<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11289" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/11289?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T10:37:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42256">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d69d66ba9e3856232deae1459b84652e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d0ae3f31390f126f0781d4c7d054c3cc</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35585">
                  <text>P 11 10-llw Dllv SSitlnel

r---Local news briefs...--..,
&lt;.:ontinued from page 1
nearly 10 hours late Monday and early Tuesday morning due to
a line break otl Uncoin Hill near the Intersection or Lincoln

Terrac:e.

sectlon wlthou 1 water extended from Riverview Drive
whtTe the tanks are located to the bottom or Uncoin Hill.
Pomer~ village workers were on the scene for many hours
makiDg the necessary repairs. The break occurred about 4 p.m .
an~ water was restored to residences about 2 a.m. this morning.

EMS has nine calls Tuesday

•·

Nine calls were answered Monday by units of the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services.
At 12: 50 a.m., Tuppers Plains was called to Route 681 Eas t!or
~art~ Smith who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
- Pomeroy at 1: 18 a .m . went to Butternut Ave. for Myrtle Klel!l
to Veterans Memor~l Hospital and at 1: 34 a .m . to the
Americare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for &amp;!tty Bennendyk,
· .
also to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Middleport at 3 p.m. was called to Bone HoUow Roa,d for
~harles McCloud to Holzer Medical Center.
Olive Township Fire Department was called at 6: 4\ p.m. to a
· garage fire at the Rick Blake residence. Tuppers Plains Fire
Department assisted Olive Township.
Pomeroy was called at 7: 17 p.m. to !;'each Fork Road for
Thomas Wilson Sr. who was taken to Ho~er Medical Center.
· Dorthea Fisher was transported at 8:10 p.m. fr.om Lincoln
Hill to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 10:35 p.m . transported Pat Imboden from
North Second Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Ball to vi.sit Racine Wedrresday
ATHENS -State Senate candidate Claire M. "Buzz" Ball Jr.
(R·Aihens) will participate In a series of events In the district
this week.
·
After making an appearance at the Plckaway Coll:llty
Republican Women's Club luncheon In Circleville tOday, he will
attend the Athens Chamber of Commerce's annual dlqner at .t he
Ohio University Inn In Athens on Tuesday before coming to
Racine on Wednesday for a pancake and sausage supper
sponsored tbe men of the Racine United Methodist Church.
On Thursday's calendar, Ball will be In Chillicothe for the
Thursday Republican Club meeting, and on Friday he will
attend the Wellston ltotary Club's 37th annUal Minstrel Show at
Wellston High School.
He will start Saturday with a speaking engagement at the
Ohio · Republlc!IJI Party's regional campaign seminar at ·
Newark, followed by a speaking engagement at the Ohio
Federation of Republican Women's East District Conference In
New Lexington. He will conclude the week by returning to Melp
County on Saturday night lor the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's Spring Banquet and Dance at the Royal Oak
~ort .

Building gutted by fire
. A metal building at the Rick Blake residence on Route 124
near Reedsville. was gutted by fl~ early Monday evening.
Olive Township Fire Department was·called to tMscene at 6:47
p.m:, and was assls ted by Tuppers Plains Fire Department. The
building was approximately 30 by 40 feet In size.
Total damages are undetermined although the contents of the
biJlldlng, Including many tools, were destroyed, reported Olive
Township Fire Chief Rick Barringer. There were no Injuries.
The origin 9f.the fire IS unknown.

--Area deaths-lrvilig.IWT

Magnolia Gibbs Nltz, Ramseur,
N.C. andthelateRussellNltz. He
was
a veteran of the U. S. Army
Irving R. l&lt;arr. Jr .. 85, of
·and
member of the Community
Mason, W. Va .. retired Meigs
County businessman, died Sun· Baptist Church of Silver City.
Surviving besides his mother
day at his home.
are
his wife. Nora R. Schaefer
Karr for many years operated
Nttz,
two daughters, Debt S.
the Karr.VanZandt ·Automobile
Brochert
of Springfield, Va.,
· Agency In Pomeroy retiring
L.
Morrison
of SUer City.
Vickie
from that In the late 1970's . .
N.
C.;
three
sons,
Rick W.
!lorn on Sept. 7. 1901 at
Schaefer,
Siler
City;
Brian J .
Decatur. Ill. he was the son of the
Nitz,
Springfield,
Va.
and
Donnie
late Irvin~ R.• Karr, Sr .• and
E.
Nltz,
Siler
City.;
two
brothers,
Chloa Banks Karr. He was a
Doy R. Nltz of Pomero~ and Hoy
member of Phi Delta Theta
L.
Nltz, Staley, N.C.; two sisters,
Fraternity and the Pomeor)· Gun
Wnnelle Bartoe of Statesville, N.
Club.
C. andMannetteM. Blumenaeur,
He Is survived by a daughter.
Rutland;
and eight
Patricia K. Carsey, Mason. W.
grandchildren
Va .. two gr.anddaughters. Mary
He was preceded In death by a
t:. Carsey, Mason, W. Va., and
·son.
Russell E. Nltz, In 1984c
Sarah Carsey Walker. Le?~lng·
Funeral
services will lK! held
ton, Ky ., ·t wo grandchildren.
Thursday
at 11 a.m. at the
Kelly E . Walker and Robert I.
Fogelsong
Funeral Home In
Walker, both of Lexington, !&lt;Y ..
Mason, with the Rev. James
and several nieces and nephews.
Queen
officiating. Burial will be
Besides his parents, he was
In
the
Union Cemetery where
preceded In death by his wife,
military
graveside rites will be
VIrginia H.HKarr In 1985, a
conducted.
Friends may call at
sister, Eleanor Crow, and two
the
funeral
home on Wednesday
brothers, Thomas and Horace
from
6
to
9
p.m.
In lieu of Oowers
Karr.
the
lamlly
requests
that contrl·
Funeral services will be held at
bu
lions
be
made
to
a favorite
10 a.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
charity.
Funeral Home. There will be no
visiting hours . The Rev. Fr. AI
McKenzie will officiate and bur·
tal will be In the Middleport Hill
PICK·3
~ 'Cemetery. In lieu of flowers
377.
donations may be made to the
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
·· Mason Emergency Medical Ser· . $1,200,412.50, with a payoff due of
.vice, Second Street, Mason, W. $425,183.00.
Va. 25260.

Lottery numbers

· Coy Nilz

Stocks

Coy E . Nitz. 51, of Siler City, N. Dally alooll prices
C., formerlY of Hartford, W.Va . ( A.l of 10: 38 a.m. )
and Pomeroy. died Saturday In Bryce and Marl! Sml&amp;b
: the Chatham Memorial Hospital of Blual, Ellll 6 Loewl
· at Siler City.
Born on Nov. 10, 1938, In Am Electric Power .... :.. ...... 30~
Harttord. he was the son of , AT&amp;'r ......... ........ .... .... ... .. ... 41'%
Ashland 011 .........................36'!1J
Bob Evans .. ............ ............ l2'Va
Charming Sboppes .. .......... ... 9~
City Holdlni Co . .;................ 13
Federal Mogul... ..... ............ 18~
Soulb Cenlnl Oblo .
Mostly clear Tuesday night, · Goodyear T&amp;:R ...................37%
with a low between 30 and 35. Heck's ................................ , 3~
Increasing cloudlneas Wednes· Key Centurion .................... 14~
day, with a chance or rain during Lands' End . ......... .... :............ 19
the afternoon and high&amp; near 60. Limited Inc ........... , ............ ~%
Multimedia Inc .......... :........ 80~
Chance of rat n Is 40 percent.
Rall
Restaurants ................. ; 2~
Elltea••. POI'eC!IIII&amp;
Robbl111
&amp; Myers ................. 16
Thu8118J ......... ~
Shoney'a
Inc. ...................... 12'!11
A chance or ~In each day, with
hllba ranging from the mid fOI to Star Bank ............... ..... :: ...... 19
lbl! mid ~ Thunday, and from . Wendy's Int'l .................. .. ... 4%
Jbe mid ~ to the mid eo. Ff14ay Worlhtnaton lnd.................. 21'Va
and Saturday. Overnight Iowa
will be m01t1y In the 301 Thursnews
day momiDg, rangillg from the
VtAnullllemerlal
mid 30s north to Ileal' 110 -~~~
· early Friday, and from the mid
·Monday adml11loni - Betty
·
3011 to the. mld 401 Saturday Bennendyk, Pomeroy. ,
morning.
Monday dbcllarpl - None.

Po~M~ov

.111 ..,., art. Ohio

Bone-chilling ·cold greets Ohioans .today J
By Ualle4 Preu lateraatloaal
Bone·cbllling cold greeted
early risers In 0(11oTuesday, but
the National Weather Service
says warmer weather should
reach the Buckeye State by the
end of the week. ·

At dawn, under clear skies,
temperatures were mostly In the
high I~ and low 20s, with the
exception of a 29 degree reading
at Greater Cincinnati Interna·
tlonal , Airport In northern
Kentucky.

Hobson area. .. Continued ~rom page i
next ~gular meeting will be held
on Aprll 10 at Gallipolis,
On recommendation of Paul
Gerard, the village's representa·
tlve to the district board, Council
adopted by unan trnous vote a
resolution In which It "strongly
opposes" the provision of H.B.
656 Introduced· by Rep. Mary '
Abel (0-Athens) 94th District.
That bill would deny to Middle·
port and other members of the
Athens, Gallla, Hocking, Jack·
son. Meigs and VInton Solid
Waste Management Polley Com·
mlttee veto authority as orlgl·
rially conferred by H. B. 592 as It
relates ·to develbplng a plan for
solid waste disposal.

- - -+--- - - --- - -·- ·

The clear weather Is to con·
tlnue thrO!IIhTuesday night, and
Into Wedriesday In the northern
counties. In the south, clouds and
possibly some rain are going to
appear as Wednesday we•rs on.
Along with the clear ·skies,
Tuesday and Tuesday night ttere
to see continued below normal
. temperatures. Highs Tuesday
were expected to range from the
low 40s to the low 50s. :with
overnight lows from the mld·20s
to low 30s.
Slight moderallon Is likely for
Wednesday when highs should be
mostly In the 50s.

•
Thurlday, Friday and Satur·
day will see a cbance of rain each
day. Hlgbs wll~lle In the mid·~•
to mid·~ Ttulrsday, and the
mid·50s to mld·IM'- Friday and
Saturday. Lows will be mostly In
the 30s 'rhursday, from the
mid·30s In the north to near 50 In
the south Friday and from the
mld·30s to mid•40s Saturday .

•
:
;
.:
.
.
.
;
:
~

of It not being (re!!."
&gt;
Councilman Dewey Horton' s
',
On
the
early
morning
weather
contention was that It Is a
map, a high pressure system
"starting place" and that since
covered
the eastern half of the
the commlttee·!Qoks•to becoming
United,
States.
By late Wednes·
self~supportlng, It gives "seed
day,
.
It
will
stretch
from the
money", a place' to start.
Hudson
Bay
to
the
East
Coast.
Complimenting 'wiSe and her
,
group on their work In getting the
NATIONAL WEATMER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·2f.IO
Middleport Arts Council started,
Councilman Bob Gilmore ex·
. pressed -his appreciation com·
'
mentlng that he feels the Arts
'
CouiiCII will be a contribuilng
factor to the quality of life In the
CO!llm~nlty.
.
',
,,
O&amp;her Actlo11
Council gave a second reading
'
to an ordlnance ·whtch will give
.village employees a pay raise of
Arts funding Approved
25 cents an hour. The ordinance
During the meeting Council was arpended to Include to add
.,
approved limited funding ~or the President's Day to the list of .
Middleport Arts Council for a six
holidays for which employees get .
month period.
paid.
Co11ncll agreed to pay the rent
Also approved at the meeting
or $150 ·for a building on North was the revised drug free work·
'•'
Second along with the utilities tor place policy . Council set clean·up
that period. Reconsideration for
week In the vlltagefor Aprll22·28.
continuing that support will be to coordinate with the state
given following the six montll Observance, and Mayor Hoffman
WEATHER MAP - Low pressure .over 'weatern Kansas will
period, It was decided.
talked on the Importance of an
prodace clt!udlnesa acr0118 the nation's mldaectlon. Scattered
Mary Wise, president of the accurate populatioJt count In the
thullderalonns will develop over the soalbern Plains, with
newly organized Middleport Arts census.
·
.
occuloaal rain for tbe central Plains. Cool weather will dominate ·'
Council, and Shirley Quickel, a
A job promotion project was
In the Eut tJtrough mld·~eek, as high preasure 18 anchored off the
member of the board met with
proposed by Gerard. His prop·
Atlanllc Cout. Mainly dry weather will prevail for the West Coast.
Council to outllrie plans of the
osal to be considered by council
(UPI)
group. Wise reported lbat 137
suggests setting up a $20,000
North Second, the building be·
annual fund for a pilot project.
Continued from page 1
tween the LaSalle and Johnson's · The project, as explained by
Variety Store, Is available to the
···-----~- ,,
Gerard, would pay "bounty" to
group and that work on cleaning
• ployees for several hundred
employerswhohlreanewperson election Nov . 7."
,
and redecorating has already
thousand doUars for his camas well as the employee.
Several of the candidates took
started. II was noted that a local
'
paign warchest.
The $20,000 would be used for swipes at their Democratic foes
'
business has·donated paint.
"This Is the finest ticket the
creating 10 new jobs with $1,000 without mentioning names.
Liability Insurance was dis·
going to the employer and $1,000
"We've raised an awful lot of Republfcan party has put tocussed and Mayor Hoffman
to the employee for each job If It . questions about the difficulties gether In 20 years," said Robert
advised t)lat the operation would
Bennett, the state party
continues for 12 months . which · that have gone on the last four
come under the village Insurance would be set as the maximum .. yel!rs," said Judith Brac.hman, chairman.
.
policy.
Ken .Robinson, an 18·year old ·'
flme for ~artlclpatlon.
.
«
the candidate for treasurer. "We
Wise sa.ld that the Arts Council
Ger~rdalsoproposeda Middlefeel now ·u·s time to fight against senior, said afterwards nothing .
views the location as a teaching
the Republl~ans said convinced .
port museum Iii which Items and those difficulties."
·
facility for arts and crafts as well
Information significant In the
' 'I regard the attorney gener·, him to vote. even though he's ·old .~
as an area for sale of local crafts.
history ·or the.· village could be at's office as a public trust and enough. '"I'm not ·Into politics/' .;
She said that the plan Is to stored 1and madeavallable,to the not a cash cow to line my
he said-.
·
"·
become sel(·supportlng perhaps public.
. The caravan·, wHich visited ·
'
campaign .coffers with," said
within the stx month period
Clilclnnatl .arid Xenta earlier In .
Atte~dlng were Mayor· Hoi· · Paul Pfeifer. the candidate for
depending, ·or course, on the fman, Clerk· Treasurer Jon attorney general.
the d~y, ·w.rnt' on
.Ll.ma a.nd• .
community response.
Buck, and Council .members.
Attorney General Anthony· Perrysburg. Tuesday's sc;hedule
Two craft classes and dance Horton, Gilmore, Gerard, James
Celebrezze Jr., the· Democratic calls lor ·stops In · Rossford, ,,
classes have already been sche, Clatwqrthy, William Walters and · candidate for ((OVer nor. has been Clevelarid and_Younllstciwn.
' '
duled for AprU. While each class Jack Satterfield,
·
accused of milking his em·
will have
fee, ihe craft
Instructors have volunteered to
teach thedasses free of charge
and also to provide the materials.
This means that the fee will go
Into the Arts Council fund.
Wise reported · that she Is
contacting several other com·
munlties with arts programs for
direction In Sl,'ttlng up aspects or
the Arty Council funding. Thl~
will help the group In determine
what percentage or class fees
collected by Instructors will be
funneled Into the Arts Council
fund.
Councilman Gerard contended .
during the discussion that all
activities should be offered free
to everyone In the village with
Council to subsidize the entire
operation. He said th.at he feels
there are many. talepted people
In the community who will not be
able to participate In the pro·
grams offered because of the
lack of momiy .
Council took no action on that
proposal and when the vote was
taken to support the Arts Council
with rent and utilities for six
mon·ths 1 he voted "no" with the
clartfyh\g statement that he !ell
•2.5·1JtwE-Fuol
io -.AIOSIOd "-·Wh!!ol
It was just .not In the "right
lnjl&lt;iodEngino
Oisc .......
direction. doing it halfway. and
o All,Now Coctcp;t S&gt;,lo
• Rood Touring Svopoooion
cutting out many people .b ecause
lnltrio/
• Menag. Center one!

.

.
.

Ohio
Lottery
'

Despite

'

prOblems~ .
play continues

Page 3

to

a

._._....,012r1RI.It
• .Pow..Aslilttcl Rod-ondPiaion SteetiftQ

tt;
LIFE

.For all y9ur
life Insurance

Mini-Trip Computer

Pick-4
8475

r

lnjtctldOoo:luadCam E.....
. • a.;., Side Aiollag
• • IJiable 3-Sp..d Automatic
hnuni'sion • .

• -.AoliSIOd ijoooring
• Powotr-Atlitt.d .....
• lmpf'OIIIId CONOiioft '
p• Front-Wheel Orift

Vol.40, No.225
Copyrigh~ 1910.

Optional systems for recycling are discussed
· recycling expert who spoke at ·
By NANCY 'rOACHI\M
Tuesday's meeting. According to
Sentinel Ne\tls Staff
Optional systems for recycling Braasch, who showed slides of
were a main topic of discussion at recyllng operations currently
Tuesday evening's public meet· being used In other parts ol Ohio,
lng of the Athens, Gallla, Hock· recycling programs are designed
lng, Jackson, Meigs, V.lnton .to fit the needs of the community
(AGHJMV) Solid Waste Manage· by using combinations of differ·
men I Dis trlct. Th.e pubIic meet· . ent systems.
Most area residents at the
. lng was· lleld at the Wllk~svllle
meeting agreed with Braasch's
' School.
"I have never seen two recy· ·Information, but questioned
cling programs that were alike,'· whether enough residents within
stated Paul Braasch, an area the six-county district would

• $paciovol_....,
1 th~'llt00Mfor6

""'O!,.,.c_,
"Hooclo-

--=----.r-tl.
l
o
o_I
O
I
_
MO_CI
M
_
.
.
_""""'
"
"""'
, ___
'

IIBI'S 10 IWOIIIO WIIIFOIIIIAI-CIII '
.....

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . , . . • ...,..,.. .....,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wid.....,
............._
o.opr_llrniMid'
II!_Mir'llp•dlllllllt.••lctOI•...,_ ..:.;,.,....,.,.c.-.;lfougtwn.tllo.-mllnlnolnll
""""""CIIIJ*C..an_..,_, · '-"""~-·

·~
u
...,.. ...

actually Implement recycling In
their · homes In order to make
recyllng a viable district
consideration. .
There must also be markets In
which to sell recylable materials,
someone said.
In answer to the questions,
Braasch agreed that In addition
to meeting the needs of the
community, a recycling system
must be designed .to obtain
maximum rtnanclal benefit, In
order to keep the system

operational.
· For example, recycling becomes ltnanclally beneficia l
when large employers participate In a pro~ram , thus making
large amounts of recyclables
available at one time .
In regard to markets, Braasch
believes the markets already
exist for most recyclable ' ltems
and It's a matter of locating and
utilizing the markets.
But; It was pointed out,ln order
to reach the district's goal of 35

percent reduction In the amount
of solid waste presently being
landfllled In the district, house·
holds within the district will have
to recycle too:
It was also pointed out that
unless some type of Incentive Is
offered, mosthlocal residents
won't take the time to recycle .
A lower tr.ash hauling fee for
customers who separate and bag
recyclables could be such an
lnce!ltlve. ·
Just to make a point, Don

Graves , a district landfill expert,
noted that If the district merely
wants to reduce Its solid waste by
35 percent, then all that has to be
done Is to build transfer stations
anit Mill the solid waste to ·some
other state.
According to Graves. Ohio
House Bill 592 was patterned
greatly after a solid waste law
that was Implemented several
years ago In New Jersey. New
Jersey formed solid waste dis·
Continued on page 5

.

State will
pay 100

PAT HILL CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE

MIIIUPOif

992·6421

Americai.way to go!

;

·percent
of costs
By NANCY YOACJiAM
· Sentinel Newa Staff
The State of Ohio will pay for
100 percent of the approximately
$700,000 In costs associated with
the proposed construction o~ a
new cUlvert beneath State Route
124 at Kerr's Run, and Improvements tp the Intersection of
Route 124 arid U.S. 33atNyeAve.
In Pomeroy. Tile pyoposed pro·
ject was discussed at an Ohio
~tment of Transportation·
sponsor;cr public hearing Tues·
day afternoon at Pomeroy VII·
lage Hall. About 30 citizens
attended the hearing.
As explained by Tom Hedrick,
ODOT engineer, Marietta, the
plans for culvert replacement
and
Improvements to the Inter·
I
section were already In the works
before the hill side at Kerr's Run
coUapsed several weeks ago.
However, the project was expe·
dlted when the cave·ln occurred
and approval was secured from
· ODOT' s central office out of
Columbus, to designate the· cui·
vert replacement as an emer·
gency. ODOT of!lclals had al·
ready okayed Inclusion of the
Intersection of 124 and 33 as part
of the overall project proposal, In
order to eliminate the extreme
turn at the lntersecllon which Is
"nearly Impossible for large
vehicles" to maneuver, Hedrick
said. ·'
Many questions at the hearing
were from affected property
owners whose homes will be
purchase.d by ODOT In order to
""'"..to 11
make
room for the Improve·
I~ ll•
-SI-ala of Ohto
..
o........
ff ,......,....,.
ments
althe
Intersection. Most of
· DINIM .tHI...,.
the
questions
could. be answered
l[GINO
w:rr11~ ......,'*' _
In general terms, but, as ex·
"lto"OIU plalned by Joseph Leach, ODOT
•
... l .lt. "··
-'"District 10 deputy director,
another public hearing has been
scheduled lor Aprll 5, from 3 to 7
p.m, also at Pomeroy VIllage
Hall,lit which time, very specific
questions from affectett property
owners can be answered. Also, It
was explained by Leach that
anyone wishing to express writ·
ten comments should direct their
IMPROVEMENTS PENDING - The dotted line shows the
comments
to ODOT' s Marietta
current highway pbwement at Kerr'• Run and Nye Ave. In
office
by
March
30
Pomeroy. The Ohio Depar&amp;ment of Traaaporlatlon Is funding
An
explanation
of ODOT's
1700,000 ol lmprovemenls at the aile to lqclude replacemeat of an
rlght·Of·way
acquisition
proce·
UllderfP'ound culvert aad elimination of the extreme corner at tile
dures,
which
Includes
relocation
Intersection ol State Route 124 and U. S. 33.
assistance for affected property
owners, was presented by Wilbur
Minnick, right-of-way admlnts·
trator for DlstrlctlO. According
to Minnick, two owner·occupled
slngle·famlly residences; four
tenant·occupled structures, and
·three business locations, are
The Eastern Local Board of Education will meet at 6:30
l,lkely to be affected by the road
ThursdAy night In the high school cafeteria.
Improvements. Minnick did not
Charles Brown, associate director of the FlnanclalAulstance
state specifically the three buill·
Division of the State Department of Education, will attend and
ness locatlo111; although from the
speak to the board and residents 011 local, district and state
map which was oil display at the
funding of ed,ucatton.,the atate emergency load fund, and the
publiC heartna, tbe locatlo111
possible uses for local
tax levy proceedll.
would appear to be be the former
All district residents
to attend the meeting which
boolcmoblle bulldlna.!. the fofll)er
said Daniel L Apllnc, •
should be very
Pomeroy Cement t:tlock plan,t,
· superliltendent.
and poaslbly, the White Houle
Bar.
· According to Leach, ODOT
· hopei to have the undereround
.Unlta qt the Melp County Emer.pncy Medical Service
culvert replacelllent underway
l'ltlpotlded to five call8 for ullstance C!ll Tuelday.
by summer. lmpt'O\'ell\e!l!a to
At 8:" a.m. the Middleport lllllt went. to Sycamore ¥d '
the Intersection will folloly with
,ilaftJnaer for Flora Bailey who wu teken to Veterans · affected property ownl!rs belni
Memorial H01pttal. .
Jlven the req'llred lenJih of time
The Syracuse unit , at 9:24 a.m. was calll!d to Route 338 In
to relocate after reacbtna an
Apple Grove ·for Charlotte Eakins who was tran~ted to ·
agreement with ODOT on a fair
·'
Continued on pa1e !i
Continued on page 5.
·
\
1

~·
J

...

\\

ANSWE~ QUESTIONS- Pan I Braasch, at lef$,
ali e:~epert on recycling, and John ·Van Volken·

burgh, of SCS Engineers, answer quesdons at a

'

Tuesday evenlaghpuhllc meetlni of the AGHJMV
Sold Waete Management District. The meethil
was held at Wilkesville,

Health department issues advisory
The Meigs County Health De·
pariment has Issued the foUpw·
lng advisory to area residents
who plan to have home sewage
disposal systems lnstall!!d or
private water systems con·
structed on their property:
-Before work Is started on a
hotne sewage ~ys tem or a private
water· system. a permit must be
obtained from the health
department.
-By purchasing a permll to
Install a home sewage disposal
system, the land owner Is as·
sured ·of a site visit by health
deparUnent personneL Recom·
mendallons regarding the most
feasible type of system for a
given location will be made by
heal th department sanitarians.
-The land owner will also be
made aware of the names of
sewage system Installers who
are registered wllh the health
department. The department requires registered Installers to be
bonded, and this bond protects
· the property owner against negll·
gence and poor workmanship.
-Private water system con·
tractors areTeglstered not by the
county health department, but by
the stale. The state requires
these contractors to be bonded .
Thus, when the land owner
purchases a permit to lnstwll a
private water system, he or she Is
offered some protection against
faulty workmanship. Also, the
health department · cannot ap·
prove a pr.fvate water system

which has been constructed
without the proper permit, and
the lack of I his approval may
affect the value of the property
should the owner wish to selllt In
the future.

