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Page- 12-The ,Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Lose your luggage? Ann wants to hear all about ·it
••

Dear Ann Landtrs: I was pleased . for !he things in your bag. flow do
to see a letter in your column from a we know your suits cost $400'1 Even
man who delivers luggage lost by wilh -JCCCip!S, lhe vllue of everythe airlines. Now I hope you will let thiilgdejneialel by SOpercenL We
a victim express himself. ·
wiD deliver it if we find ia. but only
I have traveled more than 75,000 if it's more thsn two hours late. If
miles a year since i 970. Most of my ·you can't hlog 810111111 the lirport
trips have been in the United SlaiCS, fm two llOin, dult's your tou&amp;h luck.
but business has taken me all over Can't wait? You11 have 10 return to
lhe world. My luggage has been lost this aiiport and check again. Who
so many times !hat I have stopped will deliver it? We dm't know.•
counting. The attiiUde of employees
My experjcncc widl a Japanese
of domestic carriers has gotten JW- airline: ~Bag lost? We 1re very SliT)'.
gressively worse. Here's what you
get when You complain:
"Lost your lugg~~&amp;e? Fill out this
form. Waii for lhe next flight. It
might be on that one. The law says
we have 24 hours to get it to you.
"Sorry, we have to have receipts

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Ohio Lottery

.Indians..

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of clothes (except shoes) will be paid Japan Air Lines in lhe United Swes. for..lhe purthase o( personal items:
for by Jap1111 Air Unes. If we are Mr. · ~awa said, "The gentleman · It usuaUy lakes seven days to traCe
unable to fllld your bei in two days, was m ~ probability traveling in a bag worldwide. If the bag ·is .not
we will pay you full value or $1,500, J1p111, or he received exceptionally foond wilhin that period of ti_me,
whichever is less. •
good tlelllllent on an inlmlllllonai
Japan Air LineS will compensate the
.
My bag was delivered within three flighL •
passenger fQ-Ihe lll(ls.
hoursi!YtauniformedJALcmploycc.
Thank you, Mr. Ogawa. Now,
Mr. Ogawa said lhe overall conThe next day, I received a gifi and a cepe of Mr. Foster's letter is correct . dear resders, how does this siliCic up
personal note of apology from lhe Asjans. he said, ml!ke a very big
with die treallllellt you get when you
lllllllliet of ball88&amp;e services.
lose your luggage in the United
effort to he accommodating and
Is it any wonder Japan is knock- coUrleous. This is a traditional asSlaiCS? Let me.hear from you. And
ing our socks off? •• FRED FOS- pect of their culcure.
pkfase use language I can print.
TER, CHES1ERFIELD, MASS.
And now for die facts as outlined
I~ a/q,lw/ r!411ing your life or the
DEAR FRED FoSTER: I'm sure by Mr: Ogawa: Inlel'll8lional regu- life _of a loved one? "A/folwlism: ·
Please accept our apologies along
wilh this shavinycosrrielic kiL Hen: your lcaer was of inr.en:st to every lations limit the liability of the car- How to Recognize It, How to Deal
is a coupon so you can have your · mlder who has lost his or l!er lug- · rier to $640 per bag. All airlines With//, How to Conquer It" ca11 IUI'II
taWldry and dry cleaning done at our gage. As you have r.estified, it can involved in international travel are
tltiltgs arONIId. ·Se11d a self-ad·.
·
·
expense. If your bag is IIOl found be a plin in lhe neck.
expected to adhere to this siandard. dTissed,
and delivered to your hole! by 10I ~ Alan Ogawa, manager Also Slandard, when a bag is lost or . Md . il
or rrwuy ordir
monow morning, a COIIIplele change of pau::ngcr and aiJport services for delayed, each passenger receives $SO S3 .6S
iiiCludes postage alld

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Ann
Landers

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postplned

. ANN UNDERS

Pick 3
50Q
Pick 4
7487

.. 1989, r.o. An_.~
TlmN s,.d...,... an•
Cnoa~or- Syndl"••

Low near 30. Chance oflft!)w •
31 percent. Thunday,
hlrh In mid tos.
II~

)
haltdlillg) to: Alcohol, c/o ANI Lalt:;
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill:
606il-0562. (ln ·CatUJdiJ , se11d
$4.45.)
ANN L.OOERSe

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c 1990, Cniaw&gt;n Sy~•

WANlADS bring
VacatiOOMoney

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No.234

April 1 1 , 1 990

•

2 Soctlono, 14 Pog.. 211 Cento
A Muhimolllo Inc. Newop-

Meigs board hires
teachers for 1
91
199'0 '

CPE.

· 1990 DODGE SPIRil ES.4'. DR.

'

. 1990 DODGE SHADOW-ES

Shadow 2-dr w/ES Plickage ,

SpiritES

Y-~

Eng.
Auto. Trons.
Air
Power Seat
Power Windows .
Power.·Door locks
AM/FM Cas$itte
Pearl White

V-6 Auto. Trans.

AM/FM Cassette
Air Cond.
Speed Control
Tilt Wheel
Power locks
Flash Red Clearcoat.

•. 1990 DAKOTA CLUB
' CAB
·

S1.2;94

1990 DODG.E SPIRIT .4 DRJ SED.

2.5 l,
5-Speed TRans.
Air
,.
. Speed Control
Tilt Y/heel
Cassette
Exotic Red Clear Coat.

NOW ONLY

$10,665

SAVINGS Of, $26~

1990 DODGE RAM 50 PICKUP .

Spirit
Dakota 4 x 2 Club Cab .

· Auto. Trans.
S.E. Decor, Air Cond.
AM/FM Cassette
Light Package
Tutone Paint
Advtg. Poe II
Tilt Wheil
Speed Control,
White &amp; (;rey

2.5 l Eng.
'

512,55

Auto. T~ans.
Air Concl.
Sp-.d Control
Tilt Wheel
Power Windows
Power locks
Cossette
Silver Clearcoat

SJ0,95
SAVINGS OF $3023.00

1990 PLY. ACCLAIM 4 DR. SED.

2.4 ·t Eng.
5-Sp•e~ ·Trans.
Step Bumper:
Tape Stripes

1990 PLYM•.SUNDANCE 4 DR•.-

Full fank of gas and 2
free oil changes with.
.every ne~ ·vehicle
sold •.
All prices are after Rebate, Fac,tory Discount, and Pat
Hill'a Discount. Tax not included. Prices good 'till

23rd of April.

recycle. ( OVP photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Nearly 50 attend:~·sol.id· wmte meeting
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Sla_ff
How to cost effectively recycle
was the matn topic of discussion
at Tuesday's . Athena, Gajua,
. !locking, Jackson, Meigs, and
VInton Solid Waste District meet·
lng, held In the Gasllla County
Courthouse, Galllpalls.
Among Items discussed In
regard to recylclng were bans of
certain Items aolng Into landfills,
!l'lan!l~tory . trash pick up ·and
where sorting recycla bles should
bedone.
.
In a nearly one-hourdlacusslon
of the matter, no conclusions
were made and a lively exchange
was heard between the nearly 50
COJ!Cerned citizens attending and
the 31-member pallcy board.
One thing was clear, thoughrecycling and reducing the waste .

p\llced In landfills .will r;:ostJllore

plan Is up tor review In tlve

th~~~~~~fr. ¢;s~SEngtD~r~ ~~:S~e/~~n:r~~~~!tto~:u~~:
the plan Is ready for review. .

to .the PDilcy boarjl ~ r~Iclng
methods, th~lr ·advantages and
disadvantageS were outllned.
Arnong ,problemsln' thebanof
Ceftl80 recyclabJemateriaJScUJ:·
rently taken to the landfills, the
engineers said a legal opinion Is
needed on the m•tter before
action can be take!J.
1
Next, what .WIII'be banned and
hOw and Whll will enforce It, and
what will be tne penalties?.
No conclusions were made, ~u I
the policy board directed the
engineers to took f11rther Into the
matter.
The panel did take action on ·
two recommeJ1d~tlcins during the
T!leeling. Flrsf to not consider
lnciJ~eratlon unUI the _district
· ·• ·

W.ith the second \ though, ,Iocal
he!llth departments and the Ohio
Environmental Protection
AgenCy may JICense transfer
fac!Utles.
• In other matters; the pOlicy
board elected officers for the
next Y,ear, Chairman will be Dale
. Neal of Jackson County; VIce
Chairman Terri Belville, Gallla
Co11nty and Secretary Wand11
Black, VInton County :
The next executive board
meetings will be AprU 2:i at 9 a.m.
and May 3.at 2 p.m. In Wellston,
and the next full policy committee meeting will be May 9 at 7
p.m. In the Athens County
Extension Otflce at Athens.

·, · •
tile Rutland ~ea. · .However, neighboring states and the so11th·
Facemyer reported ~~~ Tuesday •s
ern and western s !lites. .
meeting that thecompanywlllbe
Meigs Chamber: ol Commerce
President Bruce Reed com·
rebulldlllg their sawmill at Hobson, thus creating •bout 12 new · mended the company for Its
jobs In Meigs CoulltY- The new
successful operation and ex:
faclllt)l will be·callltd Facemyer
pressed pleasure that the com·
pany will be. rebuilding at HobForeSt Ptoducts.
Tf\(l Facemyer operation Is a
son. " 'I wish I could makf,! this
gro';l'lng ,P.oncern." Iii the Meigs · kin!t of announcement at every
County.Jack,son County, W.Va.
meeting;" he stated.
area. The c:Ompany 'ts a major . · A film explaining the types of
expOrter of Iuin!Jer, to ,Europe,
activities which take place at.
Japan and Canada : ~~ we)l as to
Carleton School-Meigs Industries, Syracuse, was shared with
~s
'" ChambermembersbyLeeWede. ·n
·
.
meyer, superintendent ·for the
Meigs County Board o.f Mental
Retardation-Developmental DIS·
abilities, and other board
Overnight vandalism at the Facemier i.umbet ·c~.· In the
employees.
Hobson area Is under Investigation by Mlddlei&gt;otf·Pollce.
Carleton School-Meigs IndusClllef ·or Pollee Sid Little repotted thai the vandalism was
tries Is on the May ballot
. discovered and reported by the owner Wednesday morning. He
requesting a new 1.:i mlll opera·
said that the headlights had been broken outon several vehicles,
!Ions levy. The levy would be for
·and that some equipment gauges were d11maged. Also that
three years only, Wedemeyer
other materials bad been moved and seattered around the area.
said. "It Is not a continuing ·
- The' comj,any bas offered a $1,0oo reward for Information
levy."
leading to the apprehension of the vand!lls, the pOllee chief
The film showed students and
advised.
·
adults participating In the differ·
ent programs which lire funded
through the local MR·DD Board.
Following the film , WedeA·jury of eight was seated Tuesday morning to hear the Meigs ·
'meyer answered several q11esCounty Court case of the State of Ohio against Thomas J .
. lions from Chamber members.
Richardson, Middleport.
·
He explained that the board
The case ·stems_· from a domestic dispute Involving
currently operates
a 1.5
Richardson's former wife, Cindy Sou-by Richardson. FoUowContinued on p~~L....
.
Contlniled on page 6

By NANCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel News Staff
A well-known Meigs County
business, the Facemyer Lumber
Company, will be rebuilding at
Its former site at Hobson, announced Denny Fal:emyer at
Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
. The. Hobson business was
burned out about two years ago,
and the company then relocated '
In Ripley, W.Va. The company
also lias a dry kiln operation In

'UMITED WAA'IANTY
2.5 l Eng.
auto. Truns.
Air Cond.
Tilt Wheel
Speed Control
Cassette
Light Group
Claret Red Clear coat

AlheM,·.. Gellla, Roeklnl, JaclaloD, Melp and
\linton countle~~. Amea1 thoee are the Increaalng
cost of decreasing wute and how to effectively

. One year limited contracts
were awarded to Cindy 1\llen,
Chapter I math and reading,
Salem Center; Rick Ash, math,
high school; Marjorie Blake,
nurse assistant, high school;
Paula Cllancay, Chapter 1 math,
Harrisonville and Rutland;
Donna Clark, .e lementary art;
Teresa Davis, vocal music, junIor and senior high ·schools;
Toney Dingess, Instrumental
music junior high and senior high ·
school, and vocal music, Salls·
bury; . Chrlst111e Dowler, DH ,
junior high.
Jo Dunn, sixth grade, Brad·
bury; Tim Dunn, DH, high
school; VIcki Haley, Chapter 1
reading; DarIa Kennedy, Salem
Center, first · gr,a de; David
Kucsma, high sehool D .E .; Lynn
McCarley, Brall~ry DH; ,Mary .
O'Brien, Salem ·Center fourth;
Mike Staggs, high school social
studies, Ann Van Maire, Brad·
buryLD,

Before th!l.board took actkln on
awarding tfie contracts, It approved unarl"bnously a motion by
Robert Sno~en calling for prln·
clpals. to be 'm ore critical In their
evaluations bf personnel.
The supplemental contracts ·
renewed for next year were Mike
Staggs, head football; Jim Oliphant, cross country; Clift
Kennedy, boys' head track; Fred
Baloy, assistant high school
track; Rick Ash, girls' volleyball; Dale Harrison, girls' assist, ant volleyball; Roger Foster,
girls' varsity basketball; Kim
Adkins, girls ' reserve
basketball.
John Arnott, girls' junior blah
basketball; Mike Stagas. athletic
facilities care; E;Ielinor McKel·
vey, yearbook; Fred Baloy, high
SChO&lt;?I newspaper: Toney Dingess, b!p!ddlrector; John Arnott,
John R'edovian. and Mike Wilfong , guidance; Eleanor Blael·
· Continued on page 6

Res'ea•chers step u·p e·J11J orts·'
• h•SU ur coal
to Clean up .hJU
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t:INCINNATI (UPI) - ~n·
gress' revamped Clean Air Actls
iQIPi.'tO mean .new resll'lctions
on the burning "Dr.'0h10'-wal,*
especially Ohio's · high sulfur
coal.
Still, coal is exjlected to remain
an ImpOrtant , and relatively
Inexpensive energy source for at
least several decades.
With that In mind, researcllers
at the University of Cincinnati
said Tuesday they are stepping
up efforts to find ways to red11ce
coal's envlronmental.impact.e
''Researchers are looking at
ways to remove sulfur and
nitrogen before coal Is burlled
and ways to clean nue gases of

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'lll. :· ·.......
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..ebut.ld at Hobson .
Lumber fi....
.a.a.
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Ram 50-Base

3.9 l V-6 Engine

DJIICU881NG WASTE PROBLEMS ...,.. .John
Vu Volteabu111b, •tandlnl, dlllcu- the problenul belnllound In lhe •Ud wute dlslrlct plan
his eomJ1111131, SCS EI_I11Hen, Is fonnulallnc for

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
1Sentlnel Newi staff
·
Numerous teachers for the
1990-91 school year were hired
and some supplemental contracts for sports and extra·
curricular programs were
awarded at Tuesdday night's '
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education. · ·
'Employed on five year contracts were Fred Baloy, . high
school Spanish; . Jamie · Blaet'
tnar, first grade, Katl!y Haley,
third grade, Julle Hubbard. sixth
grade, all at the Pomeroy Elementary School;' Deborah Low·
ery, .s ixth grade at Harrisonville;
Carmen Manuel, English and
math at the Meigs Junior High, •
and Chris Rouse; elemen·tary
vocal music. ·
Given three year contracts '
were Sue · McGuire, business·
of(lce , education at the high
school, and J.ulle . Randolph,
Rutland sixth grade.

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pollutants, Including acid rain
"The coal feeder appears to be
pollutants,' ' said university very cost efficient because only
officials.
_
llalf the limestone Is needl!d
' ''Projkts 'lncfude limestOne . compared to that requlieil _for I
Injection; ammonia sptay drying nue gas treatment," aald univerof nue gas and high·techclrculat· sity officials.
·lng fluidized bed combustion
In addiUon, the coal Is heated
systems."
In the absence of oxygen, so the
To clean coal before It Is result Is hydrogen sulfide gas,
burned, resear~hers Timothy not sulfUr dioxide, a common
Keener and Soon-Jal Khang are a~ld rain pOllutant.
working on a nov~l coal-feeder
"That's a lot easier to scrub,"
device.
said Keener. "It's a much, much
The device has two sections, smaller molecule and won't plug
The first removes elemental ·the pores In the limestone like
sulfurlncoalbyheatlngthecoal sulfur dioxide, wlllcll acts jusl
In an .oxyaen-free envltoament,
like a stopper going Into '
then limestone Is used In the bottle. " .
·
se(Olld section to trap the sulfur.

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Vandalism acts investigated ' ·

Local

ne

Jury seated in tria(. Tuesday

2.5 l Eng.
Auto. l rans.
Air Cond.
Speed Control
" ·
AM/FM Cassette
Aquamarine Blue
Clear Coat
·

.$9969
SAVINGS OF $2329.00

Branstool named Democrats
·speaker for ~ual session .
Am01JI his honors Sen. BranSen. Gene · Bran stool, candl·
date for Lieutenant Governor stool has been ·named one of the
and present minority whip of the top 1Q legislators In ·Ohio, a
Friend 01 Ed.ucatlon by Sou- ·
. Ohio senate, will be the featured
theast Edi&amp;CaUon Association,
speaker at the annual Meigs
oemoeratlc ' Jefferson-Jackson and hu r.oelved the Pblllps
Day dinner to be held at the Medel for Public ~viee AWard.
Senlcir Citizens Center In Pome- · He. lll!rves on the LICklag Gounty
Agricultural EXteDslon'M vlloty
r(!y" on Saturday; April 21.
COmtnUtee and ls .a member of
Sen. Branstool Ia the ranking the ~lc Locl&amp;e-. "
, inmorlty member of the AgriculDinner will be served at p.m.
ture and Aaln&amp; commltteet, a with the proaram at 7 p.m.
member of the Financial Inatltu· Tickets are evallable fr&lt;lm uy
tions and Insurance commltiees Democ~lc commlt!H person or
and serves on theComrnerce and at the Davia-Quickel Insurance
office.
·
Labor and Rules committeeS.

COMPUTER COWB - "Paint Ilea lOIII been
recioptzed ae a deeoraalntr value, aad now the
colon avellable are limited onlq by jour
deeor-Uintrlmallnatlon," says Edie Klq. Kl. .,

... Iller ....... 'ftm, - .,. · - - .. lllq'
lbrdw-. Middleport. Here &amp;IHihMdemo•trllte
their aew oompUir billed palld color mlllclllnl
1y1Mem celled Color~ea.

Hardware firm offers new ·seroice

e

SEN. OBNB'BBANITOOL

King Hardware. Middleport, Is • only. takes minutes for the color
announcing a new computer to be analyzed, formulated and
· based paint color matching sys· mixed, at no .extra charge to the
tern called Colorgen. 'With this customer.
·new service, "your paint can be
"DeCorating posalbiUUes are
matched 10 almost anythln&amp;," endless," says Edle Kiiig. Paint
· aays Tlni' Klllg, store owtier. can be matched towaiicoverlngs
"Just bi'lng us a sample of tbe and borders, upholstery fabrics,
color 'y ou want, the size of e dllne draperies and window treat·
or Jarier, and In 1..1 tllan a , ments; ca~Ung or floorll!l,
minute, our atate·of-t...art ceramic tile, bedspreads and
eqlllpment will eenerate a for· Ilnena.
·
mula to rillx that exact shade In
"Paint hae long been re'Co&amp;·
any of our available paints."·
nlzed as a decoratlne value, and
· King Hardware's In-store Co- now the colon available are
tof1en computer wtll analyze any limited only by your. decorat!J'i
1
color sample . and pnerate a Imagination," she adds.
palntfonnula tomlxtbatcolor. It
In addition, Colorgen formulas

are adjusted for the light source
In your room · Incandescent,
flourescent or natural ll&amp;htlne.
Wella, mouldln&amp;s and trims,
fumlture l.lld room accenta can·
be painted to create a totally
coordinated decor, whether your
project calli for lntertor or
extzrlor paint, lalelC or oU baee,
flat, satin or &amp;lOla flnlsb, In
quarta for small clecoratln&amp;jobs
or gaiiOIII for larger Jobti.
And ahould you need mo~ of
your custom color, the fonnula
will be stored In the computB'a
meniol')', ''to be available tomorrow, next month or next year,"
Tim Kilig says.

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Commentary

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Couri Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREsTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON ABEA

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Bmil:,l ,...,..,_,._....... ......-c::~•..,.

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ROBERT L, WINGETT
. Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Ge!!eral Mallager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Publlaher/Coutrilller .

Ass~ta!!t

Press

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Iiilanci Dally
Association and the AmeriCan Newspaper Publtsbers Association.

.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not pei'sonall·
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A rare moment

Jack AndersOn &amp; Dale Van Atta

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of Senate·drama
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By STEVE GERSTEL .
WASJIINGTON (UPI) - Rarely, mu~h too rarely, the Senate
ef!Capes from Its turgid meailderlngs to s(llge a moment of drama
wotthy of the lines t the,ter.
,One of these rarities came when the Senal e reached a vote on
whether to gtve a generous settlement to coal millets who lose t.heir
jobs as a consequence of-the clean atr bill.
:The force behind this proposal was Sen. Robert Byrd, Dcw .va:, a
wtly veteran of 72, ' who Is ' the very powerful chairman of. 'the
Appropriations Comr:nltt~e, the president pro rem ot the Se11ate and
former Senate Democratic leader.
·
·
·Arrayed .agalnst him: President BUsh, Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell and Senate Republican leader Robert Dole. :
Many. considered t.hls vote a teSt of persona! pi&gt;wer between
Mitchell and Byrd, the man he succeeded as Democratic leader a
year and a half ago. Byrd Insisted It was not. ·
But certainly, It was a .battle between Mitchell, the forem011t
supporter of clean air legislation, and Byrd, the man who as leader
had succesfully blocked tt from consideration.
· It wu a classic power struggle with the outcome tn doubt as the roll
call began In mid-afternoon. Neither Mitchell nor Byrd were sure of
vt;ctory and both · worked on their 'colleagUes as the votes were
recorded.
.
:An Important vote for Byrd was lost even before the roll call began
when It was disclosed that Sen. Bennett Johnston, D·La., who had left
the city for a funeral, was prevented by the weatherfrom getting back

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A'l,"l'EMPT FAILS - Clnel.;.._il Redl' Chrlll
Salle' *riel to make a rolllllg bloek to break up a
double play, but Houaton ,Utl'OII' IM!Cl0n4 baeman
.Bill Doran etJCaped the bloek to make the double

Staf{ Michael Deaver who, he .
says, was trying to purge the
Reagan White· House of conservatives. This so angered Dornan
that he freely calls former White
House Chief of Staff Michael
Deaver "an · alcoholic In the '·
administration.''
.
There Is no doubt about· Doi'· .
na~t's status In· the Bush Wblte
House.. The welcome mat Is out. .
·. Dornan campalioi!d for Bush·ln
34 states In 1988, prompting'B)Ish
to call the congressman his "No.
·
.1 surrogate speaker.''
As for hts .reputation · In the
House, Dornansays·lie~salong
ftne with conservative Demo.. crats. Besides that, Dornan told
·tis, he Is a favorite among the
little people on · Capitol Hill, the
· . congressional pages and "the
ladles In the cloak room.''
Dornan lamented to us that be
could be making btg money If he
had stayed In the TV business,
an!! he hopes to go back to· t.he
·· small screen some day. "Brokaw
and'! started together," Dornan
said, "and he makes $3 million a

. play,'ln lbe llfth. tnnlng of,the Reds-Aslros &amp;JIII'Ie,
Tuesday. Reds' Billy Hateher hit to the shortstop
to atarUhe double play. (llPI) ·
·

Kings one ·game· aWay from
elimina·t · .de
cham
.

