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Ohio

TRIPLE ·

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Sesqui
celebration
edition inside
today's Sentinel

COUPONS

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(With Trt,lt Y1ndor
· Coupan lelow)

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STORE HOURS
·• ·
Monday thru Sunday

WEIIIfSDA y I .
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY
APRIL 25, 26,·
27. &amp; 28

8 AM-10
PM :"·
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· · 298 SECOND ST..
POM.EROV- OH.··
•·.

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN~, APR. 22 THRU SAT.,.APR. 2t :.:

Ohio Lottery
.

954
Pick-4

0006
Super Lotto
2-17-20-26-27-29
Kicker 303252

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ELEMENTARY HONOREES- These Southern Local School
District elemen&amp;ary students were_presenU,id medals at the a11nual
academic. excellence buquet Wednesday night. Pictured left to
rlr)lt and listed second thro"-" slxib grades respectively,· the
students are frent row, Jeulca ~lley, Harmony Jane Hill, Jennifer
""ush, Vueaea Shuler, and Jason Shuler, Letart Elementary;
Joey McKI ...y, Patty Lawrence, Ashley McKinney, Greg

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McKinney, and C. J. Barril, Portlud Elemenlary; second row,
two from each grade, Brandon Wolfe, Kyle Norrlll, Kara Kina, ·
Jesse Lltde, Ryan Grace, Nicole HID, Robert Wrltesel Amy
Northup, Pa111 Dlle, NlchOiaa Sl!lllb, Racine Elementary; third
row, two frol!l each grade, Joshua Davia, Sara Fife, ~btl Davis,
Kimberly Sayre.- Evaa _S tmble, Cynthia, Caldwell, Brian Allen,
Jason Lawrence, Jennifer Lawrenee, and aa,aa Youna. .

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To. rna· t·o·e-s ••••••••••••••

JUNIOR, SENIOR HIGH HONOREES - Southern junior high
and bleb schoolaludenta honored at the Southern Local academic
achievement banquet Wednesday night were left to right, fr9nt
row, Mason Fisher, Kendra Norris, Courtney RoWih, and Matt
Morrow, seventh rraders, aad James Smith, ·Michael McKelvey,
Fred Matson and Ryan Holter, eighth graders; second row, Todd

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8tlll S.... Ajlr. II tin s.t. Apr. 21

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ROURNAILE BOmES

$11!
DEPOSIT

rector, both stated their dlscontent with the length of time It hws
taken to receive final word on the
project from the federal agencies
Involved. Hlll stated his appreclatlon to the commissioners for
''golng way out .of 'the way In
helping me wlth thls project."
A reques.i for making Goeglein
Road a township road . was
discussed witn Phll Roberts,
county engineer. Goegleln Road
ls located In the Flatwoods area,
and the request was made from a
resident on that road. Roberts
stated that the property owner
has the responsibtllty of constructing the road and that he
wlll examine the road after lt Is
constructed and will then submit
the request to township trustees
after which t!Jhe the commissioners will declare it a township
road .
Finally, a.letter was read from
Salisbury Township Trustees ln
which It was requested that that
township be permitted to provide
road malntalnence for County
Road 22 from Fisher's Big Wheel
to the Rock Springs Cemetery.
No formal action was taken on
the matter but the commissioners felt . there would be no
problem In allowing such maln, tajnence to take place. A r.Jl§Oiu"on mu11 be pasad~ IIQ-r
before the trustees can take over
the matntalnence.

Commemorative insert in
The Daily Sentinel today .

oz.

. 27.5

By JULIE E. DILLON
, Sentinel News Staff
A bld 'f rom Direct Market Data
Systems was a ccepted for the
new computer system In Meigs
County Court at Wednesday's
meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
A public hearing was set fo r
June 27 on t)le annexation Of 5.5
acres In Sutton Township to the
VIllage of Syracuse to make
possible the bulldlng of an elder~v
housing complex . The annexatlon involves only one residence,
that of · Mrs . Sidney Grueser,
according to Commissioner Rlch
Jones. The commissioners wlll
vlew the property at 10: 30 a .m .,
on May 16. This request for a
v(ewlng and publlc hearing came
from Mrs. Grueser, on behalf of
Water . Edge of Syracuse, a
lbnlted partnership.
Jim Hlll, manager of Pleaser 's
Restaurant, was at Wednesday 's
meeting to report to the comm is·
stoners that he has not yet
received word from th e Economic Development Adminlstratlon on his proposed project at the
restaurant.
Jo11es, however, stated that the
paperwork was in Washington,
D.C. and that all that could be
~"-- towaltfo 411e!lnal
word. Jones and Kim Shields ,
Meigs_ C~unty Development Di-

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Low IAinlrht near 6o. Friday,
partly cloudy. Hlgllln mid 808.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

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Daily Number ·

Grace, .Jalle HIU, Ray Prolntt, Darrell Sayre and Michelle
S!Aibart, ninth graders, and Kellle Ervin, David lhle, Jenny
Varney, and Sarah Dahl, sophomores; and third row, Jai'rod
Circle Jason" Circle and Cheryl Pape, juniors; and Kathy lble,
Brend~ Zirkle, Amy Harrison, and Chris Murphy, seniors.
Jznalfer Smith, a junior, was not present for the banquet.

Academic .banquet speaker urges·pupils
to 'go jQrth and make dreams a reality'
four steps to achieving successBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Rep. Abel congratulated the
Sentinel New• Staff
youth on their academic accomp- . participate.· and contribute to .
"Be honest with yourself, eval- l!shments and challenged them activities, develop self ·
disclpline, set goals, and always
uate your own potential; decide to continue to learn and grow Into
be ready to improve yourself
where you want to go, assess the leadership roles which they
remaining
committed to
your positive traits as well as have already l!egun to reflect.
.
accomplishments.
your llabllllles, then work toward Sl!e referred to leadership as an
your goal."
. acquired trait through training, · · On behalf of the students, ·
Bobby Ord, su)l!!rlntendent, pres- ·
That was the advice given by .an ongol11g experience, one
en
led Rep. Ab~ with the SouthRep. Mary Abel, . speaker at the which Is enhanced through the
ern
Tornado sweater.
·
annuaiSouthernLoca!Academlc · method of·triill and' error.
Supt.
Ord
served
as
master
of
Banquet · Wednesday night at
The only restrictions ln acceremonies for the banquet
Souihe~n High School.
complishment come from those
which was served by Sonja Wolfe
. Thetopstudentsofthedistrlct, which you place upon yourself,
Catering.
He noted thai the Home
grades two through high school, the speaker sald, as she encdUr"
National
Bank
again thls year ls
were encouraged 'by the speaker aged the students to believe In
paying
for
presentation
picture~
to"go forth and make those themselves . .
dreams a reallty. "
In conclusion Rep. Abel listed

to go to each of the recipients of
the medals.
Several attending were recogillzed by Ord Including John
Reibel, Meigs superintendent of
schools, John Costanzo, ele~enc
tary supervisor ·and Bob Hudak,
psychologist for the county , those
Involved ln arranging the banqliet, and Southern School Board
members, Janet Grueser, and
Gary Evans.
The pledge of allegiance was
led by the second graders, and
the Invocation was given by the
Rev . Roger Grace. Evans made
the medal presen lations to the
students.

Celebration events in full swing this weekend
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This weekend ls the first of
quilt show by the senior citizens
three blg celebratl?ns In obser·
at the senior · citizens center on
vance of Pomeroy s sesqulcen- Saturday and Sunday from 1-.
tennlal! or . lijOth year of
p.m. There will be a flower and
lncorportalon.
· quilt show by the Winding Trail
In addition to the dl'!ner on
Garden Club at the Pomeroy
Saturday evening, there will be
VlllageHallaudttorlumonSaturplenty of events for the public to
day and Sunday. The Meigs
attend and learn a bit about
CountyMuseumwlllalsobeopen
on Saturday from 1·5 p.m.
Pomeroy's herltaee.
Other events scheduled Include
Or! Sunday, the downtown
ao Appala"hlan Arts and Crafts ,churches will be open for his tori·
display , demonstrations and a

cally Informative roqrs from 1-5
p.m., and Holly Hill Inn, a bread
and breakfaSt facility, will also .
beopenonfortoursfrom1-5p.m.
There will also be exblblts at the
Meigs County Public. Library
which will be open from 1-5 p.m.
Festivals and craft fairs have
been planned throughout Pomeroy's sesquicentennial celebratlon year.
Heritage Days Junes 9 and
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lO·wlll be a three day wee kend of
activities pertaining to the ploneer heritage 9f Pomeroy. There
will be free eotertalnment, autbenllc pioneer food, Civil War
drUls, and a furniture and
fashion exhibit at the Meigs
County Public Library.
Ethnic Settlers Fest will be
held Oct. 6 and 7 and will
celebrate the European Heritage
of the settlers IIi Pomeroy.

In celebration of the 150th anniversary of the lncorporatlon of
Pomeroy Village, The Dally Sentinel presents a special
commemorative Issue of that hla!Airlc event In today's edition.
Included In the Issue ls lnfonnatlon up to 1880 on pioneer
famllles and early businesses which contributed to the ·
· economic development and growth of lbe village, and the
churches ,wblcb played a significant role In the lives of I hose ,
early settlers.
Compllln&amp; the Information for the tab has not been an easy
task at!d certainly one which coald not have been done without
the dedication and cooperation of many Individuals.
To the public which provided quantltpes of Information and
photoarapha, to the Sesquicentennial Committee and ibe 1\lelgs
County mstorlcal Society which contributed significantly, and
to the businesses which supported the tab with their
advertising, The DallY Sentinel staff extends Its most sincere
thanks.
A lbnlted number of special souvenir copies of the· tab are
available al The Dally Sentinel office at a cost of Sl each.

Celeste signs' tough DWI bill
By LEE LEONARD '
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Terming it "a
thoughtful, well-designed effort
to get dr~k drivers off our roads
and highways, " Gov , Richard
,Celeste signed a law Wednesday
making a comprehensive attack
on motorists who dr iv~ while
Intoxicated.
Effective July 25, the law will
Increase fines and the length of

Ironton police·
chief indicted
IRONTON, Ohio (UPI) - A
Lawrence County grand jury has
Indicted Ironton Ponce Chief
Wtlllam Acklson, who allegedly
stole a $345 Insurance claim due
the clty.
Acklson pleaded Innocent at
his arraignment Wednesday and
was free on $10,000 bond. The money was settlement of
an Insurance clabn for damage
to a pollee cruiser, Acktson
allegedly had the car i'epalred
free at the city garage and did not
turn the money over to the
municipal treasury.
He was suspended pending the
outcome of his case.
Prosecutors said the lnves ligation was contlnuln&amp; and further
charges were anticipated.
Investlptors searched Acklson' s borne and confiscated two
haildguns, a shotgun and a
.22-callber rifle.

dr ivers' U~ense suspensiOns for
drunken driving. There will be no
occupational driving privileges
for at least the first 15 days of the
liCense suspension, and under
certain circumstances the polleewill be able to llft a driver's:
llcense on the spot.
"This law ls no small slap 011
the wrist," sald Celeste In Inking
the bill In front of the Ohl&amp;
Department of. Highway Safety.
"It's an Indication that state
goverJ1!llen! ls committed to·
keeping drunken drivers off the- ·
roads. It sends
very c lear ·
message: lf you drive drunk In
Ohlo, you wlll pay the price."
In the background was a
township patrol car with a trunk
crumpled by the Impact of a car
going '10 mph. The Ohio Highway
Patrol said the driver's blood
alcohol content was 0.24 percent
- more than twice the legal
llmlt.
. ..•
The new law applies to offenses it"
committed on state highways·.
Infractions on city streets are·
goVerned by city codes, whlc~·
may be different from state\
requirements.
$201)
The new ~lnes will be
to $1.000 oo the first offense, up to
$750 to $10,000 on the fourtli '
conviction.
,
Jail terms remain virtually the
same: three days on the first
offense or three days In an
alcohol rehabllllatlon program;
a minimum 10 days on second
offense and 30 days on the third.
Continued on page 12

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Commentary
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The Daily . Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE
OF THE MEIGS-MASON
AREA
. INTERE!ITS
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ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEJIEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControJier
A MEMBER of The uu(ted Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American New!lllllper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters arite subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telep one number. No unsigned letters wlll be pub·
llshed. Letters should be in good taste, &amp;'ddresslng issues, not personall·

lies..

Admission of
a serious mistake
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Pomaoy~Midclapo~t,

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;Buddy accused of evading customs
WASHINGToN _ A state
Department official who Is also a
cldse friend of President Bush Is
·
·
Investigated for evading
being
·
customs when she brought fur
coats Into the United States from
Argentina.
The official Is Jennifer Fltzgeraid, currently serving as deputy
chief of protOcol, a title belled by
the substantial power and lnfiu·
ence she wields at State. She has
been a longtime friend of the
Bus!l family, and· a personal
assistant to the president for
many years prior to the current

powertulpersonatstate.
· Fltzgel'ald has declined to
respond to our questions about
· h we
t h e a11egatlon, a Jthoug
· made
ted
all
to
her
office
over
repea
c ths
1
the ast mon ·
The charge the State Depart·
a1 1s tnves
ment I nspec t or Gener
••
ligating Is that Fitzgerald bought
four furs In Buenos Aires last
July when she was with a .
"presidential delegation" and
provided an Incomplete declara·
lion of the Items at Andrews Air
base when she returned. The

post.

tlon ol Carlos Saul Menub! as
president of Argentina. It
k"' tb llrst transfer of
mar '"'
e one
.. democratically
·
power trom

State Department sources said
·
·
the· lnvestlga(lon Is· generating
unusual Interest Internally • and
Is being handled gingerly by
de~~Srlment officials. Several
sources describe Fitzgerald as
unofficially the $!CQnd mos(

~astonwas_tbeJulySinaugura·

1 ted

1 111811

esldent to

e ec
cv
pr
another In Argentina In 61 years.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher headed the offi·

Jock Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
clal delegation, which Included
Fl
tzgerald. While In Buenos
Aires, the American · group vJ·
s 1ted two weiJ-known fur outlets,
Denis Furs and Charles Calfoun.
Bo
· th sell mostly fox, mink and
nutria.
·
The 57-year-old FltzgeriUd bas
worked for Bush for more than a

~':~~~~:: ~t~~~~~:
early, 1970&amp; and when he _was
director ot the CIA. Wilen Bush
came to the White House 1n 1981
as vice president, ntzgerala
came with him. She became his
t
d
appointments secre ary an ,
d
despite what sources escrlbe as
a "natural surHness, " she en·
joyed wide Influence and a warm
friendship with the vice
president.

Put crooked
.

"PSSSTI Mapp~thorpes?"
·'

Boston's aging Bill Buckner
belts
. inside-t~e-park home run

WASHINGTON (NEA) - A
desperate lobbYing ·effort by a
petrqleum Industry notorious for
Its lack of social responsibility In
frustrating efforts to enact new
federal legislation that would
enhance the safety of on tankers.
In the wake of the spDI of 11
mUllan gallons of crude oil from
_the Exxon Valdez oftthe coast of
Alaska last year, both the House
and Senate have approved mea·
sures to reduce the risk .of a
recurrance of that calamity.
The House bill requires that all
oil takers already In service must
be retrofitted with double bot·
toms within seven years · and
double hulls within 15 years. In
both Instances, the law would
apply to ships serving any
domestic ports.
The Senate bill- supported liy
the American Petroleum Institute and by most ll'ajor oil
companies - contains .no such
requirements . .Instead, It calls
lor further study of the Issue that
already has been repeatedly
examhied. The Department of
Transportation would then resolve the matter at someunspecllled time.
Because of the Industry's In·
transl,gence, the confilctlng bills
have been . tnippj!d In a deadlocked House-Senate conference
committee since late 'last year.
The Coast Guard, which Investigates oil spills, estimates that
double huUs can reduce by an
average of 60 percent the ~;~mount
of oil released Into open waters In
major shipping accidents.
Indeed, In a · grounding or
colllslon that results In the
piercing ot only the outer hull, the

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S&amp;L executives in jail .

Vincent Carroll

pte, , that the ·savings and lcian
penance annually before the
. scandal may cost taxpayers $500
unrelenting eye of Mike Walbillion over 40 year,s. That's what
lace? No, these guys (and the few
They should not only obey the
tbe .U.S. comptroller general,
women Involved) should get law; they should conduct them·
Charles A. Bowsher, told Conmaximum, life-rotting, mind· selves In &lt;1 way that doesn't
gress the other day, and the
withering · time In a federal
discredit . the economic system '
chairman of the governmen,t's
penitentiary.
upon which all of·us rely.
.
Resolution Trust Corp. agrees
Judge Robert Maloney of the
And yet many of them, lncreas·
Dallas federal court provide the
that Bowsher's figure Is not far
lngly, smirk at this obligation.
out of line.
proper example recently when
They pay themsefves some olthe
Meanwhile, FBI Director Wllhe surprised defense attorneys
hlgh~st salaries In the world,
llam Sessions contends that
and sente!lced the'former chief of · blithely writing out preposterous
fraudandlootlngwereat .t heroot a defunct Texas thrift, Woody F . checks wltb stockholders' mooi the financial scandal - the Lemons, to 30 years In priSon on ney, regardless o~ whether tbelr
' nation's worst ever, by the way,
13 charges of fraud. In his firms are even prospering.
. and without a single ~lose rival.
hey-day, this fellow lived like
U the public resents lectures
" Is tllere anyo11e bestdes Mother royalty. A few decades of ascetic from America's corporate ~Jilte
Teresa who' "so overfiows with discipline might balance the about the necessity for hard
forgiveness that he or she would scales.
work, thrift and belt-tightening,
want the executives responsible
It this sounds unduly vengeful,
It's no wonder. Thanks to our
to walk away tree- even It they It shouldn't. The men and women· financial mandarins we already
were sentenced to lifetime com· who run our financial Institutions have a )lalf billion dollars ot thrift
munlty service, forced to donate · and great public corporations and belt- tightening. to contem·
future earnings to good works, share a duty that dwarfs that of pllite. T,hat's quite enough lor the
and made to perform public the average lunch-pall drone.
moment, thank you. ·

Inner hull can contain all of the
oU, thus preventing any spillage.
That protection typically costs
an additional 5 to 15 percent when
a ship Is being built.
A study prepared for the
Alaska on Spill Commlsston, the
special agency created by the
state to probe the Exxon Valdez
disaster, concluded that double
.hull design • 'provides the highest
probability of surviving damagl!,
· either from a collision or ground·
lng, with no Joss ol cargo."
In Its final report, the commls·
slon recommended that ''double
hulls and qther technologtcal ·
advances In tank Ve~&gt;sel design
should he required on an acceler·
ated timetable, Including prohl·
bltlon of non-qualifYing vessels."
The Industry - arguing that
double hulls are too expensive
and that their benefits have not
been conclusively established has successfully resisted pressure for the reform following all
the on spUl calamities of recent
··
decades.
In addition.to the Exxon Valdez
spill, tqey Include 29 mllllon
gallons dumped olfthesouthwest
coast of Britain In 1969 by !he
Torrey Canyon: 7.5 mUJion gallons released off the New England coast In 1976 by the Argo.
Merchant; and 68 million gallons
dlacharged oft the Brittany coast
, of France In 19'18 by the Amoco
Cadiz.
One major domestic oil comP&amp;liY, Conoeo, Inc., recently
broke ranks with the rest of the
, Industry by placing orders tor
two new tankers with doUble
hulls 111111 declaring that all ships
It buys In the future will Include

.
I
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' Dallu - M•l'll• BeaiOrt ReuiHn.

