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•

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r---Local briefs----.
Hearing scheduled
The Public Uti)ities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) will hold; a
hearing on Wednesday, April 24, at 10 am., atlbe Meigs Coun!y
Multipwpose SeniQr Cilizens Cen~e;r, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
concerning extended· area telephone service between lhe Shade and
Pomeroy excl)anges GTE North lncorponued. The hearing is open
10 ~public.

Telephone book changes
Residents·in the Pomeroy-MiddleP."!' area should report chan$es
· for the 1991 telephone book by April26, Gary Bates, local semce
manager for GTE Telephone ~ons said today.
· Customen wanting to change, correct tr add listings should caB
lhe company's service cenu:r, GaleS said.
A customer planning to move or stan new service before June 28
also s~ld call by the deadline to be listed .in the new book, he
said.
GTE's director delc!line applies to customers in Pomeroy, Middleport, Letart Falls, Portland, Racine, and Rutland. New books are
scheduled for delivery in late June.
· ,
The toll-free number of GTE's service center is listed on page 2
of the current directory, Bales said.
·

I'

,I

Shoemaker...

continued from page 1

Monday; April 15., 1991

,.

Flood watch remains in southern Ohio ·
By United I'm&amp; International
ties and lhe mid 70s over soulhern
Damp weather will continue sections of Ohio.
across lhe Buckeye State Monday
On the weather map, a low presand rainfall amounts should aver- sure system was over northern Indiage ft!OWld one-quar~e;r of an inch, ana with a warm front north across
but lhe National Weather Service lower Michigan and a cold front
said min may be heavy a1 time in south 10 Louisiana.
lhunde111tonns.
.
The low will continue to move ·
People in soulhem Ohio where a north to the northern Great Lakes
flood wa!Ch is in effect should con- Monday evening as the cold front
tinue 10 monitor rivers and streams sweeps east across Ohio.
and be prepared 10 move to higher By Tuesday an .~· of !ligh pres- .
ground if flooding begins or a sure· over the Plains States will
warning is issued.
move to lhe lower Ohio Valley.
The rain will end from west 10
It was cloudy across Ohio Sllneast across lhe swe as a cold front &lt;18y night with showers. and thunpushes across Ohio. High tempera- derstorms mainly across the south. lures will mnge from 65 10 75.
em and western counties. TemperaSkies will clear Monduy night·as tures were in lhe lower 60s across
a high pr~ssure brings drier and southern Ohio and in the lower 50s
cooler air to Ohio. Overnight lows across the northern portions of the
will be in lhe lower to mid 40s.
stale.
The dry weather will continue
Rainfall was generaUy less lhan
into Tuesday liS lhe high pressure one-quarter of an inch across Ohio
· moves 10 the lower Ohio Valley. in the last 24 hours. Ashland in
Tuesday will be mostly sunny · Ashland Count; reported the
across the entire state with highs in largest amoWll o eighl)'-six hun_ the mid 60s over the norlhem coun- dreds of an inch.

'
NATIONAl WE~THE~ FORECAST FAOIIIAM

~16-IHO TAM ~11-11

'

Pick 3i055
Pick 4: 2293

Cards : K-H, 3-C
.
A-D; K·S

Page3

WEATHER MAP- A cold frOnt wUI move over the Atlantic
from the east coast but will stUI produce rain showers In the North·
east and s~theastern states. A low pressure system will move Into
the central Rockies producing snow in the hi1her elevatioas. Tile .
Plains and Midwest wiU be,mostly sunny and mild.
··

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

.best interests of lite senior citizens considered but she said A£11, even
receiving services to have those ·wilh legislative cohsideradons, will
Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio '
services discontinued, that now give no guarantee of keeping the
Wednesday
lbrough Friday
Variable cloudiness tonight, low
with some additional assistance mine open.
Fair
Wednesday,
lows in the .
in the middle 40s. West winds 5 to
. being provided through Options for
She encour11ged residents to
40s.
Highs
in
the
middle
60s to
two brothers, Carl Nottingham, 15 mph. The chance of rain is 20
Helen Frazier
Elders they can stay in !heir own write to AEP noting that the decimiddle
70s.
A
chance
of
showers
Chester; and Jack Nottingham, percent.
homes; wilhout it, they may have to sion as to fuel switching or scrubij:unlington, W.Va.
Sunny Tuesday with the high 70 and thunderstorms Thursday and
go into nursing homes, a more bers will affect everyone, and that
Helen Augusta Frazier, 84, of
Friday, lows in the lower 40s to
Services will be held Tuesduy at to75.
expensive care alternative.
Cheshire, died early Sunduy, April 2 p.m. at lhe Heck FWleral Home
the decision will be made by the
lower 50s. Highs in the middle 60s
Rep. Abel said that she and Sen. management of AEP. She said that . 14, 1991, at Veterans Memorial in Milton, W.Va. with Rev. Clark
10 middle 70s.
Long
are
commiUed
10
doing
wha1Hospital
.
.
while
1,258
actual
jobs
are
threat, .
Baker officiating. Burial wilr be in
She was born in Kyger on June the Forest Memorial Park near Milever as necessary to preserve the ened, six other jobs are dependent
jobs at the Meigs Mane and still on each one of lhe mining jobs. 20, 1906, the daughter of lhe late ton, W.Va. Friends may call a1 the
comply wilh lhe Federal Clean Air "That's economic disaster," she Darius and Nancy (Phelps) Rupe. funeral home on Monduy from 6-9 ·
Act
She was 8 homemaker and attended p.m.
concluded.
Meigs Coun!y Sheriff )ames M. dents' teachers by May 6, 1991
·
'
She said that contacts have · . Su!) Maison, party chairman, the Kyger Baptist Church and the
Soulsby has announced the rules before 11 a.m.
Prizes
will
be
furnished
by
local
been made with Ainerican Electtic emceed lhe dinner meeting, and Silver Run Baptist Church.' ·
which will govern his department's
Charles Mathews
She is survived by her son,
bu~nesses.
· Power and the management piano music was presented by
"Law Enforcement Poster Conencouraged 10 install scrubbers so Charles Scott She introduced sev- William Frazier and a daughter,
Charles Myles Mathews, 68, of test".
lhat the high-sulfur coal from lhe eral guests including Sheriff James Patricia Frazier, both of Cheshire; Cross St, Racine, died unexpectedAll Meigs County children in
Meigs Mine can continue to be Soulsby, and party chairmen from
two sisters, Gamet Rife, Coalton, ly Saturduy, April 13, 1991, a1 his the 4th, 5th and 6th grades may
used. Some legislation is also being Atliens and Monroe Counties.
and Gaye Sowards, Gallipolis; and residence.
·
enter the contest, and all entries
several nieces and nephews.
Born on March 26, 1923 at ! must be made solely ·by lhe child.
Besides her parents, she was ' Alvon, w. va. , he was lhe son of 1
They should be dmwn free hand
preceded in death by her husband, h 1 Ch 1 F
M th
William in 1982, five brothers and I e ate ares arrest a ews (no stencils) and lhe student may
Meigs County Emergency Med- Warren D. McLain, who waS taken
five sisters.
and Mary V. McElheney Mathews. use cmyons, markers and colored
ical Services answered 19 calls for to O'Bieness. At 8:52 a.m., SyraServices will be Tuesday at 2 He was a painter, a veteran of ' pencils. The theme for the poster
assistance over the weelcend.
cuse squad went to to Pomeroy
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home with Wa.ld War II, U. S. Navy, and a should be written on lhe pOster, and
AI 9:15 a.m., Syracuse squad Nursing and Rehab Center for ElizRev. Ed Boyer officiating. Burial member of the Veterans of Foreign the child's name and school should
went to Welchtown Hill for Her- abeth McLintoch, who was talcen to
wiU he in Gmvel Hill Cemetery.
. wa::~ ~:=by lhree dough- be placed on the back of the poster.
' man· Redman , who was taken to Veterans. AI 11:21 a.m., Rutland
The three themes ate "Don '1
Friends
may
call
at
lhe
funeral
ters, Mrs. Daniel (Pam) Riffle ,
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 9:54 squad went to State Route 160 and
Talk
to Stran,ers" (4th Grade),
home
from
3
p.m.
to
5
p.m.
and
1
Racine,
Mrs.
Randy
(Gena)
Lilly,
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mul- took Ellis Ward to Veterans. At
"Just
'No " (5th Grade) and
berry for Helen Millet, and trans· 11 :46 a.m., Rutland squad to
P·'hW~ wiU be Richard Dilf, Ironto", and Crystal Simpson, "CrimeSayPrevention"
(6th Gmde).
!
Syracuse; a son and duughter-inported her to Veterans Memorial Happy Hollow Road. Brenda Faulk
be
no
larger
than
Posters
should
Keith
Youns.
Leonard
Weiman,
law,
Charlie
Jr.
and
Rita
Mathews,
Hospital. At 10:10 a.m., Racine vias transported to Pleasant VaUev.
Sh_ennan Weunan, Steve Ltttle and · Racine, lO grandchil~n. and one regular posterboard.
squad was sent to COWlty Road 28 A1 12 18
p
d
There will be a fii'St, secQJid and
for Thomas McKay Ill, and trans:
p.m., omeroy squa
Mike Lattle.
great-grandchildre", and a special
lhird place prize for each grade. All
- ported him to Holzer Medical Cen- · went to Pomeroy Nursing and
friend, An HiU, Racine.
William Hughes
~b Center for Tracy Simpkins,
students
participating will receive
Funeral services will be held a1
u:r. At 8:49p.m., Middleport squad wbo was taken to Veterans. At 1:18
ribbons and all fii'St place posters
W'lli Ri hard "Bill" H
11 am. Thursduy atlhe Letaq Falls will be placed in various businesses
was sent to Village Manor in Mid- p;m., Racil)e squad was sent to .
'
am
c
u
.
es,
Cemetery
Cliapel. The Rev. Steve
dleport for Donald VanCooney.-He County Road 35 for Rebecca
·
71, Chest.er, form~rly of M~ ton, Deaver will officiate and burial for display.
was taken to Veterans. At9:13 Lawrence. Ai 2:41 p.m., Racine
There
will
also
be
a
lsi,
2nd and
W.Va.,
d!ed
Satur~ay,
A~nl
13,
will
be
in
lhe
Letart
Falls
Cemep.m., Rutland squad went 10 Meigs ·
1991 at the Pomeroy Nursmg and ·,. ray. Friends may call at the Ewing 3rd place prize overall. Those three
Mine 2 for Milton Baker, Sr., and squad weilt to Shrinets Park for
RehabilitaliOI! Center. ,
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 p.m. winning ·posters will be placed In •
transported him to O'Bieness Eric Shultz. At 2:50p.m., Rudund
squad went to Kingsbury Road for
Born March 25, 1920 in Cabel Wednesday. Military. rites will be the sheriff's booth at the Meigs
Memorial Hospital. At 9:21 p.m., Walter Mullins, who was dead on
County, W.Va., .he was a son of lhe conducted at graveside by the County Fair this August. All
Pomeroy squad was sent to East
late Maggie Hughes. He was a VFW
posters must he turned in to lhe stuMain. Myron Bailey was .taken rn arrival. At 2:55 p.m., Middleport
farmer
and
a
member
of
lhe
United
·
r
squad
went
.
1
0
Middleport
Sundry
Veterans. At 9:45 p.m., Middleport Store for William Van Meter, who
Pentecostal Church in Middleport,
r-----------------~:7"'"---------'---------:-:squad went to Locust Street for was taken to Veterans ~ At 3:36
Mr. Hughes is survived by folD'
Richard Ward, who was taken to ·
sisters, Mrs. Fmnltie King, Milton,
Veterans. .
·
'
p.m., Pomeroy sq11ad went to
W.Va; Helen Wrlghtsel, HWltingKingsbury Road and took Helen
· On ·SWlduYat 4:15 am., R utland. Mull' to V
A 4 19
ton, W.Va.; Annie Pritt, Cleveland;
unit was sent to Meigs Mine 2 for
IDS
eterans. t : p.m.,
and
Mary Ruth Moore, Columbus;
Rudund squad went to Laurel Cliff
and transported Sharon Smith to
Veterans. At 7:53 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Page Street for Claro
Baker, who went to Veterans.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dinner dance to be held
Plans
have been finalized for a
r~port
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSdinner and dance at the Fenney
Gallipolis Stockyards C!!.
Robert Sheley, Middleport; Flossie
Benneu Post of the American
· April 6, 1991
Allensworth, Middl~port; Agnes
Legion sponsored by the Middle.
Brown, Middleport; Sherw.ood Medium Frame, Steers:
pan Arts Council on SWlduy.
250-300 lbs., 96.00-125.00;
Merideth, Racine; Earl Reed,
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
300-500 lbs., 92.50-112.00;
Pomeroy; Greg Williams, Middle-·
with dance to follow . The cost is
500-700 lbs., 75.00-93.00;
porL
$28 per couple and tickets may be
700-Up
65.00-76.00.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESpurchased at Mick's Barber Shop
Medium Frame, Hellen:
None.
in Pomeor_y, King's ServiceStar
250-300 lbs., 81.50-100.00;
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS and Dairy Queen in Middleport, or
' 300-500 lbs., 79.00-93.50;
Max Folmer, Long Bouom: Tracy
by mail to Mary Wise, 522 South
500-700 ')r.·· 75.00-87 .50;
Simpkins, Pomeroy; WiUiam VanThird Ave. in Middleport,
700' Up 60.00-74.00.
sickle, Pomeroy; Elizabeth McinButcher
cowS:
tosh, Pomeroy; Cleo Baker, MidPor!land PfO to meet
.
Utilities, 51.00-58.00.
The
Portland
PfO
will
hold
a
Canner/Cutters, 43.00-53.00.
Y DISCHARGES
Light weight low grade cows, special meeting April 23 at 7 p.m.
William Van Meter.
at the grade school.
.
43 .00-Down.
Heiferettes, Up 10 68.50.
Hospitllized
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
Marcella
Custer, 313'1·Fairwond
300-800 lbs. 67.00-90.50.
Am ElePower ......................29 7/8
Avenue,
MinersviUe,
is a patient at
Butcher Bull:
·
Ashland Oil ... :.................... 32 5/8
Doctor's
Hospital
West
in ColumUtilities, 61.50-70.00.
AT&amp;T ...................................35 5/8
bus.
Cards
may
be
sent'
to her at
Canner/Cutter, 51.00-58.00.
Bob Evans ............................ 18 5/8
DociOr's Hospital, Room No. 208,
Veal Calves:
··
Charming Shop ..................... 15 7/8
Columbus.
Choice/prime, 95.00-107.00.
CIIY Holding .. :...... :..................... l7
Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Federal Mogul ......................16 5/8
Democrats to meet
Sprinaer
Cows:
Goodyear T&amp;R ........................... 23
The
Meigs
County Democratic
t
''
775.00 &amp; down.
Key Centurion ...................... 12 1(1
Executive
Committee
will
meet
Cow/Calf Com.:
Lands' End ................................. 23
Thursday at 7 p.m. in lhe Carpen900.00-down.
i
Limited Inc...........................29 3/8 ·
ter's Hall. Public is invited.
Baby
Calves:
Multimedia 1nc.....................78 114
175.00 &amp; down.
Rax RestaUmnl ......................... .?/8
Dot Alomeet
Butcher Sows:
Robbins&amp;Myers .........................27
The Chester Council No. 323
4()0-600 lbs.• 43.50-47.00.
Shoney's Inc ......................... I 7 1/4
Daughters
of America will meet at
TopHop: ·.
Star Bank ..............................22 1/4
the
Chester
Fire House Tuesduy at
220-250 lbs., 48.00-49.00.
Assure the quality of your heat pump
Wendy lnt'l. ........................ 10 1(1
·
8
p.m
,
due
to damaged roof at
Butcher
Boars:
Worthington Ind. .. ................24,1(1
•
installation by using a cenitied Comfun
··
lodge hall.
39.00-41.50.
,
Assured
Comtpn Assured dealers ";'
·
have the experience, expertise, 8lld technical .
.
how to properly install your heat pump. ~know because they
proved it to us. They faced the demanding Refrigeration Service
Engineers Society (R.S. E.S.) certification exam that the Society
administered. Only dealers with R.S.E.S.-cenified installers can
display our Comfort Assured emblem.
'
~·re proud of the experience, technical e~tpertise, and
professionalism Of these dealers. Call Ohio 1\lwet, and we'll
introduce you to the.C.o mfurt Assured dealer lleSrest you.

Poster contest rules announced .

Meigs squad answers 19 calls

.

Vol. 41, No. 251

IIospital news

Livestock

'

~DA

By BRIAN J. REED
ject at Beech Grove Cemetery
Sentinel News StafT
. which has been in the planning
· PomerQy Village Council dis- stages for several months. Pro. cussed this summer's road projects posed costs on all of lhe projects
and lbe upgrading of the village are being withheld by the council
sewer plant during Monduy night's pel'ding submission of bids.
regular session.
In addition, Anderson updated
Council made plans to pave council on progress on a new
seven village 'sireets: Chester Street sewage treatment system for the
. near Route 33, which is currently village. According to Anderson,
panially brick and partially black- funding for the $1.2 million project
· top ; Spring Valley Lane from is now in place and bids will be
: Spring Avenue to lhe Ohio Power advertised as soon .as design and
office behind the stadium; Liberty engineering work is completed.
·Lane, Vale Street, Wehe Termce,
Anderson projected the dute for
· Union Ttrrace and a portion of bids to be awarded and lhe dute for
:Prospect Hill.
.
construCtion commencement to be
Village Administrator John August1, wilh construction expect. , Anderson discussed a paving pro- ed to end by December, 1992.

Extensive discussion was held
on lhe village's new zoning ordinance, which council recently
voted to approve. The Ohio
Revised Code requires the council
to appoint a zoning officer and two
olher boards, a three-member Zoning Planning Commission and a
five-member Board of Zoning·
Appeals,
.
'rhe zoning officer, according to
Legal Advisor Patrick O'Brien, is
responsible for nOtifying officials
of zoning ordinance violations and
overseeing removal of structures in
violation. Council ap(!Ointed
Anderson to fill the posation of
zoning officer last night, and Council President Larry Wehrung stated ·

By United Press Iaternatlonal
Marvin Warner's lawyers have
filed a 'Rrit of habeas corpus in federal Cot!n in an a!templ to keep the
fanner Cincinnati rmancier out of

prislln. .

Riffe blasts Gov. Voinovich
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ~
Ohio House Speaker Vernal Riffe
Jr., D- Wheelersburg,, says Gov.
George. Voinovich, a Republican,
should stick to running the executive bmnch of govemm~nt.

&gt;

Cemetery fees now payable
The annual fee for care of graves at Beech Grove Cemetery is ·
now payable.
·
The charge is $5 a grave and checks are to be made out to the
Beech ·Grove Cemetery Trustees and mailed to Pomeroy Village
Hall, c/o Pat Thoma, Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Name.seminar speaker
Dr. James E. Althop, Ph.D. will he the speaker at the Thursday

session of the Alzheimer's Disease and Rela!ed Disorders Support
Group meeting to be held at 1:15 at ~e SeniorCitizensCe!'ter. .
Dr. Althof is a psychologast, and as the owner and chmcal darec10! of Althof and Associates, providing outpatient psychotherapy as
weU as consulting to business and industry. He will spealdng on the
topic "Learning to Aecept Things We Cannot Change and Why We
Deny Unpleasant Things in Our ~ives."
,
..
As explained by Sharon Wnght, pro~ram director, When we
deal with a chronic illness such as Alzheuper's disease or a related
disorder, changes in our life style become daily. We must teaa;n to
accept our limitations and learn to deal walh th~ reahty of our snualion. Denying you have a problem and not copmg only compounds
lhe problems( .
.
.
Registration wall began at 1:15 w1th Dr. Althof to speak_at 1:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served a~ 2:30p.m. and the sessaon w1ll
resume at 2:45 for another hour of dascuss1on.
'I

j
t

.

Patrol charges Pomeroy man
man was c_har.ged and _cited in a one:truclt. crash
A Pomeroy
e R 18
1
Monduy at 7:25 p.m. in Scapto TIJW!'shap on · · . 'on~ mt e east
of lhe jWlclion of S.R. 143, according to the Gallia-Metgs Post of
theStateHighwayPauol.
·
Timothy M. Herdman, 29, of 3703~ Kingsbury l_td., was c~ged
'th DWI, ca'ted for driving on an expired regastrauon and domg so
Wl

.

wi~':~~ce::· heading west when he w~l off the _right side of
lhe road and Man embankJ!Ient. Aceordm~ to the mvesugau!"g
r's repon, Herdman claimed that an unulentafied van ran ham
troope
off the road.

I

I

Riffe, in a news release Monday, criticized Voinovich for
threatening to close as many as 79
state liquor stores unless his bill is
passed to turn all the liquor stores
over to private business.

----Local briefs-~--.

~

,

Director/Development Director Elizabeth
Schaad, and Oblo Power Area Manager Ernie
Sisson. "Tbe check," Sisson said Monday, "is.
another step in Ohio Power's commitment .
toward the communit:y and the people that we
serve." All together, Ohio Power has made a
three-year commitment of $2,000.