.

..:.:u
;. t ..,· h'e' .clean
·.. . .

air act:. _·__·

don struck out, Grace was
Intentionally walked. Luis Sa·
lilzar singled to center, but
Saqdberg was thrO'IPll out on Sil
Campuaano's throw to catcher
Darlt!n Daulton.
,
Wynne, batting for pitcher Les
Lancaster, singled sharply to
right to score Grace ·with the
winning tun.
"It's nice to see a guy comln&amp;
off the bench and get that htt,"
Chicago manager Don Zimmer
satd. "That's a big hit not only for
him, but also for the club."
Lancasler, 1·0, worked two
scoreless Innings tor the win,
while Mitch Williams hurled the
ninth to get his first save.
Campusano opened the game
with a single to right, his first hit
In the National League alter
belni signed by the Phlls tn the
19~.
1989 minor. league winter draft.
R"So ne Sandberg opened · the
Campusan&lt;i raced home one out
eighth with a single and went to
later on John Kruk's double ln.to
secontl on a wild pitch by Jeff
the gap In left-center to put the
'Parrett, 0-1. After Lloyd McClenPhlls ahead HI.
The Cubs came right back and
· · tied the contest In their halfolthe
first. Jerome Walton ted off with
a base hit and went to third on
MEIGS moa IICJIOOL
Sandberg' s line single. Walton
BOYS TIU.VK IICJII!DULI!
scored on Mct:lendon's sacrifice
DATE-oPPONENT
LOCATION
fly·
Aprlll2·Federai !:locking ........... ,......... A
" It was a pretty good game
Aprtll7·North Ga!lla/Trlmble.............. H overall," :Philadelphia manager
Aprlll9·VIntm ............ ........................ A . Nick Ley'va said. "Bruce (Ruf·
Aprii:U·VlntCIIINY ......,. .... ................... H
April :IS-Fed. Hocklna InvHatlonai
A
ftn, the starter) pitched gQod,,
May 01-Logan ................. .. ...... :...
and that'sllgood
. sign. He kept.us
May ()S.Melp Inv!tatiOIIal.. ...... ,.......... H
May ()8.Belpre ..... ....... ......... .... ........... A In the game. He was around t.he
May 12-TVCtBelpre ................ :........... A plate and he'll be etlectlve If he
can stay like that."
In other NL games, Cincinnati
MEJGIIIQGB ICHOOL
topped
Houston 3-2, Los Angeles
GIRLII :ntACK ICJIEIIULI!
downed San Diego 1-0, St. Louis
DATE-GPPONBNT
LOCATION
April 12·Federal Hoddna .. :....... ........... A defeated Montreal 4·2 and San
Aprll17·NOrth Galllal'l'rlmble.............. H Francisco at Atlanta was · post·
Aprll1t·Vlntm .................................... A poned ·by rain.
April 24-Vlntm!NY ...... ............. ........... H
Reds 3, Aatroil %
Aprt! :IS-Fed. Hocklng InvitationaL ...... A
May Ol·Loiall ........ ........... .'................. A
At Houston, Ron Oes ter singled .
May ()5.Mf1Iai Invitational .............. .....·H
home Todd . Benzinger with the
May ()8.Belpre ................,................... A
May 12·TVC/Belpre ..................... :...... A . tle-brea!drig ·run In the eighth
Inning. Tim Layana, 1·0, p!tcbed
two Innings In relief of starter
Jose Rljo. Randy Myers earned
MEIGSIUNJOR mGH
hls.tlrstsave as a Red while Juan
· T,RA~ SCHEDULE
~Agosto took the loss.
DATE-OPPONENT.
LOCATION
Dodgen 1, P&amp;dtea 0 .
Aprt! 16·Vlntm .. ,................ ....... .......... H
4prtl1B·Federal Hocklng ..................... A
At San Diego, Tim Belcher
April 23- VlntCII ......... ., .. ....................... A pitched a thr~·hltter and J11an
Aprll25-Gall!poll&gt; IJackllll .. ....... ...... ... A
Samuel homered In the filth
Aprll:JO.Gall!poll&gt; ..................... , .......... H
May 07-Vtnta11Wellstm ..... ... ... .... ....... A
May 1Hiel'p lavltat!onal .. ....... .......... H Inning, l!fttng Los Angeles. Eric

Show went four and two-third
tnnlnes and suffered the loss for
San 01!!110.
' ·
Cardlaali f, Ex.- Z
At St. Louis. Bryn Smith,
making h!s first start as a
Car(Unal, pitched five strong
Innings against his old team· ,
mates and drove In the winning ~
run to pace St. Louts. Zane Smith
·allowed three runs on seven htts
In five Innings and took the de teat
for Moptre.al.

C_o....._;ng""""._C_la......_~ence_·"· _M_i_ll_er

In-:.'=.·however, was only the start of Byrd: s problems. Later' hewas . . ...
·'I____
. ·____
........
.
to say that the leadership and the administration •'peeled off three of · ftiJ(J
rrly votes."·
· ·
_·
,
·
·
pneofthesevotes, thatofSen.SteveSymms, R·Idaho, wasstrlpped
Having gain~ appravalfrom
tacks of many of the midwest's constlt\lted, 45,000 ot those from . asked to bear ·the brunt of the
the acid rain provisions alone·. On. actd rain cleanup emit only 51%
from Byrd In public vtew.
the House Energy and Com·
Industrial and utntty .Pil\nts,
top of the ,POtential employment ot the nation's sulfur dioxide,
Symqts, one of the most active opponents of the clean air btll, had
merce · Committee this past
when lofted Into the air, turn
loss, midwest consumers will run . they wUI be required to make77%
voted to support Byrd, apparently hoping that the addition of the coal
Thursday. the much discussed
acidic and get carrted by wind
the added risk of ali Increase In of the SQI tonnage reductions
miner ar:neildment would kill the b1ll. Hts Idaho mate, Republican
and debated Clean Air Act now currents hundreds of mnes to the
Sen. James McClure, had also voted with Byrd.
·'
moves totheHousenoorforltnal northeast ·where they get their ·eleptr\c utility rates of called for by this legislation. .By'
anywhere t.om 10 to 25% .
.,:Jut ~ujlllaf1118, ·see~ np votea to apare, turned Symms and he
conalderatlon. The Sena~e had
dispersed In· the form of rain,
' coming down hard oil the coal ·
1 •
e)ienllililly swltthed his 'ballot. "
· · ·
.. · ., .
already approved Its version of a
snow and dust on the Jakes and
No one · can debate . that our burning utUitles of the midwest .
•;Even more dramatic was the vote CIISI by Sen. Joseph Blden,
Clean Ali bill the week before, so forests of that an~a. These acidic country and the world face a host as this legislation does, It un13:Dei., a former candidate for the Democratic presidential
once the.House completes action gases In tum cause serious ot serious concerns with respect fairly penalizes a region of this
Jlllllllnatlon and a rising power In the Senate.
on Its measure, th¢ bll'Is wlll then
environmental damage tn the to the ·environment and · that country that. through no fault ·o f
• ,:Iiden had given Byrd his commitment to vote for the coal miner
go to a Joint House-Senate
form of acidification wherever · reasonable efforts ·need to be Its own now · finds Its economic
confereqce to resolve the differ·
they come down.
alnendment, provided It did not k111 the clean air bill. As the clock
made to.ilddress these concerns. base being seriously unilercut.. ·
t~ked, Blden prepared to keep hls •commltment. ·
ences between t!letwomeasures.
'l;'ersonally, I think the acid Some ' would have you believe
Though a system of credits for
· · f&gt;11tc!lell blUntly told him that adoption of the amendment woUld
Though the b11l deals with four
rain section of the clean air that we as a country do very little the · u.tutty Industry has been
Jflean that Bush would veto the bill. Blden said.he bad never heard the
major areas of air pollution, ot . . legislation Is premature In that · to address such :environmental established In both the House and
'!)lite House flatly make that threat. . .
most Immediate concern to
an ongoing 10-year study of the · concerns, when In fact we as a · Senate bills, ttiere still exists the
• ~rtatnly not by accident, assistant Senate Republican leader Alan
Ohioans are the actd rain provt· · acid rain problem has yet to be nat ton· spend . over · $85 btllton real fear that a number of the
~p!OII was standing " right there within 2 feet" ot Btden when Byrd
slons of this legislation. The b111
completed and to date tlie evl· annual)y,wver, twlcy! t)¥! a;nount companies affected )rill turn to
Which Is estimated by the Admin·
dence gathered to document the that the 12"1nl1!1strlallzed :cmin· alternative sources of fuel rather
add said White House chief of staff John Sununu was on the telephone.
: :Btden bustled Into the cl~kroom to take,the call and was told by
lstratlon to ~t .$21.5 billion
cause imd effect relationship tries of. the Europe;m Co!IImon than Install the expensive
!\)lnunu that the amendment was a "deal IHJster' • and yes,lndeed, the
annually Is broken down tnto!our
between SO• and the prol!lem of Market expend.
··
scrubbers neeessary to· limit
adoption of the. Byrd amendment would draw a veto.
. ·
major areas deallngW\th tailpipe
a c I d If 1cat Ion has been
As a subset df 'that, the U.S. these. emissions and by so doing
. ; ;Btden, ln ·an )lnderstatrtient, aiald .t hat "the phone call ,l received . emissions from automobiles, al·
Inconclusive.
·
presently spends ro!lghly $33 put thousands of Ohio. Valley
\!iS Incredibly timely" and also persuasive. Bldi!n voted ·aga(nst
ternattve fuels for motorized
Unfortunately, however, the btlllon a year on air . pollution
miners out of work. .
·
Jlyrd, and he turned out to. be th~ key vote. · . .
. ,
·
· transportation~ toxic Industrial
Majority Leader o~ the Senate, . control. Add to this the $21 btlllon
Another major con~n I have
; '!'he final vote was 50-49 against the amendment. Had Blden voted
emissions, and acid rain:
. · · balling from a northeast state as price tag associated with this btll tn regard to this rus)l to lmpo!M! .
t~ other·way, Byrd would have won by the same margin.
.
In that the most slgrilftcant
he does, has seen to It that any arid what you have according to sanctions on the coal-burning
•:Neither Byrd, nor anyone else, has disclosed the ldentityofthe tl\lrd
aspect of this ·Iegtslatkln as li
clean atr b111 that Is to be passed . Harvard .economics professor utilities of the midwest Is that .
~te. that the West VIrginia Democrat said was "peeled ofr'tn the
-pertains. to !he.Ohlo Valley and· by that body has In It stringent Dale Jorgen8on Is a 'd iversion of this diversion of funds to Install ·
I.!DaJ hectic moments of the vote.
·
. the mldwes,t ern Industrial states
standards to reduce so• emls·. tnd1,1strlal resources tJ!!!t could scrubbers could seriously fqr..:
slons. This despite the fact that It spell serious trouble for the
•,:!!den Indicated that the White House talked to other senatorii but , Is the,llcld ralti provisions, I wlll
stall the Implementation qt more ·
tOvulged no names.
· dtsc~~SB these provtslons!n detail.
could cost the region most American economy as a-whole In
promising clean coal technology
The • acid rain sanctions are
tmrriedtately affected, the lndus- . the form of lower growth In
presently In the pQot project · .
•,
atined at reducing by 50% (by the · trlallzed midwest, hundreds of output and productivity.
·
stage.
•'
year 2000) thE: volume of sulfur thousands of jobs.
He further malntatn.s th!s ~al·
From al\ tndlcatlo11$ the Clean
•
dioxide emissions (SQI) · preslocation ot·resources could place
Mr bill ts on a fut track and
,.
ently being released Into the atr
In fact, findings submitted some U.S. companies ·and Indus· · dl!tourlng It will be difficult If not ·
by .plants burning high sulfur during Senate . debate on this tries at a dlsadlil!Ptage with
Impossible but you .can be .sure ·
1)~.60111'.8'(
coal.
legislation Indicated that' over foreign competitors.
'
that I will continue to do all that I
It ts the contention of the bUl's
32~,000 Ohio jobs could be at risk
A further ·objectloJJ 'I have ·to· · · can to clean up the cleim alr act '
s
sponsors 'that the
gases that with the passage .of the Senate this blll ·\s tliat.; tboul,h ·.the ntne
so that It Is fairer to those of us :
are released· from the smokes· Clean Air bill' as presently midwestern states that wUI be . who call Ohio home~
'
·

••I '

Spor18 ·briefs

•

Football
Atlanta Falcons VIce President Ken Herock said he Intends
to make Ullnolll quarterback Jef1 :
George the first pick In the April ;
22 NFL draft unless the Falcons
trade the chOice.

The Daily Sentinel
(VIP814. . .)
A DMoloo of lldlm.Ma, lac.

Monday
Friday, 111 Court St .. 1'0merCif, Oblo, by'the Ohio Vall&lt;Y PubU.blnl Compaay!Multlm... a, Inc..
PomerCJl', Oblo 457119, Ph. !1112·2156. SePullll&gt;hed every attomocm,

Junior high track

tbre~~J11

eonct elaas poda&amp;e peld at Pomeroy,

Oltlo.
United Preso International,
Inland Dally PreuAMcrlat!on and the
Oblo Ntwspo~AuoclatiOa. National
AdVtrt!lillf
tat!ve, Brsaharil
Newll!iitP«
• · 733 Third A-ue.
N"'f York, New,York 10017. ·
.
~ber:

: ::J::: A.'

year .''

L

.

By United Preuinter.Wioaal
Marvell Wynne, preparing for
·possible part-time duty, stayed
In the clubhouse during Innings to
stay warm at chtlly Wrigley
Field Tuesday. So when Wynne
did receive the call io p!nch·hlt
tate In the game, he was ready .
Wynne singled home . Mark
Grace wjth two out In the bottom
of the eighth tpntng to send 'the
C~lcago Cubs to a H victory over
the Phila~elphla Phlllles In the
season opener for both clubs.
"I just wanted to be ready If I ·
.was c·alled upon," Wynne said."' 'I
.got a good part of the bat on the
ball."
The game time temperature
was 36 degrees with a northerly
wind of 26 mph. The game drew
7,791 fans, the smallest Opening
Day crowd for' the Cubs since

,
..
'•
calls apologists ~for t6e . Ukes of tt," he said.
Fidel Castro and Daniel Ortega.
That blun~ style gets him In
Those ivhiJ cross Dornan, he trouble. Rep. Les AuCoin, D'
compares with the late Sen. Joe . Ore., has the gavel to prove it. In
McCarthy.
, . one cjebate on aid to the contras,
When we asked Capitol Hlll Dornan got so heated that AuCoin ·
IIISklers ·tQ name the .roost ex; . broke a gavel trying to silence
treme conservatives In th~ · him. The gavel now bangs In
House, Dornan's . name wils. AuCoin's district office as a
among the most frequently men· · · memento:
Uoned, along with hts cohorts
.l'udging by Dornan's s\)'le, ltls
.. from Orange County, Reps . ,WU- nosurprlsethathewasonceaTV
Uam Dannemeyer and Dana personality, a talk-show host ln ·
Roluoabacher. ' . ·
·
Callfo~;nta . He was fll'stelected to
In an Interview with our the Housetn 1976and then sa tout·
associate Scott Sleek, Dornan the 1983-84 session after an
said he Isn't out of the main·
unsuccessful run at the Senate.
stream. "9ne reason these guys He hoped for a United Nations
have a loatl\lng.!or.me Is I calla appoll!tment during his hiatus,
spade a spade and hammer at but didn't get It . and . blames
·
: , .-,.
· former White House Chief of .

:_

.

.

)])Oman guns for ·vietnam,movie . .· · :.
· WASHINGTON - Democrats
the war as a just cause. When It
thought they had a chance to
looked like Kovlc would run, ·
Dornan pulled out the big guna
claim a piece of Orange County,
Calif., this year whim Vietnam
and hasn't stopped shooting. He
vet Ron Kovtc said he would run -calls "Born of the Fourth of
for Congress. Kovlc looked like
July" a " disgrace" and says
the one person who could unseat
director Stone Is "evll In his
Republican Rep . RQbert Dornan
presentation of VIetnam and the
-onelegofatrolkaofrlght-wtng · VIetnam vets."
congressmen Jrom. the strongh·
"Evil" Is a word that comes
old of. right:wing An\ertca.
· eastly to a .no-holds-barred guy
But Kovlc opted out, alid now
like Dornan. He thinks . some
the Democrats will be hard
younger House Democrats are
pressed to find a viable repiacemorally corrupt and were
ment. Kovtc could have capital·
''Weaned on . pro-Hanoi demon·
stratlons.'' He once called Rep.
!zed on the fact that his life story
Is now showing on the big screen
Thomas Downey, D-N.Y., a
"draft-dodging wimp" and got In
In Oltver Stone's "Born of the
Fourth of ·July," Confined to a
a physical altercation with Dow·
ney on the House floor.
wheelchair, Kovtc Is a symbol of
Dornan . has an . undisguised
the VIetnam tragedy.
The hawkish Dornan defends
disdain for Uberals, whom he

•

·Cubs ·beat Phils · 2-1; Reds
post 3~2 win over &amp;tros

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wedneectav. April ,11. 1990 .
•, .•

,

The

Pau•oy-MiddiiPO't Ohio

I"'S"n'!AsTER:

Send addl'ell chill.,.

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•·

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·•,...,:r•,"'

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'

APRIL 12, 13 &amp;14'
A Special Showing Of Over
25 Manufactured Homes

.

..

Berry's World

.

-·

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so•

Westem cities .rou.n d :u p

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•'

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....;
......
'

~~t)
M~. So£

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&lt;I&gt;, ... .,.... ....

qa....;_.~

.

LITHUANIAN NIGHTMARE
.,

· ro~ay

in -history

By United Preaa lnterlllltlonal
. Today Is Wednesday, April 11, the 101st day of 1990 with 264· to
tollow.
.
. -:Tbe moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.·
.·The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
.·The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
· Those born on tills (!ate are under the sign of.Arles. They loclude
American statesman and orator Edwartl Ever!'!(! In 1794; .S upreme
Gourt Justice Charles Evans Hughes In 1862; statesman Dean
•'

~·

•

SCO'ITSI)ALE,Arlz.,NEA)Like municipalities elsewhere In
the nation, the city government
here operates.the public schools,
collects the garbage, maintains
the streets and performs various
other services. It also grows
alfalfa.
That agrlcultura.l operation
lost about $390,000 last year and
ts expected to lose. more .than
$320,000 . thts year. Mor!!Over,
there Is no reason to believe It
will break even - much less
produce a profit- at any time In
the future.
. Somemembersofthecltyare
bothered by that, but ·they have
no plans to sell the 8,000 acre
Planet Ranch In . west-central
Arizona, more than 120 miles
from Scottsdale.
.
..
lndeed, Scottsdale paid $11.6
million lor that property,ln 1984,
tllen lnvested ;another $3 mlllton
&lt;In lmproveiiJents - ,but . not
·

because anybOdy In the city
wants from the Planet Ranch are
Its water rights.
Under the law governing ac·
cess to water throughout the
West, ~hatever rights a property
owner has to draw surface water
(usually from rivers and
streams) .or ground water (from
subterranean wells) aceompany
the land when It Is sold.
. "H!stortcally, the solution to
looming water shortages ·has
been to build additional -dams,
reservoirs and diversion canals
or (siok) more ·and deeper
ground water wells," says San'
dra Postel of the World watch
Institute, a · Washtngion, D.C .
research organization.
But public opinion has turned
against dams and other megaprojects designed to channel
water' to the region's cities, while
undergrouli aquUers have been
depleted at a reckless rate!- · ~

s.

Ach~on,

secretary of state under President Harr;
Tr~~ • .In
1893; fashion designer Oleg Cassin! hi 1913 (age 77); Ethel Kennedy,
Widow ot Senator Robert F . Kennedy·, In 1928 (age 62) and actor Joel
Grey In 1932 (age r;B) :
.
·
·.
·
On this date In history:
.
·
In 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first ·black In major league
baseball, playing for the Br!)Oklyn Dodgers against the New York·
Yankees In an exhibition game.
·
·
I~

water_--=.R=ob=e~rt__:.:,·~-=al:..:...::te~rs

In Tucson, theilatton•siargest water, on ·the Planet Ranch · '
city entirely dependent upon because conttnuoos- use Is an
groundwater, the water table has Important element ln retaining
dropped 165 feet between 1960 the city's legal rights to the
and 1985. · The water table be· property's annual · allotmen.t of
neath the Dallas-FortWortharea 13,500 acre-feet of water. .
fell almost 500 feet during the
That Is enough to supply the
same 25-year period.
. · yearly needs of 60,000 · ~pie,
With new sourees of water about half of the city's current · ·
severely constricted, muntctpilll- population. ·When It needs the ·
ties· acrQss the West have turned water .s ome time early In the 21st
to existing supplies..;.. notably the century, Scottsdale will abandon ·
8j) to ' 90 percent of the region's
farming and transfer the allotavailable water traditionally ment to the municipal water '
· .
consumed In agricultural opera- sUpply system.
Those recent developments ·
tlons - to ' meet the needs of
rap-Idly growing urban are salutary, to the extent that
populations.·
.
attempting to grow crop1 on
arttflctally Irrigated land In the
In Tucson and In the. Phoenix
suburbs of· Mesa and Scottsdale, Sonoran Desert and other arid
"water ranching' 'Is now a major locations ln. the West was never ·
.
.
municipal endeavor.. Several ye- very sensible.
ars ago, Phoenix paid $29 million
One recent magazine article
to buy 14,~ acres offar.mland In
promoting the lavish 27-acre
th~ McM1.1llen Valley; 100 ·mnes · resort approvingly deeerlbed It
west of the cl*y, solely for tts as a "water playground'' whose ··
"lush colleCtion" or trees a.nd
water rights.
..
,. ·
'llllit practice Is lipt limited to shrubs· "contrasts will) the arid
desert landscape."
.• .
. Arizona. : Water · ranchiJJII·: Is
Other resOI'ta - and many ·
·booming In Colorado, Utab and
residents. - ·here In the Phoenix
other states. "Already moretnan
area also display little ln.-est In ,
575,000 acres ot agricultural
either appropriate •Udlcaplq '
lands have beeli purchaled as
' or water conservatm Unto IIIey ·:
water farms," says Postel. .
Scottsdale grDIVs alfalfa, a · do, the i'eglon wlll ,confront a ;
perpetual water crisis.
crop that needs large amounts ot

•

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..--_..;;.--. ~&lt;_
S..twla

.nao:

·.

,=
Thatlno,ludea:

~:-s::~~h

AI lAical and District
Canclitlat• Wilt. It Prlllllf.

: WEDNESDAY :
APRIL 11, '1990

" ·IOOtlsiD.

GAS IIIIC. UNGh

•

::n::n~~ThiKida
An Appuron,. By

. .. ,... for lty "" ...... County·

· .._....n Euouttve Commttt...

·•'fhortt M. ca11ne. r ......

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1990 70X 14

1990Fantasy
P·l·U-5-H

$ .

ONLY

500

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located At The
tnt8111Ctlo~ Rt.336 595

•

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(Aero~~ From Tilt Drive-In)

SOCIAL 10• 6 P.MA P&amp;/Dirnill 7 P.M•
Pre• n h hlew - $10.00 Per Person
,._. .~an•••uta•

MfiCI ..... . .