Nn- Orle••.,.. PGA.UW"O.fl..at

.......

On tbls day In history:
In 1607, ·the first British colonists to establish a permanent
settlement In America landed at Cape Henry, Va.
· In 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, German-made planes
destroyed the Basque town of Guernlca In Spain.
In 1986, a fire at the Soviet UniOn's Chemobyl nuclear reactor north
Qf Kiev resulted. In the world's worst nuclear disaster.
.
In 1988, the Pennsylvania primary vote assured George Bush of the
Republican presidential nomination . .
A thought for the day: Actress-comedian Carol Burnette once said,
"Comedy Is tragedy - plus time."
·
'

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Allanllt CUr, N..l. - Harold
u
tr•h Micq. Wanl, II, J•~or
wrllerWeiiMs.

Te!lllH at•Kani!M City, niJ[hl

By United Press International
Today is T)lursday, Aprll26, the 116th day ofl990 with 249 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They lncl,llde
naturalist John James Audubon In 1785, author Anita Loos In 1893,
Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy, In 1894, Inventor Charles Richter,
responsible for the Richter Scale of earthquake measurement, In
1900, novelist Bernard Malamud In 1914, architect I.M. Pelln .l917
(age 73), actress-comedian Carol Burnett In 1936 (age 54), lnfiuenttal.
pop guitarist Duane Eddy In 1938 (age 52) and pop Singer Bobby
Rydell In 1942 (age 48).

•

April
Savings

II

Today in history

•

.~

Robert Walters .

older.vessels to extend their fives
that protection.
to 20 to 25 years. ·
Conoco' s new vessels, each of
• About halt the world's fleet of
which will have a displacement
of 95,000 tons, are scheduled to be 400 oil-carrying supertankers
delivered In mld-1992 and then . was built at least 15 years ago.
placed In service In the Gulf of 'rhus, the Industry not only
rejects the protection provided
Mexico.
.
by double huUs, but continues to
Because the· cost of a new
charter or own vessels posing
tanker has doubled since 1986and
additional safety hazards.
Is now $70 million to $90 mlllton,
Chevron, Shell and qther oil
companies are refurbishing their

-

Scoreboard ...

I

Oil safety bill going nowhere

'

She was also unotllclal gatekeeper at the time·, no one could
see .Bush without Fl
. t~"erald's
- .des re- ·
approval. Two Bush a:l
signed In 1982 In the middle of a
turf· battle with Fitzgerald.
Several years later, she was
transferred to Bush's Capitol Hill
office, where he preSided as
ld t f t)J Se te "The
f:S~ t~k0 sbe ~ld !~ ·totally .
redecorate the office," one
source reported. "She came. In
and, without hesitation, redld the
office. That's power."
;
Her power aS. deputy cblef of
protocol Is aimdist fabled within
·the department. on·e kn-'"'-'geuw~
able source recalls ho
· w a-'--'.
~~
tary ol State James ' Baker
rebutted repeated. attempts by
P.rotocol Chief Joseph Verner
Reed to discuss a scheduted

In

'And after that' round of meetings, Dole found out that "If the Arab
leaders were looking tor an excuse to avoid the broader peace prll!!ess
issue, the (resolution) gave It to them on a sliver platter."
Dole assumed much of the blame for passage of the resolution and,
as the Republican leader, he is culpable. As he admitte.d, Dole should
As the nation's .prlsqns sag
have seen the potential for trouble and held up the resolution . . under the stress of housing too
Certainly, he should not have signed it.
many crooks, refo~mers have
But Dole · also correctly puts some of the blame on the
urged officials to release non,
administration, having at least had the fores ight to elicit the views of
violent convicts. They don't
' the execu tlve branch.
belong locked up 'anyway, the
"The answer I got was like the answer I get a Jot," Dole said: "We
Idealists tell us, since they pose
don't like It but we're not going to throw ourselves on any swords over
no threat to life or limb.
tlils Issue."
·
That last point Is true, of
:rhe Senate has passed, In recent years, many resolutions - · course, yet quaintly beside the
dealing With El Salvador,'Nicaragua, panama and the Philippines, . point. Life many Americans, l
among others.
don't believe In putting crooks
But In all those instances, there was a lengthy debate and usually a
away just to protect my head
roll call vote. Both were neglected In the iJerusalem resolution.
from a random bl!-shlng. If that
"These kinds of resolutions, hastily prepared and even more
were the only motive, we could
hastily passed, are nonsense, " Dole said. ''Dangerous nonsense. And
simply ship them out on a
we ought to do something about it."
one' way passage to New Guinea.
If · the Senate, In the future, gives more consideration and
·
It would cost a lot Jess.1
deliberation when It speaks out on volatile International issues, then
No, I want retribution, a pound
Dole's uncomfortable admission of a mistake will have served a
of flesh, andipartlcularlywantlt
worthy purpose.
,
when non-violent lawbreakers
Unfortunately, Dole Is increasingly seen as being anti·Israf!l- a
leave the rest of us with a bill that
position that his record refutes. The perception Is based on his · rivals the gross national product
proposal to cut foreign al~ to Israel, his opposition to U.S. guaranteed
ot~rltaln.
!pans to help Israel build housing for Soviet Jewish Immigrants and
It Is now estimated, tor examnow for his repudiation of the resolution . .
'
: .It takes a certain political courage to adopt a more balanced
position when the issue is Israel. Dole has. done-that. ·

Berry s World

By JOHN SWENSON
than three weeks this Is the regulation to send the game Into
biggest game ot my cjll'eer. I overtime.
UPI Sports ~rlter
The Boston Bruins were look- wanted the puck 'all night."
John Ogrodnlck scored on the
Ing for thelrflrstplayotfsweepof
power play from the slot off a
d 'u y Carbonneau scored his pass from James Patrick at 15: 57
the Montreal Canadlens since
1929 Wednesday night, but rookie second goal of the game Into an of the third period to puiJ New
Stephan [;ebeau took on the empty net with n seconds to go. York within 3·2. With New York
• hero's role In his first NHL
· The Bruins tied the score 1-1 at pulling Richter for ail extra
playoff game, scoring a pair of 18: 23 ot the second period on John attacker, Bernie NlchoUs scored '
third-period goals to break open Carter's fourth goal of the his seventh goal of the playo!fs
when, positioned at the left post,
a tie game and lift Montreal to a playoffs. Carter grabbed a re4·1 victory.
·
boUnd after' Montreal goaltender he took a cen terlng pass from ,
The Canadlens averted their Patrick ~oy had stopped a Kelly Klslo and scored. between
first playoff sweep overall since backhand drive with his pad off goalie Mike Llu t's leg pads ~lth
1952, and will try to become only the stick ot Bobby Carpenter .
1: 12 lett to play In the third
Carbonneau scored at 11:16 of period.
the third ·team In NHL history to
Win a best·of-seven series after the first period when he drove the
The series resumes Friday .
being down three games to none puck through the legs of Moog with Game 5 In New York's
when the Adams Division final after Brian Propp lost It along the
Madison SQuare Garden.
resumes with Game 5 Friday boards.
In the Campbell Conference,
In the other Wales Conference play resumes Thursday with the
nlgl!t In Boston.
.
" It looked like Ml)ntreal game, ~od Langway scored his
St. Louis Blues at the Chicago
OUT ON STEAL ATTEMPT - Indians' third
ap attempted steal at third base du~n- second
baseman, Brook Jacoby, tags Jays' Felix out on
Inning action Wednesday. (UPI)
\viinted this game more than we first playoff goal since 1986 34 Blackhawks In the Norris Div'
dill," said Boston Coach Mike seconds In to over time and John
Ision final. The best-of-seven
Mllbury. "It I had a chance to Druce, the NHL's leading playoff series Is tied at' two games
coach this game over· :we would goal·scorer, added two power apiece.
do things differently. They outhlt play goals to lead theWashlngton
The winner will face the
us and we didn't handle our Capitals to a 4-3 victory over the Smythe Division champiOn Edpower play very well. Give New York Rangers.
monton Oilers In the Conference
The victory gave Washington a
finals beginning May 2 In
Montreal credit, they worked
commanding three games to one
hard."
Edmonton.
.
Rookie goaltender Ed Beltour,
Lea beau. In the lineup because · lead In the best-of·seven Patrick
.The Red Sox Golleeted 13 hits for the Blue jays. Gruber's
By TOM WITHERS
·
recalled from the Canadien na·
leading scorer Stephane Richer Division finals.
off Angel pitching but stranded 14 homer was his fourth •In three
UPI Sports Writer
"Of all the great things Rod
was sidelined fly Injury, broke a
tlonal team, stopped 31 shots nights. lie leads the AL In RBI,
Bill Buckner .circled the bases base runners.
18 In a frenzied third periOd ~to
1·1 tie at 4:22 of the j hlrd period Langway has done for this
"Wasted opportunities. That's · total bases and hits. Todd StottleIn Boston's Fenway Park In an
save a 3-2 victory for the
with a backhand shot on the stick franc hlse In the time he has been
all-out sprint.. It looked more like· 11. · Frustrating Isn't It?" Ia· myre, 2·2; earned the . victory.
Blackhawks Tuesday.
side of Boston goaltender Andy here, that goal certainly ranks up
·the Marathon.
mented Red Sox Manager ·Joe Reid Ntehols, 0-i, was the loser.
The Blues lost Brett Hull With.
Moog, who had given up a there with anything," said Wa·
Brewera i, Royals o
Buckner accounte d for the Red Morgan.'"Wedldn't hltforbeans
3: 13 left In the second period.
rebound after stopping Shayne shlngton Coach Terry Murray.
At Milwaukee, ·Tom Filer,
when we needed to. "
Sox ' only run Wedn.esday night In
Hun, who had only two shots on
"It's a tremendous win for us, a
Corson.
Jack Howell had a hand In Chuck Crtm and Dan Ples&lt;~c
Boston's 3-lloss to theCaUfornla
goal, received a major penalty
"Lebeau came to play," said very emotional game. To come
Angels when he hit a-n Inside-the- · every Angels run, driving In one combined . on a five-hitter and
and game misconduct for high· ·
Montreal Coach Pat Burns. "You out a winner Is a great feeling."
and scorln~ twice as California Greg Brock drove In the !lame's
park home run.
Langway, a 12-year veteran
sticking Jocelyn Lemieux. Hull's
have to hand It to him. He hasn't
won for only the second time In only run with &lt;1 sacrifice fly.
That's right. An Inside-theplayoff scoring streak was
dressed for the past several defenseman, retrieved a rebound
their last seven games.
Milwaukee, which had . eight
park home run.
stopped at eight games.
weeks, but he came up with a big or his own shot ,skated through
Kirk McCaskUI, 2.0, allowed ·shutouts all last year, recorded
With two outs In the fourth
the right clrt:le and scored over
game when we needed it."
nine hits and walked two In his their fifth this season. Filer, 2·1,
inning, Buckner lined a 1-1 pitch
Lebeau scored again at 11:51 to goaltender Mike Richter's. left
flve .lnnlngs, but only gave up one allowed three hits over six
down the rlght-{lejd line. CaliforThe Daily Sentinel
make the score 3-1 when he came shoulder.
run' before Mike Witt came on Innings. Plesac got out of a
nia right fielder Claudell Wa"I was very lucky," Langway
from behind the net with a
(tJBPS 14Wtli
and pitched Into the eighth. Mark bases-loaded jam In the eighth
shington raced for the ball · aild
wraparound shot to the short said. "I think If (the puck) got by
A
IMvlo
...
ol Malllmeolla. ....
for
Efchhorn
got
the
last
four
outs,
his
first
save.
Brei
Saberha·
reached It as he crashed Into the
me (on the rebound), then Mike
side.
~
gen,
1·2,
was
the
loser.
·
three
on
strikeouts,
for
his
fourth
3-foot-hlgh right -field walL WaPubl ..hed every alternoca, Monday
"I had to prove something to Gartner has a breakaway and ncf
thrwgh Frldoy, 111 (:ourt St. ; I'VTigers &amp;; Twins 4
save.
shington somersaulted Into the
one's back to stop him. As It
myself," said Lelieau.
m.,.oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Voll(')l Pub84
At
Minneapolis,
Uoyd
Moseby
McCaskill,
who
threw
front row of seats and the ball fell
''I felt that during the pre- turned out, It hit Mike' s skate,
lllhlng Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
pitches In five Innings, has a: 1.06 paced a 12-hlt attack with a triple
back Into fair territory.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45789, Ph. 992·2m Segame warmup I was going to ' went back to my stick and I
cond class poataa~ paid at PomerO)',
ERA despite giving upl6hlts and and double and Dan Petry and
"I hit my head on a chair or
·
have a good game. As soon as the walked In on goal. "
Ohio.
walking 12 In 17 Innings.
Mike Henneman held off a late game started I felt confident.
somebody's leg. I was dazed a_nd
The Rangers rallied to score
"Basically, I was just lucky~ It Minnesota rally to lift the Tigers.
saw stars for a · rriinute," WaMember: United Press lnt...,.lloDII,
Since I haven't pl!lyed for more tw&lt;! goals In the final 4:03 of
Inland Dally Press AuoclaUon and tile
shington said. "Some guy offered · · wasn't' really my pitching that Cecil Fielder had three RBI and
Ohio Newopaper Association. Nauoait
got me out of it. · It was their Larry Sheets two for Detroit. Jeff
mea hot dog, but I d ldnttakelt. It
Advertising Representative, Branbam
misfortune. I think I was ex· . Robinson, 1-1, got the 'wlp, Petry
didn' t have any mustard on it ."
Newapoper Saleo, 733 Third """"""·
New York, New York 111017.
relieved to get the final out of the
While Washington remained ln. tremely lucky," McCaskill said.
the stands pondering a snack,
PIJS'INASTER: Send adcl'ess choaljl!l
Eisewhere In the American _ seventh 'and Henneman hand·
,. The Dolly Sentinel, m Court St.,
Buckner was chewing up the
League: Toronto dumped Cleve- cuffed the Twins the rest of the
Pomeroy, Ohio-·
basepaths to record his first
land 5·3, Milwaukee edged Kan- way to ptCk up his fifth save.
BUII8CBIPTION L\TEB
home run in Fenway Park since
sas City 1·0, Detroit topped Kevin Tapanl, 2·2, took the loss.
a,corrtwor-•llitoto
Mal'lner&amp; 5, Yankeea 2
Sept 7. 1986. .
·
Minnesota_ 6-4, Seattle downep
0,. -- ................. :.... .......... .suo
· Edgar Martinez had four hits,
· '''TWerity-one years and 10;000. New York 5·2, and Oakland
Onel\lonth ......... .. ............ .......... $6.10
Qne Year ............................. .... $12.110
at bats later, that 's the first one,' '
nipped Baltimore 4·3 in 12 Including a two· run homer for •
Seattle.
Martinez
singled
and
Buckner said . " I looked at the
Innings.
SIN~~~py
· scored In the third Inning, singled
third base coach and kept going. I
Blue Jays 5, Indians 3
Deily ........ ........ ...... ............. 25 Cents
run until•they tell me to stop."
At Toronto, Kelly Gruber con· In the fifth, homered In the
Sublcrlbers not deslrOigtopay the(!ar~
Washington left the game In
tlnued his torrid hltUng, going seventh and singled In the ninth.
rler may .-.mit madvance direct to
The Dally Sentlllel on a3. lor Ill month
the fifth Inning wl th a minor
4·for·5 and belting Ills major Holman: near·perfect In his
balls. Credit wUl be given carrier each
contusion in his left knee.
league-leading seventh homer previous s_tart, walked the first
batter he faced but went six
No s..-rlpttona by mall permitted In
Innings to raise his record to 3-1.
ar•• whlft home carrier aervlce ls
Mike Schooler earned his th)rd
avallahlt.
save; Pascual Perez, who left the
1!1111 .....rllollo•
game In the fourth with muscle
...... Melp to.ot,
spasms, fell to 1·2.
13 Weeks ....... .. .... .. ................... $19.24
8aa FrMdiCO .........•...• $ 11 .Ill 1%
:16 Weeks ... ......... .........., .. .. .... ... $:17.96
Athletics
4,
Orioles
3
Majors
~"Lr'"
CELEBRATE
Wuhlnaton
Capitals'
Kelly
Miller
(10),
AUanla ......................... 2 11 .111 H
52 Weeks ........... ....................... $'14.36
121nnlnp
We~qR~ult•
left, and Mike Ridley (17) celebrate Rod Lanpay's (background)
OUIII•e Mtlp Coooly
By Ur1lted Prn,.Inb'rlllllonal
New York II. Alllnl&amp;l
AM.~HICo\N LEAGUE
13 Weeks ......... .. ..... . ,............ .. .. $20.110
At Bal.ttmoi'e, Jose Canst!CO
the
New
York
Ran1ers
at
lhe
game·wlnnlng
overtime
goal
over
,
CIDellua&amp;11t,
PhUadelphla
7
Eut
:16 Weeb ........................... ....... MQ.30
singled home Carney Lansford
M•lllirtOall, Houl&amp;oa I
Capital Centre ·Wednesday a:a a dejected Rangers' goalie Mike
TPMl
\\' L Pel. GB
52 Weeb .. ...... ......... ..... ............ $15.10
San Dlep '· Qllearo I
't •oronlo .................... ...11 5 .6113 from second base with two outs In
Richter looks on. The 4-3 win lives the Capsa 3-1 series ed1e. (UP I)
PlttDII'Ih 1, 9• Franehul .t, It
Mll ..·auiRP ....•..•. ,..... ..... Il 5 .ItS I ~
the 12th Inning and four Oakland
1n••11
Ro!lton ................. ......... 1 7 · .HG 3
St.'IAIIII 5, Lott Allplet1 1
Balllmon-o ..................... 7 II ..IM 3%
~ombl.ned fill a ·lhreepitchers
Thundat Game.
Spo118 ·briefs
D..trol! ................ _. ... .... 1 fl .oiSR -1
au~ ... (~ara.ty 1-1)) at San Dlero
hltter to raise the A's road record
New Yorll ...... ............... 5 7 .U1 -1
(Hurtt f..t) ..:tl p.m.
Clt&gt;Vela.11d ... ............... .. . S ll .38S ol%
to 7·0. Lansford scored when
Hockey
PltbbuiJh (Smiley 1-t) at San Fran·
WP.St
clleo (LaCotlll-11), S:lll p.m .
Canseco delivered his fourth hit
Oakland •..... .. .....•.•.•.••• !I I .7M The Unlt.ed States, behind Paul
Houll&amp;ua (Ciaacy f.O) Ill Atlaala (lJID·
Chl c a~o ........................ &amp; I · .sa
!%
of the game against Kevin Ranhelm's thlrd·period goal,
qul1t f.l l. 5:.fl p.m.
Te~~:a.'~ . .. ... ............. .... .... K 7 .513
3%
St. Louill (Del.een 1-CI) at Lo1 An pin .
Hickey , 0-1. Gene Nelson, 1-0,
Calllornht... ..,.. ,.. ........... i 7 .510 .&amp;
beat Finland 2·l to !llalntaln the,
(Belcltf'r 1·1), IG:Sii p.111.
Mln ...MobL ••\.. ...... .. ..... . . 7 • § .oiSII .&amp; %
earned
the victory In rellef,
Friday
Gamtlll
fifth spot at the World Hockey
KIUI_.. (l113' ... .. .. ........ ... i 9 .311 f
combining with Bob Welch, Rick Championships In Bern, SwitzerPhll. . elphla .a Allln&amp;a, "'""
s..tue .......................... s ,. "' •11
Medft.i II tl~ela•&amp;L •I Jill
Wedlltltd,.y R ~ uU !t
Honeycutt, and Dennis Eckers· land. Norway pushed West GerNew
Varlllt
Haltfllo
..
•liM
Mllwauku I, Kan~ Cky 0
Chkap .a Los All pia. •liM
Toronto 5, Cl t&gt;vetaad 3
ley
to stifle the Orioles.
many to the brink of relegation to
PllttiMirsiiiiSIIDte.., •laM
~lllUe i , Nrw York 2
.....
While Sox 5, Ran1ers 4
Sl.
Lo.O
at
Saa.J'rudk-o
Pool B with a 7-3 victory .
Callfornht 3, &amp;!!ton I
Oakland -I, Baltimore 3, 12 lniL
At Arlington, Tex., Reliever
floaors
TllurNar Spar&amp;• CaleDdar..
Del nil I, IMIIIIII!Kota .t
Bobby
Thigpen retired Pete
llu""!holl
Akeem Olajuwon of Houston,
ChlcaA:O 5. Tru!l .t
NIA rtaJtft• '
T•untd as Gamtll
Icavlglla on a critical double play who averaged 27.1 points In April
THIS ECHO TRIMMER IS
nr• .....
ku. . Cit)' ( Gu~lcu J·:e) It Mil~ ·
a....-.
C4llleftllct
·
In
the
eighth
Inning
to
preserve
IH'r (Kaud1on 11-1), 2: 31p. m.
to lead the Rockets to the final
THE PERFECT COMBINATION
Clnel_..; PIIU.delpllla. 1:Jtp.m.
Cleveland (Canclotd Z·Ol Ill Toronlo
the White Sox win. Thjgpen Western Conference playoff spot,
.......
.aon,.at.Kp.m.
OF
PRICE, POWER AND
C8tleb 3-0), 12: 30 p.m .
New Yorll
8 p.m.
pitched two Innings and struck was named NBA Player ot the
Selltlk- (R. Jotmoa HI al New l'ork
Wet~ere Co ..en~~Ce
PERFORMANCE.
(HawkiDM (l.J), 1:3t p.m .
out the side In the ninth to earn Month . ... Wichita forward Dale
U.n.., .a lu Mllllllo. 1: • p.m.
Calllorma (Ahbou a.u Ill
Dala. itP•rt ... d.lt:• , ,,.,
his fourth save and help the · Ervine and San Diego goal(Ketal I-t), 1:31 p.m.
REGULARLY $1M.99
OdiMd tMoart' t.l) al ltaltlmon!
--I
Sox break a four-game k~pet Zoltan Toth were named
White
Cakddo S,riap, Colo. -tiM lultri(TJID ~1) . 7:a5 p.m.
llall IDvt&amp;at 11•1
losing skid.
Chlcaro (Pere:r. 1· 1) a&amp; TeJuu (Ryan).
Pbove1rs of the Month.