CHAMBER RECEIVES CHECK- The
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce received
a $SOO check from Ohio Power Monday anernoon liS part or the utility company's three-year
commitment to the chamber director's office.
Pictured left to rigbl are Chamber board member Tom Reed; Chamber E.xecutive

.:

~~~=~·~::!:;

COIItinued on page 10

.,

____.
L------~----------:-;.;..
.
l

that he would recommend a list of
nominees for the olher .two.boards
at council's next meeting.
The Zoning Planning Commission will .be responsible for amendments and changes in the zoning
law, as well as reviewing new construction and structural changes.
The third board, the Board of
Zoning Appeals, will review the
decisions of the zoning officer,
hear appeals and issue any variances to the ordinance.
Meigs County Parle District
Director Mary Powell spoke to .
council last night about 8 proposal
10 construct a ball field on the for.
mer Sugar Run School piope.ty.
According to Powell, she has
been in contact with Mike Young "
and Roger Abbott, who are active

in the village's "pee-wee" and Lit·tie League baseball progmms, and
bolh indicated lhat their programs
were experiencing difficulty in
scheduling game and pr_actice time
at the field at Meigs High School.
Powell requested that council
provide funds for equipment for the
field, such as backstops and· bases
from a fund established within the
district for recreational facilities.
Council asked that Powell check ·
into lhe possibility of Meigs High
School vocational (lrograms providing welding servtces and asked .
that she check jnto the price of lhe
proj~t before they discussed the
funding.
Powell also spoke briefly about
a downtown revitalization program
through the Ohio Department of

Development. The prQgram provides matching funds for improv~
parlcing, streetscaping, and building
improvement~.
,
In other action, council: .
.
-Discussed the possibility of
conlnlCting with a trash service for
a spring clean up within the village;
-Discussed the possible installa'
·tion of cable service on Pleasant
Ridge;
·
-Discussed the need 'for the village to cut weeds on its proper!y oil
West Main Street.
Attending, in addition to Ande~­
son 11nd Wehrung were: Council.
members Bruce Reed, Bryan
Shan!C, Betty Baronick, Thomas
Werry, and Bill Young; Cler~
Brenda Morris and Mayor Richara
Seyler.
·

Warner's lawyers_try again to
keep their client out ofjail

Stocks

d~er.

•

Pomeroy Council to pave 7 village streets

.

Announcements

••

1 Section 10 Poge&lt;~ Z5 cenll.
A Muldmedlo Inc. Newap~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, Aprll16, 1991

·eopyrtghlod 111111

fc

'

· Low tonight in upper 40s.
Wednesday, sunny.

•

---Area deaths---

I

Ohio Lottery

Hussein cops
95th Boston
Marathon

Riffe
also
condemned
Voinovich ' s threat to veto campaign finance reform legislation
unless it contains restrictions on
labor union conttibutions.
"The Ohio Constitution provides for a separation of powers in
this state," said Riffe. "! have
•lways welcomed input from the
governor's office on any and all
legislation. However, threats are
not lhe way to advance an agenda.
"I sincerely hope that in the
. future , the governor will run the
executive branch and leave the le$islative branch to legislatolll," saad
Riffe.
Curt Steiner, a spokesman for
the governor, said Riffe's comments were based on a "mischaracterization" of a recent report
quoting a memo from John Hall,
director of the Department of
Liquor Control, on the closing of
liquor stores.
.
Steiner said lhe deparnnent has
aulhority under state law to close
.unprofitable liquor stores in areas
or low demand.

The ~!ilion was filed Monduy
in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati
just hours after the U.S. Supreme
Court denied W~~n~er's appeal of
his 19117 ~onvictjon pn .ae.cllriliCs
fraud lriii'Odier-chatiies Stemming
from the 198S collapse of his
Home State Savings Bank.
The habeas corpus petition
seeks to rescind Warner's 3 1/2
year prison sentence on grounds his
conslitudonal rights were violated
repeatedly duriog his four-month
trial in Cincinnati. The pelition also
asks all state proceedings be
d~layed until this latest appenl is
decided.
Warner, lhe fanner owner of the
now-defunct Home State Savings,
was convicted on six counts of
unauthorized acts in conoection
with wire transfers , and three
counts of securities violations.
lri addition to the prison term,
he was ordered to pay $12.2 million in restitution and $250,000 in
court costs to lhe state. The $12.2
. million figure was reduced from
$22 million by the Ohio Supreme
Court and is stilf subject to discussion in lower court.
The decision by the U.S .
Supreme Court not to hear· this case
also means David Schiebel, former-president of Wamer' s Home
State, will face six months in
prison and five months probation
for his conviction on lhree counts
of securities violations.
Home State collapsed in 1985 ·
after losing $144 million in investments in ESM Government Securities Inc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
when that f11111 went bankrupt. The
demise of Home State triggered a
run on 69 olher state-chlrtered, privately insUred Ohio thrifts.
This run prompted fonner Gov.
Richard Celeste to close lhe S&amp;Ls,
Some were sold or consolidated ·
and many reopened within three
monlhs. The state put $129 million
into the reopening of thrifts and
recovered $134 million through lhe .

courts.

Warner's and Schiebel's convictions came two yeats after the collapse, but his conviction was overturned in 1989 by lhe Hamilton
County Appeals Court. Warner's
auomeys appealed his conviction
on grounds he received an unfair

trial.

They argued he had no knowledge he was not llljthorized to !Rake
the g~tion&amp;ble m~MY tr8}1sfera . .
Tiley also said ffiat one or the
juron "hated" Warner and another
had a relative with money in the
state S&amp;Ls when the collapse
occurred. The attorneys also said

that instructions given to the jur
were changed at the last minute.
Special State Prosecute
Lawrence Kane argued that th
convictions were overturned o
technical, procedural issues and n.o .
the merits of the ~ilt or innocence
of Warncr or SchaebCI.
It has taken almost six years and ,
just over $6 million in legal fees
joe the ' ~ to fullx. pro!lll4;Ute ,Ibis .,
case. Former Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze was in ch~ge
of invcstipting and prosecuting the
case and brought iri Kane to handle
lhe raslr:.

BEATS LAST MINUTE RUSH ·- Midnight Monday was the
filing deadline rorl990 income taxes. Meias County residents :
rushed to heat the clock in order to avoid penalties. According to
Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Reuter, his orrace received a full box or
IRS-bound mail Monday, including the returns or Jim Schael!el,
above. ··
·

James A. Diehl, Jr., 70, retired educator, ~ies
Retired Meigs High School
He was a vetemn of the U. S. Yeager Diehl, two daughters and
Principal James Andrew Diehl, Jr.. Army, World War II, having served sons-in-law, Charlene and Ron
70, of 510 Mulberry Heij!hts, from 1942 to 1945.
Pomeroy, died Monduy, Aprdl5,
·Mr. Diehl was active in many
1991, at the Holzer Medicai'Cenu:r, church, community and civic
Gallipolis.
affairs. He was a member or lhe
Mr. Diehl retired. in 1982 as Sacred Heart Catholic Chureh, a
principal of Meigs High School, a past president of the Middleportposition he had held since t~e Pomeroy Rotary Club, •d chairMeigs Local School District con- man of the Meigs County Chilsolidation in 1968. From 1954 until dren's Trust Fund. He KrVed on
then he was principal of Pomeroy th'e Meigs County Council of
High School. Prior to that, 1945 to Aging Advisory Board, was on the
1954 • Mr · D'te hi taug hI and Board o f D'~rectors o f the Me1gs
'
coached foolball and basketball at Bmnth, American Heart AJiociaWahama High School.
tion, and a member of Drew WebHe graduated from Wahama sterPost39, American Leaion.
High School in 1938, received his
Born on Au~. 15. 19211' at Hllrlbachelor'.s degree from Marshall ford, W. Va., he was lhe 1011 of lhe
Universi!y in 1942 and his master's
late James A. ~hi. Sr., IUid Lena
· de~ in ,administration from Ohio Gibbs Diehl.
.
. .
JAMES A. DIEHL
Umversaty'm 1!154.
· He is survived by hil w1fe, Ida
~
.
/

-

Rutherford of Brighton, Ind ., and
Jo Ellen and 1ohn Yeary of South
Charleston, W, Va; two grandchildren, Jim Rutherford and Philip
Yeary; two step-granddaughters,
Machelle Tribble and Tracey
Rutherford; and 8 brother and sis- •
ter·in-law, Earl Edward IIIII Juanita
Diehl, South Charleston, W.Va.
A Mass of ChriJtian Burial wiU
be celebrated at lhe Sacred Heart
Catholic: Chun:h at noon Thursday
with lhe Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz and
lbe Rev. Fr. Anthony Giannamore
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery.
' Friends may call at lhe funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p.m. A vigil service will be
held at 8:45 p.m. ln lieu of flowers
donations may be mlde to
American Heart Association.

-

tile

v

'

�Comment
Wc-tllib I
.
. . . .. GMt
DBVOIIlDTO fta INniiDn GriD =py= ••M'C au&amp;
'

.
•

CIIQIDIJt JIOUUl:ll

'HMP

G

111•·•:

PHWWJJ *WID
' 1 , r za • 1 tc twA•

•

A llfEIII!IlR lll'nP tl1diM Pnnlal&amp; Mlk••l llllud Dally Pnss
,..__.._,
ltaaNtw z perhblisll!nA...rtatJaa.

•

LEI JERSOF-.JN"JON~u•• MP "'''li!yslaalcJbt-lssdaaa•
. . . . . . . OionoluR 'jectiD-Ii$-~IIP_s..-­

......_........
-

?'

_

_.l

III!L

• t . Non'&amp; eUoflaswUIIIe ..~
JIIIId..te.~--·--.,......u.

WASIDNGI'ON - U.S. buops
,.,.... tiaoliocs fnllll tk PtrGtdf w.- will come bKt 10

milillry . _ lbll'Jbay Sl8l
.• Mili..-y- ... saffaed
CC•!*n•iraDy wllea die buops left
will saffcr P"
ndy with dleir
I - . &amp;a&amp;
W"llla die - Clll&amp; of die~. tk
II g • IIIIIIUMJW JC1 dowiiiO lhe

clr&lt;z y of ....... i!s DMIIimbs..
l)pms of t.:s laOIS die ......y
ue likely to be clliuiaatcd to
dicetkP •ll"sbrl&amp; I
'1111: p
g •• las ia 0'11111 idea
o{ wlaicb bases sboald JO, bal
bc:6B die clcldlnw; •s• siped,
lbe Ina .... •retde wOIJII*IC·
live """""'n of Cueeu wbo •
an for~ lases- iD .......e

wrn.. Dictia-

elle"s-..
H a Anay plm 10 sflut dowa

C)wwwjnr!e,

Cou&amp;t !Jl

--~ ..........'"....... ,...

Rep.

ad 11 1 • ..:11 of ia 1
cb
vma. 2000 ckea't - loot
ud ~ facililics is ay &amp;ood c.· ..,cr. ll's cx.-sive. II
iMic • ., of 11ow die bnias wu1: a
10 ,_,ldin&amp; a - c:ily •
lbe ~ 1·
lbelllllclllilillly
..r
de
Reclsw
011 de- Ollt·
., - · . •- .._
. ~ ..r..__._
_• Ancaal
_...._ .. _.II.
-

m ... a...,.. pCUid

011dle ' - • • · c• ime.
'1111: Anay Mllaiel. Co
,..
bas drafted IB i' all do
Ill

lakiae a wrcctia&amp; ball 1o lbe
Army's ~micr rescartll ud
cltvdupn eM !Jaljric:s, wllicb procalled "'ViliOD 2000; . . . dKI:II die lallb. l!eliooplen llld
crilia iasjdc lbc Amly are aow -•ukalioas eqllipmelll dlat
c:al1iD&amp; '"Myopic Visic!a 2000.• It tKdul so wdl iD Operaiol De8l:rt
1'*"&gt;11••1!!111'¥1!: •tJUiiic llld IDOW.. 8aonD..
11 least fu.r lllldlive rac3fdl ad
The Aim, :gys Visiou 2IDl is a
dcvcJopm~l
facilities
to IIITIIq :ca. It will COli S2.2 bil·
HDDtsviUe, Ala. Wby Al•hlm•? liOII ap ftoat ud.lllllla' lhe best
For 01e r
"• il is de bomc Slac calC vanrio. de CODSOlidatiOD
of 1be bi111est
i!!J Rep...' •• wil . . pey for iDelf for 18 years.
011 tbe Haase Arme4 Service$' . nc AnDy's cWioMiiwt of a - y

r-•

The Bradbury basketball ban-

qiet C""mdw would lite 10 lhaDt
everyone wllo bclpcd make our
t.oqaeu succus

•

A special m.w goes 10 lbe area

111ft E

-

b!•si"e!Ses for tlleir t!Onaricw ad

~committee would also lite

to thank all pueniS for allowing
their children 10 ~ in lbe

alld pre~ting them wilh budmaleiM•in••s
Also, Mr. BiJt Maynard for:
helpiDJ 10 COIISbDCI a horse c:uraJ
in wbicb de Slodeots sat and tad;
Mrs. Mary Smith who provided

music and llelped immensely;
Tn:vor Dn:abcr wbo exhibited die
ases of a lariat and ~ a unique
lasso show for lbe qudm•s IIIII de
parmts who lislened to tlleir chil·
dten read aJJd sent in decmlli~s
and pictures for our building.
Potland Bmleolar)' StaiJ
Jan Hill.ll!apter I lmK""s

The Atwater tragedy
By ARNOLD SAWISIAK
UJ'IS ., PO
WASHINGTON- M., liiDra wla a JJIIIIIil: fi&amp;1R dies. IDs frieads
ncav bibulc ad llis
Dies .., .,.., . . Ia l.ee AlwiRer's CMe, ilbeft ;;lise of a II" • tiad r... bodL
·
·
·
Alwll«.- de J - . (40 w11e111e di;ed ._ ~ R.
_POiit·
ic:aJ Pi* giJI wllo
1 1Gla&amp;c a.ll I 1988 JW ~ •el• *'4*ip
Undlir Alw 's ' "sllip. die c 14Mip came bKt fnllll • ellly
poU.ddicil ofiiiiR dla 20 pac
ac points to aladslide '&lt;ieiOiy.
AlMier's rea a d - de cllilir
'4• of lbe Pqmticee I'Wi 1' cam.
mjgee, a job le _;. J iw4 _. ID wbell a IIMDOr - foaM iD bis

r•"· •

....

4 ·p•• p.~wasai'OIIIb•••••r.He'IOWediO
I ._,. D
a Vd I I&gt;+. • ill 1988 81 ba did il widl ca::1ics 1b11
n:pded • periloasly dole 10 die - o f tie !WI!!ial by
.-eBIIsll ...
Atw
..,alldy aiti i""" for QJI!oilill&amp; a priiOa fuaJoap
w• d 11J M
7 ttl ufrw iels daiu&amp; Dabtis"s ....; "•tlliuu 10 a
-daer mt ~ Willie Hortoa, wbo qM 'JP'lly commjgrd npc in
I Ia ylllld..
·
. .
Tie• Pli!h*MIMIMic:iaJs
,.., to be ¥in&amp; dill JW:atjs ~
* - I .... Hanw did- would permit such tbiop 10 ......... if b e ..- Asa•

•-•s.

»

e.,_.,p _., •
To liiiDie willa aloaJ P¥1P!wy,de ads nralled lbc D nlfic OOID·
-dc:ill.t i11964 ._ :JIIoMid alii* lid iD 1 field of fluaas bc:iD&amp; obliler·
a:d by a
I ICID ca.t..t a•1uiCiDJ tie :iapo • •lhll GOP Cllldidle Bany Ocilw
fawcaalw:' ...
.

As oat cMi
, ~ lriDd ID QC 'tie I.e of tie Rqlul.t":::PP
Pldy. jiMiic I I) --.leaviiJ D w¥.o Nrh
dbII by lbe
$otdPI Catalila-Raral Anracr wvc rqaulcd by ..a'ay u brazea
k)&gt;...,.a1 1'0'
of epilodes..:llas dtalbiOM .. illil 1J1i1L
.
: Mler.Ck
illlas,.-.~..,.•ci*'\1 ilwriliD&amp;iuomc
~ - 10 a -~·· of liiiDie le ...
IIIDil biaedy iD ... 130·

neae

f.,.

~=- ba died. Der1•• 18 as well as RqJUN¥ .

._g those
tho said Atwar:r - a · ael)' IIIIIJ far •Y llliair IICtics ba bad
$IS ..t dill tie ..u r jiMt ofltis dealb- lhlf ba woald rewa- bave a
tlw•:c 10 sbow ..... Cllllld- a klalnlal palili elc:.~pllip.
' nqap cat dipnjss ~W 's W!* hI 10 llis former eaemies M a
1 .lbbcd CODVCilliOII ID YiltJe, ..r ll IS tne IIIII DO OIIC DOW wiD eY~:r
1now juP bow le WOIIId have r-.r-wbeu die • •NI¢iliowrl
J upilr
I-

~111/Uw

btnr !k every olber poljlicel pol I • Ml dill it is posiible 10 ~_!__~ IMii ian ~ lt:aitilc 10 aafair IICtics It would
bave .,_~for er'llplc. 10 q 1•J11 rw.sws views 011 a:imioll
( sf• e.
~ lie
~looP f'"'Y-" ,'widtlu picllaina lUI • a

If.

virmll•

••••ace

J'n!::. ...
~

daas.

=

.

c:

• WleD AJ:wrlll died. lais fonter m'l I , Ed Rollim, DO Clalll
liil
a c:.~poip T J! I . . . ~ ba lebd~for"~ de
!P"MIIhs, wiJited 10 RICh beyald lie COH"'I
..,...
M
•mer of acplive politics, 10 bave die ma • ._ catt a lcD&amp;er siJMiow

~;!i.1!~ ·.:.lhll_wc •10 be dqaiwe4 of ~.ec·s ,,....., aauned ID

111e polilics 1101 oaly. of wilm=~~viiiJ sood OIICC ill power· a
.:.jl i I of IDCDiity it
of
•
•n
~ Tie AJw..- SIOry ad de Rollins eulogy would mate a sood p-efacc
mevery Cllllp.ip plu - DliiLOCJMie • well • Republica - DOW
teill&amp; pqued ror 1992.
1

:~oday

By lldrd l'rtas I I wa

•
•

I

" Today is T~~· April I~. de 1~ dJty of 1991 wilh 25910 follow.
• TbaiiiOOIIIS WW!II,IIIO'VIIIJ JoWIId
fint qq 1:1.
, Tbaii!OIDiD&amp; IIIII IIC V-, Man ad s.D.
:' Tile evatilflllln IIC MaN) llld Jllpiltr.
• . TboK bom dlit dlle .... . . . . . . . . . of Aries. 11ey ..... Jftacb
. ,wriler ADWJ!e Alace iD 11144; IVialioa J'kml !r Willu Wri&amp;bl ill 1867·
ipar_.,.h 6i CIOII Cllde Chp1ie m 11119; llrililb lCD Parr U.:
Dov ill 1921
c:owpcw-cghh . . Healy u
iii ia 1924
67); jazz thllia Hllllie .._ in 19]0 ( . 61); .... BCibby Villa 11
193.S
S6); llld t l'lllilll player x - ~ in 1947

*

&lt;•

&lt;•10);

44).

&lt;•

. oa dlit dlle ill ltiMiy.

.

.

&lt;•

-

--

·

: Ill 1862. CcJIIan:D ..... hlriVU) ill lite~ of Columbia.
Ia 1972, Apo1Jo.l6 tl
I off b de . a willt tine Amaic:a-.o.

I

0..61ri

'IIIII'I . . . for HaalsYille. 11111 a

n-•••tiia wlltle

for -

dj

dJme 110,000 ...,.., .... . , live
adWOit.
Aloal wi.. die expeare ia lbe
logisric1J Dicbtuwe. Visioa 2000
calls for m~villg the Taak aud
,t.utomotivc Commaad oat ·of
Delroit, die ,t.vialioa OloMDMid oat
of Sl louis, de C.....mnnM Mious
alld Elccborucs Conuunc! 0111 of
FL M•..•••IM, NJ...... Ph Mi*J'"Y
Anaal out ofRoi:buy, NJ.
Some delade4 people ill the
.........,., say that dtc dlco ..... of
lllliqaely bAotd civililln IMllisls
ad mJineas will gJIIIIy to
~ s .. ,., .... IDd COD. . . . .,.. . JOU(tes told . . ....0- JimLyncb lha iS bat Ciie of !be
m,u y false prcmi.s cs of Visioa

YfASHINGTON &lt;NEAl- Tbe
IIObOIIIhiiCNeof~fCM'·SWp
c:ra1s wbo so briJiiatly ~wed
ad Cl"'rnltAI lbc RA m« IJaq
~d somebG'! be trUsfOIDI~
miD a 1992 u•"nlJ ~ ~ Presiden~ .Buh al'!Dys occap1ed tbc
c:•tJcal ~rntory somewhere
twea~ludimlus llld ..epos1er-

cas..
. .
. Now, ... faarasy IS fina!lY fad.
~ ad B1iSb .PI •IJ~y J:' COD·

~th the
politit:ia best l:noWII for bis perpetaally vataDt ~.
va-.
die ma ~ u !'PJ*Cii~y - also
~wub V1cc Prcsideot Du
.
......, ... ,
nat :s a very scn~as malter
:::;:,;:::,a:rtainly;::
lie D--o.o.....:...• ri~ . _.
. ~ .
Y........
c • .,..... fur
P' SJrc or lhe. ,_.d,
.
will
. ..expenenc:e a ~~c ~
_Sbugle for liS pn:sidmlial
~.be
wilb • - Bush
-~ialWI!F.,.
"-C I spec
euort 10~':""'•
UllllfOVe
SIP.:". to agam FUDDIDJ

M
.
meo

:trc

11e

vx- ..._.de

Quayle's duoliic:aly
low •andiiiJ
llllitm's
YOII!IS by • •
fit~ de
vX:c P." ' I I • oea•~ C&lt;ei!IS,
jd · 1fyins 1Jim • a wmber of de

White Houc i1111cr circle ud
claiDJill&amp; 111at be waa inli••"IY
ilnulved a die oftea •liffilllh decisian Jllilltin&amp;P"'
It diciD't wwt. "TTe historic
DIOJMII; I U • ~ 0111C olieavu,
"
' 10 dwl!f,IICJI.W
*• de
ville p 'toN'
Tbe - also P'"'' ed • I
S(II'C'!"ai"' ... - of ill rao priJtcipnllllili&amp;nry In+ rs - Gea. H.
Nor- SelJa •lrtpf,..
h
of Openlioa Delat S1011111, or Oen.
Co1iJJ L. Powell, cbainna of de
Joint Cbiefs or Staff - mi&amp;bt
~chow CIDCI'!C as a 1992. rtm·
I1ll1J lillie for BusiL '1111: prrnleFO
boWC11tr, ....
,__ "'.....
. ..... liD m~:~at
·
"
....,....,_
in lbole alleralives.
W:bi!e Quayle is promoting
r.ece•mmstJon and resentmcat
am011g the VOJers by sublly qucs-

tiOIIiaa 111e D!niOalts' ~
Busll pr• qnnthly wiJIIIOIIIIin dig~
l1ified ad tsidcntial. Tbll good
guy-bnd ~~: is baidly aew to
·· .
·
1;
Bat tbe current c011vcalioaal
wisdom (always Mlject 10 rt p)
balds IIIII tw "* Busll's pgplari1y ._ SOM:d IIi sacb asiOIDdiag
levels ill die wate or die war. he
daelll't neQd lelp from Qnayle Of
IDJIJodt -10 aChieve ai-+IW
~ CID vicJOry in 1992.
ladeed wben voters arc surveye4 iD
public cpoioo
. poUs, dey ~ n:jecl Quayle
by a lllllpn of sboUI 2-1 wbea
asbd if dey believe ba's IJUI'Iified
10 11a p ;• u1
Tltas, ~here's lbe possitility lhll
r-t7 replan • ClltOiliacecJ by de
DUIIICIOIIS politicians wilh pn:si. - will CM(lodc
·
"""""' ==='=
dW u a• nly DD-Republicu
n:vo1t eDina tite 'beir appllml is
prd'crahle 10 aomiaalinJ Quayle .
IIIII !tiiiously rislinJ dcleal by tk

,.m

aiDoawide

===•

Robert Wa/Urs
Dt~::.c:e.t.,.=~

in ellly 1996. trieD Q&amp;)lc's ript
to W E • , M 11011111 be ... •..
ty dn"mc 1 by Oilier ~t~t

.. ...
•

•

...

•

...

'~··••(I

...•• de•

r •·
t

Tllcrc's DO RUOM tO
believe &amp;bat tbere woa1d be uy
cllqe ia public ...,.lily 10 Qugfylc
as vi:c p · tkN, lllllcb less presidall.
Bat Basil wwld 11i11 ba pesidenl..t would lllill ba &lt;I • ....,
10 justify bis 1988 sclecti011 of
Quayle as IPs numills mate. Ia
those circumslallC:es, be would
COUitJ.

bave 10 ~donsiiPically support

Quayle's bid fardtc P"iL y. .
Tbaa coalcllequiJC Blllb 10 lXIII·
frollt Quayle's critics IBd opJJO-neniS wilbia lhe party. Tillis. a,
p 't« K l ii!J 10 ~aft iD dipi:
ly coold becGme CIIIIDJlcd ill 1B
ugly political dispute in .., filial
IDCMIIbs in office.

Is Mickey Mouse a ~ultural imperi~list?
MARNE-LA-VAII FE. Fraace il's nei!-lacr ·free uadc: DOr free
-la 1992, SOO years~ a Euro- I expressiOn. Bul IDUJI' aiiJervers
pean ~ Columbus diJco~ . say qlllllaS woa't aulc 100 -=11
America,~ Euuljl •• will dis- difference. Tile privlliutiow of
cover Amenc:ans DRllll'd ~d broedcatiag plus a111c _.
Dot:t - ~ br:re • ~ Dis- satellite ICCbnulogies will doiriYc
ney. 20 miles from Pans. Alas. European televisioa IIGnn r..sooe Frcncb intel_leclllllsasay die 1985 ID 1995. Oaly ~ po- lbeme ~ will baa cultutal duces ~gb p~~C~•nJRiae IIi Ill
Cbemobyl, poiJurina de sJory of them.
.
La Belle Ftllll:e. , .
Beyond quota dcfeases, ~
II only sounds stupid, and, ull. Frencb- JOin&amp; 011 offeate.. If yo.
Mickey ~. But culllft does caa'l beat 'em, etc. ·Riviera.~
CODDI ia lh~ games tbat nations Europe•s lint America-style Slllllp
play. especially populu cullllre. opera. is in ..,o•tion- Parif..
Toda,.s Ewq · IIOOUiar cullun: Tbe dftc!Dr blrb in Frenc~ lbc
offers a glimpse o( America Is tlespisas perform in EnglisL At
liiiiR. ~ IBd DooaJd .-e onJy de boom in&amp; finn of c-J Plus,
J*l of IL
biJ movic-expcn cleals SIC coot.
Ner1 year, lbc European Com- ins: a 1tot oae is •.JFK.• ditet:ted by
mDDity 1992 comes into being. Oliver Stole m America.
EniGpCal oplimista say EC '92 will
Tbrec Frwll radio act worts
creMe a .._ EniUJk*i ideality." nm dtsn so patlCIIt Amc:lican
Americaa pessimisls say EC wiD music. Tie GaH W• made CNN a
build a wa_D kt:epinJ ~ ~ bi&amp; player ia Europe. Tllere ate
of a lacrabve awtet, 350 million Amcriam daily aewsp~pt~s, aewsSIIUIJI
. ad Reader' n : .DcW.•t bet~ eidter ~- m~&amp;.o Disney. ~;j.j'6''";'milmuu or Amencu ~~· lion visitors, cllild-driven, arc
!oday. die srat ~ idea~- expected ill year oae. The Cbcr·
~~~IS ~~ aobylists say dJo8e Disneyed kids
0
JDOriCI, .I n ... ad miiiiC,
:~J:Oi¥ up ud mislatealy be
America jonraalism not far
Ewo11 ...