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. MiU StrMt, Mld.epert, Ohio

. . ,CI.Jit

The
Part11
is
0 J,

·3 To chooseFrom

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2 ~~P::"lpeciat s17,995°· 'l1le Sa\'1DP' arc· \ilurs.
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$12,99500

fi.ACII
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.OI.EPOIY MilliCAN
UGION ANNEX

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WASIIIS, IIYBS,
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Any NIW Homt l'urchOn ~ Spot Flnenclng
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We Recommend The
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OPEN
Mon •.sat. 8:30 • 8:00

CIOIId Sunday

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P~-Midcleport.

Wedn•deY. April11. 1990 ·;

Ohio

ADVEITISED ITUI POUCY- Each of these advertised i tems 11 requii'ed 10 be readily availa ~ for sale •n each
Kroger Store. except as specmcallv noted in this ad. If we do run QUt of '"advertised item., we w ltl oHsr
you your choice of 1 comparable item , when available, reflecting dw ume aavings or 1 raincheck whkh
will entitle. you ro purchaM tNI advtr1illd Item It the advert!Hd price within
day1. Only one vendor
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CANSECO HOMERS - Oallland Atllletle, Jose Cailseeo pves
Mark MeGwlre "tile bash" after blltlng his first home 1'IID ollbe
season In tile fUih l!mlng agalast the Minnesota TWias Tuesday.
(UPI)
.

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WHOLE (7·9-LB. AVG.)

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O.k.,. Otwell H) • Mn...kee
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111-M (.,....I !-2) at Oaklalld
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New Yertl (I.e.-, 1-14) at cteveiUMI

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(Laa..... Jf.lt), It: U p.m.
'l'lllrwlte'Gamet ·,
Clewla•atNewYorll

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SUI FrAndll'l at AUuta, ~tpd. rain
·Gamew
PK ..... llll (Smiley 1!-B) at Nrw Vorll
1\llo .. JJ.I1), l :JI p.m.
Molllnoal (S.Jd J.l) aa St. Loul11

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A. IICMIDCe4 (reihmu
'h~Udl.tlforward Bl'l!'JIIIanKn•J h•
ltR ICIIIOOI fu ~1'811...:1 re•tllll.
Gelilna (Pat) -NamedDavtdMIItn¥
IIICi:«coach • • a.be'*a..,.-oalllltantf!)od)•~~h:
•
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GARDEN.
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•Rak·.15 . ·· ·' ,
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Grass Shears,

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..... "&amp;alf - ·Nune-11 Ken TIII"Mr
ulllca•• b.-ett~ .n eaaelt.
Mlll~l .. ppli

- Named &amp;I NbOn IIM!D'4
bMketball coaell.
Na&amp;lo ... J11.Ur Collep Alhlel~ "-••
etallen- EJeetedLeaPianld prsident
Uai't'el'illl)' ol ill• Padllc - Nllml!ld'

Nlt:!k

Goto\'ac

ftcriMID.,..,....,_._

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PoOiball
GrHD Bay -81ped ll'l!'e apni• Tolll
0. IIRploa, stAn Slllher !lnd · Trst7
Marlin.

"-tel• ( v - . . - . JI-U) at au
1-1). lt:tl p.m.
'

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Lessig named commissioner
of Sun Belt -Conference - •
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~
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) -James
Ice Hockey Committee. The
W. Lessig, head of the Mid·
Canton, Ohio. native Is vice
American Conference since 1982 president of the Collegiate Com·
and former assistant coach for
m lssloners Association and Is a
the Cievelal)d Cavallers of the member of the NIT selection
committe~ and the NCAA Meri's
NBA, was chosen Tuesday as
commissioner of the Sun Belt Tennis Committee.
.
Conference.
He taught and coached at the
Lessig, 54, will · succeed VIc
high school level and then at his
Bubas, whose retirement bealma mater, Bowling Green.
comes eff~tlye July 1.
where he eventually became
''I have thoroughly enjoyed my
athletic director, before' ~~occept·
past eight years with the ·Mid·
lng a position as asslstantbacket·
American Conference, and I am
ball coach at the University of
proud of the accomplishments
Minnesota In 1969.
we have been able to achieve,"
A year later, he joined the
Lessig said.
Cavaliers as assistant coach to
· "At the same· time, I look Bill Fitch and head scout and
forwarp to the challenge of • director of special promotions,
working with the Sun Belt and the
He also worked as an announcer
eight outstanding Institutions 1or the team's television network
and did radio broadcasting for
that make up the conference," be
the Cleveland Im;llans.
·
said. ' 'I am also proud to be
replacing an Individual such as
VIc Bubas."
Bubas has been commissioner
since the conference was formed
In 1976.
'
'
"One of Jim's greatest assets
r Is his ability as a communicator,
, and It allows him to blend many
Ill Second St., Pomeroy
1 Individuals with different view.
'
points toward a common goal, "
YOUR INDEPENDENT
said Bubas. "He Is an excellent
AGENtS SERVING
.
choice at this time In the life of
the Sun Belt Conference.".
MEIGS"COU""
Lessig Is a former member of
SINCE 11•1
'
the NCAA Council and the NCAA
,.

-

v....-.. _.ladi

$1·.39

Willi FliES .........~.......... S2 .04

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Bean Coffaa
.3·1b. Bag

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1·

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Easter Candy Purchase

8

Of $2.00 Or More

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(Not Good On Regular Stock Candy)

., .

DOWNING .CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

· softJ&gt;all lost a pair of games ·
Monday to non-conference oppo. ·
nen t Otterbein on the Lady ·
Cardinals' field In Wl!$tervllle.
The Rio ladles ' dropped the
opener 9-4. Cindy Ridgeway took
the loss· on . the mound for Rio
Grande, while Ridgeway, Gena
Norris, Robl.n Stull and Kathy
Lute accounted for all four.of the
team's hits with' one each.
The Redwomen recorqed five
errors . .Otterbein advanced on
eight . hits and allowed. five
errors.
.
The gap narrowe~ In the
nightcap, but the Lady Cards
emerged as lhe'wtnners,6-3.Lute ~
pitched a three-hitter agalnstthe
hosts, who posted two errors. Rio
Grande was credited with seven
hits, with two apiece by Ridgeway and Stull, but stumbled on
seven errors. ·
Last Friday, the Rio ladles lost
a twin bill on the road to Wheeling
(W.Va.), 10.0 and 4-1:
Now 1·9, the -Redwomen open
Mid-Ohio Conference play Thurs-..
day when they host Ohio Domini- ·
can In a 3:30p.m. doubleheader,
arid travel to Mount, Vernon
Nazarene on SaturdAy. Otter·
beln, 'which Improved to 5:7, was
scheduledtoplayJobnCarrollon
. Wednesday and host Mount Un·
ion Thursday.
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HUH:~S~~~:":HOUSE

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The University of Rio Grande

aarvan -:- J'lfame4 a.lliil'omu"tonl

(Port•al-7·1}, I:D ,,m.
(lien~

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Clacla..tl (Armatre..- t-S) .. Hou•oo

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Rio softbalf
team dr,ops 2
to Otterbe.i n
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."IN OBSERVANCE OF GOOD FRIDAY"·
. FROZEN
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O.la&amp;JO'I,IIIIwukee#

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W L Pet. GB
............. .......:.......... . ! 11.. . -

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IN STOCK

AMERJCAN LEAGUE

..,•
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connected on four tree throws In
can do Is control our own games. games. Dennis Hopson paced the
Nets
with
18
polnJs
and
Chris
the final 25 seconds to propel_
UPI Sporll Writer· .
We can't worry about what
Morris
added
.1.7.
Larry
Bird
Milwaukee.
First, Dominique Wilkins and
Cleveland Is doing." ·
pumped In 19 poiQts, nine coming
Moses Malone burt the Phlladel·
Philadelphia had :an eight·
In ,the second quarter.
·
- - , . pbla 76ers from th~ Inside. .
game , home wiDnbig streak
Then Glenn Rivers and John
stoppefl and saw Its Atlantic
· - - .... Tlmberwelvel" :
At Mlnne•pdlll, MJiiD.. Clyde ·
Battle finished them off from lh~
Dlvjsliln lead over second-place
Drexler
. IU!d Jerome . Kerii!Y
outside Tuesday rijght as the
Boston fl!ll to one BAd one-haU
combljled . for t~~ :polilts to lead
Atlanta Hawks moved closer to a
games. '
. '
,
·
123 111 1 ·
"Defensively we 'did not piay · Portland, wbiQb' posti!d Its 15th
'
playoffspot with a .
v ctory
well,." P.-hlladelphla . gua'rd win .In Its 1ast 19 rames. Buck ...
y·o~- sover the 76ers.
Wllllamii
added
13
reboUnds
~
Uli
After Wilkins scored 23 points
Johnny Dawkins said. "We gave
· Terry Porter 10 ssslsta for ' .
.
•
)' -· ,
and Malone had ·13 In the first
up the three to Rl~rs anjl be
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASMC.
·Portland.
Pooh,
Richardson
half, Philadelphia tried to double
didn't miss. They played a little
1'11H4111iY . . . .
Mi!llii!IOla.
Atkata 1!1, Ph.llelpWalll
team theJI;I after Intermission,
looser than we did. We just have scored 2l, points
INto• 111. New olerlr)' II
leaving Rivers and Battle .open
to keep o~r composure down the
111, ••.
all• 'Akeem
tu
Re..aottlll. Dl•lotte lit
AtBoet•
Cbar!Qtte;
N.C.,
stretch." ·
Mltwulll!t 111, Or ..... 11"7
for
jumpers.
,
o.troM 118, New Yorktl
.Wilkins finished with 29 points, Olajuwon scored '1:1 points. and
And they knocked them down
Portluilltl. HIDII!So&amp;a 1-1
lntl-117, W•W•oalt5
as Rivers hit four three-point Malone had 23 and Rivers had 18 grabbed 19 ·rebound•. and. Sleepy.
\!tall nt. se.we tn
Floyd added 23 poJ.aU and 10
Denwr IU, 8an-am!alo ItS
baskets and Battle added 10 for the Hawks.
LAOippenti,O.U.tl
Elsewhere, Bosto,n clubbed, assists to guide HouatciJi.· Dell
points In the third quarter, when
Su A.llt-'o 1St, GoWn State l!t
led ·Charlotte. wtth 21...- •
we-..:., Ganies
Atlanta took control ofthe game. . New Jersey 112-96; Portland .• c1:1rry
polntl.
.
.
'. :.
•.
Mllwukee at AUuta. 7:• p.m .
"Moses and Domlnlquee were ·battered Minnesota 106-M, .Hbus·
New,JeriQ'atDdNI, ~;atp. m.
......- 1.., ....,.... '
Cll!"elud at Ch&amp;cqo, I:Jt p.m.
playing so well t!lat they had to ton edged Charl\ltte :'115-112,
,
At
NI'N ; 'rork,, IIJall :TIIomaa
..
, ••~
Tla•ndiQ'Gamet
• pay some attention to tl)em, and .Detroit silenced New York'. lOS_.
Cle\'elaa.d· at Wulllftllon, '7:10 p.m.
scored n ·polllta and Mark
· , ·
start double teaming them and ·,98, Mllwau~ topPed Oflalldo
Miami at Botton. ?:M p.m.
,
·
leaving me and Doc alone," said ' 1iJ0.127, Indiana ni~.Washlng· .:A,utrreadde&lt;i~HohaltDetrolt's
Mln~t&amp;a at Pblll(el,tll~.t 7: 1G ~·.~·
. . .. ,
Bat tie, who flqlshed with 19 · ton 107-1p5, Utah defeated &amp;!little twname · 1~111 streak and
JHI- at New Yort. S p.lft.
,.
c!op.p~ta the Piston's !!Weep of
points and hit 8 of 12 shots.
1~~·102, Denver downed SacraLA Laker• at Utall, 8 p.m• .
CII..WttM Ro... oa.ll:31p.m.
"He bit four threes. It wa,s menlo 121-113, the LfA. Clippers t~ folir·fBIJie l!ealon lll!rles with .
LAQippertat Su AIIIOIIIo. 8: »p.m.
Incredible. we passed the ball so beat Dallas 98-90andSanAntOnlo 'the KD!oks. Patrick Eyilng led
Denwr .U Su&amp;lle, M p.m.
'
. New York with 26
........ M 8acnmetUO, II p.m.
well. Weweresoopen. The shots outlasted Golden !!~te-132·122 .
0
Dallu MGoldnStde, 11: II p.m.
. Jlilcb Uf,
I
were going down. That was the
Celllce 11%, Ne&amp;l •
At Orlando, Fla" .....""
IWAIOR INDOOR SOC£ER LEAGUE
. turning point of the game.."
At East Rutherford. N.J., ·
NIIMI••d .....
Atlan~ avenged l! 112-~ loss · Kevin McHale scof!!&lt;l 24 points
. ..........,.Gune
to
Philadelphia on saturday and 1'\eggle Lewis .a dded 21 to
No 1.,.e111:~e ..
1'11111'W111t'Gana
night and moved within one-half · lead Boston and l hand New ·
&amp; . LoW1 at Wit:-., t II p.m.
game of Idle· Clevela!ld In the. Jersey lts16thlossllilhelrlast18'
San Olep at T~-. 1:~ p.m .
battle for .t)le eighth, allll final,
THill'!
.:a-•«t;eai '
playoff ~pot from the Eastern
PI&amp;UIINIIh - 'lft-MI ,_,._ Joe
Conference. • ·
Slektb".te Toroll&amp;o lor olltfl..... Brla
MorN"' Wilt eer u•pe• to ~elr
''We understand our backs are
'
.,
ate•d ·...... ..- INIIi.llr ptopam; AA·
FOIIASTD
agalost the waJI, •i Atlanta coach ·
•lptd .Wrtatop ".lea lllc._...... to
•tr.aa alllae A.merlc• AaiDCialktL
Lilies, llunls, , .....,
Mike Fratello said. ·'We Jiave six
St. Lo• - Slped ptklll.er . Tom
games left and we have to pick up
NINtpr.r Ia a m._....ea&amp;'lll'! eo.-rac~; .
Hyacinths,
'h. . .e - Asalped c.aelter Joe
two games somewhere: All ·w e ·
SaelaiiJ .. S,Nim• oHH _Ialf!r;aai'-_.
'
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Calildlaills
,.
Leape. ·
&lt; .
ALSO: Complete line of

a,. u.a.e• Pre~• Ja&amp;er.e;lo.a~

r.

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&lt;

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. -over s·IXers·.
Hawks notch 123-111 wm
•

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WE RESERVE
OEAL&amp;RS .

Kroger Wishes You And Y.o ur
:Family A Very Joyous ...

By United Pre.• International
stuff like tllat."
, ,.
• played ,I nto a triple.
•
At Bolton, T:clny . Pena · had
With beads of state looking on,
"I went Into spring •training
'1 '101f It In tbe upta," said a '· tru-· hits, lucludill( a · twa-rllil
theTorontoBlueJayssco!"fdtwo ready," said the right-hander,
Vlall&gt;lyal!JI'YIIlf!a~.
.
slli8Je· Ia a four-run tbkd,' aild
,. runs that had a distinctly com· who threw only 11 and two-third
''lnca~lla II·· a aooct out·
batterymate Mike Boddlcller,
mon flavor. But they counted.
Innings In the Grapefruit Circuit.
fielder," Valentine IDIIIted. But i-0, pltcbed five ltrolli lnnli\p to
Tony Fernandez launched a "l thniw quite a bit durtng the
when pu.hl!d 011 the pol!lt, be help IlK! Red Sox ·to their lOth
fluke. triple and later scored lockout, In my driveway and at a
added, "Let's pullt thla way; I . conseeudve victory over Dltrolt,
Tuesday night, giving the Blue high school, because you never
don't worry any more abOut ms datlnr 'back to last year. IleO'Oit
Jays a 2·1 victory over the Texas knew when the lockout li&gt;as going
lett fielder than the Blue Jay, do starter Kevin Ritz, 0.1, laated
Rangers after. George Bush be- 'to end and you'd have to report."
abOut theirs."
only two and one-third lnnlncs.
came the first American presl· ·
David Wells, who .en)ered the
Mookle Wilson slapped a sharp ·
Aapls 7, ......_ t
denttothrowtheceremonlalflrst gamewitharunneronftrstbase
single to left-center, scoring
At . Anaheim. Cbuct Finley
pitch at a blg·league game In and two out In the eighth, earned
Fernandez and giving Toronto a limited Seattle . to two lilts over
Canada.
the save. He allowed a splo htmer
2·0 lead.
·
the flrstillx.and one· third Innings
The 41st .consecu live sellout at to Ruben Sierra In the nlntll. ·
Elsewhere In tl!e AL. Cblcaeq and Chill Davll, Dante 'Bichette
clipped J'4Uwaulq!e 5·3, Boston jlnd Orlan Downbig.. ~ellvered
the SkyDome lnpluded ·Bush, Charlie Hough took the. loss.
whose son Is part-owner of the
"I didn't feel wild, the Jays
down~ Detroit .4-2, California
home ri!IIS to power California.
.Ranger's, Canadian Prime Mints, · were just patient," s~d the
beat. Seattle 7.0 and Oakland · Reliever Mark Eichhorn earned
ter Brian Mulroney, baseball 42-year-old knuckteballer.
defeated ·Minnesota 5-3. New his first save. Randy Johnson
coinrnlssloner Fay VIncent and . After Bush and Mulroney
York at Cleveland was postponed took the loss.
American League President Or. threw out the ceremo*lal open·
by rain.
A'• 5, TwiDa 3
Bobby Brown.
lng.pltches, the two clubs played
. Wlllte Sox 1, Brewer• 3
At Oakland, Matk McGwire
Dave Stleb pitched six Innings four Innings of shutout ball
At Milwaukee, Lance Johnson and Jose.Canseco each homered
for the victory, allowing just two. before Toronto struck for a pair
delivered a two-run single In the and ·Bob Welch allowed O.ne run
singles and two walks. He struck of runs In the bottom ot the fifth.
sixth and Scott Radlnsky re- · owr flye and one-thlrd· tnalngs,
outfour batters and did not allow
With one out, Junior Felix, who
corded his first major-league helping the Athletics. ·Dennis
a runner past first base. .
' went 2 for 2 With a pair of walks,
victory, leading the Whtte Sox In Eckersley picked u11 a save·. Roy
•'Stleb had great cpmmand of bounced a Hough delivery over
the . Brewers' · home · .opener. Smith was the loser, pitching
hiS stufl," enthused battery· the fence In right-center for a
Bobby Thigpen pitched the ninth four and one-third Innings. Dan
mate Greg Myers said. "Cood ground· rule eouble. ~ernandez
for his second save. Tom Ftler, CJadden opened' the game for
curve, slider, fastli!lll. changeup. · followed with a line drive that '0·1, took the lou. .
· •·
Minnesota by homering ori''a ~·2
He's har.d to' beat when be has · left·flelder · Pete · IncavlgJla
· Bed Sox f, Tlpn 2
.Pitch over the left-field fence. •
'

COPYRIGHT . 1990 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOO
SUNDAY, APRIL 8, T HROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL t 4, t990. IN

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The Daily Sentinel- f»aga 6:

Ohio

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M INI foiARSHMALLOWS

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Register To Win
·Free
Pepsi
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A
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f
eJr
) '·
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Come to your ·local Kroger store
to ..... .

. register or use, the handy' entry form ' at
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6-The Daily Sentinel

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

County board eqtploye:e' commended .

Continued frompage1

Continued from page 1
.....lni! the dispute, Cindy Rlchar!!Son filed a charge of domestic
violence a!!alnst her ex-husband. Her parents, Sheriff aqd Mrs.
James M. Soulsby, each tned a ch!ltge of assault against their
former son-in-law: The dispute took place January 28, Iil--~he
afternoon, at the home of Sheriff and Mrs. Soulsby, Union
Avenue, Pomer\)y.
~
The jury was seated shortly before noon on Tuesday. Closing
arguments In the case were expected some time this afternOon.
Tlte state Is represented by Meigs Prosecuting Attorney
Steven Story. Richardson Is represented by Charles Knight. ·
Meigs Public Defender. Presiding over the case is Colll\tY Court
Judge Patrick O'.Brlen.

tnar, librarian and library supervisor; Earl Young, assistant high
school principal, part time.
..
Head teachers hired · were
Roger Blrc"h at Bradbury, Becky
Zurcher at Middleport, ,Julle
Hubbard at Pomeroy, Marjorie
Fetty at Rutland, Ed Bartels at
Salisbury, and John Arnott, at
Meigs JuniOr High.
.
Employed on two year limited
contracts were Carrie Morris
and Steve Morrfs. bus driv,ers,
.
Myrvllle Brown, cook; Carroll
Johnson, custodian, and. Sandra
Butcher, aide. Given contlcuing
contracts were Dorset Thomas,
Five calls were answered Tuesday by Metis Emergency
bus driver; Bernice Garnes,
MediCal Services units.
.
.
..
Ruth
Pearson, .coOks; Don Karr ·
I · At 6:25a.m., Middleport was called to North Set11nd Avenue
and Rosa lee ·Snowden, Cl!stodl·
for Jobn Myers to Veterans Memortal Hospital and at 7:24a.m.,
ans; and Mary Beth Mu$ser,
to North Front for Genevieve Demoskey to Veterans Memorial
aide.
.
Hospital. At 8:26a.m., Middleport was called to Hedley Street
Supplemental
contracts In
· for Linda Acree to Holzer Medical Center and at 5:40p.m. to the
sports
al)d
band
programs
not
Overbrook Center for Kenneth Hartley, also taken to Veterans
renewed
at
this
time
since
those
· Memorial Hospital.
.
.
employed are not teachers In
Tuppers Plains at 6:04p.m. transported Wilbur Warner from
Meigs Local and teachers have
Route 681 to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
preference for the jobS were
Terry Adams, Bob Ashley. Jr.,
Continued from p8ge 1
Zane Beegle, j{enneth Bond,
Carson Crow, Kathy 0\)ldge,
, mUI conJinlllng levy, butthat the shop will be held May_10and 1l at Cathy Edwards, Rick Edwards..
: effective yield of the curientlevy Shawnee State Park Lodge. Mary Hudson, Joe Johnson,
• ·Is "down to '1:22 mill."
Anyone wishing more lliforma-. . Mitch Meadows, Jim Niday,
'
.If the new levy falls, Wedetion on the seminar shollld also Steve Patterson, Chris Stout,
: meyer said MR·DD will have to contact Leedy at the above
Bryan Swann, Gene Wise,
• :make some cuts In 19911n order numbe'rs.'
·
Tammy Wright, Bryan Zirkle.
~ to balance the budget. "We are
David Kucsma, marketing ed·
Other contracts not .renewed
; committed to providing the most ucaUon teacher at Meigs High,
were those of Rick Ash, boys' ·
· .services we can with the amount explained to Chamber members
reserve basketball and Ron
· .or money with which we have to a project which Is just getting Drexler, boys' assistant varsity
: -work," he stated.
started at the school. In keeping ,baaketball. These positions, It
• · Passage of the proposed levy with Pomeroy's Sesquicenten: would cost the average ho- nial anniversary this year,
; me/1wner "$21 a 'y ear or five to Kucsma and students are.consld- ·
· :six cents a day," Wedernyer said. erlng the.publishing of a special·
· : : Dwlg!Jt Leedy, of the Ohio !zed map of Pomeroy, sbnUar to . Melvin Adams
: ·Technology TranSfj!r Organlza- one which was publlslled . for
• )ion, Rio Grande University, GaiUpoUs, ·Through advertising
Melvin J. Adams, 61, of Oool·
; ·distributed Information on the costs, area businesses wollld help
ville, dlecj Tuesday evening at
· :Dale Carnegie Course, a highly fiiUlllce the project. Kucsma
Cl!mden-Ciar!t Memorial Hbspl·
: :respected, prgram In effective explained that he and students
tal, Parkersburg, W.Va. , follow-.
will be doing ali they can to
: ·speaking' and hul]lan relations.
lng an ' extended .ll.tness. '
· .Leedy lias received requests · to obtain reaaonable cost estimates
Born at Reedsville, Mr. Adams
: :sc hedllle the C~negle' Coutie In befOre approaching the bus!·
was a son of Forrest Adams; his
the lOcal area. H there is·enough nesses. n this project Is success·
mother, ivho survives, and the
: :Interest, Leeqy will be abl~ to tul, studenis would like to com·
late Ray Adams.
. ·secure the services of Michael ptete a map for each village In the
Other survivors lnclude' three
: _Jones and Associates, Columbus, county, as special anniversaries
sons, Kenneth and Harry, of
. .which Is. the closest, licensed warrant.
.
Lockport, 1)1., and Dayld, of
· -presenter of the 14-week CarnePresident Reed announced
Joliet, Ill.; three daughters,
·gle Coilr~. Anyone Interested In that the Chamber CUIJ'ently has . · Sbaton Graves, also of .Lockport,
:the course shollld cou..ct Leedy 96 members and that charter
Ill., Janet Haynie, of Kansas
·at Rio Grande, at 245-5353, or, toll membership' plaques are still
City, Mo., and Judy ,Myers, of
:free. at M0-282· 7201. A minimum available by calling Sherry Hart · Alfred; 16 grandchild~. four
:or 25 Is needed before the course ll.the Chamber office, Pomeroy. great grandchlldr~n; one
·can be Scheduled In the area,
brother, Wayne Adams; andtwo
l'lre
:IJlOS t lllu~ly at Rio Grande Unl·
slster.s,
Charlotte Vecchio, of Las
The Mhklleport Fire Deparm·
:verslty and most likely In the fall.
and Marilyn Swain,
Vegas,
Nev.
ten! answered a total of 61 calls
Cost of the course Is $775 per during the month of March of Reedsvllla.
.
person.
Services.
for
Mr.
Adams will be
Including 11 fires and rescue and ,
Leedy also announced that"the
Friday,
2
p.m.,
at the Eden
50 emergency medical. All vebl·
Second Annual "Small Business cles were driven a total of 1399 United Brethren Clturch with
Wcli"t·
Rev, Robert Sanders offlclatlilg .
mllel, Jetf.Dera1t, cliilef rE'POfh!d.
. '

Squads have 5 Tuesday rolls

Lumber... .