meeting wltli Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard A. Shevard· ·
nadze In Wyoming last Sep.
tember. Through aii assistant,
Baker told Reed to keep out.
Enter Fitzgerald. After she
contacted Baker, the protocal
· office became essential to the
occasslon.
These are among the reasons
why tbe Inspectors general \!lveS·
ligation Is being handled
delicately.
~
The alleged charges fit Into a
long pattern Of laxity by the_U.S.
Customs Service In Inspecting
goods being brought In by VIPs to
a
Andrews Air Force Base.
series ot earlier columns, we
reported on • the problem at
Andrew, where customs otllcials
· are wary ol angering Important
otllclals tom either the executive
_
branch or Congress.
For Instance, last December
we wrote that "smuggling Is de
rtguer for congressional -scof·
naws." Army Sgt. Cloyed ~cldle
told Army Investigators "that
some members of Congress and
their spouses ·slip foreign goods
Into the country without so much.
as a mention to the customs
agents/ '

did ."

I

Ohio

Thursday, April 26. 1990 · ·

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An abashed Senate Republican leader
Robert Dole returned from a whirlwind trip to the Middle East to
admit he made a big mistake -'-and he was far from alone.
The mistake · was the Senate's passage of ·a resolution declaring
Jerusalem the capital of Israel, a position held by Israelis but
completely contrary to the views of the Arab states a nd the
Palestinians.
· That the resolution should pass comes as no surprise: In the Senate,
Israel has virtual carte blanche.
.
.
By contrast, the Arab states, With the possible exception of Egypt,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia, have no standing. The Palestinians are
seen as terrorists, when they are considered at all.
So It wasn't of any great moment when the Senate, Wltl)out any
debate and on a voice vote, rushed through the resolution one evening
along with other bits and pieces of legislation.
; As Dole pointed out, two days after the resolution was Introduced It
hjid 84 co·sponsors - including himself,
• "We all kQow how It works around here, " Dole said on his retuq1.
'We cal'ry our resolution, or Our letter, Into the cloakroom. We
button-hole every senator Wllo walks In, and push them fot an
Immediate signature.
· . "Half the time, the signer doesn't even read the text ," Dole said.
"Most of the lime that doesn't matter. This time, it mattered a Jot." ·
:aut Dole didn't realiZe his mistake untU he and the Senate
d~legatlon he led landed in the Middle East.
' ·
.
·Wherever they went- Egypt, Syria. Jordan, Iraq and even Israel
...: that Senate resolution was on the table.
:"We didn't put It there," Dole said. "The leaders "':e spoke with

.

Canadiens avoid sweep; Caps
capture·3-1 series ·advantage

Page 2- The Deily Se 1tiMII

3~ n

I .117 I

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Patriots sign two free agents
FOXBORO, Mass. (UP!) The New England Patriots
signed free agents Brian Hutson
and Christopher Wl)llams, a
native of "Brockton, team off!·
clals said Wednesday.
The 6-fuot·l, 198-pound Hutson
played strong safety at Mlssls·
sippi State. Hutson, 25, spent the
1987 season on the Los Angeles
Raiders' Injured reserve list and
was out of football last season.
Williams, 21, had. 49 tackles
during his senior year last season
at American In ternatlonal College. Williams, 6-3, 309 pounds,
graduated ~rom Southeaster!'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds smash out 16 .hits

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AVOIDS COLLISION
Cincinnati Reds' shormlop Bury
Larkin goes hlcll lo avoid l'hWies' David Hollins as he IJIIoreed at
:· second alter plnch _hlltlng In the filth lnnln1 ollhe Philadelphia
• Phillles-Clnclnnatl Reds National Lea111e baseball action at
· Veterans Stadium W~esday. (UI'I)
·

iA ndretti, Japanese·
:rJtake Indy debuts

.

'

: INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - A
•rookie named Andrettl, Japan's
lirst two Indy hopefuls and a
returning veteran absent for 10
years highlight the Indianapolis
~00 orientation program that
opens Friday.
.; The thre~day program gives
)iew drivers a chance to adjust to
iJie speeds needed to compete for
qne of 33 spots in the May 2!1 race.
Bernard Jo'!rdaln, last year's
¢o-rookle of the year with Scott
~uett, set a record by reaching
!169.643 mph las/ year In
Orientation.
:· The latest Andrettl to chal!~nge the legendary 2 ~-mile
oval iS Jeff, the youngest son of
1969 Indy winner Marlo Andrettl
and th~ younger brother of
slx-Ume Indy starter Michael
Andret11. Tog~ther wl!h·P.o rsche
. Orlver John Andretti, Jeff's COU·
sin, there could t)e four starters ·
from the family In the 74th Indy
race.
"At this point, he's probably
got more experience than his
tirother Michael did at · this
stage," TEAMKAR co-owner
Roman ;Kuzma said. "Mario and
Michael have been encouraging
and both think he's ready."
' Jeff Andretti has driven the
pliSt three years In the American
~acing Series, a tuneup circuit
for Indy cars. TEAMKAR found
a:sponsor for him at Indy and the
youngest member of the Nazareth, Pa. , racers "got his chance.
"We've had a good relationship
with the family for a number of
years," Kuzma said. "We've
competed against Jeff In ARS
and we've been trying to put
something together for two or
three years."
Also hoping to move up from
the ARS Is Kenjl Momota, a
10-year veteran of racing in
Japan. Tlie Tokyo resident will
work with Andrettl this weekend
In hopes of being tile first
Japanese driver In the starting
grid at Indy. He will also use a
Lola-Cosworth.
Hlro Matsushita became the
first Japanese drive to compete
In an Indy-car race last week at
~ng Beach, starting 21st and

Adams, Diddle
ready for action
Racine drivers Bob. Adams, Jr.
al)d Chris Diddle will be ready for
th)s week's racing action at
Skyline Speedway In · Stewart,
located off route 50 on County
ro;~d 53 between Coolville and
Athens.
Adams, In his nationally known
"Black Bandit" has teammate
Diddle and "The Baron" In the
same racing stable this year.
Adams was running away with
last week's racing, leading all of
the first 21 laps In the 30 lap
A-main, when mechanical problems·sldelined the Racine racer.
Little Pocking's Bobby David·
son, In one of just a few Fords,
claimed the win.
Chris Diddle flriished sixth In
the semi-late main. ·
Gallfpolls driver Phtl Davis In ·
the Whaley's Auto Parts "B·Ball"
Lumina missed Its debut )ast
week as Its tow rig had mechanl·
cal problems. Davis Is expected
to be ready this week to resume
the hunt for the title he defends as
the Sporstman track cham·plon.
Racing begins at 8: 30, with
preliminary warm-ups at 6: 30
an~ time trials at 7:30 each and
every Friday evening.

••

,,,

finishing 19th. In his LolaCosworth. He will test this week
at Indy under veteran Dick
Simon but Is not expected to seek
.
a spot In this year's race.
David "Salt" Walther will use
the session as a refresher course.
The seveq-tlme Indy starter last
raced at Indy hi 1979, finishing
12th. Hls ·best showing was ninth
in the rain-shortened 1976 race.
He finished his tin the 33-car field
three times. Walther also
crashed at the start of the 1973
race, Injuring 11 spectators and
damaging 11 cars. ~
Walther, 42, of Dayton, Ohio,
will drive a 1988 Lola-Cosworth In
his comeback bid.
Other rookies scheduled for the
three-day program are Canada's Scott Goodyear, Mike Groff of
Los Angeles, Steve Barclay of .
Orange, Calif .. Buddy Laziet of
Vall, Co]o., and former Formula ,
One driver Eddie Cheever. an1
American now living In Monte)·,
Carlo. ·
Cheever, a native of Phoenix, :.
has 132 career Fotmula One ··
starls In thepast12 seasons, with ,
his best finish second In the 1982
U.S. Grand Prix. Cheever, 31,
will drive a Chevrolet-powered
1989 Penske.
Gooctyear, 29, will drive a 1989
Lola-Judd In ·his fii:st Indy
attempt after several years on
road · racing circuits. Groff
moves to Indy cars alter captur·
lng.last year's ARS crown.
· One driver who will not run this
year at Indy Is Wltlle T. Rlbbs,
who became the first black
Indy-car racer when he finished
20th last week at Long Beach.
Despite support from comedian
Bill Cosby, Rlbbs was unable to
lind a major sponsor and so will
bypass Indy and . other ovalcourse races.
Rlbbs came to the spe'edway In
1985 for · an orientation .sE:Sslon,
seeking to. be the first black
driver at Indianapolis. After
reaching only 172.215 mph In 48
laps, Rlbbs pull~ out and has not
been back since.
"I don't want to go and do a
race just to say I did it," Rlbbs
said. ''I was young. I knew I .
would get a good opportunity. I
knew I had to keep winning. That
was the secret."

f;.

Sports briefs
Ba8kelball ·
North Carolina authorities
questioned a '52-year-old North
Carolina man believed to have "a
lot of Inside Information'' of an
alleged point-shaving scandal at
N.C. State. Charles Shackleford
and three.teammates have been
accused of conspiring to fix a
game between N.C. State and
Wake Forest during the 19!PI-88
season .... Dllnois, charged with
basketball recruiting violations,
will present Its case before the
NCAA on Aug. 10-12 In Colorado
Springs, Colo.

By JOE CIALINI
Ul'l Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) · If a
thing of beauty Is a joy forever,
Cincinnati's 12·7 victory over
Philadelphia Is already long
·
forgotten.
The Reds matched a season
high with 16 h!ts. and broke the
Phlllles' four-game · winning
streak Wednesday night but
Cincinnati pitchers contrlbu ted
nine of the game's 16 walkS.
·
"It was a win," Clnclmiatt
manager Lou Plniella said. "But .
. I'm beginning to get concerned
about our Nasty Boys overthrow·
ing the ball. Instel!d of getting
guys out, It seems like they want
to strike out people. (Getting
people out) Is the name of the
game. Strikeouts will come with
good pitches."
Norm Charlton and Randy
Myers, two oftheN asty Boys, the
name Cincinnati's relievers have
·given thel)'lselvs, walked three
apiece. '
"When you get In the frame dt
mind that you want strikeOuts,
all of a sudden you 'reoverthrow·
lng the ball and. you get yourself
In all sorts of problems for no
reason whatsoever," Plnlella
said.
Luckily for the Reels, they had
the offense to make up for the
free passes.
Mariano Duncan hit a three-

•ID

Two 4ttending tourism conference-------------

12-7 triumph

Two Meigs Countlans will be In nor Richa~d F . Celeste will be be on past and future economic
held on {pe final day of the opportunities ·for tourism as It
Columbus Sunday through Tues·
day to attend the Governor's · conference. Their discussion will relates to development. ·
Conference on Tourism at the
Stouffer Dublin Hotel.
Leesa Murphey of Leesa Murphey &amp; Associates will attend as
the representative of the Meigs
County Regional Planning Commission. · Mary Powell will re·
present the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce and the
•24-lb.&lt; Skillod I lntormodiilo Cltl
Meigs County Park and ·Recrea•Prival &amp;Semi-Prinll Rooms
. tlon Commission.
The conference will feature
''""'-" Dills
oflol11111nt styli 1011i-NioctiYe mtnu
!ICtress Marlo Thomas and Ar·
.fill time dioliiln
.
thur Frommer, one ot the na·PIIyoicirl1 in "'*t dliy
tion's foremost travel authorities
·Spsectl~
and author of "Europe on $2~ a
.,..,... n-p, will ...... physicollll!lpiltl
Day."
WorkShops and ,panel .
&lt;Ricnolonlt Al:dvlill
discussions will be held by
ofllligial»
SIMclo
Industry · experts Including
·~VA~
Editor-at-Large 'tor "Conde Nast
Traveler'' Paul Grimes; Eng446-7112
performance lJI • part of KIDFEST, an all-day
land's "Travel News" Travel
ANTI-DRUG MESSAGE- "Hot Pursuit", a
event
which
will
feature
aumerous
displays
and
Editor
Steve
Keenan
;
Anne
Blgband composed of Coillmbus PoUeemen, will
adlvlties from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. ChUdren under
lng of "Tokurlstlk Aktuell" of
deliver their anll-tlrur mesll&amp;ie In the form of
lour are admitted free, others pay $1 . The
West Germany, and First Lady
. Rock·;N·Roll at II a.m.. SatiU'Ilay at lbe Convoca·
.PI'OIJ'&amp;m II sponsored by the Special Education . Dagmar Celeste. '
lion P,.ter on the OhiO Unlverlllly cunpllli. The ·
Gallipolis, Ohio
Parent Advocacy Network.An executive rountable featur· .
lng Ohio's top business leaders ,
-~,-""'----Flower
I r v1 ne Le v1ne, CBS economic
.,
. • ,
Resl&lt;!ents of Alller!Care· • A variety of flowers and plants
s·
cQrrespondeni and Ohio Gover11
Pomeroy ' are having a flower · will be available and the public is
_,
----------------sale on May 1, 2, and 3from9a.m.
Invited attend. All proceeds will
The Letart Township Commun· on the doors of Letart Township
to ~: 30 p.m. at "the facility on · go to the resident's Christmas
lty Association will solleli house residents on Thursday, Friday
Rock Sprinp Road. ·
fund.
to house In Letart Tqwnshlp for and Saturday. The solicitation Is
contributions to the fire truck being held In Ueu of a bake sale
fund of the Racine Fire Depart· planned earUer.
Next meeting of the group will
ment next week.
be
on May 7 at 7 p.m. at the D&amp;R
Luda "Sug" Anderson and
Tackle
Box In Antiquity .
PauUne Wolfe will be knocking