WI..

CaltantJ price..,
We cxpon pbarmsceuticals,
food. MCDonald's, Cote llld airp!wes For..., wk JWii II• cvay-

Ben Wattenberg

~ dr:IJOII• .,~

lion· as acalwal imperialism••
Amcttia-indebiUb
Can 1111( soft driab export cal1111e, 11111 u.?y iDdin:ctly. 'l'helc is
IIOir - eapbiciu ill dtc CIJIOII of
dim:l callue • tclevisiclll, radio,
VCR 11pe1, DIOtiesad joamlllism

Berry's World

I

Jacoby •s homer gave ·Cleveland
its lhird victory in four games over
Boston. In addition. tile shutout
gave lhc Cleveland staff 22 Straijlht
scon:ICS! innings against a bathng
order many had projected as one of
the toughest in the American
League.

·

Hussein captures
Boston Marathon
..

McR~e,

By FREDERICK WATERMAN tively, witb times of 2:26;40 and
· UPI Sports Writer
. 2:26:52.
.
Samuelson, founh .at 2:26:54,
BOSTON (UPI) -Kenya's
Ibrahim Hussein, unwilling to chal· said she w&amp;S "really· running _on
lenge·lhe dangerous rolling course, empty after lhe halfway, mark. It
·..Monday won his second Boston didn't come as a 101111 shock when
Marathon with a conservative strat- Kim went smoking by me, but I
cgy.anda2:11:06time.
was surprised by Uta.'' Her goal
The 1988 champion, who did was to place in lbe top 10 and fin.
not rmish last year•s race because ish under 2;30:00.
. of leg and foot injuries, took the
"I cried tears of joy." Samuel·
lead for good in the 22nd mile and son said.
· ·
was never challenged.
The weather was ~rfcct for
~"':lf'riilt'i' veey• smart ·race. '•1• M .· IQnk·llistance 'lunnlns;''Pri&gt;viding
.said. "l 'didn't wan1 to run a crazy cloud cover and rempC#Itures hov·
l'liCc like last year." ·
.
, ering just above SO ~s. spar·
.l · In ·that race the early leaders· ing the runners the Pf!lblcms of
· ruined lheir chances with a foolish· dehydrati011.
.~
ly fast pace ,and Hussein was
The winners of tho1men's and
among those who had to drop out.
women's competitions each
'l Ethiopia's A~bc Mekonnen,
received $55, 000. Secdnd-place in
the 1989 champion, finished sec- each division was wo~th 527,00
dod. 16 seconds behind Hussien. and third was $18, Olljl. A world
lreland•s Andy Ronan, competing record would have beeil wonh an
iii just bis third marathon, was third additi_onal $50,000 in either diviat2:11 :27.
·
· sion, and a course reconJ $25,000.
:.In the women's race, Wanda
Last year's winne~·· Gelindo
Panfil of llcland triumphed with a Bordin nor Rosa Mo\11. did not
time of 2:24:18, the second·faslest · return to defend their Utles. This
women•s time in Boston Marathon year's favorileS, DouglafWakiihuri
lltstory. She finished 391h overall:
and Ingrid Kristiansen, .we~ sixth:
, "I was very comfortable with. place finishers.
1
.
lhe race - up 10 25 kilometers."
Mekonnen made the mistake of
Panfil said through an inuepretcr, thinking Wakiihuri was the runner
She said lhat after talcing lhe lead he should stay with.
:.
for good, shcrea)ized: "I was beat·
''I didn't go in the first (lead)
ing them hands down."" .
group because llhought Walciihuri
· Panfil, who won the 1990 New was in good shape and he wl\5 the
York City Marathoa, lOCk the lead ravorile," Mekonnen said through
for good in the 16th mile, moving an interpreter. "I decideilto 'stay
ahead of former Bos1on and with him audit was 100 lale when ·
Olympic champion Joan Benoit (afler 25 kilometers) I saw Hussein
Samuelson, who is trying a come- was 100 far ahead. •"
back after having two children.
Unlike last year, the lead run·
Kim Jones of Spokane, Wash., ners did not date to attack lhe gru·
and U18 Pippig of Germant: over· eling Hopkinton·to·Boston course,
took Samuelson in the~~ mile and with its withering combination of
fipished second and .thud, respec· uphills and down hills. In 19~. a
group of Africans ran the opcmns
downhill segment of the course
with abandon and few of them fin·
The Daily Sentinel
ished de 26.2-mile race.
,
Hussein,
who
had
not
run
a
(USP814. . .l
marathon since last year's Boston .
Alllwlo... tlll~loc.
race; said he was wary of an ill·
Publllhal every anei'!!OOII, Monday
chOsen
slnltegy, "because tben the
throu&amp;h Friday. Ill Court St.. Pu·
pn:ss will be then: to kill me."
meroy, Ohio, by th• Ohio Valley Publllhlni Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
This yc&amp;r, the lead pack finished
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!'761. Ph. 992-215e: Sethe
fil'SI mile at a veiy conservative
cond class postaee pald at Pomeroy, t
4:57, which was 31 seconds slower
Ohio.
than last year;s self- dcfeatins
M'mber: United Pm• Intematlonal,
pace.
The .runners" respect for the
lnlan~ DaUy Prna A... oclatlon aDd tbe
Ohio Newopaper Alooclatlo!J, Nationa I
course was consislenl lhrough the
AdverUalna Representative, Branham
rust 10 miles, where Hussein led a
Newspiper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
pack of l5 runners with a time of
New York, New York 10017. •
·
5Q:22, far off last year's 46:53
POSI'MASI'ER: Send
ch...,..
pace.
to 'Ill!&gt; Dally Sentlaol; 111 Court St.,

a-

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., c u n e r a r - OneWeelo ..... ............ ..... .. .. .........IUO

one Year ......................... ........ 113.20
IINOUOOf'Y
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~~~ .......... 2S eenJ. ·

Sublel'lb&lt;rl Dot dellrlal to pay theear·
rter may remit bt adVance dlreet to

-·___ ............... .
--...-

Tile Dally lentlnfl 0113, &amp;orl2 m!llitb

-·credit will btiilve!ICarrltreach

J!1o •ublerlpt- by maD permitted In

available.

1

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.... .

PREVENTS BRAWL- The Cbicago White
Sox' Scott Flekber (left) graba the arm of teammale Ozzle Guillen as White Sox manager Jeff ·
Torllorg and coacll Terry Bevington race in to
_keep Guillen away from home plate umpire Dale
in the fifth."
In that inning, a walk to Jack
Clark and a double by Ellis Burks
put runners on second and third
with none out But Nagy got Mike
Marshall to hit a grounder 10 third
in which Clark was lhrown ·out at
the plale, then retired the next two
Bostoo batlers.
McNamara was also impressed
wilh reliever Sieve Olin; '1.(), who
·came on in the ninth and got Clark
10 hit into a double play wilh runners on first and second and one

Scott (hatless) and first-base umpire Jim Evans
In the sixth inning or Monday night's aame
against the host New Yqrk Yankees. The While ·.
Sox won 6·5. (UPI)
'

Elsewhere Monday in lhe Amer-;
OUl
"Olin came in there and did ican League, Chicago trimmed
exactly what we wanted him to New York 6- 5, Baltimore bounced'
do,'• McNamara said. "I said Milwaukee 7-2. Toronto topped•
before the season started thai I Detroit 4-3, Oalcland clubbed Cali1fornia 5-2 and Seattle thumped
liked our pitching.··
Minnesota 8-4.
•
• The Indians, who ,haven't bee'n
In lhe National Lcasue, it was;
home yet, finished their season- SL Louis 5. Monii'Cal4; New York
9, Piusburgh 3; HOUSIOn 3,-Ailanta
opening road trip at4-3.
.
''I"d say for the schedule we've 1; Chicago 5, Philadelphia 4; Los
played so far, we've done well," Angeles 2, San Franc1sco 1; and ·
McNamara said. "But it's still so San Diego 3. Cincinnati 2 in II .
early you can'tlell very much:·
innings.

Davis rate high in coming NFL·draft

By DAVE RAFFO
-~Sports Writer
• When ~ scouts waleh college
offensive linemen, deir fUSI priority is to r='layers who can handle
the left
position in the NFL.
Left •ackles .,. de mosr importanl pass blockers because tbey
often draw the top rushers lind the
wide side of the .fJeld witbout help
from the tight encl. The April21-22
NFL draft includes three players
who are considered blue chip left
IIICide prospects, and two of them

were college teammaieS. .
Charles McRae played left tack·
le.at Tennessee, wilh AniOIIC Davis
at right tackle. But816-foot4, 328
· pounds and with excepliooal quickness and speed, Davis is proJected
as a left tackle and is coasidcred
the best lineman available. McRae
is a cloae second and Pat Harlow of
Soutlem Cal is also expected to be
drafte4 by the middle of the first
round
"It's incredible thai one college

' team could have two tackles like
this when there are many NFL
teams that don "t have on.e IaCkie as
good;• New York Jets gen~ral
manager Dick Steinberg said of
Davis and McRae.
.
Tbe Tennessee line gave up jnst
eight ·sacks in 339 passing plays
last season.
Other highly rated offensive
linemen are tackles Stan Thomas of
Texas, Kevin Donnalley of Nonh
Carolina and Mark Vander lloel of
.,

By DAVE RAFFO
draft. By lhe end of two rounds ;
Many feel Ismail would be ideal
UPI Sports Writers
there could easily be a dozen new in the run and shool offense, and
Wide receivers were passed wide receivers in lhe NFL.
there is no doubt he can be an
over in the first round of the I 990
"Wide receivc;r has traditionally excellent third·down receiver out'
drart, which was bolst~red by an been a strong position the last sev- of the backfield. But the first pick
especially strong group of juniors.
eral years because colleges throw . must be moo: than a role player.
The underclassemen in lhis the ball more now," New York
year's draft an: not quite as strong. Jets general manager Dick Stein·
Keeping mat in mind, the Patri·
but the wide receiver corps has berg said. "Obviously 'Rocket' is a ots are looking to trade the No. I
· been helped by .the decisions of great alhlele.
·
pick but find nobody _is willing to
Notre Dame's Raghib "Rocket"
"There's nol always a clear-cut put IOgether the package or veterIsmail, Virginia's Herman Moore: No. 1. pick but 'Rocket' is one of ans and high draft picks lndianapo·
and .Rob Carpenter of Syracuse to lhe guys up lhere. He has world· lis dealt for Jeff George last year.
COllie out early.
class speed and can malce the big
Randall Hill of Miami and ColLed by Ismail, wide receivers . player l'rom any part of the field as orado's Mike Pritchard are similar
are expected to dominate the first a wide receiver, as a runner, as a to Ismail although not as fast. They
round of the April 21 draft. There - returns man.''
returned kicks in college an.d
could be . as many as six wide · Ismail is small at Hoot·lO and Pritchard, like Ismail, played wingreceivers taken. matching the num- 175 pounds. but nobody in the draft back.
ber of fiPSt-round running backs matches his 4.32 speed in the .40from 1990 and the number of first- . yard dash. He was the best all·
round wide receivers from I988.
around player in the country last
Unless New England trades its year - catching passes, running
pick or contract negotiations with from scrimmage and returning
Ismail fall apart before the draft, kicks - but the challenge to an
t~e Patriots will take the former
NFL team is how to fil him in a
Notre Dame speedster 10 open the pro-style offense.

\

, "-

·~·-.v , ., ·

0

t•
It

'

"• "

&gt;

'

Colorado. guards Ed
Auburn and Eric Moten of Michh
gan State, and cenlets Chris Thome.
of Minnesota and John Flannery of·
Syracuse.
Davis proved his wonh by han·
dling highly rated defensive.
prospec1s like Florida's Huey
Richardson and David Rocker of
Auburn during last season. He also
impressed at the scouting combine
with a 5.05 time in the 40·yard
dash and good agility.
,,

o, 11o

SPRING VWlY CINEMA
446

4~14

$).00 IMUII MTII(IS UMIAY I SliiiAY
13 ... UIIAJ1I •IIMl ftlnlllY

1

7:ZO,II : 1D rM.ILY
SAl/SUit Mfiii:E5

TIRES ARE OUR

1: 2Q,J :l0

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BUSIN~SS

Quality Service Before, During nm~ M1el'
the Sale.

SERVICE:
eTIIE IOTATION
•RAKE WOII
eFIONT END AUGNIIENT
eiAUNCING

The smooth-running Hussein
finished more than three minutes
off lhe course n:cord of 2.1!7:51, set
· by Rob de Castella in 1986. In
1988 Hussein ran the. second·
fastest time at Boston with his
2:08:43 viclory.
· Mekonnen and Ronan aaempled
a cloning kick in lbe fdlal lll'lisht·
away but were too far back to .
thtcaten. HusiCin kept looking aver
his shoulder during the cloains
miles. ·
·
"You nevct underestimate anybody;• he said. " ... yoll never
know what coqld happca.'.
Jwna lkangia, wflii failished sec·
ond the previous tl!rec Boston
Marathonl, fell '-:k frOm de lead
pack halfway lhroup the IICC and
was limpiJig.

P
ROY
HOME AND 'AUTO

600 EAST lAIN

.H

,.,,_

1\

.

'

-

-

"''"

.......

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•

.
Kin!! of•

Ismail among leading wide · .receivers in 'comfng NFL draft

•

OliO Month ............... ...... ....... .....16.9:1

"/ miss military jargon. ..

Cleveland Manaser John M~a­
mara was particularly happy wttb
slai'ICl Charles Nagy, who gave up
four hits over 8 1-3 innings, striking Olil three and walking three.
· "I'd say Mr. Nagy has arrived,"
McNamara said. "He has so much
more confidence, and so much
more composure than at Ibis time
last year. He got out of a tough jam'

: . HUSSElN CAPTURES MARATHON- Aady Roaaa pimacea
'as he Is overtaken by Kea1a's 1brabiql Huaeln 11 tbey come off
·.Heartbreak Hill after runatng side by dele ror three milt~' Itt Moo: clay's Bontoa Marathon, wbleb Husseht woo. Roaan IID1Ihed tlllrd.
,(UPI)

Pomeroy, Olllo 45'18.

•

bctLoot•ind a·a ....
oa tbe
...., •..;::f,es
_,
ChaiD]K Elyee.
's ·otMSe
. All« Ln l.oluu.• Tltal'slbe oae
witiiiCCYin CGM1er ad ~guy
IM'
Nell doJr is ..Alice,. - rilll IIIII pat Freaebmu, Moa·
siear Woody Allen..
_
Ill Fr.ace aiJoal 60 pen:cal o(
box-office receipts come from
.Atttericaa JDOYiea, low by Earo, _ i wda.ID Italy it's 011er 80

Is it imj,orwn? It is. We've
hesrdlbal Ameri&amp;;a is losinJ 1 ndc
war. can "t compete aud is in
declite,
•
Tbe fiaurea IIOW show de u.s.
trade deficit goin dowa. Muy
cxpens believe it will move into
surplus. JlcYGIIIIbal is die qaslity
of lrllde. All impons 111c1 cxpcns
1110 ~ culllnlly equal. We impcn
tdevision sets; we~ 1C1evisi011
pen:ent.
series.
Tbc teJevisioD situMM'I is DOIM
Nslioas wBnlto wield iDfhlfi!Cl'!
,_,.,.. A mere S7.Y"'u:ut.oftdcvi· Eva- ..us.
sion drsme ia Hurope is from
Dies m imJ::l, J - - car
Amaica. Bill it would ba llipcr if iDO- us?l;-'~wine
. . for"cu]twe!qcd• •
ad chrsr from France influence.
America •44•
'II' I , sayinJ peddleIS? Sun:. EverylhinA bas a 1

the game.

.

Will Quayle be on '92 and '96 -ickets?. · ·

ll1J;

in history

...-20•h•w

Tie Army abo tbinb it cat sell
Piealinny 10 1 privaJe buyer at 1
price tbat ia 400 pertelll lliJber
dwl wbat local realtors say lhe
lad in WOI1l - evea if it ca be
aaillllllal c:ne. of dtc IIIVin
u.
lltlllaanls ad buried ~
llliB llenl.
....-ves
11e Army WilliS CUil!l .....
....cull of Vision 2CXXl by OcJo.
ler, bal CapiiDI Hill w
IOid m
dill de Aim, will haw: 10 fiJil for
. . , llllltey from Cooan:a 10 fund
itS fimla!y.

I

.I

lion drwu .... - - taller. Tie
"SS!per0-1 r Q I
do -.1
c1eYe1oJaea1 will ltrilt1 no.ooo
l""fle ID lflailwiJle ri41*ilc lie
c• tliUiuuflta • • • • • ·

2CXXI.

'Right to Read' program big success
Dear Editor:
Portland Elementary School
would like 10 dial* aD lllo8e ~e
who helped Ill make our "Right 10
Read Wed&amp;." a sucx:css for our students.
Our appreciation roes out 10:
Jim Camallan for calling sqaare
dance; Lisa Smith for bet borsc
exhibition; Ronald McDoaald for
his reading motivatioa; Racllael
DCiwnic for explaining llllimal ca
llld sbaring horse adveolllrCS wilh
OS; Tbe Retired Senior Voluoleer
ft.u fllah for reading to our students

saver inc:ludes a $3.6 million gOlf
CCJUrSe. a $1.6 million swimmio&amp;
pool .cl ml)'be evea a $2.5 mil-

-

De.. EditOr:

'

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

SOIL

PtlTents appreciate support

.I .

By ERIK K. LIEF
.
UPI S~ Writer
On PatrioCs Day in Boston,
marathons were beil)g stased all
over.
As the entrants of the 95th
Boston Manthoo weaved tbeir way
through de aged strce1s of the bar·
bor city, the C)eveland Indians
were forced 10 i;o lhe extra mile
themaclvea Monday, working 13
inninp to secure a 1.0 victory over
thcRedSox.
The Indians posted a string of
zeroes on the scoreboard before
)lelling the only run of the pme in
ihc 13th when Brook Jacoby lined
an 0-1 pitch from reliever Dennis
Lamp over the left-field screen for
the game winner.
·
"I wasn't lookinf to hit one
out,'• Jacoby said. 'I was ~ust
looking to hit it hard. I ' m JUSt
thankful we got three outs in the
bottom of lhe l31h. That wasn't
easy, either."
~
DOug Jones, who got his third
· save. had a bit of a SCIUe in the bottom of the 13th. With one oul, Tom
·Brunanslty and Carlos Quintana hit
singles. Tony Pona •s long fly to left
went foul, and his slow roller to
third moved the rumers up 10 second and third. ·However, Tim
Naehring popped to second to end

·Pentagon closing bases·that are costly
•

• · · "='"'""••- '---.
&amp;OBDTL. WDIGBTr

-n1uar. Aprtl11, 1111

'

The. Daily Sentinel

Indians blank .Re.d Sox again, 1.-~

Pi!IQI 2-lllt DIIIIJ sentinel
~ov •uapcv., Ohio

.,.•

•

PO•••, I OH.

..

�..

...
18,1891

Ohio

Ohio

Mets rally in ninth to top Pirates,
9-3·
•
By ,JEPF SHAIN
UPI Sporll Writer

It wasn' t llow ll'd Johnson's
tlumder tbllSjMib::d the New York
MeiS to viclOry Monday night over
the Pittsburgh Pirates. Rather, it
was IIIOlher 51" • :Mlo of lillle hilS
tbat have keyed the Mets througb
lbe fii'St wetk: oflbe ~
Tbr Mets cashed in on two lead·
off walks and a throwing error by
Pitlsllurgb relievu Bob Ki~ on
lbe way to a sill-run ninth mhlng,
cruising to a 9-3 victory over
Pirales.
Gregg Jefferies scored the goahead run on a throwing error by
Kipper, 1-1, to open the floodgates
in tbe six-run ninth. Johnson added
an RBI single during tbc inning to
go with an Cl!rlier two-run single
and his solo homer.
" I was a little won'ied when we
bad 11 hits and only three runs.''

me

New York manager Bud Harrelson
said.
Butlbe MeiS changed that in tbe
nilllh.
.
'•
Jefferies·and Vince Coleman,
wbo went 3 fa 4 011 lbe night. led
off the ninth with Walts and Keith
Miller foUowed wltb a bunt single.
Kipper fielded lbe bunt and over.
threw first, allowing Jefferies to
score and Coleman to late dlird.
Dave Magadan, Johnson and
Tom Herr each followed wilb RBI
singles and, after Bill Landrum
relieved and struck out Rjck
· Ccroae, Kevin Eisler followed with
a two-run triple.
·
David Cone, who left fQr Jefferies in the inning, earned the vic·
tory in his firSt decision of the sea-

the eigbth homer to reacb the upper

deck since Three Riven 'Stadium
ope11ed July 16, 1970.
The blast. off Za!le Smith's 3-2
pitch, bounced off the facing of the
deck in extreme left field ~ an
estimated distance of 425 feet.
Johnson became only the second
visiting player to reach the top
deck, the fii'St be" Pltiladciphia's
Greg Luzinslci in ~79. Four of the
other sill upper'Cieck blasts were bit
by Hall of Farner Willie Stargell,
while Bob Robertson and CUJTCnt
~JC,Ider Bobby Bonilla had the

Boih Cone 111d Smitb struggled
throughout their stints but refused
to yield the big hit that would have
broken open the game before. Kipp:r erred and fell apan in the ninth.
son:
"
Lost in the commotion of the
Smith gave up three runs, II
six-run ninth was Johnson's sec· hits and a walk over six innings.
ond·iMing blast that became only Cone gave up nine hits, three runs

In Lakers' 112-106. w~ over Mavericks,

Johnson surpasses Robertson
on all-time NBA assist list
,.

Rutland g~deners prepare
for Earth Dav activities

and foUr walbovereiaht innings.
" Dave was a lot lite Zane
tonight," .Pilllburgh manager Jim
Leylind said. "Tiiey aot as
sharp wilh their control as ·tbey
usually arc. They struaaled, but
they both huna in tbenl,8J!11 gave
their reams a clilnce to wm 11. They
won it and we didn't..
·
In other National l..alpc action
Monday, St. Louis trimmed Montreal S-4, Houston beat A.-.. 3·1,
Chicago nipped Philadelpbia S-4,
Los Angeles edged San Prancisco
2 ~ ] and S111 DiC~~O topped Cincinnati 3-2 in 11 inmngs.
Cardinals 5, Expos 4
At MontJeal, Tom ~ hit
a sacrifice fly 111d Pedn! Guerrero
belted his second home iun to high·
light a thn:«un ninth inning as St
Louis spoiled tbe Expos' borne
opener. Tim Burte, 1·1, gJI\'e 11J1 all
three runs in the ninth u Cris Car·
pentcr, 1..0, recudcd lbe Vic:tay.
Astro13, Braves 1
fAt Atlanta, rookie Jeff Bagwell
belted his fnt ~or-league home
run 1 a two-run shot with two out in
the ninth inning. 10 lift the Astros.
With two out. Ken Caminiti singled
off Kent Mercker, 0-1, and Bagwell ripped a 1·2 pitcb over the
left-field fence. AI Osuna, r.o.
earned the victory.
Cubs 5, Pblllles 4
At Chicago, Greg Maddux gave
up three hits over seven innings
and rookie Gary Scott bit a tic·
breaking aBJ single to lead tbe
Cubs . ·
· ·
Dodgers 2, Glan~ 1 .
Padres 3, Reds 2 ~11 inn.)