-Failure to purchase the re·
qulred permit before lnsialltng a
home system or constructing a
private water system Is a viola·
tion of state and local laws.

Classroom management and
clean rooms are board topic
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Board.
Sendnel News Staff
A resolution was adopted by
Concerns about classroom
the board to delay the post-semanagement and cleanliness
condary options program until'
were expressed by a delegation
March, 1991. The legislation
of Harrisonville parents at the
setting up that program provides
Tuesday night meeting of the
that tax money follows students
Meigs Local Board of Education.
who quality for college level
Robert Smilie was spokesman
Instruction and atteqd a college
for the group. In response to the
or university while still enrolled
expressed concern about, class·
In high school.
room management, Supt. James
Pomeroy Attorney Carson
Carpenter acknowledged some
Crow , was asked to do a title
problems, the concern which he
search on the Pomeroy Junior
and the board members feel, and
High School property to clarify
then assured the group that the some dlspu ted boundaries .
problem Is being addressed.
The Pomeory Youth League
As for the cleanliness Issue. he was giVen· approval to use the
reported that the Meigs County
baseball fields at Salisbury and
Health Department has In·
Meigs Hlch School as well as the
spected the building and found no diamonds on the hill near Meigs
problems.
.
High School.
During the meeting the reslg·
The board approved a field trip
nations of Roger Holman as
to Kings Island for a music
director of transportation and festival on AprU 21 and 22 for the
·mechanic, Harold Graham as · Meigs Junior High and the Meigs
head teacher at the Harrisonville High School choruses.
Elementary School, and Tim
In other action Deanna Apllng
Dunn as assistant varsity foot·
was employed as a 'ubstltute
ball coach were accepted by the
Continued on page 5

••
I ··

"..

&lt;

. .,... ft. V.-

Eastern board to meet

•.-"'--oood,_,

199 SOIIIII ~

2 Sectlona, 14 Pogoa 26 Conta
A Multimedia Inc. NewiP•P*'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 28, 1990

Local news briefs.__,;;;_-.

__

ID mid -..
of rain " pel'Ct!il&amp;.
Thursday, bf&amp;b near 80.
Chance of rain 90 percent.

•

•

\

•2.2·UiofE-Fuot

.

Daily Number.
077

Gop

Weather

H01pital

Tunlla;. Medlo 7:7. 1110 :

1 .

'

'

.
.

'

•

EMS has five Tuesday calls ..

POINTS THE WAY - Olllo Depaa1nietl&amp; of
Tr-portatloa Ellllaeer Howard Gilford polata
o•t tbe affected homea alon1 Nye Ave. 1\-

PomeiOJ wlddl wiD he l'll8ellla ..._ te ..., ... .
adequte apace for ODOT Ill wll1lll U, I. D _.
Improve llalllterledloa wltb
llihte ut.

fiP*'

�The Daily Sentlnei-Page-3

Ohio

Commentary

•

111 Court Street

P0111eroy, Oltlo
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~!:b.

t:~m~ r-n......L--r-lr'T"'E!!~·~

'q!v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlllher

.

CHARLENE BC)Ef'LJCH
General Maaacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Publl.iher/ControUer

Assls~t

A MEMBER of The United Press InternatiOnal, Inland Dally Press
AssociatiOn and the American NewSpaper Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be tea, than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must 1M; signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
·

:rtayground politics
at the summit

--

By JIM ANDERSON
; WASHINGTON j UP!) - Former National Security adviser
2lblgnlew Brzezinski and former West ·German Chancellor Helmut
SChmidt differ on just about everything, but they are In perfect
a~eement on one point: They can't stand each other.
· The BrzezlnkSki-Schmldt feud Is one or those basic organic dislikes,
sp deep that It appears to be genetic, sort of like the Nancy
~eagan-Donald Regan hate af.falr.
.
· •And like Nancy and Don, Schmidt and Brzezinski have taken their
f~ud Into public print, first with Brzezlnkskt's 1981 hook "Power and
Principle," In which he suggested, not very subtly, that Schmidt. the
SOcialist chancellor of West Germanyuntll1982, wasahouttwoquarts
lQw, psychologically speaking, and that some of his public actions
were the result of an almost pathologlcallnferlorltycomplex toward
Americans .·
· In his new book "Men and Power" (Random House), Schmidt
responds. He begins by suggesting that Brzezinski was a sort of
b)Jccaneer megalomaniac, a Rasputln-ltke hawk who hijacked the
Carter foreign policy while Secretary of State Cyrus Vance- "who
we all respected"- was passed over.
·
; Schmidt writes, " Brzezinski called on me twice In 19TI; he
Pfesented himself unabashedly as the self-assured agent of a world
power." He writes contemptuously of Brzezinski's Ill-conceived
h\lnger for publicity, which resulted In a picture of him at the Khyber
Flass In Pakistan with an automatic rifle aimed In the direction of
Afghanistan.
:Schmidt remarkS acerbically, "I pointed out (to Vance) that
Brzezinski and his submachine gun in the Pakistani refugee camp
had sent the wrong signal (to the Soviet Union)."
:Schmidt suggests that Brzezinski's power grab was made possible
br Carter's "disarming" naivete, mixed with the American
president's penchant for seeking votes. ·'I began to understand that
W,hat he (Carter) was after was domestic prestige. For the sake of his
prestige, I was supposed to give up mtne."
, .
.
:All of these resentments boiled \lponesummer afternoon In Venice,
where Schmidt was to meet Carter and his staff, including Brzezinski,
-auring the 1978 economic summit of the leading Wester-n nations.
: As Schmidt describes the encounter, It was an ugly scene with him ,
;accusing Carter of insulting Germany, and undermining Schmidt's
;political power.
,
• Schmidt quotes himself, speaking In English; for clarity and
' forcefulness: "It cannot serve any useful purpose to Insult an ally
:(Schmidt) who keeps his promises."
·
; Carter: " I have no such suspicion."
• Schmidt: "It Is a regrettable fact that your letter (commenting on
:schmidt's policies and which was leaked to the press) af~ect.ed the
;German-American alliance."
' The nastiness between Carter and Schmidt then moves to a new
;level as Brzezinski jumps in, with language that sounds like a
(barroom brawl about to break out.
·. Brzezinski: "You were critical of American policy In general!"
Schmidt: "If ,necessary, I can fight with the best of them!"
. Brzezinski: "And we know bow to light back!"
-: Carter 's teps In at this point with a sooth'tng, "I think now we'll
·understand each other better," but the violence of the feeling
:reflected In the Schmidt-BrzezinkSi memoirs makes one wonder what
:·the Secret Service and West German security would do If a fist fight
ibroke out between the American national security adviser and the
·:chancellor of the Federal RepubliC of Germany In the presence of the
:president of the United States.
•! Schmidt's recollections raise anew the central question . that
;troubled American allies durtng the Carter years: They could never
·tell, with certainty, who was In charge _of American foreign policy
rthat week, or thai day. Was It Brzezlnkl, the anti-Communist
~super-hawk? Or was It Vance, the courteous, reasonable man?
: No foreign leader could say for sure. As a result, as Schmidt
:recounts it, they all pulled, sllently.or publicly, for Ronald Reagan, as
ione who may not have been ideologically In tune with the Europeans,
:but at leas t they knew where he stood.
1

,

'.....-------__;,---~

Berry's World

-

WELCOME TO lSRAEL

GO DIRECTLY TO THE
OCCUPlED TERRITORIES

DO NOT PA.SS GO
DO NOT GO.L\.E.CT $200

-•••
• ••

.,

'I

..a.-..._&amp;va '&gt;•
Cl _.,NIA. one.

..

Pllga · 2-The Dlly II 1tiNI

'

'

The Daily Sentinel

Spring

•

•

·

Jock

Utile did Jimmy Wood, the

seco!ld baiC!man of the Chicago
White Stockfnil realize wben he
· "lll~ted" spri~g training back
1 18"" th 1 Its evolution would

Ande~n

Castro uses kids as pawns:_·___!:!::-.!!&amp;D~ale~Jtl~a!!...:n·~~t;:::ta.
WASHINGTON ~ A 14-year· to continue to punlllb the elder
old Cuban boy has come to Menendez for defecting.
.
'symbolize the unrelenting, lronHuman rights watchdogs told
fls ted rule of Fidel Castro.
our associate Scott Sleek that
Alexander Menendez wants to Alexander and his grandmother
leave Cuba to, live .wltn bls attempted to go to the U.S.
parents In the United States, but Interest Section In Havana in
the Cuban government won't let December, apparently on advice
him. He can't even go to school. from a Cub,n Immigration of!lHis only oUense Is that his father .. . cia!. But the two ·were detained
Jose Alberto Menendez, Is a by Cuban guards .
well-known defector. ·
They were reportedly held In a
The . elder' Menendez Is a state security facility for several
. former trainer for the Cuban hours, and now Alexander has
national cycling team. He, along been told that he cannot leave the
with another trainer and an country.
· engineer, defecteq In Panama In .
Cuban officials tried to get the
:1987. Alexander's mother· was hoy to sign a pledge to stay In
allowed to leave Cuba In 1988, and Cuba, but he refused. So they
she left her son In the care of his expelled him from school and
made \Jim spend a · week in
grandmother.
reform
school:
Now he Is the pawn Castro uses
Alexander's ordeal reflects the

DOUBLE PIAY - The San lf'rllllclseo GlaniS' Kevin Bau II out
on tbe froat end of a fln&amp;-lllnlnc double-play as Oakland shortlltop
Walt Welu &amp;allee iO tile air on tile relay throw iO first In Tuesday'•
aprtn1 tralniDII&amp;me In Phoenix, Arb. (UPII

Tigers drop Reds, - ~-1
PURe HASE:1 AN

-NFL FRANCHise
.

·-

-·
'.

.~.
t

•·.

l':f1{.·!
.

'

J

Commemoratives croWd calendar- .
concerns, many commemoraIt all started In 1914 with the
tlves are a lot more frivolous.
designation of Mother's Day. No
Such designations as National
one can fault the Intent of such
designations but one Is com- Tap Dance Day, National Quarpelled to question the means by ter Horse Week, and High School
Reserve Officer Training Corps
which such "days" come about.
Today such nationally sancti- Recognition Day, while appealoned designations are called Ing to those associated with the
commemorative and It Is·safe to subject being recognized, serve
say that any given week of the little national purpose.
· Why then does Congress spend
year carries with It a designation
so much time and effort on such
of one type or another.
What's wrong with that you matters? Principally, because
ask. :. nothing, other than that members have difficulty saying
such commemoratlves are tak· no to those constituent groups
·
lng up a lot of time that Congress that ask.
could be devoting to more sub·
stantive matters. In the previous
If a Member's district has a
100tb Congress, 287 commemora- large number of almond growers
tive resolutions were approved In It, It would . be particularly
by both the House and Senate. difficult for that member to
These 287 measures constituted decline a request from those
38 percent of the total legislation growers to de~lgnate a week In
that Congress enacted during the ·recognition ill their product. The
last Congress.
same can be said for a member
Most commemoratlves origi- whose district -houses_ the na·
nate In the form of requests from tiona! headquarters of a major
single Interest groups who want drganlzatlon such as the United
special recognition extended to States Trotting Association.
their cause, event, or Should officials of that associaorgar\lzat ton.
tion come tq their Congressman
While such designations as and ask him or her to take the
National Foster Care Month, lead In getting a resolution
National Disability Awareness passed commefllorating a sl~rolf­
Week, and NatiOnal Literacy lcant event In the history of
Day, all underscore very worthy harness racing, It would be hard

Highway

for that member to decline.
brought to the House floor for
Having acknowledged the pop.
consideration, Is adamantly op-..
ularlty and merit of many of
posed to this measure: ,
:
ihese proposals, how can we stU!
When this subject was dis··
continue the practice of comcussed at a recent hearing of the
memoratives while at the same
House Post Office, Census and
time relieving Congress of the · Population "Subcommittee, spon-unnecessary burden? I, along
sors of the bill that would create
with over 250 of my House
the Independent commission
colleagues, feel that the solution
made the argument that over a
lies witli the establishment of an
halt · million dollars could be
Independent commission, and I
saved annually by transferring
have joined In sponsoring legislathis responsibility to an lnde- '
tion that would do just that. Just
pendent commission.
as a special postal panel conAt the hearing, Congressman
venes to decide what Individual;
Alex McMillan of North Carolina
event or observance will appear
expressed the embarrassment
on a new stamp Issue, so too
and frustration that mall)' ·
should an independent commismembers feel when asked to :
sion rather than Congress be best
co- sponsor some of the more
able to · determine what cause,
ludicrous resolutions.of recognl· :
product, or organ lzatlon Is most
tlon that have been Introduced.
worthy of having a day, week, or
After being asked by a colleague
month designated In Its behalf.
to co- sponsor Na tiona! Mule Day,
With the support of well over
he musingly asked tr such a .
half the members of the House of
proposal wasn't more self- ·
Representatives, one would
congratulatory than salutatory
think the passage of this leglsla·
of the draft animal in question.
tion would be automatic, but,
"We have met the mules .and
unfortu'nately, It lsn' t, the reason
they · are us," be joked. If his
being that the Chairman at· the
Committee Chairman. ~onttnues .
House Committee· with jurisdicto rebuff efforts to 'change the
tion over this legislation, and , way these COJ11memoratlves are •
through whose committee this selected, perhaps the mule ears
bill must go If It Is going to be wlll be aptly earned.

Jackson operations and a DeW
business and hotel have opened.
This translates Into · new jobs,
haws and renewed opportun\tles
for all of our citlzellll.
. I'm pleased to have play_ed a
part In getting this funding
approved, and thank the local
officials In our area who have
assisted In the process. Getting -

"t'

Nor1h

.'

's

Ga UI•a

·
wm•
~1
Jt

..

Bissell then fanned the last singled, the score 6-2.
batter to end the frame.
EHS was scoreless In the
In the sec;ond Inning, with one fourth, but WHS came back with
out, Michael Smith stsrted things . · one on a Brent Fields single and
off with ·a single, ,Jason Hager an error. Eastern defensively
walked, Jerrod Barber got hit gunned down a runner at the
with a pitch and Mark Murphy plate twice In the middle Innings
reached on a fielder's choice that and gunned down a runner In the
gunned ·down the runner at the third on a relay at third.
Bissell had a two-run single In
plate. ·
Things looked gloomy at the the fifth, Matt Flnlaw bad a
Eastern camp, bllt Tim Bissell sacrmce fly , Scott Fitch had an
delivered a two run, bases loaded RBI single, 'and Shaun Savoy an
single . . Jeff Durst ripped a RBI single in a five run fifth
towering shot to deep center lhat Inning.
was mishandled and two more
EHS added two in the sixth for
runs scored, the score 4-2.
the 13-3 finale.
A warmed-up Bissell then
Bissell scattered three hits,
· retiredtbesldelnorderthenext3 walked six, fanned six and went
of 4 Innings, Including two · the distance to gain the win. Tom
Innings In a row In the second and McDermitt suffered the loss
third. The young hurler did an despite pitching strong In the
exceptional job and · showed middle Innings, fanning three,
much charisma In coming back walking eight, and giving up
strong.
three hits. Rodney Baumgarner
A fielder's 'ct101ce on a hit ball came on In the last Inning to fan
by Jason. :Hager brought home one for WHS In relief.
Matt Flnlaw who had singled In
Eastern hitters were Bissell
the third, then an error on Mark three · singles, Jeff Durst a
Murphy ' s grounder brought double, triple, and single; MIhome Michael Smith, who again chael Smith two singles, and
a
singles each by Scoit Fitch, Matt
0'1_... .
Flnlaw. Mickey_Bauer, and Jeff
~- ·
~
Horner. Jerrod Barber walked ·
three times and was hit with a
pitch, walking seven times In a
row across the last two games.
Bob Ash doubled for WHS.
Missing a near no-hitter in the
Phillips, and Lorrie Baker sinRodney
Baumgardner doubled ,
seventh Inning, Eastern's Edna
gles. Bird was the lone WHS Brent Fields singled. and Mike
Driggs led her Eastern Eaglettes
hitter.
Harbour singled. .
soflball squad to a hard-fought
Head Coach Pam Doqthltt
Eastern coached ·s cott Wolfe
1-0 non-league victory over the
stated, "I thought this was a was well-pleased with the win
Wahama White Falcons here
really good game, well-played by saying, ''I was very pleased with
Tuesday.
both clubs. Ifelt we played really our defense and Tlm's(Bissell)
A P 11 try Bird double broke up
well : defensively and Edria
pitching. This was a gre~t team '
the no-hit bid In the seventh
helped control tl\1! game. When effort as 15 players saw action.
lnntng, when wtth one out Bird
they hit the ball we fielded well Aside from some blunders on the ·
drilled the ball to deep left, where
and made some blg plays. Edna
bases· and missing some signs.
leftflelder Amy Murphy held her
(Drlggs)pltched 'another · great
we
played quite well. I'm very
to a double.
.
game.''
proud of this team tonight."
As the drama continued In the
Eastern Is Idle tQnlght, but
Easter11 played at Oak Hill
. exciting game. Bird stole third,
returns borne Thursday . and
tonight
and hosts Waterford
·but Driggs recovered to strikeout
Friday for games wlfh non- Thursday.
the next balter. With the tying
league Waterford and Kyger
Llnescore :
·run just 60 feet away , Driggs got
Creek respectively.
Eastern ......... .... .042 052-13 13 1
.· the gina! out on a ground ball hit
Llnescore:
Wahama ............. 200 100- 3 4 4
to second to end the game.
Eastern ..... ......... 000 100 0·1 4 2
Batteries - BlsselliWP) and
Driggs picked up the fine
Wahama ............. ooo ooo o:o 1 3 Hager
'one-hit win wttb one walk, one
Batteries: Driggs jWP) ~nd
Tom McDerrri/II(LP) , Baumhit, and seven strikeouts to her
Baker.
·
garner and Harbour .
dedit. Drlgp, In her last three
VanMeter(LP), Black, and
'
games, · over 21 Innings has
Zuspan.
walked just three batters.
on the losing tn oft be stick, but
not because of lack of effort was
Debbie VanMeter, who also
tossed a fine game. VanMeter
went six and one-third lilillngs,
before making way for Debbie
Black, who faced the last four
batters. VanMeter's fine effort
registered 6 strikeouts · and 11
walkS, while Black fanned 2 and
walked one.
The lone run came In the fourth
Inning, when catcher Lorrie
Baker led off with a walk, stole
second, and came home on an
RBI double by Mary Ann Kibble,
the score l-0 the way Its stayted
throughout..
Eastern stayed In slight control behtnd the fine pitching of
Driggs.
Eastern hitters were Kibble, a
double; Lee Gillilan, Tabby

I 8 edD'e

.
Eas. tem
... a FaIcons, l •0
Waham

A two-run.single by sophomore
save)
Chad Fitch and a two-run t rlple
LP- Woods
by freshman Rob Canady powered North Gallla' s Pirates to a
Bobcab 17, Wildcats 2
season-opening 4-1 victory over
At
Cheshire, Kyger Creek
Southern Monday_ evening at the
scored four runs in the first two
Vinton village park.
Innings of Hannan Trace starter
After Southern hurler Jason
Ron Woods before exploding for
Quillen, . the eventual losing
nine more In the third inning
pitcher, h'eld the Bucs scoreless
before
the game ended two
for fhe first two innings, North's
frames
later
In observance of the
Dewey Hunt started the third
15-run
mercy
rule In the season
with a single. He -advanced to
opener
for
the
Wildcats.
second base on a wild pitch. and
,John Sipple,
Senior
catcher
after a strikeout by shortstop
who tripled and got one other hit
Darin Smith and a popout to
THE MOWING
in t()ree at -bats, and sophomore
centerlleld by catche_r Shane
third sacker - Dav.ld Wellman,
SEASON IS
Smith, centerflelder Ulysses DaKC,'s
who
also
went
2
for
3.
keyed
vis and pitcher .Casey Staton
HERE...
offense,:whlle pitcher Chad Jontiwalkl!d. 'Fhen Fitch drove a
son,
Scott
Newell,
Mark
Villanusingle io left field, scoring Hunt
eva and Mike Frash 101 one hit
and Davis. Then Canady fol·
STOP IN AND
each
tor the Bobcats. •
lowed w[th a triple to right field,
The Wlldeats' runs came In the
SEE OUR LINE
which scored Staton and Fitch.
third,
wbea Shane Wells and
The Inning ended with Terry
David Wells walked. Shane Wells
()F...
Farley's fly out to left, but
went
to
tblt!l
on
a
wild
pitch
by
Quillen 's tour of dilty on the
VIllanueva:,·, who started the
mound ended In the next frame.
Inning
In relief of;Johnson. then
The Tornadoes' lone run came
David
Weill llole aecond, at·
•20 INCH AND
In the. sixth, when Todd Grlndtractlng
VIllanueva's attention.
staU followed junior Arnie Du2~ INCH
and draWing the throw. On
gan lnnfng.openlng ground-out to
Villanueva's throw to second.
•221NCH
Staton with an hifleld hll down
Shane
Wells
broke
to
the
plate,
the third-base line. Canady. the
PROPELlED MOW~
scoring Trace's first run. After
third baseman, overthrew flrat
Chad Swain strllck out, Woods'
base. allowing Grindstaff to
groundout
to second base alreach secolid. Quillen doubled In
lowed
David
Wells· to dent the
Grindstaff. Then after Staton, a ·
plate
for
Trace's
final run.
sophomore who allo~d one walk
Joht180n
pltcl!ed
two Innings, ·
In going the dlstant:e, allowed
struck
out
four
at\d
walked two.
senior Brent Shuler to coUect one
Woods pitched all five lnnlnp,
· .MASON, WV.
of (our hits the Rac\ne nine would
fanning
six
and
walking
six.
get t~at day, Staton tallied two of
his game-high 12 strtki!Dufs .by
fanning Jerod Moore and Scott
Lisle to !!ftd tht! IDR!ntr.
The Plratetl will play Beaver
Eastern today at 4:30 p.m. hi a
makeup of Saturday's game,
which was postponed because of
snow. SOuthern. 0-2, will hosi
31
Hannan Trace on Wednesday.
'f~
Uae ecore
Soutbern ......... ooo 001 0-H-0
Jactr. Cuhlr ...........
· North Gallla .. 004 000 x-H-2
(efl tl..
"'P - Statoa
LP - Qlllllen
Kyger Creek (1-1) will bOlt
North Ga!Ua on Wednelday,
t.i
&amp;114)
while Hannan Trace will travel
,
..
.
•
'""")
.....
Sa .. (159·90)
upriver 19 play Sotadlfl'l,
.C
I I
. . . llhuffiOh.IIL ••Alii
u .....

,

WlthC7Siefl'

.

,

On this date In history:
··
In 1797, Nathaniel Brlgp was awarckid a patent fpr tbe flnt
washing macbtne,.
'!(

Ing games were canceled due to
the lockout.
Umpire Eric Gregg said the
dispute Involved respect as much
as It involved money.
"We know we're not the
game,'; Gregg said. "But we are
an lmportantpartof the game. If
they .(the olf!iers) are going to
pay S4 million to some of these
players, they ought to give some
attention to the guys who call
these guys out."
At Winter Haven,_ Fla., Tim
Naehrtng hit a home run In his
first official spring training atbat and Roger Clemens pitched
three shutout Innings, leading the
Boston Red Scix to a 3·1 split·
squad victory over the Houston
Astros.
~------------------.

The Daily Sentinel
(\JSP8141-Htl
A Dlvllllen of MutUrnedla. Inc.

Published every afternocm. Monday
lhrtulh Frld~y. ~11 Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by th e Ohio Valle)' Publishing Company/ Multlmedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4~769. Ph. 992·2156. Se-

cond .class postage paid It Pomeroy.
Ohio.
Member: United Press

AdvertiSing Representative, Branham

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third
New York. New Yo~;~ 10017.

to 'nte Dally Sentinel, Ul Co.art St.,
Pomeroy, Oblo 457tl9.

•

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier er Mat• lto•k

One Week ................ .. ..... ,...........11.40

One Monlh ... .. .................. ...... ....16.10

OneYear ........................ ......... ST2.110
SINGLE COPY
PRICI!

Subscribers n,ot deslrtngtopay ft\@carrler may remit In advance direct: to ~
Th.e Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 1,2 month; :
basis. Credit will begive-ncarrtcreach
week.
No subStrlp11ons by mall
~rees

• ,. a \Ill d.._..

flwl••• '-'

, • .,. •chlnery

• 2.5.-UIIi'
tojocoool e..,..

·"

Sat•rday, •rcll
11100•.&amp;

'

. u
.........._.., ,v.
.....
if'

.

.

.

oo-

Hannan Trace ...ocr!
2-0-12
Kypr Creek ...... ~ 31-17-8- 1
WP Jobnaon (VIllanueva

,....._

......

·----

' ' II LIQ .._...

.. ro,...c-.,
.....

'~'lfl

..........
"......'
St'' i·t'
• IU-4049
liJ~7J.J477

P'c .

. ~
t\"1-·

__

., •••,.._

taw•••••• ffA &amp; YfA
.

.,_...,...._..,

'~

-------·--- --·-

~---··- ~--

....