· was noted, will be consldere{l
after the boys' varsltybasketbal)
coach Is hired.
The board discussed the route
bus which has a cracked frame
and whether to have It welded
alld then certified In writing that
the weld will hold or topurct~ase
another bus. No decision was
made as to what action the board
will take on the matter.
Also discussed without a dec!·
slon being made was the need for
having the junior high football
eqlllpment reconditioned.
Approval was given by the·
board to waive tuition for two
foreign exchange students . who
will be attending Meigs . High
School next fall. The students will
be residing with Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Williams of Middleport and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck of
Pomeroy.
Mary Stewart was granted
maternity leave from April 23 to
May 25, Randy Dillon was
acceptedasatllltlonstudent,and
the release of Bridget Powell to
Southern Local School District
was au tliorlzed.
Dock days were approved for
VIctoria Bumpass arid . Joe
Anthony.
. .
The board moved Into executivesesslon to consider personnel
and pending litigation. Attending
were Robert Barton, president,
Jeff Werry, Bob Snowden, Larry
Rupe, and Richard Vaughan,
board members, and James
Carpenter, superintendent.

___.; . . . . .';··-Area·
.
deaths-....;._

report

.su.

By rrhe"Bend

Wadneeday, Aprt 11, 1990

Ponwoy Middleport. Ohio

Burial will be In the J"den
Cemetery. ,Friends may call at
the White Funeral Home, Coolville, on TnurSday from ·2 to 4 and
7 to9. Friends may aJ'socallat the
c hurch for one !tour prior to
services.

Hospital news
Veterana Hospital .
Tuesday admissions -Brenda
K. Woodruff, Romeroy; Kenneth
W. Hartley, Middleport.
Tuesday discharges - Iva P.
Powell

Meigs County Board of Educ41tloil employees Sandy Chadwell,
speech · pathologiSt, _ and John
· Foster, · worl,l-:-study coordlna· ,.
tor, were commended for recent
. achievements when the board
' met Tuesday evening.
·
Chadwell co-wrote some research material which has been
accepted for distribution ·by a
company which supplies materials to speech Pl!thologists
throughout the country. ·
It was announced that Foster
has been selected as the outstanding regional work'-study
coordinator. ·
·
Both Chadwell and ·Foster
were commended for their
.efforts.
In other matters of business, ·
. the board employed Ralph Werry

In more routine matters, the
board accepted the minutes of
the last meeting and the treasurer's report, and paid the l!IUs.

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t·

STEP OUT IN FASHIONABLE
FOOTWEAR

20°/o
OFF 20°/o OFF
t LADIES MEN'S CHILDIIM'S , t
&amp;

~

DRESS

TENNIS

~ . SHOES

tfill.

.~:tt

SHOES . ~

. MERE AlE WIJINEIS Of Out RECEifr IOSSIIII .
ATII.ETK fOOTWUR GIVIAWAY1
Jane Banks•. Pomeroy; Elale Folmer. Pomeroy; Paul Klein, Middleport; Vicki Ferrell,
Rutland; Cathy Dyer,"Middleport.

.

Riverview
Garden Club ,J· ·
.
.P'J:eeting .held.recently. .
.

A workshop to make Easter catalcig. Betty Boggs wws fhe
favors for patients at the Arcadia actlrtg president for the meeting
Nursing Center at Coolville was and cards were signed for sick
' .
conducted at the April meeting of friends.
the Riverview Garden Club held
A buffet ~as served by .'the
at the Reidsville Church of hostesses·, · Klla Young, Nancy
Christ.
Wachter, and·.Betty BoggS\ · .
· Nola Young and Margaret;
Others attending were Mary'·
Grossntckle were the directors Allee..:• Bhe. -'Mary Grace
tor the wor~shop and Marlene Cowd'e ry, · Phyllis Larkins;
Pubnan, president, obtained l!le Gladys Thomas, ·Grace Weber,
material!! that were us'ed. .. ' · . Maxine Whlteh~d, Pl\llllftCI M:9·
Devotions were given by' Kjla •. ers, Opal Harris, and Ruth Ann
Young entitled "No Time" and Balderson. The door p~lie was
"The Joy of Living."
won by Mary Alice Blse.
:"
!loil call was answered · by
The May meeting will· be held
members naming their favtlrlte · at 8 p.m. at the home of JaniCe
gardening magazine' or seed Young.

Weight control clas.se,s sch~ulal

.

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Sunrise service

:f'i:'·.
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SCHOOL PLAY -The Gallta Christian
Us annual
school play recently at the White Oak Baptist Church. The play,
"Beauty aad the Feast" Wfll! adapted frqm the Biblical story of
Queen Esther.aad her determination lo save the Israelite captives.
l'lctured
Is Paul Anspach, left, and Michelle Welbnaa.
,
.

,2 5°/o OFF ALL DECORATIVE~:..

·: REJOICING liFE
CHRISTIAN ·sCHOOl.

Gin ITEMS

1'.

.\

INCLUDES OUI LAIGE SEUCTION
OF SU FLOWDS, PICTURES ·
AND PLAQUES

Kindergarten - Grade 8

SPECIAL REGISTRATION FEE

.'

A special

reduced rate of $ 10 per child for
currently enrolled and new students for Registration of the 1990-91 school year is now .
in affect until May ·31 sf. ·
For a frH brochure tmd school manL!al containing

0·\\iff

complete information, call: 614-992-6249.

OR WRITE:
.
Reioicing Life Christian School ·
333 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760

;~~-~~·~~· .,~
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A Good Friday three-hOur Tenegrae being taken verbatlrll
service will be held at Sacred from the s~rlptures, according rQ
Heart Catholic Church. The church officials. ·
• ·
service will begin at noon ·and · It Is descr-Ibed as a worshipful .
continue to 3 p.m .
experience geared to draw th~
The office of Tenebrae (which . listeners closer to Christ Jesus.;
means "darkness" or "shad·
When atten.d ing the service,
ows'') Is a Holy Week devotion residents will have an opporturv
which dates back to the seventh ity to view the recent remodeling
or eighth century A.D. and Is of Sacred Heart.
;
characterized by the successive
extinguishing · of candles as the
service progresses. No service
• during the entire church year Is
more biblical wJ.th ev~ry word or
The University of Rio Grandf'
Pershing Rifles Troop .A-1 15
taking donations for a canoe triP,.
Sunrise services at the Mt.
to be held April 20-22. If anyone
Herman Church will be held at
would ·like to donate to the troolt
6:30a.m. Easter morning. Roger send name, address, and the
Buckley will have charge of the amount of the donation to Jon '
program and a breakfast will Benfer: Box 216, University of
follow in file fellowship hall.
Rio Grande, Rio Grande, 45674",

Pershir?g Rifles .
taking donations

~

•f:,

'!t,l&gt;

A

·'series of weight . controL ' . ~la~s size will· ~ lbnlt~(l ana
classes lfll! be offered beginning · will be -held In the co~rence
April 17 and 18 at 6. p.m. at thl\ r.poin of · the multi . purpose
Met g s county He a 1t h bulld~ng oq Mul~rr"Y He~hts 111
Department.
P.ohleroy. ·
•
· •· ·
·The six week. classes )VUl be of ' il.ie classes are "ftee: to M~gs
two hours . (juration and wUI .. Co111{ty tesldea!S who should
Include nutrition· education, register as sqp)t&gt;al:posslbledue to
stress . management, wee~ly cl~ .size lbnltat~!IS· · '
weigh-ins, relaxation_ te~hReslcfefts m~Y register ·by
nlques, recipes, diet J'IICall calling. the Meigs County Health
sheets, _exercise techniques ,at'ld DepalliJnent at 992-6626.
other phases· of- weight co,nyrol.
'•

t

Good Friday services planned

"Pom•roy'I FAshionable Shoe SIOf'e" ,

I

.
Wednesday, April11, 1990 ·
Page

~a 210HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
-~
EAST MAIN
992-6254
PO,MEROY
·11•,.

'

The· Daily se-ntinel

to

aa a subStitute teacher be used
on an aa needed bula, and passed .
a reso~t~tton oppomq Hollll! Bill
7'19. Thl$ 1$ propoeed leglllatlon
calling for theestabl~ntofa
professional standards · ~rd
with regard tii cer.tlflcatlpa; of
school persoDJieL 'nle "¥etas
County Board feels the ~mnt
·method of enslll"lnl the prates·
slonal standa~ of ·school .personnet, as carried out by a
division of the State Department ·
of Education, Is satisfactory. If
H. B. 779 Is approved, .· the
resllltlng 17-member standards
board would be appointed by the
g~vernor.
·

~~-~~·~~·

t.

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5tl'H.t

ffiooks

93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

(614) 992-6657

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STUDENT OF THE WEEK. - David llerdmaa Is thl8 ~ek'a
reclplellt olJIIe ll&amp;udeatef tlle'Wee!l A"ard at "elp .Juler·BIPI :
Scllool Ills recepi&amp;IH came fer h18 aullerlor work Ill' ·m.allah

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�Wildwood Garden . Club

··Meigs County property .transfers
CompUed by:
Emmogene RC!Iateln Conp
·Recorder, )llelp Counly, Ohio
Giles Lee Hysell, Paula . K.
Dtllon and Timothy R. Dillon,
. parcel, to Glle5 Lee Hysell,
Chester.·
Giles Lee Hysell, Paula K.
D!llon and Timothy R. Dillon,
parcels, to Paula K. Dillon,

Chester.
Warren P. Pickens and Lillian
E. Pickens, 15.0429 A,. to·Ernest
E. Whitehead and. 1. Maxine
Whitehead, Olive. ·
Warren P , Pickens and Lillian
E. Plc!&lt;ens, 1.80 A, to Denver V.
Weber and Grace E . Weber,
·Olive.
.
'George A. · Radekln dec'd,

aftld., .to Wanetta G. Radekln,
Columbia.
James W. Ellis and Maagle
Ellis, parcel, to John R. Hunnell
and VIolet F. Hunnell, Rutland.
Country Mobile Home Park,
Inc., ease. and assign., to Hock·
lni Valley Ent~talnment Systems and United VIdeo Cablevl·
ston, Inc.

Community calendar
M:DNESI&gt;AY
CHESTER -The MI. Herman
United Brethren . Church will
have revival through Saturday
with evangelist .L amar O'Bryant
speaking nightly at 7: 30 p.m.
There wUl bz special singing.
Robert Sanders, pastqr, Invites
the publiC.
HARTFORD -There will be a
revival · at the Fathers House
Church In Hart1ord,. W.Va.
through Sunday at 7 p.m . nlgl\tly.
There will be special singing and
preaching and the public 1~.
invited to attend.
POMEROY -There wlll be a
revival at the fiysel) Rim Rollness Chapel through Sunday with
George Wllliams, pastor of the
Point Rock Church, as speaker.
There will be special singing and
- services are nightly at 7 p.m.
• Pastor Robert Grimm Invites the
~ public.

Wedneeday. Aprl11, 1990

Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

. Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Groupo( AA and AI~AJ\on wlll
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
JTPA offiCe 'tn Pomeroy.. ·
CHESHIRE -There will be ·a
free clo!hlng day Thursday from
9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building In Cheshire spon·
sored by the Meigs Gallla Community Action Agency.
GALLIPOLIS-There will be a
meeting of the Diabetes Support
Group on Thursday at 7 p.m. In ·
the ·French 500 room at Holzer
Medical Center. . The guest
speaker· wlll be ·Dr. Barbara ·
Wiseman. ·
· · .,
·.
RUTLAND -rThe ·Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary will have. a
donkey basketball game · on
.Thursday at 7: 30 p.m, ~t· the
Rutland Civic Center. Admission
Is $4 fcir adults and $2.50 for
·
children and senior cltlzeris.

at 7 p.m . on Golgotha's Hill off
Route 143, two miltS south of
Carpenter on Co11nty f!,oild 14.
Pastor Joe N. Sayre Invites the
public.
.
RUTLAND -There will be an
all night hymn ' sing at the
Rutland Freewllll!aptlst Church
on Friday starting at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY· -The Women's
Auxjllary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will have ·a "bake sale
Friday beginning at 1Q.a.m.ln the
lobby of the hospital.
.

''

RUTLAND -Dan Hayman
and Faith Trio and the McDaniel
Trio will sing Friday and Sunday
at 7 p.m . at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church nea·r Rutland.

Clarice Krautter presented a .
program on gem stones !or
members of the . Wildwood
Garden Club at the · group's
recent' meeting held at the home
of Doris Grueser.
..
·
Mrs. Krau tter stated that gem
stones are minerals valued !or
their beauty, rarity, and hard·
ness. Precious stones Include
diamonds, rul)les, emeralds, and
sapphireS.
Semi-precious stones Include
topaz, spinel, opal, amethyst.
mOos tone, ·aquamarine, chrysoberyl, tourmaline, zircon, peri·
dot, garnet, 11nd others. She went
on to say that ornaments of gems,
tQid, carved stone, snell, Ivory,
and pearl have delighted people
since tlie earliest o( ages.
Mrs. Krautter stated that there
has also been many beliefs and
superstitions connected to gefl'!.S
and crystals. Following her pro- .
gram, Mrs. Krautter showed an
array of jewelry made from
gems.
The meeting opened with devotions by Kathryn Miller who read
· "My Secret Gard,:!n." She then
conducted a short business meetIng and announced tlie regional
meeting to be held April 28 at the
. Hocking .Valley · Motor Inn In
NelsonVIlle.
·The' meeting will be
.

.

Wahama /1./umni
banqtlet planned

SATURDAY
CHESTER - The Queen and ·
The Waliama alumni banquet
King Bees 4H Club will have a
and dance wlll be held May 26 at
bakesaleSaturdayfrom9a.m. to · the M0011e ·Lodge !n.Polnt Plea~ .. ·
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock noon at Gaul's Market' In
sant, W.Va ..
; :: SYRACUSE -The Syrjicuse
Springs .Grang¢ will meet Thurs- Chester. ·
A dinner of prlme rlb, potatoes, ·
" · Nazarene Church will have rev!- day at -7:30p.m. at the hall. ·
.
, vegetable, salad;. rolls, dessert,
R,II.CINE -,The Racine Amerl·
:; J.al through Sunday a! 7 p.m.
coff~ and tea will be served at 6
• -nightly and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday
TUPPERS .PLAINS -The can Legion Post 602 will have an
p.m. . .
J'
= .With Rev. Ronald Roth as special Tuppers Plain's VFW Post 9053 easter egg hunt 011 Saturday at 1
Following the dinner entertain{ •$peaker. The public Is lnvit~d to will meet Thursda)i, 7:30 p;m. at . p,m. at the post home. All area
ment will be provided by the
the post home.
~ · attend.
'
children are Invited to attend. , . · Midnight Cloggers.
The dance will begin at 9 p.m.
SYRACUSE -The Save the
··-.. MEIGS -The Vanderhoof
POMEROY '.;...The Meigs
with the music by the Party
•..-· Baptist Church will have a County Better Llvesiock Dairy Pool Committee will have a car
Factory.
- pre-Easter revival Wednesday
4H Club will have Its first wash at the fire station In
Tickets will be on sale at Fruth
·: through Saturday. at 7 p.m.
meeting of the year on Thursday Syracuse be$lnnlng at 10 a.m.
Pharmacy In Middleport
·:- Jtlghtly. The evangelist wlll be at the Meigs. County Extension Proceeds will go for needed Farmer's Bank In Pomeroy, ami
:·. Charles Ferrell, Pine, Grove,
repairs of London Poo~
Office In Pomeroy at 7 p.m.
Peoples Bank In Mason and Point
:;· :W.va. . There will be special
Pleasant, W.Va.
BURLINGHAM -There will
singing each evening and the
FRIDAY
Reservations must be made by
: · public Is Invited to attend.
RUTLAND -There wlll be an be an Easier potluck dinner Mayl9.
.
all night gospel sing"on Fdday sponsored by the Modern Wood· .
•.
POMJ=;ROY ·-A representa· beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the men of America · BurUngham
':· tive frOm Congressman Clarence · Ruttan~ Freewill Baptist Camp, on Saturday at 6t 3Q p.m.
: :)f!ller's ofllc~ will conduct , an C~urch. Sln~ers Include , Chris·
Meat will be provided by the
.; c)pen door session·on Wectnesday tlan Sounds, Heav~li ·Bound ·camp and those attending are to
:· trom1111,m. tolp.m.Inthecourt Four, l\larro)ll Way, Edell$ Fam- bring a covered dish.
.;; ')l,ouse In Pomeroy, Anyone hav· Ily, Refleetlon.S, Gabrlet·Quartet,
• -lng questions. concerning the and Charity.
·
RUTLAND ~ Return Jona·
~ -federal government Is Invited to
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
discuss them with the represen· . CARPENTER-' 'A Place For of the American RevoluUon, will ·
· tatlve at this lime.
You" will be· pr~isentedby theM!. meet Friday at 1 p.m at the home
Union Baptist Church on Friday of Mrs. Vernon Weber, Rutland.
POMEROY -The offices of
Planned ParenthoQd In Pomeroy
•. will be,closed Wednesc;lay due to a
:·. staff
. .' ' .
. m~etlng.
.
'
'
- . '·
'
'
.
Rejoicing Life Church · wlll
"Let There Be Praise" and Jlm
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
Evans singing "He's Alive! "The
Nazarene Churc.l! will iiave revi- celebrate Jesus' 'resurrection at
val thmugh ·Suilday with Rev: the 10 , a.m. service Easter . worship d!lllcers will be presentlni "Behold the Lamb'' with the
Ron Roth as ~peclal speaker. . Sunday In the }llaln 'sanciuary.
Rejoicing Life Singers, and the
Services will be 7 p:m·. nightly · The · Rejoicing · , Life praise
praise dancers will begin the
and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. on team, musl~lal)s, soloists, and
praise and worship dance teams
triumphant processional with
Sunday.
wlll ·lncorporate the theme •. "Be·
"Glory to the LaJ'!lb."
hold the Lamb" · throughout the
Pastor Michael Pangio wlll be
THl!RSDAY
'
preaching at the mernlng service
.. ; POMEROY ·~The Pomeroy , entire service.
Soloists Include Michelle Hall
and Invites the public to attend.
singing, "Beht;lld the Lamb" and .

.•

Easter
services set at chutch .·
.

~-~

meetS.----~-

hosted by the Athens County Garden Club to be held at the
former Pomeroy Senior High
Clubs.
The morning session of the · AudltorJum on April 28 and 29.
Dotothy SnUth had .tbe arranregional meeting will feature
Connie :tflll, herbalist, and the gement of the month featuring
afternoon progrtm wiU be "Pre- · various colOred carnations In a
lude, of ~litg Des!~" by wood container using bridle
Myrna Cordray, Ohio Assocla· wreath, spirea and moss, and
tiOI\.Of Garden Club chairman for aceents of a jewelled doU.
'for a specimen exblblt, Mrs.
junior garden c~bs.
.· Mrs. Millet- also announced Miller had a St. Patrick's daffodil
and ·Evelyn Hollon had a
that Arbor Day Is April ~,
.
.,
An lnvlt.tlon to area garden dleffenbachla:
.. club members was read to
Following the meeting refreshparticipate In the sesqulcenten· ments were served to the those
nlal flower and quilt show spon- attending .. The door prize was
sored by 1 the .. Winding Trail won by Pauline E~on:

..8eautifulEaster Cards .

.'

••, Huge selection

· ·

u religious, non-religious and

clrildren's cards.

•.'
•·&gt;I.
•.

..

.·

··'-~

Ma.. dwu

-·

a..

1:00 e.m. to 1:00 p.m.

- . , .111:00 o.m. 10 4:00p.m . •

I'IIIICIIII'TIONS
'I'll . ttZ·atlll
E. llloln
frlondly ....ico
l'om•ov. OH.
. :· Op. . w.~
'tilt

NliM•

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..OPEN
EASTEI
10:00 A.M.
TO
12:00
,NOON

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"Special CaF.e ,For People Who

_Are Speciai ·rQ

You'~

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:

•.

.~ Co"eaio'fl.
•
,
•
•·
.
~

::.
•

~ In the recent birth announce-

ment of Timothy Allen Spires,
son of Tlm and Pamela. Spires,
Cheshire, the paternal grandparents should have been listed at
Rodney and Patsy Sprles,
.Cheshire.
'·
,
The name of Patsy Spires
should also have appeared In the
teport of Pamela Spire~· baby
.
.
shower.

'Victory Baptist Church

,. .' ~'WELCOMES YOU''
TO ·

EASTER SUNRISE. SERVICES

'I

SUNDA APIIL 15, 1990
. 7:00A.M.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL •• ~............ 1'0:00 A.M.
.
MORNING WORSHIP ......i•••• 11 :00· A.M... •
EVENING SERVICE .................. 7:00 P~M.
WEDNESDAY EYENING •••••••••• 7:00 P.M.
\

'

-

..