Janet Bolin gave tips on-planting for April when members of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners met at
tbe home of MatJaret Edwards for
their March meeung. .
Suzy Carpenter gave devotions
on the Easter Lily, a symbol of
spring, and members answered ron
call witb a variety of spring
blooms.
~orie Davis reviewed "Dirt
Work, notintr that a 1ood garden
is fertilized wflb blood, 'sweat, tears
and an aching bact. At Ibis time,'
pruning 8nd mulching of pemmials
should be doite with planted beds
being cleaned.
SUZ)' Carpenter stated that when
arranging using the Easter Madonna as 111 accessory, the same gener·
al rules arc observed as with using
the Christmas Madonna or Madonna with child.
Joanne Fetty presided at the
FIRST PLACE HONORS • The Portland
on rroQt row Is Amy Rizer; second row, l·r,
meeting and reported that t!te club
Amanda Adkins, Ashley McKinney, Amanda
is involved witb plans for the
'' Elementary Pirates cheerleaders took first place
honors recently In tbe Racine League Tourna· · Smltb; Tblrd row, 1-r, Patty Lawrence, Jenny
spring Region 11 meeting to be
ments at Southern Junior High School. Pictured
Sellers, and Billie Jo Sellers.
beld April 27 at. the. S~lisb)lry
'
.
School. Mrs. J. L. Gabrielli, regiOnal director, advised tbe club that
reservations of $8 per person are to
be paid by April 23. The club is to
Seven Eastern Band students members of the Eastem Band com· snare drum; and Lauren Young, purtbase and fill a basket for a dechave been selected to participate in ·peted in the OMEA Districl XVIII trumpet
orative cen~tpiece to be awarded
: the 300-member All-Ohio State Solo and Ensemble Contest. The
Students receiving exceiiCIIt rat· as a door prize and will design 111d
Fair Band. These musicians will annual event was held at the School ings were James Ewing, alto sax;
live, rehearse and perform at the of Music at Ohio University in Heather Well : alto sax and piano;
1991 Ohio State Fair from July 27 Athens. Band director Bill Hall, Amy Smith, bass clarinet; Ginger
to Aug. 17. It is considered a great called the event "highly success· Nutter, trombone; · Melissa
honor to be' selected for this' band, ful." "Any time a school has over Dempsey, french horn ; Kristy
and the experience is often thb high 50 percent superior ratings. you Warner, snare drum; and Eric Hoi·
Community Caludar Items
'point of a high school musician's have accomplished a great thing." lon, trumpet.
appear two da,s before an event
career. The selected students arc This year's Eastern ratings include
and tbe day of tllat event. Items
lo other Eastern Band news, the
· Charlene Dailey. flute; Dawn II superiors al.
concert band will travel to Colum- must be received' weD In achance
. Foley, clar~net; Letitia Holsinger,
Students receiving superior rat· bus Saturday to compete in the to assure publieatlon In tbe c.al·
· ·alto sax; N1cole Kanawalsky, bas- ings were Jonathan Avis, alto sax; State B111d Contest Eastern earned endar.
soon; Andrew Wolf, trombone; Heather ·Howard, clarinet; Julie the ri(!ht to compete by receiving a
TUESDAY
· Kyl~ Fausnaugh, tuba; and Bill · Brown, flute; Jennifer Mora. clar· supenor rating at the District Band
Bater, tuba, Kanawalsky and Faus- inet; Chi-isty Drake, flute; Noelle Contest on March 8 at A,thens High '. REEDSVILLE - The Eden Unit·
naugh were also members of last Pickens, flute ; Jeanie Cline, flute; School. The band will perform at ell Brethren Church neat Reedsville
year's band.
.
Rebecca Evans, flute; Briali Hoff. · 11:30 a.m. at Gahanna Lincoln will hold revival services through
Last Saturday, 20 junior high man, snare drum; Joe Kar~ chnik, High School on Hamilton Ri&gt;ad.
Sunday with Rev. Bob Wiseman.
Special music will be presented
and the public is invited to attend.

-

fastbreaks. He began the second
During the five-minute ceref!!o. By JOHN HENDEL
period on the bench, but returned ny immediately after that asSISt,
UPI Sports Writer
Johnson received a crystal uophy
Earvin' Johnson became the with 6:S2to play in the balf.
Johnson ·equaled Robertson 's from general m111ager Jerry West
NBA 's all-time assist leader Monday night while Sacramento mark six seconds later when he and a thunderous ovation from the
·grabbed
the title as "Farthest from pass.ed to Worthy for a jumper. sellout crowd of 17,505 at the
SABO FORCED AT SECOND - San Diego second baseman
With the l.atets running their half· Forum.
the Kings of tbe ROOd ...
Blp Roberts ·rorces out tbr Reds' Chris Sabo at second base and
court
offense, Teagle then scored
"I w111t to thank my teammates
Johnson,
known
as
"Magic
"
· • JUkes tile throw to first for the double play, wbicb claimed Eric
over
Upshaw
to
give
Johnson
the
for
making most of the baskeis
since his high scbool days, surDavis u a putont Ylctim in tbe first inning or Monday night's game
r.
e
cord
and
Los
Angeles
a
44-35
most
'It the time."' saitl Johnson.
passed Oscar Robertson as the top
.In San Dif&amp;o, .Wblcb tbe Pa~res won 3·2. (UPI)
·
lead.
.
'
"\
.
passer in NBA hisiOry with assist
No. 9,888 in the Lakers' 112-106
victory over the 'Dallas Mavericks.
The 6-foot·9 playmaker. appearing in his 871st game, got the
AltlJ!Iugb h_e was "di.saJ!I?ointed'" team of Tim Murphy (junior, this early in the season," Willey
record on a baseline pass 10 Terry at placmg th~rd m the Mad-Ohm Zanesville), Marc Michigan said. "However, we're working
Teagle, who hit a turnaround IS· Confer~nce ,m Saturday's MOe (freshm111, Kettering), Brian Brels- hard and I'm looting for some
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL
llool
fOOl
jumper with 5:44 left in the Cham(Donshlps at Walsh College 'ilierd (freshman West Lafayette) good thingS later in the season."
BASKETBALL
W L l'a.
Gl
second
quarter. It was his ninth Saturday, University of Rio Grande and Aaron Griffin (freshman Well:
ASSOC.
Rio Grande's women's track
T0101110
...........6 2 .7.50
assist if the.game. .
lhdent C•terenu
track
Coach
!3~
Wi!ley
said
he
ston)
placed
fust
·al
3:28,
t~o
.
sec­
team
was not idle over the weekC........
......... A 3 .511 I 1/2
"I always wanted to ~ known was pleased With mdiv1dual perf~· onds ahead of Cedarville and 12 end, either.
AIWIIIcWlilt"" Pci.
GB
s . - ..........3 3 .soo 2
as the guy who mates the pass," mances by members of the men s ahead of Walsh. The 400 meter
Mll........3 4 .429 2 1/2
The Redworilcn, escorted by
Ddmil
.............2 4
.l]J
3·
t.-8~
........ .56 22 .717
Johnson said before the game. team. .
.
relay
team
finished
third.
Assistant Coach Eddie Alldnson.
........... .2 5 .216 ll/2
y-PhiWidphio ......A3 35 .m 1 13
''This just lets everybody know
!low Yodt
....... .2 5 .216. 31/2
The Redmen, the 1990 MOC , Mart Cline (senior, Cbillicothe) participated in the Universitv of
y·New Yad&lt; ......37 42 .461 191/2
w...
that."
'
.29 49 .311 ' 21
champs, scored 48 pomts m the finished flfSI in ihc 800 meter run Akron Invitational Saturday.
Cbicoao
...~..••• .s 0 1.000
New Jtne)' .......2' S4 .301 31 lfl
Robertson
played
'With th!l meet, while Walsh earn~ 76 for at1:59.13. He was also runnerup in fl&amp;ecause
Ooklml
..........6 I
.857
' Miomi
..........23 l5
.295
33
Akron is having a new
Colilomil .......... .S 2 . .714
I
Cincinmiji Royals from 1960·61 ~nd place and Cedarville netted the 1500 at 4:07.
Ce~~lral Dt'flllon
track
installed,
the meet was held at
lYnAo Oly ........4 2 .4566 I 1/2
,.a.;..,. ........SI 21 .70
tbniugh 1969-70 and with the Mil· fust with 85. Urbana: the oni,Y
In other events, Kurt Tyson Mount Union College in nearby
MinaooGia
.... :....2 5 .216
4
y·D«noit ..........41 Jl .607 10
waukee Bucks from 1970·71 other conference team with a men s (junior, New Lexington) was runTaa
............1 4 ·.200
4
y·Mllwaut.eo ......47 32 .l9l
II
Scnlc
,_,........ 1 6 .143
.5
Y·A&gt;Ion&gt;o ..........42 :!6 .539 ' 1ll/2
through 1973·74. A Hall ,ofFamez, U.,:~ sq~ . was un$~ to attend. . ncr up in the hammer. 118 feet; Alliance.
While results were not immedi·
Y·loodiuuo .......... 39 40 • .494
19
he collected his 9,887 assists in
I felt m ordcff to,wm, we h~d to Murphy finished fourth in the 110 ately available, Renee Peck (sopho0. 'edl,ao..O. t 3im.
Clooelaod ......... 30 49 .310 211/2
Cbiap 6, New Yod&lt; 5
Charl.... .. ........ 24 S4 .308 33 1/2
1,040 games for an average of 9.5 a be near ~eel, ~iller explained. hur!lles, 15:9 seconds, and third in more, Baltimore, Ohio) won ftrst
8•,' •7,Mil•aukee2
'
W•&amp;ent Cunren.ce
game.
"I wasn't disappomted m the effort, the 400 intermediate hurdles. 58.31 place in the 3000 meter run at
T-4.0..Ul
Mklw•t Dl•llioa
Ootload 5, CaiUmio 2
Johnson, 31, is averaging 11.4 because nobody let down at all. In seconds· Griffm was second in the 10:16, 111d placed third in the ISOO
...W L
Pd.
GB
- I , M"
o4
assists a game over his career, an a competition lit~.thiB o~, there's 400 meier, 51.3 seconds, 111d $ec· at 4:48. Vonda Sliles (senior,
y-Sm Amonio .....52 26
. ~7
NBA record for players with at JUSt no 100111 for miSlikes.
x - Olr (Appia' 1.0) at B01t0n ·
,.u.... ...........51 21 .654
ond in the 200 meter, 23.03 sec- Shawnee) placed third in the long
y-HGli&amp;On ........51 n
.6S4
. (DotwioO.M;!!:p.m.
least 400 games. He is averaging
But
the
R~men
ema;ged
~rom
'onds;
Blaise Reader (sophomore,
and Sherry Coote (senior,
ro- t)" Cleveland
Orlondo
..........21 50 .359
24
12.6 this year, second in the NBA the conteSt With several !ndivtdual Waverly) waS second in the high jump
(Kina 1-0), I ,35 p.m.
MU.aua
........27 52 .342 25112
Sunbury)
.was sixth in the S81lle ·
· f..aa10 (W.O. 1·0) at o..uit
DolW
............26 53 .329 26 1/2
to Utah's John Stockton.
conf~rence
champtO".s•
t!lcludmg
jump,
six
feet·
,
six
inches,
and
.
event
and
placed second in the
(S....,00.1~7 ,35p.m. '
Dmwcr
.......... 19 59 .244 32 lfl
Johnson totaled 19 assists in the Trav1s _Rambo, the JUOIOr .from ·fourth in the triple jump, 39 feet, triple jump. Debbie Gray (sopho, Qicaao (M.Jiarez 0.0} at Nc:w Yod:
Poclllc Dl..,..,
game- and has 9,898 for his Columbi8D8 wbo placed first m the one inch· Brelsford was was third more, McConnelsville) placed in
(l!ilaad 0-0), 7,35 .....
a-Ponland :........61 18 .772
)5
• (Ericbon 0-i) at Seaule
·y·LA l..okcn .... ,.!17 22 .121
4
career - while James Worthy hammer, 143 feet. four inches:, first in the 100 meter, 11.22 seconds; the 5000 meter run at 21 :48. Nancy
(llolnooo O.I),.J.0:35 p.m.
J •Phoa&gt;ia
..... .. .!12 26
.667 11/2
scored
23 points and Terry Teagle in the shotp~t. 47 feet, 1~1/Z mch· and Michig111 was fourth in the 800 Keller (freshman, Mantua) competo.tland (Dalu*i 1.0} a1 C1lifomia
J-Oolftn s.... .... ..41 31 .519
20 .
~ 1-0), 10,35 p.m.
y-Sca~e.
-. .........40 39 .S96
21
.
21
for
Los
Angeles, which won for es; and first m the discus, 142 feet, meter, 2:04.82, and fourth in the ed in the 1500.
w_,c...
LA Clippon ....... 31 47 .397 29 1/2 •
tbe
I
Oth
time
in II games.
S...no.. .. .....23 l l .29l 37 1/2
five inches.
400 intermediate hurdles, 59.13
The Redwomen 'travel to Miami
'-a.~:,::.
T
OftliiiO aa.
•
xodlndled di.W"- UUe
With lhe Lakers reverting to , Rambo netted the most event seconds,
,~
. University on Friday for the AllCloicop o&lt;llow Yodt
J-&lt;llodted , ..,.,.. berth
their "Showtime'" days of old, championships for the Redmen, but
"We all had good effort put · Ohio Ch8mpio~ships, and .will be
Mondly R.ulll
Bdimare at Milwt'*ee, niJhr
Johnson amassed seven assists in hi~ tea~ma~s. also basked in the forth, but it's bard to be ready for followed by the Redmen at the
••
#' .. Seaule, .Uif-!.
Chicaao 103, Mllw......, 94
OrU.latd 11 Callfomia, nipt
Minnlilata 112, Saenmento 94
tbe first quarter, five coming off wmner s cucle. The m1le relay the conference meet when it's held same meet on Saturday, April 20.
IJ(qwn 97, Sa.ule 93

Eastern band students win honors

Rio qrande runners finish third in MOC

Sc( )rc hoard

w.........., . . ..

7

·Gardeners' Spring Regional Meeting, April 27 ·

,_.,e-

Eal
W L
llowY....

.. ...... 6

hL

2

........... 4

=b
.

.750

3 .571 I 1/2
...........4 3 .511 I 1/2
......... 3 4 .429 2 lfl
........,.3 4 .429 21/2

SL.......

Piuol&gt;uoll&gt;

GB

.

-.a!

..........2 6

w••

Soo JMso
-

.250

4

.........6
...........
l.ooAnpko ........l

3

.511
.!iOQ

21/2

-

l

.400

3

Son-- . ...
Cinaanai

............2

4

2

.333

3 If].

2 5 .216
Mondl7 Raulll
St.I..Guia 5, Mmtftla! 4

4

-

.......... 2

.157

I
l

y .... '· l'laobwJIIl

....... ],A ...... I
.........
_ '-l'hiWdplll• 4

5;,~ J, Cin&lt;ilina&gt;i 2, II iM.

,.....,c...

U.. Anpko 2, S.. FtonoiiCO I
•

;&gt;

Jlhi' f ' t 'a aw.u. 0.0) at OUcaao.

"

'

'

CHutOJ o-1S, 2·2\f.m..m.

k. ....... (liill -0) · · - 1
(MahlorCI-1), , , .....
· flllw Y~ ('WI\il.eh.lnt 1·0) II Pi.as-

•, .• .....,JIDull,an
cr..,...(Hanilch
0-Gl. us.,....
1-0) M Alllnl.l.
• • (LOionn4l 0-0). 1&gt;10 p.m.
(Cio,dim ().I)" Son
•. ~01-1)4).1-p.nL

. .

c-

l.ol AnF- ( - 1-0) .. Son .
Fnncioco(UC• 0.0), 10:35 p.m.

w_,ea_

Philllllfhiltt Qkap

Loo"""*aS•F.....UCO

•
•
•

· s.. ........ -

.....

NewYmloat~,.qhl
...,...,_.-.Adlai.&amp;.
ni&amp;'ll

Clncinatli at s.. Di.,, nif;hl

LA Laten 112, Dall• 106
Tuelda7 Gnnn .
'
lndianau New Jeriey, 1:30 p.m.
Milwal&amp;bc at Wllhirctan, 7:30p.m. ·
Miami at O..douc,. 7:"l0 p.m.
AilanlA • Orlando. 7:30p.m.
8011«1 at tlrclroit, 7:30p.m.
Philldelph.ia at New Yctdl , l :30p.m:

LA Clippcn" s.n Atlonio.l:lO

Ea.gles defeat Pirates,.Wildcats
The Eastern· Eagles' baseball with a double, Mike Smith 4·5 , faMed four and walked JuSt one.
team of Coach Dennis Eichinger Tim Bissell3·5, 111d singles by Jer·
C. Swain had a 3-6 night, R.
recently boosted their record to 5·1 rod Barber, Mark Murphy, 1and Woods was 3·6, Barnes Jim Brace,
overall and 5·0 in the SV AC with JBSOI1 Ha,l(er. ,
H. Queen, Swain, and Wells each
· wins over Nonh Gallia and Hannan
Tim Bissell picked lip the win in singled.
Trace.
·
relief of Mike Smith. Smith went 3
In a 13-0 shut out of Nonh Gal·
Eastem slaCked off early against and two-thirds innings of work, and · lia Jeff Durst picked up the will ,
the Hannan Trace Wildcats and Bissell completed the game with . fanning 12 111d l"alldng two.
found themselves with their backs the exception of Durst facing two
Tim Bissell bad a home run 111d
· against the wall as the young 'Cats batters and accounting for one· third
single, Jerrod Bar~r had two sin·
put up a good fight with EHS nar- ofaniMing·ofwork.
gles. Mark Murphy and R_andy
·
rowly escaping with a 14-13 win.
They combined for 7 strikeouts, Kaylor each a double, and smgles
Chris Adams led the way with a si~ walks, and gave up 12 hits.
by Chris Adams, Jeff Du~st , and
3-4 night and a double and triple,
Chris Barnes suffered the loss
Mike Smith.
while Mau Finlaw (3-4) had a dou- . despite pitching a great overall •
Darrin Smith went three innings
ble and two singles, Jeff Durst was game, 111d giving the Wildcats the
to suffer the loss before yielding to
3-5 with a triple, Randy Kavlor 3·5 opportunity to stay in the game. He
R. Canaday and Fuller. They com·

p.m.

Aliomix at Denver, 9:30p.m.
S1cnrnaM 11 Ullh, 9:30p.m.
H01111Gn1at Podllad, 10:30 p.m.

woo~o-,a.­
cmcoa•
Mlomi, 7'30p.m.
Cbarloae at Atluu, 7:]() p.m.
Ol

Orbndo atClcwelllld, 7:30p.m.
Mlnnoocu 01 Qollaa. &amp;,30 p.m.
LA Clippasot'l'hoi.W., 10,30 p. m.
LA Latas •t Golden St11e., I0:30

p.m .

sP.,ris Transacllons

..........

Allanta - Opiatted pilehcr Plul

..

- Mmkoo~or...........,
l.eope (AAA); ~...,.,.,of

co&gt;doerlony W;Jiu,l fnom Ridunonll.

Nolionoj leo ... - s............ San
Fnntilco CNd".W. K11rin MilchcU. fm
~~ ..,._ and tiDed him an und"lcoeod
..... 1.- fiah&gt;ina April I0 'lainal San

~

- P!acod pi&gt;cber B...
Walk on IS- daJ Gb&amp;Dd list; c:aUed up
inf-Orl.wto Maood fftom Ruffolo of
American Almcialion (AAA).
l•'klfb•D

Eastern tops KC, girls, 6-3·

ldonoohil (WBL) - Ai&gt;quitod rip

"1 .,..... (....,a--......., fl&lt;rida

In the annual EHS-KC softball for a 4· 1 score.
alive.
rorriahts 10/onrml Edc: . . . ..
shootout,
Eastern
rolled
by
Kyger
With one out, the seore.6-3. and
Eastern
added
insuf!lnce
runs
in
flori4o (WilL) - S;.,.od pard Jeff
Creek 6-3 after taking advantage of the fifth and sixth innings fof a 6-1 . runners on first and third Ward hit
~and ror-ud Tn t"~ \loori,
four rll'st inning runs here recently lead.
a ground ball to Gillilan at second.
'
in girls' SVAC softball action.
In the 7th frame Conkle led off Slte tagged Loveday and threw to
Coach Pam Douthitt's crew is with a single, Drummond walked, first for the game ending !loublc
now 2·1 and .1 ~ I in tbe SV AC.
Shaver reached base im a fielder's . play to end the game and get EHS
Eastern collected only two hits, choice, and Bradbury hit a ground outofajam.
singles by Amy Well and Lisa rule double to score Drummond .
The game was delayed in the
Golden, ~ut toot advantage of 16 Loveday hit a single to score. fourth inning because of a hard
possible replacemem for Phelps. KC walks.
Shaver and KC kept the inning rain.
The Xavier sports information . Missy Conkle; Teresa Drum office S&amp;id Gillen was unavailable m.!lfld, Beth Bradbury, and S. Lovefor comment
' day each singled for KC, while R.
John Heisler,. Notre Dame sgons Lemley bad a double and single,
info~mation !lirector, said no
and Conkle a double. Edna Hensley was the winning
timetable bad bten set for finding a
pitcher
with 10 strikeouls, five
new coach.
·
· BY SCOTT WOLFE
filst, then SWHS added one in the
walks,
and
eight hits given up.
Rumors about . a coaching
In a game originally scheduled third for a 2-1 score. In the bottom
change ·wcre rampant following Lucianna Scott suffered the loss to be played at Southwestern, but of that same frame SOuthern added
this season. only the third losing at with 16 walks, and five strikeouts.
moved to Racine because of wet three more and was never seriously
·
Notre Dame under .Phelps. Some
Coach Pam Douthitt said of her . SWHS turf, the Southern Torna- challenged.
reportS hild him resigning to take a Eagle~tes, ."We played. a fO.od, does defeated SVAC foe SouthScott Lisle led the SHS hitters
job in the Bush Administration; defensive game. We are not hllbllg western Il-l FridaY. behind the with two doubles and a single,
while Andy Baer and·Jamie Anderothers had him bring fired . The well yet, but a lot of walks helped piu:hing of Jeremy D11l.
coach and Notre Dame officials ·us tonight. When we did have a
Southern is now 2-4 o¥CI'ail and son each had two singles each.
denied £or weeks that any change chance .to hit we were popping 2-2 in the SVAC.
.
Anderson and Baer have had out·
would occur.
·
ouL"
Southern pounded out 14 hits in standing offensive seasons so far
Phelps said he wants to continue
In the first inning Lee Gillilan, the all8ct off SWHS starter John this season.
Mark Taylor also had two sinliVing in South Bend, but is unsure Carrie Morrissey. Michelle Dono- Sires. Simpson came on in relief of
what be will do. He threw out sev- van, and Edna Hensley eac~ Sires in the sixth. They combined gles, Ronnie SpaWl a double, Todd
eral jJOSsibilities, including politics, waited and Amy Well slugged a for five strikeouts and one walk, Grindstaff a single, and doubles by
Collin Maidens, Arnie Dugan and
social ~orlc, television, novel writ· two run single for .Eastern's quiclt plus one hit batsman.
Jeremy
Dill.
ing and oil painting.
4-0 lead.
Dill limited tbe 'Highlanders to
SWHS
hitters were Chris Met''I s18rling painting oils a year
In the KC third, the score 4-0, just three bits, fanned four and
ago," he said. "Actually, I •ve Drummond led off with a single, wallced one in a fine effon. Scott zger, Conwell, and Staton.
· Southem is to play at Oak Hill
painted si~ since MIJch 19.'"
· Shaver walked, and Bradbury Lisle handled the catching duties.
Southern took a 2..0 lead in the tonight weather pennitting. ' ·
drove Drummontl home on a single
.

·~--------------------------~

f:Phelps steps dowt:t as :Notre Dame·cage boss
:. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) : Digger .Phelps, saying he needs to ,
:.reorder his life as he approaches
;:SO. retired Monday after cQaching
Notre Dame's basketball team for
20 years.
One of the most prominent ·
. coaches in college basketball and a
:longstanding believer in running a
· J;Iean program, ·Phelps announced
bis decision at a news conference
on the Notre Dame campus. .
: "There is only so much time in
Jbe gam~ of life," he said .
: '"Between the ages or 50 and 60,
·.one better auempt
other chal. lenges because thmgs change
.between 60 and 70. It's time to
)nove into the next decade for me."
• ·Phelps, 49, led the Fighting Irish
lo six suaight NCAA tournament
)ppear8DCCS brfm: his team stum. bled to a 12-20 recor&lt;l this year,
· br;inging uncharacreristic boos from
... the hometown fans.
·
:• Xavier head coach Pete Gillen, a
former Noue Dame assistant. was
Jllentioned in several ~ports as a

t¥

Southern tops SWHS, JJ.;J

•

I,

I

(

Thera oh«Kjld be opaciol .,., lnour·
ance for mOrt metureufer clrivera.
Now there II'
lt'a Stoto Auto Componleo' Mtdol·
lit Auto policy.

Teachers workshop, June 28-29

tf yov hne hlld no violotiona or ot·
foUH OCCiclenll far ttl- YNFOI!Id

•• at._,, 21 , ..,.old, you could .
be quell- to becomo 1 Modolllt
policy haldor. enJoying -lot. re·
ducodrotn.

Wolf Pen personals

lmrilldiato!Y. too. T"-' •na throe
y•r welting porlod to quellty. ance
yau own o Mtclolilt policy.