·

.,.~

.....

f4J·~·

Americai way to gol

·- 111,.1

1

ls

Mall SubocrlplloM
lnskle Melp County
13· weeks .. ....... .. .- .............. ,...... S19.2t
26 Weeks ... ,.............................. $37.96
52 Weeks ..... ....... .... ....... .... ....... $'74.36
Oulolde Melp Caunly
'13 Weeks ..... .. , ......... .... ·... ...... .... $20.110
2£ W£&gt;l"k.S . :•• .1... . ........ ... .. ........... UQ.30
52 Weeks .................................. $'15.40 '

HARDWARE

11th .....

tn

available.

Of-Whoolom.

..... I • ,

~rmltted

·where home carrier service

,.r...I¥••&amp;1111

.,.__

~

Dally .. : ........ , ....................... ~ Cento

• 2.2·Lilw
fn;..dOueohl:uoiC.f91e ,
·~·tOod"'"'"'
• Drhor Skit AN!oag
0 t,_..t Conaslon
• 'ullcla!e 3-Sp-cl Aulroonatlc:
Pi r :fc"

PICKENS

~venue,

POSTMASTER: Send ad&lt;ftss chanJI!II

NOIOIYBSE

Tfllftllftlulon

lriternattonal.'

Inland DaUv Press Assoclatton•ndthe
Ohio NewsPaper ASsociation. NaUonar •

._......,...IrA lliLr
!ttdouaic ,_
•--AIIItOod - ..

saF

'

~:e~~~~~~~et~;
_ ~~~e~:~~;:8
Income. About 326 spring train-

I
ClmSI• WIL PAY

MOw•s

An._,..

j

'Sophomore righthander Tim
Bissell In his tlrst career varsity
start pitched six strong Innings
and collected five RBI's In
leading the Eastern Eagles to a
. one-sided 13-3 non-league victory
ave!' the always tough .Waharna
White Falcons here Tuesday
evening In ·a rea high school ·
baseball action.
· Eastern Is now 3-0 overall and
1-0 ' In the SVAC going lpto
tonight's SVAC showdown with
Oak Hill. Wahama drops toPEastern stumbled early offel)slvely and did not score In the
first, but Wahama collected two
runs In the bottom Of the frame .
Leadoff batter Bobby Ash
walked, stole second and Mike
Harbour had an RBI single. Tom
Knapp, and JohnJonnsonwalked
to load the bases, whll!! Rodney
Baumgardner hit a sacrifice fly
for a 2·0.1ead.
Wahama was still threatening
to break the game open early as·
Bissell got off to a somewhat
shakey start and again worked
the count full, then loaded the
. bases with )3rent Fields walking.

AuCtion

By United PrMa r.terlll&amp;leaal
Today Is Wednesday, March 28,
day of 1990 with 278 to
fu~~
•
.
The moon Ia waxing, moviJII
first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, MIII'I and Saturn.
•
The even tng stars are Mercury ud Jupiter.
Those born Qll this date are under the alp of Arlee. Tbe11nclude
Russian author Maxim Gorky In 18e8; bandleader Paul Wbitemailln
1891; brewers Frederick Pabst lnl83e and Augu11
Bulc:b
Jr. In l899; Edmund Muslue, tbe 1988 Denliii.Tatlc vt~"llhUal
candidate, 1!11914 (age 76); Zblgntew Brzeztnllkl, ear•r·~lalltra-tlon national security adviser, In 1928 (age 621; 8lld aC!ton Jllrk
Bogarde In 1921 (age 69) and Ken Howard In 1944 (ap~).

---

Lugo, a 27-year-old righthander, has shuttled between
Trlple 'A and the majors the last
five years, pitching for both
California and Montreal. He
signed with the T't gers as a
minor-league free agent during
the winter, foUowing a 12-4
record last year at Indianapolis,
Montreal's Triple A affiliate.
"He throws strikes," said
Anderson. "A pitcher with good
control, who b;ts as good a
fork ball as he has, Is bound to
help us. If he can't make this
team. then we have better
pitching than I first thought ."
The Tlgers .were held hitless
the first four Innings . by Rick
Mahler and Jack Armstrong, but
scored four unearned runs off
against Nell Allen In the fifth 19
offset the Reds' l~ lead. Rookie
shortstop Travis, Fryman paced
theTigers'olfensewlthatwo-run
single ln.the fifth.
Lloyd M...et~y led off the with a
single past second, base and
promptly stole secoild. Lar,r y
Sheets followed with a walk,
before Allen struck out Dave
Befgman.

TF/ahama,
13·3
W

LAWN "10WERS

the state bureaucracy to move Is
never easy, so It takes teamwork
to succeed.
·
It you liaveany questlot18 about
this project, or any other Issue ·
Involving &amp;tate government, ·
please do not betlltate to contact '
meat (61'1 466-8156,orbywrltln&amp;·.
Senator Jan Mlcbael Lon&amp;, Statebouse, Columbus; Ohio 43215.

Today in history

LAKELAND', Fla.' (UPI) - .
After finishing last with 103 '
losses In his worst season ever,
Detroit Tigers' Miuiagex; Sparky
Anderson Isn't taking anything
for granted - Including any
· exhibition games.
"I didn't want to let thlsoneget
away," he said Tuesday night,
afler the Tigers evened their
spr.ing record at · .1-~ with a, 5-1
victory over tlie Cincinnati Reds
at ·Marchant Stadium. "I'm
beginning to understand what
winning means/',
Rlghtb'lnd!i!r Urbano Lugo
might also find out what winning
means. Wlnnlng __could mean ~
spot for him In the Tigers
starting rotstlon. Lugo. who's
pitched for bolh .California and
Montreal .ln his career, gave up
one run on three hits · In five
Innings as he made a strong first
bid for a spot on the 12-nian
pitching staff that Sparky plans
to keep •t !lie end of camp.
"I don't see 12 better pitchers
arouod llere th1111 Lugo," sa'jd
Ander!IOII, "He illon't have .to
worry, unless he collapses completely from here on."

·y outh mo..Tement
· , .k eys

Cong. Clarence Miller·•

projects._~-------=By_s___;en_.J_;_an_Lo_ng-=--

One of the best parts of being
bypass. In Ross County, highway
an elected official Is particlpat·
officials have approved a 2. 7 mile
log In efforts to provide jobs and
connector, at a cost of $16.2
encourage economic -developmllllou, on State Route; 207 tram
.ment In our region.
U.S. 23 to the Township Road 127
Intersection. Work will include a
This week's announcement by
bridge over the Scioto River and
thE! Ohio Department of Transportation· that It plans to spend
a grade separation over the C&amp; 0
Railroad.
more than $83 mUllan In blebway
In Plckaway County, an 0.7
construction In our part of the
state was especially pleasln&amp;,
mile stretch of State Route' 104
since It shows how muchC!OOperawill be widened, with two bridges
tive efforts between state and · replaced, curves realigned and
local offlc:lals can pay ciff.
the Intersection with the .Slsk
The blgge~t chunk of money,
Westfall Road rebullt at a total
$58.1 mlllfon, will go to widen a
c;ost of SU mUllan.
'
1f.mlle stretch of u.s. 50 from
The ap~oval of these projects,
two lane blgbway to four lanes
when coupled with last fall's
between Atbeu and CoolvDle In
approval of the Gallla bypass on
Atblal County. Tbll project will
U.S. 35, brlnp the total appropriation over· the past year for
have an Important Impact on all
of IQUtbeutern Ohio, alllee It wlll highway construction ID southbnprow lllllll to other major ern Ohio to over $144 tnUliou.
roac1a Ill Oblo and IDteratate 771n
What's most Important aliout
nearby Wnt VIrginia.
these project~ goes beyond mere
Juat u Important 11 the decl·
brick and mortar. As was shown
•loll to apeadSUmUlton to widen following the construction of the
6.8 mllet of U.S. 35 In Jackson
Jackson bypass, the spillover
Into other areas Is great. Since
County from two to four Janes
!rom a point just IQIItb of the
the bypus was completed, two
Ron County line to tbe Jackson t Industries have expanded their

to a preseason as bedeviled • Finally, on Tuesday, the urn- because the ownen failed to
as that of 1990.
ptres agreed to relurn to work COIIllult the umpe before making
Flnt. spring training was
thla ·Friday, In exchange for changes In the spring training
delayed by a 32-day owners'
biDding arbitration with Jhe and regular season schedules
lockout. then came the.umpires' OWIIers.
, alter the lockout.
boycott of the spring training
The Major League Umpires . The union had argued that the
games.
Association called for the boycott changes would give umpires

·Enos
·v· .•tern clu.b s

he has been refused permls•lon
to leave.
t·
Arcos Is tbe first Cutian
granted u.s. retupe status who
has been refused permission Jo
leave. His father, Sebutlan
Arcos •. and -bls uncle, Gustavo .
Arcos, 11re !Ndlng buD;I&amp;JI rights
activists In Cuba and arch·
enemies of Castro.
Castro's unwUilDgnes» to let
young people leave Cuba to join
their families h... ~ompted an
angry respoMe on Capitol Hill.
Sens. Robett Dole, R-Kao .•
Nancy Kas~baum, R-Kall., 1111d .
Edward ~ennedy, !).Mass.,
wrote Castro to demand that
Alexander and the famDles of the
· men who defected with his father .
be allowed to join their loved
ones.

typical . tactics of a , desperate
Castro trying to hang on to
repressive communist Ideals
while the world changes around
him.
In 1988, Castro began letting
political-dissidents leave Cuba as
part of an attempt to Improve his
human rights record. But Cub!ln
authoritieS still make life miserable for their leading opponents.
And when the authorities can't
get to those foes, they go after the
children .
Last year, we reported on the
detention of a young man whose
lathe~ . and uncle were leading
dissidents. Sebastian Arcos Cazabon has been granted refugee
status by . the U.S. government,
imd more than once he bas peen
ready to hoard a filght to Miami
to join his mother. But each time

IIWtl

8

VPI~~;i. Writer

Pon•ov ,JII"'.,;OND
Weduully. Msd1 , 11101

'

continues despite pro

�..
Sentinel

Ohio

1990

Portland routs I .akers; Johnson .injured...
By Untied Press lnlerulloaal
Los Angeles Lakers Coach Pat
Riley would notblametheteam's
worst loss·of the season Tuesday
night because It missed Magic
Johnson, who suffered a second·
quarter Injury.
"No excuses," Riley said after
the PortlandTrailBlazersrouted
the Lakers 130-111 In Portland,
Ore. Jojmson sprained hls right
ankle at 6: ~0 of the second
quarter and did not return. "We
were flat and they weren't.
"Yes, we lost Magic ln the
second . quarter, but that's a
convenient excuse."
KevlnDuckworthplayedoneof
hls,· bftter ga,mes of the season,
hitting 10 of 12 shots for 22 poJnts
to lead Portland.
It was Portland' s largest margin of victory over the Lakers
\ shtce a 141-121 triumph Dec. 25,
1983.
The victory moved Portland,
• • 50-20, within 2 ga,mes of, the
Lakers In the Pacific Division.
Los Angeles dropped to 51-17.
(
The victory also marked only
. the third time In their 20-year

'•

"::::::;.--"'

:FIGHT FOR BALL - Neither Dallas ~&amp;\'erick Derek Harper
(right) nor Golden State's MUch Richmond can qulie come to grips
wtlh this lo.ose ball during flrsf.perlod action In Tuesday night's
NBA giune In Dallas. (UPI)
,.

drew last week, as well.
The withdrawals, however,
made room for Martin, a 19-yearold sophomore at Northwestern
University, who was given a
wild-card berth Into the tourna.
ment after McEnroe pulled out.
Martin, · the nation's topranked collegiate player with a
35-2 record, · had trouble with
Wilkison's consistency early, but
overcame the southpaw down the
stretch.
"Obviously I'm excited," said
Martin, last year's Big Ten
Freshman of the Year. "! had
nothing to lose. I just wanted to
play well."
Martin came out confident, .
· golngupa breakat2-llntheflrst.
However, Wilkison retaliated
with a break to make It 2·2.
Wilkison brok~ again to take a 5-4
lead and then closed out the firs!
set with a wide, sweeping serve
that Martin returned long.

Scoreboard ...
NATIOSt\L HOCKEY Li::t\G\JE .

'Results

TueiMI ._y RCK 1•111.:

Bufi!Alo ti, Dl&gt;tmilll
C~tlpry

EXHIBITION fiiCOKES
Kanllllillll1 6, Toronilo 3
Baltimore :1. Atanw .t
Bottoa 3, Hou.ton 1

Nffl'· ,lenr)' .J. ft' uhi~Wton 1
BGt~ltm 3, st. Loulll 0
Edlriolllun -1, \1 uco•w.r I
\\"lnlllpea-1. Lu .\1'1~~ -1. tte

Phllad"plll.w. t, lloKIDn ':'
(.. lear• IALJ ii, K4,. lo .."' 3
Mla~e~~ota 3, Houlllon '%
, Mortno_, t. l..oa i\lt~e. 1
• fallforlllla II, San lN t'AO i

w..... .,. Gamf'·
Nl' h•adi!F!Ial To,..o, '::S$ p.m.
T"•.-c!10'• Oamn
Harlfoftl • Boalon. • •
Mlnnt•ota at lluftaJo, alpt
Mo•ft'&amp;l at Cl••hH. nl•

SeaUifo -I, &lt;.1t"Vt'lud 3

• Mllwu.u IPI"I. Chlcqo CSLJ 3

·
)\'\' Raairrt~at s - .#t&lt;r!IQ", alpt
" '.,.l.._toa at r.Uadelphia. nllhl

' Oakland If, San Franrhlf·o 3
' TPXIWI ;$, Plll!lbuf"lh I
: Srw l'or k ( NL) II, Set~~.· \ 'orl (NLIII
OPt rvlt S, Onrlnnatll

:
, Allanla

w·r~.v Gamrtr.
u. Lo&amp; All plftl,

Ptt...,.rwhat !!W.. Loul,, alpt
Toi'Ofllo • OklliO. alafll

~ \-'r-ro

Wl•pe•• Lo• All"""'· nil(ht
M"IOIIINDOOR SOCCER LEAGUE

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

llelk•h, Fla., 1'! ~ 35 p.m.
DdroN "'·St. Louhl, u st. Pf'terUr.:.

Fla.,I :Hp.m. .
a.a•oa n . Clnt"la•U. al Plant Cll)',
flL, I: f3 p.m.
New ·York I ALl""· MoMrul, at ll'e.t

Palm llucl!. Pla. . 1:115 p.m.
New \'ort (NL) ' '!1, Balclmo,.., at

Ml.,.l,l i iJp.m •.

• • Mlnni!IDLI "~- BoMon,at -..;·taW!f'Ha\'l:'n .
Fla., 1 : 11~ p.m.
.. O.ll·••• IALJ v11. PtuM,..h. .11.1
pradellloa, Fla. , I :OS p.m.
••.,.. . Ctty n . Ten•. at Port
Charlot&amp;r. Fla. , I: Up.m .
Sl!alllto n . Sa~~~ F'rancl~~oeo, at
ScoUIJdal4'. Artr. .• 2:11p.m.
, Caltfon1lil ""· !!lu 01 .. ~. at l'unll.t.,
.\rlz .. l :IJ p.m .
• CleuiiM u . Chlca•o I SL ), :\lt'N ,
Ark., J : U p.m;
MI.._Wr n. ·oaldu4l. ILl Ph~W&lt;nl11. ,
:t:IJ p.m .
,........ Vt. Phlla~pWa. M Oear•
w.uft', Pia.. 7:a,.....
• NA.ftONA.L &amp;MIIETULL MIIJilC'.
....... IteM ...
t s~ l 'ork lit. Wlllllllftll:onJtt
r . . . .,. Ill, lo!Jion H
·
l OaiU. 1111, Golh Stale Ill
• Mllwau•e JU. hoNk 1n
l 8afl ADt-. I IJ. Se ..llt liS

• Portl... Ia, LA Ld. . Ill
•
1h.-1fGarna

le~~&amp;o• II Plll.. oilel... a. 7J :It p.m .

, Ol .....tr • DI!INI. 1: •

-1, S\' ManOn-" t

Harcfonl3, Pltlllhllrwh 3, OT
N\' Ranpr11 7. Q.ebfot- -1

1WIWIQ Rl'll ..hl

•.m.

DaUu 3, " 'h:Nia I

.... .... .,c...

·

·

San Dlep: at a . . . . CHJ, I:JS p.m.

Tt.rMI.,Gamr

T.coma ~ o.l~ •lpt
Wea.Hdar Sptna Caleatlu

....... .

'

Fe.ulri-welallh
~anl'IIMWI", Elalf.. d- Paulliodktau . Stn• McCrer)

*'"

,,.,. tlk•ll•r

HoullllOII -

Chkqo - tMI.... \'oho T•••
fhic~tA"O tournamfttl

Houllloa- VII'Jh.. SUms of Holtlloa

CII!'Vf'IMIMI -

-PlaeH

i\11••• .. walwra.
c.....
•ner -

N•mttl lob

fHIItlll ce•eh.

....... .......
........ 111!....
....,..,._
Nt.U -

Pl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

•••Jt•,...••
,................
.

om..Ua ,,...,._

..........__. . .
........

· I=:1!-li~

"""'

111--·--·--

........ 0if"".....

..

.

ClokiP - II .... Plu S -

Clok. . . .

~

IIM"IDiomeo

•ldllletiNet•DHUiiiJ.

,...,........... J

,u...,....ftw«
• ucw.-..
11:• p.m .
.......
.. a....... .....

"-d)'

Cret ..... - All ....e...........

.,....

. t

"*'....

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI
11 PIECE SHRIMP

S1.44
. Will PIIIS-.."11,09

On. .... - ............ " "

-

eN~~rOHraev. ..-.,....

.

..::li.::=-....
•·.........
~:
_,..
lkna. . . . .

.. (......... .

Lt. . . tr .... )-N-oiiWIMMicaels

r...,

T-.. ..,-~ ...- . .....

-

w..- .......
lleldt-...

11

... ""'

Johnson scored a career-hlgb 44
points for Phoenix, which failed
for the second straight night to
clinch . a playoff spot In the
Western Conference.
Spura 115, SuperSonlcll103
At San Antonio, Terry Cummings scored 31 points to lead ·
San Antonio,. which ·cllilched a
playoff berth for the first time In
two ·years. The Spurs had six
players score. In double fl1111res. ,.
David Robinson and Willie Anderson added 22 points each for
San Antonio.
·

·What's
inflation
done to your
life Insurance?

ADOLPH'S DillY YILUY
"It tile Waf tile Pa•aray-P 11 MCeu"
POIIIIOY, OMO
Pl. "2·2556

..

are,

Chances
n·a lllt'aad , .
Prfltly thin. Now you can
bui.ld up your protection
with hlgh-timk
permanent Insurance ..•
wHh growing cash , .
values ... attntte more
than the cost of term
insurance!

.

'

.,

302 Wnt .2nd Str•t .
POMEROY, 011. 45769
Ph. 6 I 4-99~·5479
••

a1fl1 NATIONWID~

~L~~~!!C.!

NATIONWI~ Uf"E _,IURAHCE COMftMY
HII'NI Ollica: CofwtR•wa. ()No
,

Continued fl'om pap 1

Free cl.lnlc Friday
A free blood pressure clinic
will be held Friday, March 30.
from 10a.m. to3p.m.,atRiteAid
Pharll\acy In Pomeroy. The
public IS welcome.
AUXIliary meets
The Racine Firemen Ladles
Auxlllary recently held tbelr
regular March meeting at the
fire department annex . The
meeting opened with the Pl\!(lge
to the Flag and prayer.
Eleven auxiliary members attended the meeting. Unable to
attend because ot Illness were

VeterBJII.
Tbe Salem Townablp Fire Department was called to Route 124 ·
f9r an on IPIII at 10: 59 a .m .
At 1:59 p.m: the Racine Fire Department and the Syracuse
Fire Dzpartment were Called to Route 3381n Letart for a bruah
fire.
At 6: .S p,m. the Middleport uult was clllled to Page Street for
Kenneth Hartley who was transported from Qverbrook Center
tQ Veterans.

Sta.te w;ll
•

II&lt;

Continued from page 1

• ~ ·~__;____:_.:;,..._;._

purchase p~lce.
Plans for Improvements to the
lnteraectlon call for a two-lane
system with turn lanes, In order
to provide easier traffic movement. For example, If a motorist
Is tr•vellng frcim Pomeroy to
Racine and the traffic ll&amp;ht Is

__;__.,.....

green, the motorial would be able
to drive straight through ancl not
!lave to stop for the motorist
waldng to mtke a left turn
toward Athens. Both 124 and 33
Will be Widened to facilitate the
turn lanes, Hedrick said.

•

'.
J

'

'

.,.. '

Emma Lyons and Kay Holman.
The auxiliary Will be takluli
donatlous on an Easter hasket to
be given away shortly befort! !be
hoUday. The basket 18 on display
at the Home National Bank In
Racine.

Cemetery cleaning

"
~

The Olive Township Tr11stees
will begin cleaning up the ceme- ·
terles of that area and are
requesdng that families remove
all grave decorations by March

•.

..

31.

--------Weather------

Soutb Cealral Ohio
Extended Forecast
Rain ,developing Wednesday .
Friday tbrourb Suaclay
night, with a low between 4o and
A chance of rain each day.
Contlnuecl'from page 1
45. Chance of rain Is 90 percent.
Hlibs will be mostly in the 50s or
Occasional rain and a chance of
the lower 60s, with overnight
trlct~, Implemented ' 10-year rental fee coUld · reflect the thunderdorms Thursday, with lows ranging from the mid 30s to
management plans vowt~g to property tax paymeut.
the mid 40s., .
., htihs near 60. Chance ot rain Is~
Another tiugges Uon was to
reduce solid waste, and then·
percent.
began bulldlilg transfer stations tteat mandatory piCk up as a
and trucking the state's solid .public utHity With every howaste · to otber areas of the meowner and renter being recountry, Including southeastern quired to_pay for the service. ·
Ohio, he said.
·
All viable suggesdons from the
· Depuues· of the Meigs Couuty , . Road area. Deputies contacted
Graves stressed that he did not public are to be given consideraSheriff's
Department took a ' that ownerwhowas.toconflnethe
support sucb actions, but was tion by SCS Engineers as t)ley
report
from
Gerald YoiUig, ·Bur·
horse.
merely tcylitg to make a point.
prepare the draft ofthe dis trlct' s
llngbam, that his vehicle, wblch
Finally, on Saturday deputies
Another suggesUon made at 10-year management plan. The
had beell parked at the northtook a report from Rhonda
the meeting was to "mandate draft Is to be completed around
bound road side rest on Route 33,
Milliron, Reedsville, that on
rural bo!lsehold trash pick up" May 24.
Wednesday she noticed that she ·.
had had the·driver's door giass
'throughqut the six ~unties of the
Before closing the public meet·
broken,
fte
also
reported
that
a
was having trouble getting her
district. ·
lng, Neal urged local residents to
pair of binoculars had been
trailer door to latch. Upon
"But )low do you finance continue to share suggestions
stolen.
'.
Investigation, she discovered
ml!ndatory pickup?" asked Gal- · with the district's committee
On Moiiclay, depudes returned . tbal the ·door jamb . had been
lla County Comrnts.loner Dale members as the 10-year!l'lallageJames Sellers, Tommy Quillen,
busted. Thereportwenton to say
Neal.
'
ment Pii!D for thediS1rlcHs being
that .It appeared that the door
and David Dillard from state
A pJ'OIIerty tax was. suggested developed.
..
penal lnsdtutlons to the Meigs
jamb had been damaged preas one tuncllng poqlbllty, with It
"We want your Input now,"
County Jail lor shock probation
vlously and · that apparently
bi!lng pointed out that If It were a
Neal said. "If an Idea Is worka·
hearings In the Meigs County
someone had pushed against the
rental property, the owner's · ble, It Will be In the plan."
Court of Common Pleas. The
door causing the jamb to come
·'
'
three had been sentenced to the
loose.Mrs.Mllllronreportedthat
state lnsdtutions on separate · she was gone Tuesday evening
unrelated drug charges. The
when she believed the attempted
three
are
currently
lodged
In
the
entry
occurred .
RecdsWle; sister. Elizabeth.O'Dell
Franklin Kidwell, Jr. ·
--"----.,--county
jail.
F11111klin C. Kidwell Sr., 80; of o[ Chicago; 10 paruk:hildren, four
Coacb potatoes
· Reedsville, OH, formerly of the step- gllllldc:hildnln; two great· , . On Sunday, the department ·
grandchildren
and
11
stepgreattook
a
report
from
Dayton
·
Robertsburg na died.'Mitch 27 ~
Spencer,
Long
Bottom,
In
which
·
Children
who
watch
too much telegnindcblld.
·
.
.
C~U- Hmllington Hosital follow·
he
stated
that
his
camper
trailer
vision
can
become
"couch
potatoes"
.
Services
will
be
Friday
ar·
2
p.m.
ing a short illness.
.
several
times.
He
obese.
boring
and
dense
accordhad
been
shot
BOrn on January 10, 1910, he at the RaYnes Funeral Home in
that
he
did
not
know
when
ing
to
a
1989
public
service
TV an·
stated
was. the son of the late Edpr and ·· Buffalo with the Rev. Charles
noUIICC!ment
by
the
American
PediatNancy Kidwell. He WIS, I llla!l~ Whaley oflicllling. Burlai will fol• the Incident occurred.
ric Academy. The state of Maine,
Everett Schuler, Rutland, has
where tbe potato is the larii!St cash
of the FuU Gospel Chtin:b uid was low .a t Oldaker Cemewy, Buffalo.
Friends may call at the funml reported tothedepartmentthata · crop objected to the term "couch poa~farmer.
· ·
,
1980 Kawasaki · trail bike had • tato. ~ 11 sent a llght·hearted "a-peel"
He is preceded in dealb by bis borne Thlftday evening from S-9.
wife Josephine M. Whoeler· Kid·
been
taken were
from called
hls yard.
Deputies
Saturday
,.toto~tb:e:_:ac:a:de:m:r~---.:_-------------------------~wellonJuly24,1980.
evening
to
Investigate
a
hit
skip
Sumvors include sons, Jolin C.
accident ai )larrlsonvllle around
• Conlin~ ~OR\ .Paae 1
Jr. of Leon iDjl EdiW W. Qf
,&amp;:
Reeds\'il!e; daughters, Eva· SaxiOII teacher for the r1989-90 schpol · 40 · p.m. According to the
report, a small br9wn truck ran
of VJeJ~U~~ ' 8lldc LoiDe LIWIIIII of year. She Is certified In 7 through
·off
the r:oad and Into the yard of
12 bUsiness education. Shirley
the
Kim Taylor residence where
McDonald was hlrejl to do some
It
struck
a tree. The truck backed
tutoring. Approved was a correcout
and
drove
aw.ay.
. tlon on a d~k day for Karen
Dally slock prlces·
Don
Cottrell,
Syracuse, reStanley.
(As oi10:30 ·Lm.)
ported·
to
the
department
on
Attending the meeting wet'e
Bryce aacl Mark Smltb
Saturday
that
he
discovered,
Supt. Carpenter, Treasurer Jane
of Blunt, Ellis .. Loewl
during the night, that someone ·
Fry, and board members, Robert
had thrc:iwn t~&gt;&lt;o beer bottles at his
Am Electric Power ... ~ ......... 30~ Barton, Richard Vaughan, Ro·
truck. He stated that the rear
AT&amp;T ................................ .4218 bert Snowden, and Larry Rupe.
glass
· and windshield were
The board went Into execu dve
Ashland Oil ..... ............. ..... .37')8
·broken.
session following the meeting to
Bob Evans .... , ...................... 13
Brian Winner, Sand Ridge
Charming Sboppes ............. :. 9¥, discuss personnel arid pending
Road,
Albany. reported that
litigation.
City Holding Co ........ ........ .. . 13
sometime du!ing the early hours ·
"
. : ... 171L
Federal Mogul. ...............
11
of Saturday, his vehicle had been
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 37'
entered and some Items were,
Heck's ................. :........ .... :.. JJ,.t
taken.
Key Centurion ................... .14¥,
'In the Meigs County Court of
Depudes , took .a complaint
Lands' End ......... :................ 19
Common Pleas, the following are · Saturday regarding a horse that
Umlted IDe ......... .'............. .41~
seeking divorces, Pauletta was running loose In the Success
Multimedia iiic . .................. 80~
Smith, Portlilnd, from Car I S.
Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
Smith, Silver City, N.C.; Rita.
Robbins &amp; Myers .:.............. 15%
Jane Celli, Pomeroy, from Ml·
Shoney's Inc...... .. ...... ......... 12~
chael A. Celli, Athens; and
Star Bank ........ .. ................. 19Y,
Veierans Memorial
Mitchell T. Sable, Racine, from
Wendy's Int'l ......................... 5
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
Juanita M. Bable, Racine.
Worthington Ind .... .............. 21%
Wl!llam · R. Osborne, Reeds'' Flora Bailey, Middleport; MevlllS, and Kathy D: Osborne, linda Hayp~an, Long Bottom.,
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Long Bottom, are seeking ·a
None.
dtswludon.
'In •the Meigs County Court ot
Common Pleas, ' Citizens National Balik, f&gt;Otnt Pleas.ant,
W.Va., Is seeking S5,281!.d9 from
Richard L. Connolly, Pomeroy,
and Belinda Connolly, Pomeroy.