PASTOI, JAMES ·1. 111511
. ASSISTANT PISTOl, DWIGHT ASHUY
9924772
525 NOUH SECOND
MIDDUPOIT,_OHIO
'·

.

Mother
first came 'to Overbrook Center in October, 1989' she was
.
"
unresponSIVe and comple~ely bedfast: We didn't think that·we would
ever see her out.oof bed and acting like the person that we knew as our
mother. .
.
. . .
.·
.
' . .
-

_,-

I

· Now Mother talks with the fa:mily and walks in the halls with 'h~r
walker. We can hardly Q.elieve that she has improved 'to ~his extent. The
family agrees that the improvement in Mother is beca'!lse of the good
care that she has received at Overbrook Center. We are well pleased with
the services and care at Overbrook Center and would recommend Overbrook Center to· anyone.
.

._l;}. ·

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Margaret Buckley, Daughter · '·
and the Family ofLola Barber

Come Visit, and_ Experience First
Hand T_he O verbrook Difference.
Approntl aftd Ctrtlflitl
for
.
, Medicaid, Medicare, ·
Workers Comptntatlon
Private lnturanct Prtigrams,
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Wf -Pay IHIIItnts. '

the shopkeeper's pistol per·
suaded the gunman ·and his
accompUce walling outsld~ to
flee the $lore, located near
Philippi, W.Va.
"I thought, 'Well, my gun Is
bigger than hfs, and hiS can't
make too .blg of a hole In me,'"
the 46-yea~:·old Philippi resident
said, "And I said, 'I don't think

.

SO. "'

.

/'""-

''Tbanady's to be credited."
.

P~ople

in
the news

ra~~~Ue~
,. (614) 992-.6472 '
333 PAGE STREET
MIDD~EPORT, OHIO 45760

,.

I

against the pair for an armed
says Taylor County Sheriff Rick
robbery Friday of a grocery
Reese, who solved another
store In the Rosemont area of
armed robbery with Titchnell's
Taylor County .
help.
.
When the men fled her st.ore,
Tltchnell said · that when the
. Tltchnell raced outsid~ and noted
man walked Into her store and
the car's license number. Then · de~Danded the .money and a
six-pack of beer, she lniUally
she called th~ pollee.
Sixteen minutes lat er, Phill~pi
didn't get the messa_ge.
· Pelle~ Chief Bucky Gainor and
" I thought he was taking
BarbOur County Sheriff Guy
money out of his pocket, and
Steerman had two suspects In
that's when he pulled the gun
custody.
out." she said.
When Till hnell reached for her
Reese then flied charges

:357 Magnum and dropped _to the
floor, the man scampered out,
yelling as he ran, ''Takeoff, she's
got a gun."

--.-

Whai'a Ia a name, aayway
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) LUcille Anne Marlin wants to be
known by her malden name
again. Her husband does not
object, and both thin~ the judge Is
wrong In requiring the husband
to sign tire petition.

Lucllle Anne Martin, 41 , went
·to Probate Court last fall to
retake her malden name of
Riccitelli ln. honor of her late
father. But Judge Anthony Sciar·
retta refuse)d to grant her.petition
unless her husband signed II. .
. .Riccitelli refused to obtain the
signature and said Monday she l(
appealing the decision to Superlor Court, backed by the Rhode
Island chapter of the American:
Civil Liberties Union.

.
\'our Locally Own~d
Low Priced Supermarkets

By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
Ualted Preu lateraatloaal
BACK AT THE MOVIES: 20th
Century Fox apparently has
forgiven Gene Slake! and Roger
Ebert for their unholy review of
"Nuns on the Run." Slskel, ·a ·
movie critic for the Chicago
Tribune and· Ebert's partner on
the syndicated review show ''At
the Movies," called to see If he ·
:. could attehd a Monday night
~ preview of the new Fox movie
' 'Vital. Slg11s., and received permlsslo!l. Ebert, who also writes
for the Chicago Sun Times., was
out of town but a Fox spokesman
said the ban against the critics
·had been lifted. ''The only thing
I'm ![15appolnted abOut Is ·that I
· had predicted the ban would last
. only one film and Roger had
· predicted It would last none,"
•' Slskel said. "Roger was right and
. ' he's going to be hard to deal With
· when he gets home." Fox had
said II would not allow Slskel and
Ebert to see previews of Its
.: movies after they made furl of
"Nuns on the Run" dui1ng an ·
' appearance on "Live - Regis &amp;
: Kathie Lee." .
TIANANMEN SQlJABE REV·
ISITED: Philip •Woo, the
Chinese'· American keyboard
player for the soul band Mue,
has assembled Patil Labelle,
. Richll! Havens and Aahford and
· SimpsoD to make a video about
the Tlananmen . Squar~ massacre. The vldl10 will be released
June 4 - the first annlverary of
the brutal crackdown on the
pro-democracy movement In
China - and proceeds from the
video and record will go toward
paying for a monument , In
Washington, D.C., a traveling
exnlbltion of photographs and a
tour 'of exiled students. The
"Tiananmen Square" video will
, feature. footage and headlines
·abOut the massacre. ·''I think
people ,aliould . be concerned
!lbout what · happens In the
world," Woo said. "I waht (this
song) .to be on the major video
networks . so th~t people , who
aren't exposed and who aren't
bookish' and llewspapei'Jsh. will
see this. Even ev,:!n thO\Igh I'm
bOrn and raised In A.mer1Ca, I feel
kinShip with my distant brothers
· In China because we're both ·
thinking on .the same thing.
We're thinking about peace,
eq usllty, human rights."
WRITE ROUSE . HEI-.
RARCRY: First dog MIIUe
' knows who really has the power
In the White .House. Pr1181deilt
. Bush's English sprlnier spaniel
wanted to join him Tuesday as he
headed to Toronto for a meeting
with Canadian Prime Minister
· Brian Mulroae;r, dashing tor the'
Marine One) hertcopter on the
·White ~ouse lawn. Bush first
tried ,to eblde the dog Into retreat
and then made a lunge that MllUe
artfuliy dodged. First lady Bar·
bara Bliih then took control of
things, persuading MIIUe to return to the fold, tall between her
legs.
INSTRUMENTAL JOB: Roy
Cluk thinks the Lo\'ln' Spoonful
seriously underesUmated In
the!r '&amp;C!!I song "NashvllleSats."
· The song refers to 1,352 guitar
pickers In Nashville but Clark
expects more April 22 when
anyone with agultaror!lailjo will
be admitted free to the Opryland
theme park: The pickers wjll be
assembled In the shape of a giant
guitar wltil Clark standing In the
guitar's sound hole for an aerial
photograph to mark the 150th
annlversety of · photography.
Clark.says It hasn't been decided
what song the assembled pickers
wlll play but said It" 'Would be a
bias t to hear hundreds of pickers
try to start and end 'Wildwood
Flower' at the liame time." ·
GLIMPSE8: Britain's Prlace
.fhUip .had a private audience
with Pope John Paul II at the
Vatlcan Tuesday. The prince, the
husband of QDeell Ellubeth II,
was representing the Worldwide
Fund for Nature but, as usual ·
with papal meetinp, details
were not ' released. PhJllp also
had an audience with John Paul
on Oct. 17,1980 ... llate JackNII;
Rick 8chroeder and Chrtl8arudon went to MIIUielota to shoot
• "The Stranger Within," a CBS
movte thriller, and expecting lola
of the winter weather tliat tbe
script called for. The bopef-lor
•bllizard dJdll't materialize 10 the
' lcript had to be cballpd to raiD
and sleet. ID fact, for most of the
llimiDClt was so warm, director .
Tom BoiJMd had trouble finding
a suitable frorell lake.

ODLA

OPEN
EASTER ·SUNDAY .

llappy

MAitlUFACTUIEI'S

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WE GLADLY
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APRIL 1-5,. 1990

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" ~ The Modern Woodmen of
.:,American ' Camp 4798, Athens,
::~lll be conducting -a matching
· fund project to raise money for
. ,the bene(lt of .Albany Elemen:
.: .,(ary School fqr playground equip::. 111ent, !lnd also ll!ldille and junior '
:· pjgh schools .for computer
, equipment.
;: The home office of. the Modern
::. Woodmen ot American will .
;. match up to $2500 of the fund
~.:r;!ilslng project.

Quirks in the news_ _ _ __
Clerk repeia llllel: 'M7 pa Is
blger tllu IIIII'
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (UP!)
-Lots Tl.tchnell was mlndhiC 'h er
grocery &amp;t!lfl! when a man bent
on helplni himself to beer and
money walked In and whipped
. out a .32-cailber plato!.
.
·
Undaunted by the gunman and
his weapon, 'l'ltchnell simplY
reached for her owri firearm .:.. ·
the much larJl!r and more
powerful .357 Magnum revolver.
One glance down the·barrel of

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9 ·

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

. Wedn•dlv. Aprt11, 1990

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$139

6°9

lOX or UGHT BROWN

IANQUU

RED RIPE

Domino Sugar

Cream ' Pies

Tomatoes

2U.

$119

14

89$

oz,

&amp; SERVE

CORN OR VEGETABLE

Crisco·Oil

9SP.o~.

SUPPORT OROCERs··.FIOHT AOAINST CANCER..~

59.!~

Rolls

2 •1
12 a.
PKG.

1

89•.
.

YELlOW COIN --.Yo.. 5/

WED., APRIL 11 '"

:::'SAViNGs·!
Join Us a.d Tile Allllrlc1n C-r Sodtty In
· . Wlpl•1 O.t this_DII••MII
•

.,

.

"

;ts,.Ntlftu,a ... ..,,.,, ,...,......,,........,..,.,

.,, .

s1

\ I.

\

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j

�'
Ponwoy-Middleport,
Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Wedn•dev. April11, 1990

embarrassed by all the fuss we
that 'with a$ little disruption as the leave and attend the funeral.
are making oVer him, " Reagan
possible/' said Brian Buchanan . Go.v. Evan Bayh ordered flails In
wrote In an C)p·ed column In the · . of Flanner and Buchanan Mortu· the state to be flown at half-staff.
Washington Post. "He did not
ary In Carmel, located 15 miles
The R,ev. ·Ray Probasco, a
want to be anyone special. He
south of White's hometown of MethodiSt mints ter and friend of
Cicero In suburban Indianapolis. ·t he White family, was asked to
just wanted to go to schoq), play
with his friends and grow up like
Jerry Roberts, a funeral dlrec- preside at the ceremony. The
every other kid In the neighbortor for Flanlier and Buchanan, Hamilton Heights High School
hood. But It was not to be."
said no special provisions, like a choir was Invited to sing, and
One of the directors handling
closed-c(rcult television or public singer Elton John, a friend of
funeral arrangements said the
address system, were being White's, was to sing his own
worldWide grief surrounding the · inade In c~e Second Presbyter· "Skyline Pigeon" and lead the
18-year·old's death required that
ian fills to capacity.
COfl&amp;l'egatlon in the Lord's
a large church be selected for
"More than likely (the doors Prayer.
White's funeral. Second Presbywlll shut once the church Is
,John, . football player Howie
terlan was chosen for Us seating
filled)," Roberts said. ''! .really LQng, talk , show host Phil Do·
capacity, eve!) though White was
don't know what (size crowd) to nahue and three of White's high
not Presbyterian and · never atanticipate."
school friends - Tommy Hale,
tended !he church. · ·
.
Roberts said several · pollee- Leo Joseph and John Huffman ''Our main concern Is for the
men and security guards were were asked to be pallbearers,
Immediate. family. Iri a situation
hired to make sure traffic runs .s aid Sara McMullen, .a member
like this, It's sometimes difficult
smoothly around the church. · · • of John's staff.
for the family to go through the
Classes were scheduled Wed·
First Lady Barbara Bush will
normal grieving process.. .. Our
nesday at Hamilton Heights High be the White House representamain concern is to provide a
School, where White was a tive at the funeral, Indiana
forum for them to be able to do
junior, butstudentswereallowed University Medical Center off!-

mourners despite dreary, rainy
clals said.
weather.
,
White wlll be buried Wednes·
The
crowd
·at
White's
wake,
. (lay afternoon ai a cemetery In
lasted
sfx
hours,
was
a mix
which
Cicero, where be had lived. since ,
1987.
•
of family , friends, clljssmates,
White was diagnosed with
well-wishers and AIDS activists.
AboQt 25 pe9ple at a time were
AIDS In Dec('inber 1984 alter
allowed Into the visitation area,
contracting the virus from a
blood-clotting agent used to treat
where they were- greeted by
his hemophilia. He was told he
White's mother, Jeanne.
might live six months to one year
John, who arrived at Riley
but he survived more than five
Hospital for Children In Indlana:years.
polls Aprll 2 and kept vigil In
During those years, the teeWhite's room until his death,
nager traveled the world to help
stood behind Jeanne. White to
offer comfort to her and other ·
lessen fear, Ignorance and panic
about AIDS.
friends and relatives.
Prominently displayed In front
White was hospitalized March
of White's open casket were a
29 with an AIDS-related respiraslate from the 1989 television
tory ailment that ultimately
proved fatal. Upon his death, . !DOVie, •'The Ryan White Story/'
praise for White and condolences
and a People magazine cover
for his family came from across
featuring White. Numerous phothe country.
tos, Including a baby ·picture
A wake for White at Flanner
posted above White's body, were
and Buchanan Mortuary Tuesplaced among flowers that
day drew a steady stream of
adorned the casket. ·

•
State high court hears patient ttssue
case .
LOS ANGELES (UPJ) - In an
Important case In the growing
field of biotechnology, the state
SupremeCourtwasasked toglve
patients new rights to Share in
the profits from medicines .
created from blood and tissue
removed from their bodies.
The case argued Tuesday
Involves John ;Moore of Seattle,
whose cancerous spleen was
removed and tlssue from the
dlseased organ used to create a
biotech a,ntl-cancer drug with
possible potential sales of $3
b!Uion. ·
His attorneys allege he has a
right to share In whatever profits
are made from the product. The
surgeon, cancer researcher, unl·
verslty and blotechcompanles .h e
has sued allege that the spleen
removed In an operation that
saved his IUe had no value and
that he retained no rights to it.
''This case Involves physicians
who took a unique (cell culture)
of great value without the pa!lent's permission or consent,
then sold It," Moore's lawyer
Sanford M. Gage told the court
Tuesday.
But lawyers !or the defend·
an~. Including cancer specialist
Or. David W. Golde and the
regents 'of the University of
CaiUomla, countered that If
Moore Is allowed to lay claim to,
and receive compensation for his
blood and tissue It would hamper
scientific freedom ·, and hinder
researeh.
"OUr most slgnUicant concern
I~ the ab!Uty to continue medical
research for a public 'benefit
without the Intrusion of the
private Interests of the patient,"
said Allen Wagner, representing
·
the regents. .
. Mon)Over, Golde's attorney
argued, California law speclfl·
cally allows scientific resei~rch
op tissue that has been removed.
Moore, 44, who runs a so~ft
drink company, recovered fro
his leukemia when his spleen wa
re'119ved at UCLA In 1976. But
Goltle and researcher Shirley
Quan later discovered that celts
of hiS diseased spleyn had unique
properties that offered some
protectio,n against leukemia. and

could be useful In treating cancer
and AIDS.
Isolating the unique cells,
Golde ', a hematologistoncologist, and the imlverslty
patented a new cell line - a
culture of cells - In 1984.
A biotech firm, Genetics Instllute of Cambridge, Mass., contracted to commercially develop
the line, and a Swiss pharmaceutleal firm, Sandoz Pharmaceuti·cals Corp., was brought In to
market it.
Although the line Is still In
clinical trials, a product derived
from Moore's unique blood cells
could generate sales of $3 billion,
Gage told the court. .
Moore's cells were "absolutely
vital for development or. the
valuable productlnvolved here,"
. Gage argued. "He never consentedtoremovingthecellllne ...
which has substantial value."
Another attorney for Golde,
Anthony Murray, argued that
nothing had been concealed from
Moore'.
,
"He said Take It out. Get rid of
It, It's got cancer In It,"' said
Murray. "Now he's saying, 'No,
you can't do any r~arch unless
you pay m~. "'
At Issue In the closely watchl!d
case Is the legal theory of
conversion or wrogtully
·taking someone else's property
Without consent - and whether
the definition of conversion
should be broadened to Include a
person's body as property.
Moore sued UCLA, and the
doctors and companies Involved,
losing In slate court when a judge
dismissed the suit, saying .h e had
no legal grounds under the
conversion theory.
Anappealsrourtrelnstatedthe
suit, finding for the first time that
a _person has a "property Inter·
est" In bls own tissue and saying
that not allowing the'sult io go to
trial would open the dcipr to a
• 'massive Invasion of human

privacy and dignity In the name
of medical pmgress."
·
The July 1988 ·ruling . was
significant because human tissue
was not listed In the California
laws defining property.
"What has been taken (from
Moore) Is property," Gage said..
"It Is a product, property, and It
should be protected."
But lawyers for. the 'medical ·
researchers told the court that
life-saving breakthroughs In
medical science and blotechnol·
ogy Will be hampered If the court
decides that Moore has a property right to his discarded tissue.
In questioning the attorneys,
the justices seemt'd most Inter- .
ested In the Issue of Informed ·
consent - and whether Moore
agrm, either Implicitly or ex-

APRIL SPECIAL
ON CARPn CLEANING
WHOL~ HOUSE SPECIAL
ON ANY COMBINAnON OF S
!'QOMS, HALLWAY AND lATH

$999S

AD.VANCED CLEANING
SOYICE

b

ALL

1 GROUP LADIES JEANS
by Lea, Levi, Chic
8t Sunaat Bluel

.

Classified
.,.,..... -Ci--· . . . ,. ,. ...

MIDDUPOU

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STOBE

'''"of TIIMII

•

CROCK
MARGARINE .......!f.lll- S1.09

IMILK CHOCOLATE.
RABBITS

·89C

CHEESE
SPREAD ..............!!... S2.59
BEAVEI VAllEY IIEDIUII

EGGS"................1m•• S1.19

TUESDAY PAPfft
W£DNUDAY PA,!fl ·
THUIIIOAY PA"IA
IIIIIIOAY PAitiR
lUNDAY ItA~ fA

Classified

GET AHOP
-~ -

--

'PASm -WICKER
I EAS ill IASID$.....

. , "YOI)R EASTER HEADQUARTERS"

992-6455

POMEIOY, OliO ·

•

.

2•&amp;-Rro 0rlnOt2t6- GuWin DttL
143--flb&lt;ID•t•

·PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
217, North Second

. Middltport, Ohio

~

i

Rt. U41 ~o-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp;·TRUCK

REf AIR

2 531 West lloln,
Po~~~eroy, Oh.

Alee Tr••••leelo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121 .

For Moat 'l and 4-cycle

PH. 992"3922
6-21-'H-tto

Good Ret•
T.L.C.

'

SHOP

TRI•COUNTY RECYCLING

OffEIS 3 LO(AnONS to SIIVI YOI ....

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 tit S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO : Rt. 60 tit S.R. 143
HENOERSON, WV .: Rt. 36 Adj. to Sidon Equipm..,l
.
NEWHOURS:
POMEROY : 9 o.m.· 7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALBANY: 10 o.m.-6 p.m. 6 Ooyo, Ctoood Sundoy
HENDERSON: 10 a.m. -6 p.m. 6Doyo. ClaoedSun.-Mon.
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAR . 13, 1990
# 1 Copper 85C per lb.;
Clean Drv Aluminum Cena, 35C per lb.

So•••
•C.m••rv FtoWer
V•• •CI., Bird 811h1

Reforenceo

•C•m•n Bird Blthl

992-6173

•Fountain Bird B•tha • Plus
o8er, Froga. Angels •nd '

209 South 4th St.

Other Ywd Orn•menu

Micklleport, Oh.
"LOW IIKOME HOME"

3 -28-'90- tfn

3 Announcements

EVERY THliRSDA Y
VFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.

4~

WE BUY ALL NON FERROUS SCRAP. BATTERIES,
STARTERS, TRANSMISSIONS, ALTERNATORS, ETC .

Buy From l l• &amp; Sav~!
992-$926 l/1_1/1 mo.

614)992-5114

v.w.
PARTS &amp;

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMATE

BINGO
'

.

MIIIWI C.o

CONTROL

HUCK'S CAR WASH

NEW &amp; USED
PARTS
For Rabbit,

·Service
Residential &amp;
Commercial

Jetta, Golf,

CALL
992-5589

Beetle and Bus.
614-742-2315
3-29-'90-1

2-2-'90·1 fiiO . d.

1110.

~l-lutll\•1

you bel1~e you could hnd a 3
be!t'oom ranch w~h luH base·
ment ff1 great cond1!10n wtth at
·2 acres ·you wanl lor ellDw
room? Includes a heat pump,'
central air, garage and large
stOI'age shed and this ooie is
for yru. $43,000.00.

'2-w..tea to'""
li-ked •

hnilwt~r

·

o,,•. """"

10 LOitl

RACINE- Vine Street - I

,, ....,11

floor frame house. Needs
some wor·k but has a ntce
50xl90 lot with all ut1ltltes
on s1te.
MAKE OFFER
S12,500.00.

71 - Aw101 lor Ill•
72-TrYC:III for Iiiii
73 - VIIftl. 4 WD 1
74-MOIOfCVCI.
·
71 - IOIU &amp; Mou"' tor lele

•

I:Cili@IJM

W\1

31-Hamtt tor 611c

16-AIIto Peru. A,c.toft•

32-MOtlll. HlUft.l ICir $•1e
JJ-hrm1 tor ill•

" · ·&amp;ulo Repau
71-,lm,un' lOtOIIltmlflt

7S-ternpers'

l4-l~~~tn•t luildlftfl

M~or

Homn

J•-L•U I. A.('l•lfl

'773-MIIDII

NfN ·LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT -Central atr woold be
nite this summer and hav1ng
a 5 room home in excellent
condrtioo wtll let you srt back
in coot comtort~ Rear deck
wlh gas grill,
equopped
krtchen, storage
buidinll.
Good locatiOn $33,0QO.OO.

3&amp;- RI.. lllete WIIIIH

"••n
116 - L.a•rt
11~-New

I!' -htt•o

TUPPERS PlAINS - Woutu

11 -hrrn l~llll'ftM1

U-Lw..tocto
e•-M•v &amp; G11•n

I;@Dijld
4 '-HouNI tor Rem
. 42-MGOII• I"'Gfi"M tor Renl
Rent
·U - AINrtment ICtr Rtnl
46-F"rn•f'led Room•
46 - l~t~• ror "ent
47-V"'fii4CIIO Ren1
U -~outcut'ltnt tor Rent

11-·Komelmar_"'..,''
12-,.lu~blng lr "••tnll
U-hCIIIIIIIIIO
,

14-EIHirtCII &amp;. ,., ......,.,_

16 - Gin••• tilultnQ
••-Mabile "•"'• "-••"

11-UpfMtllll,,-

40 - ~or l.e•e-

IIIDDLEPORT GOOD
STREET - OWNER WANTS
AN OFFER, NEEDS TO SELL

Public Sale

- This mce l'f.· story home·
features l4 bedroom~ m~
dem krlchen w1th dimng bar.
all s!OI'ms and many ~her lealures. lndudes lraila- lot. Call
lor appomtment REDUCED
$24,700.00.
.

EI'A,.I

AUCftOI
.Saturday
Aprll14, 1990
10:00 ~.M.