run home run and rood Benzin· bat better and better," Plniella doubled In two runs.Clnclnnatl
said. "With Davis out, we. need . .went ahead 3-0 with three un·
ger, batting In the cleanup spot In
place of the lnju~Erlc Davis, Todd to be productive In the earned runs In the second Inning.
. Benzinger walked and wltb one
clean.up spot."
·
also knocked In thr runs.
The PhUlles closed within 8·4 out, Rolando Roomes reached
Cincinnati- sta ter Rick
Mahler, 1·0, ytelded 'llve bits and and knocked out Mahler in the first · oq an error by ·third
baseman Charlie Hayes. After
four runs In five Jn,jlngs, walked siXth. Von Hayes walked on four
three and struck out noae to earn pitches and Ricky Jordan Oliver popped out, Duncan homered over the left-field fence
his first vlttory since last July 15. singled.
Charlton relleve(j Mabler and, for his . third home run of the
Cincinnati chased ,P hillies star·
season, matching his total for-all
ter Bruce Ruffin, 1·2, to take a 7-3 after reCording two outs, wal.ked
·
Darren Daulton . and CharUe of 1989.
lead In the fifth Inning. Ruffin
In other NL games, Montreal
surrendered eight hits and seven Hayes to force in a run l!elore
retiring pinch-hltier Randy edged' Houston 1-0, San Diego
runs In 41·3 hinln~.
,
shut out Chicago .3-0, St. Louis
''.C\nclnnatl Is a :·good hlttiilg · Ready on a fly to right.
beat Los Ailgeles 5·1, Pittsburgh
The Reds scored four more
team," said PhliUes manager
tqpJied San Francisco, 74 and
Nick Leyva, who ,wlll' ejected runs to go ahead 12·4ln the eighth
New York stopped Atlanta 8·5,
after the eighth lnnl)lg for appar- whl\n Hatcher doubled In Sabo,
Pltmburgh 7 San Francisco 4
ently arguing some calls made who had walked, and Benzinger
At San Francisco Wednesday,
by home plate umpire Tom doubled to knock In Hatcher and
the Giants extended Pittsburgh
Barry Larkin, who also walked.
Halllon. "Ii was just one of those
to 12 Innings before Andy Van
Benzinger scored on a sacrifice
nights. You have to try and forget
Slyke delivered a two-run single
fly by Herm Winningham.
it."
The Phlllles added three runs and the Pirates scored four runs
Chris Sabo started things In the
fifth with a single and Billy ' In the ninth when Myers walked for a 7-4 victory. The Giants are
now winless In seven home
the bases loaded and John Kruk
Hatcher was safe ' on a hunt
games.
single. With one out, Benzinger delivered a two-run single.
singled to score Sabo and Paul Dickie Thori fotlowed with a Expo1 I, ~lr!IS 0
At Houston, Tim Raines
O'Neill followed with a two-run ground-rule double to tnake It
12-7.
.
scored -from third. base with two
single.
The Ph lilies scored three tlnies · outs In the ninth Inning on·
O'Nelll advanced ·to second on
reliever Dave Smith's wild
a groundou t and scored· on a In the fourth.to tie the score at 3-3.
pitch, giving Montreal the
Tom Herr led Off the Inning with a
single by Joe Oliver.
victory over Houston. It was ,
The Reds went ahead s.Jin the ground-rule double, Phlladel·
the Astros third straight loss.
sixth when Sabo walked and phla's'flrst hit of the game.
Padres 3, Cubs 0
Herr advanced to third on Von
eventually scored on a sacrifice
At San Diego, Ed Whitson
fly by Benzinger, who went Hayes' single and scored on a
tossed a seven-hit shutout and hit
sacrifice fly by Jordan. With two
3-for4.
his first major league home run ,
"Todd has been swinging the . outs, Thon singled and Daulton
shutting out Chicago, who have
lost six straight. Wlth·the Padres
leading 1·0 In the seventh, Whit·
son,
In his 461st career at:bat,
.;
.;
power alley to right ~:enter,, the
Smith got till! win In 'lour and
lined a pitch from Mlke,Bieleckl,
score now 14•0.
, '
two-thirds Innings of work, h!s
0-2, over the left field fence to
Smith fanned the first batte~ of . record 1-0 with two saves. J:ason
give the Pll.dres a two-run lead. ·
the second frame, his fourth In a Hager the durable third-year
Cardinals 5, Dodgers 1
row, l:tefore walking the bases catcher of the Eagles had
At Los Angeles, Bryn Smlih,
full with pitches just missing the another fine game behind the
2·2, scattered seven hits over
mark.
plilte. Smith fanned eight and
eight Innings and singled In a run
He got the nex t two batters to · walked 5. Horner walked four ..
during St. Louis's four-run sev·
fly out, Including the second out
Rick Dlllqn was the HT pitcher
enth Inning outhun;t that lifted
when Jeff Horner made a run· ol record, relieved by Jim Brace
the Carqlnals to a victory over
nlng catch to hold the runner at In the first Inning with Brace
Los Angeles. Ore! Hershiser, 1·1,
third.
going five full Innings of work.
took 'the loss, surrendering five
HT scored one In the third when Todd Saunders went the last
runs and six hits, and uncharac·
Chad ,S wain walked, Jimmy two- thirds of an l11ning.
· terlstlcai!Y walked four batters
Brace reached on a fielder's
Eastern hitters were Tim Bls·
In his 61·3 Innings. Smith lost his
choice and Todd SaundersgQtthe · sell wlt)l two singles ( .3'19 aver·
shutout bid In the bottom .of. the
first hit for his team, a hard hit age), Jeff Durst had a double and
eighth when the Cardinals· comdouble to center, the score 14-1.
single (.500), Shaun Sav·oy was
mitted • two errors 'and the ..,
EHS ad!Jed one lit the fourth one-for"llne with four walkS, Jeff
Dodgers scored an unearned run .
and six In th.e .llfth.
Horner had two doubles, a single,
Meta 8, Braves 5
Jeff Horner star~ the fifth, and live 'RBI's (.455), Michael
At New York, pinch hitter Mike ·
but had control prQblems alter Sll'\lth had a double &lt;.407), 1\:l;it.t
Marshall doubled In the go-ahead
. allowing three runS, but · Smith Flnlaw two singles, Mark
runs In a five-run eighth Inning,
returned to retire tlie side In the Murphy a double and single,
rallying the Mels to a come-from- ·
last two· thirds ·of lj.n Inning of Tony Maxey a walk, and Rod · behind victory over Atlanta. Ron
work, the final 21-4. 1
Newsome a single.
·
Darling, 1-2, making only his
Eastern has scored 46 runs In
HT had three hits, a Todd
se~nd career relief appearance
Its last three gam~s and has a Saunders double, Rick Dillon a
and first since 1985, pitched one
five game winning streak. .
single, and Shawn Gross a single. · Inning to get the win. John
Eastern Is Idle lof\lght hut
Franco retired the side In order
hosts Southern on Friday,
In the ninth for his flft.h .save.

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Eastetncrolls over Hann-a n Trace
Behind a 14 hit attack and fine
pltchll)g by sophomore hurler
Michael Smith; the Eastern
Eagles blib;ed to a 21-4 SVAC
victory over the Hannan Trace ·
Wildcats to boost their·record to
12·3 overall and 8·3 In the SVAC.
Eastern struck for siX runs In
the firs tinning as 10 batters went
to the plate as HT walked five
EHS batters while giving up two
big hits to MattFlnlaw and Mark
Murphy .
Meanwhile, starter and gamewinner Michael Smiltl struck out
the side In the flrstfor the Eagles.
In the second EHS wasted no
time as Shaun Savoy walked,
Smith doubled, Matt Flnlaw
reached on an error, Jason
Hager walked l and . Mark
Murphy hit a bases loaded
double, followed by a two run
single by Tim Bissell, the .score
12:0. ,"
Jeff Durst then singled, Savoy
walked the .second time around,
al)d Jeff Horner ripped a. ground
rule double over the hlll In the

'

Eaglettes ~omp over HT, .15..0
The Eastern Eaglettes of
Coach Pam Douthitt rode a wave
of m.omentum enroute. to their
12th win of the season with a lS.O
wiil over Hannan Trace. .
Eastern Is 12-l ; 8-1 In the
league.
EHS took a 4-0 lead in the first
Inning with Edna Driggs having
the big blow, a RBI single,'
sandwiched between five HT
fielding errors, the score 4·0.
In ·t he second a walk to· Lorrie
Baker, a Tabby PhUilps RBI
single, a Toby Hill triple, Mary
Jo Reed RBI single, and singles
by Driggs and Amy Murphy
brought home five runs and a 9-0
score.
Meanwhile, Edna Driggs held
the Wildkittens -at bay with her

Sports briefs
Soccer
Juventus won the Italian Cup,
beating Milan 1·0 In the ·second
leg before 83,000 fans at Millin.
The teams drew 0-0 In the first
leg.... In World Cup 'warmups,
England downed Czechoslovakia
4·2, East Germany blanked Scotland 1-0, West Germany tied
Uruguay 3·3, . Sweden defeated
Wales 4-2 and Ireland edged the
Soviet Union 1·0.

DOMINO'S
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WINNBit .-Flo Marie Anlo.. , rlchl, 'aci:epled on beball of her
hul!baiiui,-CharUe, 'a SlOO gift certificate In food and merchandise
from Big Bend F!lodlan4 which he won In a recent contest. '
l'resentln&amp;'tlle cerllflcate II store manager Cliucll Blake. ·

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purchase. of a
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REG. $6.50 Flats NOW 1510

IEDDING GERANIUMS
REG. IJ2 NOW S950

•

$1 0

S6 &amp;SlO

·•INFANTS LEATHER

JOGGERS S6 " Sl 0
MfN'S WORK &amp;
DRESS ARTICS
$1200

'l"·Z·Boy ®

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LOW &amp; HIGH CUT

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$
·-.

MEN'S HIGH &amp; LOW CUT

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Leather FlatsSlS Joggers

•

S25 &amp;S29

S14

Sale Ends May ·10.
··Must be an
upholstered

living "room
chair.
. .

MEN'S LIA1HEI

·t··········l
• Trade-in Chairs «
-11

DRESS SHOES

_$1

Will • Donated «

...................!

!

to Charity.

UDIES

GOLF SHOES

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.

·we have over' 85 · ch~irs in stock, and
more coming, so our.sel·ection is good.
Come in .and ..-ake your selection-now.
*FREE PAlliNG
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The Nike Air Cross Thziner"' low.

OPEN DAILY

... ..

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1
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~

·

OPEN
MON. &amp; FRI.
'TI 6 P.M.

219 NOOH

SECOND
AVENUE

iI

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992-56~7 h ................. .........-:···.........
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.AND

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1$29'5, S3C)95 &amp;UP
. LOGGIIS, U. .lll,

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IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

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LO(Al REPRESENTATIVES:
.DENNIS L HOtltMAN, .RICK T. SMITH/
RANDY E. KJNG, IRIAN.S. VIGLIOnl I
FIIST AIMIKAN NATIONAl SUURITIES, INC. j

EQUAL HOUIINO OPPORTUNITV

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OFFER
GOOD
THRU
MONDAY,
APRIL 30,
1990

CLOSING
.
STORE
SELLOUT
ALL SHOES MUST GO-MANY SHOES MAilED

ALL IEDDING PLANTS
3 PKS S1 00

A Prillllt'lca Comp;J
. ~..
. - A·-·~
-~~If~;;;

Sund• 10:00 1.m . tG 4:00p.m. •
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 1182·28&amp;&amp; ·
a . Metn
Prt41n&lt;tty S...Viae
ll'am.ey, OH.
Open Wu&amp; Nights ' iH 9

STVDENTOFTHE'WBEIL- Eric Wbltewu oelectedatudent of
the week at the Melp Junior High Scho11l last week for his
excellence In readln1 aad spelling. Here he Is being presented a
certHlcate by hll teacher, Kim Adkl~.

811 W; MAIN
POMEROY
992-2124

"""""""i

...

Kenn•h MaCullaugiL II~Ph .
Ch•l• Rlfll&amp; It Ph .
flon•d Mlnning. A.Ph .
Mon. thru Sat. 1:00 1.m. to t:OO p.m.

2014A,,Irm.,g S,t/811 Slit .

3120 Bre'*ln•idgo ....l-d. Dulutll, Ooo•glo 30119·0001

.(

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HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

Momllor NASO •4 SIP&lt;

"/

a

Randy :::::o':lo led the
4 IN. GERANIUMS Reg.1SJ.OO
University of Florida swim pro85c U. - I 0 FOR 710
gramtonatlonalpromlnenceand
4 II. HAIIPY MUMS ht- •1.00
Olympic success, will not return
NOW 85c •·- 10 FOR SJ-50
as Gators coach next year.
10 INCH HANGING IA5KETS
Florida swimmers collected 24
REG. 15.50 NOW S4SO
medals ln.the lasttwo Olympics.
REG. '6" NOW S$75
Tenn~
·
Jim Courier beat Yugoslavia's
AU SIIRU.ERY '&amp; TREES
Goran Ivanlsevlc 6-3, . 6-1, 1o
20% OFf ·
reach the third round of the $1 '
~· ConlinUos
iho S..011
mlllion Monte Carlo· open.· The
HUIIAID'S GIONIOUSE
19-year-old Florldlart next meets
SYRACUSI, OHIO ·
Austria's Thomas Muster, ·who
.,
992-5776
overpoweredArgentlna's Mardn ·
Qpen Deily 9-5· Sun. 1-&amp;
Jalte 6-3, 6-2.
....-..-.~.~..:::~.~-• .:.;,:;:....1

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NOW 1/2 PRICE!!

.

•

usu-ally fine , pitching
perform!lnce.
.
1
Eastern added two In the tblrd,
and three In the fourth to pick up
the win.
Eastern hitters were Tabby
Phillips with two singles, Mary
Jo Reed a single and double,
Edna Driggs three singles, Toby
Hltl a tHple, Carrie Morrissey a
single, . and Amy Murphy 'a
single.
t
Hannan Trace ha~ but one hit;
a fourth Inning single by T.
Swain. ·
,.
·
Edria Driggs was the winning
pitcher, her twelfth win of the
season, and third one-hit game,
Including one no-hitter. ·Driggs
fanned 8 and walked three.
Vera Swain was tl!e HT pitcher
of record with six walkS, 10 hits,
and l)O strike outs. ·
· Easiern Is Idle Thursday and
hOsts Southern on Friday.

COMPLETE ·
STOCK

I

It's people helping people~

.APRIL SPECIAL

IONAL
U!RE
Home-Like Atmosphere

PRO

. . . ..--.. -~ ..-.. _,,._. . . . .. ..,_ - -·- --··-- - ----2:---~-----.L...-....;.-.;.:.
___
••

�Page · 6-The Daily Sentinel

Poma'oy-

Thursday, April

Ohio

Salisbury
·Science
Fair held

,.

GRANGE BANQUET - ParllclpaiiDI Ia the
various activities .of the aaaul!l Melr;a Coualy
Graace Banquet were left to rtcht, front, Westiaa

Crabtree, Junior depuly, aad Patly Dyer,
speaker; aad back, Pauline Atktal, Pomoaa
Master, Meadal JOrd8J1, past depuly, aad Arthur ·
Crabtree, depuly.

I

People
By WlLLIAM C. TROTI'
United Pre&amp;s Iateraatlonal
SINGULAR AGREEMENT:
D&lt;!nald and Ivaaa Trump now
have social carte blanche. At
Ivana's request, _they've signed a
two-page agreement that allows
them to conduct their affairs as If
· they were single...., meaning they
can date other p!lOple - without
their actions being used as
grounds In divorce proceedings.
"In laymen's words, it means .
that either one can live like a
single person, doing whatever
single people do," Trump lawyer
• Saaford LotWta said. ''Does that
Include adultery?" he was asked.
"Yes, II would Include that,"
· Lotwln said. The New York Dally
News quoted a source as saying
Ivana might have requested the
agreement because she plans to
get In to the dating game soon and
doesn't want It to effect any
flnaDclal sett1eme11t she might · .
. get from Donald.
MOVIE REALISM: Boxerturned-actor Tommy Morrison
•· was too much for two stuntmen,
who are suing Sylvester Stalloae
because Morrison beat them up
In a fight scene for "Rocky V."
stephea SBDtosUS80 and , Todd
Champion say they were subjected to assault and battery and
flied suit In Los Angeles against
Stallone 'and producers lrwla
Winkler and Robert Chartoff.
The plaintiffs said they were told
repeatedly that they would not be
hurt In their boxing sbenes wltli' •
Morrison, whlclt Stallone dl·
reeled.' But Morrison suffered a
broken jaw ·tn a ring $(:ene on
March 14 and the next day
Morrison broke Champion's ·
right eye socket.
BRONX'S P.R. fROBLEM:
The Image-conscious borough
· president In the Bronx wants a
disclaimer on the film version of
"Bonfire of the Vanities," but
Warner sros. says no. The
studio, however, did offer to
make a $10,000 donation to a .
· Bronx charity, but that's not
what Bronl&lt; Borough President
.FerDBDdo Ferrer had In mind.
The movie, based on Tom WoUe's
novel, is centered on a Incident til
which an Investment banker
played by Tom Raaka accidentally, kills a mugger In the Bronx. ·
Ferrer says the Bronx Is trying to
·rebuild Its Image and he wanted a
disclaimer at . the end of the
movie. Warner Bros. refused and·
offered the donation, but, with his
predecessor still behind bars for
extortion, Ferrer Is extra. sensitive to Impropriety. "When
the offer was made, he hit the
roof," his spokesman said. Negotiations continue. _
NIXONIAN ROME: Rlchard
Nlxoa Is giVing up his sprawling
. estate In Saddle River, N.J. , In
favor of a condo In Park Ridge.
The Saddle River home Is on the
· market for a price that a Nixon
aide would not reveal. The
·. former president and his wife,
Pat, decided to move because .
"they would prefer to expend
their energy on activities other
than maintaining a large house
on 4 acres," Nixon aide .Joha
Taylor said: The condo also will
allow the Nlxons to cut their
•maintenance and security
·budgets. Nixon spent $2.3 million
· to buy the Saddle River estate In
1981 and decided to remain there
after his plan to buy an apartment In New York ran Into
opposition from residents In the
building In 1984.
SPLIT: Civil rights leader the
Rev. Hosea WIUiama says he
suffered an Injury In a scuffle
with the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy's son, which explains
why he didn't g~do the elder
Abernathy's funeral. Williams
said he · went to see the Rev.
Abernathy In an Atlanta hospital
about two weeks before his death
· but Abernathy:s son, RalpiiiD,
31, a .state legislator, wouldn't let
him ln. "He grabbed me around
my waist and shoved me outside, " Williams said. "I didn' t
· try to hit the boy. I thought about

,, .

It but I didn't do II." An Emory
Hospital spokesman said Willi·
ams .suffered a ruptured blood
vessel In his left arm and he's
'been hospitalized ever since.
Ralph III had a different version,
saying his father didn't want to
WIIUams, . who AbernathY
said smelled of liq\101'. •'It. deflnllely'was a fight," the younger
Abernathy· , said. "I've known
Uncle Hosea my whole.llfeand he
was not drunk. But ... he was
buzzed." The. rift between WIIUams and the Abernathys started
last year when Abernathy's
autoblography,dlscussed Marlla
Luther Klnr; .Jr.'s sex life.

see

.
~
•
•

Grange banquet held

Patty Dyer, 1989 National
Grange Young Agriculturalist,
was guest speaker at the 1990
Meigs County Grange Banquet
held at the Salisbury Elementary
School.
·
Dyer spoke to the approximately 150 people present about
the four secrets of success dream, do, dare and care. She
concluded with an appeal for
everyone to work together for the
betterment of the community.

Invocation by Westina Crabtree,
chaplain. Entertainment was
provided bv Denver Rice. ·
Pauline Atkins. Pomona master, gave remarks and Introductions.

,

·~

J

HOT SPRIN-G
SAVING'S!!
'

,

...

Num~rous door prizes were
awarded ~nd table favors were
given •to all those attending. Tbe
dinner was se~ved by the Saltsbury Elementary School, Group
singing of "Let There be Peace
on. Earth' ' and the benediction by
Mrs. C~abtree concluded the
annual event.

The prog~am opened with
group singing of ''This Land Is
My Land'' followed by the

·'

..

Girls
State
delegates
named

•.

Salisbury Elementary recently heklltsannual science fair
with Mrs. Karen Walker, science
teacher, In cbarge.
Serving as jlfdges were John
Costanzo, elementary supervisor; Bill · Buckley, secondary
supervisor; John Riebel, Meigs
County School Superintendent;
and Gary Walker. electronics
teacher at Meigs High Schoo).
Winners In Jlrst, second, and
third places flir. the fourth grade,
were Brad Davenport, Myca
SCIEN~E F,\IR ~ -TbMe studeata at 8AUIIJul')'
Haynes, Michael Lelfblet. Honoril:lemeatiry were tile- flrat plaee wiDBm'IIID the reeeat ~lence lair
able mentions went to VIncent
held ~ere. Pictured, frGm left, are lrad Davenport, Chellle
Broderick, Chad Folmer, Jared
Dodsoa, aad Dorolby Leifheit.
'
· '
Warner, and Held! Legar.
· In the fifth grade the winners ·
were Chelsle Dodson, Melissa Dorohty Leifheit, Autumn Ru~ll received
Whaley, and C.hrls Roush. Adam Conde, and Rana Justis. Daniel mention. ,
Whlt.e received honorable
men!lon.
· Sixth grade winners wer~:

..... w. ...... ...

~!fi

I

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....

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,,
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DISCOVER WHY
P£0PLE SAY,

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MOUNT VERNON, Ill. (UPI)
;' . .:.. A·manwho rode for at least sill .
hours dangling upside doWJI by
his foot 10 feet off the tracks on a
speeding freight · train was
rescued when he screamed as the
train made a stop In southern
nunots.
Authorl(les said the man,
Marty T. Leeper, 25, of Bloom·
field, Mo. ; boarded the train In
Poplar Bluff, Mo., between midnight and 2 a.m. Wednesday.
''I can tell you when we got him
off the~e he was very thankful to
be down," said Capt. Charles
Bowles of the Mount Vernon Fire
Department. "He was just hangIng there by one leg with the other
off to the side ivlth his stomach
turned In toward the car.''
Leeper was treated for a minor
foot Injury at Good Samaritan
Regional Health Center, said
hospital spokeswoman Jane ·
HamUton .
Authorities said It was not
knoWn why Leeper had climbed
aboard the railroad car loaded
with .automobiles.
"Probably he was a transient
looking for a ride, bu I we don't
know," said Alex Tlce, a spokesman for UnlorrPaclflc In Omaha.
The distance .between Poplar
'BlUff and Mount Vernon Is about'
185 miles.
Tice and Bowles each said the
man ap~rently had slipped
while climbing on or off the ·
freight car. His foot became
lodged between two Iron bars on
a gate.
Bowles said It took about 20
minutes to free the man's foot
using a hydraulic jack.
Leeper was detected In Mount
Vernon ' when he was heard 1
screaming as the train slowed to
pull · Into town about 7:45a.m.,
Bowles said.
Union Pacific authorities s•ld
they did not know If charges
JoVOUid be filed.