Better than
Candy&amp;
Flowers

25°/o

Turner visits family

C811 ua obovt lhio cor lnauronce'
-kthraugh lor - · d•-··

ER

hood of Southeastern Ohio will
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Third close its Pomeroy office on
Wednesday Homemakers Club will .Wednesday and re-open on Friday
meet Wednesday at tbe municipal · at 8:30 a.m. The closing is due to a
·
building at 10 a.m. with Cindy staff meeting.
Oliveri as a guest.
MIDDLEPORt - The MiddlePOMEROY - The American port Literary Club wil.l meet
Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. w1th Mrs.
the Meigs Senior Citizens Cente~ in. Roy Holter as hostess. Mrs. Wilson
Pomeroy on Wednesday from 1- Carpenter will review the book
5:30 p.m . Tbe Middleport Child "Pillars of the J!arth" by Ken Fol·
let.
·
Conservation League will .be in
charge of the canteen.

Black Hills Gold

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Whllt'a moro, •• • Mldlllot poll·
cyho- yau oro not 9he&lt;gtcl lor
yaur flrot tcddont, tlllt'o .tfacti¥1

lL.L.....

·Calendar

Scholarship deadline approaches

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ROGAN

Also attending were Mrs.
Barnes and Judy Snow den. Easter
basket favors were given by the
hastes's and several members
received Easter r ~ me'mbranc es
from their secret pals.

assz"gnment

Pteferrd 4rlw•rt

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Marjorie Davi s has th ~ rost
office window display for A~ .
Members will meet Apnl 24 at
the home of Lorri Barnes with
members to bring a ·plant for
exchange. The program will
include ornamental grasses by
Janet Bolin, Blazing Shrubs by
Carrie Morris, Veggie Time by
Lorri Barnes, and Garden Hints by
Kimberly Willford, with Mrs.
Edwards to have the travelin g
.prize.

Carson beg· lnS
,

bined for nine strike outs imd ten
walks.·
Darrin Sm ilb, Farley, and Casey
Staton were the lone NG hillers.
Easlem was 10 travel to SHS last
night but was cancelled 10 to wet
grounds, and the game for tonight
with Federal Hocking was also cancelled because of a Lancer .make-up
game. Eastern's boys and girls
host Symmes Valley Friday and go
to Southwes1ern Friday. Thursday
EHS hosts non-league Waterford.

And if yau oro mlddto-- d 148·
14), you'll fill thll blg-t ratt
"'-"of oil.

Suzy CUI'Jlel1ter and Carrie Morris led the garden therapy project at
the Extended Care Unit of Veternns
Memorial Hospital where they
assisted residents in mating pot•
pourri Easter baskets to scent their
rpams and extras were made for
residents unable to participate in
the project. A tentative date of May
6 was set for the Delli session.
The club's participation in Earth
Day activities was discussed and
Janet Bolin is obtaining litter bags
and pamphlets from the Litter Control Office. Mrs. Fetty said B111t
One In Rutland bad donaled flower
seed, packets v:hich will be dis·
lributed house-to-house in Rutland
by members assisted by local Cub

and Brownie uoops.
·
Kimberly Willford bas bad dis·
plays in the Rutland Post Office
window during March.
Margaret Edwards reparted she
had dpne a demonstration and led a
workshop in making grapevine
wreaths and decorating them with
the Rulland Friends and Flowers
Club. Janet Bolin bas done several
programs and demonstrations. Sut y
Carpenter presented a ~rogram on
Victorian ttmes and des1gns for the
Chester Garden Club.

'Sorority Celebrity' May 11

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NATIONAL LEAGUE .

prepare the. program covers, plus
muffms for lhe coffee bour. Sales
table material is needed and com·
mercia! plant vendors will be on
hand. Mike Duhl of lhe Soil Con·
servation Service will speak on
Trees and OAGC judge Marian
Hendricks will demonstrate on
"Christ in Flowers." Kimberly
Willford was placed in charge of
the basket preparalion for this club.
The club planned a tour of
Amisb country in Ohio on ~pril 20
and will leave the civic center at 6
a.m.

MT. HERMAN · The Mt. Her·
THURSDAY
COOLVILLE • The Coolville
man
U .B. Church will be having
SILVER
RIDGE • ·The South
Several announcem ents were gram on "Salad Bowl Garden.'' She Yeauger had a peace lily with sev·
VFW Post 3478 is sponsoring a
made at the monthly meeting of the noted raising your own vegetables era! blooms, noting to keep where- reyival through Sunday with Rev. hunter safety course at the Lions Bethel New Testament Church lit
Wildwood Garden Club held at the not only taste better but are nutri. it gets plenty of light and stays Joe Leighton, Logan. Special Club Building on Wednesday, Fri- Silver Ridge will hold revival
singing Monday by the Harvest
home of Hilda Yeauger with devo- . tious. Most salad vegetables can be moist. •
day, April 24 and 26 from 6:30- Thursday through Saturday at 7
Trio
and
on
Friday
by
the
Southern
tions by Doris Grueser, "A Oar- started from seed for early trans•
Janet Theiss had Now is the
9:30 p.m. Call Roben Pullins at p.m. nightly with Rev. Bud Hatden," "Easter," and "'):hanks For planting. She noted that potting soil Time to continue to prune and cul- Hill Sing~. Pubhc is invited.
667·3831, Edward Wigal at 667- field. Special singers Thursday,
Today."
is no.t good for starting vegetable tivate soil when dry; work wood
66S6 or Ed Rood at 667-6348 for .. Traveliri' On Quartet; Friday,
POMEROY
•
The
Pomeroy
South Bethel Choir; Saturday, Ru$
Members answered roll call by seedlings. Add 50 percent peat ashes in ground; apply fertilizer, PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m. in information.
Spencer
and the Southern Hills
moss to .potting soil for plantislg . . seed and fertilize lawns, set out the school gyin.
naming their favorite season.
~t
Public
invited.
:
POMEROY - Pll!'en!S of junior
The Spring Regional Meeting Mrs. Hollon then read ·an article fruit trees, ev~ns. rose bush~
will be held April 27 at Salisbury · from the Ohio· Farmer, "Starlings and grapevines; make plans for
POMEROY • The Xi Gamma and senior parents planning to
MIDDLEPORT - T~e Middle·
'S·chool :· Wiljlwood Club is in •Are No Darlings" followed by a annual se-ed beds; set .strawberry Mu Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi Soror· attend tbe Meiss High School
port
Child Conservation League
· tree contest.
and rhubarb plants; mow grass "ity will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Prom are invited to attend a meetcharge of the coffee hour.
For show .and tell , Hilda when high enough approximately at the home of A.R. Knight in i~g to pl111 pre and post~ activ. will meet at the Rock Springs Unit·
Evelyn Hollon presented a proone and a half incbes high.
tues on Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at. ed Methodist Church on Tb~
'
at 7 p.m. Rosalee Story will
For the arrangement of the Pomeroy.
the high school in room 202. ,
on the changes in schools in th-e
month, Kathryo Miller had "Spring
·RUTI..AND • The Rutland Viis
Is Here," using ice follies-narcis· ·lage Council will have a special
POMEROY • Planned Pll!'ent· past 30 years.
•
A "Sorority Celebrity" bas been well-known men of the area who sus, yellow-daffodils in glass dutch meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY • 'The Meigs Couqplanned for May -II at Royal Oat will serve .as "celebrity" waiters containets on a wood base.
Rutland Civic Center to discuss
ty Democratic Executive Commit·
The meeting concluded with financing
Resort by three chapters of the Beta during the evening. Three of the
on the wasle center treat·
•
tee will meet Thursd:ly at 7:30p.m .
refreshments
served
by
the·
hostess
· Sigma Phi Sorority. A social hour , waiters are principles of the high .
ment system.
Warner
called
to
duty
·
.
the Carpenter's Hall. Public
in
an
Evelyn
Holter
won
the
hostess
will be observed at 6 p.m. followed schools of lv!eigs Co~nly, Jim
invited.
door
prize.
Air Force Airman Brian K.
by dinner at 7 p.m. and a dance Adams, Southern; Charles Moore,
RACINE.· The .1961 Class of
son of John and Bobbi
Warner,
from 8 p.m. to midnight. The event Eastern; and Fenton Taylor, Meigs.
Southern High School will have an
Pauley,
Bearwallow
Ridge, and
is being held in order to raise
Tickets for the event may--by
·organizational class reunion meet·
grandson
of
Betty
Pauley.
Mason,
money to establish a scholarship purchased for $30 a couple at
ing on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at South·
W.Va.,
and
James
(Hap)
and
Elno.fund for Meigs County students Swisher and Loshe, K &amp; C Jewel·
em High School.
ra
Ingels,
Loop
Road,
Rutland,
has
who plait on attending a vocational ers, Chatteau Beauty Salon, Gerald · ·
.
.
arrived
for
duty
at
Vandenberg
Air
, institution.
Powell or any member of the Xi
POMEROY - Seed distribution'The evening will feature a din- Gamma Mu, Xi Gamma Epsilon or
Charles Carson, Pomeroy, h~s · applications will be !Uen Tuesday Force Base, Calif.
He is a member of the 392nd
ner followed by a dance with enter- Preceptor Beta Beta Chapters of recently begun his first co-op and Wednesday from 9:30 a.m..to I
Communications
Group, whose
tainmenf to be provided by the the Sororiiy. Tickets will be sold assignment with Mead Corporation p.m. at the Meigs United Methodist
responsibilities
include
base and
in Chillicothe. He is a sophomore Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor St.
·band "Jay Flippin." Prizes will also until the first week of May.
be given away throughout the
missile communications; air uaffic
More information on the event at Ohio University majoring in in Pllmeroy.
services, dlta au10mation, teie·
evening.
·
· may be ob\Bined by calling Sandy computer science and will work
phone
switchboard, and missile
Another highlight will fca:ture Iannareli at 992· 7039 or 992· 7606. March through June in the pro·
POMEROY • The Veterans
mstrumentation.
The 392nd supMemorial
Ladies
Auxiliary
wj
ll
gram.
. ' fi
Cooperative Education IS a eve 'meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in the ports Air Force Space Command,
year program in _which students ~let conference, room at the hospital.
Strategic Air Comm•nd and
nwnerous agencies involved in the
practical expcnence by workmg
The deadline for the Rutland · the name of tlie intended high edu· within a compQny. Students altertest
arid evaluation of existing and
CHESTER - The Chester Coun·
High School Alumni Scholarship cational institution.
nate periods of study ~n campus cil No. 323 Daughters of America proposed mi_ssile systems..
All applicants will be evaluated with paid worksite expenencc.
applications is May I.
will meet Tllesday at 8 p.m. at the . Warne~ IS an apprentice telc·
Applicants must be a !991 grad· on grade point average, course of
Chester Fire House duCl to roof pbone and data circuitry equipment
, uate and a child or grandchild of a study, and complianl:e with
specialist He is a 1990 graduate of
damage at the lodge ball.
• Rolland alwnnus.
requirements, with consideration of
BRIAN K. WARNER
Meigs High School.
Applications must include high extra curricular and co-curricular
:
POMEROY - The Southeast
' school course transcripts, a resume activities and career objectives. .
Ohio Rabbit Breeders Association
t of activities and Clll"!ltr objectives, a
Applications may be mailed to
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.Jll, at the
1current photograph fo~ publicity, . Rutland High School Alumn i
extension office in Pomeroy. A
...
, the name and graduauon year of Scholarship Committee, Box 125,
program will be presented on nulri·
1 alumni parent or grandparent, and
Rutland, 45775.
tion, "No Caesar Salad for
I
Thumper." All 4-Hers and family
are invited to attend. Refreshments .
t
will follow. Call 949·2797 for
information.
'' The use of newspapers in the tion students.
Through detail exercises , pro·
: classroom as sources of informa: tion, art and pow er will be the jecls, games, programs, and
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Matthew
• focus of study in a workshOp for resources using newspapers, work·
were
recent ~isitors of Mrs. Eugene
t teachers, June 28 and 29, at Ohio shop participants will learn to
Haning.
.
develop young people's reading
l University.
Eva
Allen
and
Casey
Allen,
l "Newspaper as Textbook" will and analytical skills and their visu·
by Colemao·Fri.zzell, Inc.
Winston-Salem, N.C.; Judr Polack,
• be held in the labs and classrooms al literacy. The program will also
. Stockpon; were recent VIsitors of
~ of the E. W. Scripps School of demonstrate how "media conMr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole. H~rner
• Journalism. Sandra Haggerty, asso· sumers" can. have an impact on
OFF EVERY DAY
Hill.
.
ROGER C. 'fURNEl JR,
: ciatc professor of journalism. will what is printed in the newspapers.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
The program may be taken on a
AT••••••·•
I lead the worlcshop designed for ele·
were
SWlda}' dinner guests or Mr.
\ mentary, junior and senior high non-credit or a graduBIC or under·
•
and Mrs. Jeff Bole.
~ school teachers as well as youth gratluate credit basis. Enrollmeni
EW4
Roger
Clinton
Turner
Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans,
deadline is June 12. Additional his wife, Teresa, and his son,
! services ·personnel. adult literacy
Mother's Day is Approaching!
Tyson
and Jonathan were recent
: teachers 111d journalism and educa· infonnation may be obtained from Steven, were home to visit his
Come In and see our wfde selection of
'
Sandra HaggMy, 593-4880. RegiS· mother, Dottie Turner, this week. dinner guests,of Mrs. Ida Mwphy. ,
E~ster guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Black Hills Gold.
tration is handled through the
t
is stationed in Earl, N.J., Charier_ Smith were Mr. and Mrs.
Office of Continuing education , Clinton
WE OFFER TWO STYLES OF BLACK HILLS OOLO
with the Navy and is on the ship Doyle~· Mrs. David Waley,
: PlanJ have beeR finalized for a 593-1776.
MOTHERI' RINOI.
U :S.S . Seattle. His ship just Stacy, Dame! 111d Steven, Mr. and
i dinner and dance at the Fenney
Outrlnteecl Delivery In time for Mother'• D1y.
returned from the Persian Gulf Mrs. Cbarlea Knapp, Mr. and Mrs.
· • Bennett Posl of the American
If orderCICI by April 11.
after being th'ere since August. Kevin Knapp, Michelle, Amy and
: Legion by the Middleport Arts
Thet11 was a welcome home party Ashley. Mrs. Dorothy Reeves and
BVRBY IN WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD!
' Council on Sunday.
·
Esther Brandau, Jackson, for .him Tuesday with an ice cream Mr. 111d Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and
; Dinner will be served at 6 P.n:'· wasMrs.
visitor of Mrs. Lola cake being served toTeresa and Melissa. ·
• : with dance to follow. The cost 1s Clarka weekend
.
and
visited
Ora Carsey ori Steven Turner, Denise Bunce;
' $28 per couple and tickets may be
Robert Reeves, 'Chester, was a
·
PT. PLEASANT
MIDDlEPORT
GAU.IPOUS
Jerry, Charmele and Kaylyn Friday vililllr of Dorothy Reeve~.
i purchased at Mick's Barber Shop Sunday.
2501
,.._
Mrs·
Margaret
Tlnnalas
and
Mr.
716
N. Sectnll
364
Spradling, Monica Turner, Sean
tn' Pomeroy, King's ServiceS tar
Charloae Lambert, Nelsonville,
Strlit
' and Dairy Queen in Middleport, or and Mrs. Bob AJti;~ited Friday Dodson, Kalrina TU(DCr, Alta Mar· was ·• recent visitor of Jo Worley
evening
.
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dan
~ by mail to Miry Wise, 521 South
ble, Jimmie Cain, David, Rose and and family and Mr. and Mrs.
304-675-2303
614-992-649 1
614-446·6620
Sydenstricker, Mason, W.Va.
Renee·Edmonds.
·-TbiJd Ave. in Middleport. ·
.
·Cbarley Smith. . .

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The

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Dinner, dance slated

luuaace Services

Harrisonville news

~14 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-8687

~State Auto

,_

IMUriiiCt C........

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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

1Uelday,A~I16,199t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

-

Beat of
the Bend..

I

By
Bob
Hoeflich

• The Area's Number 1 Mai'ketAJaci

..
RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-215'6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 1 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDAY
POLICIES.

Day•
6

10
Monthly ·

•

"Rec.Nrl 1 .50 discourM tor

16
1&amp;
16
1&amp;
II

3

' "d' out ... o Mei91. G.Hia ot Mes on C:ounti• "'"' 'be Pt'•·
Plld.
.
,

adl pt1i d

Rate
t4.00
••.00

Wordt

1

Ovtr
.

16

Wonla
.20

.30

•e.oo

.42
.60
.06/ d..,

tt3.00
•1 .30/ day

Alin • • hMeon•c:uiMI runto. kollen updlfa will bech•Qed
lor e.eh diiJ • • . ..,.,• .61.

1n adwi1RCti

·

· s~tntintll

1 Clfd ot Tt•anks
2 In llemCMy
3 AnnGYCiftl. .l t
4

6 Happv Ads

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BULLE'fi,N BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
. PUBLICATION
.
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PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

The J)nce has been reduced to
$81~.900 and ownerfinanc1ngofup
to 8u% of purchase amount may be
possible lor qualifying person to
buy very nice large ·home on 312
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages, rented I BR apt. Property
includes 4,800 sq. H. farm. bldg.
and mobile home.
Call 614-992-7104 for Appt.

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Officers of the Harrisonville~cipio Alumni Association met
recently to make plans for the
annual banquet and dante to be
lfeld on Saturday, MaY. 2S at 6:30
n.m. at the Harrisonville Elemenwy School.
The menu for the dinner was
planned and will included baked
stc11t and fried chicken, along with
seveml vegetables, salad, beverage,
and dessert.
.

Reunion classes to be recogniz:ed will be 1931, 1941, and
1951. Music for the dance will be
provided by the Alvin Chutes
Band.
Reservations are to be made by
May 20 with Larry or Joy Clark,
992-3690. Officers are Larry Clark,
president.: Howard Oilkey, vice
president; Pansy Jordan, II'C8Surer,
and Joy Cladt, secretarY.

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO. 1111
An Drdln_. ziHarllting
t!'e rulel for the regulltlon
lild conduct of the Votunt - Flra Dopart-nt of the
VIII... of P-roy.
. WHEIIEAI, the Pomeroy
Vo"'-t' Fire Oep~ment
Ia Ol'lln- """ . .
the
VII.... of Po:liiEOf. Pomeroy. Oltlo; and
WHEREAI. It Ia dMmed
bait to further reaullte oald
departENnt. .
•
tHEREPORE, be It oQr·
dolnad ltv the VIllage Council of the IIUIIge of PoENroy,
State of Ohio. by"" offlrmllttvo vote of all membera
-adlhl-:
ARTICLE 11 : All momltoro
1Bto38-oofagemu•
comply with the Ohio r•
vleld co:la _, the Ohio C.
requlr•
R.A. lnouran~
monte for claN pr~n
lnour- rltlnp and Btate
of Ohio a....u of Workmen'a Co-HIIon out·
lln11.
ARTICLE 12: Appllcltlon
for me .....llllp
tha Pomaray Volun- FIN DapartEMnlwlllzl given by the
Flra Chief "' 1t1a eppolntad
offl-.. Whan the applcallon .. oon:pletad and ralilmad to the Fin Chief, It
will thaillzloubmlttad to the
FIN Compony. All -llrly
oc:haduled maetlna. appro-