Optional...

·,
..

Vandalism probed by sheriff

.•,

........
* ""; '

-

__......
~

'·

--Area deaths-·- -

1

Stocks

'

'

.. .
'

.,

'

.

...

..-...,
...,.

'

' •. :

; ' I

••

Seeks
divorce ·
.
.

....,

•

H08pital news

Judsment sought

\

'

II

.

:

•

'

lsauee ruling

"

.

'

..
'

.

S2.
3
.!,~
·
S27!,~
S35!c~L
AfTEI

$4.00 RElATE AFTD 14.00 RElATE AFTEI 14.00 IDATE
Price klc!Udee:

.
• Mopar/CharnpioQ spark plugs
•lnlpect ernlsalon CorTlPOI'lenll •
ti11W1g o Adjust 'Ieite speed
(Greater than 2·BBL Carb Ond std Ignition slightly higher)

set

P
~THILL Chrysler-Plymouth-~
399 s. 3nf
Middlepcltt, &amp;..
"2-6421

news briefs·~·""'"''i.....--..,,

a

JEFF WAINER INSURANCE

ENGI.NE
MAINTENANCE
TUNE-UP

.

--~l

6

ClassrQOm ...

See your Nationwide
agent right away . . .
no llallal' lime to
.
""

Bonner graps NIT limelight

Teams

,t:.,....
Newo Yort• N•l•.,, 7:•p.m.

n--..,.-.t,.m.
..

By United Press International
Some of the best moves the
New York Rangers made this
season were the ones completed
off the Ice. Those offseason
acquisitions - the hiring · Of
general manager Nell Smith and
coach Rog~r Neilson - proved
pivotal . in helping thE' Rangers
achieve their first regularseason title In 48 years.
The combination assembled
the first Ranger team to wtn a
division crown since 1942, when
New York was champion of a
six-team league.
"We were just hoping to make
the playoffs this year," Neilson
said after the Rangers ralUed to
defeat the Quebec Nol'lilques 7-4
Tuesday, clinching their first
Patrick Division title. "Around
Christmas everyone lri the divIsion. felt they could win the
division. A~ one point we were In
last place but we got hot at the
right time. It's a great feeling to
.
finally clinch It."
Mike Gartner scored the goahead goal and Paul· Broten
capped a five-goal, third period
rally for New York. The Rangers
entered Tue~day's play needing
a victory ove~ Quebec or a loss by
New Jersey to secure the division
title. The. Devils beat the Washington Capitals 4-1.
· ''Quebec played a pretty
strong game for two periods and
It seemed we were oout of It,"
Neilson said. ''The players saw
the New Jersey Devils score and
knew they had to do It
themselves.
.
"We ca111e out with a big third
period and It's a great way to win

socked Seattle 115-103.
bleb 111, Btdlllh1N
At New York, Patrick Ewing
scored n points, lllcludlnl tbe·
fb'sl :!-pointer of hiS career, to
help New York snap a slx·game
losing streak. The Knlcks, ahead
50-41 at halftlme, expanded their
lead to85-68after three quarters.
Bernard K1ng scored 23 polntlfor
Washington.
·
Pacers 101, CelUmN
At IndlanapoUs, Reate Miller
scored · 22 points, . Detlef
Schremp! added 21 off the bench
and Indiana recorded tts fourthstraight victory. · Boston had
ltsflve-game Winning .streak
snapped~ Kevin ·McHale scored •
32 points and ptilled down 11
rebounds for the Celtlcs.
Ma\'erlelra 118, Wanton 188
At Dallas, Sam Perkins and
Blll Wennlngtoacombllledfor20
points In the fourth 1 q\iarter
helping power Dallas to Its fifth
straight victory. The· Warriors
~ere led by Mitch Rjchmond
with 32 points.
•..
,
· Bucka 133, S•Di112'7
At Milwaukee, Ricky Pierce
scored 30 points and Paul Pres-

~.sad~;: ~~.w!~~:qU:!:~

·

1

U .S. NaiiCI_. P"'ct.ten

......... Or .....

.,..,... ............. ,:.p.m.

· ·
• 1:"
l
RangerS
wtn J trst regu ar season
NHL
• h tn
• tn
• 4B years
·
' champtons
?"

Champfolllhl,.

TIIPIMI ... lp.-t11 Tnll•cfle&gt;•
By Ualled PrtU lllft'-.&amp;11 . .

tory ever. over Loa Anples. In
their cbamplonshlp year of 197677, the Blazers beat Los Anples
145-116. But the Laker beacb kept
the Joas trom being wone tban It
could have been.
"That feels a lot better than the
other night . (wben the Blaiers
los no Minnesota 11(!-105) ," Por·
tland Coach Rick Adelman said.
'We came out With a real
purpose.
"It was a tremendous effort on
our part. Tonight we jumped on It
and good teams. do that. Los ·
Angeles Is a very good team. But .
we were hitting on all cylinders.
It was a game we just !lad to
have."
The two teams meet again
Friday In Los Angeles and then
on the (lnal dliy of the season In
Portland.
ByronScottledtheLakerswlth
24.
·
Elsewhere In the NBA, New
York routed Washington 119-100,
Indiana downed Boston 101-96,
Dallas defeated Golden State
118-108, Mllwuakee stopped Phoenlx 133-127 and San Antonio

Ogrodnlck and Broten. Kelly Norris Division. Buffalo Is three
klslo collected three assists In the points ahead of Montreal In the
period for New York.
battle for second place In the
Ranger goalie Mike Richter, Adams Division.
who stopped 27 shots, spoke of the
Flames 4, Islanders 2
significance of the away·vlciory.
At Unlondale,N.Y., the Island·
''It's a very important day for . ers still kept alive their slim
· us," he said' "Sometimes when · chance of making the playoffs by
you win It on. the road ll has a virtue of Pittsburgh's tie. The
little Irony to It because we feel Flames have already cllnche~
we are a good road team an~ It's their third straight Smythe Div·
our way of sending our best Ision Utle.
wishes to everybody who's there
PenJU!as 3, Whalen 3
and everybody who cares about
At Pittsburgh, Adam Burt and
us."
Yvon Corriveau scored in a 2:01
"It-'s a big day forthe organlza- span of the third period for
lion'' Klslo said. ·'There are a lot Hartford. l'he Ue stopped a
of young gu~ on the team' who four-game Hartford Winning '
will be here for a long lime and streak and , extended Pitts•
hopefully they'll have a great burgh's Winless skein to six
organliatlon for a long time."
games· (0-3-3). With two games
Quebec's lone All-Star, sopho- remaining, l:'Jttsburgh has yet to
more Joe Saklc, ~cored twice arid clinch a Patrick Division playoff
collected an assist. bringing his spot.
point total to 98 for the league's
Devils 4, Capitals I
last-place team.
,
At East Rutherford, N.J. , Kirk
"It's a tough way to lose a Muller aud Dave Maley scored 72
game,'! Saklc· said. "We played sei-'Onds apart In the. first period __
two good periods and then came and Sean Burke made 2G saves to
up flat in the iblrd. The Rar\gers lead New Jersey. The victory
cameoutstrongtnthethlrd.lfwe · ensured the Devils of fllllshlng no
would have played like the first
worse than third In the Patrick
two ilerlods, we would ,bave Division, the club's hlghestflnlah .
won.''
In history, Th~ Capitals lost an
. Elsewhere In the NHL, Buffalo opportunity to pull Within one
boUI\Ced Det~olt · 6-5, Calgary point of the second-place Devils.
clipped the New York Islanders
Bruins S, Blues 0
4-2, Hartford lied Pittsburgh 3-3,
At · St. Louis, · John Cartel'
New Jersey whipped Washington scored a goal and assisted on
4-1, Boston beat St. Louis 3;0, . another and goalie Reggie LeEdmonton tripped Vancouver 4-1
melin stopped 33 shots for Bosand Winnipeg and Los Angeles
ton. It was the sixth consecutive
lied 4-4.
defeat for he Blues, who reSabres 6, Red WIDp 5
mained tl!ree points behind the
At Detroit, Davp Andreychuk
Norris Division-leading Chicago
scored three first-period goals to
Blackhawks.
1
a pennant. '
lead Buffalo and eliminate DeOilers 4, Canuck&amp; 1
Trailing 4-2 entering the final troit from the Stanley Cup
At Vancouver, British Colum·
peilod, the R~ngers received playoff race. Detroit Is five
bla, Mark Messler scored )lis 45th
goals from Jamees Patrick, points behind the fourth-place
goal of the season arid goalie Bill
Brian Mullen, Gartner, John Minnesota North Stars In the
Ranford stopped 31 shots to help
Edmonton clinch second p!llce In
the Smythe Division. .
•
Jets f, Klnp 4, tie
At Iuglewood, Calif., Tomas
Sandstrom fired In a 15-foot
N~W YORK (UPI) - ·Anthony
rebound shot with 3:02 remaining
So the spotlight at Mafllson
Bonner, a senior leading the Square Garden has focused and
ln the third period to cap a
nation In rebounding, brushes with Bonner down to one game,
four-goal outburst In the last
aside the disappointment of three letters cropping up more
period for Los Angeles.
never playing In the NCAA
than NIT are NBA.
Tournament and claims he would
"I can't gauge whether a kid
do the same If an NBA career can play for St: I,ouls," Grawer
never materializes.
joked when askedabouthlsstar's
He says playing In the National
potential. "Some .of my recruitInvitation Tournament "Is my
Ing has certainly been questioned
version of the NCAA'' and Indeed
but Anthony has b~D lbvlted to
has been to the NIT In three of his
the Or lando Classic so some NBA
four years at St. Louis
people certainly coilsldet him In
. University. ·
the Top 40."
1
. Wednesday night, against VanNBA scouts have projected
derbilt , the Bllllkens return to the
Bonner being drafted In the mid
NIT final, which they lost last
to late first round, with potential
year to.St. John's. The game Will
to rise higher. Vanderbilt Coach
mark the last collegiate appearEddie Fogler, after watching
ance by Bonner, w~o averaged
tapes and the Bllllkens' setnlflnal
19.7 points and 13.7 rebounds per
Victory over New Mexico, said
game for St. Louis, 21-11.
"t~ere Is no doubt In my mind he
Vanderbilt, 20-14, IS no-name
can play In the NBA.':. ,
but balanced squad that !lt. Louis
Bonner, ·however, claims no
Coach Rich Grawer admits
such expe~tattons.
would: have the edge on the
"There've beeu~ a lot l!f playBilliken's "'If we didn't have
ers, really better than I am1 who
Bonner."
were never ~~~~.~· he said,

Wilkinson upset in Volvo play
CHICAGO IUPil -Todd Mar- .
tin further depleted a weak field
Tuesday night, defeating 'rim
Wilkison 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 In the
$500,000 Volvo TennisChlcago. .
The 24-man field; which origl·
nally boasted five top-10 players,
has . been .decimated by
withdrawals.
Sixth-ranked John McEnroe
pulled out last Friday, leaving
the world's No. 1 player, Ivan
Lendl, the defending champ, as
the lop at traction. McEnroe cited
back and shoulder Injuries forhls
third withdraWal In the past
month.
Brad Gilbert also removed
himself from the Chicago draw
when he was asked to replace
Andre Agassi on the U.S. Davis
Cup team for this week's competition against Czechoslovakia.
Two-time Wimbledon winner Jo-·
han Krlek and Jakob Hlasek,
Switzerland's top player, with-

history that the Blazers h11ve won
at least SO games.
•
Johnson left the game •In the
second quarter With Portland
ahead 51·39.
Lakers trainer Gary Vlttl said
Johnson suffered .a moderate
sprain and could miss a couple of
games. Initially Lakers officials
said the Injury I!'as only a mUd
sprain, and at halftime, they
even speculated that. he might
return to the game.
"It was really dlsappolntlng,"
Johnson said. "It was a blgweek
- a real pivotal time In the
season. I thought this was ,golng
to be my lnjury-freeyear . .Butlt
could have been worse. If I can
{Un a little and Gary can put me
back together, I will play."
Johnson finished the game
With eight points and ~even •
assists.
Portiand broke the game Wide
open early In the third period
with a 22-8 run that gave the
Blazers th!'lr biggest lead at
94-69.
1
Before 1\. was over, Portland
nearly ear~ their biggest vic-

..'...••
- - - Mei8s announcemenll---- •.

to•t••· IIIII)', Mlrdi 21, 1110

•

•

.

,,
•

.

·••~t'etwrRf11J
. . . . . . . , _ . . b.U &amp;eltll

'•
NOI

In the Meigs County Court of
Common Please, judgment has
been entered In favor of the
Cenlgal Trust Company of Sou·
theastern Ohio, N.A. against
Matthew V. VanVranken and
Lori L. VanVranketlln a foreclosure action In the amount of
$18,751.54.'
.
The Ohio· University. Employees Credli ·Union, Inc ..
Athena, IW · been awarded
$1,065.22 tram Paul Aikman, et
al, on an unpaid balance of
$10,453.33 for Nal estate. II has
been tuHber Ol'deied that the
real estate be 10111 to Nlllfy the
liens.
·
In other court matters, the
Chrysler Credit CoJ110ntlon has
beeP . awatde\1 St,618.10 from
u ·ncta PowelL
·

Can~ioA
Jan WUI1tms, Racine, wbowas
.eleCted as the alter111te to
Buckeye Glrll State by the
·RIIclne American LeJIOn Auxll·
tary Unit 602, ts 'the dau1hter of
Mildred and Fraeman Wlll!llllll-

ESTABLISHED 1895 ..,

•
l

GOSPEL CONCERT

•

•

"Youth United For
Christ"
SUNDAY, APR.IL 1, 1990
Paint Creek Baptist
-Church

••
•
•

•

•

833 3rd 'Ave., Galli~lis, OH.
GONCERT ........ 3:30 p.m.
Dltffl'BB, ........... 5:00·p.m .

Ad~ks •to - Famiiy '25
AU ·Proceeds Go To The Restoration
of The Ariel Theater.

Tieken tvli!tWe at Brunicardi's or Peddler's ·
Pantry .or call
'Ariel office at 4't6-ARTS .

•

h

-.

'j

Ofllceeloeed
11 has been reported that the

018110 The F.,..,_ Banlt. All rtghll NIIMCI,

~dCitP ,.,,

lltOJ t; Tu Oftlee
. will~ elllltd Friday.

'

'

"

.

•
.''
•

llanlllr F.D.lC. • - •

~ .

�Wulr I ~a;. Meidl 28, 1.910

Pagn I

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

People in the news...

Wectle1dey, M.d\ 28, 1990

Middl8port, Ohio

Glenn·hopes to delay action on acid rain bill next week
WASHINGTON (UPil - Sen.
Jolui Glenn Is hoping to aelay
action on the acid rain portion of
a clean air bill that Is expected to
oo voted on by the Senate next
week.
Glenn, D-Ohio, made a 50minute speech on the Senate floor
Tuesday, saying preliminary results of a 10-year study on acta
rain shows no environmental
lustiflcatlon for an · annual 10
mUIIon-ton reduction In sulfur
aloxlde emissions by the year

2000.

He said similar environmental
results might oo accompUshed,
with less cost. by an 8 mUllan-ton
reduction and a compllancP datP
of 2005.
.
He said lower standards and a

longer compliance schedule
would not bP as costly lor states
such as Ohio, which is the leading
producer of sulfur dioxide from
burning coal.
The senator admitted his re'questfor a delay was coming late
in the legislative process, and he
made no procedural motion lor
such action, saying he was sure it

BIG BEND•••

CLEVELAND &lt;UPI) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
077.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
S1,180,J69.50, with a payoff due of
$534.868.00.
PICK-4 .

8475.
PICK-4 ticket sales total~
$241,920.00, with a payoff due of
$88,400.00.

•

---·------ --

or other materials. and laying
three to lour Inches of mulch over
the ba:se. Snow should be knocked
off the branches to prevE&gt;nthoverload breakage, but remembl'r to
start with the lower levels of the
tree and move up to avoid the
weight or accumulated aropped
snow. Many people forget that
bushes and trees pl;mted under
downspouts dr leaky eaves are
subject to water drips that turn
Into Ice buildup during a normal
winter. Evergeens should be
checked soon for spiny brown
cocoon-like bagworm cases, In
·which case they should bP cut off
and burned to prevent Infestation
of the tree. ·
,
AprU 8·14 will observed as
National Garden Week. with
members of the club planning to
Pa~ticlpate by staging a clean up.
plant up, fix up campaign in
town. Meml)ers are working on
procuring litter bags, seeds, and

'

·10 YEARS .OF SAYINGS! 1980-1990 .·:
OHIO VALLEY FOODLAND'S
' '
.

ODLA

311)

· . .

WElle

'.

ffil I

·PURE CANE

. I·

!·

DOMINO SUG'AR
5 LB.

BAG

•1s9 I
. · Good thr,u 3/31/10

Oonit I '" Family With C - &amp; Atlditlonal Purchase

Carnie! News ·

ville, Ky.
Pastor Coleman spent part of
his childhood in Middleport. He · Rev. a.nd Mrs. Richard Young
has several family members still anddaughfer. Elisha, and grandIn the area.
son. from Sidney, visited Mrs.
Pastor Coleman will also be . Mary Roush over the weekend .
cOnducting special Sunday .
Linda Patterson and Florence
school classes at 10 a.m. each Circle visited wiih Mr. and Mrs.
· Sunday morning. The class is Henry Hill, Letart. to see Mr. and
designed for those without pre· Mrs , Terry Patterson and son,
·vlous church education. II will bP from Orville. •
conducted entirely on a lecture
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnitz,
bats without class membl'r . Pomeroy, were visitors at' the
response.
home of.E11nie Brinker on friday •
The services are open to. all · morning.
area residents. The .services are
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Newbeing held , in· &lt;;onjunC;tion with man, Gallon, visited Mr. and
"Here's Hope" simultaneous , Mrs: ·Robl'rt uie· recenti~.
revjvals with the ,Southern Bap1
tist churches nationwide.
·

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

FOOOLA.NO VALl :ABLE COUl'QN

.4PPLY AT STORE

other related items for distribu- had the jiadents making dried
tion to residents. A poSter contest flower arran1ements In small
sponsored in conjunction With macrame bead containE&gt;r s.
National Garden Week for chlld- Working with the patients w.erc
ren ages five td 10, dealing with Kimberly Willford and Mrs.
the theme, "Plants Grow Child· Bolin.
Membl'rs also discussed par ren - the Leaaders or Tomor·
roll(." The deadline Is May 15 and ticipation In a.Jolnt flower show
the size Is to be eight and one hall wi1h the other two Rutland
garden clubs with a tentative
by 11 Inches long.
date
of Sept. 8-9 set . .
Arbor Day was noted as the
Other
membl'rs attending
last Friday In April with Suzy
were
Judy
Snowden, Margaret
Carpenter planning an obser·
Edwards,
Lorrl
Barnes, Marjovance In conjunction with students at Pomeroy Elementary. rie Davis, and guest, Cassady
Other schools are encouraged to Willford.
The Wednesday meeting ·will ,
part.lcipate and Mrs . Carpenter
has a packet of materials availa- bP held at the home of Mrs. Joan
Stewart with her making arranble to·ali schools for use.
An educational display of ever- gements of .early blooms and
greens has been placed In the Mrs. Carpenter to present an
lobby of the Rutland Post Office illustrated talk pn biennials.
with Judith Hillin charge of the - Each membl'r is to name a
biennial, bring seeds for the
March window. Therapy· with
junior garaen-4H club. and Items ~
residents ol\he Yeterans Memorfor
a fundralsing auction, with ·
ial Hospital Exten!led Care Unit
Mrs. Davis to,chalr the event.

Middlepc&gt;rt native holds services

'

'

'

EXPE~IENCED PART TIME HELP WANTED

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
!UPI) - Heavy bl'er di'inkers
are twice as likely to develop
cancer of thP mouth than those
who guzzle hara liquor, but both
groups lace a far greater cancer
risk than non-drinkers .. a researchpr said.
:All people who regularly consume large amounts of alcohol
face an lncrPased risk of oral ·
cancer. But Dr. Arthur Mashbl'rg said his research found the
problem appears to be more
severe among beer drinkers.
A study of military veterans
showed those who drank 6 ounces
or more of hard liquor dally had
10 limes greater rates of cancer
of .the mouth than non-drinkers,
Mashberg saia.
But among those who drank six
or more cans of bl'er a day, the
cancer rate rose to 25 limes that
of non-drinkers, Mashberg said
Tuesday at an American Cancer
Society seminar.
Although the link between
alcohol and oral cancer has long
been known, Mashbl'rg said
research prevto\'sly has not
drawn a d lstlnction between hard
liquor and beer. ,
It Is not known why beer seems
to be more harmful than hard
liquor. said Mashberg, of the
Veterans Administration Medical Center In Eas1 Orange, N.J.
He compared the drinking and
smoking habits of 181 hospital
patients who had mouth cancer
and 497 people who did not have
mouth cancer.
Of the cancer patients, 82
percent had six or mote drinks or
cans of bl'er a day and 76 percent
smoked one or more packs of
cigarettes.
"It is .very difficult to find a
non·smoklng drinker," Mashberg said.
Mashberg emphasized that his ·
work and prevous studies Indicate that alcohol is an Independent risk factor lor cancer of the
mouth and esophagus, and smoking simply Increases the risk, A
recent study of Israelis who
smoked but did not drink turned
up very lew oral cancers.' supporting the Idea that alcohol
alone can predispose people to
oral cancer, he said.
There are an estimated 30,500
new cases of oral cancer in the
United States annually and 8.350
deaths. Men ha"e twice the oral·
cancer rate of women.
Mashbl'rg said contact be. tween carcinogens in alcohol and
the mouth and tongue may be the
reason aichol seems to boost the
risk of oral cancer more than
than cancers of the pharynx,
· larynx and other organs of the
respiratory and digestive tracts.
As with other cancers, the
researcher said, early diagnosis
Is a key to long-term survival
among those wit)1 oral cancer.
But he said most mouth cancers
are not diagnosed until there are
persistent . visible sores.
For people at high risk for oral
cancer, an experimental screening rinse may offpr the best hope
for early treatment.
The blue rinse Is administered
like a mouth\yash, . Mashbl'rg
said. Its chemical action. can
make visible tiny cancerous and
pre-cancerous "patches" In the
mouth that might otherwise go
unnoticed.
Mashbl'rg said, however, that
the rlf\se Is not being markeled
and thus Is not generally availa·
bie to doctors.
Unless a drug company agrees
ioproduce the rinse. "an unusual
opportun lty for dlagilOsls of
cancer of the oral cavity and
upper aerodlgestl\·e tract will bP
lost_ " he said.