SO. YD

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lity Furni·
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"If'·-·-· ----

·- - .

'STORE HOURS

'

Monday 9:30-8:00
Tuesday-Saturday

9:30-6:00
.,.0 Cluelifled AppiiCIIInta •

FUIIHTIIII, APPUAIKIS, TV'S, ·ROOI COVrillt

992-3671

DOWIIJOWI POIIIIOY, OliO

The Mason Gallla Meigs Crusade for Christ revival will be
held through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly. There will be special'
singing and preaching each
night. Rev. Clyde Henderson
Invites lhe public.

The Pomeroy group of AA and
AI Anon will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 1-s00-333·5051 for
Information.

Or C.U To Receive An. AppUcatlon ...

We'U Proce11 Your Reque1t Quicklr ... ·
When Approved, You'D Ha-ve H;'undrecla Of
Item• To Cll.oose From •
Alone With Easy llontbly Paymenta!

Call Collect (614) 742-2211 For More Information
•FREE DELNERY

o()N.SI1'E SERVICE UM''L.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
ST. RT. 124, THREE MILE$ OFF RT. 7
RUTLAND, OHI() • (614) 742-2211
Holn: MondciV·Salurdav. 1:30 am-i pm

AA meets

Thunday • ClaM N Noon

•VISA/MASTERCARD
ACCEPTED

•BANK FIWICING AV AILABI E
('WITH APPROVED CREDIT)

OCCUPATIONAL '111ERAPY MONTH -AprU Is Occupational
Therapy Month. Pictured Is Barb Culbertson, right, occupational
therapist at Amerlcare Pomeroy with resident Etollla Cassell.

FREE

.DELIVERY

~

·-~-

We Want rro !fumisli
EAR'l11 DAY OBSERVANCE- Firth cradeabldeaja at Tappers
Plains Elementary learned about Earth Day last week aad steps
Deeded to preserved the earth. As part of their actlvltles,ltudents
plaated two trees on the school's play ground. Pictured Ia Jeff
Rankin holding a tree while Jeromee Calaway places dirt around
it.

.._ - ..:..-.-.-1
'

..

:,YoU Witli Credit
Local merchants always give you a better deal. Just consider the
advantages of obtaining a Visa or Mastercard from your home·
town bank!
Compare our 15% A.P.R. with the high rates charged by other
banks. And if you have deposit accounts at Peoples Bank, you
may be eligible to receive a card with NQ annual fee. Optional life
and une~ployment insurance is also available. We will even
handle the transfer of your present credit card balance to your
new Peoples Bank account.
So enjoy the convenience and savings of banking in your own
· ·
hometown. Call us TODAY for an application!

Bock memorabiUa auctioned
at Sothehy'l
LONOON (UPI) - The bat·
tered electric guitar used by Jlml
Hendrix to play the "Star
Spaaeled Banner" at the 1969
Woodstock Festival fetched
$324,000 In an auction of rock
memorabilia.
An official of Satheby •s auct loll
house said Richard Pugliese, an
Italian coUector, ~ld$324,000for
the Fender Stratocaster electric
guitar. It was three times the
expected price. and made It the
world's most expensive guitar. ·
The euttar, scratched and
marked by· clgaret te burns from
Hendrix, was first owned by
Mitch Mitchell, who played
drums for the legendary late
musician.

.

'

SOFA

MGM revival set

Stop In,

b7 foot from rail car

s·1Q49

..!'!'".:-.~.
.....,,,

at Ohio Weslyan CoUege. She Is a
member of the Tri-M Music
Honor Society and student council where she serves as secretary
for the junior class.
The delegates will attend · a
deslgaated orientation on May 6
at 2 p.m . In GaiUpolls or on June 3
· at ~ p.m. In Crooksville.
Buckeye Girls State will be
held at Ashland College beginning' June 16.

Man rides six hours daaciiDg

lEVEL-LOOP CARPET.
.,,..,_
'

· LEIGH ANN REDOVIAN

SUSI\N HOUCHINS

Helpful, Understanding, GrowMethodist Church of Middleport, .
lng Students (HUGS) ; and the
and Is a choreographer for the
Enterprise United Methodist
Dance Com~ny of Middleport.
Church and youth fellowship
Redovlan Is the daughter of
where.she Is also choir assistant. · John Redovian, Pomeroy. At
Houchins tS the daughter of Mr.
Eastern High School, she ~rtlciand Mrs: Stephen Houchins,
pates In varsity basketball,
track, marching band and conMiddleport. She takes college
prep cOurses at .Meigs High
cert band. She' Is a member oft he
School where she Is a member of
Niillonal ·Honor·Soclety and tsan
HUGS, the yearbook staff, and · Ohio University Summer Schothe National Honor Society. She · lar. She Is the Hugh O'Brien '
Is a member of the Heath United
Yout~ Foundation ambassador

Quirks in
the news

UllrED 10 TEll WAIUNTY

SCULPTURED CARPET

Warth Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Warth , Pomeroy. She Is a varsity cheerleader,
partlcl~tes In track and cross
country, Is vice president of the
·Fellowship of Christian Students,
. Is In the Spanish Chib: works on
the yearboQk staff, Is a member
· of the National Hooor Soclelty;

AMY WAR'l11

April Is occu~tlon . therapy
month and . Is sponsored by t6e
American Occupational Therapy
Association to promote public
·· awareness of. the services provided by occu~tlonal therapists
to people with physical, ·mental
and psychological disabilities.
Occu~tlonal therapy Is Indicated for elderly persons to
maintain or Increase joint mobilIty, muscle strength and physical
endurance; provide sensorimo-·
tor therapy to diminish or prevent the degenerative process of
aging; Increase Independence In
aktlvltles of · dally living and
related self care skillS; provide
adaptive equipment io maintain
or Increase functional Independence; and to provide assessment
of the living environment to
eliminate barriers. ·

RIUliRD l;t:RF.
JlU \ 11118fJI1!i

..

Amy Warth and Susan Houchins, juniors and t4elgs High
SchoQl, and Leigh Ann Redovlan,
a junior at Eastern High School,
have been c:hosen as delegates to
Bu~keye Girl$ State · by tbe
American Legion Auxiliary Fen·
ney Bennett Post 128 In
Middleport.
A,lternates cho_sen are Lucy
Wlnebrl)nnet, daughter of Delores Winebrenner, Pomeroy;
Amy Wagner, daughter of Jane
Fry, Pomeroy; and Andrea Cleland, daughter of Charles Cleland, Long Bottom. respectively.

· Occupational
Therapy Month
being observed

!IW ....... _

'',

26, 1990

Discover The Difference!
SUBJECT TO QUAIJI'1CAnON OF BOR!I9WER

PEOPLES .BANKMASON • POINT PLEASANT • NEW HAVEN
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_.q:'- ----:---·----

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�Thursday. April26, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I•

.."
~

Newcomer .Clint Black wins four awards ·
Williams won a second straight
LOS ANGELES (UP II - Clint
Hat
for video of the year for
Black, a ·fonner ironworker from
"Ttu!re' sa Tear in My Beer," an
Texas who made his first record
Illusion he created by means ot
jU$t last year. took home four
electronic wizardry that made It
"Hats" at the 25th annual
possible for him to perform with
Academy of Country Music
his legendary father, Hank WilliAwards, the most ever won by a
ams Sr.. who died at 29 In 1953
rookie.
when hisson was orily 3 years old.
· Singer George Strait, a threeIn accepting
the video award
time Hat winner for -top male
vocalist, received his first enter- W1lliams read a letter to his
tainer of the year award Wednes- father. ''Dear Daddy, we fir)aliy
got to sing together, and you left
day night over five-time winner
me such a big hit. 'There's a Tear
Alabama, Hank Williams Jr.,
Dolly Parton, and Randy Travis . in My Beer' is one of the biggest
As Bll1ck accepted as top male records this year," Williams
vocalist, his fourth Hat of the said.
The ''duet'' was develqped
night, he salld. "A lot of people
from a TV film made by Hank Sr.
have askep me, 'Is U fun?'
in the early 1950s in which he was
Yeah," he chuckled, "It's fun."
Black, wearing his trademark singing hts hit, "Hey, Good
black cowboy hat, said back- Lookin'." With electronic alterastage thar In his previous life as tions to his Ups and guitar
an Ironworker, "I dreamed about strumming tempo, he appears to .
be singing "There's a Tear In My ·
this. That was my ambition.''
Black also won for record orthe Beer" with Hank Jr.
It was the first time In four
year for "Better Man," album of
the year for "Killin' Time," and years that Williams did not win
best new male vocalist, winning ·the . entertainer of the year
In four of the five categories In award.
As record of the year, "Better ·
which he was nominated. also a
Man" beat out GarUt. Brooks's
record for a rookie.
The only category In which "If Tomorrow Never Comes,"
Black was nominated and did not Keith Whitley's "I'm No
win .was song of the year,-whlch Stranger to the Rain," Williams'
"There's a Tear in My Beer'' and
went to "Where've You Been."
Patty
Loveless's "Timber I'm
Singer Kathy Mattea shared the
Failing
In Love.''
award .with writers Jon Vezner
Other
song of the year nomi·
and Don Henry and publisher
nees
were
· Rodney CroWell's
Wrensong, Cross .Keys. Mattea
Grammy
winner,
"After All This
also was named top female
Time,"
"If
To.morrow
Never
vocalist, beating out Grammy
Comes,"
"Killin'
Time,"
and
winner k.d. lang, Reba McEn.
''There's
a
Tear·
in
My
Beer."
tire, Dolly Parton and ·Tanya
. The mother-daUghier duo, The
Tucker.
.. .
. ·
Judds,
took the prize for top voeal
Black, a relative unknown
duet.
.
·
little more than a year ago, took
Restless
Heart
was
named
top
the country music charts by
Shevocal
group
over
Alabama,
storm with his premiere album,
which has sold enough copies to · nandoah} the Statlers _and Highway 10~. whb had S'llllept the
go platinum and from which
category
the last two years,
three singles rose to No.1 on the
Other
newcomers
who went
charts.
home
'l'inners
were
Mary
Chapin
A country traditionalist from
Carpenter,
new
female
vocalist,
Texas ,hels the first performer to
be nominated, much less win, for · and Kentucky H!i!adhunters. new
vocal duet or group. The Headbest male vocalist and best new
.
hunters' rebellious,., rocli-band
male vocalist In the same year.
IOQks
set them apart (fom the
The title trac-k · from "Killin'
and cowboy boots . that
sequins
Time'' was nominated for song of
dominated
the night, but the
the year.

audience gave their victory a
warm reception. ,
"We knOw we're cloWns and

we're monkeys sometimes, but
we really want to do right by
country music," said guitarist
Richard Young.

'·
1

BIG WINNER - Clint Black

poaet~ with

..

four~~~;:~~

for top male voc!lllst, record of the year for ''Better Man," album
of the year for "IUDID Time" and best new male vocalist durtn1 the
~th annual Academy for Country Music Awards Wednesday.
Black, a_fonner Ironworker from Texas made his first record just
last year. (UPI)
·

·- .

TOP FEMALE - Slnpr I.Mbr Mll&amp;lea II all liD Des as
poses
with the two "HII&amp;s" sbe won for beslaong of the year •'Where've
You Beea'' and named top female.vocalllt do ring the %5th annual
; Academy of Country Music· Awards Wednesday. (UPI)

•
us1ness -

Taylor}s ·life was · in danger.· doaor

The ,nationally televised
awards program was held at the
Pantages The~ter In Hollywood
with taped segments from Universal Studios in HollywOod and
Florida. It was _hosted by Alabama, The Judds, Strait and
Tammy Wynette.

serious health problems. She has
type of virus that is causing it.
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI)
"In this type of pneumonia, it's sufferecj from back· problems
- Elizabeth Taylor was In
that began when she fell off a
da:tger of dying of virai 'pneumo- very difficult to isolate a virus,"
horse during filming of the 1945
nia last weekend ana she ts "not said Murray.
film "National Velvet," and
out of the woods yet," but her
Murray said she may learn
nearly died of pneumonia while
doctors said her condition has more about Taylor's condition in
filming
in London in ·the early·
Improved.
·
a few days from a culture taken
.
"Her life was In jeopardy over · durtng the biopsy, but It is also 1960s.
S)le admitted her5elf in to a
the weekend, and for the time possible that . the exact cause of
being, at least, I believe· that has Ute pneumonia will never be drug rehabilitation program at
tllj! Betty Ford Center near Palm
passed," pulmonary specialist known.
Doctors also said they found no Springs in 1983 and again In late
Dr, Bernard Weintraub told a
link between Taylor's illness and 1988.
~eporters Wednesday. "She's
The ·District Attorney's Office
s eriously Ill and she's stili In ihe large .amounts of prescription
recently said It would not file
Jntensive care unit . She's not out drugs she had taken In the past.
''There Is no evidence that any criminal charges against three
._?f the woods yet, bu·t she Is
doctors who treated Taylor sev.tmproving. ''
of her previous medic!ltlon, wha; Taylor, 58, was taken off a tever It wa~. has had any effect . eral years ago, despite finding
evidence that they had presventilator Wednesday shortly on her present lliness," Murray
cr)bed near-fatal doses of painbefore an update on her condition said.
The Academy Award-winning killers to the actress.
:Was provided by Weintraub and·
The findings were turned over
otner doctors at St. John's actress's four children - Marla
Hospital and Health Center, Burton-Carson, Llza Todd-Tivey _to the State Medical Board !or
possible action against the
where the ac.t ress has been and Christopher and Michael
. .
.
physicians.
Wilding ..- have been with her
hospitalized since Aprll16.
The violet-eyed actress, mar"She was smiling for the first through the week, .and several
ried seven times ...:. twice to the
time in a few days," Infectious friends visited her Wednesday.
late actor Richard Burton -won
Taylor was moved to the ICU
disease speci~list Dr. :Patrtcia
Murray said. ''She told us she Friday, three days after being · best actress Oscars for her
performances In "Butterfield· 8"
. would come out and wave at.you, transferred to St. John's from
11nd ."Who's Afraid of Virginia
.but she wasn't in her balcony another hospital where she had
Woolf?''
.attire. That should give you some . checked in April 9 with what was
described as a sinus condition
lilea of her state of mind."
Taylor Is stili receiving oxy- and fever.
A1 the time she was tra~ts­
gen, but the ventilator tube 'that
. had · been Inserted in her throat ferred, Taylor issued a statewas withdrawn, Weintraub said. ment denying rumors that she
She is also taking antibiotics, but was suffering from AIDS. The
less than pallents with similar doctors said again Wednesday
cases of pneumonia usually do, that she does not have AIDS.
"She did haVe an AIDS test,
Weintraub said.
and
it was nega'tive," Murray
· The doctor said he did not know
said.
when Taylor, who nearly died of
Taylor has been active in AIDS
pnuemonla 30 years ago, would
public
education efforts and has
be moved· out of the hospital's
raised
millions of dollars for
)ntensive care unit or when she
AIDS
research.
would be sent home.
The actress, who has admitted
A biopsy performed Sunday
a
long
dependence on such drugs
revealed she is suffering from
as
Demerol
and Valium, as well
viral pneumonia, but the doctors
as
alcohol,
has
experienced other
said they do not know the exact
.
.

.

:(

The Deily

. ThUisday, April' 26. 1990

.

.
211111
" .

DUMP TRUCK
Send-Stone-Dirt

1 Session ............................,_.......... •3.50
6 Sessions..................................... '12.00
12 StssiOIIS...................~............... SJO.OO
15 Stssi...........................~ ........... SJ 5.00
.FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIIL Y MORE

MOilLE
HOME PAIK

(614) 1167-3271

LOTIONS - STICKERS

Gr_, A...,td

•Mobile Home

t2-IIJ.1

•Mobile Home

FENCING r"'f--,..._

R-1•
•Lo1· Ren~•

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

• 992·7479

lt. S3llertllef

GaodRotM

T.L.C.
27 Yra.Exp.
IIefer•COI

•

HU.HIEY'S

212 EAST· J)IAIN

992-3785

oit.

Days
1
3
6
·10
Monthly

y

......,.

.

'""Ads outside Meigs~ Gallla or M11on count1• must be prepaid.

TRI·COUNIY.·IECYCUNG

7.

Commercial

OffiiS 3 LOCA1101S YO SDVI YOI-

POMEROY. OHIO: AI.
S.R. 143·
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. !0 8 S.A. -143
HENDEA SON; WV.: Rl. 31 Adj. to llderdqulpment
'
NEWHOURI:
POMEROY: I a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-11 p.m. I Deye, C - SundiiY
HENDEABON: 10 o.m.-B p,m. 5 Doye, CloMd Sun.-Mon.
PAVING AS OF TODAY. MAR. 13, 1990
#1 CoP!* 85C I * lb.;
Cle•n Dry Aluminum C•na, 3&amp;C par lb.
. WI IUY ALL NON
IICIIAI', IATTfiiiEI.

. · CALL
'992·5519

2-2.'90- ..o.

OIL CHANGE
4 Qt. ••·

STARTERS.

niE IEPA.

CBSTD

•

We con rlfllir tind re·
IDI'e radlottn IIIII
..... c•es. Wt cat1
.... •14 belli 111111 rtHI

St. Its. 7 &amp; 141

a.ma.•o

repoir

a~ce

•Adsthlt mu11 be paid in

Gutters ·
Downspout's .
Gutter Cleaning

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1 1o00 A.M . SATURDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY PAPER

- 2 '00 P.M . MONDAY

TUESOAV PAPER
-. WEDNESDAY PAPER

-

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~

992-6669

2 :00P .M FRIDAY

follou·in!( telephone exchan!(es...
Gall1a County

Aru Code 614

Countv
Area Code 614
M1t191

367- Ch•hire

992- Middlaport
Pomeroy

246-Rio Grende

985 - ChesteT
843 - Portland

446 ~ GaU i polis

3BB ~ vm'ton

Area Code 30.tt
675-Pt. Pleeunt

458-,leon

~76 - Ap@Jt G~ovt
773 - Muon
·
882-New Haven

256- Guyan Diu

247- letan falls

643 - Ar•bi • Dist
379- Walnut

949 - R•cine

895 - Letarl

742-Rutland

937-Buffalo

------~----------1
-t

Get Recalft Fast
Public ~ICe

Public Notice
.

LEGAL NOTICE ,

4-G;vtrwly
6 - Mappy Ads
6 - Lost tnd Found
7-·Vard Sate (paid in advance!
B-Public Sale &amp; Auction
9- Wantld to Buy

f rn pill I filE Ill
Srrvll.f!S

~

.
1 1- Hetp W•nted

12- Situation Wanted

13- lnsu,.nce
1 1-Busin•s Training
15 - Scnoo!a lo lnatruction
16-Aedio, TV. Cl A•paif
17 - Miscttltneou 1
18 - Wentad To Do

21 -Busin•• Opportunity
22- Mon.., to Loan

23- Prot-flionll Serwlcft . ·

Rr.al Fslalr.