prlotl pn&gt;cedurM wMI be un-.
:lartalten to _ , "' dllll·

:. Fa tal Attraction'
~~~~~~!::.~1 ~i:~~l!;:~~~g
trial nears jury
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"Anytime anyone comes in
By GRETCHEN LANG
I
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UPI) contact with him, something hap.f- The defense attorney in the pens," he said. "You can see his
·
'•'Fatal AtlriCtion" trial Monday clever tentacles coming ouL"
Lewis
insisted
that
the
ripped into the posccution' s case,
iccusinl Carolyn Warmus'Iovcr of Solomoos' marriage had gone bad.
!llotting his wife's death and fram· "There was no love in the house,"
ins her with the IIIUing.
· saying Solomon suppressed "a
: Speaking to a packed court- murderous rage."
rpom, David Lewis wound up his
He said Solomon had reached
Ojlse as he began 13 weeks ago, the sta~e "when your wife no
it'Siatina W.-mus was innocent of longer IS a human being, but a
tbe murder of Betty Jeanne piece of baggage - so you kill
SOiomlltl, shol down in her home her.' •
· He asked the jury to consider
Jp. 15, 1989.
•. Instead, he said, the victim 's why Solomon sought immunity
hust.Jd, l'lul Solomon, conspired from prosecution before he agreeed
With Manhaaan private·investigator to teslify, askin~, "Protecting him'{inccnt Pan:o to plan the murder.
self from whal? '
'
1 As he spoke, Warmus, 271 wearDuring the t~ial prosecutors
ill! a form-fiaing bllck suit with a allempted to pamt Warmus, the
sllixt skirt IIICI high heels watched daughter of a millionaire executive,
L:ewis's facry summation without as so obsessed · with Solomon she
emotion, a demure look on her . 'was willing to lrillto get him. They
claim that obsession continued
f~ .
· Tfle ptOICCUiiOD COnte'\_dS that even after the victim's death, when
Warrnus, who was having an affair Solomon starting dating other
witll fellow school oteacher women.
sOlomon, tUicd his wife with an
The trial before Westchester
iUepl pistol and silencer Parco County Coun Judge 1ohn Casey
iller for $2,.500. The murder has drawn worldwide media attenhal never been found.
tion with its titil.laling details about
,
ptOieCUiiotl wu scheduled the yaried romantic pursuits of
ll.l Sill liP Ia c. in .the aftemool!. Warrnus and Solomon.
During tlie trial, Lewis got
but Lewia was ruan1ng so Jona 11
W. .ot ue if dJe caae would go to Solomon to admit he had at least
die . Monday• .
·two extramarital affairs with
is the . women other than Warmus, and
•• ... witness, and lhc regularly lied to his wife .
The defense also presented a
Oily 01111 wllo COIIIIOCU the former
eleineatary ICIIool teaeher to the witness who said thai on tile niaht
pn tMI wu ued to till the 40- of the murder, he overheard
yar4d Solotnoa.
. Solomon discuss a gun that was
' Lewis Clllcd l'ai:I:O "1 thief, I dropped " in the deepest part of the
ferger .S a liar who talks like river."
:

~~plor P~m&gt;

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FLAG PRESENTATION- An American . Plctured,l-r, are Mike F1oc:cari, Henry Clatworthy and Commander Howard ·Pinnell, all orthc
llq and an Ohio flag were given to Overbrook
Feeney Bennett Post, Mark Murphey, OverCenter Monday morning bt members or the
brook Administrator, and Meigs County ComAmerican Legion Fenney Bennett Post No. 128
and the Meigs County Commissioners. The nags
missioners Manning Roush and David Koblentz,
were presented to Overbrook resident :Tom . presenting the Ohio nag.
Turner; front, who Is a World .War I Veteran.

•

appalled by a TV senes that plays but excluded his dad's new wife. It's
tapes of the dcsperatt people who time for S(IIM tiew rules.
phone 911 pleading
for help. A
I haVe worn all the hats ,_ wife
.
recent recordmg ~as especially mother, ex-wife, single mother; other
upsetung bec_ause 11 w~ from a woman, new wife and stepmother.
14-ye&amp;r-old girl b'IIJPe:d m a fire; Because I've had so much experiShe~~ SOilJ:' after.
encc 1 feel qualifiCd to spea1c OUL
It IS SICkenmg to hear those aw.ful
1, agree with you, Ann, that
last moments.•How dcbumanzzmg weddings are not the time 'to punish
for the victims to have their private former spouses.. It should be the
horrors broadcast for all the world bride and groom's day. Too often
t~ hear. It ~ust )!c extremely the weddings of the children are
diffiCUlt for lhetr loved ones.
seized upon as a gmnd opp&lt;WIWliiY .
I've heard recordings on local and to "get even. • 1 have thee more
national news broadcasts of womfl weddings to go and my ex-husband
whose estranged husbands wqre is not apeaking to me. Will you
killing_ them.' men pleading f~r please wade tluough all the gubege ,
protecUOII agamstdrunk oc psydlotic · and put the solution in a nutshell?..
women, and children begging into J.M. IN HONOLULU
the telephone to be rescued from
DEAR HONOLULU: Each
abusive~· Have these news situation is different, but after
bn:w'.r•sten no sense of ~~y?
serving as refcrcc for at least 1,000
Docs anyone ~ve. perrDISSI~ to of these faghiS, I would •Y the best
play such recordinss? ~ I've wntten · rule to follow is thia one· Let the
~ TV station but I doubt that it bride and RIOOIII ' decide •
thev
will do much good unless olheis want to invite and their decilion
complain. Please respond in prinL should be finaL Onnted, thtre are
-- SICK OF EXPI,.Or:I'ATION, bound to be some hiD'I fecliags and
DAVIS, CALIF. .
unhappy people, but the two
DEAR DAVIS: Unfortunatt)y, principal characters should have the
many people consider catastrophes last word.
~ disasters great cnterlainmenL If ·
Dear Ann Landen: Leainin1
this were not the case, there would lessons in life never ends. Theile Ia
be no market for the grue10me no )lilt of life that doclllot eonllin
prognms you describe.
a lesson, if yal arc tuned in.
What you heard sounds like
One of the-m01t imponant
invasion of priYicy. buliiOIIIC people leiiSOIIS is lhil QDC: TlrU iJ often no
couldn't Cite leA about the flmilics better than tlult. Something
of the bereaved, and appmatly different isn't Jl«cs ily better.
there are no laws to proccct them. I
Lesson No. 2: Othcn 11re simply
ftnd this 1101 only revolting but a mimln of ourselves. When you love
sad COIIIIIIellllry on the iiiiCDIIitivity Or hate 1001cthing abouiiiOIIICICli1Q, it
... bid lllte of too many people.
is Oftco becaii!IC itrCflcCIIIOIIIOthing .
Dear A.. •.aden: nu is in you love or hale about JOUIIOlf. ltlpJnSe to the letter from the 1011 ·A READER IN CAMBRIDOB

.

.

.
'

Ann
Landers

..-_. Counly

Mason Co .• WV

Area Code 114

..... Co4e 304

441 CWUpoli1 .

112 M•ddl__.
Pom•oy
Ch•ler
143 Portland
·

·t&amp;B Leon

311

Vintll'l

z•s Rioo.......

211 . Gu.,.., 0'-t.
643 AraltiaDist.
379 · -

••6

247 1Man Fatls
941 Racine
74Z Ruta.d

1- die~. The Fire
CNef or hl1 Cf!Palnted of·

floor wllln t""' _ , . to the
M - Mid tiLe VHietloCouncll, tho r-lla of the eat1on
,....., In ltoltalf of the Fire

ec....ny. Tho Yllole cou...

ell . . . .... ... IPPIC lion

un:tw -""'

IPr-'·
RncLI

lltlon fzzr llnll

113: Tho • Fire

Chief will tumlllt thi·VII....
Clerk wltll 1 -tete ll:zt of
ICIIve flra flaht- not to • ·
DHtl forty 140) INrnbarl IIIII
1 yllily boola.
ARTICLE 14: All membero
to receive mtnlmum
for all fire 01lloln the VIU..
of ,..,_roy.
ARTICLE H : After 11
YIIN of IINIOI. I member
hoe the option to blco- on
lnEECtlvemember.
ARTICLE *1: All or:llc aa Of perte of orcl·
liiEEc• · ln confllcl with thlo
orcflnMU hlroby , .

w.a•

'*'

_.....

ATTIST:
Lanv W.hrung. Preo.; Ietty leronlclz, • Tom Worry, WilHam Young
COUNCIL MEMBERS
......... Morrie. Clerk
VIllage of Pomeroy
Molal County. Ohio
(4)11. 18, 23. 3tc

R-.

ANN LANDERS

ORDINANCE NO. 1187
An Ordln-to E:ztlbfllll
• •lartnforVarloua
No:i-o11clad
"*IDnnel Ill the VHiailo of
Pomeroy. Ohio, and

ORDINANCE NO. Ill
An Or:llrzancoto Eotlltlllll
S.lerllo for Varlouo
N~~r&gt;-lllolad Buporvloory
and Non·Riparvl-v
Emplo'/111 of the VIllage of
Pomeroy. Oltlo, ond
,:lacllrlng Ill '
EMERGENCY .
IE IT OIIDAINED IV THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE ·
OF POMEROY, OHIO.
SI!CTION 1 : Thot the oalarloo of tho .. r~ou. """''"'·
_...1, - · pollee. ce-

.......... .

EMERGENCY •
BE IT ORDAINED ·BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VIUAGE
Of' POMIROV, OHIO.
SECTION 1: Tl!ottha ool·
ary of the Chief of Pollee of
Po-.,y Pollee Oaport- . ll:alllzl .... II hareby
-llalted II the Nil of
•18.000.00 par,..,.
SI!CTION 2: That the oolary of the Tax Admllilllrllz&gt;r
-n lzl•d 11 "-by a~~ab­
llofzad at the rota of
•12.000.00 par,..,.
SECTION 3: Tlzll the 111IHY Elf IIMt Vllla11 Admlnlo·
lrllt&gt;r 11:111 be and II hereby
__,lohad at the Nte of
t23,100.00 par yar.
SECTION 4: T1z11 the Ill·
ary of the It,.., • ..,.,._
•hiM lie and 11 ...,...,. aatolilllltod at tho rota of
SECTION 1: Tlzll the ool·
ory of the Fire Chief of the
Ponwoy Fire Dapart-nt
-lllzlond .. hereby altlbllahetl at tho rata of
11000.00 ,.., ....r.
' • .
SICl'ION 8: Tltot the ooiIHY of the Clerk of BlOCh
G ..... Con
lllollltoond
Ia ltinby 1
ltthed 11 tho
rota of 1800.0Q per .,..r.
SECl'ION 7: That the Or·
d l - .. - b y ...........
tollaiiEIMERGINOV - •·
IUfe MOIIII'Y for the lrn.
.....,..,. pr-lllon of the
publla · l:aolth, and
....,., of the Vlllofl• of
Pomeroy. Ohio. ond tot the
fu:thor - n thll the cont l - mo:lntltiiiiOI of high
emp.. v• morN end good '
emplo,•·employee · relatlonl Nq~Einllmmlilllte action. WHERI!POIIE, thla Ordin- 1helltltallffHI ond
Ito In fiLl loroo •• of Jan1111ry
1811, upon lla
EEnd opprovll by tho Council.
PASSI!D: Aprll1, 1911
ATTEST:
LMry W.hrung. Pro.; Tom

Z::::J

1.

P••-

Werry, a r - Read, Iotty

I a - . William A. Young
COUNCIL MI!MIERB
lrondtl Morr11. Clllrk
VII.... of Pomeroy
Melp County, Ohio
(41 a; 11. 23, 3tc

CLASSIID ADS

a.-=

aforevery •

P

PUIUCATION OF NOTICE
TO ALL PERIONB IN·

'

PIN down EX11lA

CA6H?I!

I;&gt;EAR READER: Beautiful. I
wish I had said tbaL
What's tlw truth llbo111 pot, · cocaine, LSD,PCP, crack, speed and
downers? ''Tiw Lowdown on Dope"
has 11{1-10-IM-minute infortrlanon on
drugs. Send a se/f-addrtssed, long,
bMSiMss-size tnl!i!lope and a check
or money ortkr for $3.65 (this illeludes postage and hand/11Jg) 10:
Lowdown, c/o ~M Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 -

0562. (In Ctulllda. ftnd $4.45.)

TEREITED
the Eltlte
of ~ARLENEIn LANTZ.
do·
__,, 1111 of 12281 Mt.
Olive Rilld, Long Bottom.
Oltlo 41743, Moigo County
Prolzlto Court. c- No.
21.H7. An llflllllclllon hal
""" flied ...... to ,.,_
die . - . from odmlnlatra·
lion.
....
do
not ........ 121,000.00 liEd
die cradlloro wll noJ Ito projudiGotl tharlby. A halrtng
on tho oppllc- w~J Ito
held Prldtly. Aprll21, 1181.
II 1:30 o'oloclz P.M j Pertone knowing eny reeaon
wilY tho -llclllon llloultl
Ito pMIMZI llloultl appear and lnfDnn tho Court.
Tlto Court II located locond
Floor.
rt Hou•. s-nd
lt .• Po~, Ohio 41711.

thai--

1'11111 yollr cl11.tter ir1to ca.slr.,
SJ1.ll it tile ean r.tJa..y... by v!lone.
no need to leave your laom.e.
Place your clauiOed ad today!
15 word1 or le1111, 3 dqp,
3papert,l6.00
CqR nar nfllctt fnr pnld Ira_adMnr.P. rnlt~•l

576 Apple Grove
773 Ma1on
112 New Haven
815 let••

PubliC NotiCe .

a_,a-y

c...

~"t!·J~~

Lena K. N•lll-d, Clerk

141 2.

e. 11. :Sic

1 ,(,

11 · HelD War'll ..
12 Sllultian
13 lnsuranc:e
14' • Busin•• Trtlntng
. 11 SchoOII &amp; lnslmctton
16 Radio. TV. CB R.p•n
17 Misce61Mwov t
1~ W111tM To Do

w..,,_.

.-.ry,wotorEEnd--•-

••
111tplo.,..,
lllutll Iii
ora hefeb'l
a:ztobllol:od
IIond
the
r"" Ill forth on Exhibit A.
lltiChad 11111110. whloh exhibit lhll Ito and Ia hereby
adopted a n d - - ·
EXHIIITA-f0-2Vro;3-4
Vra: I· I Yro; 1 0·14 Yro; 11118 Vro; 20 • Ovor.)
POLICE
.

CPT.:
1.11.
1 .81
7 .01.
7 .11,
7.21
. , 1.11 .
LT.: 8.10. i .eo. 1.70.
I .BQ, 1 .90, 7 .00.BOT.: l t21, B.38. 1 .48,

l .ll. l.ll, I. 78 ·
Patrolmen: 8.03. 1 . 13.
8.23. 8.33. 8 .43. 8 .13.

DlopotcfM!r: ...... 4 "811 '
4.711. 4 .•• 4.111. 1.01.
M-lfloroon:4.11. 4 .11.
4.711. " '"· 4.111. 11.08.
.
BTR~ET
Alii. •·-.: 11.72 ; 1 .12.
......1.12. 8.22
11.12. 8 .02.
Labo,.,: ,4.1511. 4.111.

4 78
" " "-•~:le111i II .OI. ·

Alit. Supt.! 11.17, 11.87,
8.07. 8 ,37, 8.27. 1.37,• •
LaboNrl: 4.14........ 11.04.
11.14, 11 .24. 1.34•
lyo. A1t1lyat: B.44, 11.114, ,
I.M. 11. ~·~ 11.14, 11.14.
Cllok/~ : 4.111.
4.88. 4. 711, 4 .•• 4 .•• 11.111.
GENERAL
IICNIIIy: 1 .17. 1.07.
• .17, 1.27. B.37. 1 .47.
SECTION 2: Tltat Ia ordl·
nonce Ia heroby zllclarl&lt;l to
be en EMERGENCY mtll·
"!,. IIICIIIIfY for the Immediate pro-• Ilion Elf the
publla p1101, health. and ••fely of tho VIllage of Pomtlroy. Ohio. llid for the
further roooon that the contlnuocl ~~~~-- of high
employ• morale end good

an:ployer/-tov-1

1 .._~---

.. . I I

'•

"

I

BISSELL
'BUILDERS
CUSTOM llaT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI 1-...W. l'rtal"

PH. 949·2101
OF Ill. 949•2160
•. Day 1!1' tfW.t
'Ill''
NO SUNDI y CAllS

I

'

'

t'

I

'

Motorc.,cl•

76 Auto P• n S. Ac c•sor ttil
' 77 ·Auto Rep•r
7 8 C• mping Equ1pmwn1

..

Hou ..hold Oo•
52 - SPGfCing Gooda
5l Antiques
6.a , M i.c. Merchftfldlse
56 Building Suppli•
56
tor s .. e
57 Muti-e tllnstru menh
58 Fru its • V•gat•bl •

Serv1ces

61

81 Homell'llPf:OYement •
82 ,· Piurftbing&amp; H• ll•ng
83 e.c ...ati"9 ·
,
84 Elec:tric:ll &amp; Reh tg ero~tion ·
8&amp; Gvf\• ill H.ulfng
86 M obile Hom e R.p1it
87.. Upholstery

P•"

59 For Sele Of lra11 e

THE

coumY cua
Salt .
GOLF LE~S-'10 •6 .sss

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

NEW GIIPS......
14
lrobn (I* l=td
TIIIPIIIES • PI.A S
IADGES
M_M

992·2269

,1;:====:!:~=•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO •

s-tc-.

1-12-110-tfn

IIIW . _ hit
E
:zttmat....

Home Repllrt
•Roofing
•Siding
•P.alntlng

PROM TANNING
SPECIAL
1st

10 SESSIONS - $10
949·1126

992-6641

UC. ·

'

....

Tab the pcin out of
painting.
Let 11M do it ,... you.

VEIY IEASONAIIE
HAVE IEFEIEN(ES

~-

•R•IOIIIIIII R1t. .
oQu1llly Work
l!etimate1
•Cerget H11 ."Fa:zt Dry

IDIIGIUI'OIS-St• •

IMIIS--.-$12~ •

•F-

miDIS-$115.

kEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

•High Gloa on Tile
Floor Flnlah

99t-5US • tiS-3561
Au.ss Frt111 Pm OHkt
POMIIOY. OliO
10130111 1111

MIIIWIS, Owr-

lt, 1, lutlto.... OH.

(6141 915·4110

3·1· '11 - 1 mo. pd.

rlla-

4·1-'M-1

Spechtll. . ln

-o--•

- EiocUtool-ConCNtt worll
-- 1
Rooftng
_ _ , ...- _

NEW • UBED PAIITB
FOR ALL MAKES l
MODEUI

(FREE EITIMATESl

III·CDUm
. IICYCLING

V. C. YOUNG 111 ·

01 TOLl flit

992-6215.

1-100·141-0070

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK

,_.,, Ohle

DliWII, 01110

9 A.M. "TIL 7 P.M.

11-14-'90 Un

In ~

Gar:lan of our
HMrtl."

Alwayo will be ~adfy
mfe•ad by · her tam-

,!]:=
..~~.
but.
ntis.

JAIIISDISII
991-1772 or
742-2251

DINO-MITE

•.•.,.,,

IU·•· Stant!

I. L MASH

Hend Tufting
Cultom Drtpe•

CARPENTRY

S6YHnlxperlonoe

614·991•1111

H2·SS26

We lay Whll W. Do.
We Do Wl:at We

a..,.

N•• I•

'""'"

MOIILf H- FUINACES - HEAT PU•s
l1L FUINACE PAll'S

SAVINGS...
In the Classlfteds!

•••m·s

MOIIU 110111
IUftNG &amp;COOLING

.................. ..... ......... 141' .

...

-~

CAU fOI PIKD
614-992 -5114
t AM-7PM~ 7 DewoWotlr '

P-or,

2·21.'11.1-

I

UPHOUTDY

,.

lr'8. lttltNitora 1nd all non·
tenoua mtltl!le.

614-992-6120

41121'11 / 1 mo.

tl Mlilll,,

-·-·Jum.---·
... . -·
,.,.,.. Ollh fOr •lumlnum,

Owntr &amp; O)ltl'attlr

52100 S. I. Ul,

•lloom Additions
oG•a1111
•Kitch- • 81thl
•VInyl ,lding
•Ra1toratlon
•RIIPif..Work
.Und-plng•G,radllngl

.CYCLING

lemtt4 Off lito ly;..s On
llzeC..al
.
h. 1 &amp; lt. 143
._.,, Ol:le

EMILIE MERINAI

..........

8rylll Pleca
MldtlleporL

011 .....

· TII·COUNTY

Complete Grooming
for Alllrlllla

- 147·4035

&amp;39

THE

GROOM
ROOM

N- Open For Sprlnl(l
. •H•b Plant• •PeNnlela
•Ev.laotlngo ·
Cr1fter1. Orow you own
drlldlrlltlrloll.
Open Thurs. thru Sot.
10-1; Sun. 12·1

•RepiiCIIII.IIIIt
Wlnclow•
•Rooting
•lnoullllon

Ill•:
Kathryn' and
Woodrow Mora
Peul end Ruth Kerr
HoNce 1111d Dorothy
Karr
Grenclchlldren end
Great-grendchlldren.

r

COIIIII'S
OHIO IIYR •ns '
111111 mii.AmNGS

INSUUnON
•VInyl Biding

1M.

A
.•
Bright ldgal

Plvmlllnl

In MemOry

In loving memory of
our da• mo-r.
ALTONA KARR, who
depa"ad 2 , _ , ~~go.
AprH 11. 1189.
.. M!IfiLOriH • - mora
praclou1otll
.
When lova:l -~ havo to
part.
But ramaln . . , _ llfoom.

'

P-lolg

992-7013
or 992-5553

--========~
r

'

. CLASSIFIED~ .·

-Room -.JJIIItH••

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

I
' I

698-~59:1

CAIPENTII SDYICE

3/ 1/'11 / 1. mo.

2

,,

YOUNG'S

WHAUY'S
AUTO PAllS

P•-•

'
5-31-'-10 lift.

. Sweeper
Repair

IICIO 0¥11tS-SJt .,.

Time

667·6179

SPEEDY VAC
Quality

tONYWUUim

WA51f._S 1GO •

• • n&amp;l fLOOI CAB

FREE ES'OMATES

- -.

USID APPUAIICI'S

c•ncuANIIS

MliMOI·diMW

915~4473

FOIIYR 1101111
. . .l ..

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Stop &amp; C••••re
FrH' Esflsgtn

c•,., ap,t.

CONSTIUmON

NO SUNDAY

•Ga,..as
•C-pl•h
. a-lllllng

so High Sdlool
Stldtnts

CEDAR

PH. 949·1101
or leao 949·1160

...........

1155111 &amp; lUilE
.CONniUCnOII

FOIEYEI IIOIIZI

•!111

''F

Sentinel
Classified&amp;
992-2156

JOHN IIAfOID

USED RAILROAD TIES

NO JOB TOO SMAlL
FREE ESTIMATES

tlonl raqulrotll-lotaactfon. WHEREFORE, thll Or- ·
dlnanoaohlll taka -.ot end
Iii In full force •• of J111uory
1, 1111. upon Ito
and approvol by the Council.
PAllED: Apr111, 1881
ATTEBT:
.
Larry Wohru"!!· Preo.; Tom
Worry. Bruce Read. llelty
-l1ronlok, William A. Vounq
.
COUNCIL MEMIERi
lron:la Morrl1. Clllrlc
VIllage of PoENroy
Molgo County, Ohio
141 I. 11. 23. 3tc

--'---11

Po-.eroy IJiillly Sendilel

1•

7 9 C111 mpen • Motor Honut$

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and-

'"---- ---1

n

J

76 l o ••• &amp; Mo101 s fot Sille

10-11-1 ao.

1
1
J ;)·- --

., 1

46 Space tor Rent
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equ ipment for Runt

Business Services

11._ _ _ _-1
12._ _ _ _ _11

·:':11

7 1 • Aut os for Sal•
72 Truck s for S1le
73 V.ni&amp;4WO ' t

MerchollliiSP.

. 21 Busin•• Oppottuntey
- 22 ~oner to l.,.n
23 Protel!ston .. S•vices ·

I

'• 11I

Tr,lns~urt.llllln

49 For L•••

Pl . Pie.-•

· Public Notice

Public Notice

Want to:

&amp;76

137 lufl•

H7 j:oolvllo

ua.ooo..oo par vur.

Public Notice

,""In

GINiaCOUIMy
AreaCode•14

317 Ch-o

COPY Of ADLINf
DAY BEFORE PUILICAT ION
MONDAY PAPER
11 :00 AM . SATURDAY
, 2 :00PM .
TUESDAY PAPER ·
2 :00P.M.
WEDNESDAY PAPER
2 :00PM .
tHURSDAY PAPER
, 2 :00 I'.M,
•HIPAV PAPER
2 00 P.M .
SUNDAY PAPER

.

f,.

jollowirtK 1·1'11'/lhl;iu• I'XfhRIIKI'~ ...

'A tliltlf.lfrod advertiun,~~nt plK_,o '" Th e Oady S unhrull (P ·
upt
c::lanrl1ud dls pl,..., 8 usMu• a C•d oand llJ9IIft01ices)
WIH itllu iiPPII• .0 tht: Pt Pleo~~•nt R~ster •nd th• GMh·
polls O..ly Tnbunu. rtt ilchmg own 18.000 honuts.

.

I'• :· 1111

•

Hou•• for Rertt
Mobile Hom.. lo1 Avnt
43 h rm'l tor Rent
44 A,.rtm..-.t for Rent
4&amp; · Furnished Rooms.
42

En1:il

Ytwd Sltlus

.

IIJII11

Public Slle &amp; Awction
•

4'

'Ads that mull be patd in .chliln CI$ • ••
Card ot Th .,;lk~&gt;
·
H•ppv Ads

~-·

. 61 ~· Farm Equrpm un t
62 Wan,t .-d to B"y
&amp;3 Livntod.
64 HitY &amp; G11in
6 5 · Sued • ferhhz er

3&amp; Lot s &amp; Acl eegt
l &amp; R• lll Estate w.,aed

9 W•t• to Buy

for e rrora hrat da¥ ad tuns m P"PUf» · Call bttfore 2 :00 p .n1.
dt¥ 111M publr call!on to mak tt correct ion
'I

liULLE·-··TIN- BOARD

Sltlt~~

33 F•m• for Sat t
3 J Bulin• • Buildings

Gi'lltM,.Y

rs not teaponslble kH euora •her tiut d., - IChvdi

In IWiefllorlam

31 ' Ho m n lor Sal t
3 2 Mobil• Hom• for

6 l ost t M Found.
1 Y•d S.aelpaid in Hltt n cel
I

"Free .ds
Give-.w~ a nd Found Mil under 16~ ords will bv
n~n l ~-· M no c:h•ee.
.
• Pri'e.t: of ad fOJ 111 &lt;:lpllall~ttus is dou'blu pnce o f ad cos t.
• 7 pomt line type un.,. us.od .

F,.·rn ' !ll l lt!S
&amp; L 1.1 )lld,~

RP..II f :&gt;I.JI~

Iowan!

-~~­
~~ ~n
,.,

L; Wrltesel

·ROOFING
NEW- IEPAII
Gutters
'Downspouts ·.
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
•
FREE ESTIMATES

205 II. ...... ,.,. .
IIIIDUfOif, OliO 41760
614-9t2-2. .
.... 614·tft-1692

Offlq

DOmrS.MIIa,-a
HOUIEIILOTIIIPARM
COMMIIICIAL

949·2161

11'e Need U.dnpl
1·1'"»111

4-5·11·1 • . '"'· '

IELUI'S CUSTOM BEtiDING
w. Hnt Ora1 1 1 Our Latlla re
11/J .... East "' It, 141
Chttt•, Oh.

thriUih

BPECIAUZING IN ....

•Cultom Bent Exhalllt lyateme
'1
•Complete Une of Exhelllt luppllea
•
•Handle and Instal Monroe lhoob
Come ud See VI~ A rr.t IMpldloJ!
aad' l'l&amp;lmde
PH. .14-tiS·I94t IOIIIIY aua
472" Sl. II. 24f
L11i1 lin-. a. 41741
J/llltlll•

'

~

I

�1

.'
TUeedayr April 16, 1991

~. Aprll11..1flt1

........ .._..._,LAFF-A-DAY
. _..;....._

3 Announcement•

35 LOlli

IINI1

oil,

Acr••a•

:::n .........

:r.=....-~ \i=!l

=:-· .. -

P.O. lox

-1041, OeSt da, Ott 41111.

4

'51

•

~-'1";.:'-

'* eon•cw•. 114-441-

Coucl\.,..,
1444,

s:eo

HOL*thold .

-· .. --.

WHO AM I TO STAND IN TI-lE
WAV OF A WORLD WAR I

NO, HE'S NOT- GOING TO
DO ANVTHIN6 .. HE'S JUST
AS CRAZ'{ A5 HIS D06 ..

FL'(IN6 ACE IF HE WANTS
TO HAVE A 600D TIME'?

LOeT IAiall

I •
PI

l:::'a:Z....... Ioirtdng 0111104LOeT· lllille eotllo 1 - .

l!:"..:'oo'::iR~

=ltoli:iD.=I'J

Help wantld

11

4 to.
1

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Yard Slla

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home

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22 Monay to ·
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DIADLINI: 1:00 p.M.

tetoro 1111 od .. 11 -

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p.m.

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r.

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IIIIIM.IIIoo.

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teaches o problom LlluCiant a

-~
MonevMtll

.

PICII-I'URNITURI

---

NaaUaal

T.-... ......,., Water, goo,

............ , . EllllrMll..

-~

.......

. (I) . . . . . . . .....

Ill. l!n1M85:Tonbi:ht Sllll!l. Q
. Ill. Ml:lla'l PainiiJ
11lJe M'A'I"H

Ro""hwcb.

WHITI'I boiiTAL 1M IICIO"'

~

Ron - .
'"""'"'
Odlpolle,
OM -ttt ttl
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,. ..............no.

....

114 441 M30

42 Mobile Hamal .
torRent

-

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I , _ , 1 112 loloth, hill ......

=.::----=·~bolo&amp;J:

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4171.

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............
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looile.Good
114-

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Ao1W, IIIII.. ...,100. C11 :10+4»1110.

Good llllaod .., . Wont to loooo '

-~-·-­

...
-....-1-·- .

mil::·

. .,._, ':*'"".;

75 Boat• a Motors
'

Sa~.SUW.O. Q

(!) CD Novl The Voy1ger
trl-..11 ifOm Ell!h to the
ends olthe aol1r syttam.

s-.a

till a•IIIICIII: 111
Paramedlca bight to save .
their Iormor · (R)
(f]). I 1!00):Ail ... Rigll1

ALLEY OOP

SlariO£.

MOVei(R) (2:

I

fors.le ·

Ill• WIIO'a.,. ao..?

Tony IHmt I IniOn In ego
Iller hi llllkll 1 promise to

'·

iiJ Munilr, llze Q
QIOnltlge
.
• Pl'lmtNewl
ID MOYII: Clilmliy .IIIII
llld 111m leu C2:001
1:311 (J)
1111r Tllil Mickey
gets sick when his mother
dills an un-man.

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(I).

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....
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7 eii Dopooll ...........

44

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!I,

·•·

'

7:36 (I) Major Laap S.aeball
e:oo C2le IIJ Mellock Mattock ·
detenda i mlelam accused
of mwaering I caM gl~. CRI

i,

f&gt;fAPL.INf FO~
MA/CING lo/\ONfY·

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,._
.....
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1111.' Minify
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s -.a

Apartment
far Rent

.._101•'•

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..........

lull . . 11 ,.

7

lttomoy fliQ I wrongful
Clllltlault 1geinat two

.........

,..... :1411, .:00-. AvL

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IIIII, blnlo,

.

Roeeanno vlalto the
prlnclpll't ot11ce an.r Eleck.J
Is auaponclod. (R) s -. 1;1
(l) (!) PrOia••-E;J
t111
MOVJI!: ·~·
.CQ TUIUIV Movie (2:00)

a•

S\11'10. Q

lniiNmantl
=-Can Jill Pllno llfllln.

SHUitton
Wanted

nlllll: I•PB1111111

11)1 Prima Tillie Wraa111ng (T)

QINa.........

'*" to

1:30 (J) tile ITAT A man
axhiblto tlllhe tyrnptoms of
hlo preg111nt Wile. Stei'IO. Q
10:00 (J) Ill. lbliltW-tillng
MICI1aello tom beMMn work
1nd his roaf)onllbllltin to
Gary's widow. Stereo, Q

IMn loolllr.
bolr. White ol: 1·
IDNZ7oellat. 101.
...... d

=·

IDr - . ' M - - .
jlrloo ............ 114 HNIII.
cas

, . ......

- -

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(!) 11...,_ A TaleYialcin

,.
Cllmpars &amp;

MoblleHomu
for Slit

=
f.t'".!'::O:..an.w...:: ,_ .....
Wit_.••
Cloollo

Homo tz411\ii:o:

,_1011
I

On Alw ':'.~~In Stock
Homo Conllr.llolootiOII l'ro:il Which To

llllo'l'llt

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lldlzlt. Filf , IIi- ' " - -.. AVEINoble. CoM
He .1e1t To 1-1~-~~~~~11710~.~·~=-:::-­
l l g O r - l - . -.
Good Concbllon,
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adaR1,d,
111

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1m Dat- 210 .... aoo. 104-

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Cit...., I ovllnclor.
..... 114-102-ml!

an•

=·1:

- - tz,400. 1111 .....

"'=.
·il!'L.
Nir.....
.....-o.

DO IT, AND I'M STIL.L..

COME INNueNDO."

NOT' SURE He DID.

\ .cr--.

=-::a..•co.,or,
.• c::..-·· "·I,
1171 Conllr

I

l1lJ • 0vtr !hi Influence
Host Whltnoy Houlton
suggestl WlytiO hllp In the
treatment Of drug-addiCted

Children. (1 :00)

'

8 CNN ~venlllg NoiWt

.

1171 •~o.~l'/1. Wllool - . I•
-~1
~~
lint
Col .....
. . Ia
""' I. ·

,.....

1D 700 c.ll Willi Pit
Roblfttoll

·::
,,,.

Improvements

!•

'
"..'.

:
. . ;;-

-=:u="".~,,..~.,~-==,-:bllo=lr.
blooli .... ...... ,.,..

~---~

.."

10:20(1) MOVIE: III:W. IPGI
(2:00)

10:311 (I) ......
Ill Claok end Cizlse
1111 Major I 10111'01 IIIIMII
u:eo C2le (II Ill• 111 a e

BARNEY
WHAT ARE THEM
tiOSSIPY DL I HENS
TALKIN' ABOUT,
JUG HAID? ..--.:--J

SOME WILD

IIJNnro
(!)NnroWitGh
~.~v: Hoo5l 8111'80. Q

FREE·FIR·AU.
LUKEY GOT
INTO

8IIIOnltlge
8

Q
11:311 C2le 111 TOIIiglzt 1111ow

~~. 114-1411101

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....
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rr=

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MO
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ASTRO·GRAPH

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Wllool Ono
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Eogll
11111011
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=

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•• 1441.
4 ••

BERNICE
BEDE OSdL

- · IIIII
Iaultw
_ llllnC!ng,
.. ,,,..
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tl

lllur.rt.

• • . . , kind II IYI'i!!lc lllloo
laoiiOII ..........
111411'1.

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Plurilblng I

Wll do IIMI -.,., Coll 'oftor
3:30
114atl
.

.c......

.l:i., ...... .. ....
~ ' ' ll

I

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HeMing
~~~u.,