Lottery numbers

.

Your Locallv Owned
Low Pdced ·supermarket~
'

Beer·drinkers
run . high
cancer risk

Janet Bolin is host for ·Rutland Friendly Gardners

Glenn and his colleagues from
"scrubbl'rs" on smokestacks. of Appalachia and Mldwes t
the Midwest are seeking ways to. The amendment, sponsored by states such a1 Ohio a·nd ·Illinois.
reduce the effects on utility Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., was
Also, an amendment sponrates, business costs and &lt;X!al scheduled to bP alscussed sored by Sen. Robert By~d.
D-W.Va., would give federal '
Wedhesday.
jobs.
.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum. D. By using such pollution-control money to coal miners who lose
Ohio, has been attempting to devices, utilities could continue . their jobs under , tbe acid-rain
build support for an amendment ·using high-sulfur coal, thus provisions. That amendment Is
to give tax credits for cleanup averting massive layoffs of min- expected to come up for a vote :
efforts, such as installinl! ers in the 'high:sulfur coal fields Thursday or Friday:

would bP defeated .
General agreements on sections of the legislation covering
toxic and auto emissions have
bl'en reached. Only the provisions for acid rain are still
unsettled.
The measure places the largest
cleanup burden on Ohio and eight
other major polluting states, and

The Daily Sentineh- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

.I i

-------------------~---·---~-J

ASST. COLOIS

COnONELLE

BATH TISSUE

.

.

' I l l -"

FACIALS
~3 1018 $1 ·

SP111E, DIE1 OR lEG.

COCA-COLA

•PL41N •SELF RISING

GOLP MEDAL FLOUR
in~us

2 UTER
Ill.

computer ctass offered·:

'

5LB.
BAG

PS/2 computers and 11 network ,
system. The newe$t verslon•of ·
Lotus 1-2-3 (version 3.0) Will also
be used.
The cost for the entlftl fiveweek course Is only $100. Inter· esle'&lt;j pe~sons are encoufaged to ,
rtlgliter . , early, as a . strong
J'I1Sponse · Is. ex~~. for·. !be ·,
: course offering. ' ·
, Registration may be completedby,maillngorbrlni!Dglna
check toAdultServtces, P.O. Box
Students . will be .able to take 157, Rio Grande, 4;;674; 245-5336.
Checks shOuld oo.made out .to
adva"tage of state of the art
equipment, lr\cludlng new IBM theGallla-Jackson-VintonJVSD.
1 A class on using Lotus 1-2-3
America's m()st popular computer spreadsheet program, 'will bP
&lt;Ufered by Buckeye Hmi'c areer
Center's Adult Services In ApriL
The course will be offered on
Monday and Wednesday evenIngs from 6 to 9 p.m. ·for five
consecir.tlve · .w~ks · beginning
Aprll 23. Buckeye Hills Computer·
Lab will bP the location for the
'
'
course.

CASTLEBEiRY

The University of Rio Grande
Is offer1ng a counted cross stitch
on a sweatshirt class.' The class
will be Monday, 1\prll 9 and 16
from 6:30-8:30 p .m. In the Fine
and Performing Arts Center,
Room 124.
Call for the course Is $20 ..
This course Is featuring a
counted cross stitch using waste
canvas. After completion of the
counted cross stitch, the waste
· canvas Is discard~. leavihg '
nothing more than the design on
the sweatshirt.
For more Information and
registration, contact the Office of
Continuing Education, P.O. Box
· 878, University of Rio Grande,
Rio Grande; O)lio 45674, or call
245-5353, extension 325. The tollfree number In Ohio Is 1-800-2827201.
'

.

.BEEF STEW

Eleanor Circle meets at.·
~orne
of Emma Oatworthy
.
A, combined meeting . of the
,.

GLAZED ·

·DONUTS

$1,89

FlO IS

$119
SJ99

1 II. PMG.

KIIICII MDT

IOL9CJNA

I II. PMG.

K...

SMOIED

SAUSAGE

Ll.

$199

Scott Connelley All Star Gaine
· FeaturintJ Cincinnati Bensals
Plus Scltool

"t

Star GaN

VS

Colies~ All Stars . ·
Aprl 6,

Dl IWftnlty ·at

•io hill, ·

spr.lng retreat on March 30 and 31
Eleanor Circle and United Meth·
at Rio Grande.
• · ..
odist Women of Heath United
Joseph Davis, M.D .. was ll'elMethodist Church WIIS held re- comed as a guest speaker. He
cently at the home ·or Emma K.
gave a slide show presentation of
ClatwQrthy.
· Turkey, and the geography and
Devotions were 'given by history, as well 1\5 early Ch.risNancy ~ale.
tianity of the city of Ephessls, .
~
'
Mary Wise, president of the where Mary, mother of Jesus. ·
circle, called the meeting to spent her later years along with
-·
order, ' aud announced that the John, the Baptist.
~ummage sale will bP held May 3
Hostesses were Twlla Childs,
'
and 4, and that the circle has dish . Pat Philson, ~mma Clatworthy,
cloths for sale.
'
Mary WIR •. Maxine Philson, Jep
' '
Betty Fultz. president or UMW. Chesher, ·and Ne!Ue and HaiUe
Mom Perry's Restaurant In
reminded the membl'rs about the Zerkle.
Ravenswood, W.Va. was the
'
setting for the reCent meeting Df
the Golden Rule Sunday Scbooi
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
Tbe .Unlversity of Rio Grande
ttie basic functions and hlghllJht
Following the tll!afood smorwltl be offering a three-week the DOS commands whk:b are - gasboard dtnller, a ihort _bustWQI'kshop In "Using Cumpu~ets moat Important.
neea mlietinr wu col'ldllcted by
- MS-DOS Operatlpg Sy.stems."
TopicS tnc:lude the basiC com- . John Riebel, president
The course will .meet 'from 7-10 puter 1yatem, PC compoDIDts.
The cltss baa been asked to
p.m. on Wednesdays, AprU 4, 11 operating •Y•teml; floppy ud
.erve breU:fat foiJQ1lllnr sunrise
a,tld 18.
bard diSks, fl.., system powm.erVJce on Easla' Sllliday. li ··
Cla11es meet at the ~9Grancle
up Uti DOS CQIMWitll.
·
.dJscuwon wu held regarding
CIJIIpus In the Davis Careers
Furtliel' lnfonnatlol! . oa tile
tile menlf and .ervln1
·the
Center, Room 105. Cost lor the
worillliOPI ud tqistratloa til· breakfut.
c'll,ss IS ~- The Pre'reaJitratlon fonnatloll may be OlttaiDIIf lrlirn
AttendiJii were Ray and Helen
deadline is Monday, A11rU 2.
· the Ofllee of ConllaUIIia EdueaFlekll, Joblf'and G141Ma Riebel,
,1he DLsk OperatlnJ Sys~m Ls tton, UalveraUy of R1o 01'1111111. · .Jean .1hom~. Mablllllg 'Kloes ,
tbe !lfebloocl of a eomputer
P.O. Box 8'11. Rio Qnuidt, 06'lo
and Dille Walllui'IL
,
S)'lltem 011 wlltch rNf!!ry appllca~74, or by callllil .s.s-11113,; · Gueeta attendlq ware Donna
. tltill depfadl. ,.\II IBM or~pat­ exteDIIDil 32i: Tile toiJ.Jree ·. Gttnatead, Bryc&amp;~PamBucklllle ·computers Ute DOS to
number in Ohio lsl.JQO-~I'r.ill.
ley, ·and John Riebel Jr.
oilerate. Tile COUI'H \IIIII cowr

Golden Rule
Class meets

. EN,I'BY BLANK .
Name············
,
"'"
·
~ ··········••ot•• . ·············

.

Addr••••' .............. :.................... .
City: ........................ State·. .........
.
.
'

Phone:

I 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0

ooooooooo

0 0

o o o o oo

0 0 0

oooo

workshop slated at R(J

ot

1

We,.....,

Th• ":igtn 10 Umil Outntttl•. -: Pricet EftKtlw Through Saturday, 'Maroh 31, 1110

.

'

Ms~oos

KIIICII

Sweatshirt class set

"'

'

;, ·

'•

nm!'cfut
..-.. --

I
I
I
I

r

ON .AJN'VARIEIYOF DEUQOUS COOJ(JES! II
w. .......
I

.... -,., ... .1
10 0111 toYpOn

••t.lde?.tO&amp;or~~

=...,.~._c.. ..
....,
.. ..
~

........FfiiiiOdt , •

.....

•• ·~Jil~.~~

'"::.:-::- "

llr&lt;asz:

10 COWJ

1111ii$lbit

..... ~ ....... C...ai

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OII't.·

~()-l.t~·~ '

I•

---VIOl&lt;IW

I
I

t447.()2

I

· P . O. ... !Oooot ,
- •-.._,..a._.t

·

I
I
I

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

�.

.

-.

The Deily Saati:ll PilaF I

. Pomaroy-Middlapon, Ohio

\,'V8dnaaclay, March 28, 1990

Rock Springs
UMWholds
' '
·March ~eting

Middleport Arts Coun(il ·-offering two classes ·

•

The newly formed Middleport
Atts Council will he offering two

'

T-SHffiTSLOGANWINNER·-Tom
grader,
was the winner of the t-shlrt slogan contest conducted by the
eighth grade re&amp;dlng and spelling teachers at Meigs Junior Hlgb.
His slogan was "Reading Blasts My Mind."
·

•

classes that will be taught by
local artisans.
.
The first class, a bellli bag
bunny, will be held AprU 5 at 7
p.m. at 137 North SecOnd Ave. ·
(next to Johnson's Variety
Store) . The' bunny, an original
design of the Ohio River Bear
Co., has movable arms and legs,
Is made•of cream coloted fur and
'Is filled wlth plastic pellets for a
bean bag effect.
Ins tructlon will be provided by
Susan Baker and the fee for the
class Is $20 which Includes all
materials. Deadline ·for the.
bunny class Is AprU 2.
The second class will be an
adult class In sweatshirt painting
and will be held Aprll19 at 7 p.m.
at the same location. The class,
Instructed by Marilyn Meier, will
result In a completed handpainted sweatshirt. The fee for
the class Is $18 and Includes all
materials. Deadline to register
for the class Is Aprll12.
To regls(€or or to obtaln ·more
Information, call 992-7733, .992·
2675. or 992·5983 In the evenlrigs.

· Prayer by Dorothy Jeffers,
president, opened the March
meellilg of the Roc~ Sprtngs
United Methodist Women, wh1ch
was . follo~t:d wllh·gtoup singing
led by Shar011 Folmer .
- Roll t'Bil and tbe secretary's
re.poi.t were. given by ' Mary

.,

·.

~

.

.

,"

.... '

...

will he offered by the newly fonned Middleport
Arts Counell bestnalng . ·In April. Sweatshirt
palatine will be taught by Marilyn Meier aad a

'

,.

a woman who miraculously beat
~. lliave just read it, and it's a
real upper. ' '
De• Ana 'Lallden: You must be
liledp( _he&amp;rina· the bride's
~plain abOut invired (\lt;Sts who
~!'CD unable ro Stir themselves and
~ ro 1 lovely invitation. Per"-myt..--wi!l-a"~-LI wt'II
•..._.... . .._,a .....

{~mnr

~NN j-lNDERS

"1989..... 4 • .,....;.
Tim .. """"'••..,..

....... .. .,. ~yndlr•r :

be apeciftt.

·

We 11111t out engra-ed invitations
anclencloaedself·adtlrcmd,Sfllllpcd

111 argwnen1,

'

.
,

~

rePeat-

•

'

bean bag bunay maklng.class will be Instructed by
Susaa Baker. Pictured are some of the shirts
prepared by Mrs. Meier aad a bunny made by
Mrs.
·

CoPVfUQWT 11*1 THE
CCi ITEM S A.NO PRICES GOOD SUN·
DAY M4RC..j ~ li-IROUG~ S"-TURO.&amp; '{ MA.RCH 3' . 1990, IN POMEROY.
WE AESERVf H E fltGH- ,.-:,.. • ·.y, - QJM~TI T I E!::i
DEALERS

her know. We could have given that
$1 ;152 10 the newlyweds or trealed;
ounclves 10 a weekend aip. We are
htirt and
dW sO many peOple
thou&amp;ht 10 little of om in vi~. MINNEAPOUS PAR,EN:fS
.
DEAR PARENTS: .Thanks for
spcUing it out. Pcrftaps •When rOUts
see the numbers, it will make an
imprasion.
.
'
Gem of the Day': The only thing
certllin about a wau:h with a lifelimc
8fiii'III!CO is that you will lose iL

Roast Beef ••••••••••••••~-.•• S3.99
Meat Salad ••••••••••••••~·...... ~89&lt;
~ooked Ham ••••••• wcEo.... Jb:··$ 1.9.9

Part-tirne·
I

;. ~ Heroe
a

Spring round up
PomE&gt;roy Cub Scout Pack U9:
will be having Its annual spring:
rpund-up on Saturday at 2 p.m..
at the Pomeroy UnltcdMeth~lst :
Church. For 'more lnfonnailon·
contact Da le Thoene at 992-76l6;
or George Wright at 992-2439. - ·

'·

OHIO

LOw P·r ices •
And More.

NONE SOLO 'TO

10.7S.oz.

.
.

'"

.:

•

~

IN OIL OR WATER

,· ,;,.

FROZEN.

.

Chicken Of The Sea·
Chunk Light Tuna

•

...
.••

•
'

.
...
.. '

' &amp;.5-oz.

•,

v·

Jeno's Grisp'n
Tasty ·pizza

.•'

,

•

.•-

:~

'

"-

..
.-

7.6-7.1-oz.

&gt;'

'

•

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

Cubed
Steak

'

Turkey Breast
Pound

Pound

.

"

' '
t• • I

...

·.

Bacon ....................~.~··· S1.39

U.S. GRADE A, HOLLY FARMS

·-

Boneless
Chicken Breasts

....
'. '
'.,

'

'

l

.,

...

.. ,

Meigs junior. High .. .
observes Right to Read .Wee~
. .··

'

Contllluing Edueation, P.O. Box .
Unlvertlty of Rio Grande,
Rio Grande, Oblo '5674, or call
2f5-5353, extension 325. The tollfree number In Ohio ls .1-800-2827201.
~.

tom•t~ ~oup ·

a

..

The University of Rio Grande
Is offering several financial aid
workshops during AprU .
The wor kshops are on April 4,
i1 and 25 from 2-4 p.m. and Apr il
19 from 7-9 p.m. In the Rhodes
Student CE&gt;nter. Room 113.
These Individual presentations
will Include step-by-ste p Ins truc tions on how to complete the
1990·91 Financial Aid Form
;FAFi a nd will inc lude lnformatlon on the other higher education
financ ial assis tance programs .
For more Information on these · ·
wor,kshops, contact the Office of

CaJDpbell's

angry

he tells his friends.
childrenandn:lativesallthedellils.
envelajleaoncmontbbefcnlheevenL
JICOilleshouldbe~e¥eQ'clay
Even though J've rold Joe
All the guesis had ro do was put an
from offices in the Ullifocl SiliCa and . edly how 1feel f!boul his tq1011ingon ·x· in lhe proper space 10 let us know
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Canada. In my opiJiion, her sin was our "family business,"! overhelli' llits if they plap~ 10 attend.
,
446 4514
' '• '
pickinglbewrongl!llllandthewrong andpiecaofphonecon~'in
A week before the weddihg, we
place.
which he goes into decail about.the ~nt nearly ' SSO ·on long distance
l~mnotalswyer,Ann,bl!titscems arguments wc'V!I had, r~~e been 10id
calls asking people who had not rc·
to me dW your CQiftiiiOIIdent is in a by acooniClor that 1~Y lack self- tuined \heir reSponse cards whether
pretly &amp;ood spot 10 ftle a suit for esteem. 1 feel even worse abol!t or not they were coming. The carersexual discrimination. Since the myself when 1 know my husbancl'is · • ers rc:quired ~ coon~ 48 hOurs
chainnan of the c:omjluy was so ailicizing me to his family. It's gotbefore the event. Each dinner cost
Strilngly Oj\J08ed 10 blllky-pantyin tensolamemiMirrassedtofacelbem~
$36, and 32 people who said they
the wcrk:place, he should have liml
Surcly,Ann,othermarrjcdtouples
wen: coming did not show up. We
thembolb.
•
must have this piOblem. HoW dol
hadtopay$1,152formealsllwwen:
BOOK COVER CONTEST WINNERS - TheSe are the wlnaen
l'msli'JlriseddWyouJ!adnobarsh · dtal with this?- DISAPPOIN'Jl!D not served.
of the seventh grade Meigs Junior High School Rlghllo Read Book
wonls fix the ladies .in the orpliza- INPORn.AND
Please rcU your readers once more
Cover Contest. ·They are, 1-r, Kelley Gt,aeser, flnt; Crystal
lion who left notes on the WOIIIIR's
DEAR
PORTI.AND:
One
or the
thai if they change their mind or if ·
Vaughan, second; Carrie WIIUams, third; and Heidi HuUman,
desk with sucll salfdericw u "HeUo, principal ingredien~ in _any lasiing · something comes up that makes it
fourth. The-contest 'l'lili coDducled by Mrs. C&amp;JI!a Sa_el~ns and Mrs ..
Whore" mid 'Greetings, Tralilp." reJationshipisloyaliy.Inmtmage,it impossibletoat1811d,theyshouldtakc
Suzanne Bentz&gt;seventh grade reading aJid speiDng:teachers.
They should have kept dreir noses is paramount 1 can't imagine any- a moment to call ~ hostess and let
whtrethey ~ged~ofhurl· thing more cles!Juc~ve t)Jan running
ill&amp; epithets 11 a 'co-WQIIrer .wile! al- downone'siiUIICtooutsiclers.
.
read)" had been subjec:ted ll a pal
· When this occurs repeatedly, it is a
·deal of.psin and hum~ -· NOT Safe bet that the penon who is doing
READY TO CAST TilE FIRST thercpc)ningislookingforvalidation
.
STONE
of his own JUilion. This is a smallA program to encourage stu- t-shlrt slogan contes't was .Tom
DEAR
NOT
READY:
Thousalids
minded wayiO bolster one's ego, and
dents to get involved in various
Cremeans, "Reading Blasts My
&amp;f
aden
picked
.
..,
onl!ae
-ua1
yourhusbandoughttostoplt.P.s.ru
Ohio Right to Read activities was
Mind." He Is reading' student
carried ouf by the Meigs Junior
from Mrs. Jeanne Bowen's clas:s. disaimi1181ion aspect or that lelia', bet this column lands on loll of dinner
ECmCH
Hlgb under the direction of the
Ribbons, bookmarks, certifi- and of coune, tbey 1n rigbL I mi~ ' plallea IOIIiJht. ln~emtingly enough,
seventh and eighth grade read- cates, and ·food coupons were it completely. for wblc:b I tl: 1=t ve 40 more wives arc guilty of Ibis fail in&amp;
ing teacher, Carla Saelens, Sugiven to prize winners.
'
lulla witb a wet noodle. 'l'hanb 10 than ht•sbinds
HOUIIADE .
·
·
zaane Ben.tz, and Jeanne Bowen.
Another phase of the obser- allwhowrole.
DEAR READERS: Rccendy J·
vance was school wide silent
The observance focused on .not
~ AMI.ndera: Both my busprinted 10111e suggestions oti what to
.r eading each mor.nlng as well as band and I have been been Nlried. say to 80IIlCCli1C who is very ill. It has
only reading, but writing and
oral work as well as a book cover
In reading classes. .
.
DIU MADE ...............: ............................. s•EDDID..Jb. S2.19
bel01e l!ld have chik!lm liom ~- been called 10 my 811e1Qon that they
contest and t-shlrt slogan conStudents donated books to the'. ous mllriapl. "Joc"li:nowl that the l:IIIIC from a bodt entitled "Of Tears
test. The purpose of the program
classroom library . In Mrs. Sael: ~· lltpeCt of our rc~ that llld.Triumphs" by Georgia and. Bud
was to develop lifetime readers . ens' reading class, 187 books.
~- the most aouble is hiS big PhoiOpulos. (Publisher, Congdon &amp;
CIISPY SEIVE
.
and to stimulate and support the
were added to the classroom .mouth. Whenewrwcdilsgrceorbave Weed.)Thisisanexc:ellentbookabout
,. total reading program .throughlibrary.
'· '
out the school years. ·
.
. There were bulletin board
•·
displays in the · classrrom and
Winners in the seventh 'grade
iamous
.
book cover contest were Kelley
. . ·Corridors, reports ' on
.
\
Grueser, first. illustrating " The . - Ohloi;ms. A-V activities, newsCall of the Wild; •· Crystal
paper studies, creaflve writing, .. ,• ·
rOUAIIDS-POUIID
~~
Vaughan, second, with her ·book
and book give-aways.
LEMONS-............ 3/59C
''• ,,
PAIIAY
.
The culmtna,tion· of the obser·
Illustration. " Around the World
..•
MAIGAIINE ............. 99 c
In Eighty Days;" third place:. ~an~e was'il boOk fair held In the
.,
GOLDEN IIPE
went to Carrie · WUllanis . for
~chool library,
DAn SIIIIDDED
"Heathcliff at Hoine; " fourth .~· Mrs.• Saelens r~ports that the
.BANANAS ........ JA.,,,!49c
CHEDDAR
went to Heidi Huffman who · 's chool .now qualifies for the hio
' In 1775, rag-tag army of farmers and
(· ;\i.f;l;~~
CHEESE .........f.RL. 1.19
illustrated the cover of "Sport . neadlng Hall of Fame Awar&lt;j to
shopkeepers took on the British. They weren't ·
Goofy ." Honorable mention went · -be gjven by the Ohio Department
IUV.. VAWY
6x6
•
"professionals," but their desire for freedom .
to Michelle Lucas~· Sonja Bale- · of Education ln Columbus. This ls
SMALL
EGGS
Rl\1
...
99C
TOMAIOESM .....IA.. S1.29
was a: poWerful weapon.
·
man, Jaclyn Swartz. and Melissa · ·the·.eighth consecutive year the
In ~977, a slmUar part-time
school will receive the award
Vance. The above winners ,11re
army
of teachers, coaches fro the reading class of Mrs.
fro111 the state due to their active
peopte 'from all walks of life
Carla Saelens: .
·
•
'
Pl!rliclpatlon in·activlties revolv-:~ out to flibt t!te powers
. Winner of the .eighth !;fade
lng around reading.
IASTIE
«:lf corparate America. They
wanted a different kind of
ireedo,n - flnaadal
MIIIUIE ·flAil
.
freedom for average
Americana.
.•
12 OL
(Reg. U.S. P~nt Off: ). '
Rabbi Asher Zelllngold has
·
Today,
the
fight's
still
on.
But
the
By United •P tws Jnternatlonal
certified that the gas prodpced at .
winner li clear: A.L. WUI!ams IS the
~. • ·
·
Judge' 'd umped
Koch's Refining· Co. · that ls
of
financial
services
·:.
;
;-...;·
largeat
nud:lteter
ALBANY, N.Y . iUPil ' - New
needed to put _the fizz ln about
Ainerlca. ·
• ·
..
11.;; ':.
York's hlgl!est .court has re-'
50,000 cases .of Pepsl·Cola , now
IIU NHIIII.of ladiVt!~!a.r IUe Juurance placed 1n fo;..,e In moved a judge from the bencH for
meets Jewish dietary laws for
DILMCHm
.
... PINIIP 'MILICO!' •
. .
.
throwing the book at a defendant.
consumption durtng Passover. .
ea'J.tiiJIUea Mtal In ~oree (more than any other life
Caneadea· Town Judge JoseTh Pepsi bottler1n Baltimore
IMIII'IIIIce OOIIIpaay) · '
,
phine Tyler_was removed from
normally .gets its '' auppl)' of
IUSI WIOLE
office Tuesday . in part, for
They may ·be. "only part-time." But to 1.8 mUifon pollcycarbon dioxide from Archer
hurling a telephone book at a
Daniels Midland. an &amp;Jl'lcultural
l::r~~ with a ~lghter financial future, they're definlt~ly
19-vear-old man she claimed had· . processing comp&amp;Dy ln'D\!&lt;:atur,
,
written obscenities on a cour- . Ill. The gas used for 80ft drinks Is
1
troom table. ·
collected as a byproduc:t of the
,Qillll WillE
. •. ·
.
The Court of Appeals also clt.ed
company's corn•b&amp;Nd etllapol
w'
.,
Tyler fo~ Improperly us\IJg her.,
production.
· '
,,
judicial power to ar~est and jail a
. But Jewlsll dietary law (orblds
,''
'
.
r
person who gave her husband a
I'
consump.tlon of foods derived '.
bad check. The small town In
from Jl'alnduz:ingPanover,sald
which -Tyler served as judge ls
Zel!lngold, rabbi for the Or·
CIYSIAl LIGHT
. ·
· .
located about 75 mUes south of
thodox congregatloa at Adath
L ••
'
l3 01
Rochester.
. '• Israel Syna{!lllle In St. Paul.
"lly any measure, her cond\lCt
So An:blr Dan!eli Mldlalld bad
'
lUI ·
·
displayed a hick of the basic
toc~ll'if11PIIIIIth800tol,000tonsof
qualities of fairness, Impartiality
no*atl derived catbon dioxide
and self-restraint which are · to suPPW Ill East Coast c.'uato· : · essential for judicial office," the
1111!1'1 whO producespeclalllolber
court said.
soda pdp for Pas10ver, which
starts the evening of AprU 9.
Gu declared kosher
When' lt came up short, It tut:ned
ROSE;MOUNT, Minn. (UPilto Koch for- two truckloads. ·
Ko&amp;her carbon dioxide?