MIIOn Co .. WV

667- Coolville

OFFSUGGESTED

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

-

. Classified pa![es· corer i he . -

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2nd
9:00 A.M. • .5:00 P.M.

''CHOOSE
FROM"~ •• Iings,. Charms, BraceletsI
.
Earrings, Chains, Plus Much Mort. .

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

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

THU RSOAY PAPER •

14 KARAT
GOLD &amp; STERLING
SILVER SALE!

1 - Card of Th~nkt ·
2 - ln Memory
3-Annoucements

Happy Ada ,
Yard SaiM

• A classified advertiHmern placed '" Tha Daily Sent lntt [lit ·
c:e.Pt - cl•sified displl'f, Business Card and legal not•cesl
will also appear in the Pt. Ple•lint R89ilter and the Galli ·
poh~ Deily Tribune, ruching o"er 18,000 homes

u.oo
. u.oo

' 949~2161

16 wordt

Middleport, Olito
·

.20
.30

' 86 .00

J13.00

11 .30fdey

.42
.eo

SMAll ENGINE

.0!/doy

. broken updfvswill b•ch•g.t

Clml

31 - Homft for Sale
32-Mobllt Homtt for Sale
33 - Fttms for Sate

34-Busin•sBuildings

McrcllorHll se
61 - Houeehald Goo•
52-loening dooda
53-Ant iqutJ
54-Miac:. Marchandite
11-luildinQ Suppli•
56 - Pats for Salfl

lly_,......

Inn, ........ ..

HOURI: M-F 1-7
Sal. 11-5; t;:loMd Bun.

57-Mu•itallnltrumentt
58-Fruit• • Veg .. abl•

&amp;9-For Sale or Trade

949·2969

Fotll' Sllllll ltr!s
&amp; l.lv,•slrn:k

AMIIOMIIII
liN L.TIOII
D&amp;

I 1- hrm Equipment

v•·s sam

12-Wan1ed to Buy
83-Livestock
84-H-v &amp; Grein
66- Seed &amp; hrtilillr

· ENGINE IEPAII
2511 Wilt llaltt,
· '-row, Oh.

Far Moll 2 ond 4-cycte
englnll

71 - Autoifor S.la
72-Tn.u:ks lor Slit
73 - Vtns 6 4 ""0 ' ~

Stocll ·Pane far Hornollto,
. WHdut•. TocumHh.

74-Motorcvtl•

Brltloo • Btrotton.

7&amp;-Boats &amp; Moton for Stla
75-Auto Parts I Acc•sori•77--Auto Repair
78 - Ctmping EqUipment
79-Ctmpers &amp; Motor Homes

••• 992·39!2
5-n:'n-111

r

•BLOWN IN

INSULATION

... ...

Connection

"Fr.. EMIIMt•"

To All .r.=,..
Typ11 Of
Travel" 4-11-1
.

.... 949·11G1.

. or IlL 949·1160
1110 SUIIOl'
.

*SHRUB lit TREE
. TRIM ami. REMOVAL·:

*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992-2269
EVENINGS
"'!'!!'!"!'.;;;•""t-Ill

""'--

PLU-16 &amp; IIEATIIG
161 North S.ontl
MWtillpOrl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE .

w.

, ...............
Pho1111

Billa Hera

48-Equfpment for A•nl

L•••

Publlc· NotiCe

HOURS:
WHOLEBALE·AETAIL

247-4035

s ••
a..•• w413/'1011
••• Ollie
mo.

•FIOI!t End

.

Allilnrnent

Notice Ia hereby given that
Am81i&lt;ln
Network ExchM~ge, Inc. hoo filed an application with the Public
Utlhleo Cominloalon of
Ohio (Cou No. 90·358-TPACEI for authority to furnloh
intrutate interexchang• op.
erator a11llted aervic• on a
stltewidt bail throughout
Ohio. Any lnterosted person. firm, corporation. or
entity who can ahow good
cauat why thlo application
ohould not be gran!ed
should file with the Commiaaion a written ltltement
detailing the rNaona on or
before May 17, 1990. Unleu the Comminlon , .
. ceiy11 1 written ltltement
to thot effect ond an ..,.
companying requeet for an
oral hearing on IUCh lnue.
thia motter will be d•clded
on the batio of the lnfonnotion _contoined l_n the eppllcation and the oflldovitl to
be aubmltted by the oppl~
cont. Further 11\Connotlon
may be abtelnad by contactIng the Public Utlltloo Commiaalon of Ohio, 180 Eost
• Brolld StrMt. Cotumbua, ·
OH. 43288-0573.
(4) 28. 1tc

•Oil Chenge • Lube

•Brike Work

IN MEMORY
In Loving ·
Memory Of
CPL. RALPH
M. TRIPLETT
On His 40th

Bi,r thd.y,

April 26th
Barb

IIAifll 51., -JUI

llialtlc - C.18111tiiiiS
·. Vlnyt'fwlnl
,s..lllflifi Gootf•

Announcemrnf..;

Repllill-tWW.we

.......

IYDYTMSDAY
YfWPOST nt6

MASON. W.VA.

~

NEW &amp; USED
PARTS
For Rabbit,

. Jette. Golf,
Beetle end Bus.

s

:.•s

lnnn
Prices"
PIL 949·1101
• lllo949·216d
D1Jtr11Pt

.....
,.,.
·..
..
-....
.
...

. . ...!P.I."
fMIS STMr 7101 P&amp;

..•

_,..oCoM•........
POl IIS.ISS.

V-oCior'--

- .,..,_

eCa::Mtllnl .....

.

.. town

.....

......... Cihlf":

CUSTOMIUIT
· HOlliS &amp;

"'lfOCII:

--....
....a.:.::•.:.-:.-:..;=
Poll•4• 1111. . . . . . . . .: ..., •
4th, . . lnd llh. .....
•:
Come ...,_...,, . . . . -

-

PAnS &amp;
SIIYICE .

01n
mac-..
,IS.............
,
lOW OPII

lluthiN. :

WV,IIL~4--oj ··

v.w.

61

i3~A~n~n~ou~rw»t~i~•~nt~s~

~.. I'LIA IIARKI'f,

lle-lntalatlen
Stonn hon &amp;

NOSMAYCAW

' liNGO

•

-------J&amp;L
INSULAnON

BISSELL
IUILDIRS

"At

985-4422

St. lt. , ..

Call -.,-92,~1-7:rt

•Tir• .....

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

. Thura. l!lru Sun .
10 a.m.·&amp; p.m.

FREE ESTIMATES

4-25-Hn

CIIISTD, 0110

OPEN:
•
APRil 1 THIU JUlY 1

I'IIIINI

· RUTLAND nRE
Alit Trl•e•lellea
SAliS and
PH. 992·5612
SDVICE
or 992·7121
7~2-3011

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

OHIO
HEIISIIIId
EYEIUSTINGS

REPAI~

All . . . . . . . .

J

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

"Your

'-OJ Oltit!
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

46- Fufnill:ltd Rooms
41- iptct for Rent
47-Winted to Rent

WE GO TIE EITaA MILE .....
992·6110
OliO

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

lit. »~,

217 North Second
Middleport, Ollio
;

1-13-ltc

Garage

43-Farms for Rent
44-Aplrtment
tor Rant

1

742~2027

Roger Hysell .

41-Houses for Rent
42 - Mobila Homes tor Rtnt

AGrtot Comlllnation-

(614)

PARTS AND' SERVICE

Tr;mspnrl alton

I;NIIMI

PubliC NotiCI

s.r•c
....

...... IWen, Cltoi•

~

3$- Lots &amp; 'Acrug'e
31-Aullllat.e Wanted

48 - For

USDIIOWIIS
NIW YUI*AII &amp; KNO
PIODICTS
Serwtce c.ter •

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

.z:;)l·-rtRAYEL
· ., PURSUIT

-

EAGU IIDGE

GIEG lAlLEY

"Quality and l10sonoblt Pritts"

PAT IILL FOlD·

Z·l·' ' I MO. pd•

.

are

Card of Thanks
In Memoriam

O~i

Rata

Gas Tllillu.

912-2198

NEW -IEPAIR

fnr ear.h

ru" 3 d-vs at no ch•ge.
:Pric~ of ~d for •II capitalltrnen i5 double price of ad cost .
7 pomt hne type only uMd .
•sentin·el is not responsible tor errors afl:8r first dav. (Ch.eck
lor errors f1r11 day •d runa in peper). Call before 2 :00 p m
dl¥ after publicBt•on tom-"~ correction
·

1

I ahd J CONSTRUCnON

SER~ICE

QUIK STOP

ROOFING

Words
16
15
.. 15
16
16

ALTEIINATOIII,IETC.
a.u. ••ttn

MOYIE liNT A1
&lt;ONVINING STOll ITEMS

B1wanl L Writ...

"Aecefrvf! 8 .50 discount for ads paid in adY•nee.
•free ~ds - Giveaway and Found ads undtl!' 1 Swords will be

IETAIL PRICE

992·2178
' 411-1 rno.

"LOW

R811dentl81 ...

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

PpLICIES

0

711 tl. 21id
.DDLIPOU

209 Seith 4th St.

Heatlftt,CMIIng,
bfrlguatlon
Senlce

Clcissifi

POMEROY, OH.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY .,

65

SEARS

992-6173

CUMAR
CONftOL

SJ.6U

-

FREE
ESTIMATES .

out rlllittttr~. Wt tho

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

0~

Cal Susan Coltnlan, 742-2771

Peru

FREE ESTIMATES

•'

New UIIICI ld., lutl_..., Ohio

N'WLAND
ENTERPRISES

. . . P111inting

•

SUN'S UP TANNING

SITEWOIK • ROADS
CLEARING

Ftr Appt. Call
992-6717 """' ...
992-6244

.

•'S · APNllla
SiiMCI

ftl-5115 • ti5·J561

u, •~

�I

Ponw'oy MlddiiiPOf't&lt; Ohio
7

LAFF·A·OAY

Yard Sale
•

torRent

·-· Pomeroy- Midcleport, Ohio

26, 1980

lGT 'N' CARLYI.Ee 'r 1an:J Wrtpt

HoUMIIOid
Goodl

42. Mobile Homel
1ioo ..... -

Anrtl

AI!OS\11" Ll.IICISIC
a.~...llUS "'

.......... - - . .... 1 1 1122. - .

,... .... ..,.. ..... .,. ,......
--.-.
.
flS.11U.

QOOD

_,_

.

UIID

~=---~r

AI'PLIAIICII

:-.~·t~r
u,"lo"
_-,r... CNolllcolol. Colll1..-.:n..

.... ..•.

.:-·:.::::
, .

.r:==

1ta -

•

114f~M:,

I:DD~·­
.(J) .~. (JI

'llfi; L,AD,

e~D !IJ~

THE 60LF
PRO SAID HE

.I])

506&amp;EST!:D •

C1J SpomLoolc
a Ill 8 Cll ABC Newo Q

YOUR 6AME

1:al.
-

For - · JDW71.

2

,

. . . ..

ATTENTION! Doloy F - Po Jolgy - ' -- · W.
- - 111tD- _
.. ,.,..1,14-ZIHm.
·
luiColfCNIIL11414111"
....... lleoolood ....., 11110. 79
Clml'lerali
t1U..1012.

Motor Hom..

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

[l)BodyEieetrlc
Cil a·2-1 con~ct Q
.
iiJ ID1121 CIS Newa Q
e tiJ) Th'"'' Company
111 Top Cerd Contestants
combine enlertainmenttrivia
with the luck ol tha draw.
8:35 (lJ Andy Gilftlth
7:00 IJJ Scarecrow a Mre. King

-·.

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lllraury Mei'CINIMr ,,

83

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(2:00)

B Ill l2ll Coeby Show
Denise is eager to join lhe
ranks of rapping educalors.

~

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. ANYTtltNG $HAJtf.

&amp;5 Saad 1 Fenllzer

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HAvE TO

surfo$EP TO LfT

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Employment Serv1ces

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Ill National Geographic
,Special Go on a dramatic
descent inlo an erupting
volcano.
·
CV (f) HOmetime This
program discusses the in"ial
steps In contracting a home.

21' ...

G&lt;lllbllnod, AC, .
-11111.11+7~

1:00 Pll104o171-f101 ,«.,.. .. 114-742-2111.

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

.,

targeled lor murdar. D
i!Dl 1111121 48 HDu~ 411' Hours
axplores a graMmothar's
efforts to sava her
grandchild. D
Ill l!ll MOVIE: Flraatarter (RI

.

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Col -114- - llo
llnlolo,
- DH
CloiooiO
J4M111.

58

8Myalenea
Cll Father Dowling
'For some reason,
a drunken artist seams

Transportation
~

Pete for Sale

,, ..'

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•'&lt;

Serv1ces

(2:00)

1121 PilmeNew•
1!J1 Murder, !liee Wrole

Situation

wanted
1HE.Y SHOOL.D
/ •/
/

=

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/ /

Murdar At The Oasis
Ill·Amarican Mualc Shilp
Hogan'• Heoaeo
8:05 (lJ MC'VIE: Solomon ·And
. Sheba 12:301
8:30 II (]) l2ll Different Wortd ·
Dwayne and Ron dress as
women to ascape tha drug
dealers chasing lham. Q
(!) Sneak Pnt'llewa Goat
VIdea
(!) Wild America l.ook at the
color blue in bolh lhe plant
and animal kingdoms. Q
111 On Sl8ge
.
MaJor Leagua Baseball
9:00 8 (]) l2ll Chee,. Rebecca

..

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~PHEAI

MORK

WAHTIDI

No Elop. IJJI eo 11,100 dlllyl Coli
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.wrllo: PAII4JI, 111 S. Lln-

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---•71-4D14.

you \litho year ahead,.Send lor your As- ICORPIO (Oct. :111-Nov. 22) A person
- - - - - - - - . · tro-Graph predictions tOday by mailing with whom you're preMntly InvOlved will
.$1 .25 lo Aatro:.Graph, c/o lhll .-spa- I~ upon your petition with fiYiir 10day
pet, P.O. Box 91428, C~. OH II your p,_tatlon Ia , _ . , ., Tho
44101-3428. Be IIUi'l to 111te yourzOdl- _ oppotlte may be true If you're too

BERNidE . .

SNAFU. by Brace Beattie .

BEDE :oso~

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w:a d1n nove~~-.. llxoelllid lnOOIM. 1MM 841 z:a• AD •1110.
poliO,

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·;c,,~j(...,a"I.....:..;Beceuteyou ~~(Now. 2J.OM. 21) TO·

failed .10 get tho l8cla lll'ligh1 lnlflai!Y, day, If you dlllegate critical Ullgnments
there's I poulblllty yOU won't know how to lntpl ~ants they might cause you
to UN tome .....,.1118 lnlormatlon1ou · comptk:atlona Instead of allevla11ng

p,_.lly
lhtm. Be very,(Dec,
very aaleciiVe.
next
Ume.p&lt;liiiU Be I beHer lilt_,'· CAI'IIICOIUI
22...., 11)
CANCIII 1"-·21-.lulr 22) Oon'ttlke groups or e11quee tOday who contain
big ~ for 11111811 llakea tOday. If membera wllh whom you've hed cross
you're IINMiy ...._, be Nllafled wl1h wordl ~.They mlghllry to pick
what you have lnale8d of rllklng II Ill 'up-. they tell 011.
juat lo get II! f8w pannlel more. •
' 1AQUAJIIUS (olen.., ,... tl) You mlghl
LIO (.luiJ 2J.Auf. 22) II your thinking Is; i'haW to dael with an Individual today
.. emotional you mlglol•not respond 11\'or· jwho 11 u lnlleldllle Mel llrong-wllled u
. April ~. 11111
today. a~ 1o bef ,you are. The lmmovlble Olljtct wiH not
. . ably
lbglell Mel dell !rom your llrlnglhl, ov~ 1M lrNIIItlllle 1or01 or \Ilea•
Promotion In your clooMn flold of en. · not your lullnga.
'·
·
. _ I a allrong pcHJitlllty In the,_,: YIIQO (Allar .ltpL 22) Give Cl'1ldll PI8CU (Feb._, •r 01110) II you have I
llllalld. HD••••· hwd _.. Ia W!lm will ...,.. cncll Ia Clue tocllr. ~ Wyou to do llf'/ fmportam _.. todly that I
be l'lqlllcW to w1n you 1M kay to 1M a . I tlllnlc It llllghl.._ yaur contribution In r ·~ wtlh l8cla or llgu,.., 11 mlglof be
_.... WllllriiO!n·
·
. the . - of your,arraOIItet. KIIP 1110. IOdvlaable t o h a v l - you truatreTAUIIU8 IAIIII• ..., ID) Make an II· out !Illite piGtutt.
·
cMck ~ - l i t .
·
lort'totrMt•ueryo~~ewltllwhcimyou're ' ~c-. o.o.t. D) Someone ol· ~• (...,. t1-Aprl tl) 111 ex-1
IIWDivld tqUIIIy llltlay. • you ....,.. , w11am you·.. , . . fond mlglll ~ your ,t.....a~y OII(IIIIDnt o1111e ..... dllalllln 1

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Tonight ......

.:·=::c . . .

I profit or aloaa.

Newa{Tima Magnlne .,,..._

.,

.,

with such haste !hey usually
go right -----·?"
-

•

SCUM.I.ETS ANSWEIS
Stupid -

Humus ~ Cloth -

,.

Throat- MOUTH SHUT

"That dress says ,it all," SIT)iled lhe saleswoman.
"That's the trouble," sighed the custonier, "I want a
dre_ss thatwill keep It's MOUT&gt;~'H_s_H_u_r....!_"- - -- - - - - .

BRIDGE
Today's deal features Bob Hamman
in an unusual role, misplaying a hand
and by some lights mlllbiddillg it. After
North's takeout double, it was certainly right lor South to bid one no-trump.
However, when North raises to two
no-trump, describing a hand of 15-17
poliDIS, It can't cost anything lor South
three hearts. Tbe meaning
l' """'ld be clear: "I'm acceptinl your
game invil!ltion; a10111 the wa,y I'm
telling you I have lour hearts, JUSt in
we have a 4-4 lit that -:ould play
. better tban three no-trump.•
In the nO-trump game, Hamman
played a low heart at trict two, ducking all around. West continued with
the king of bearts, also ducked, but
East now played tbe heart ~ · That
could be nothing but a suggestion lor a
spade shift, and West duly led the t110
of spades. Declarer won the . ace,
cashed t110 hearts (West dilcarded two
diamonds, East a club), and then
played the kinl of diamonds. West won
and played another spade. HammaD
now tried lor an endp)ay agaiDat West,
cashing two clubs en«&lt;illl In dummy
and exiting with a spade. But tbe .delenders arranged tblnp so that East
took the balaDce, even depriolng declarer of hill eighth trick .
~ Nothinc's clear in the play, but de-

...

NORTH
.A Jt4

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Vulllerable: North.SOUtb

= .i:."'
Dealer: South

~·

.