111111···

I

Elaclrlc8l &amp;

34

BUY IT.

SELL IT.
FtNO IT.

=:
*
--·-lziiON
..........
-....,..,
.,__
..........
OfiiiiCI ~ POR LIME .:

=~~~~-4\.::,,

-

1=.4-AI~
fl
aAJ=-~

Ul=:......._.. ..,,

-

--~------·

f

-

.... l'liono ... ..

"Make aure that doesn't pop out &lt;luring my
co~ert. Last time, hall the audience
wanted their money back."
~

,.

'

~

Send lor Aries ' Aslro-Graph predlc·
lions lor the year ahead by mailing
$1.25 to Aslro-Graph, c/o this newspa.
per, P.O. Box 91428. CleVeland, OH
44101 -3428. Be sure to s1a1o your zOdiac sign.
TAURUB (April ZO.MOJ 201 Major
achievements of a material nature are

possible through lonaclty tOday. AI,
templlng to operate :liang lines devoid
ol
reslstanu
could
prove
counterprOducllve.
GE..,_ CMIJ 21· June 201 Success Is
probable in your maior involvements to day. provided you do things In a pracllcal. method•cal manner. Ignore hunch-

••

,:::.~
Gam r 01111t

I

:-"cl:-.: ._

'

_,., -1011.
.......
to J!PPF,,
..........

lwali• .

.

·ill Cizcll of , . .

:n.ooo

toooloo5. - · -

Cougor

Mcn.,lne

ID lca,_w IIIIi Mrl.

-D;o~-,
_
-lli
.;Mj_-..._..
.-.
1111~5!

c

CD Tilt '801 TeleVIsion
delermlnoa the mythm of
people's llvn.

1,

nt

' Home

a

....a.IR SCREEN, FL.IE'5 WIL.L.

-::-=:M::;Cit~or~Hornel~~:-::-:- :,,,

....

Coll114-

I DIDt-iT 'Tl-IINI&lt; ~e: COUL.D

-:;

-- -- -------

1111- Clooolo M onalno,

""*"" .r

rem a 1 •o:-

•-

ir.

loll " ......, . , . . 1 - ·
1171 G:oonob I ljll!l!5
.....,. ••• ·'an 1111111 0011.
II 111.
PI•HoMiii
mao
, o11'
EEOOEI. , _ EEOOEIIIIO. 010 114-llolll
•
'li!NUhr 114-1112-a.l.

_.......,. .... ,....... !-'_=..._,
:"-.

~

or Trade ·

a..o-.
•tM,

till

For Sale

:

• IF 'THS'R~S A HOL.E IN

Htatoty

'

Aprll17, 1111

es; lhey'ro apt to be olllltle help.
CANCER CJZZM 21·JUIJ U) Instead of
focusing on lhe pot ol gold allhe end of
lho rainbow, capllallzo on whal you :II·
ready ' have at hand. II you're imaglni·
live and resourceful, there Is a bounty
within your reach.

More omphallis !han usual will be
placed on relallonshlps with friends in
lhe year ahead. Tho most slgnlflcanl
thing to occur wMI be bolwaen you and a
long-lime pal.
ARIIIJMarch 21·Aprt11t) PartiCipate
in ,.:tlvlllet: lhsl you lind enjoyable today, but try to pul the emphasis on lhe
-...._o.111 expensive kind. You can have a
gaocbllme wHhoul brulslnO your budge\.
Ariel, tr811l youraelf to a birthday giH.

LEO (.:UIJ 23-AIIIb, 221 Personal concerns and objeetl- might n... to be
. lomporarily set aside tOday, so lhol you
are able 10 do certain m1ngs that provkle the greatesl goOd tor the greatesl
number.
VIRGO CA1115. 23-hpL 221 Opportuni·
ties are likely to be car-· rolaled lo·
day, bul don'l expecla'lree ride. You'll
have
to .earn · any . poall!ve
developmenla.

LIIRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 Your popularity is eresanlly at a high wilh your peer
group , yel you must be wary of one who
uses excessive flattery. This individual'
may have ulterior motives.

tures your partner prOpOMS.

-

-~

·~

'

l(TTERS

I .·I I I I ·1 I

NORTH

•un

•a
•u

By Phillip Alder
Today's slam was played 'carefully
by Rafael Bufill, who is one of Spain's
top competiton~. If you would like to
ley! yourself, cover the East·West
cards and plan the play in aeven
spades on a heart lead. East holds all
four missing trumps.
East· West made life difficult, but
North·South eventually bid seven after some cue-bids and after North had
used the five·no-trump grand-slam
force to check that his partner had the
K·Q of spades.
Bufill won the heart lead and cashed
· the spade king, gettin&amp; the bad news.
He continued by drawing all the
trumps and then leading the diamond
10. (Leading the eight would have been
equally effective, but starting with the
three would have been fatal. as the dl·
amond suit would become blocked.)
West didn't cover with \he jack, but
that was irrelevant. Bufill put up dum·
my's queen, and wben the second bad
break was revealed. returned to hand
with a club. He '.ed tht diamond eight,
covered by the nine a.nd king. Declarer
crossed to hand with' another club and
fineslled dummy's diamond seven. Finally Buflll discarded bis club losers
on two diamond winnerS. ·
Nicely done by South, but should
East have done anything different? He
might have doubled seven spades, ask·
lng for an unusual lead -' the Ughtoer

.AKQ712

...

..

EAST

....

WEST

.JH2
.KJ108752 -

.Q.9 t3
• J965
.QJ862

•to s

SOUTH

.A
•to

.KQtiiiS
83

.AK74
Vulnerable: East· Welt
Dealer: South

•• •• s•Paa
Puo
Puo

Weot

Nortb

Pass

s•

Pass

5•

Eul

Pass
~NT
All pus

.,

Opening lead: • 3

slam dQUble. Here It would not he dif-•
ficult lor West to select a diamoad. •
However, If EaiEI alerts his opponent.a
to the potential opening ruff, South
might correct to IL!Yell no-trump, a:
contract that can be made by . the:
above line of play. Maybe Eut bOpecl
.his partner would find the kllllnslead
unillisled.
~ ,

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN
1 Argument
2HII1orlc
parlod
31812

,.,.....

1 WI!Qd

7=

Sol!pbo~

.

1¥101

'''

4Maxlmslly
5 Loudly

llpllktr

12 ScrMn·

wrler
Ja11111
13 Conllal

8-Scoll

e7Ukl QOW11

grMIIng

In India
I Before

1

0 biiOVbl!: Cai1m11Y

inclllm .... (2:00)

Jet

12:011J) Nbglllltll Q

12-.20(1) MOVII: 1om~
C2:00)

neighbor
28 Prlnc:tiS
perturber
27Est•m

.

211 Not
working,

•••

30~:11

..

.. .

..

34 Nice

."

round
figure
40 For two,

~·

~II of

South ..
Dakott

..

CoiMcllon
• • HIIdCipy

12:11(1) " - Cor.ntclon

1:GOI&amp;::' lkzJ Q

.....
=--..
~···

'

IIIIILE&gt;illd (PG131

~L.. r-,

L-:o--·9
.

TOIIiglzt

..

•·

•flat:

~

•..,

... .
·~.

lsLONGFELLOW

'
One letter stands fol.another. ln this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnf!le letters,
apostrophes, the le11Jth 1r1d formation of the words Ire
all hints. Each day the code letters 1re different.

E YU

~;'~ofL.ftl

1:01

43 WaPor

C2:30)

Ill Perly MICIIIIII Willi Nle

'111

.'

muelcally

41

4-16

The llltiJ (RI

.

&gt;

31 Hunlout
32 Phi Bela

e 11J Lltl Nlglll W1111
DIYicl...._

12:30 (J)

0

·"

AXYDLBAAXR

.....IINiul•

(J) MOVH!:

•

Ytllllrdsy's Anntr

20 Rare thing 33 Gladys
21 Courn
Knight's
peculiar
goal
·
. 1lngers
18 Hard at
now '
22 Boundar 34 Baret
work
I Sparkler 23 Blue
35 Lyric
18 Under·
10 Date
25 Coffee
poam
atallda
14 Olllclally
acidftlve · 38 Wilder's
21 Gone by
parmlfted 28 Short
·-Town·
22Well
11Less
lock
37 Wrath
Pointers
oovared
29 Veg11
38 Miner's
24 Coac~
17 Cuatom
WO~Ir
yield
PaiSeghlan 11 Home of 31 Bowler's 31 Catching
25 Nev.
the brave
ptObltm
aid

15 Mar.t

....,

'·,

unruly

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTF.S- Heft's how 10 work It 4118

:~~~=~·1(
..............

•

•

12:00

il!Je '"" ...-. Wl1h

,

.......

42S.IIY

llle Into Iiiio Nl::ht Stereo.

•

I

l18llon
11111por11 Tonbgill
11:361J) CMitl Q

SCORPIO (Oct. :NoHow. 221 Your
mate's judgmenl regarding family li·
nanclal mailers miQhl not be equal lo
yours !oday. To be on 1he •are aide,
keep yourself apprised of any oxpencfiIAGmARIUS CNov. 23-Dec. 2111n order to ellecllvely implement your pre·
sent plan of aclion, nomln:ll support
from olhers will be n8eded today. It's
wiae 'lo depend more upon your lnpul
lhon theirs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 11) You'rll'
pr-lly in a financial !rend lhal could
prove to be ralher fruitful. l)o evaryt~ing you can to lry to !urn a profit bolh
today and tomorrow.
AOIIARIUI (Jon. 20-Fob. 11111 may be
up to you atthiallme lo lry lo untangle a
social orrilng8ETient lhal llat taken on
soma aeriDUI overlones. You're the one
who can llppeaoe oppoaing factions. ·
PIICEI CFob. zo.Mirch 20) It looks like
you might learn a very vlkzabla 1e11on
tOday: Somelhing you've beor'o worrying
aboul suddenly takes a turn lor the bat·
tar. So, stop !ratting about thinga lhal
may never happen. · ,
'

illo chuckle quatod
filling In illo milling - •
you doYIIot&gt; from ftp No. 3 bolow.
by

BRIDGE

11

a u.., King LJwzl

,..
......t-~'-oto
.....,....
Cln on
be
Wurtll.... '

"n

poliCeman. s..reo. Q
C1J Cl) e RoltiMI

T1 .Aulae for Slle

liluiiCII

- - , . _ ,....., to ooi
iDIIo'nl~~ 1:00 to

·

• Cllurllh . _ 811111011
t:GOC2le 111
Dell

....._
ttt 411 . . . . . . ';.,..
Dra......
~

e:ooPM

llllollk • -

Wllbw
.....
_...._11NCW11117.

111r• .,.... a .......... ,...
CIUINd.
.ob. 'No PolL 0111 . _

AP!i'IJ. ~~ l?fAPI.INf

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

.,..,

Building
Suppllal

1-.go.

=~ lriib I tiopooii.I04-8....

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

7

;I; Nrt$.ffp THE

.
Ill

~

......
(J)

1111 j Will IIIIHir . . IWII, ....,
IIIII ...... poW. illoiiNnooo

31. Hamal tor Sale

7:05 Cll HIZppJ .,.,,
7:30 C2le 111 111 .:.operdy: Q

•...

c:-t.:o

ICIAM un ANIWIU
~·•J
Deputy - Humid - Ubel - TIITIBiy - MULTIPLY
My overweight lrlend and I were hiving lunch when
the wallreu llkad If we wanted csn.rt. • No thank
you." my friend grinned, "calor!" are able to bDih add
and MULTIPLYr

Q

'

84 1 Hay &amp; Gl'lln

Strvlc:ll

ID ac_.w IIIIi Mra. King

I

&amp;I 2 1-, I U -

!Jan, 114 441 00".
PIGh · - Homo

!

•

Polrd

1n

.

leoiiiOII In lile. Q

bald tw ........ 112 mi.
. . . . . Rd. Pt. PI 111rt, WY,
.....

L

UNT~R~~8~N~~w

•

~u::
naQ
11)1
MacGyver

ProfeiiiOnsl

23

PUblic Sale
&amp;Auction

::&amp;..:::

'9ilhftl. Phone: I
.._ ...... Yoonol.. - · ""' .,. .11111.
Soli. ...,.. ltol- lec1n •- ., '