.

Financial aid workshops on sl~te

Count On Kroger For ...

•

CLASSES TO BE OFFERED - Two cluses

~"'"

president bf lbe finn. You $lid she
shouldn't ha~~e been sleeping with
someone else's 1Jt1sM1cL On this one
.
yougetpointaforn-nmcas.Ann,but
not mucb ebe.
·
Granted. the WOIIIIft was guilty of
poor judgmenl. bul if diat is a sin
punishable by firing,anawfullol of

Property
transfers .

l
Fire Dept., 1.80 A., Tlappen
Plalns'Fire Dept. , lnc., Orange.

Claudette J . Pickens, Lebanon:
Orange Township Volu ~

...

Ann
·r
who •·;::SC':he=:'affair=.; t ·an.le' rs·
·~-

:,\tone, Sec. 34, to Geor11e E .
Sliowalt8. Nonna Baker gave
Malone Jr. and LaCreda f&gt;{alone,
.
the treasurer's report.
Columbia.
It was decided to give donaPhilip R. Gaul alld patti A.
tions to Bethany l',loqntaln MisGaul, lots 101-102; · to ~barles
sion; Sine Car;~, and to tlie I!CW
David Jeffers and Brenda Kay
' eabnets In the church kitchen. · ..
'
Jeffers, Salisbury.
Anl\8 G. Pjllllnl, easement, to .
' ·Thelma .Jeffers had devollons
Jolin p , wuuams . parcels . to
and Katherine • Riley had' the Ohio B~ll_ :r•lephone Co .,
James A. Rlffie and VIrginia R.
prdgram on how people could be Cbeslel'. · •' •
Rlffie; Syracuse Village.
Bertbi·Evans, 'J)ar,cel, to Malrillsslonarles . Ms. Riley spoke
Arthur F. Knight. and Charlsse
about her work on an Indian. colm Ipgram and Mildred In- P. Knight, lot 73, to John S.
gram, Rotii\Dd.
reservation In Oklahoma. ·
Codner and ·Beverly L. Codner,
- Several prayer reQII('!;ts were
Walter E . Tuttle and Sharon J .
Racine VIllage.
Tuttle, 5e~=tion ,' to Timothy. E. . Racine United Methodist
taken and Sharoit Folll)er led.ln
prayer.
Showaltj!r and Michele D. ShoChurch by Trustees, pt. lot, to
walter, Olive.
Katherine Riley dismissed
John S. Codner and· Beverly L.
USA -Farmers Home Admin.,
with prayer before'adjournlng to
··
Codner, Racine VIllage.
lot 14, to Larry E. Hoffman, · .. William Nathan Pickens and
the church fl'llow s hlp. room (or
rerro;shmenl$ and social time.'\, ' . Middleport.
Frances M .. Pickens; parcels, to
Clyde
Slone
and
Wanda
Lee
.,
William E . Pickens and
I; ,

-·

Dear ADD ....,....: I'm writing in

~-•

'

•

'

Defends woman
who lost job
after an affair

, . . ,.

·Pound

0.5% LOWFAT OR

Kroger
·skim Milk
Gallon

s

M ..

Ocean Perch ...........~-H•• S2.99
'
S1. , 19
Lemona1.d.....................
'Cool· Whip····~··········!.~\ S1.59

Quirks in .the ._ news...

.
DENNIS L HOCI(MAN
: AND ASSOCIATES
. 614-992-7066
657 tfk.Jh Strltt, Middleport, .Ohio
REPIESENnNG

-Whole Kernel Corn ••••~~:1•. 69&lt;
Irish Potatoes ...~J~.~\ 2/S1.09
JELLO •••••••••••••••••••• l.~!-•• 2/99&lt;
Corn Meal ••••••••••••• 1~.2!. S1.09
Potted Meat••••••••••!.~~. 2/6 9&lt; ·
$1 3ft .
Dr'In.
0 ra Creme1 •••••••1l.fh S2.19
·
aout
-.
hroom Tissue ~-~~~.t!. S1.59

......

I '

'

..

.••

.:".
•,

I'

•'

•

•

Courtesy Qt.

[-~

:i'

&lt;

I

'

..•, .
.•:.·
::

.•'

-

•

•.

·'

~.J.

•

..

All
Wed.