~~

P- 2 NT
AllOpening lead: $

+

L.-.-----------1

darer Will Succeed if be

p~ys

Welt .

lor the IIDJietoD jack of c)ubia.l'ft bad
the good fortune to be Bob's par!Mr 1
lew times, IUid I l!ltimlte IIIII lie'
would mU:e this CGDtract 10 perceat
of the time, aod perbl.. llllire tbln
IIIII if it ......, day 0i1e of the tourna- ·
ment ratller than day Ul.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Exline!
bird
4 Resound
8 Bruise ·
9 Knight's
gear
11 Buchwald
and
Garfunkel
12 Undo.
as a lie
14 Daughler
of Cadmus
15 Roadside
sign
16 Waler
(Fr.)
17 Overcome
19 Ancien!
20 "leGorior
21 Price paid
22 Suburb
of Paris
23 Lady
.Jane 24 Wear off
25 - serif
26 Varnish
ingredient
27 Busboy's
burden
30 Slalule
31 lamb's cry
32 ~ -

37 Between
Septs.
and Novs .
38 Old oalh
39 Familiar
article

DOWN
1 French
river
2 Rusty
.Yeat,.rdiiY'I Answer
· 3 Paclno
and olhets 15 Indiana ·2s Showed
4 Guslalqry
cily
mercy
sense
.18 Slippery 28 Choice
5 Greek
21 Indian 29 D.C.
love deity
buffalo
VIPs
8 - ,
22 Sag~ .
(abbr.)
amas, amal
advice 31Composer
7 Grow rusty
giver
Bartok
23 Feslive 34 • - Day
8 Servant
10 Property
24 Guidon,
Afternoon"
13 Au natural
e.g.
35 .Bunk

ln-+--1---

..

Buller·
milk Sky"
33 Type ·
of plane
35 Destniclion
36 French
"school"

DAILYCRYPTOQUOIES-Here'showtowortlt:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is WJed
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slll(lle letten, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.
•
CRYPTOQUOTE

4 ·2fi
JLVP

WEVXX

ECKTKNTFV
VAZTVCW
MVJJVC .

AJ
AJ

PATFA

DATFLP:

GXOGPW
JLGT

GTR
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JLVP

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JOGAT
, Yeeterdap'e c,.,t. .a•te: PERSONAL BEAUTY :
· IS A GREATER RECOMMENDATION THAN ANY
LETTER OF INTRODUCTION. - ARISTOn.E
C&gt;IIMIO by l&lt;tno Footufos Sy-o. InC.

'·

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CROSSWORD

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One old timer. to another:

A Complete lho chuckle quotod
.
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•
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L.-...J.......L-.L-....L.--1--' yo u develop from ~1ep No. j be low.

11:00a:=~atle And

==-=~~P.'::!:r:,:~
~==~=::::
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. lng 1M'""""wiiiOII
- '

tiJ) lleMy Hll ......

Ill Olnah eon- HonM Glen
· Cempbell, Norm Crosby, and .
Joe Wiliams welcome Dinah
Shore back to NaahviHt.
10:31 ()) MOVII: Mo.a: The Law
Olver (a:OO)

under,_,.

:42 Mobile Homes
. fOrReRt

o,.n.......,·

L.A.~w Roxanna
must assume her lather's
care wtean ha is evicted. Q
IIIII II Cll Petlf Jennlngo
Reporting: From The Killing ·
Flalda Pater Jennings hosts
lhis program which
investiga)es t~e possible
return of the murderous
Khmer Rouge to Cambodia
and what, II anything, the
U.S. government has done to
allleer help or hinder this
sltuatlon. Q
(!) N-owatch
Cil Under Fire
.
1111 e1121 Knoll Landllll! Val
is horrified when Danny os
released from iali, D
•(!]) New Twlllgldl:one
Oilvanlntl Nawa
10:30 (!) Maaterplece Tl:ealre
'·
Jack I.Hhgow linda himself in
conflict Wltl1 ~lum rarmars.
(Pl. 1) (2:00) Q
CII Ryan'• Daft Beyound The
Maiilloll

'o

fl 'll. ~- 711 TM Ford

- · - .......... ·1br,

•u•mlliJI Work oe

Rober110n

B (]) 8

11 Ferm Equipment

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(2:00)

9 Haalwille NOW Country
music's hoHasl slars are
leatured live.
1:3081]) l2ll Wlngl Helen's
thrilled whan she's called
back for another symphony
audillon. Q
10:00 CD 700 Club With Pat

= ·-1

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111

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loft • . odolvor.

1101biil .. Hot bib I1,DDD.IOW7f.7711.

lwlll•r'o Uood ADollonooo,
2 -on, 1 ..,. 1co1o, I Comor ol Aond a l&gt;irole II.
"'1111 0ompo11o L..U, ~OIIIol1-7471.
pullllo Wllor,_
no_
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-wfthil
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~ ......."''G!t. . Ina. Good
ODin
S'IWUI.
' Llll. eo 1 P."'· Mon..... d14~"!. 117 Snl. Ave. Gil......... -

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puiOr

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Opportunity

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RrntJIS

No apoiflo101 - . COl 1•
INO'TICEI
-1·7771 Elol. 1114. Opon 24 OHIO VALLEY PUBLJ811NQ CO.
e Mow.&gt;do IIedei ,.,.. do
FIELD ADYlRTUIO DIAEC- II: I - - JIIOIIIo ""' - .
10A(SI 'llelo lo not Oil
NCII' le _..,
ooloo, orl-rMtlila PGOIIIcft, ""*''le .. IMilunll,.,.._... ......... lolld'll! wtlh =-==·=dd:..:Uio:=.::olld=oinjj.~-­
and -liig ..,.. ·
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~~_o~_ete.., ~~ m·

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Would . . 1D do tw I c'r'lnltrg.
heW ,.MIC II it .......... H.

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304112-311tor-77.

A.,.... ~lng eho . ooloo oriG -lng 111 o doy~ ,Havo
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"Dew SO" Colporoilon. 11+147_,.
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Wo Mod pooplo lo holp uo llllp

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VegetableS

58

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''Wf Worl .. hDmL C....

ap.n ~

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A &lt;SOOD IDEA!'

411-1171:

-

OCMM.

111.

wHh Robin. &amp;:;1
Top Rank Boxing
a Ill Ill CIJ Twin Peako The
.people of Twin Peaks turn
out lor l.aura Palmer's
funaral . &amp;:;1
(!) (f) Mylleoyl Dalgllesh
learns how Sir Paul spenl his
last hours. (Pe 6 Of 6) I;!
OJ ID1121 Falcon Creat The
truth behind Danny's
accident Is the key to conerol
ol the winery. D
i1J 1.1erry King i.lvel
1!J1 MOVII: Lat'a Gal Hany
(!)

ceRTAINLY. ..'rOLJ

~ ~Y.

Ill
· ·MIL
lltlda -...........
Wllw. 0 - ROod, 'I • 1111•
oil AI. 17. -7f.l'M7 • -

n r vnrv. lend rwume l•

ag I

a'llflld"'

encounters romantic
complications after moving in

'•

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·
klt':4--.l IdA

Oilllldd ln-

---·-COl-·
loo'

Rep:CW:iliiM.

=

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7:30 e Ill Fa1111Jy Feud
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Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

'Thursday, Apri 28, 1990

---·Local news briefs-Two Racine residents were Injured In a two-car crash
Wednesday at 2:59p.m. In Chester Township on S.R. 7 at the
junction of C.R. 26, according to tlie Gallla·Melgs Pos t of the
State Hfghway Patrol.
• Luke E . Pickens, 25, and his passenger, Cathy S: Pickens. 21,
were taken by private vehicle to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Both were treated and released for bruises.
Luke Pickens, driving a)981 Pontiac T-1000, was heading
south on S.R, 7 when a 1981 Ford Mustang (!riven by Michael~ ­
Frost, 17, of Long Bottom, was hit by Pickens' car. Frost was
heading east on C. R. 26 and had pulled past the stop sign when
the collision occurred.
Frost was cited fo~fallure to yield and not wearing a seat belt.
Luke Pickens was cited for not wearing a seat belt.

CLEVELAND (UPI) -Democrats and ~pUblicans put aside
their (l()lltlcal alliances Wednes·
day to pay tflbute to Frank J.
Lausche, a Democrat who served
· five terniS as governor, two as a
U.S. Senator, and two as Cleveland mayor.
Honorary pallbearers com·. posed an lmpresfiiye array of
Oh lo and Cleveland political
giants. Included were Gov. Rl·
chard Celeste, fopner ,Govs.
James Rhodes and John Gllll· .
gan, Cleveland Mayor -Michael
White and . former mayors
George Volnovlch, Dennis Kucl·
nich and Ralph Perk.
The political mix of the pal·
!bearers resembled Lausche's.
mixed voting reror-d that often
Irritated his. own party. In his
later years Lausche was known
for often fav.or(Jig a Republican,
and Irked Democrats wheh he
announced he voted for Richard
Nixon In the 1968 presidential
election. ·
The two Cleveland politicians
running for governor this year Republican Voinpvich and De·
mocrat Anthony Celebrezze, Jr.
cited Lausche's political
standing In their eulogies.
•'The most Important contrlbu·
lion he made fs that he lived up to
the high expectations of a public
servant," Volnovlch said. ...He
was an lnspira lion to me. He was
Mr. Integrity ~ "
.
... He j\'as an example for my
father," Celebrezze said. "I
remember my father taking me
to Columbus so I could meet hlril
when l was a boy: That's
something you remember all
your life."
'
Bishop A. Edward Pevec des·
crlbed Lausche as "one known
for his honesty, his Integrity, his

loyallty .... Tall buildings will
continue to bear Ills name, books
will bear his accomplishments."
Four pollee horses, three she·
riff's cars, 12 pollee motorcycles
and and nine limousines led the
procession to the cemetery from
St. Vitus Church on Cleveland' s ·
near .east side where Lausche
grew up.
Lausche died saturday at the
age of 94 of congetive heart
.failure. He had recently moved
Into the Slovene Home for the
Aged frm Bethesda, Md., when
his 36-year political career ended
In 1968 .. He wife Jane preceeded
b!m In death.
His death leaves Ohio with only
three living former governors Rhodes, John Gilligan and John
Brown, who served the final 11
days or Lausche's term when he
went to the Senate In 1956.
Lausche defeated James Gar-·
field Stewart In 1944 to win the
first ot.a record five-consecutive
terms ' as goV!!rnor .. It was his
length. of terms that prompted
Republicans to press for the
change In the Ohio Constitution
that ltmlts a governor to two
four-year terms.
As Senator, Lausc he refused to
participate In pork.barrel politics
and denounced federal spending
to the point where he alienated ·
. organized labor. He also fought
with fellow Democratic Sen.
Stephen Young over th(' 1966
. rioting on Cleveland's East Side;
Lausche completed the split
with the Democratic party organizatiOn when he Implied that
the . rioting was Communist·
Inspired and the violence was
linked With the civil rights
movement.

Hospital·news

Divorce granted

Velerus Memorial
Admissions - Frances E .
A divorce. has· been granted to Mardn,Pomeroy; andEvelynG.
Jennifer I. Bass from Brian E. Stanley, Pomeroy,
Bass In the Meigs County Court of
Discharges - Walton Manley
Common Pleas. · '
·and Russell Powers.

WEA~ER MAP ~ B\)t and . steamy .condltla~ will put a
damper .on an otherwl11e ple-t d~ from the aatl- capllal
south alone U.e Atlaatlc.Coul. Rain .....,.,ld move out of lbe New
Encland stales dari•c the d~, rePlaced by partlY cloudy llkllia and
mUd temperatures. · Tllundenllirml will conUaue to rumble
throU~:boat the Mlulaolppl River Valley for oae more dq and
predpllatlon wUJ move Into lhe Norlhen Bookies ahead of an
approacblal: Pac!flc storm.
·

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I

Jessie E:stoy Cooper, li4. of
Winifrede, W. Va., fonnerly ·of
the Langsville community, died
Wednesday at St. Francis Hosptlalln Charleston, W. Va.
Born on Aug. 25, 1905, she was
the daughter of the late Colonel
Jerome and Maude Frances Fink
Cottrell.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband, Beecher - M. Cooper, a
great-granddaughter, Paula
Carso~. five brothers,.. four
sisters.
She Is survive!! by a daughter
and son-In-law June and ~Cox,
a son and daughter-In-law,

Beecher and Jeanette Cooper, all
of Winifrede, six grandchildren,
eight great-grandchildren. two
brothers and sisters-In-law, Bill
and Chloteal Cottrell, Chesapeake, W. Va. , C. J. and. Della
Rose Cottrell of Winifrede, two
sisters and brothers-lr)"ll\w, Pat
and Warnle Rumbaugh •. and Jo
Leah and James Mullins, all of
Winifrede; one sister, Gwinnle
White, ·Middleport, two nieces
Texanne,and Amber Well,.Pomeroy, and several cousins.
Funeral services will be, held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Johnson
Funeral Home at Marmet, W.
Va. Fril!l)ds may call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 at
Tbursday.

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South Cealral Ohio
Partly cloudy ThurSdi!Y night,
a low near 60. Partly to mostly
sunny Friday, w!th hlgbs between 85 and 90. Chance of rain Is
20 percent.
.
Extended Forecast

The current 60-t1ay- license
Rep. Marc Gu thrle, D-Newark,
suspension on first offense Is co-author of the law, said 38
raise(! to 90 days, with no · percent or all tho.se arrested for
CLEVELAND (UP!) - There
In Wednesday's Kicker game, occupational driving ··privileges .DWI are driving under a suspen·
were no winners In Wednesday's
there was one big winner hokl!ng for the first 15 d'ays. Currently, a slon of their license.
·•
Super. Lotlll jackpot .worth $15 ·six of siX winning numbers for judge may grant privileges to
The new law allows a pollee
mfillon, Ohio Lottery officials
$100,000. The winning numbers qrive to work Immediately after officer to confiscate a driver's
said. The winning numbers were · were 303252. There were 1D with suspending a 'llcense.
·
license at the scene I! the driver
2,17, 20, 26, 27, aild29. There were
five of' · six winning Kicker . The license suspensions grow
refuses to take a bteathal~r
234 tickets with five of the six ·numbers for ·$5,000 each. There longer after each offense, · and test or has previously been ...
winning numbers for.$1,000 each.
Were 79 with four of six winning judges may require an Ignition convicted o! DWI and falls the ~
There were 11,421 tickets with
Kicker numbers for $1,000 ·each. Interlock device which allows a
test.
' '
four of the six winning numbers
Saturday's Super Lotto will person convicted of DWI to drive
·
for $75 apiece.
reach $20 million.
only when sober.
Mayors' courts will have jurisIf a county cannot find · jall · diction only over first offenders;
space within 60 days, It Is al}owed · repeaters must be sent to the
Jll!&amp;rest county court.
to sentence repeat DWI convicts
••
The new law takes aim at
Twenty eight Individuals were
costs; Wendy Armentrout., · to electronically-monitored
A
·
. • teenage drinking and driving bY
fined and five forfeited bonds In
Greenville., N.C., speed, $25 and hou'se arrest:
setting an 0.02 perce.nt blood ,.
Wednesday's Meigs County costs; Charles Fink, Shade, no
, A-nyone caught driving under a
alcohol content as the level for
Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien.
operator's license, $75 and costs, DWI lice~ suSpension will
60-day
Fined were David Copplck,
three days jail suspended If valid receive three days In Jail. a $250 conviction, drawing
Portland, failure to possess rned·
license suspension, or until the ,,4
~o $1,000 fine and a maximum
ope~;ator's license prOvided In 60
leal certificate, $25 and costs;
days; William Barley, Rutland, .one-year license suspensiqn, and driver Is 18, whichever Is shorter.
Linda Kirkland Sentz, Chateau, expired operator's license, $75 his or her car wm be Immobilized T)le legal limit for adults Is 0.10
days.
percent. blood alcohol
Mont., speed, $27 and costs;
and c,osts, three days JaU sus· for 30
' . content.
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Thomas · Wallace, Syracuse,
pended If valid opera! or's license
'
speed, $20 and costs; u'nda M. within 60 days, failed to display ·
Vanlnwagen, Pomeroy, speed,
valid registration, $25 and costs.
$25 and costs; · Melvin B. FreeStephanie Yaromey, Pomeroy,.
man, Syracuse, speed, $21 and ·passing bad checks, four
'.
costs; . Mary C. Bodle, Toledo,
charges, restitution, fine and
speed, $24 ~nd costs; Henry Lee costs on each; Doug Lavender,
.,
Jackson, , Midway, Ala., speed,
Syracuse, $100 and costs, five
$28 and costs; Jimmy McClure,
days Jan suspended, one year
Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs;
"'
good behavior; Donnie A. FreeDavid C. Steinmetz, Pomeroy.
man, Pomeroy,$25andcosts,lefl
seat belt violation, $15 and costs;
of center; Lona K. Riffle, PomeJeffrey L. Maynard, Syracuse;
roy; unsafe vehicle, $15 and
speeding, $22 and costs; Toney
costs; Debra Ramey, Point Plea· ·
Watson, Shade, speed, $20 and • sant, W.Va., passing bad checks,
,.·
costs.
$25 and costs ~Jnd restitution;
&amp;
''
Tammy Culp, J;oshen, Ind., Amy Patterson, Syracuse, dlsor·
speed, $20 and costs; James derly conduct, costs only; Robert
Bentley, Ironton.• speed, $21 and Stemen, New Lexington, fol19w·
costs; Walter Arnold, Langs- lng too close, $10 and costS;
Walter Novak Jr. , Maple
ville, speed, $20 and costs;
Delura Garbesl, Crown City, Heights, stop sign violation, $10
speed, $24 and costs; Dan Weldy, and costs; ' and Amy Patterson,
Syracuse, disorderly conduct.
Bellefonlalne, speed, $26 . and
costs only.
·
Korfelting bonds were Keith
Barrett, Pomeroy, seat belt
210 lent Main . 992·6254 · Pomeroy, OH.
violation, $35; Nancy Barrett,
..Pomeroy's Fashionable Shoe Storew
Dally stock prices
Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
1
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
$25; Charles Tracy, Westerville,
Bryce and Mark Smith
no muffler, $55; Walter Arnold,
'i
of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewi
Langsville, speed, $60; and Alvin
Colwell, Langsville, littering,
Am Electric Power ......... .... 29%
$30.
AT&amp;T .................... , .. ............. 40
Judgment awarded
Ashland011 ............... ;.... ,...35lf,
·Bob Evans ....... ................... 12l-(,
In the Meigs County Court of
Charming Shoppes ............... 8%
Common Pleas, Manuel ,Green;
City Holding Co . ........ ......... 13%
dba Green's Painting, has been
Federal Mogul.. ...... .. .......... 18~
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ....... ..........35% ordered to pay $2,940 to 'Nation·
wide ·Mutual Insurance ComHeck's .... :............... .. ........... 2~
pany. The court .further orders
Key Centurion .... .............. 14%
that If Green does not pay $2,940
Lands' End .... ........... .... .. .. 16l-(,
Limited Inc . . ........... ........... 39% In monthly lnstallmenls of $200
each, that a payment of $3,675
Multimedia Inc ................... , 79
Rax Restaurants .............. 2 9/16 will have to be paid.
Robbins &amp; Myers .;.. .:.:...... :.15!-2
Shoney's Inc ............ .. ..... ... .13!-2
Case dismissed
Star Bank ................ ...... ..... 20%
Wendy's Int'l . .......... .. ......... .4~
The case of Linda S. Beaver
Worthington Ind ..... ... ... ........ 21
.I Cusfom Trim '
.I 2.3 LEFt
(Federal Mogul's fll'lll·quarter versus George Jelfr~y Beaver
.I 5Speed
.I All Season Radials
net $.17/share n. S.17 after has been dismissed In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
charge.)
·
Rear step Bumper .I Clear Coat Paint 1
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Meigs County Court news

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.NUR.SEMATES.

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SHOES

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FRIDAY

Y SHOES

RAilER

~~.~26 .

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- 6 Yepr, 60~000 Mile Powertraln Warranty!·

2'0°/o
OFF
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SPRING ANP
SUMMER ·
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MERCHANDISE

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COR.J&lt;V'$ CLA9$/C$

, 112 Wtst.Main

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POMEROY, OH.