Public Notice
NOTICE
Notlco lo horoby glventhot

,.,... Dt... ,,_... of
818 IIIII Roull 124,

, . Bottom. Olllo 41743,

filed on AppiiCIIIon In

Problto Court of Mlllgo
___.. ounty, Ohio.
No.
211111 . requeotlng o chonge
.
of the nomo of hor minor
chid. Dullln Wayne Dlllev
to Dul!ln Woyne Hllil. Thle
AIIPI'-t!On Will be hHrd et
P.M .. on die 14th dev
di'Moy, 1880.
Robert E. luck
Judge Ex Officio Clerk
Melgo County Problte
Court
Aprl 11, 1180

c-

"*'

\•

·

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

ANlJQUES I HOUSEHOlD: Bamboo What-not shelf. heart
back Ice cream chair, dol cradle. trunks. Windsor chair.
qul~s · blue ! White. pink; double Wedding Rlnil quilt top.
milk glass hen on nail, cake stand. severa hand painted
bo~s.llemwore goblets. old pitcher and bowl. 18Y8ral
rancv glass lamp lhadel. nlppon .chocolate set, several
places of Flo Blue, 2 blue glass ftre axttngulther. gold Bristol
vase, several cups and soucers, all types gla~Je Corntval. Ruby. Fanton, Aleiddln braa lomp. ott tamps.
case Iron vase. bQpt jock,llelgh bells. IIone jars,' stone /Or
with Diehard PreiGJ\IIng Co .. Pittsburg. miniature lard
Ptllll. pleating ~or.. butter mold, smal ~utt press. piclUres. mirrors. canelelabro, balketl, toll of lion ware.
Wooden tov pUI horse, Jewelry boll... lots of wood wore.
lanp parts. IIUdent tanp, goa lamp. brOil Chandelier,
wood craft nama, ~s. table ctotht. doll. tunldllar;
tovs. 2 ._.,., ntca collee grinders. comb.case. 4900.BTU
or conditioner. PU MLleh Moral

The lamily of Denlord
D. (Dink) Dou&amp;Jas would

like to thank ev.eryone
for thtir kindness, syme~rds,

watcll For Signa.

n.. Bst•t• •f,.. .,.,. 111...,.., s ....,1

CARD OF THANKS

Pithy,

LETART - OWNER WILL
TAKE PAY OFF - N1ce 2

Located at 1008 Main Street, Point Pleasant

'JDD"DOLLARS
TO Will POCICO
WITH A
CI.ASSfiD AD1C-ar_d_
oi-TII-an-ks-

food and

llowtrs durinl the loss
of thtir brother. ·
Spedll tiMs to the
RIY. Florence Stnith. Allo
to Ewinc Funerll Home
lnd cloct011 lnd .stlfl It
Holt• lhdlcel Cent•.
Bless IICh and everyone of you. Your kitd· •
ftHI will IIWIYI be te· i

.

AUTOMOIIII WILt. liU. AT· 12 NOON: 1979 Ford
Wagon Chateau van.

cUl

Ailed• Con.r~~etel..,

RICit PEARION AUCTION CO.
LUNCH

MASON, WV

17M715

...... , .roura a. trColfiiTEil
TIR•: Cllllw

membered.

IIIII $I

Brothers ·&amp; Sister

Cllllll•

.. l'tr

LD.

,IWIIIW~IfPIIJI

II

Uu111t.., ._.. .. Oltlo, ._ •III,..C w.c Vllglllllt..,.

Niece &amp; Nepbew
&amp; Fmllles

N.., ....... 8fJiq • h•m•AIIII...
j •

.... . . .

POMEROY,O.
9?2·2259

frrn St'IIPIH"
/', I I Vf''lill &lt;

23-~ro,..an•l ••v•~

171-AHie C.r.w1

843-P.,n..no
24 7 - LMtrt fatll
t•II-Aec:tn•
7•2 - Ru1'-Ad

_E . MAin11.ii.MI

v.,......
11-for Se1e • lrall•

1?-Mrlc.U.n_,.,

41i-Ltofl

•••-cPo"'•ov
.......

601

s!OI'y home teatures large
kitchen, IV room, large li~ ·
ing room, dtning room; 3
bedrooms, I bath, patoo and
2 car garage. Car peled
throughout Gas heat and
hot water heat. $29,900.00.
MAKE OFFER.
'

.I'OIIEROY PIKE - Forty-one

acres plus a 1980 Uberty Mobile Home BellltitJI ~1ew, 2
car garage, POI'Ch on 3 stdes, 3
siOI'age bulding;, and barn. 2 .
good . s~ed bedrooms, bay
window, equipped kichen. ·

Real privacy OWNER WILL

TAKE AN OFFER. $32,000.00
'

pd.

For Appt. Call
992-6717 Home 1!1' ·
992-62~~~':"P:.•.

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEI'AIR
Ali MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

:

KEN•S APPUANCE
SERVICE

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

SER~ICE

.

We can repair and re·

core radtatan and
heater cores. We

f

992-5315 or 915-3561
Across ,,_ Post OH!u
2l7 I. S.C. ·-•Y
POMEIOY,OIIIO

I

3161'90/ttn

can

also acid boil and rod

•Mobile Home
Renalo
•Lot Rent~''"

aut radiators. We alsa
repair Gar Tanks.

• 992-7479 '
lt. U Nerth ol

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PAY HILL FORD
992·2196

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-12-' II· tfn

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

CUSTOM llaT

I

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At ReoiOIICiblt Pricts" · :

'

PH. 949-2101
CONNIE'S
OHIO RIVER
HERBS and
EVERLASTINGS

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

OPEN:
APRIL 1 THRU JUlY 1

Ris. 949·216d

or

:

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4· 16-16-tlo

742-308B
•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change 8t Lubo
•Brake Work .

HOURS:
Thurs. thru Sun.
· 10 a.m.- 6 p.m.
WHOLESALE -RETAIL

247-4035
St. lt. 331, 5 till•
lbowo lotart, Ohio

MAIN Sf., RmAND
1·15-'!JO.Wo

4 / 3 1 '9011 mo.
•

I

GREASE JOB &amp;
OIL CHANGE

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

5169$ 4 Qt. Mar.

lental Cleanupo

IIITEIIOI EITEIIOI

liRE IEPliR .
MOVI IENTAI.
CONVINtlNCI STORE OEMS

&amp; Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES
Tah tho pain out of jloinflrlg.
lot us do it for you.
VER·YREASONAilE
HAVE REFUEN((S

CHESTER
QUIK STOP
St. Ill. 7 I 248
CHIST~I, OHIO

Ami.P.M.

(614) 985-4180

. 985-3350

lofore 6 p.m. loou Mtstot•
4·9- '90 -1

4-9· '90-1 mo .

mo. pd.

KOUNTRY KLUI

1

,,... ~ G?L!,:.E.S~~
·

(_

II Hra ....... 14ti •.

12 Hro ..... l9a

•Club Aep.t1,
·-G•Ipo

· ......:. , ln••N .. ..... 14,
New . Sh.rta tOr lro••
· ' Club1, Clubs ··shoAenlll tor
•on or d•ghtlf.

•.En;ravtng. TropN•.
PllqUtl li bdQ•

•sHRUB 8o' TREE
TRIM anel RE·
MOVAL .
*LIGHT HAULING

MW YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

~

too

,;
,.

c-, .... ..~

JOHN TEAFORD

"'.:..

USm APPUANCES ••
tO DU WAIIAIITY

..ASHEI$-$100 op
ORY£~$-$69

up

.
..,•'.

~
RIFRIGIIIATOI$-$100 u~
IIANGIS-Gos·llec.-$12 up t
FREIZIR$-$125 ur
JlttaO OVINS-$7 up
•
KEN'S APPUANCE ,.•

'•

992-5335 .. 915·35·1
..... .. , .... , ... Offlu
POIIIIOY, OliO

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENRI

·.
,

46317 !&lt;out
Ch•t•. Ohie
~
•·S. 'tD-1110. ~

SERVICE
10/30/'lt tlo

..
...
...

..
.·

...

USIDMOWIIS

PIODUm
Serwlu Center • IOC
ly•·P - and Serwlu,
IIden, Chorln
Saws, WHdeatlro.

*FIREWOOD .

•••s.

BILL SLACK
992·2269
EVENINGS

HOURS: M·f 9·7

Sot. 9·1: CtoMCI Sun.

. 949-2969
3 / 28/ 80/ Un

4-1-lt-tltl

Henry E. Clellfld
992-6191

,.,....... .

SI 01/J2NI St, MiiWIIpor ,

. SERVICE

Heating, Cooling(
Refrigeration

. Parts

11-WIIern•d to De

Ar" Cede 304
176-~1

.ao

3-12-t0-1 mo.

·

IN STOCK: .C.m ..t Porch

. 27 Yro. Exp .

STICKERS

· . Call Susan Coleman, 742.2771

IS NOW OPEN
FOI BUSINESS.

.42

&amp; Auction

992~21 56

.RUST &amp; STAIN REMOVER •••••• S2.59
HANDY WRAP •••••••••• ~•••••••• Sl ;39
KOOL~AID •• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• 3/69C

LOTIONS -

SYIA(USE, OHIO .
IAbov; Plna Shop)

.... &amp; loard fC!I'
Senior Clti1H1 and

17-Mu•cll ,,. ..,.-_.,,
.,_,.,.,.... &amp;

13-lnll.,•n~:•

cm·l'r lh&lt;•

Co~o~nt.,.

.30

rtlplr )'1111'111

8

I

'

lo •••••

enginM

Jo•s GIFT

1110.

New Lima Rd., Rutland, Ohio
1 Se·ssion ~..........................,...............S3.50
6 Sessions ....................................... s12.00
12 Stssions .............. .".............. '20.00
15 Sessions ......................:;·;·:.......... $25.00
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIIL Y MORE

Stock P1rt1 for Homelite.
Weedeater •.Tecumseh.
Brlgga fit StraHan.

EUM HOME

3·5· 90-1

SUN'S UP TANNING

PARTS AND SERVICE

4-25-ifn

11-... ator All•

H'l . .,,.,. . .,

U.-lw•'"•• lrltftlfiQ

WANT AD

'

TEDDY. O'S ............................
. ' 15 oz. 59&lt;

... ,....

llo- lct.M.... lf'I."IICIIIU~
16- fiiiOtu TV &amp; Clfll.. ..,

ISA

SPAGHEnl SAUCE w/MEAT ••~ S2.09

'

1:'11 -90-tln

AIIIIOUIICIIII
IIEW LOCATION
DAVE'S ,SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

Real l:ltate General

.20

.._.................

U-ln•t•nllliiM'IIH

CARROTS .....J.\Re... 2/79c

PIIGO Jt 01.

WE GO THE EXTRA MIU.....
CJ92·6110
POMEROY1 OHIO

985-4422 .

Roger Hysell
Garage

••-M"c M..-cfl_...

11-NIII W.,.ltG

BAG

PIE CRUST ftliiX ••••.•••••••••1•1.~!-S1.19

"Quality and Reasonable Prices"

•Mobile Home

Sr • VIII"

M II"IDAY

Cet . Rt~altc Fast

CAUFORNIA
i!
ORANGES ••••••U.~!,; 3/99&lt;
..
LEMONS" .............. 3/59&lt;

TOMATO SOUP .............!!.~!•••• 99&lt;

I

2 '00

'

1 I wor•

13-Mt,..._

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 ·4)-,..r"'t lor

HMS

FUlCO UIIRICAN PUIN

-

O~r

11-henMtO...

1-lll.... lt . . . . &amp; o\W~IIen
1-Wentld •• ll~W

:Z :OO P.M..MONDAY
2 .00,. M TUIEIDA'I'
2 :00P .M WfDNI!IOA'r
2 ·00 PM THUfiiSDA'

687 - Coolvrll•

U.-0-Wll 16 01.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

317 - Ctl•lltr t:
3111-VtnU:I"

3'78-V.IInul

PIZZA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !.!.~!·••• 99C
ORE-IDA 10 OL
SHOESTRING POTATOES •••• SJ,49

. .
.
01
25 /0 OFF.

'-"•«~s

py Adt

-

,,,_,.,._.,011

••6-GIIIIpDUI

ll.-99

,

4,16-16-tln

Mt•rr ltMHlt:,t

6-LHI lftd f.,nll

lrte Dlitv iet~lffl .. l••·

Arutoae614

CAMPIELL'S
-·

tft

pa11e.~ ·

M••••

Gllh• Coo.fltl
A,.~ Coot 6U

Fox c•••AnoN

ON EASTER
--

NOSUNDAYCAUS

I1-Hew.-e41110...

:1-Annouc_._..,,

fo/lowinr I e/ephqne &lt;'XC:hallfl'&gt;...

ORANGE JUICE .....~·••••••• ~!.~!·S1.99

·ann CROCIEI

--

or las. 949-2160

..-. •• ..,..., ....

•-Gw•aw•"
,_...,..,..,., · ·

2.:1-Mon.w

.SQUEEZE .KETCHUP •••••• ;!~.~!·$1 ~89

A Great Combination-

AT ALL

ALL PAPER liNGO GAMES

113.oo

""

1 -c;ere of '"'"••
2-ln....,.orw

, DAV~_,OI!.! PU8i.ICATION
·. -1 1:00 A.M SATUIIlDII't'

DfAOLINI · MOND-.Y PAPER

110PICANA

&gt;

u..... , . .............

•••o ..... '" lhl '- Pl....nr ......., •li&lt;cl II•• G•lh •
pol•• Dat~v Tr~aun• . Nadllng ""r 11.000 r.om~~

CO~Y

'

HOIIEIIADE .

Send the FTo®
Easter Basket Bouquet.

•ANYTHING

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

"Fr.. Eotimotaa"

IOHUS GAME IN

19.00 .

AllllliiJII( 1'1111'111'.

witl

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ••• 89(
DIU MADE
· . SHREDDED .L1. $2 ' 19 ·
COOKED HAM ....................

HOLLOW

w.~

C-1 - Cl•titwed . . .. lutlft•t Clrlll1,.d I.. III'IOIICft l

i 'Ill Ll ;) ! I I l GII \1 I i HI ill S{\ I f1 i' IIi L I l I UU1J

SHEDD'S SPREAD .

u.oo

·

11.00

"

'

hul &amp;II•

•• O•an•.. .-.en..,..eru IPIM ..

IOIIEMADE

'letenonr

PH. 949-2101

....

'

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

~OR!' VEL

' 11.30 1day
01101\'
Monthly
"•• ••• t'•t c•n•.,,.,. ruM. .,OIIeft u~clll¥1 wll . . _.. . . .

,

H...

lfl Memct~~~m

PHON! i,J .' ;; I il!r

.

R111

fUtl ] ..... 11 flO Cft•tt

VA. BRAND HAM •••••••••••• ~.. S2.29

2 F0189&lt;

CHESTII,

GAMES START 7:00 P.M.
ONE UNDER 11 YEAIIS
550.00 PER GAME

1!

. 10

"Prtot ..... ,., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111'101 . , . . . . ..
"1 .......... type ont¥ "'"
'
"'-t•.t • 110t . . . . . , .. . , tef . , . . , , ..., flm d.w ICII. .
teo .... .,, fNII • . , . . &lt;IIIII lilt p~J C.. l ~- 2 '00 II·"'
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .toft " ...... ·~,~.... mil mutt M NICI tri~Gpnm ••

ICDICI

ALL RUSSELL STOVER
EASTER CANDY AND
RUSSELL STOVER·EASTER
BASKETS ••••• 2 5°/o OFF

NOON SATURDAY

Plld

992-2i51

THIS EASTER, SPRING FOR
A BASKET OF FLOWERS

,

3

•Ao,_,.,. • 10 ••co""' to• ... ••• "'...,,"c•

POMEROY

OHIO

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
._. .....

'HO

Word•
11

DIYI.

"A•• oUIMOI M01 . . . 0..111 Of' MIIOfl cpultl* ""-'11 Dl P'l·

Corky's Classics ·

GREG BAILEY

RATES

JIOUCIES "

290 SECOIID AVE.

L HOLLON
TRUCKING

INSULATION

··

· ~ and J CONSTRUCTION

I~

FREE COfFEE

. CLOSED SUNDAY

.

PEEPS

•VINYL SIDING ·
!ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN

OPEN 5:00 P.M.

• The Area's Number· 1 Marketplace

I A.M, until

THIU SATURDAY, APIIL 14

· T-T521

!hi! years go by, Wt' haW'

----------

TO PLACE AN ~D CAlL 99M156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

SPRING
FASHIONS

·MARSHMALLOW

I lmes

pverythlng,
·
Now about that R,evolullon .... :

a little ·problem In makln~
connections on these thln~s so 11'1
I'm sorry to report that Jan•• · me. help with that. Hobarl !s the
husband of the- former Evelyn
c o m e s
Brown of Pomeroy has some
Flck and so many of you know.
naturally?
problems and Is ' undergoing
Evelyn. At any rate, Hobart was
They seem to
testing at Camdentalln Parkers.
a member of the Pomeroy· High
expect us to just
burg, .W.Va. You can brighten
School graduating class of 1933
accept It all and
her day wlih a card. . The room
and It would be especially nice
•smile. Now. I
number Is .;146;· the zip code Is
for him to hear from some of his
know we're
26101. Jane will be glad to hear
former classmates. You can
good, but are we THAT good?
from Y0\1.
send cards to 1fl18 North Main
The government Is counting
Ave., Sidney. Ohio 45365.
Mrs. Frank Shoemaker of
heads this year as you no doubt ·
.
are aware. There appears to be Cleveland Is searching for
Barbara Fry. a. membt&gt;r of the
qullters.
numerous people who say thev
MPigs County Fair Board and
M1's. Shoemaker has retired
never received a census 'rorm.'
sup&lt;&gt;r!ntendent of the amateur ·
Now we could jusr shrug it all arid · from a teaching career and· now
painting departm&lt;'nt has re·
has complt&gt;led several qull t tops
call 'em big lia rs bur one
wm'ked the areas of ·compelltlon
which she would ll)&lt;e to have
communlly In Call!qrn Ia was
In the painting and .thP changPs
completed.
If there Is any
missed compit&gt;t(•ly ...,. nar~· a
will go Into effect durin~ the
Individual or· group Into lhe
form . Now a communltv couldn't
annual fair In August. this year.
quilting who would take on the
possibly have a toti percent
Artists will be permUted only
job of completing Mrs. Shoemakpopulation of liars so somehow
one Pntry in each class and there
••r's quilts, please write her at
the town must havP been mbS&lt;&gt;d.
will be both junior and · adult
1157 Belrose 'Road, Cleveland,
Should we chalk It up ro anotht•r
levels of judging. Thl' categories
Ohio 44124-1526. Incidentally, the
well-planned gov.,1·nment op&lt;&gt;ra·
lion -you know. kind of par !or 'tops she' want's completed ai·e lor . are the same In both a~e
divisions &lt;!nd lnc:lude: land s·
twin size beds. ·
the cours'e?
cape, animal study and floral ·
, And now we peons are bl'lng
study with the samecale~arles to''
.
Help!
advised that most of our nation's
bl' judged In · three different
The Women's Auxiliary at
cosmetic manufacturers are not
medias which wlU Include oil
Veterans
.
M
emorial
Hospital
is
In
taking part In the voluntarv
painting. acrylic palntin~. a nd
desperate need of a local to stage
program to be lnsp&lt;&gt;cted . In the
water colors. So If you work In all
report we're told that the Food · their I'Ummage sale on May :J, 4
three of the medias and do
and 5. Thegrouphad a downtown
and Drug ·Admlnlstraflon has no
.
palnlings In all three categorlt•s
location
for
the
sale,
but
have
aulhorlly to requlrP sa fl'fy tt&gt;stof
each, the maximum t&gt;ntrlt&gt;s
lwPn
Informed
that
thl•
building
lng of personal carP product s
you
can do woulb be nlnt&gt; In your
has
been
sold
and
Is
P.repared
lor
which Includes everythln,;: !rom
particular
age classl!lcatlon.
location
by
a
business.
This,
of
tpothpaste lo bubbl e bath. Nor
ThPI'e
will,
of
course, bt&gt; spt•da I
coursl.',
left
lht&gt;
Auxiliary
without
does the administration have theawa1·ds
of
best
of show and
a
place
to
hold
their
sale
.
If
you
a~ thority to force manu! act urt&gt;rs
ean
hPip
out,
do
let
thP
Auxiliary
reserve
best
or
show.
to r~port safNy data on cosmt•t know by calling 992 -2104. ThP.V'I'P
-------lcs or cosmeU c~-relal&lt;&gt;d Injuries.
Cre-t!
I was gonna take a
concerned.
There's no government revlf.'w of
bubble
bath
bur sine&lt;&gt; Uncle Sam
thec.hemlcals In thf.' product's. So
Isn't
checking
that put·too wellHobart
Young,
forme1·!y
of
,
It's apparently a case of anything
maybe
I
had·
better
bypass that Pomt&gt;roy
and
a
frequent
visitor
~oes. I'm overwhelmed - and
just
pass
the
Sure.
Do kPep
here
over
the
years,
Is
havln~
here WP were 'lhlnkln~ thai thl•
smiling.
·
somP
health
problems.
Somegovern!llent took carl' of

33°/o O~F

SUCED Ll.

106 IITTEINIY AVE.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Are they .w orking to drive us up
the wall '- or Is
'(:ast• of
doln' what

50 0/0
/4 Of.f

80 PAIRS OF MEN;S WESTERN BOOTS

OFF ALL

I

992-6454

Now, about the revolution
as

20°/o OFF Boys &amp; Girls Shorts, Tops or Sets

·20°/o

.

20°/o OFF

· . Sunaet Blue. Zenia
&amp; Rocky Mountain

446-3915

112 WEST MAIN

MISSE$ AND WOMEN'S

JEANS
by l,.ee. Levi; Cl)ic,

'

The Daily Sentinel Page 11

Business·.Services

.

pllcltly, to the researeh . . The
q ues tlonlng also appeared to
Indicate the. court's :concern of
extending llablllty too far for
body tissue.
A decision Is expected Within 90
days.

ONLY

Pomeroy Midcleport, Ohio

Beat of the. Bend

Ryan ·White's mourning climaxes with massive funeral
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - A
church Ryan White never at·
tended Will be the site of h!i
funeral only because !twas one of ·
the few churches near his hOmetown that could accommodate
the throngs of mourners for the
AIDS-stricken teenager.
The funeral for White, who died
of an AIDS-related Illness Sun· •
day foUowlng a five-year battle
agillnst the disease and dlscrlml·
nation against its victims, was
expected to draw an overflow
crowd Wednesday to Second
Presbyterian Church, w.!Jich
seats more thari 1,000 people.
White, who WC)n the adinirat ion
!lf stars ahd comm!ln pe!Jple alike
during his fight for AIDS education, was remembered Wednes·
day by former President Ronald
Reagan as a teenager "who just
wanted to be like the other kids."
"Ryan would probably be

Wadnesdey, April11, 1990,

1Jo.11•HillTrmell
..... 949-26&amp;0
.............. 985-.-&amp;
1111 Hqpp .. ,....... 949-2257

'Office ................ 992-2259

THIS SPIIIIIG UKE lEATHER
HAS PIOIIPIED BUYEIS TO
PUIICIIASl IHILI THE still

SHIIIIS. WE NEED IIORE

USTIIGS TO .IGIIlll OUI

•m

DAY AIID YOUISII ·LIST WITH
' CLUJIID IEAI.TY FOil
RESUIJI!

.