fti~

~~~

•

Get Your Spet:ial

$2.li0 DisCount C011p0111 At'
Ylillr ~rilildly Kroger Stwe

==

I'

•·x..................... . . ,

..

••

...,

'

Ivory Sno.w........~.~"·'~· s~.89

J

.,

•

I

•

,,

•

�•

· ~Ps~g~~~~10-~~The~~D~at~y~S.~'~w~*~--~~~~====::~::::~~- ~P~~~m~•;ov~-~M~-~t~~~~=~~~~ObQ~·====~:::::;~::::=:=:=:=:=:=:·~h~~~dn~.e;•;d~~·~~~a~h~28~.~1~~~o .
·American Legion Drew Webster
Post 39 celebrates 7lst birthday

f

-:.•

.

•

·~,

' Tbe nat blrtlula)' celebra&amp;lon of the Amerlilu LepN Drew
• Wel!ller Poal 31 aad lbe Amerlcu Lepoa •'-xlllarJ Ual&amp; wu
oblervecJ, "'Ilea&amp;~¥ at llle ~t II«De ID P0111er07.
Several ·· clal aw.,. were priiiDied ud oae fl lbe
hliJall&amp;hU of lbe evea•r " • apee!elllartal b)' a quartet ma4e
up of Joe Struble, Jim Gllmere, Frank Vaapaa, and Georre
Horak.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE

•

•
'

'

.

......... ,...,l.....
• HPIII

· ·• The Area's Number ·1 Marketpla~e

•

..

,

Woros

DIVI

8·A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

15

Monthl\

15

M•••• ·Gau,, 0' M.. on c:o unt~• iTlust De Dtl' ·

•• f'

•

11 . 30 &lt; q~\·

of r,..,.,

,

.

tot•itPv Aa1

HIITIIIOI EXTDIOI

't11d &amp;11"

SPECIAL GIFT- Gerrl Miller, rilbl, back row, presldenloftbe
Drew WebSter American Lelfon Auxiliary trait, presented a gift 10
Mulae Bar-, Lancaster, eJrllill district president, at I!Je 718t
blrtbday celebration held recently a&amp; tbe post home.. Pictured In
front are junior color ruarda Jesalca and Asbley HamUIOn.. ·

HAPPY BIRTHDAY - Gerrl Miller, president of lbe Drew
Webster Post Ill oftbe American Lepon Auxiliary Unit, presented
a blrtbday 1Ift 10 Post COnunaDder Dick Vaugllan, In o~vance
of the post's 718t blrtbday celebration.
·

'

...

RelvacinoSE~LegoE BICIDorSk

wtUII
rec . •
~ ED . , un ,
4 :00P.M. Monday. AprH 4,
19110. for a 1884, CASE
6808 .,·, Con1tructlon Klee
...
Ba .. hae -~~~ 111287871,
dacl•l&lt;l 11 ••-•property
ond to .lle oold ,"AS !8".
Equipment . avallibl, for
. in*Pictlon . irt the WATER ·
. BUILDING at the aornor of
lnl llld Vine 8 trM11.
Marko~ lllvllope "BIDS
FOR BACKHOE."
Council,...,.. tho right
• - lrld
to ac-t or -'oct
•.,
.. ,

.

DOWNING CHILPS

.,

:MULLIN MUSSII

·, Harris hospitalized
.
,'

'

;' INSUIANCE

Charles L. Harris Is a P!itlent.in
the Wesf Penn Hospital, 4800
Friendship Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
15224. Harris has spent a great
deal of tlnie ln the hospital since
the ·beginning of the year and
cardc . would be greatly
appreciated. ·
·

·111' s.c...a··$t., Pomeroy
YOUIINDEPINDEWr
.AGilY$ SEIVING
. .GS .COUNTY' .
SINCE 1868
.,

.

A JOB WELL DONE--' Jim Glbnore, of the Driw Webs~ Post
39, pl'l!8ented a certjllcate to Marsha Kln1 .for he~ dedication as
bu~rler lor the post during the past year.'
, ·

ovcs

.

.
.GIRL'S STATE DELEGATE -

·•

Mica Joaes, center, has ~eel).
selected as tl)e dele1ate to Buckeye Girl's state by the ~erlcan
Lelloa AuxiliarY. J)rew Webster Post 31. Pictured with !he
delegates are sponsor representatives, JoAnn W!Uiams, left,
Farmer's Bank, and MIUie MldkUf, Bank One.·
, •·

Prescription .·
Shop
OHIO

Gospel sing

. '
The Fellowship Church of the

Nazarene will have a gospel sing
. on Saturday at 7p.m. and Sunday
at 10:30 a.m. 111 the church~ The
Conners from Sulton, W.Va. WiiJ.
be the fealuredi singers. John.
Douglas, pastor, InviteS the
public.

RACINE - The men of the
Racine United Methodist Church
will be serving a pancake and
sausage supper on Wednesday
with servjng to start at 3 p.m.
"Donations only" will be ac·
cepted for the dinners. The public
Is welcome.
RACINE - The Morse Chapel
Church located on County Road
35, Racine Portland Road, Is
holding a revival on Wednesday
through Saturday. Speaker will
be Rev. John Jeffereys of GaiU·
polls. There will also be special
singing nightly. Rev. David Curf.
man InVItes the public to attend.
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednes·
day at 1 p.m. at thebomeo!Dorls
Grueser. Guest speaker will be
Clarice Krautter.

ng n
es re.
REEDSVILLE _There will be:
a ·meetlng of the Eastern Alumni
Association on Thursday at 7: 30
p.m . at Eastern High School. All ·
Interested alumni are · welcome
10 attend.
u

REEDSVILLE_ The Eastern
High School student council and
the American Red Cross will hold
a blOOd drive on Thursday from
10 a .m . .to 2 p.m. In the
gymnasium.
FRIDAY
LEBANON TOWNsiiiP- The
Lebanon Township Trustees will
hold their regular meeting on
Friday at 7 p.m. at the township
garage.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and Al·Anon will
meet Th11rsday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart CathoDe Church In
Pomeroy. For·more izi1ormatjon,
call1.-IJ00.333.5051.
.
,.

'

., ·~, , SA
. • T~m'.:..
a*' . ,.,.
·
.,...,~.
. POMEROY ·- T,ite Bells. and
Beaus Dailce .Clult Will sponsor
an opeli.dance lm sa;tw:.day at ·the
senior citizens center ln 'Pome- ·
roy. The caUer will-~ Kenrilall
and th.e dance IS. ,q~q lo all
western squai:e dancers.
· ' .'
I
1
REEDSVILLE· -' ,Thf junior
class of Eastern High School wilt · ,
have a sprln!l'carnlval qn Satur-.
day · from 4·9 p.m. at the blgh
school. Dinner' •will be· ser~d .
from 4-6 p.m. by the athletic
booste~s.
'

FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain •t of
pciofinB.
_Itt us &lt;lo it for fOU·

.,

erewJ!!
........."

:~,

'

J;loDDA'

,

MARSHUUOW ·.

· ;: · PEIPS' . .

. YDLOW 01 w•11 CIICIS
15 COllin 01.,...
IIIIIIIS. fl CCMIIn:

89C :_'.·
.'

.3 FOI aa·c., .;,

I

I

"

..

·. .ASSO..r.
. 1 ·011lACI
•. ' '
•

·

PAAS

330Jo OFF
Sall PIICES $3 5 10 $59
· · 300Jo ~-· .

~-

THURS.,

.

'·

!I
_ng emory
'• MATI .WEAVER
M4'RCH 28, 1.982·
•APRIL29, 1988
if I 1\IC[ Ill t]Jtt world to

.

.

j,

21M 01.

j

'··.J
' J: ...
' ~~

·· ~

.i

'

•

·•:- .·
•

.

~

it: ·.,.... and

•• him llmila

grllt him at the
. · door.
•
" ' ' ell' I C!ln do, deer
,, aon 6 brothar.
r, ·go lind tend your
And

~: grave .

)

t

.

1.,8 behind to.. kene of love,
•
t p th8 beat, aon Gpd .
And

.'
;

•

.. ~::

grve,

•

To 11- .hit voic;e, 1ee

••

...

•

~ . more , "

.'

DIN'; ·UCIETS ' .

•

1'4 giva

HERSHEY'S

:i:, ,

~

- ,

·PRESCRIP'OON SHOP'
.

.

992-6669'. .

s.c.a

217 North
. Middleport,
•

P.&amp;

2

.

PANTS

~RI.'.I4T f,:

.•

I

c.
.
99

·; ~~~~~~~~:ls

f

••

! '

·

Ann·• P.li.
.(6141.15·4110

nal 1ctiono moy be appealed, 1
1
00
In -iting, within 30 doyo of
nvMtmento ........ , liOO.
the dato of thl1 not lee. to the Touol Tr...ury
Envlronmontal Bo1rd of Ro- ·
Bllonco .......... 80.369.06
Loao Dut~ndlng
view, Rm . 300 1 231 E.
Ch · k•
1o 131 iia
Town S.t .. Columcbcnu),o.
l,j,jjj;aj . j TOTA~ .. ..... .... '
·
43216. Notice ofo•
LA
E
8
oholl be ftfld 'With
A NC .. .... 50,237.4
tor, w~hln 3 uyl.
'SUMMARY OF·
lctlonowlll becomofinllunINDEBTEDNESS
' lela 1 written .djudiCMton OutiUnding
hearing roq.,..tlo oubmlttld
J1n. 1. '88 .... .... 8. 786.96
within 30 dlyl of tho il- ·New 11............. 14,2B5.35
....nco date: or tho director Rotlrod .... ...... .. .. .. 4.3B2.98
OutltandinJ
NVIMI / withdriWa the pro·
De 31 • 9 1 B 668 33
PGtld ection . · Any penon
c.
•
.. .. •
·
I conif\1 thio repon to be
mav aubmit commema and~ correct and true, to the bat
- / or a meeting regarding any of my knowJedge:
·
draft lotion wlt~ln 30 doyo
p 1s M
Cl k
of tho date Indicated. "Ac·
au · oora, or
tion", 11 ullld above dftMarch 20, 1990
32785 TR11 0
not include receipt of 1 veri~
Racine. Ohio 46771
fled complaint. If oignifican)
614-949-21 ·9 4
public lntort~tOKilto, a pub- 1.3) 2B. 1tc
lie n'lieting m~y be hold. Ao
to any .action, inclut;ling re·
ceipt of verified compllinta,
any peraon m•v obtain no.
tice of further actions. •nd
additional inform.tion . Un·
lt1o otherwloe provided in
notice of P'lnlcular ICtlono.
all communicationa lhlll be

ltforo6 p.m.
1

r

Southern Ohio Cool
Company
.
Salem Twp. , Ohio .
Effective Oote; 3 / 21 / 90
Facility 0Mcrlption : Wuto·
water
,
.
Appliclticin No. 06·272B
Thil fin.. action not prec~
ilcled by proposed action and
i1 appeliollleto EBR . Deletion of cl-v layer facing
1bove .. evation 753 feet for
Meiaa Min• No. 1 alurry im·
poundm-.nt .
131 28, ttc

GOLF EOU.MENT

•Engr1vlng, TrophiOI,
Ploqu01 &amp; Badgoo
:1' •Now Grtpo
_... oCiubo Shon·

.....

of'oti.D .
Tags

JO

411317 Scout Camp Rood
Chaster Ohio
,

l

••.

Ohit

every made .

.•!•

••

.

2

In Mlmory

;::::::::;::::::::;J
loVing
In
M-o;y Of
1 MATT WEAVE II

On .... Zlth llrthdey,
'
~h28'

Todoy 11 your opea1a1 d1y

!like to think wh•n life
done,
w n - He8Ven may
be,
,1·
He'll t)e ltlflclng It
tiledUp thlre to w.lcome

'.me.

•

.

.Mott.. Dad. • ...,.

Brother8•1'-ly

..,.t Dllellratelt
Thou-way•
IU1 -

lftltead, w.·wlf aaswm.. ' ""

bor

'

And think """'fllv otyou,
And look forwtrd te tho
doy

When
Mew. '

ltao -~tan
.,

· Love Alway,
, . Petty 6 Mlahelle

3 Announcement•

2'- 19-'90·1 mo.

·YOUNG'S

Business
Services

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Additiono
-Gutter Work
-Eioctricol &amp; Plumbing
- Concrete Work
- Roofing
- Interior &amp; EKterior
Plinting ·
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C• .YOUNG II

2nd St, MiddltfiOI'tl

I
For Appt. Ca I
992·6717 Home or
992 •6244 .Garage

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2860

DOZER

SITEWORK . ~ .ROADS
CLEARING

t6-'9Q.t mo.

up

'IIAIIGES-GII·Eiec.-$125 up
FREEZEA$-$125 up
MICRO OVEN5-179up .

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
9n·5335 or 985·3561
Acr- F...m Pait Office

o•o

POIIIIDY,
·
10/30/'89-lfn

COUNTRY
MOB.LE
HOME PARK
•Mobila Home ·
Ports
•Mobile Home

Rentals
•Lot Rantala

• 992-7479
lt. 33 Nerth of

'-••oy, 1·12·'11-Hn
Ohle

Wlntlf Speelll Oa
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
,WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
3-5-'90-1 mo.

EUM HOME

Roem &amp; leerd For

Slftier Cltiz- and
Hantllca(lfiH ,
Good RotH
T.L .C.
27Yrs. E&amp;p.
Raferencea

992-6173
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW IIICOMI lOME~'
3-21· '10-rln

POIIEROY -

2 lots with
Seplic and
efec. available. lots of shade
trees. $3,000.00.

Howard L. Writestl

ANTIQUITY - One story
home with 3 bedrooms and
coallurnace.. Woutd mak~ a
greal sull)mer place. hiS 3
lots, indudin&amp; river frOfl·

NEW- IEPAIR
Gutters ·

ROOFING
DownspQuts

Gutter Cleaning

Painting

FREE

~tn TruMII ..... 949-2610
· . J~t HIII ...........,.. Ns-4416

E8TIM~TE8

949-2168
.
2·1-'10-11110. pd.

Mat Hupp ... ,...... Mt-2251

OPIN 5:00P.M.
GAllS STMT 7.00 P.M.

110 0111 .,.... 1a rws
. 150.00~WI
, lOIIlS

Iring It In Or Wt

"At loatonoblo Pricos"

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pick Up•

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949•2160'

992-5335 or 915-3561
AcrHt ,,_ Peot Offico

Day w Night

217 I. Sec. Pomei'oy
POMEIOf,

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4' 16-16-tln

Roger Hysell
Garage

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••l11lo•

•Tire Sales

TRUCKING

.IILL SUCK
992·2269

ElWIN
CONSTRUCTION

SYIACUSE, 0&amp;10
(Allow• Pine Shop!

1· 1 1 -90-tfn

Custom Built
Homes,
Remodeling &amp;

IN STOCK: •CamMt Porch
Boxes •Cemetery FloWer
VMII •CIIIV Bird Bath1
•Cement Bird a.thl
•Fountain Bird S.th1 • ptus
Deer, Frags. Angels and
Oth• Y11d Ornament•

Repair

Wo~

985-3365
3"29 517

Froft) Uo &amp; Sa•·~!
992.592~ j!l_!/ i mo.

Buy

OHIO

Announ crmrnt'

anr-.,.

I RodrNrJ D. Long, . . not bl
,.,ponoltoolor
thin mr own •• tit IIIII ~ • .... :Tri-Cauntr IIIIUty_ " " - - flrll pluo Moy ~ Hottcloy 1i1ri. C..
dr'tlllld.
h........... .

4

OFFEIS 3 LOCAnOfiiS TO SUYE YOIJ....

POMEROY. OHIO; ,Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 110. S.R. 143
HENDERSON. WV.; Rt. 35Adj. toSidor1Equipmont
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Daya
ALBANY: 10 l .m.·5 p.m. 6 Dayo. Clollld Sunuy
HENDERSON: 10o.m.·6p.m. 5Dayo.CioMd8un.· Mon.
PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAR. 13, 1990
# 1 Copper 8~¢ per lb.:
Clean Ory Aluminum Cen1, 36C pet lb.
WE BUY ALL NON FERROUS SCR.&amp;P. 8ATTERIE ••

'•

~3~A~n~nou~n~ICel~me~~n~t•~ ,

~~.,.,...

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

814-·7·741:1.

'

Giveaway

2 cute ' -

lt4-44t.OtCt.

.

..

to g-.;y.

.,.o

Ono
old, ...... .... .
Oool-, tlnor tnlnod•
al¥1
to IJOOd ltorno. Colt lt4- '
IR.a77.

.w.,

..,.,... ..... old ltolf .......
8hlphonl, 30M711-1411.

STARTERS. TR.&amp;NSMISSI()t\18. ALTERNATORS. ETC .
3·11- '10-dn '

6141992-611.4

STREET
.·PI%ZA

LOWEST PIIICES
HIGHEST QUAliTY
FREE LOW DEUVlRY
POMEROY AND MIDDLEPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

7

· Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Special.s
992·2228 2· 1·'90-1 mo.

SUN~S

Yard Salt
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinitY

.·
·~

UP TANNING

Naw Lima ld., lutlandr Ohio

·

1 Session ........................................ S3.50
6 Sessions ..............................~•..... S12.00
12 Susions................................... 120.00
15 Sesliohs •• ".. ~••••••••:..........-....... S25.00
FIRST VISIT FREt - .POSSIIL Y MORE
LOTIONS -

STICKERS

Call Susan Coleman, 742·2771
.

.

.

··

3-12-tO-t mo.

- · Auoclon lorvlol, tl

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GltEG BAILEY .
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

A Grtat Comblnatian"Quality and lta1011abl1 Pric••"
WI GO TIE &amp;mA . u.....
992-6110

Stop ·In and S..
DALE
. HILL

,

..
PAT HILL

CHIYRI!I.ftYIIOITH
DODGE
JH S, 1Nnl, ••• ,,.,,

992-6421
r.~

'

rro '

.r.-:.~=·:";;.!1 v.::

..... !ll1d Ohio, sown.M47.

9

......tift

'

985-4422 .

CHESTEI, OHIO

IS NOW. OPEN
FOR BUSINESS.

EYI.NGS

, . . (Offll

CHESTD, OliO
•GRAVEL
•LIMI!STONE
•FILL DI~T
•ANv:THING
AT ALL

MAl~ ST.,

HS·Ifn

. 1

'

--~---"'t

Alignment
•Oil Change' &amp; lube
•Brake Work

.

'FIREWOOD
..

All UPIIIINGO. GAE

.
I. L HOUON

'SERVICE
742-3088
•Front End

*LIGHT HAULING

ta. IN 411

IVU/'., tfo

ALL MAKES

*SHRUB • TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·

••-umNOs.

!17 I. S.C. P - . y

MICIOWIYE
OVEN IEPAII

'

EVElY THUISI)AY
VFW POST 9926
. MASON, W.VA.

Acr111 ,,... Peot Office

d.

2-2·'90-1 tnO.

:~. '
I·

992 ·5335 .; 915-3561

~· · MAIN

INSULATION

tage. $11 ,000.00 .
Htnll £. Cltltnd
' 992;6191

lEN'S API'UANCE
SERVICE

CUSTOM BUILT
.HOMES &amp; GARAGES

J&amp;L

possibit~iesl

FUINACE

PARTS ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

&amp;

CALL
992.5589

BUILDERS

JO'S GIFT SHOP

REFRIGER~TOR$-$100

FURNACE

Commercial

BISSELL

USED APPLIANCES
DRYERS,..$69 up

$21.900.00.

Relidential

16141 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

PomeroY., Ohio

90 DAY WABAIII1Y
_.ASHER5-Sl00 up

FURNACE

Heating, Cooling,
Refrigeration
Service

DUMP TRUCK
Sand -Stone-Din

·30-'19-2 mo.

cw, ,,

Slridllly

CUIUTE
CONDOL

NE_WLAND
ENTERPRISES

·

cMict

. 12 0.,..

HUMPHREY'S

otllct................ !112·2251

BINGO , ·.

EYBY
SAT. MGIJ
6:30P.M.

NO SUNDAY CAllS

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

992-6215

·'

1 each Insulation Blowina Machine (C&amp;M brand)
2 each Insulation Blowing Machine with Attach·
ments (Krendal brand)
·
1'tach 'Homelita Ganarator-2,250 AC Watts
1 each ·Homelita Chain-Saw
Sealed' bids will be received at the CAA office in
Cheshire until 4:00p.m.; Allf'll.16, 1990. Equipment
may betxaiRined -t t~e C~ office in Cheshire betwHn the hours of 8:00a.m. 111d 4:00p.m.• Monday
througll Friday. Each bid must be sealed and com·
. pl•te. The Gallia·lli&amp;s CAA reserves tlie rifht to
Wiive any infor11111itlts or to reject.any or 11 bids.
For further Information contact Ron CI'IWford at
614·367-7341 or 614·99~·6629.

TEAFORD

1-'..___.;...____.,

·

k l l l l l ........

"Free ·E 1timet11"

7-18-'19-lfn

20% OFF ON AU

CAl WJUIII
Cloirk.~~~~~~~:!

OEPA,
-1049. Col·
t to;P.O . Bo•
Hurlng
umbuo, . OH. 43266·01 49
Ph. 1614) 644·2116. Con·
oult ORC Chap . 3746 and
OAC Chapo. 3745-47 and
3746· 5 lor •OCIUiremont•.
1.:;:1 inuance of Pormitto

FilE IIPJ• •

...._...,

PAT IIU FOlD

KOUNTRY KLUB

a

FOR

I _••

89C

25OJ.. ,OFF

ALL 'Mill'S BELTS
1 GIOUP MEN'S DIISS

. S15

.

.HOLLOW
.ILl CHOCOUTE
'
'
' BUNNY

EGG COLOIING ICIT •.
MIDI. liT · · .. ~

.

BOOTS

'

•

. PAlMER .

1 GIOUP MIN'S -WISYE•

.

.

69-C

;: .

..

..U.

.·'JELL

'

'

·c01111. ·

·-·

.'
~· '·., "/ ..

·s·orv1coo ...............
·
10,097

VIIIY IEASONAIII
HAVE IEfEIENaS

Public Notice-

.
•
· ,
G.O. BONDS - Fire TruckCASH BASIS COMBINED
Oufotanding
•
PUbiiC·Notlce
'ANNUAL' FlllfANCIAI:' , . ·J1n.1 •. ' 89 ... .. ....... 36,000 ' · .;"~..;..:.;:,;..;;_;.;.:.:.:;.:..__
,.
· REPQRTE'
. ,· Rotirl&lt;l ......... .. ........ 2o.ooo
" For Fi•c.. Year nding
Outltanding
FINA.NCIAL REPORT
•· Of TOWNSHIPS
. Docemlier 31. 1989 • , Dec. 31. 'B9 ........ 15.000
Fo.r Flocal Y11r Ending
1 RACII'IE VILLAGE
G. 0 . I'IOTES- F .D .(Lend)~. Ml ;i,l.lli
December 31. 18B9
" MEIG,S COUNTY
Nriw laouM .... o. . . ....... 4.500
POMER
, 0.
GOVERMENTAL ,TYPE
Outotending
•
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
COL!I'ITY OF MEIGS
•.
FUNDS
Dec. 31, 19B8 .. ..... .. 4.500
992-2259
RECEIPTSTOTALS " Thlo lo an unaudited
TUPPERS PlAINS- Would
Loi:aH••n· ..'....... ... 19:742 Olitltllndlnli
Financial Report"
you believe you coutd linda
Intergovernmental
Jan .' 1, '89 :....... ..... 35.000
SUMMARY OF CASH
3
bedroom ranch with fu ll
~avonuo:........ ...:.28.446 Now IliUM ..... :...... .. 4.500
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
·basemen.! in great condition
AND EXPENDITURES
Ctjoorga for
Retirod ..... ...... ..... .. ... 4.500
S.rv~ ....... ....... 87.8211 Dutotanding
w1th that 2 acres you want
GOVER MENTAL FUNDS
Fi,..., ucen-.
Dec. 31. '89 .. ........ 19.600 RECEIPTSlor elbow room?l? Includes a
&amp; Permlto...........'..... 1.674
I cartif\1 thio repon to be ToliM ...... .... ... .. .39,187 .39
heat putnp. central air, gar·
·
Mitcelleneous .......... .4,864 co,rec:"t 1nd true. to the.beat lnlergovwnmental
age, and large storage shee .
Rocelpto ... ...... 55,200.39
T.OTAL .
,
of .IllY knowledge:
,
and this on e is. for you.
RECEIP:Tjl ......... 142,442 ·Thlo ,io •on unaudited fin1n· lntorelt ............... 3.218.24
$43,000.00.
All
Other
·
DISBUR5.EMENTS'7'
clli otetemont.
Revenue ...... ... 13,276.00.'
Securhy of Poroon &amp;
Jane G. Beegle. Clork·T•eoo .
SfRACUSE - Abeautiful b&gt;
f'ropeny ..............29 ,313
·
MarcH 19. t990 TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... 1 10.882.02
tl'let horne in excellent cond&gt;
Public Health
' 66 6th St.. P. 0. Bo• 375
SenriCM ....... ..... :... 3.016
Recine. Ohio 45771
DISBURSEMENTStion. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, a
Oenerel GovernBliic Utility
614-948-2891
large family, room wrth lireSenricM ....... ....... 11 .877 (3) 28, 1tc
•
mont .... : ... ..... .27,609.30
place.
Allie tans, ~orage workTranaportatk)n ....... .. \7,393
~
Public Sofaty ..... 14.271 .46
.
shop
and
fenced yard. All ths
G..-GovarnPublic Works ..... 46,080.99
for
on~
$4
7,000.00.
....t ... .. .. ....... : .... 11.1111
Hollth ......... ........ 4,731 .24
Cephal
C!jitltl Qutl•y ..... .... 1.7.6811
Public Notice
LETART- 15mins. to Rrtchie
D
SerVIcl ... :...... 22.800
Outlay ............ 16. 100.00
T TAL DISBURSE·
Debt Service :
Bridge 7 room house, 3 bedMENTS .... .... .. ... .113,61B
Note.
Principii
rooms,
I bath. targe living
PUBLIC NOTICE
ToJoi .R ecoiptl Ovtr/ I!JnPtrymont ..... .... 3.B10.29
The following were reCalv·'
room and large ktchen. Car·
dar) Dilb .. ... .. ...... 2S.924 ed / prop~rld by the Ohio
lntereat and Fiscal
pet throughout. Patio. 2 car
OTHER fiNANCING
Chergao ............. 672.19
Enviro"n ment•l Protectioh
garaga
Gas heat and hot wa·
S!)URCEI'IfUSES.)-:; ·
Agency IOEPA) lait W.ok. · TOTAL DISBURSE·
ter heat $29,900.00. OWNER
Transters
·
.
MENTS
........
1
12,076.96
Effective dltM of final oc·
WILL TAKE AN OFFE~.
. ·-out .................. , .. I300I tlont ar\d itauance d1tea o.f Total Recoipto Over/ (\l.n· '
1
Totll Ott.f Fin. ' '
der)
Di1b
.
..
.....
..
1.193.94
propOaed ectiona 1nd of
SourcM/ IU-) ,....... 1300) dr~ft 1ction1 ere slated. Fi- . Oepoo~ory
MIDDLEPORT ~ Beautiful
E•c. Rcpto 1nd Oilier
Bllonce ... .... ... 6B,869.06
. Colonial Home1Level lot, 2
Financlngllcloo- Over/
car ·g•age. has ornate trim.
iUnri!Or) E•por'rd.· Olob. &amp;
· attic studio w/skytighl. WeU
Olhor U.../Not...... 28.624
Public NotiCe
insutated.
· R!DUCED
F~nd Calh·..l1nco
$49,900.00.
OWNER
WANTS
Jill. 1. '88 ............. 111,302
TO
SELU
Fuild Calh Balance
·
PUBLIC NOTICE
Dilc. 31."81 .. : ..... 113.921'
ADVERTISEMENT
BIDS
PROPRIETARY FUI'IDB
SYRACUSE- Nice Modular
Gallia-Mei•s Communi!~ Action Apncy has the fol·
RECEIPTS- '
on corner tot. 3 bedrooms, I
Iewin&amp; equipment for sale to be disposed of through
Chergao for,
balh, carpet, laundry room .
competitive biddina. ·
,
t'nricn .. ............ 54.929
Patio and ctose to school.
.
.

·EGGS

MIDDLEPORT:- The.MiddleP9rl (), tkl of the Eastern Star
will have a chicken and noodle

•

'
.
The Golden Gaits 4H Club will
111011101' a tack lllkUol! on Sunday .
all: 30 p.m.atlbe Atbi!t!,l .CollDty
Falfll'ouncll In the JuniOr fair
bUlldlna. More lllfOrmatlon may
be obtal!!ed by caiUna 664:-4145

. •.

FOt WWHD

99C '"~··•

RECEIPTS ..., ....... 6B,371
DISIIURSEMENTS.
Plroonal

,, PubliC Notfoe,

·. ·...PALMD:· . '
• SOUD · :.
.CHOCOLATE .

...

1 G~~UP LADIES

GAS IIIIC.

'

'

BRADBURY -'the Bradllury
Cliurch of Christ will have
weekend revival on ' Friday,
Saturday, · and Sunday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. ·Former ministers
of the church· ~u be preaching

'

be an orpnlzatlonal nieetlng for
all team managj!l'a and other~
Interested In a men's summer
basketball league on T)lunday at
7 p.m. at the Middleport VU1a1e
Hall. '
·
. '
CHESHIRE - The GaiDa
Meigs . .Comm!lnlty Action

.

.

-·
.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
.

'

M:a·g_ic·

MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- ,. ~~~~r:~~t. The P,Ubllc Is Invited
port Literary Club will meet
'
Wednesday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
LONG BOTI'OM -There will
Episcopal Church 'Parish House be paqcake supper on Friday at5
with Helen Hayes as hostess. p:m. at the Carmel Church
Books reviewed will be "Riding buDding located on Carmel
the Iron Roosters," by Bernice Road. All · proceeds will go
Carpenter and • "Alaska" by -toward repairing the church. The
Betty Fultz.
public Is Invited t6 attend.

Tack aJJ(tion

or698-3U6.

...

be taking gard en app UcaIIons
Wednesday and Thursday from
9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

..

.

Kindergarten
•(pqimunity calendar
:
registration ,dates = = =,= = =·..;·::::·;..~==. ::::Ag::::e::::n:;;;cy::::wl=ll::::ha~v=e:a::::free~c;;;;lo;;;;th;;;;ing=~di~M;;;;e;;;;ro;;;;a~Fr:=i::da==y~·fr:;::om~·~17l~~.::m~.1~0
WEDNESDAY
•
day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. In !!le basem~nt of the
alie annou.need
POMEROY - · The Meigs
noon at the old high school Maso!lic Te~l!)e, ·
'
·
County Cooperative Parish will b Udl 1 Ch 111
Dr. Fred Williams announced
that kindergarten registration
for the 1990·91 school year Is open
at Ohio Valley Christian School.
Interested parents should call
446-0374 for information and to
make an appointment for read!·
ness assessment:
Ohio Valley Christian School
offers al) academically oriented
lull-day kindergarten program
which · Is Integrated with a
Biblical ' world-view and taught
by a Christian teacher. Students
not only learn to read, write, and
count. ·but they also have the
advantag~ 'or interacting dally
with their Chri~tlan teachers and
s taft members. The strong phon·
lcs based readiness curriculum
Is designed to prepare the child
for reading success.
A child must beat Jeast5years
of age on or before Sept: 30. If a
child Is 6 years of age on or before
Sept. 30, he or she must attend
school.
The parent wlll 'need to bring
the child's birth cerdflcate and
record of Immunization. Children must have lour OPT's
(dlptherla, whooping cough and
tetanus vaccinatiOns). three po·
llo vaccinations, one MMR (measles. mumps and rubella vaccl·
·nations J. and a tuberculin skin
test.
.
.
Ohio Vallev ChrtS!Iari School is
entering Its -14th year of opera·
lion and Is located In the First
Baptist Church educational
bulidlng on the corner of Third
Avenue and Locust gti-eet. It Is a
private Christian school which
compiles with the Minimum
Standards of · the Ohio State
Department . of . Education for
Non.Chartered, Non·Tax supported schools.

..

.Easter
.

MIDDLEPORT,

J.
i

.. ~

•

.. ........ 3.442

Tt'8Vel t111n11
io
c::.::t..:;............. .. 1,198
S 1coo
B 267
orv
...... .......... '
Supptio.and
.
·.
Mate•illo ......... ...... B.I 78
C.Opitltl Outloy' .... ......... 961
TOTAL DIS·
·,
BURSEMENTS ..... 29: 186
Tote! Recoipto Over/ Under
Diobur10monto .... 29, 186
I'IDN·DPERATING
Ill bido . • :Jane G. BeOlllt, REVENUES/IEXPENSES):
Vllligo Clerk Othor UoM/Nonop.
·
Ekpondltures ...... ,..... 1979)
P
0
8
376
· .• '' • · · Ok
Total Other Fin. Sourceo/
Racine, Oh. 4117'71
1
. IUooo ..... .. ............... 1979)
13114, 21 : 28,' 3tc
. •
. . •
,
Ekt. Rcpto. lind Other
-,.....,P"'u'"'blc-::-1.c-,N=-=-"ot'"'t·-c-e'"·'...,.·•. I Fin . Soprcel Over / )Under)
. , ,
Exp. Dl1b: &amp; Other
UOM/Not ....... .... .28.207
''
· ~ · PUBLIC .NOTICE
fund Cnh Balance
NOTICE II hereby given .hrn. 1, 'B9 ... .. ........ 63,863
ttuit on Slturday. M1rch 31. Fund Cllh Bal1nco
1990 0 I 10 00 I m 1 pub- Dec. 31. 'B9 ..........B2.070
· :be hlld
' wHI
• " at 1011
RM. for Encumbr.
lie 111e
Union Avenue, Pom•oy. O.c. 31, '89 ... ... .. .... 4,000
Ohio. to oell fofCIIhthofol· NDNEXPEI'IDABLE TRUST
FUNDS
lowing
collateral:
Non~Oporettng Revenues /
1984 Chryolor L.uor S#
1C38A44E7EG171673
(Exponus)1979 Ford LTD S#
Tronofero-ln ............... 300
9B63F18B939
Total Other Fin. SourcM/
The Farmero Bank end
(UIIO) ... , .. ..... :............ 300
Savings Comp.ny, Pome· Exc . Rcptaand.~Other
ro'y&gt;Ohio, r&amp;II!IMIIi,the right . Fin . Sources Over/ (Un· .
to bid it thlo 1110 , and to' ' dor) Exp. Dlob. &amp; Other
withdraw the above colla·
UIM / Not .................. 300
te,ra,l p~iOr , 9 , aala. furthe.~ • . Fund C~ah Balance
Tho f.;,Mro --~k and, S.v- .J1n. 1, 89 ....... .. ...... 8,5,00
lngo Coiqpenyo- the , Fund Cash Balance ,
.
right to reject any or all bidl Doc. 31. '89 ...... ..... :6,80!J
bm 'tted
.
Troooury
.
suFur!.wer 'the ebo've calli· · Balance ... ..... ..... 2.07.378
terol wll be •old In the con- tnvootmonto ... ......... :6,800
dltion It lo In Vo&lt;lth no ••· Total Treuury
'
p 0110d or impl!ld warren·
Baianca ........... .. 214, 178
/
ivan
O,u tltonding .. .. ·... :.(11 .382)
-s
·
•TOTAL
131 28. 29, 30, Jtc
BALANCE ....... .. 202, 796

IN APPRECIATION - Ellen RoUiht, left, children and youtb
Ch!U!'ftliUI for tbe auxiliary llDit of the Drew Webster Post 39,.
prelllinted Iva Powell wllh a plaque In appreciation of a job well
·done in tbe youth program. Tbe plaque was Pn!llented durln1 the .
post's 'llst .birtbday celebration
· ·
·
helil recently at the post home..

~

~J1.:'~tnOOUI

LEGAL NOTICE

Public Notice

IACIIII

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

992-2198

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

1'0'''

PUbliC Notice

We ptn ripl!ir and rt·
cere radiators and
heatw ewes. We can
aha •HI boil and rad
out r.diatws. We also
repair Gas Ta'*s.

GUN SIIOOT

4-16-16-lfft

'A cltttth~ achoenrse rn..,l DIICI(I tn The 0111¥ 5enltntl 11~
!=8PI - CIMtiftecJ d11p1 .... . &amp;u•m•s C•ro tnd •.,., n9ttets
wMt 1110 IDDII• tn I he Pt Pt,.ant A . . . . . , II"! a UU! Gil l•
Oauy To~ne. re•Ch•ng ow• 18 . 0~0 nomer.

~

SER~ICE

M i ddlepon.

t or co n• eu'i""• ' "'"' · brOIIIen upoav $ wtl l bt c:n1rt.c!

C1ra
' " Memoream

•Senttn• I1·A01 rnoon11bte tor lf'tOts Uter hrst o•• fChto-.
for
hnl 08'1f 1d runs lf'l paper, Can DI!IDU! 2 ·00 p,..
~".,. att~ . Dubhcl't t On 10 mall.e corrtc11or

113 0 0

De jMIG In tctv..,Ct .

·

..,,D,.

as:oo

Stntton.

tnr Ill"·., rJIIN II MDirl1• ld~

•FJ •• ads - Gwe.wav ll'lod Found IO$ ~o~ila.- 1 S wcoras will Dt
iun 3 01¥1 at no ch•9f
olatJ tor au c•n• •
"ctGuDle or.c~ ot 10 co1 :
,

. 20
.30
. 42
.10
,05 1 di Y

16.'0~

1!

R et"

Over 1s' Word1

R11e
U .OQ

15
15

3
6
10

PI•C!
•.~t
~
*"•CM\Ie I 50 ChiCOunt t or ICI• DltG lf'l ldw1nCf

·•"c:e
l•t•r•
•? DOtnt ltne1vrH on ~v u ..a

fllt.RT8 AI'ID SERVICE
fo• Moot 2 lftd 4·cycle
IIIQintl
Stocl&lt; Pen• for
Homll~e. Wol&lt;loator,
Tocum&amp;oh, l•lggo &amp;

RATES

TO PLACE
. AN AD
. CALL 992·21 s·6'
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to. S P.M.

•

.. "II "r•rrt, 011.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING.
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

'

wanted to Buy

..,.,can

Junk cora with or . .. _

-

l.or!y

u..ty

tt4- •

�'

.

.

. ..

'

1811 ...... - · ..... ,.,.

•.......: r"''-" IWIIIilo._ . 17Ifill....

,,....::-,,:t'f; ~I

.,._, *t M1 11t 1•1141

I~~· mo . . . lor-.

,!

Cor:

C:::ioo
'::'"n ~'ll:l~ ::::l
mt EOH. ·'

.

.

ft.--....

. Viewing

ilooltow-·=CIAI 'I

..._AJMIII.11-IIN.

aiW&amp;ru.

AUCTION.
Cllowll., o.•r

•

-

M

WID., MARCH 21

II

n ·Nloo •~
twnllura. ......_ W t n a

•• i tCirmluk
.........Q -

u.oo:. .'.Coli
. . .._
. . . -

····~

.

'{()0

I

illl

ROOMT

I 11'1'1

illlltaldllllle I'OA T-

. (!) Dogranl High Caldln
!lramallclllly diiCovere that
Claude' a comm~ment Ia a

fiC=i.
i«»~==-Q

AND TONI614T WE1U. 8E READtNO T~AT FAMOUS .
POEM.''TIIE OWL ANO "~:.we PUSSYCAT,' AS ~STE!'
1W ALL OF

• • • (JJ

. . L . . ':'
:========~"?..,

I!JHHIIIn
ID Cll*lelln Chlrll
1:05 (J) llvlrly Hlllblillla

' MATES OWLS AND PU$S'fCATS ... ..

1:30.(1) 8 _NBC Nlglitly Newa

(jj 8pooULook

.r I I
I

-;K:...;I,rP-;:N~Y::.,--11
I If I: oo

111 wtlfld toc111r

EXCEPT RAW•\OND, ~0

I I I* I I I
WHECRN

EVENING

-114&lt;MWIM.

Roorra,... lettwn ol ilia
four oo:ralllbt.d ~~ below 10 form lour ~""''" -d•.

•

.

I've observed many families
w~h lots of kids and I've con·
eluded that families run
smoother when theni Is .... ·•·

Ie

MlRTHE
1---.,iri'~I.FTI:...:.:,I...:::.,·I,..-!

I

Complete tho chuckle quoood
.
•
•
•
•
•
_
by filling In the missing words
L-...L......IL-.J....-1-.L....J you develop from s1ap No. 3 bolow.

•f_!ttll
AIC Newl Q
(!) ;:j.~ ElectriC
...
·

32 Mobile Homes

I'trna:·~~~
=•'la Q
Three'•
I Clrd

ContpMir
Conltlitants
combine enltlrtali\mont trivia ·
with lhl luck olthe draw.
CD Hlngtn• 111

f'tip

1:31 (JJ Andy Oofftttto
7:00 IJIIIcncrow l Mre. KLnt

for .Sale

..

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWRS

·r ----·---,----......,

. i

(J) PM M~QUinl
ill SportaCintor ,
D a D Cll Curreqt AHIIIr

BRIDGE

(}) (!) MacNIII Lohllr

Will •-.M In my -r
JooliMn PIMo. Exn:::nco ond

,...,. ... 114 44die.

1.1122,

I

1110 De.nvHis t4x72, t,C.I

45

. 1121 M-run•

eaao.
Slooplng
-~~~~- .
Aloo
trolor- apooo.-~~
All -Upo.
Hocel. •14-441

COli. ottor 2:DG p.m., 304-1'73-

Mit,llo-WY.

46 .Space for Rent
Co&lt;lnlly - · H - Pork,
33, of ,_..,_
l.olo.~··
polio,
- - Coli
114......7471.

Bllift tor ooio. 114:2!41.1H5
446-7141.

.1~1110 i Si1'0110n 12.1 cu. ong.,
5 HJ"ONttlu illlor. I!OIPoinl1f.l
cu.•.
uprtglt
·cholro,
3 - .a
bor
with
2 motchlna
utr11 chair &amp; 11M1 nlllllcNftg

1)1/;

·..

-u-.

'·

toble.
-t-.
otyrotoom
·
·
T1mper homenwhf31141·1nchoa
picnic table.

-g g-nt

I

I.fNC~T~. ·sr. . .
\ ~ ...-· . /
-

Flohtna - I tocklo box. 114:

317-41512 oftor I.
II

pool. ..rrnlahod: """·

1703.

Dlllmond

otootaun, ·
81~1·

1·-HJll SIHJPII•"

6 L1V' ,trJ('k

wodolng

HI: · 1P'
~ ot ttooo. lr.U.- tn
61 ·Fann Equlpment
woddlng ring, 1 :orgo 1 2
omollor dloinondoi ln ..,. · 11 'MF TrootO. with plow •nd
~~~~~ IIIlO ar boot of' - · dui\;"".:.:0 tiia.
ror: l14-44&amp;:t703. .
· ~710; tU Mi'thoiii, $4 ..0:
FOIIIIN -

- · :iS lb. pull,

sxl nrlotoillo 1100po. sz.o. 114-

lino.!"I14M_I.IIOI.520wnor2
•

·--

"

I

..

BuT I suPPO&gt;f .

I!J Mlalnl VICe Castillo hllps
a fQrmer detective find a
Qlobal murderer. Stereo.
ll!l Muak: llow Vldllo
CD
And Coatelto .
7:05 (J) Jltfforeono
7:30 (J) Fomllr Feud
ill MotorwHk lltuatrated
l!nt-:nment Tonight
(JJ. Mltnl'l Family

you GUYS A~I

UJfl&gt; TO t;-

ffEA~tNG fTU!F LI/CE 1
Tf'IAT A.'-L THE :,.IMf~.~
~
•

e
•a
e

1111 .1121 8

~rdyi

•trn M"A"S'H
11)1 c....u..

Q

.

CD Night Court

7:31 (JJ IInford And Son
8:00 (J) MOVIE: Bprlngtima In
The Rocklet (2:00)

e (J) 18 Unaolvod

. Myoterlla A profile ol a
Chicago kidnapping more
than 45-years-ago. Q
ill AdvontuN Great
American Events : Bucking
Horae Roundup from Miles.
MT ('f)
(II 81Il 0111w1ng Point
Ben sneaks into the high
school to sell Carol's old
term papers . (A) C
(}) Wondorwolka banny lives
with his father In an old.
• ~rked gypsy caravan. (1 :30)

'will

44t·1703.

NORTH

e

The great writer Terence Reese has
pointed out that sometimes falsecardin&amp; the j~rek from J-9 combina·
tions can ·pay defensive dividends.
Bobby Goldman found just such a play
durinc the London Sunday Times mvl·
tational tournament in January .
South made an invitational jump to
two no-trump after East had overcalled with one heart. With a sound 14·
point opening, North bid 1ame. De·
clarer ducked the first two heart leads
and finally won the third heart. Since
he could not alford to let East on lead,
he got 'to dummy with tbe kins of
spades to lead the queen of clubs. East
put on the king. declarer won the ace.
and West (Goldman) played the jack.
II the jack were sincleton, the. whole
club suit could come home, so Sotitb
played back to dummy's ace of spades
and played a club to his eight-spot.
West won the nine and played a third
spade. When declarer . eventually
played a diamond, West took the ace
and won the setting trick with his long
spade.
Note that declarer will surely suc·
ceed if West does not false-card with
the club jack. He will give up a trick to
the jack of clubs and have no hope lor
his contract unless the ace of dia·

J.li· H

+AK8
.72
tKQ8
+Q7H3

By Jamea Jacoby

"*It

F:RANK AND ERNEST

a&lt;

w_, 01

• liD Night Court Q

Fumlshld
Rooms

A-lor ..nt · - o r IIIOfllh.
Slotting 01 S1201m0. Golllo

F:nanctal

•

I

.a.c.,

oontrol olr, dlo-hor, rock
UndorDLIWiinQ. Zi!!o..2 lui' boih,
tuml8hed, li11,uuv. 11.._...
81~44112~ ...........

iI

NewtHour
1111
•1121 8
, _.. Q

t

1111 Clayton Nswpor".. 14110,
Zbr, Wllol or wfthoul, 114:2!41.

..

Be foul - Yours- Anglo- Pplicy - YOI.J in FOR . ·

The live year old climbed into the baby's playptJn and
asked the tod.dler, as he peere&lt;j out the bars, "So, what
are YOU in FOR?" '

EAST
., 7 5

WEST
+8432
.988
+A1075
.J9

.KQJ54
tJ32
+K4
SO liTH
+QJ 10
.• •A 10 3 ·.
• p. 4
+A 10 B2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soalb

Well

2 NT

Pass

1. 1.
Norlb

Eool

3NT

ALL pus

Opening lead: • 6

monds is with West. But since Wt!lit
does hold that ace, declarer will make
nine tricks.
True. declarer would aiso have succeedejl if he had played a low club first
from dummy. intending to insert tbe
10. But give West lull credit lor deviling a scheme to cause South to go set
after the mistake ol Leading tbe club
queen from dummy.