992-2851

4 DIYI OILY!!!

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Thursday • Friday.. • Satur~y • Monday Only!

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SPECIAL PRESENTATION_ Cathy Joh,.011,

left, lon~:·llme member of the Ohio Eta Phi

Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi Sorority waa presented
a braas tray for her years of dedication to the
'

aororlty chapter at the 51tlHJi.;g..Foiinder'sDay
obllervance held at the Dowu.Vnller In GalllpoUs
on Thursday evening. Presenting the tray on
behalf of the group Is Su&amp;an Clark.
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Racine uirl, 13_, s_. ti m. lS,SlJlg.
e

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
nation's first-quarter gross na·
tiona! product rosl!o2.1 percent, or
$21.7 billion, with Inflation mak·
lng Its stro.ngest showing since
1981, the Commerce Department
said Friday.
ffigher food and energy prices.
a result of early winter's unusu·
ally cold weather, accelerated
Inflation during th" quarter to an
annual rate o! 6.5 ilercent, from
3.6 percent, as measured by the
GNP fixed-weights price Index.
•The rise In the Index was the
greatest since a 7.7 percent gain
In 1981, the department said.
Antonio VIllamil, the depart·
ment's chief economist, said
Inflation rose to 5.2 percent,
excluding the often vOlatile food
and energy prlcesand a pay raise
for fel;leral employees:
He said inflationary pressures .
are expected to ease slowly
during the rest of the year. ·
"Our ·assessment Is based on
the ongoing thrust of monetary
policy that alms for price slabll· ·
lty, continued expansion of our
productive base by the private
sector and the ·lllu!ly unwindbtg

the beglnnlng .ofthe year and do
not llldlcate a long-term peri.'!? of
hlgh~r prices. .
.
.
''The basic message Is. the
economy has not slowed suffl·
clently to bend the back of
lnflatJon, let alone break It," said
Robert Dederick, chief economist at Northern Trust ·Co. In
Chicago. "Until we see these
numbers slide down again, we'll
have to be uncomfortable."
Mickey Levy, chief economist
at First Fidelity Bancorp, In
Philadelphia, said the first quarter Inflation numbers ·were so
distorted by weather conditions
that . they should be averaged
with fourth-quarter ligures.
Doing this brings Inflation's
rise to about 4.6 percent and the
GNP's gain to 1.2 percent, he
said.
·'I strongly believe the fixed:
weight (Index) will roll off and
Inflation numbers. will Improve
In the second quarter," Levy
said.
·
During the fourth quarter of
last year, the ONP rose 1.1
percent, or $11.2 billion.
Despite the larger· than ·

the fourth quarter. Durable
goods purchases rose $16.8 bil·
lion, largely from motor vehicle
sales, after falling $16 .1 billion In
the previous quarter.
Purchasesofnondurablegoods
decreased $8.9 billion In the first
quarter after riSing by $300
mUllon In the fourth quarter.
Service e\{pendltures were up
$8.5 billion during the quarter .
Home heating expenses for
fuel ·Oil, electrl~lt y and _natural
gas decreased $13.1 billion In the
first quarter after . rising $8
billion In the fourth quarter.
Nonresidential investments In·
creased $9.4 billion during the
quarter after falling $7.1 billion
In the fourth quarter. Residential
real estate Investment costs rose
$3.8 billion In the first quarter
from a decrease of $500 million In
the previous quarter.
Net exports gained $6 billion in
the first quarter after rising $9.9
billion In the fourth quarter .
Exports rose by $1.4 billion from
a gain of $13.5 billion, while
ftmports decrfe.a se dbll$4ll.6 billion
rom a r 1se o • 3. 6
on.
First-quarter government pur-

~~~~~ergy and food prices." he ~~:~~~dsh~~~~,.~:~e~c~u~~;~ ~:~~~:: $~~~ebl~:~~ ~~·:~~·f:~~~

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Private economists agreed lng developments. VIllamil said . . · quarter.
·
Lilian Nakao age 13, Racine Is
to contact the sheriff's number nine roaa, went off the that the first-quarter upturn In
First-quarter personal con· , .. Defense-related purchases
stlllll)l!lstng "I!CO~Ing to. Meigs
department.
.
right side and struck a pa!'ked Inflation Is likely t!le result o! the sumptlon gained $16.4 billion gained by $200 mlltlon after
.co~nty. Sl)erlff ,James •. M. ·
, Cindy King, 39118 .SR 124, trU.ck. Accordina to the depart· unusual weather conditions l!t after 11n Increase of$3.6 billion In . decreasing '$4.4 bllli~n.
·
SOulsby.
', ,
Pomeroy Informed tlle sheriff's mentthedrlv~rbackedupandln
, The girl was reported missing
deparlment that her home had trying to dtlve away reportedly
o~e ~.eco
u~es
on the 11\0rnlng of Aprll17, from
been entered Thursday between struck the truck again arid
.
9: 4? a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
knocked It Into another parked
.
her residence near Racine as
reported to the sheriff-'s depart·
The department reported that vehicle.
·
· .
·t'
ment by her grandmother.
a pane of glass In the front door
Th~ parked vehicles were
. According .to Information re-. had been broken and a kerosene repor-tedly- owned by Russell
celved by the sheriff's (lepart· container was found In the living · Williams, Rt . 1. Box 83,
By Vnl.l ed Presslnl4;rnatlonal · threat of some thunderstorms heat and humidity se~dlng the
men!, the youngster. was at the room and two burned spots In the Reedsville. ·
Friday wa$ another· typical Friday ·afternoon and evening; heat Index into the alert level.
llvng room carpet. There was
T-here was heavy damage to all day In Ohio's ," typical sprtng" of buttemperatures were to fall off
Very high dtylng ·potentials
residence at 1 a.m. Uhe was
discovered missing at" 7 a.m.
also kerosene on the kitchen floor three vehicles. Smith was · 1990, with a third str~~olght day. of after sul)set, with lows of 55 to 60. were to occur Friday afternoon
when her grandmother went to andamatchboxandpapertowels charged with driving under the record high temperatures
Saturday will see scattered as evaporative rates top out
get her up for school.
.
were · found on t~e porch. The lofluence and failure to control.
expected.
.
showers and thunderstorms, as a
above three-tenths of an Inch.
Lilian .Is described as four to kitchen door was locked.
Smith Is lodged In the county jail
Two records were. set Thurs- cold front moves In from the Increasing southerly winds of 10
five feet tall, 120 ..pounds, Ipng
The, Incident . Is under pending a .hearing In Meigs day, two fewer than were set west,andhlghswlllbeonlyabout . to 20 mph. later were to limit
County Court according to the ~edilesday. Zanesville re~~oched 75 to 80. sunday will be the same. . outdoor spraying of fields .
brown halr .and browm eyes. She Investigation.
has Asian features.
The depar1JIIent was called sheriff's department.
87, 1 degree higher than !he mark while Monday will · be fair.
The warmth should support
Sheriff Soulsby reports thatthe · near Reedsville Thursday all: 50
Arrested on bench warrants
set In 1984. Mansfield also broke a Tuesday will again see another another 0.20 to 0.25 Inches of
a.m. to Investigate an aj:Cide!lf.
for .. failure to eomply with the 1984 mark by 1 degree when.'It hit day of scattered sl!owers a'nd evapo~atlon from ~oil surfaces.
department has received calls
advising that the youth was some
According to the sheriff's de- court's order were Ronald
83 degrees. And Youngstown tied , thunderstorms with highs of65 to .S aturday's showers and a linger·
place In West Virginia, Anyone
partment Harold E. Smith, 36, Starcher and George 'Clifford
a 1948 mark with an 86-degree "70..
·
lng risk of rain on su.nday may
having any ll)formal'ion Is asked , Reedsville was traveling west on Collins. Both are confined to the reading.
I,lvestock. producers were
lead to a ·suspenslon of fieldwork
county jail Pl'ndlng hearings In
Friday's 'highs, were to soar again adVised to keep watch on . as one-quarter to near 'One-half
bn•e.~S
Meigs County Court according to
Into the mlddletoupper80s under their animals Friday. with the Inch of rain could fall.
1:
the sheriff's departmenr.
mostly sunny skies. There was a

·rd
high
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tempera·t·
• 8 UCkeye Sla
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expec ed
.. • m
.. (e (OOay

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Local news

Portland area ·man injured
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A Portland area man was Injured after his truck crashed Into
a house In Lebanon Township on S.R. ·338 Thursday at 4 a.m:,
according to theGallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Steven C. Boso, 31, of S.R. 338, Portland, was taken by the
Meigs County J;:MS to Veterans ,)VIemorial Hospital, where he
was treated and released for cuts.
·
Boso, driving a 1985 Chevrolet S-10 plckup; was traveling west
when he went off the left side of the road in a right-hand curve.
At that point his truck went on and came to a rest at the porch of
the residence of Henry D. Lemley.
.
.
Boso was cited for failure to control and having an expired
rel(lstratlon.

Man's death said suicide
•, · A Ewlngton resident apparently committed suicide Wednesday·outside his home.
· Don Bush, 38, of Ewlngton Route 1, died from an apparent
self-Inflicted gunshot wound according to the Gallla. County
Sheriff's Department.

·Riggs .named 'Secretary of Year' .
Carol Riggs, a secretary for the Meigs Local School District,
was selected secretary of the year In a conies t sponsored by
Krogers. · .
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Riggs was entered Into the contest by her boss, Greg McCall.
She will receive 12 long stemmed roses, a box of chocolates,
and lunch for herself and her boss at the reslaurant of her
.choice.
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New oomputer system praised

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New Summer. Merchandise Arriving Daiiy

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HOOD F

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25 Cents

GNP
shows 2.1 % gain

continued from page 1

20°/o. OFF ·.

A

F~t . quarter

Saturday thrOUflh Moaday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Saturday. with
fair weather Sunday and Monday. Highs will be mostly In the
lower 80s each day, with overnight lows between 55 and 60.

•

Celeste...

2 Sections. 16

27, 1990

Lotto· jackpOt jumps to $20 million

--Area deaths-Jessie Cooper

Low t11nlght near 60. Salur· •.
day, and highs near 80.
Ch811ce of rain 50 percent.

•·

•

·'

- - - - - -.Weather-----·.,..,- -

ACADEMIC BANQUET SPEAKER - Rep. Mary Abel was
speaker at U.e SouU.em Local Scbool Dlslrlct's aamial aca.temlc
achievement banquet held Wednesdq nl&amp;hl at the hl&amp;b schooL In
her talk ·sb~ encouraged the studenla to •'1:0 forth and make thdreams a realKy." Sbe waa preaenle4 a Sou&amp;bern Tornado sweater
following her talk by Supt. Bobby Ord on behalf of U.e scholars.

New computer system praised

Republicans, Democrats pay
·-last reSpects to Lausche ·

670
Pick-4
4037

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•,

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Se~vice
responded to four calls for assistance on Wednesday.
· At 12:06 p.m. the RJ.!tland units and Middleport unit, along
with the Rutland Fire Department were called to Route 124 for
an au to.accident. JuniCe Adams was transported by one unit to
Holzer Medical Center, Macle Pride!Y was transported by
another to Holzer; and Shelby Prica was taken by the
Middleport unit to Veterans M'emorlal Hospital .
The Pomeroy unit and rescue, at 3:06p.m., were called to
Route 7 on an auto accident In which Mike Frost, and Luke and
Cathy Pickens were treated but not transported.
At 4:49p.m. the Racine unit was called to County Road 31 for
Margaret Holter wbo was treated but not transported.
The Middleport Unit, at 11,55 p.m., responded to a call on
South Second for Jane Warner who was transported to
· Veterans.

.

Daily Number

Page5.

.

Squads respond to four ca_Us

In Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners .
a bid from Direct Market Data Systems was accepted for a new
computer system which will be Installed In Meigs County Court.
According to Linda Bentz, an employee In county court, the
new comp1,1ter system will "help tremendously In cutting down
on all things do)te by hand. " . ,
The computers will allow quicker 'research of cases and
retrieval of Information, keeping track of fines, check\llg ~f
warrants, and the disbursement of receipts·.. The system will
also save time on the amount of work that goes Into preparing
the jury venires.
Not only will the new new system cut down on the amount of
hand writ teo work that has to be done bu I II will also save
money. according to Mrs. Bentz. As one example, the docket
bo&lt;iks used to record all cases cost between $300 and $500. With
the new system these docket books will not have to be
·
purchased.
.
The bid from Direct Market Data Syste"'s will provide the
· court with four computer monitors, one at each of the ·three
workstations, and another at the transaction counter, ahd the
necessary receipt and regular printers to run the operation.

Ohio Lottery

Indians
slip by
Blue Jays

Two 'hurt in two-car crash

In Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners
a bid from Direct Market Data Systems was accepted for a new
computer system which will be Installed In Meigs County Court.
. According to Linda Bentz, an employee In county court, the
new computer sys tern will ''help tremendously In cu ttlng down
on all things done by hand," .
The computers will allow quicker research of cases and
retrieval of Information, (leeplng track of fines, checking of
warrants, and the disbursement of receipts. The system will
also save tlnle on the amount of work that goes Into preparing
lbe jury venires.
·
. Not only will the new new system cut down on the amount of
hand writtl!n work that has to be dorle but It will also save
. C011!1nued on page 12

.

'

Meigs residents Gdonate -66 units of blood
Elg!Jty·flve people attended
blood' drive for the .
'American Red Cross
Bloodmobile
The drive obtained 66 units of
blood and 28 of those units were
given In appreciation for blood
received by a relative or friend.
First time donors were Enbch
Staats, Linda Hallet, and Melody
Ramsburg.
Multiple gallon donors were ·
Paula Wood, one gallon; Bruce
Hawley, Mary E . .curtis, and
Hazllee Riebel, two gallons; and
J,.lnda L. Haley, five gallons.
Medical · personnel present
were Dr. James Wltherall and
Dr. Wilma Mansfield and nurses
Lenora l,elfhelt and Beulah
Ward.
Clerical workers assisting
were Jean Nease, tarolyn Bar·
ton, Mary Crow, Tracy O'Dell,
Libby Fisher, Peggy Harris, the
Racine emergency squad and
Edward Cozart, and a reoresenWedn~sday's

tatlve of the Vietnam Vets E. Snouffer, WllliamE.Snouffer, Jqhn$on, a_nd Ripley, W.Va.
Gerald Rought. Janei P. Leffle, donoru Include Mary J'ane Staats
Motorcycle Club.
Workers from the Retired Harry L. Leffle, VIrgil K. Win· and Enock J . Staats.
Donors from Middleport ln.- •
Senior Volunteer Program as- don, Geoffrey A. Wilson, Adell L.
slsdng were Marlon Ebersbach, White, Danny R. White. Harold. elude Linda L. Haley. Jean A,
Durst, Leafy M. Chasteen, ChaDorothy Long', Polly Hysell, W. Brinker, Pamela J. Miller,
rles P .. Gerard, ~ariih J. Fowler,
Wanda Fetty, Joyce Hoback. Carolyn A. Charles, John F.
Kenneth Imboden. Cyllnda L.
Florence Rlchwrds , Evelyn Snyder, Deborah L. Grueser,
Wartier, Gerald Wildermuth, · William W. Radford, John S. Frederick, Jacqueline L. Wams Foster, and Loretta A. Brown.
ley, Tamara J. Nelson , Giorla J .
Lula' Hampton, Evelyn Gilmore,
Peavley, and William H. Moody.
Reedsville donors Include Jo·
and Mace! Barton.
·
Racine donors were Jeanette
The canteen was served by the seph· D. - Marcinko. Roxie A.
Marcinko,
Mace!
S.
Barton,
•·
M.
Radford, Han;ey Po It er,
Middleport Child Conservation
Carolyn S. Barton, and Fonda G.
Grace Holter, Betty. V. Sayre,
Leai!ue.
·
Donors from Pomeroy Include Thomas.
Paula A. Brown. VIrginia M.
Donors from Syracuse Include Bland, Linda Holter, Mary E.
Paul F. Marr, Bryan S. Shank,
Curtis, Marie H. Bush, Michael
·Brenda S. Cunningham, Janet M. David F. Lawson, Kathy J.
Ambrose, Lenora J . McKnight, Cumings, Deborah 'A. Lowery . J. Brown, Laura K. Hart, and
David M. King, William L. Tei:!1.sa Tyson-Drummer. and
Frederick R. Thompson. ·
Fro,m Long Bottom, the'donors
Buckley, Janet K. Peavley, Mau· Richard G. Ash.
Residents from Rutland who include Laura! I.,. Hawley, Bruce
E . Hennessy, Thtllnas ,E.
Molden, Wilma A. Mansfield, donated blood were· Marta H.
Hawley, Paula J. Wood. Hazilee
Howard P. Logan. Dan E . Blackwood, Fred H. George, Riebel, and Linda L. Edwards.
Donors from Langsville In·
Follrod, Linda J . Harrison, Scott Avanell George, Donna M. Da·
A. Elcblnger, Debra D. Mora, vldson, and Mary E. Davidson.
elude Ellis E. Myers and Alva B.
Melody Ravsburg. Betty J .
Mason. W.Va. donors Include Clark.
Lowe, Patricia J . Barton, Gary Sharon L. Lelfie and Brian E.

reen

Committee fortned to restore Reedsville voting precinct
Approximately 60 area rest·
dents, county and local officials
and political candidates al tended
a meeting of t)le Committee for
the Restoratipn of the Reedsville ·.
Voting Precinct held last week at
the Olive Township fire house .
Maxine , Whitehead, cochairman, after lntrbduclng the
committee, Hugh Martln,1 Grant
Smith, Ila Westfall, Inez Bornlog, Margaret Cauthorn, and
Ruth Anne Balde'rson, read ex·
cerpts from copies of the Melgjl
County Board of Elections meet·
lng minutes pertaining. to the .
dissolution o! . th~ Fteedsvllle
Precinct.
She noted that unfavQrab~

condllloqs . of the voting place statute to mean that the change
the Reed~ ville Voting Precinct.
rep9rtedly' found by the board's cannot occur In the year central
Jones stressed that the Issue I&amp;
director. Jane Frymyer, had not committee tnembers are elected
not a "political problem" bUt a
been mentioned In the minutes of which In this Instance would' "people problem" and Indicated
February meetings In 1989. Mrs. mean during 1990.
that the desires of the peopl«:
However, she said that It Is the
Whitehead had earlier Indicated
should be considered oy the
that she understood thOse condl· committee's Interpretation that
board. There were also .brief
tionswere a factor In the decision the statute means the change
remarks from George Collins,
cannot occu~ from the first day of . countY. treasurer. Paui'Life, Joe
for closing the ·precinct.
Other Issues dlscusseil at the January to the May primary , J-antz, an.d Ernie Bar.J'Inger,
meeting was Ihe board's Inter- date. Interpretation by an attor- Olive Township trustees. Candl·
pretation o! the ~tatute concern- ney Is being sought, Mrs. Whitedates for central committee
Ina th"! period of time that must head reported.
posts we~ Introduced. IncumAmong thoae attending and
elapse before precinct. boundar·
bents Melody Roberts and Dorset
les may be changed. Mrs. White- speakbtg at the tneetlng were
Larkins expressed their support
head sale! . that 1t. was her Rich Jones and Manning Roush.
as well as candidates Alison
understan!Jing that the Board of · Meglp County Commissioners
Cauthorn-Krless and Kirk Reed.
Elections had Interpreted the who encourage those attending to
Refreshments were served. • •
continue t{\lr efforts to regain

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