WIMIJUSTINGS

A

DOZER
SITEWORIC • ROAQS
.'
ClEARING

Aoward L Wrltttal

ROOFING

NEW - REPAIR

NE._WLAND
ENTERPRISES

I

Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

1

DUMP TRUCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

....tic- (erteitlr_,S
Villyl .Nisrg

s.a...

Gull•
· R~ment Wlnllows

llown lnltrl•tierr
StorM hers &amp;

.......

:;:
~

;

FREE ESTIMATES

(6141'667-3271

FIIEE EITIMATEI

949-2161 '

GnMtA.Nawlalld

Call 992·2772

7-11-'lt-111

1-1-'10-1 ......

•

-

....•

4-5-'10-1- •.;

�41 Hou... tor Rent

LAFF-A·DAY

Announcements

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

Or Bela - 10x10
nooblte homll, 87WI34.

*-'-

CARLYLEIIl by Larry Wriaht

Hou•hold
' Goodt

21 In au ft oldo lor -

42 Mobile Homea
kir.Rent , '

Annlv-ry Solo 'now In
prog,..o, lhru Sot. April 14111.
Sign up lor tno d - prDo.
Palnl PIUI, 304--175-4014.
Reduce your weight - tUe • .._
Shopo Dlot Pton" oncl E-'liD
wal., pUle, avellabll FrUth
Pharm1cy.

4.

-.11'-

ta-n. olw. p.ill.

3 Announcement•

51

1MI Fon1 " - XLT,
JOW75-4410.

llalpcolnl

=

cond, -

•t&gt;Mt ~.QIH.L.f;S, r .!l •.•ArD10Ml ~ ~
t!liCMATM ~ ~ ~ f&lt;5,ooo. ..
~U7.I· ... •

vans a 4 WD'a

73

rwftisr.wllw •• a11da ...,.• ...,

tn droom

11.1996'

Wednesday,

Ohio

Page- 12- The

- ~-

11.'1!10·

'It)

Gto~.~.~eaJtiiT

4« FMliFOI... ~.

1116 ~.·ir;o'l!)~.

W

..'2.5,000...

~-··81
-..Mo ':'~,=

Television
Viewing

v-AT ntts R?~~Jr, rr 1~~N? ~ Jl

WED.1 APRIL 11 •

I

OMlNKO

(JJ lnaldtt TIMo POA Tow
(l) Degrallll!lgll
It

:I

I~ 1ct t

i :::::::::....
Ralnloillo-w 1;1

,,

-EVENING

holo¥y duly · ltricoid on
~ r otjan. 11111 nnt •· Pleillerito.
I

... ~t='lleAnd '

.

Giveaway

JoeY

MotorcyciH

74

2 male em•l doge, Dachlt;n:'J

1m Hortoy .,........ ..., ......
11WN-2711.

Rololngo~oyeol~,

noturoCI, 81 4-448.J1147.

e!JI ••g•(J) •

· eaa .....

-=·

WHI' A~E WE 60tN6 ON

__

1 M I - ........ Elo
1111 700. a 11indom ule&gt;
cor ,,.1'--, $300 oeoh • bath:
$510. .,. 311 110!1.
:
1111 Yomoho

A I=IELD TRif' WI-lEN IT'S
601N6 TO RAIN ? .....

280, ~­

yz,

ftndlng It more dlfflcu~ !han .
ever to keep up In high
achoot 1;1

WloiAT MAKES '1'00 TlliNK

IT'S 601N6 TO RAIN? OiJR
TEACI.IER SAID IT'S 601N6
TO SE NICE DAV...
.

et..-:,

For Bolo 1111 1200 - I I •&gt;

'

..•·

.1 •• cea .....1;1 g
a
Conlilttlnta

1--ril&amp;r-'
i.,r·-,,.._-yl-""17rl
e ,?vConipleoe
•
.
•
•
filling

a:J)Tine'a~
Top c.n~

1-...L.-oL.-..1-.....1-"'--' you develop from step No. 3 ~elow .

•.

.•
, combine entwtalnment trivia

SCRAIMETS ANSWERS

;"..::A~of the ~-

'"f.-1 0

.

C&lt;xlger- Jelly- Groom- Unsafe - MERGES
at executives meeting: "Today a man is
known by the c&lt;impany he MERGES."

1:31 {j) AtttiJ Orllllth
.. ·, ,7:00

the chuckle qu 0 ted

in the missing words

Colltaot

(J)

.

I I I

1

In Clwga

1:01 Cll h•erly lllll•n
.:· ..1:30 (J) Ql NIC N.-.., ......

o.c., """"" kopt, bluo, 304-f7S.',

uF L y

"I don't think your directions
are · right," admonished the
,
tourist ·wett; drawled the
'"'--''---'--'---'......... T
local, •ask s&lt;imebody who
..,--R-E--V~S-T~Y:---..,. gives you directions··-·····."

I

I
· !11£::.;...o
.·
S.2·1

cond,olNMi
- ·volllf:
M!JO, TiHO "" .
cor
oquol
1531.
'
'
~

1131.

0~
ID ~~

L

s

0 Wootd taday

_!· ••

1

1

Ov~.rheard·

11'-- • Ml'l._,une
I (J) PM Mlogazlne .
(JJ SpotlllCiilltw .

e • • (I) Cunent Altair

........_

(l) II) MecNelllellrw

&amp;1QI

ill
1'0111Me

•

. Wlleel Of

c-tg

0

•

0 MiaMI VIce Fruit Of TIMo
Potton Tree Stereo.
Mutle R- V1C1a0

a
a

''

Galli poll a
&amp; VIcinity

BANK

wfi.L, .X fiNA'-LY ":'
·------:~-ACHtEVfP FltiArvGIAL! ·
JNPfPfWPf~Cf·-· ·
l'fo· Of'll IN TOWN

Real EstJte

31 Homes fcfr Sale

Pl-.1

1 .... lcot 12d0, - · lxt4
-ndo, olio 121111 ,_, bulft

- . -..nH~774.

on,- -•- _..a

- . 2 ..........,._ kygor

CIMI!Diotrlcl. CA. ooTollb '"""·
SD,tllll.ll1-1-41-.
' •sd

~·

OOIA1 ~

kiDfiM. aJum
N. lhln. P 'I II OWMI'

.....n;.._

Wtl 0011111 ...,.
thing .. . ,.,_,., low
30'o. :IOW'JI.l'll? or 304-4111-

Alr-cand,

:JtJ : •••

dleh•~'!ID h: : hup, vwy

~

Af'IY M 0 Nfy •

!

2111.

l

:r::&lt;ll

"

..

Pork,

llobllo homll lallor - · Adub
No ,.... 111...-T·

Two ,,.,..r .peoee, • • • : •,
304.e'111o111711.

For Lease

4 1a1o,
llolao

a _., 1 - - 1n
.......1

-

21,11110 1'1\1 olr condltl-. -

rn.51.

12d0, good condition, 14000 ar
otfir. b o - l1'-

614-612·2411'

tl24131.

Wtnlld T~ ~~='d Uood Mobllo

1m Llborty 12x10, 2 bodeom~t~~tety l'lftladllld. Sl,200.

Ajopt- Bolo. - . olryor, 2
rwfrltjoo....., 1 goo otovo,

AlTENTION: PHAAIIACI8TIJ
ARE · YOU LOOKING I'OA A

CHANGE?

II oo, Kr-r hoo on - l t y

for yout We have 1n llilnlld1811
oponlng In tho Proc- xnoo.
W• ott.r: Excelllnt ~
Slock OWnoowlolp, ~
Suboldy,
~iid!!lg
Attlromont Pton, 401-K Tu
Plani 4nnual Sal8ry llerfl
Revlewa, "Pure", Pharrnlcy Setting. It lntorootod, Dlnu oal!
Chorloo lorflold ot 70WIW530
ot Bonny Ronlc:k II -'131Bst20 or 11nd r.un.- to: CharIll lorflold
Tho K"''lor Co.

..,.n

A ; 1 1111
lo ltw In
oncl ..,. lor -.y _,...
._.. o n d - ptuo
~-tootlll......,.ond

11110 lloo""lllo
141172,
Ioiii
CWIINI
..,, .cla
.......
r. -rock··
undorplnnlnt- ar, a 1v1l both,.
unlumlohod1 117,000, 11--.
1817, 114 41111 1202, . . . rftllloo

AN Cooo llo-, lor
poldlotrloo • oauao 111r homo
ur. nur81ng, lmoe, to 1 ,..,

Merchandise
51

a - ,_ __
:.:c
........
_·
.....pllttl43.a&amp;.

ond Supply
-...na.AII-..AII

Dorll Plno 1,_..1 toblo,
bonc:hoo oiid hutch. 1400. 11'11112-21131.

Good a

Footer..-

1-

Pork, k o - , LaiD.

Buick okyhowlt, t-top, ol•
tift, anoloe, PS, PB, otoncltrd
~--·
point,
., ..
112-25H
bo~lp.m.
11--.
3301 oftor lp.m.

TrooStumpA.....,...I. Collllowld : :
Short .. 114-2811-2471.
.,

..
..

R-Ing:
llobl1o
Home
iWpol• roonng, oonooolo _.., · •
o~l, plumbing IKporionc•. ·;

JAMEY, WILFERT
ARKIE, WILL'M, JESS,
THURLOW AN' YOU!!

WHAT'S TH'
PARTY FER
ANYHOW?

BOYS·"

I , 0

· Cllnmlaln M.,.half It ·
obligated tO aid I riVII In
palling an exam. Q
1:50 (I) MOVII!: Chato't Lan4l 11'01

7110 Club Willi Pit

A...,..ncee lneurance clalme ·

occopted. 11'-2111-1&amp;11.

::

leape Into
Hie o1 a debeuchad protnaor
In 1872. (RI .D
• • • (I) ......... ..

Mike delenda a battlt'ad •
hou-'111 who finallY wlafdt
har own justiCe. 1;1
(l) . . . . . . . .

ill

-::·:r·

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

· BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

FrfdOY.
Aft ogoe.
Avollobto 01011
April
11th,
4
......
Aaoomblyl Work 11 homll. Com- 1110.11
puter p1rt1, creative craft•, D
ll1blil, Chrlltllln WOIIIIft
wooden MO\IIHieL Ea:CIIIInt I""
wttflng to do bolt!iolllng at my
comi. 504-145-2335 AD IFD2. . 114-71f:t.

85 Gene111l Hauling

Opon 8undtyl

Rent&lt;~ Is

I ' ' ',I: 'jlll' ,
, liVI",Ic!( r

41 HoUIH for Rent

-·-

a loodro...n ..., _ . ln-ioncoll_,aoJ.
aar3bod,__...,,...

lnPcO•Uf·· 1 2 01 3 l:u J CO.ft, .....,

..... _..,, .1.....

J.R.'o HoUI~ng,
1rUc1c lor
OCWIIINIIENT IIEIZED wehlcotoo hlro, - 1
-. "
, rcn:nabll :"'"'
"""' t1 00. CorVIl1M, Cllovyo, Mnd, illrt. a

--.
-Guide
nt I 1-{
d

Alllo

ond

·-

Olllor

-

......

1.

=~ns::... 1DI.

_.

........

ond

., ' ndi.

a

R R Wot• &amp;oM-. " - . ....

• - - . ~ h111

lbr homll In Qollpcllo, no
· - ....- .
1111.

polo.

11~

II •1,000 or
C.l-

~llono . .lowy,

'.

EARN IIONEY Roolllo• lloolilol

• $30 000 yr. Income iiol.......

Dotliia. ltl IIOMI7-tad0 Ell. y;

101H.

.

patch up a brOkan romance? The Astro·
Graph Matchmaker can halp you to un·
derlland what to do to make the rela·
tionohlp worlc. Mall $2 to Marchmaker,
P.O. B!lx 91428, Cleveland, OH 44 10t·
3428.
TAURUI (l\prll 20-l!llaJ 20) The responee of otlwrstoday will be predlcat·
ad upon the way you treat them. II you
wanl cooperation, you mulllllrst shOw a
wtlllngnese to cooper'ate with them.
GEMN(..., 21-.lune 2111 Things might
not go too Willi for you today when you
first gat out ol the shirting blocks, but
don't be dtemayad. beeauae conditions
·will ateadily.lmprOWtaa time tlcke on. }
CANCI!R (June 21-.lulr D) Usually
you're a reuonably good maneg~~r ol
yourr-.rcea,buttodayth!smlghtnot
be one ol your virtues. Don'llat _,.trav·
apnt whlml dominate your thoughta.
'LIO (...., 11-Aug. 22) There's a poui·
blfHy yow mate might be a trifle dell'llllldlng today, but ·don'tlat disagreementa beC:Ome major 1 -. If you'N
yltld ·a bit, yaw mate wiD aoon lollow

'1-- - _,______ .... _ , _ _ _ _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ ____ •_h __.._...

.

lhal which Is ol a purely maleriallllllc na·
ture govern your ernoflonl today. llfe'a
·greater values are eiHWhere. Seek
them out instead.
'SCORPIO (octo 24-Mo.. D) Instead ol
'Insisting upon having everything your
·way, make reasonable concesalons today. Your desires wlllslill have a strong
Influence on others.
IAGmARIUI .(Now. ·
pee, 21)
, You're a much better probiMt 1IOiwr to· day than lor which you're likely to
yourself cradft. Don't dOdge IAuoes,:
even thOee lhat appear to be a bit
compltc:at.d.
CAPRICORN (Oec. a...-.. '11) It'• best
· ~ol to request lavors from lrlendl

a,

~ay,eapeclallythOeelhatehobfaftMn- '

:181 or~ nature. Your~
tor rejection ara a lrlfle lllglllr IMn
LIIUal.
Apr1112, 1110
AQUARIUI (.18n. 21 Feb. 11) II you fo.
•
cue an Hlllah int-tl today, IU cc111
In the year ahead you.may from time to
may be clfnlad you. On'!'- other hand,
time reaHle tmallgalna from other thMI
If you want lor ollwrs what you want lor
,your ~aiiOUrcea at income. II devel·'
. yourtell, ~ could end up In the
opac1 properly, t - tldellt1ft might lUll.
wlnner't C!Jde.
yield- bigger returnt.
·
VIIIGO lAIII- 11-lept. 22) II you mleuae ·PIICII (Mo lll•t-~'111'.,...
~ . , It IDUid
Mill (llanill :tt-Aprl1tl An obiW· your 11nag1nat1on today you mtgltt her· prove benelldalta.llller' 'Your routine a
vant and rwllllle poe1ure will be,.. ·; bor pt~..S ..-tment' 'bit today. Tlfn!IO'ar!IY lei atlde dequlrad on yoilr part todey II you're In·. 'hat w11 haft a rllgiiiYa an.ct on your mandlna. · mlg~~menta anct pu,_
valved 1n aroy type of commerct.i leallf1111 wl1ll othera. Don't judge any- thlngetliat relax you both mentally a""
arrangement. Study the tranUiotlan In meln adv-. . _
phyalcally.
_
'
· ,delallllt'HI read the small print Trying to . UUA (..,.. D:Oet. 21) Try not to 1at

r.led. Nloe, 01'1 lJnoolil

Mdt

'

• • • (J)Mal'lhall

(2:15)

18 Wantad to Do

Coo-ollglot Noodod. OourwJ.
-lono, lull
or part-time, flniMIIc S.M'a.
lt4-44t-7217.

a ••

e

w..dy'o Now llrlng, lar doy
ohlft.
- In
- . ......
Til.,., "
:l'oCp;m.
E.O.E.

lood wogoo, pold

111 •

music's hOttaltltart ere
feaiured 11...
1:30 (J) Ql flM r.-Ann'a only
hOpe Ilea with tad when the
IRS audita har. 1;1

h~ GIVIN'
A PARTY,
JUGHAIO.t
AN' YO'Rt:
INVITED!!

1112 Ford E....., Runl ~.

- ot• - wor~~eeoo, a.a.o.
S..
IbM

BElli DiiiVERSI LocoJ 1quld loutk u p o - ,.........._
Cleon *'vlng owcord. Ablo to
D.O.T. phy II II l drug
-· bo D.O.T. 011llt1oblo, 1P111Y In ot
I i i - TnoCIII'I• Co._~ l'lko
·
- In Oollllllillo ........ ....
hind 'aultl.. Oft, W 1ft the
houri ol ll.m.·1:t - . onty.
lloro.fll, .

..... . A~y. 31 -on - ·
Apt. 1110, Tlio Plolne, OH 41710.

American d..-. (2:001 Q And The
·Fatnlan McCabe rlllaee a key
wltn•• lrom the .d. (RI 1;1
0 Larry King LIYal
0 MOVII!: The Killing
" ' - (2:00)
'
Nll8llvllle Now Country

.

HUMOR.

BARNEY

'

.Household

..........

Boby alii or lor· now born· oncl
loddler ln'llllon wooll-doyoond,
10m1 Sit tvenlnge, NfWinot
roqulrld, coli botoro 1:00 11'441.aU2 oftor 5:00 - . ,
38711oove " ' - • ·
'
Bobyol1tor lar 11111no.
old child, • '"· 1:41 to
3:18, ~ .ameone ,_ ....

t....ACI&lt;616 .
. MCOESlY
'

SENOEOF

sea.

a

Aoonoko,YA. 24031

AVON I All Arooo I . llhlrtoY
Spoors, 304-1?5-14:5.

THE~Ror

v.o.IDERFUL.

- · COU14 441 llalll.

-lrod.o._!'!-" coli fCimborly
Quolty --.1-71MN1 .

Doy

benNth the

L

P; 0 . Box 14002

"Krogor lo an Equol Opportunity
Empfoyer.•

.
0 NIA laMetiNII
I:Oo (J) D Night CoUll A TV
,~.· :lhOw profiles the nlghl court
world and Interviews lha
IIIII. C
(I) DoDgle lluww,
M.D. Doogle unwiMiy lfii'MI
to let Vinnie vld~ hlm .

(J) AIHriCeft PlayiiDPadro Gonzales achlevaa the .,

~.
. _ ....... 11---

-·
-- -ol J-.· - ..ted Pl!lloo
~ 104ot'111o1111 oftOr 1:00

F1oh Tank, 2411 .......... "''·
-.t.IDW7S4CII3, 10
got Ill up li4.W oiid 10 gol

-

-

.,.

·

mlnlstn~lor.

with ... oglloiDr.
ll'Wtt-r
7424180.

A HANDSOMI:.
8tRD. HE 1e
I NTE LLII!jENT:•.

-

3175i
Rockll&gt;rllllll
-·
Pomoroy, Ohio 41711. Altn: Ad-

grill,

1115 Ow- Pork, t4:::~.3brl
1 Iloilo, CA. ownlngo,
ol

belt friend II kidnapped. 1;1

'&lt;' • Qn ltagt

. :
ooertnl
ano expi!nd, with a jOurney

_THcONL..Y
QUALiTY

WITTY, FE:Y,
AADHA'3A

-

POIIIiROY.

Molntononco Dlroctor. " - " "
n.,.lng ' oncl ,.hobllftotlon ...,..
lor. POoftlon I n - 1M coro
malnlononoo 1nd ropolr of
loci!Hieo propo~l oqul_.t
ond groundo. 11 1-od
ploaao atop by to fill u an liP'
plication or HnCI ,_,.,.. to

Big-.--.
.
_
= ·-... -·

frooior. $00 oncl up. Coli 11'tl241111 oftor I p.m.

'THE PARROT' IS

Eootw lounnloe, 1341. Aloo
_.Abrlldire.I14417-GU4.

·

AVON • AD .,..., Celt llorllyn

• • a ,,.., Sydney
ICOUr. the city When her

. on his rounds. (R

-

·

. . 3101

·

Employment Serv1ces

WIIVII 3-·21141.

•7orl7_,.. '

114-tv2·7•71.
1m lloutNo 14x'IO, 2 bodon .....alai, lully - - 2
t/21....... 17,100. 304-175103.
'

Clate Ariatoile tries 10 .,_
Charlie"• acting carMr. 1;1

e• •

~

171.

••• &lt;ll

Cll ..._ l!al'lll

Air - 7100
- ..110
-.
Wl*lpool
u, 011.000 blu. oli.,. 1a:oo »W71-

Pro i 940 quiHI. Any oonclftlon.
Cooh Pold. Coli 514-ot:z.lll7 or

Draga .,.~ caa.y ,.,.,,
ind Hlflleloyon Ioiii-.
11444.......... 7 .......
Eootor ....,... ..,. oolo, eolld
..... ond blool • ...... -

-

OUIIte

lulla Eye

e

r::•
49

a Con-tlon Wltlt Dlnaoh

D

· .'

-"'Y·

or wllhoul

l.overo And Otl)er Kllera

, 11:311(1) Ml,lar League laleball
Head Of TIMo

1 ~olo,
Lo!8
11
......
7471. porto, ' · COli

motor., COli Lony UVoly 11'3111-8303. ' •

. 0 Murder, 1M Wrote

•·

1- Oklo 1'4, good ccnd, .,..

Amorlcon COr Cluohlng. 'fop
p - pold for ...., _ _
'q o ton. Appllenc10 hw, -or
1nd comp11811tor IS • ton. Aft
mlloo Notlh lrom BolpN on AI.
1. Townohlp rood 7. t:G0-4:30
~i llondty.frlcloy, 114-373-

DPaluuNewa

·.

71 Autos fOr sale

Wanted to Buy

,.

NORTH

+A75U

•a7u

B~gulled. ·

,I

by an ·ace

I WEST

ly J - Jactby '

.

Nortll meant his raise to tbree
ltearta u·a pme-force. Altlloullh be

•

tAJU
•• •

.ltl '
EAST

•

It Jl 4
• t1
t Q_J
Q 10 7 I 4

+Qlllll

t K 105

+KIU~
llad 1-lli&amp;b canla tbu the bid ualt· +
, _.... be bad flnt·round COli·
IIOUTII
In tlrie suits: Soutlt amelled a :
•••
111m rl&amp;bt away, 10 Cllenbld fotll' dubl. , ·
.AKQJIS
Wilen North alloftd tbe diamond ace,
tun
South fallowed UJ*t practlee when ·
+AJt
lfiDdllam- unlikely. He limply 'i
Vulnenble: East-West '
J~ to lill hearts. Note tbat a •ud· ,
Dealer: South
•·
• ump to 111m Ia UHally made with
a vo d aameplace. Doa't double lllCh a • Soollt
Well Ner,.
slam juat beea- you bold A·K In 1111 1 •
P-

•

·s•

llllit.
'
I 4+
p - 4t
Welt wu 11111rt, -lib to kllow· I •
AUtbat South ..,u pr!lbably ready for ·a
Opellilll lead: • 6
spade lead, '10 be liid a club. Declarer
·dlicarded a dltiDoa4 aoc1 won tbe club
ace. He played two I'OUIIda of trumps '----~--------t
ud tltell led • dlamoac1 to lhtmJnts
.
.
niae. Wilen Eut w011 the 10, declarer
·
· :
bad no way of avoiding tbe farther lou trump one more spade bip. Lo aoc1 beof a diamond, 10 was down one.
bald, the spade suit bu divided 4-4,
Declarer would bave done better if and the lut little spade Ill durnJnr II
be bad no ace of clubs. U he ruffs the now a winDer. llecla.rer can Jll!lllk
~apenuaa club lead In dnmmy, thea altlltandlDc trump PDClao to dtiiiiDIJ'a
a apade ruffs auatber dub, playw ace Of dlaiiiOIIda to 1lbed lliOtber lOibi&amp;
. ace and ruffi a spade bl&amp;b, be Is off tO dlamood 011 the lfiOC) :f:'.!:;!lth the
1 better lltarl He can now cub one earlier ci!IC&amp;rd of a
. 011 the
hlcb heart, trump bis Jut club, and spade ace, Jll!.now bas 12 trlcb.
llllbid

Ate lear tPGI (2:00)

Transportation

1117.0117.

a

e a:J1 MOVII!: l!artli cJile

Improvements

'

9

.