. ifi lmlthaon:.n World

Examine culturallactors that
have influenced theories of
evolution. C .
\Ill
t121 Monnol LH• The
lamily offers advice to Simon
on now to handle the school
bully. C
• liD WI9YIE : Kid O.lllhlld

e

aJr ll-IE.Y 00 .IT
I"-! A BAt::ERY

(2:00), .

Mu-.

9 Pdntt:Newa
I!J
Shft Wrote Alma
Mui'Qtr Stereo.
• CooWerutlon With Dinah
CD MOVIE: The PromiN (PG)
(2:00)
8:05 (J) MOYIE: The Big Lind

•

(2:00)

e:aoea

8(1) Held 01 Thl
.C laM Aher repair of his
deviated septum, Arvid has
further questions. (A) C
1111
Sydney ~astldloua
Matt moves into Sydney's
unkempt apartment. Q
IJIOnlla. .
9:00 8 (J) 8 Night Court
Christine lantaslzes about
ner child in 10 years. Q ·

•IIJ

[!) Call... ll8akllbloA

aa
e(J)D-"-·
M.D. Doogie and McGuire vie

lor the Resident of the Year
Award. C
(!) Americen PlayhouN Two
lilm oompanies glvo writers a
chance to direct. (I :301 Q
all • G2l Jake An&lt;! 1M
Fllman Jake Is visliod by an
old lllend who has been ·
hired to kill him. Q
11)1 LitTY King Llrill
i1J MOVII!: 1'111 Take (2:00)
Stereo• •
IJI Nath- Now Coun~ry
music's hottest stars are
fNturod live .
9:30 (J) 18 FM Ted and
Gretchen become mora than
just lrienda. C
(I) ln,uo:ng lui
L~»v• Marty tries to cheer
l:lannllt U£.on her 30th
birthday. !;JI
(}) Long Ago I F1r AWIIV Q
10:00 1]1700 Club With Pal

e

•a •

.I \_...

..._' ~

RoblrtiOn

. Elactrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration .

.,

.

tor-

Goecf ,.. ....
;:..:114412
aa::OW·
tor-,..
... In
mr o..d .....
WIN ._.

In
Iiiio

Wid ....

, . . . . -. 114411 •••·

Ill-·

--

root,

SNAFU® by

bod.-. t~roe
-

0&lt;
thntwty
nd•cot•led,

n t. 11111
~ghto. 614:111:!·58Se.

Lincoln

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

Br.

mobile hoM In country.

-- .....--1.
3

Bruce Beanie

· rtuo doD.,
quiNII.It~.

-

==

..r. ,...

Ill Olnenll Hauling r

F....-, ol 4i0ototc. 2 lr., 1

f::•
=::.r:t. r !"*..::
r, •••

~~

lol. · - - llof. • 1144.

dop.

.

:iltoplttllll In "" - . """ .,

........ iloHt. -

., :-.

...._IUIII Jill.

GIIQI'l: ""I I

,.,.

-iiiif

-

Dolt logo . . .. ...L•'I_ID,_,IIDM7I:

· l'"

to IIIICIIIoMnl to mr illl-w!fw

...,.., • 11e1 o1 111e -

'

..... alllrglc ,;,...

'

reality lactors. Trying to patch up 8 bro·
ken romance? The Astro,Graph Match·
maker can help you 10 understand .vhat
.to do to make the relationship work.
Mall $2 to Matchmaker, P.O. Bo•
91428, CieYeland, OH 44101 -3428.
'TAURUS (AprlllO:Mar 20) Partnershop
arrangemenls could put your tolerance
10 a test today. Regardl811 of what oc·
curs. .lry to remain calm and unruffled.
because II you lose your cool. you may
later rfljrat H.
·
GEMINI (...r 21-J..,. 20) Ali abun·
dance ol-gy and comp8111on might
tempt you to take on more rnponllbil·
ltlea -than you should loday. Be halptul,
'but let ottlora do 101111 things lor
· tllemleiWI.
CAIICIR ( " ' - 21..JUtr 22) TOday It
might be nece111ry for you to be a trifle
thtcl&lt; llkl!onecl and not· to take OllenM
. too rudlly, 811*111:Y 11 apt'MOII8 dil-l
1ort1 1 remark or actiOn of yours. Don't
....-clln kind.
· 1.10 ( - D:A... 22) GOlla which are
ol tmportenee to you todiiY might not
hive the priority with your ....,.
alllla. Tlllacouldcauaepro.,..,_Kyou
mllllntarpret the motlvel 01 lukewarm

live. Jhings could' rapidly go downhill .
·•
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You'll be a
pretty good performer up to a point to·
day, but there Is a possibility you may
suddenly ease up just when your goals'
are within reach. Start strong and finish
strong .
SCOAI'I() (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You and
BERNICE ·
· your mate can hlitmonlze on major :..
BEDEOSOL
sues today aalong aa thelyrlca both are
humming contain more " we' a" than
thay do ''I' I ." Teamwork _,llal.
IAQinARIUI ( -•.
.,_..., WOI'kloacl titan you
might be your lot In life today. Ho•oi181',
K you match the taka at harld. rather
than ntOM 1bout lha, you'll be proud of
' your .achll•-'•·
CAPRICGMI (lleo. 22-.lett. 11) TodiiY
• you'l be .n.ctl¥e In promoting your
•own lnt..U. but you're not 111c415Y to be
~
; aa conoelentloua about loaklng out tor
. 1·
.-..ch 8, 1tiO
thl ~ of otlilrl. Thla _,, halp
;
'
your popularity.
Provided you Mve up Ia yqur poltnllal
AGUAIIUI (olin. 10 .... 111 TlmlnCt II
~ cto everything .,peotld ol you, thl
ex~ ImpOrtant todey In lutlltHng
. yur ahead oould 111 1 banrw one for
your ambltloul objlcttvw. If you . . OU1
~ materleuJ. CapitlltJI on your opoflyncwllh-'•· ltcouldM•..:YdiIIJIIrlllnlllll, 10 you'll heve no rfljretl
lull your vlclorlll"i-.MIInoh
...
.
aupporln.
.
. , PIICII (1'811. •Mardn 10) Be "*Y
_ .'(lllniiii'I-Aprll11) 1'1111 might VMO (AIIIo D:l.. l. 211 Relation- a.elulwllhwtoomYOU9!"1niOUirtQua
tit - of t - dl)lll wllen your com- ..,.. aiiOuiCI be l'llhlr pia aunt and en- ,dlleulllon todlly. Don I I'II8ICh will or·
)MnlltiOn _,•t be - r a t e to . ~Grable todllr, Plowldecl you do not try , _ . with a peraan you k - from
tile 111ort1 ·end .-gila you
to t~ your ·wtll on your OOIIIPM· , 1*1 .,..,...,_ lllla'!ld ...,_,
· Don't let your expeclltloow ~~~ lha ton&amp;. II you are too dllmandlng or aaser.
·
·

·"'!JIIIId..

• (J) 18 Oulntllm Lilli
Sam :eapa Into the life of a
115&gt;U!"'llrapeze artlot. Cl '
g
(I) !qual Jtiitlco A
gr.,d jury hlarlng confllcll
with JoAnn's plan to visit har
dad.
(}) Nowawotch
1111' 81121 Wletlur VInnie
blows the whistle on hla
boas lor dumping toKic

ae

....,.lnt- z.
lwa~&amp;
Twtllght

...

~-

10:011(1) MOVII: PONe !PO) ~2:00)

11):.301%1 V. . . Of MlntOIY
(J) Till Movie 1'118111. 11111

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Bacleriol1 Isle ol
ogist's
exile
wire
40 Pilcher
5 Strike·
· breaker
41 Prompted
9 Overtake
10 Subject
DOWN
12 Actor
1 Old oath
Grillilh
2 Hawaiian
13 Shunned
veranda
15 Philippine 3 Greet
tree
4"16 Caddoan
Wednesdl!Y"
Indian
5 Metallic
11,Dean ·
6 Envy
Martin
7 Brazilian '
film
lree
18 C~ntumely 8 Say
20 Distant
QOodQye
21 Slippery
22 Dullard
23 Minute
24 Criticize
25 Kane's .
"Rosebud"
27-·Unresponsjve
28 Sanskrit

ilc!10ol
29 Type of
-footwear
31 Whale
32 Snoop
· 33 Newsman
Rather
35 Drinking
toast
37 Mature
38 Show
feelings

DJ\ILY C~ YPTOQUOTF.S- Here's how to work It:

.portriYI 1111 heyday, deCIIIW,
and rebirth of grancl o1c1 .
movllthHterw. (R)

@._, .. llhow

I CfOOIII CliMe

u•li'H-~=~(J)

,...._.

3/H

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is w:ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each da}' the code letters are different.

to the mov11 pellce ol

8201 and 18301

Ans-r
39th U.S.
wood
president
14 Challenge 29 Ill will
16 Govern 30 Pass by
19 Progeny 34 Require
22 Glabrous 36 Piglet's
24 ." -· Boy"
mom
25 Ce!lsation 37 Fabled .
26 "M" star
blrlil
11

CR'VPTOQU~TE

1-JI

•

HJJPF

VI

XBVJWAGI

ZBGVA

FBHZ

ZP

BHSSO

F H0 ,

UPA

FHO

FVJJ

ZBGO

w (\

M p 8 I E·P I

P F I

LGZZGA

LG

0="11

G K ~A

• Camilli '""""

Yeatudar'• c..,.t041•ota: HISTORY BOOKS
BEGIN AND END, BUT THE EVENTS THEY
DESCRIBE DO NOT. - R.G. COLLINGWOOD
.c'
,

eO Ala:•• Hal

~ 1 01 iJ.,. Prodlgll Son
• c.n ••...-n .... Dlnlh

11~~~a::~

u vI

w

I

-

0

"

4) 1990 by King Footuoea Syncllcale, lnc .

"

�Vanderbllt
wins 53rd
annual NIT

AU

Daily Number
486
Picll:-4
6322

Wini1HIS

We Reserve The Rirhl To
Limit Quanlilies

Super Lotto

IS.. Store for

. STORE 'HOURS

;

7·24-30-32-37-39

TIIPU v•oo•
COUPON

Mon.dcfy thru Sunday :

a AM-10 PM

COUII9II
March 28. 29,
UMIT 15 TRIPU;

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

COUPONS
,...--~----

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MARCH 31, ·1990 ·

1
I
I

'

.

'

.Despite program success:

,..

BUY 3 somES
GET 3. BOnlES
..

·. KRAFT

SUPERIOR. CHUNK

SUPERIOR REG. or THICK SLICED

.U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS •

'

,

''
Bu~

1 3-LB. Bowl Get 1

'FREE
Good Only At Powoll's S... Valu
GoHI'hru s.twdoy, 111ar. )I, 199o

.

L--~~--------·-·~
T"""""--~------

KRAFT

9
2
Top Round Steak .L:... ~ .

.(;RAPE
JELLY

(
Ground Turkey ••••• 99
FlA
69&lt;·

'

FREE··

t

G10d Only At POwoll't Supl(
Good Thtv Saturday, Mar. )1,

'

.
------------'

THANK YOU

APPLE SAUCE.

I
BUY 1 56-0Z.
I
I
Jar Get 1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I Good Only At Powoll's 5aper Valu

FREE

I Goad Thrv 5allrdoy, lllar. 31, 1990

L-----------..--------------3 LB. BAG

B.)4/ Sl

~X ~·- MATCH-CARROTS IL.

Grn. ·Peppers/ Cukes ••Ef.

· .

YELLOW
ONIONS

.

Buy 1 Ba9 Get. 1

FREE ·

FLAVORITE .

2°/o Milk ......... ~~!·•• Sl ~9

KRAFT

·

Mac./Cheese •••2t. 4199&lt;

Orange Juice ••~-:.~. $2
VA N DE KAMP, FillETS OR
ot: S
- 99
F.tsh Sttcks ••••••••••. 2

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

BORDEN'S

WHEA

·

.

0

39

21

.

OSCAR MAYER

SLICED BOLOGNA
luy 1 Lb. ·Gtt 2nd Lb.

FREE

Good Only At Powoll's ~up.,. VIla
GOOII Thrv
Mar. )1, 1990
. ....... Sotw•r.
.
~

1/t

...

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

PET RITZ
COBBLERS
Buy 1 26 Oz
Cobbler Get 1

FREE

Gaeol o.ly AI Peirflll's . . . , • •
00011
IMO

nn s.•••r...... "·

Tuna ••••••••••••••••••••••• 69&lt; Ice Cream ••••••••••••
6~0L

GOOII Only At Powoll't S..W Vllu
1_.:..
Geod__________
Thrv ~twdoy, Mar. 31, fHO
,;,.._

GAL$

---.-----~---·-·

DOWNY', FLAKE
FROZEN
W~FFLES

2 QUART UNSWEIJED

HO_L .SU(ED

KOOL AID

PEPPERONI

luy 1 fkg. Get 1

FREE
Satur.,.

11aeo1 cw, At
Geolllln ~.,. ..... 11, ....

Buy 5 Paks Gtt 5 Paks ·

. FREE

v•

Good Only At ......., S1Mr
, , Goo~ Th111 S.tw41f, .... I 1, ~ MO

'.

Buy 1 3.5 Oz. l'kg. Get 1
Goed Only At Pow••• Super Vatu
..... Thrv
Mar. , 1, 1.990

FREE
r.w•·• ..., v•

We're seeing more and more
program. Since no residents
restraints
.being
put
on
the
.
were
present to comment. the
L
.
"
• ,
prugram. .
.
application will now be submitEdwards, along with George · ted to the funding source.
Arnott, assistant director of the
Architect 6111 Dittoe, of the
JTPA program, was at Wednes·
firm of Burgess and Niple,
day's commissioners' meeting
Parkersburg, W.Va. , presented a
for a p1,1bllc hearing. A public
completed feasibility study for
hearing prior to submission of a
office space needs for the Meigs
JTPA grant application . is a
County Departmllnt of Human
requirement of the funding
Services. Dittoe is recommend·
orocess.
lng the department's present
Edwards and Arnott reported
location on Race St. in Middlethis year's program sustained an
port be enlarged to 14,000 square
overall cut of approximately feet. The building is pow 3,500
$73,000 In both counties, but that square feet . By enlarging the
some of that. money was reco·
building, Department of Human
vered through a recently funded Serivces • offices now housed In ·
training program for displaced the Coates building on Second
coal miners. Galiia-Meigs Ave.; could be combined with
JTPA subcontracts the coal offices in the main building. The
miners' training program from suggested expansion reflects
Tri-County Community Action possible growth within the
Agency in Athens County.
·
agency over a ~year period.
No area residents attended Costs estimates are from $800,000·.
Wednesday's hearing where Ed· to $900,000.
wards reported Gallia-Melgs
The · commissioners accepted
C.A.A. Is seeking a total of the feasibility study , subject to
$337,098 for the 1990 JTPA approval of the State Depart,

.

ment of Human Services, since
.state. funding is involved. If the
study ,Is approved by the state,
the county would begin seeking
methods of financing the project.
In other matters, threy bids
were received on a computer
. system for Meigs County Court.
Cards Inc., of Elida; the Hen·
schen .company, of Bowling
Green. and Dlreci Market Data
Systems Inc., Dublin. submitted
the bids. The proposals were
tabled for review by Linda Bentz,
Meigs County Court deputy.
Two bids were also opened on a
mini-van for the Meigs Depart· .
ment of Human Services. The
bids from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport. and Smith-Nelson Motors,
Pomeroy. were tabled for review
by Human Services Director
Michael Swisher.
·
Finally. the commissioners
au thorlzed the Meigs County
Highway Department· to bid on li
monthly basis for bituminous
and aggregate materials for the
department.

Vote set
today on
aid ·p lan

1 3-lb. Jar.Gel 1

· ·

VORITE GRADE A-1 0-14. Ia AVG.

.

i

Bologna •••••••• ~ ••~...~ 119
FISH FILLETS
. Ll.$4'99
Orange Roughy •••••

$'»

'

PARKAY SPREAD

Bologna •••••••••••L:.•••• 89&lt;
.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Despite the apparent success
of the JTPA program In Gallia
and Meigs Counties, those who
adminisler the program locally
are concerned about Its future.
Recent federal funding cuts and
rwnors of additional funding cuts
are the cause of concern.
"How effective do you think the
JTPA program has been tiiMeigs
and GalUa Counties?" Meigs
' County' Commissioner Richard
Jones asked Sidney Edwards ;
director of Gallia-Melgs
Commqnlty Aciion Agency
whiCh administers JTPA: in the
local area .
"I think we've been very
effective," Edwards answered.
"JTPA is a ,piace for people to go
for help. We've been successful
in helping individuals who had
lost hope. We have been, and will
continue to be, most effective In
providing long-term traiJIIng.
And we would be even more
effective If our funding isn't cut.

~---------------:
,--------------_I
.

Pick ·of the Chick •••••

.

~

Goed o.1J. At Pewoll's Su!Mr
Goed Tilt• Satwdoy, lllar. )J, 1·HO

LB.

!

JTPA officials are concerned

·fREE v•

•

2 Soctlona. 16 Pog11 25 C.nu
A Muldmodlo Inc. Nowopopor

M

20 oz• .BonLE

LOTSA POP

LONG ACRE-LB. R.OLL .

Ohio LOttery

SPECIAL GIFT- Gerrl MIUer, left, beck row, preslilent of
Drew Webster America Leeton Auxiliary Unit, presented a gift to
Maxine Barnes, Lucaster, eighth district president, ai the 7lat
birthday celebration held recently ai the post home. Pictured In
front are junior color guarils Jessica and Aahley HamUton.

local news briefs---.
Man returned. to prison

.
· David ' Dillard was returned to the Plckaw~y Correctional
Institute on Wednesday by Deputy John Spires, reports Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Dillard will reswne serving
his sentence Imposed by the Meigs County Court of Common
1
· Pleas. Dillard had been returned Monday for a shock probation
hearing, but at the Tuesday hearing Dillard, after consulting
with hi$ attorney. withdrew his appUcation for shock probation.
The judge consented to the withdrawal and· the defendant was
ordered returned to the state insdtutlon.
On WednesdaY. John Moore, Gold Ridge Road, reported that
he has a beef cow missing from his pasture in the Gold
Ridge-Kingsbury .area. Anyone spotting the cow is asked to
contact the sheriffs office or [){Qore at Ills residence.
Deputies wee called to the Bill Buchanan residence on Joppa
Road, near Reedsville, Wedne5day evening. Sheriff Soulsby
· reports that. when Mrs. Buchanan came home Wednesday
evening she discovered the house had been entered. No other
details are available at this time.
.
r
Sheriff Soulsb~ reports that Brian E . Bass, SyracuSe, was
arrested Tuesday evening on an assault warrant from Meigs
County Cou;·t. He is scheduled to appear on this charge. He was
lodged .In the county jail pending the hearing.

Huck ple.acU guilty in killirr.g
WINFIELD - Raymond Huck pleaded guilty to a reduced
. charge of second-degree murder Wednesday in Putnam Ci&gt;unty
Circuit Court and was sentenced II&gt; up to 18 years In prison for
his role In the death of en off-duty sheriffs deputy.
Two GalUpolis area men - Robert Gray, 31, and Robert
Bates, '32 - are also charged In connection with the shooting
death of John Janey, 32, In August 1989.
Gray has been charged In the shooting of Janey, a Putnam
sheriff's deputy who was staktngoul Huck's home in Cow Creek,
near Hurricane.
Huck, 34, was accused of arranlinir en ereon attempt on his
residence lest August. Janey. who wu mOOIIIJahtlng from his
deputy's job, bed staked out Huck's home because of previous
fires end thetta there.
.
Gray and Bates are alleaecf by Putnam offlclela to have been
the two Huck hired to bum his bouse. Grey Is el lePd to have
·shot Janey whea !Janey attempted to arrest Grey. In a struggle
with Janey, prosecutora ellege, Gray aelzed Janey's pn end
shot him.
Huck had ~ llldtcted for ftrst-dep-ee murder, which would
have carried a lite sea~. He entered e guilty plea to the
reduced cbarp miDutet before hll trial would he:ve bepn.
During bll sentAmcllll betore Putnam Circuit Judge Clarence
·
,
Watt. Huck cholled back teara.
"I'd like tosen.d my apOlogies," heselcl. "lhednocontrolover
lt ...

'&gt;'

',

If.'

,. •

I

'

' •

•

f

. "1'

I

/
wAsHINGToN ·:(u:Prt :_ ·The'' •·· •
Senate braced for a • possible
showdown over a $500 million
plan to provide ald.to thousands
of coal miners and other workers
If the clean air bill becomes law
and prompts major industry
changes and layoffs.
.
With a vote set for Thursday
afternoon on the workers aid
amendment by Sen. Robert
Byrd, 'D·W,Va., Senate leaders
hoped for an agreement on a less
expensive compromise to help
tliose who could lose their jobs
because of increased emission
control expenses pn industry.
Byrd rejected the leadership's
latest proposal on Wednesday as
Inadequate, . par,tlcularty with
regard to West Virginia coal
miners. " The counterproposal
does not do what needs to be
done," Byrd told reporters.
A:t the same time. Byrdsaldthe
negotiations were not dead. "The
door Is not ·closed."
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell of Maine said he
still hoped for a compromise, buf
Byrd appeared very close to
having enough votes to pass his
amendment without a deal.
Mitchell seemed resigned to
•
the possibility that Byrd could
win, even suggesting he could
accept the legislation If it was
adopted.
.
Mitchell said he did not conDEMOLRION BEGINS -Demolition crews of the debris and relevel the property. The boa pisider Byrd's amendment a
began knocklug down two hulldlnp at Lakin tel will be UDdergolngseverel changes durin II the
"deal-buster" that threatened to
. Sta&amp;e Bospl&amp;al earlier this week. A spokesmaa next six months lo Improve facilities.
upset the clean air bill, the
sal!! It could take six to eight weeks lo remove all
product of a compromise be· .
tween Senate leaders and the
Bush administration.
The Senate has promised ac·
lion on. the entire clean air bill
project related to housing and
next week.
form last January.
By LEE LEONARD
would open the door to abuse.
Mitchell said he favors some
Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron. the
UPI Statehouse Reporter
form of job protectlon·for miners
chief sponsor, said he hopes for
COLUMBUS ..... Turning aside
Verich told his colleagues that
and other workers bul Byrd's warnings that it's an lnvitatlo.n to
Senate ratiflcatk&gt;n next week.
about
20 percent o!Oh lo' s popula·
amendment was not structured scandals, the Ohio House of
If reapproved by t~e Senate,
is
struggling to find or
lion
the right way. In particular, Representatives Wednesday ap·
the constitutional amendment
maintain
a home, dettpite an
Senate leaders objected to provi; proved a constitutional amend- will be sent to the ballot in
eight·year
old state housing
sions giving coal miners more ment permitting the state and
November. Ohio voters have
program
which
hu provided
aid than displaced workers in local governments to borrow
rejected government borrowing
low·lnterest morqeges to 53.110!!
other affected industries.
for housing three tlmett in the last
money for housing purposes.
first·time home buyers.
At the same time, the Senate 20 years.
Byrd has twtc'e scaled down his
•
Senate Jolnl Resolution 11
concurred
In minimal House
Verlch said the amendment, I!
legis)atlon to meet the adminiswould' amend the stale Constitu·
adopted, would enable the state
tration's cost objections. It now changes and sent to Gov. Richard
tton to make houatnr • "public
Celeste
e
$138mUiion
supplemento help private 'contractors prowould provide ,a maxlmwn . of ·
purpose" for which the atate and
tal budget corit.lnlng $92 million
vide housing to the 140,000
three Y,ears unemployment benefits for coal miners end lesser to offaet e pnijected sborttall in locel aovernmentl mey borrow. · homeleu, the 400,000 young
Currently, onlyhllbwaya,educa·
Ohioans who cannot afford their
assistance for displaced workers Medicaid tundl .
tlon, poUutlon control and transThe Senate also adopted
first home, the 200,000 Ohioans
In other Industries.
·
portation are public pUI'pClleS for
who went homes that are no1
Byrd maintains the high-sulfur House·approved new and
borrowing.
stronger
child
support
guidelines
available, and to help an ettl•
coal miners of Appalachia and
Rep.
Michael
Verich,
D·
ordered
by
the
Supreme
Court
to
mated
100,000 senior cltJzens
the Midwest will need more help
Warren,
said
a
crlticel
housing
take
effect
AprU
1.
The
House
make
repairs
ori their homes.
than other workers because they
shortage
lndicalea
that
aovern·
must
concur
in
the
Sena,te
"This would not allow us to
stand to lose the most Jobs from
the clean air proposal, speclti· changes before the governor gets ment should be allowed to form give it (money) away, juat loan
partnerships with private con· II," said Verlch, pointing out that
caily from Its acid rain reduction the bill.
tractors
to provide housing for 40 other statett have houlllll
The housing resolution passed,
provisions.
those
who
wen I it.
programs. ''Government hu en
The bill requires a ~0 million- 8().15, end was returned. to the
But opponents said the mea· obligation to respond to the
ton reduction in sulfur dioxide Senate for concurrence in numer·
sure wu drafted so broadly it
housing needll of this state," he
emissions by the . turn of the ous chengett. The Senate had
would
allow
virtually
eny
type
of
adopted
the
proposal
in
different
said.
century.

House approves housing legislation

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="295">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9568">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35587">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35586">
              <text>March 28, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5608">
      <name>kidwell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