.
Normat ~;~~e ,....
family oilers advice to Slmon
about a ICIIool bully. 1:1

Hom.e

81 ,

pountry Mobllo Homo
A - 3:1, Nollh Ill

.

Hle.c

Services

46 Space for Rent

AMEAICAAE

Glaw:tlg PalM
Mike's coaching Ben In
glrl·watchlng 1oada to
lll·nlght adventura.(R) 1;1
(l) (J) Infinite Vopga
Intimal rhY\hms govern al ol

· • !Ill •

Public Sale
a AuctiOn

Help wantecf

Myttarlaa Examine 1 ca•
involving 1 former San Dalgo
policeman. (R) g
'·
(I) MajOr Laa0ue lal8ball

·J:

Rlclc PMnon- C..pony
now boold,. auctloM. U•
porlonco mikOo lho dlhotnce.
Llconood Ololo, Kentllillty, Woot
Ylrglnle, 304-m-6715,

11

e

One bod,_, lumlohed opl,
Jelho-• An. 11?5. ptuo
- . JIIW?WUI boloN
1:00.

13th.

Homoo, 11

7:31(1) MIA laMatllal
1:00 ()) MOVIE: TIMo IIIIa (11'1 2
012) (2:001
(J) Ql Ul"'niO-tvadoa

'

Glbt. rHidonct. 215 lllchooy
Drlvo, N- Hnon. 11-4. Frldoy 4-

care whh

Oc-.t~N

ONightc-tl;l

Nollh Thlnt. Avo, lllddlopaol, a
b droom fumt.hld ·~tt;i.
,_opi. R o - - .

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

Junk

. •• a(I) ........
l!nlerla~- Tanlthl
, Fllllllly·
ltll • a «~.JeoPan¥ g
• a:J1 M'A'$*H

F

11'11.

8

Home RIRI De111J wtlle
Mays vs Mickey Man11o

(JJ

i

~INP Mf

'1'111-L

NMitr Nmldllld, epealo·•, 1
badream. downtown Point

eo...ao.

Alillott •
7:01(1) J a t l t
'1::311e CJJ Family l'eud •.

,. I

BRIDGE

'

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

ea

WIMIUY VInnie

contemplatll IUiclda when
McPike Ia g_~ dOWn. 1;1
ea:~~~~ew n.g~~~

OIYBnlng .....

z..

10:30 (l) llnlflll8 l'ar DefMIIl81UIIr--i
WatiOn rneata Western

author Loula Lamour. 1;1

eo a.nnr ... .....,

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Suit
1 Lay into
&amp;Lily- "
t Mountain
crest
10 Eager
12 Friendless
fellow
13 Cut
15 Tokyo's
old name
18 Trailor
18 Asian .
river
11 Throw
off the
track
21 Hlridu deity
22 Notion
23 Boundary
24 Prank ·
27 F rult
drink ·
28 Soviet
Inland sea

Iabrie
DOWN
1 Bundled
2 Eat Into
3 Title in
Ta!llpiCO
4 Summer
(Fr.)
Yesterday's Answer
5 Small dog
.8 Former
29 Russian
years
23 Money·
village
7 Cato·s·
maker
.. greeting 24 Poultry
32 Silly
8 Alienated
specialty 33 Dog's skin
allllctlon
11 Cross out 2!1 Biblical
34
Done with
14 "01' Man
28 ~:~~In 38 ·Colleague ·
~ ",
Be
27
39 Wing .
17 Porter ·
(Lat.)
20 Biblical
mls :.
41 "L.A.-"
brother
shapen

29 Wk. day
30 Buddy
31 Eventually
·35 Anglo·
;:;axon
coin
. ·38 Skill
37 "Brandy

.

38 Part
oiUSNA
40 Swedish
Island •
42 Swiss '
hero

43 Scope
44 Light
beam

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'ii!S-Here's how to work It:

CMM
lcUOIOW lllfl. 011

•&lt;ll •

ICil
a ••
a· a....,.

I GJAnenlollal

o=••
0

VloeDaft~

Miami Sttreo.
• Llvlllg L111 ncl George
Jonet patarn11 many of hiS
claaalc hila Including .He
Stoppad LIWIII' Her'loclay.

11~=uir-Cit ....a.._

....

fi:J;~

11:08 (I) --Tile ....(PI I
011»(1:011)
.
.
(I) In I-PI Tonlglll
. . ........... 1;1 ,

·r

......,1"!"""1,.....

.
1

a Craolt I

11:00~

I

4 111

.•

'

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three ·L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length end formation of the w~rds are all
hints. Each day the cDde letters are different. ~, ,
·
CIIYPTOQUOTE

ZABPAJMOKTJOKBT . KM
JAO

BC

NVVZKTD

XVMOVAUJX.-UBT

Y•ater••t'•

I
}'

4·11
OIV

VZ . SKOI
HJAWVKM

Crr•tot~aotss

FOUR · BE THE
. THINGS I'D BEEN BEllER WmtOUr: LOVE, Cl.JR,
; :10SITY, FRECKLES AND DOUBT. - DOROTHY ·
. .PARKER

~---~--------------~------------~--------~--------•,

�.
'-ge 14-The

Dllilv

Sentin81

•

Wuinndwv• .-11,

Ohio

.,...... __
I
I
I
I·
I

I

,.

l6

'

Piek 4

2866

'

1'!1" s........ *' Sat., •

Kicker

• ,14

.
~-~-----f"'''-----

,.-·--·---------..;.._...

.

POWELL'S COYPON

-· 3D.

We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

.
Yp1.40, No.2315

COunty will _review old claim

,.,(

ot

CAN

The Meigs County Commls· out of court, the commissioners
stoners will be reviewing the explained, and Hawk appealed.
status of an old animal claim However, the appeal was also
from Calvin Hawk, Tuppers denied.
Now the commissioners have
Plains, for the loss of sheep.
· The original claim against tne been notified through Hawk's
county was for $6,000, but the · attorney tllat tile $945 settlement
commiSsioners reduced the orig- Is acceptable. But given the
Inal claim to $945, which was tile circumstances surrounding the
going market value at tile time. animal claim, the commission·
However, Hawk refused the $945 ers will be verifying whether or
payment an!J sued the county for . not they are sun responsible for
damages. The case was thrown the claim before Issuing _

.

LIMIT l WITH COUPON

- BOB EVANS . SM_OK~D·

.'

AND •11.00 PURCIIAsJ!:
.
.
Goo4 S.. Apr; t lhru S,t. •·

.. .

'

·:.SaUsage ••••:•••• ~..... $199

I

Scindviich Spread••1'i 99C

·Colby ·Cheese .~~.... $1 99
' CRUNCHY ·COD ·
$ .9
Fish. sqUaieS ..~.....- J0

.
..

l\-

•

· ~ubed

.

,j

UMJT. I WITH COUPON
AND 11.08 PURCIIASE
GM S.~ • . I lhru'Sot~ •• I 4

........__ -----·-- -f'--·-r

'

LB.

PICI·OF•THE-CHICK

9 UVES . ·" •

. CAT FOOD

-EASTER SIGHTS-: Quite the popular thiD&amp;ID lawn decoratlona
In the Bead area this week of Easter are IDflatable bunnies aad
colorful e111ree8. Mr. and Mrs. Fraak SllliOJi on Lasley St. used
bOth In their dlaplay admired here by their youlil nel&amp;hbllr,
Brapdy Soiiler.

6.00Z.l6

Sl 79

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payment .
-Met with Daniel Gilbert, of
-The commissioners also con· Klals and Company, the county's
dueled the fo.Uowlng other t)usl· . medical Insurance adminlstra·
ness matters.
tor, to~ general policy review.
-Announced · there wlll be
,...Tabled bids for a computer
meeting on Monday at McArtllur systein for Meigs County Court
to continue discussion Into the for another week.
possibility of a multi-county jail
-Approved a request from
In this area.
Meigs Prosecutor Steven L..
-Reappointed John Rice, Jen- Story to appoint a special prosec-·
nifer Sheets and Ron Ash as utor In a juvenUe case, due to a
members of the Private Industry conflict of Interest.
Council.

Richardson_found .· innocent

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2 Sectlona, 18 P1ge1 26 Centa
A Muhlmedio Inc. Nowopope&lt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 12. 1990

Copyrighted 1880

PINEAPPlE
20

-IEEF BUCKET

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1~9-34-36-37

I AND 11.01 PVBCJIASE
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.POMEROY, OH.'
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., APRIL -14, J 990

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Friday, cloudy. Rl&amp;h In mid

Super Lotto

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Monday thru $unday ·
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DEL· MONTE·

1---

Ohio Lottery

A Meigs County Court Jury of Richardson was at the home to
eight deliberated (or less than exercise visitation rights with his
one hour before deciding that Infant son.
·
Thomas J. Richardson, MiddleAccording to Meigs Assistant
port, was Innocent of two charges Prosecutor Linda Warner, In
of· assault and a lesser Included closing statement, Richardson's
cbarge of disorderly conduct.
former wife became concerned
Richardson was _!!barged with during the visitation of her
the two separate counts of former husband because she
assault an~ a lesser Included .thought l!_e was playing too rough
charge of disorderly conduct In a with the 1chlld and was actually
caseflledagalnsthlmbyMr. and · causing the child pain. Cindy
Mrs. James M. Soulsby, Pome- Rlcharason turned to her father
roy, and his former wife, Cindy for help In making Richardson
, · Soulsby Richardson, also of stop what she felt was too rough
Pomeroy .
·
treatment. The visitation ended
The two-day trial before Ju\lge with harsh words and a scuffle
Patrick O'Brien began Tuesday between Richardson and Mr.
mornlllgandconclllded5:50p.m. Soulsby. Mr. Soulsby 'sustalned
Wednesday when the jury re- an Injury tohlshand as a result. of
turned their verdict of Innocent. · the fight. Mrs. Soulsby tllen tried
Charges against Richardson to break up the scuffle and to
stemmed from a domestic dis- retrieve a tape recorder-which
pule on January 28 at the Rlcbardson had In his possession
Soulsbys' Union Avenue hOme. and had used to record the fracas
At the time of the lncldl!nl, · at the home. Mrs. Soulsby

l!/ charges

received a bruise to the chest as
FUchardson pushed · her from
lilm, Warner said.
Warner' pointed out that "If not
for Richardson's propensity towards being violent with his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Soulsby would
probably not have-been there."
She urged the jury to consider
why Richardson was carrying a
hidden tape recorder In the firs(·
place. Warner accused Richard son of coming to the home "for a
fight" andactuallyproVbklngthe
situation.
.Warner also urged the jury to
disregard suggestions from defense counsel that Soulsby, as
Meigs County · Sheriff, hild
abused the power of his office In ·
·regard to dealings with "his
former - son·ln-law . Warner
pointed out that when a 11armful
Incident happens within a private
home, whether or_not the person
living In the home Is an elected

~,~8f-~~t:··-~ · : jt~;~}~:~~;!~~~~'- ~J:iEfeciifives ._.$iJy
· · ·, ·-· -J-~Ob apj}t£Cants

liJcli s#tiifs

.OJI!IlJ; COfl!lUJl\~r.~· ,. C91!nsel Wll-

watchdog.
tlim",.!lj!ratley said Wednesday
Spratley said blocking would
DAYTON,- Ohio (UPl)- Ohio
The, poll of business officers,
the new "caller Identification"
be justified wheil giving anonym- business executives say 20 per- , . mostly chief executives, from
technology offered by Ohio Bell · OilS tips to Jaw enforcement cent of tile people who apply to . coinpan'les across Ohio found
Telephone Co. could alter the
agencies and news organlza· their companies have trouble widespread concern with a dele·
!:laslc concept of privacy In
lions, c~llng social service agen· completing · an appllcatlon be-- rloratlon In the entry-level work·
telephoning unless a blocking
cles or shopping by phone. ·
cau·s e they can't read and write force1 with 45 percent saying It's
option Is made available.
He said his agency will ask tile
well enough.
·
worse than belpre.
Spratley held a press confer- POCO, If It approvesCaiJeriD, to
A Society Corp. surVey of 1,054 , · One teiUng sign Is people who
ence to cite a wide variety of forc'e Ohio Bell to offer the executives released Wednesday struggle to complete job appllca·
potential abuses of the service, blocking mechanism.
also found that 72 percent of the lions because of deficient skUis. ·
which allows a customer to view
Dah Fugate, public lnforma·
executives would support higher
·
the ~hqne nwnber of an IJicornlng tlon .officer lor the POCO, said ' taxes If the money would go for
can before deciding whether to the cop~mlsslon has the request education.
answer the telephone.
under consideration and has until
"What tlley're saying Is there's
The service already Is avalla- May 19 to act on lt. The some kind of problem here, some
By UnUed Press International
ble . In several other states, commiSsion could extend the kind of !allure that needs allenOhio typically has a rough
marlteted as a method for deadline, .he said.
tlon;" said Ken Mayland, chief transition from winter to spring,
discouraging obscene and haFugate said the commission eeonomlst for the Cleveland butThursdaymomlngcameasa
rasslqg phone calls.
· staff Is studying the Ohio Bell bank.
surprise to even the pardlest of
OhloBellhasaskedthePubllc proposalandwlllconslderSpraBuckeye State's weather
Utilities Commission of Ohio for !ley's proposed blocking option.
veterans.
.
permission to offer It In the · "They are getting as much ·
Up to 3 Inches of snow fell
Buckeye State at $6.50 a montll Information as they can," he
overnight In tile nortlleast coun·
P!!J:!!_j'one-Ume$60 to $SO charge· said. "They are looking at what _
ties, and the morning rush hour
for Tristiiliiiijf~flieldentlflcatlon other states are doing."
In the Cleveland area was a
device.
Douglas Mangen. a spokesman
wASHINGTON ( tJPI) - U.S, mess.
Spratley said that for the sake for Ohio Bell, said Caller ID Is
retail sales plunged by 0.6
A nine-vehicle accident Just
of balance and retaining the right being marketed becallse It Is one
percent In March for the second before dawn closed Interstate480
to ' prlvacy, a person making a of the three ''most desirable
stralghtmontlllydecllnelnmore west of Hopkins International
call to a telep~one equipped with features" that customers want.
than tllree years, the Commerce Atrport. A five-vehicle acclde_nt
''Caller ID" should be-.able to }fe said the blocking option_would
Department said Thursday.
snarled traffic on the Shoreway
neutralize the device and pre· defeat the purpose of Caller ID,
The decrease was the Iarges) In front of Burke Lakefront
rendering It useless.
monthly drop since a 1.4 percent- Airport Authorities reported nuserve his or her anonymity.
"This would totally and radl- ·
Continue~ ~n page 16
fall last October and provides merous minor accl~ents on Icy
further evidence that America's freeway bridges throughout the

"A full tO percent of applicants
cannot spell 'Cievela_!ld' properly," one CEO said.
The results were contained In
the Inaugural edition of ''Reglonal Review," Society's report
on business Issues, to be pub-llshed quarterly.
,
· The review Includes a survey
on general business conditions

Ohi·o .weather

Re t a"L•1 ·prwes
•
fiall in MarC
· h_

'

Workers comp board
· hi h
·
sets ·

eeo~lo~~J~!~b~~:o~:g~ de- a~:jd

sa1an•es

cline In sales · except for food
stores, which recorded a 0.2
percent Increase last montll,
according to the report by the
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Some
AFL·CIO.
department's Census Bureau.
Workmen's Compensation Board
Chalnnan of the compensation
The 0.6 decline In March and a
members' could co Uect $30,000 ;1
board John R. Hodges, president 0.3 percent decline In February
year just by attending meetings. .of the Ohio AFI-CIO estimated lare the first two consecutive
The -, Cleveland ~lain Dealer
Wednesday that board members - monthly decreases since October
· . reported Thursday that a new
were likely to be paid about and November 1986 when sales
law created the '.business-labor
$30,000 this year. .
were off by 4.6 percent and 0.5
board to oversee the $7 bllllon
Hodges and Celeste aide Rlpercent, department said.
compensation system. The elghi·
chard
Murray
said
the
fees
were
Total sales for tile month stood
• member board appro~es rates,
based ·on · research by · two
at - 148.6 biUion after hitting
pollcles and Investments, and
members.
$149.5 bUllon In February and
cap also set Its own salaries.
$149_9 billion In January.
State Sen. Richard Finan, R·7,
From Nov. 8 when the board
of Cincinnati sponsored the blSales of durable goods _
took office, through Feb. 6, seven .. partisan reoganlzatlon bill.
expensive Items made to last
of the eight bdard members were "I think the whole purpose Is to
three or more years -;-fell by 0.8
paid $12,000 each for meetings,
get outstanding business persons . percent In March, while sales of
wblle a seventh was paid $10;000.
out there (on the board) ~~tty to "bon-durable goods dropped byO.S
This translates jnto sallirles of
operate It like a business, Finan
percent the commerce Depart$2,000 per member lor each
said, "I think I would rather
ment said.
meeting of the system's partMarcli sales at automotive
judge by theresultsover tile next
time board • far more than any
two years. _If they g~~ results, I'll
dealers were off by 1.4 percent
such state board or commission
double their salary.
,
after 8 7.2 percent coUapse In
pays members.
·
Cincinnati-based Western &amp;
sales In February, In January,
The Jaw requires the board to Southern Life Insurance Co,.
sales ot cars, tr\lcks and vans
base Its salaries on the salaries of
whose 1988 assets made It abou
zoomed by 10.2 percent, as
private-sector boards i'ritll slm·
bait the size of the cornpen-.uon
dealers ·offered Incentives to
liar duties.
system, paid outllde dlrectora an
clear their-loti of1989Ieftovers _
~ All required from the reorganl·
average of 18.086 In 1985. •
and helped push total retail sales
zatlon law. Gov. Richard Celeste
Nationwide Ute Insurance Co.
up by 8.2 percent. ·
names the eight members. Four of Colwnbu~ bas 1988 -.~eu of
Ill a related area, March sales
from busiiii!IS and four are about $8.7 blulon and paid lls17
at gasoUne service stations
from labor from llata submitted dlrectoraan- averageofal~.OOOin
C ti
d
'
~.
on nue on page 16
by business lobbies and the Ohio 1985.

•a
~-

s

are

'-.li----'--: __ --- -----

downtown restaurateur

Maureen Cook: "You know, I've
livedinCievelandallmyllle,but
this Is rldfculous. You get used to
strange weather here , but
enough Is enough."
'"g)Js Is great weather, for
February.:," silld anotller office
worker.
·
At dawn, white-out conditions
were reported In Medina County,
south of Cleveland, with traffic
on Intersiate 71 slowed to a
crawl.
·
Elsewhere, skies were clear or
part!)' cloudy at mid-morning,
and t' .e National Weather Ser·
vice .aid temperatures were to
"warm" to lhe40s under clearing
skies. Another cold night was on
tap, though, with lows Thursday _
night to drop again Into the 20s.
Friday will see highs In tile 50s
ul_lder sunny skies.
The ralil will return on the
weekend, however, with showers
expected both Saturday and
Sunday, before lair skies return
on Monday. ~lghs will be In the
mid-50s to mld·&amp;Os on the weekend and In tile 50s th low' 60s
Monday. Lows will be mainly In
the 30s !jaturday and Monday.
and In the mld-30s to mld-40s
Sunday.
,
The continuing cool teniperatures Thursday and Friday will

-·- ii---- -~

~eat

official has I\,Otlllng to do with ·
tllat person being entitled to the
protection of the law. ''The laws
are there to protect all of us,"
Warner said.
Meigs Public Defender Charles Knight, representing Rl·
chardson, urged Jurors In his
closing statement to Indeed conslder the "Inner relationship of
these people." Knight recounted ·
events prior to the January 28
Incident In which he believes his client was denied his rights by
the Soulsby family.
He also pointed out that Pomeroy Policeman Joe Kirby testl- ·
fled that he (Kirby) had been
called to. the Soulsby home on :
January 28 foUow!ng the alleged ·
assault, and that Kirby had asked Mr. Soulsby If he had
struck Richardson. According to
Knight, Kirby testified that
Soulsby said he did not strike his
Continued on page 16
·

that show.~ executives optlm~tlc
that the · grow til recession of
· the lastl2 months may be over.
Initial unemployment ,claims
are edging down, purchasing
managers say conditions are
better and commodity prices are
rising, all signs consistent with
an economic rebound, though
probably a modest one, Mayland
said.

-~0....

11 •.a

Febru_ary.

keep drying rates limited and
The slx-t.o-10-day outlook for
soils will show only a little
Tuesday through the foUowlng
firming. SoU temperatures at 4 . Saturday cal~ for cooler-thanInches under bare ground are
normal temperatures and above
still averaging only In the upper
normal precipitation.
40s.
Ontheearlymornlngweather
'_I'he ground will warm some
map deep low pressure was over
under the Influence of the nearly
Newfoundland wlth a cold front
tuU sunshine Thursday and Frl- over tile western Atlantic. High
day,andaveragesmayholdnear
pressure centered over eastern
50 degrees even on the weekend
Kansas occupied most of the
as showers develop once again.
eastern two-thirds of the country.
Wind speeds Into the teens, as
The high was to graduaiiJ :
well as prospects for subexpand to the east and Into the ·
freezing temperatures, wlll _deOhloValleylaterThursday.The ·
l!rade spraying conditions. Llgh- high center wlll move across ·
ter winds will Improve prospects
Kentucky Thursday night and '·
for spraying Friday. However,
through the Vlrglnlas on Friday. :
extension specialists caution · Low pressure will move out of the ·
fruit growers to consider the ROckies Thursday night and :·
toxicity of their chemicals on across the Plains states Friday :

~::mw;;~~~~y are present In ~~?d!~t~~!~~- Mississippi Valley -:
Local news bn·e~II_ 8
•.
Patrol citeS Pomeroy man
- A Pomeroy man was cited In a crash Involving _ a
tractor-trailer and a pickup truck Wednesday at 10:40 a.m. In
Rutland Township on S.R. 124, about half a mile east of milepost
. 14, according to the Gallla· Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Ronald S. Haggy, 38, of 35230 Wolfe Rd., was cited for !allure
to yield after his 1988 International tractor-trailer hit a 1986
Ford F-150 pickup driven by Malcon M, Ingram, 81, of Noble
Summit Rd., Mlddlegort.
Ingram was driving west when Haggy, heading east, turned
left Into a driveway Into Ingram's path.

'

Deputies pr.obe theft
A 1974 Plymouth, reported stolen from the Shady Cove
residence of Homer "Cotton" Mille~: on Wednesday afternoon,
was recovered early Wednesday evening by Middleport Pollee,
according to Meigs C9unty Sheriff James !'4, Soulaby.
· Sheriff Soulsby also reported that two Middleport area
juven-Des were taken Into custody. They were apprehended at
Manley's Recycling where theY had sold some alwnlnum cans.
It was reported the cans were stolen from a realdence on WIDow
Creek. An Investigation Is conllnulng on the theft.
Sheriff Soulaby reports that charg~ against the pair will be
flied In ~etga County JuvenUeCourt. They wereteleased to the
custody of their parents.
.
.
In other matters, Sheriff Soulaby.reporta that Frank Houser,
27, wu arrested Wednesday evening on a bench warrant from
Continued on paae 16

. ------~-~~

·.•-

.'

•

'

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