1n

1---ri-ls_,1~'Tl'--r-1-~r-1 8

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQU'-RES

~~L"'.C':Q

Palnl

=""'..;...;.....;..;"-:--::----~

-··-·Colt ""-lllna - -_, ..._..,
~~~--···· ~~~
""' .........,-·.•...........
......
--a:oo....,..
400

·-~~:.no.

I

ioward real -~.·

E N L I MB

\ Wheol"'

. NewaHz:zzr

I

stonment It lha IIIII true alejl

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---Local briefs... - - - .Fair

weather will
continue across Ohio

Coadnued f'rom pqe 1

Columbia Trustees to meet Friday
TJ.Ie B~d of Trustees of Columbia To~p will hol4 a special
meeuns Fnday at 8:30 a.m. at the ftre stauon. Trustees will consid·
er payment of insurance.
•

'ffight of a Thousand Stars' planned ·.
"Night of a Thousand Stars", the Great American Read Aloud,
will be held at. the Mc.igs County Publ.ic Library WedneSday, at 7
p.m. The hbrwy will offer patrons an opportunity to hear Senator
Jan Michael Long (D-Circlevillc) read aloud.
·
. The e~cnt falls in the middle of National Library Week (which
ends April ZO) and focuses attention between reading and succeed·
· ing. LibiWY.Director Ruth Powers invites the public.
,

'Derby Night' ongoing
I

.
'
The Pomeroy Bowling Lanes will be the 'site of a Soap Box
Der~y derby ~ight ~u~ing activity each Friday through June 21 .
A different pnze will be giVen away each week. Prizes are courtesy
of Loclcer 219, Dairy Queen, McClure's, Pomeroy Super America,
McDonald's, Middlepo(t Trophies and Tees, Pomeroy Lanes,
Kroger, Pleaser's, and Middleport Gas Plus.
· ·
A percentage of the profits will be dollllled to the derby.
'

.

Yolan Jo Satterfield, 51, of Yost
Road in Racine, died Monday,
April 15, 1991 at her residence following an extended illness. She
was a secretary and receptionist for
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab Center.
S!le was born in Letart Falls, the
'daughter of the late Roy and Inez
(Farra) Rhodes. She' was a member
of the ML Moriah Church of God.
She is survived by her husband,
Rev. James Satterfield; three $ODS,
Dennis of Wright Patterson Air
Force Base in Dayton; Wayne of
Pomeroy and Gregg of Racine;
three sisters. Mrs. Vernon '
(Margery) Rowe of Killeeu, Texas,
Mrs. Glly (Irene) Thompson, of
Reedsville, and Mrs. Paul
(Dorothy) Forbes, of Pomeroy;
four brothers, Robert Rhodes of
Racine, Charles Rhodes of Mansfield, Wayne Rhodes of Shade and
Norman Rhodes of Moundsville,
W.Va.; two aunts and an uncle;
four grandchildren; and a close
_friend. Shirley Applebee of Mid- .
' dleporL
Besides her parents. she was
· p~ed in death by a son, Joseph,
and a brother, Ronald Rhodes. ·
Funeral services will be held at
, Ewing Funeral Home on Thursday
; at 2 p.m. wilh Rev. Benny Tripplett
· and Rev. John Evans officiating.
; Burial will be at Letart Falls Ceme-

l
I

: tery:

..

. : Friends may call at the .funeral
· liome·from 2 io·9 p.m. on Wednesday.

: Tona H. Boring
0

: Tooa H. Boring, 93, of Route I,
• Reedsville, died Monday evening,
: April 15, 1991 at Arcadia Nursing
: Home in CoolviUe.
Born in Reedsville, he was a son
of the late John and Melissa Con·
' grove Boring. He was a veteran of
· the U.S. Army during World War I,
a member of the American Legion
· Drew Webster Post No. 39 in
' Pomeroy and ,the Tuppers Plains
· VFW Post No. 9053.
: He is survived by four sons,
· Herbert (Bobby) Bormg and Paul
Boring, bolh of Akron; Malt Bor·
ing, Columbus; and Asa Boring,
Little Hocking; a step-son, Carl
Barber of Indiana; four daughters,
Beattice Bailey, Sunbury; Iris Randolph, North Canton; Alice Pill.
Chester; and Dolly Walton, Area·
dia. Fla.; one sister, Lucille Smith,
Reedsville: 22 grandchildren; 32
great-grandchildren; and three
great-great-grandchildren.
Besides liis parents Mr. Boring
was preceded in death by his wife.
Golda, on June 13, 1990; a grandchild and great-grandchHd.
Services will be Thursday at 1
p.m. at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville wilh Evangelist Phillip
Sturm offiCiating. Burial will be in
the Reedsville Cemetery with mili·
tary graveside services to be conducted by Tuppers Plains VFW
PosL
Friends may call at the funeflll
home on Wednesday from 1-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m.

Floyd L. Harrison
Floyd L, Harrison 78. of Depot
St., Rutland, died Monday, April
IS, 1991 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, W. Va ..
·foUowi114 an elttended iUness.
Born m Rutland, he was the son
of the late Ernest and Faye Sp~$
Harrison. He was a coal miner and
a heavy equipment operator, and a
·member of the Bradford Church of
Christ, the International Union of
Operating Engineers, Local !8,
Cleveland.
He is survived by his wife of 58
years. Loll Russell Harrison, Rutland; two daughters, Ada Scott of
.columbus and Elaine Quillen of
Rutland: two sons, Jack and Don
Harrison, both ()f Rutland; a sister,
Adeline Snowden of Rutland; II
grandchildren: 11 great-grandchildren: and several nieces and

nephews.

• Besides his parents he was ~­
ceded in death by a brother, Moms
Harrison; three sisters, Frances
'Johnson, Elnora .Stivers, and.Ada

·'

. ,,

Harrison.
Funeral services ·will be held 81
I p.m. Thursday at the Bradford
Church of Christ with Derek Stump
officiating. Burial will be in the
Bradford Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Bin:hfield Funeral Home
on Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 iO
9p.m.

Walter Mullins
Walter Mullins, 54, died Sunday, Aprill4, 1991 at his residence
on Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy.
Born in Pikeville, Ky., he was a
son of the late Elbert and Gladies
Lambert Mullins. He was a disabled coal miner.
. He is survived by his wife,
Helen Adkins Mullins; five sons,
Reed, Andrew and Aaron Mullins,
all of Pikeville, Ky.; Kent
Williamson and Ricky Adkins,
Pomeroy; three dau~hters, Joyce
Mullins, Califorma; Angela
Mullins and Mary Helen Adkins,
PikeviUe, Ky.; three grandchildren;
one brother, Berfin Mullins,
A-thens; four sisters, Billy Maksimczak, Deltter; Edith Blevins, Trion,
Ga.; Florine Burchett, Virgie, Ky.;
and Ellen Laudermelt, Meritt
Island, Fla.
Services will be held Wednes·
day 81 2 p.m. 81 the Bigony Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany with Rev.
Harrison Starr officiallng. Buri a!
will be in the Riggs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 7-9 p.m.

~~ ·'

.··~

Wednesday 60 to 6S across tlie
By United hess IDtenatloaal
Skies across Ohio were mostly nonh and in ctJe •middle 70s across
clear overnight, except ·over the · the south .
On the Tuesday morning weath·
nonhern counties where there 'was
er map. a low pressure system was
.some rain.
· Temperatures across the state located over the northern Great
ranged from the upper 40s to lower Lakes with a weak front extending
. 50s early Tuesday morning. Winds south across southeastern Ontario
were from the west at 10 to 20 to Lake Erie.
A weak area of high pressure
mph. Rllinfall amounts were lighi
across the northern counties, with was over the lower Mississippi and
most reponing stations reccrding a Ohio valleys.
The low will move slowly east
trace of rain.
.
to
the
New England states WednesThe fair weather pattern will
day
as
the high pressure remains
continue the neltt couple days
nearly
stationary
over the southacross O~io. Lows Tuesday night
eastern
states.
will be 45 to SO with highs

Eastera board to meet
Meeting rescheduled
The Eastern Local Board c;~f
The regular meeting for Leading
Creek Conservancy District was Education will meet in special sescanceled for Wednesday and sion on April27 at 8 a.m in the
rescheduled for Friday at 9 a.m. at hi2h school cafeteria.
4-11 club to meet
the office.
. The Meigs County Better LiveSpecial services slated
Hope Baptist Church, 510 Grant stock Dairy 4-H Club will hold its
St. in Middler.&gt;rt. will hold special f"mt meeting of 1991 on Apri124 at
services Apnl 24-28 with Rev. J. 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Exten·
Eddie Gandy, Westmoreland Bap· sion Ofrice. Any Meigs .County
list Church in Huntington, W.Va., boy or girl, ag~:s 9·19, or in the_
as speaker. Pastor Gandy has a third grade on Jan. I, 1991 who has
Doctor of Ministry from Luther ownership of a registered dairy aniRice Seminary. He has served as a mal is invited t() join. For more
Baptist pastor for 15 years. The information call the elttensioll .
public is invited to anend. Services office at 992-6696.
wiD begin at 7 p.m. nightly. Nursery will be provul~. .
Spaabetd dinner
·
A spaghetti dinner will be held
April 27 81 5 p.m. by the Coolville
United Methodist Wom11n at the
Meigs County Emergency MedCoolville Masonic Lodge on Main ical Services answered seven calls
Street. The menu will include for assistance on Monday and early
spaghetti, salad, garlic bread, Tuesday morning.
dessert and beverage for $4 for
At 1:25 p.m., Syracuse squad
adults and $2 for children. All pro- went to Yost .Road for Yolan Satceeds will go toward the new terfield, who was dead on arrival.
church annelt
At 1:33 p.m., Racine squad went to
Round and square dance
Bucktown Road for Woodrow
There will be a ro\ind and Hall, who was taken to Veterans
square dance Friday frol'l! 8-11:30 Memorial Hospital. At 3:59 p.m.,
P·~· ~~ the Tu.ppers Pla!.n~. VFW Racine and Bashan units went to
Building featiD'Ing Ramblm Coun-, Bald Knob-Stiversville Road for a
try. ~e:lvm &lt;;ross will be the caller. · tree fU"e. At 4:20 ~.m., Middlepon
.
. s~uad went to Mill Sueet, Mary
, Pubhc IS mv1ted.
·
·
G1lhan was taken to. Holzer, At ·
8:19p.m., Middlepon squad went
to State Route .SS4 for Joseph
Wills. He was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
In Monday's edition of The
At 5:22 a.m. Rutland squad
Daily Sentinel containing a news responded to Meigs Mine 2 for
article yertaining to the fashion Oliver Norris. At 6: IS a.m.,
show o the Pomeroy .Merchants Pomeroy squad went to Spring
Association, the name of Jessica Avenue for Audrey Arnold. Both
Hannahs should have appeared as Arnold and Norris were transported
Ashley Hannahs clogging to "Yan- to l'leasant Valley .
kee Doodle."

Units get 7
calls Monday

Correction

'' .

Stocks

of The Block, Macdonald Group of
Stamford. Conn., and retired
AT&amp;T senior vice president. .
- William M. Ellinghaus,
retired AT&amp;T president and fonner
executive vice chairman of the .
New Yort Stock Exchange.
·
- William L. Keefauver,
retired AT&amp;T viet president-law.
- Donald E. Procknow, retired
vice ·chairman and chief operating
offJCCr, AT&amp;T T~hnologies.
They. will replace Exley, NCR
President Gilbert P. ~illiamson
and directors Cathleen Morawetz
and WiUiam Bowen.
"Although we are disappointed
in the low turnout and that we fell
shon in our effort to remove the
entire NCR board, we are pleased
that our four nominees were elected to the board by more than a
three to one margin ," AT&amp;T
Chairman Roben E. Allen said.
In alldition, about 78 perceni of
the shares voted were cast in favor
of a non-.binding resolution
requesting the NCR board to take
prompt action to clear the way for
shareowners to sell their shares to
· AT&amp;T or to arrange for an altern&amp;·
tive sale transaction.
'
The preliminary results were
reported by Corporation Trust
Company, the inspectors of elec. tum.
·

Lottery numbers ·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Plck-3

·oss.

'

Ticket sales: $1 ,259,957. Pay·
off: $494,403.50.
Pick-4
2293.
Ticket sales1 $248,457.50. Pay·
orr: $125,500.
Cards
King of hearts. .
Three of clubs.
Ace of diamonds.
King of spades.
Ticket sales: ' $50.892. Payoff:
$45,770.

Am Ele Power ......................29 5/8
Ashland Oil ... .. ..... .............. 32 7/8
AT&amp;T ...................................361/i
Bob Evans ............................ 17 3/4
Charming Shop ..................... 15 3/4
City Holding ...... :........................ l3
Federal Mogul ...... ;..................... l7
Goodyear T&amp;R .... :................22 1(2
Key Centurion ...................... 12 1(2
Lands' End ...........................22 1/4
Limited Inc ...........................29 3/8
Multimedia Inc.....................77 3/8 Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
R8lt Reuurant ..................... ! 1/16
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS · Robbins&amp;Myers .................. .26 !(2
Debbie
Cutlip,
Cheshire,
and Bur·shoney's lnc ......................... 16 7/8
weD
McKirmey,
MiddJepcxt.
Star Bank ...:..........................22 1/4 ·
MONDAY DISCHARGES • ··
Wendy lnt'l ......................... 10 1/4
Wonhing10111nd:;.................23 3/4 Greg Williams and Keith MusS«.
I

Pick 3:783
Pick 4: 8180
Cards : 8-H, J·C
3-D; ·lO-S

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WEAmER MAP- Widely &amp;a~ttered snow showers are possible
in the central Rockies with a developing low-pressure system. Seal·
tered showers l!nd thunderstorms are possible In the C!llltral Plains
and along the Gulf Coast. Rain and snow showers wiU llki!ly devel·
op in the Northeast, while the Southeast, the northern Plllns and
the Southwest will be mostly sunny. (UPI)
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Val. 41, No. 252
Copyrighted 1811

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------Weather------:·•
South Central Ohio
Mostly clear Tuesday night, ,·
with a low in the upper 40s. Mostly
sunny Wednesday, wit)! highs in
the middle 70s.
Ohio mended forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday and Saturday ,
with a chance of showers and thun-

derstorms on Friday. Highs will be :
in the 70s Thursday, ninging from ~ ·
mid 60S to the mid 70s Friday. and~
mostly · in the 50s Saturday. '2
Overnight lows wiU range from the ~
mid 40s to the mid 50s Thursday, ~
and Friday mornings; and from the •
upper 30s to the mid 40s Saturday :
morning.·
.~

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SIMithi"' flli#I Alw•yl e..ki"J At

MASON, WV

NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL

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Monday-Friday, 11 am-3 pm
Monday -LaSiigna with Garlic Bread

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Tuesday • Phlll Sandwich with Soup &amp;Fries
Wednesday· Meatloaf Dinner
Thursday
·SpaghetU Dinner with
.
. Salad and Garlic Bread
Friday· Baked Steak DIMer

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II C8rr)' Out Otden Available (304) 77~5321 I
VISA • MASIERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS J\CCEPl"ED

1

If alcohol is runni
your family, stop and get
help--before you run out·
of options.

The
·Daily
Sentinel

AMulllmedl8 Inc.

Railroad talks
end; ~trike
underway

. RECO~NI~ED ·.Special recognition was
to Ehzablith Sm1th, R. N., director of Veterans Memorial Hospital's Home Health Service
and Dr. James Witherell in recognition of ser·
vice to the Alzheimer's Disease and Related .Disg~&gt;en

'

ol'llers program: Sharon Wright, I,.PN, director
or that program, rigbt, presented the plaques
during Tuesday's meeting of the Advisory Board
or the Meigs County Council on Aging held at
the Senior Citizens Center.
.

Advisory board plans programs,
discusse~jinaiJ£~~~ P':!}hlem.s
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ,
Sentinel News Staff

By TERENCE FINAN
from e11gineers to clerical workers,
United Press International ·
oo strike, he said.
Union workers began manning
The walkout came following ·a
picket lines on the East Coa.st stalemate that has seen union .worl(, · Wednesday morning, signaling the ers 'go without a contract since
start of a poten.tially: crippling August1988.
:..
nationwide rail su1ke that is
Railroad comP.anies expected to
eltpCCted to spread across the colin· be hit by the strike comprise some
try after the breakdown of of the largest U.S. freight lines,
marathon negotiations.
including CSX, Union Pacific, llliTransporlation
Secretary nois Central, Burlington Nonhero,
Samuel Skinner, appearing before Santa Fe, Kansas ,City Southcnt,
a~;~ early· morning congressional
Northfolk Southern, Norfolk It
hearing, said the strike could hurt Western, and the Chicago &amp; Nortli. national defense and the economy's western. Commuter lines also w-e ¢
attempts to pull out of recession. · effected.
He eltpressed "cautious optimism:•
'The unions' issues are wages.
that legislation could be on Presi- health and welfare benefits, and the
dent Bush's desk before the end of composition of train crews.
. .
the day to force a settlement of the
Skinner told a House Energy
rail strike.
subcommittee Wednesday morrt·
A !2:01a.m. EDT deadline for iug, "There is no question that this
a cooling-off period came several is a national rail suike .. , which
hours after a last-ditch attempt . clearly imperils our, ·national
failed to settle the long-simmering defense."
.
dispute between eight unions and
Singling out the auto .industry,
some of the country's largest rail- Skinner said, "This is J&gt;robably the
roads.
toughest time the auto industry has
In Washington, a rail labor had since 1981-82."
·
source said pickets were up at scat·
He said the strike will begin tO
tered locations in the Eastern time be felt by th.e auto industry within
zone and would continue to go up 48 hours.
across the coumry at 7 a.m, local
"There is a sense of urgency, !
time. "By 10 t~is morning)-tbere · especially at this very critical 'time
will be 250,000" workers, ranging in our economy." Skinner said.

program, and the 1084 Program, dous amount of money to the local
which provides funds for the con- center, she said.
slniction or renovation and mainteAs for the on-going heating and
Reports on various programs , nance of seniors' facilities.
cooling problem in the Meigs
. The Oplions for Elders program Multi,purpose Building, Mrs.
an~ impending financial problems
highlighted a meeting of the Advi· is scheduled to be plaase&lt;l out in Thomas reported that of the
sory Board to the Meigs County 1993 if the budget recommenda- $45,000 requested for correcting
·Council on Aging held Tuesday tions of Gov. George Voinovich t~e problems, $20,000 has been
afternoon at the Senior Citizens are approved by the legislature . rece1ved. She said that while it is
Mrs. Thomas testified last week an inadequate amount, one section
Center.
EleQnor Thomas, executive · before 'the House finance sub-com- of the building will be targeted for
director of the Council, reported on mittee on that program which cur· correction this year. ·
the two programs-Options for rently serving 64 clients in Meigs
A new van is expected to be
Elders, a home-based assistance County and 700 in the nine-county delivered in early May. Mrs.
.
.
area of the rural demonsuation pro- Thomas reponed, and effons are
ject which got underway in March, slill being made to raise the local
1990.
share of the over $20,000 cost. She
She
noted
that
of
the
64
clients
said
that about '$ 1,500. has been
'
in Meigs County, 50 percent are contributed toward the $4,500
.
now arthe nursing home level of needed.
care but are remaining in lhei(
The Meigs County Council on
About 400 families on lines of slip call the water company. Mean- homes due to the various services Aging, meeting this week, recom·
that two of the old station
the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water while the workers will continue to provided through the Options pro- mended..
wagons
and
one van be taken out of
gram.
These
include
home
delivDistricl were still without water searc)l, he said.
service
because
of the general conFour other major slips have ered meals, transportation services, dition of the vehicles
Wednesday morning.
.
and the high
According to a company been found and repaired and water personal care assistance, homemak- cost of repairs. Slalf members
will
er
and
maintenance
programs,
as
spokesman, the areas a~fe.cted are restored to those residents. It was
be
asked
to
do
some
individual
,
well
~
respite
care.
Mile Hill, East Lellirt, Letart Falls, reported that the problems have
Sbe went on to point out that of patient uansporting in their own
Old town Flats area, State Route resulted from ground saturation
that
SO percent, most would "spend vehicles and be reimbursed on a
124, Dorcas community, County which starts the earth moving
down" to the place where they per mile basis.
Road 4§, Stiversville, Barringer pulling the lines apart
Sharon Wrigh~ LPN, director of
The spokesman advised that would be eligible for Medi~aid. a
Ridge, Durst Ridge, and oth ~rs
the
Alzheimer's and Related Disoranyone who has b.een without state· and federally·funded prolocations near those points.
ders
program, reported that 22 fam.
The spokesman said lhat as yet water and now had it restored for gram, in two months.
ilies
are now be served. She talked
To point out the cost advantage
the origin of the problem has not the next 48 hours should boil the
about
the training sessions and supof keeping elderly in their own
been found. He asked that anyone water before using it.
homes as long as possible, she said pon group.meetings for care11.ivers
in the affected areas seeing a major
that the average state cost of the held monthly.
for special professional service
Options program per client is $350
to
the program, Mrs. Wright pre,·
whi~h
includes
the
services
given,
r----sented plaques to Elizabeth Smith,
case management and administra·
lion. The average cost of Medicaid R. N., director' of Veterans Memofor a nursing home resident is rial Hospital's Home Health Pro·
gram, and to Dr. James Witherell.
$905.
' Ellen Rought and Fred Hoffman have filed petitions with the
Mrs. Thomas said the gover- In making the presentation, Mrs.
Meigs County Board of Eleclions, making them Independent candinor's office has claimed that Pass- Wright described the recipients as
dates for the mayor's offices in Pomeroy and Middleport, respec·
port, which has been expanded being willing to go above the "call
t1vely.
'.
·
statewide, will lake care of lhe cur- of duloy in helping those affiicted,"
Dales for ihe multiphasic health
Hoffl!'an is the inc u~bcnt Mayor of Middleport. His petilions
rent Options clieniS. However as
screening
were announced for OcL
for May s Republican pnmary were.dcclared invalid by the board ih
explained by Mrs. Thomas, ~ss­
3, 4, 7, and 8. The screening is a
February due 10 an insufficient number of valid signatures.
,
pon has different financial guide·
. By fil!ng their petitions now, Rought and HolTman , both Repub·
lines and requires clients to be cooperative effort of the Meigs
County Council on Aging , the
. hcans; w1!I bypass the party primary and go on the November Gen·
Medicald eligible.
Meigs County Heallh Depanment
eral Elecuon ballot as Independent candidates.
Pl.ans were made during the
and Veterans Memorial Hospital. It
. Mayor Hoffman will be challenged in November by Osby Mar·
m~ung to mount a letter writing
was last offered in !987.
·
tm, a Dem.ocrat•.whde Rought wdl face Democrat Larry Wehrung
campaign to members of the Senate
Linda
Friend,
representing
and the wmner m Pomeroy' s Republican Primary . either Bruce
Finance Committee, Mrs. Thomas
Reed or Dotlie Turner.
..
Council on Aging, reported that
noted that Sen. Jan Michael Long
screening
will begin at 8:30 a.m.
(D·Circleville) is solidly behind
•
and
contin11e
to 2:30p.m. each day.
continuing the Options for Elders
The
tests
will
include complete
program.
The jury !rial scheduled for Thursday in Meigs County Common
blood
work
handled
by the hospiA seCond Pf0j!f81!1 which is slatPleas Court has been canceled because of a plea, Jurors need not
tal,
eye,
dental,
and
hearing tests,
ed for change m the governor's
report.
blood
pressure
checks,
urinalysis,
budget is the 1084 Program used
According to a court spokesperson, this was the linal trial schedhemocult,
tuberculosis
tests, and
for new construction, renovation,
uled for jurors in the January term. January term jurors are now
possibly
lun$
capacity
evaluation
and maintenance of senior centers.
released from JUry se"'1ce ~nd need not make funher conlact with
and examinaaon by a llO&lt;iiattisL
Mrs. Thomas said that funds from
the court.
. '
'
r•
'
Materials arc also being prethat source go toward routine main·
pared
on diets and drug interactions
tenance and general repairs, pur.
which
will be available at the
chase of ltitchen or other equipment
screening,
Mrs. Friend reported.
which may need to be replaced.
~ A slolen car belonging to a Meigs County resident has been
~ecky
Ball
has
been hired as coorheating, air conditioning and
recovered· by the Athens County Sheriff's Department near
dinator
of
the
screening.
She will .
plumbing needs. A block grant proGuysville.
.
begin
in
August
to
accept
appointposal to replace the 1084 Program
.
C011dlllled 011 J1111! 5 .
Continued oa page 5
ciluld result in the loss of a tremen·

··400 Meigs fam.ilies
·without water
Every day, alcohol shatters
·thousa·nds of families who
have no means of coping
with the
problems of the
alcoholic. · r
The fact is, · ·
families of
alcoholics
need help, too.

Local briefs~;.;........,

Rought, Hoffman file for posts

Jury trial canceled

Stolen car recovered Tue$day

. I

-•po,...

2 Secdono, 14 Pogeo 25 otnto

Pomeroy·Middlepc)n, Ohio, Wadnelday, Aprll17, 1"1

Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
announced today that clean -up
week in Middleport will be held
April 22-26 in conjunction with the
statewide Clean Up Rural Ohio
Week,
Due to' the lack of a landfill
which the village can use, the clean
up efforts this year will not be done
by village employees but is being
coordinated through a joint effort
by the village and Manley's Trash
Service. .
During this one week period,
, April 22-26, aU customers of Manley's Tms~ Service will be. permitted to set out an unlimited amount
'of trash at no additional ·charge.
This additional pickup will bC done
along with the customer's regular
tra~ h pickup and will follow the
. · same schedule which Mr. Manley
has at the present time for cus ·
tomers in MiddleporL
The mayor emphasized lha.t all
items for pickup must be put out
along with their regular trash at the
regular ttash ,Pickup time for Man·
ley in your area. No items will be
picked up by the village and anything put out after the regular pick·
up time for Manley will be the
responsibility of the resident to
make arrangements to have it
hauled away.
· .
"The cleanup provides us all
with the opportunity to do our
spring clcanmg and maintenance
and have our excess material taken
away at no additio.nal charge, The .
.end result will be a cleaner and
more attrac;tive comm'unity• in
which to live."
.
.
The mayor stated that he was
appreciative of Mr. Manley's coop·
cration in making .this clean up pos·
sible to village residents at a minimum cost to the village and urged
ail customers of Manley to take
advanlag,e of .this . one ~ time free
pickup service.

~

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT .
RI'. 33

at

•
en tne

Announce
Middleport
cleanup
dates

~

Low timigbt in near SO.
Thursday, party cloudy.

Page3 .

AT&amp;T gets 4 seats on board
By JACK LESAR
United Press International
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co., in a proxy battle to clear
the way for its $6 billion hostile
takeover of NCR c;orp., defeated
four NCR directors , including
Chairman Charles E; &amp;ley Jr., b.ut
failed to oust the entire board, a
preliminary vote count showed
Monday.
·
Eighty percent of the ouiStand·
ing shares were required to remove
and repl~ce all 13 NCR directors
-a move that would have allol\'ed
AT&amp;T to dismantle NCR's poison
pill lakeover defense.
But AT&amp;T's proposal to remove
the entire board received support
from only 52.6 percent of all share$
outstanding during the vote at a
special meeting called to consider
the move.
It got support from 51.5 percent
of all outstanding shares in a vote
at NCR's annual mecling.
·Both meetings were held March
28 at NCR's Dayton, Ohio, headquarterS.
"We are eSpecially pleased with
AT&amp;T's low total vote in light of
AT&amp;T's pre-meeting predictions
· that they could achieve an 80 percent vote to remove our entire
board," Exley said.
"AT&amp;T also fell short of the
number of shares last tendered into
its offer," Eltley said.
But AT&amp;T'S four nominees
needed only a simple majority of
the shares voted at the annuai meeting to replace the four NCR board
members up for re-election. The
AT&amp;T sllte got backing from 75
percent of the shares voted, and
will take their seats on the NCR
board following certification of lhe
election results. ·
The newly elected directors are:
- Edward M. Block. principal

Ohio Lottery

Reds ',losing
strea~ ends in
.· san Diego

.}

•

--Meigs announcements-

--Area deaths
Yolan Satterfield

NA-LWUTHEftfORECAITfRQIIIAU1141101AII~'HJ

.
,

.

Slater pleads gu1lty to
two-count drug charge .
Robin Slater, 29. pled guilty
Story reported Wednesday that
Tuesday in Meigs County Co~l'l!on Slater was previously convicted of
Pleas Court to a two-count !ndlct- drug. tr~ficking in Ath,ens County
ment on drug charges. Slater s plea and IS IS currently scrvmg a prison
sentencing brings to a close a year- sentence on that conviction.
long drug investigatic_Jn in Meigs . :'Slater was the 13th in a group
County ~at resulted m the. arrest of mdJCtments handed,down in July
and conv1cbon of 13 dcfcndahts.
as a result of a year-ion~ investigaAccording to Meigs County tion involving the Me1gs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Prosecutl.ng Attorney, the Meigs
Story, Slater pled guilty tQ one _Counly ·Sheriff's Office and the
count of trarficking in drugs and to Bureau of Criminal Investigation "
one count of lrafflcking in marijua- Story said Wednesday. "Seven of
na, both felonies.
those individuals were involved in
In both cases, Story said, ·Slater sale of cocaipe as well as marijuasold the drugs to an undercover na."
agent of the Ohio Bureau of CrimiOf the 13 individuals Story
nal. Investigation.
·
referred to, nine have pled guilty
Judge Fred W. Crow 111 sen- and four others have gone to jury
tenced Slater to a prison sentence ttials where they were convicted.
of three to 15 years on the cocaine
"I am very pleased with our
charge and one year in· prison on l~vel . of success," Story said. "It
the marijuana charge with the shows what a little hard work and
terms to be consecutive, or one coopemtion between law· 'enforceafter the other. Slater also was ment officials can do. It also shows
fined $3,000 and was ordered to that we can do somelhing about
pay coun costs.
Meigs County's drug problem."

Rail strike affects
12,000 O_hio workers
By United Press International
. A sbike by railroad employees could lead to immediate unemployment of 12,000 .Ohio workers and could seriously llarm any expected
rapid recovery from the present recession, especially in the auto and
agriculture industries.
Several items needed by auto plants in Ohio, such as wheels, arc.
shil'ped by mil while. agriculture is also a major rail user, shipping
gram and receiving seed and fertilizer.
·
"We're in our critical spring planting season, .and inbound fertilizer
is very important right now," sa1d Vern Russell, director of transpona:, .
lion for Countymark Inc .. a cooperative headquanercd in Delaware,
QhRio.usseII S81'd at th'IS lime
. ,0 f year; II. IS
. difliICU It. to SIOC k Up on phOS·
phates from Florida or other fertilizers because the materials sell quick- '
ly.
.
.
· James Coons, economist for Huntington National Bank, said he did
not think the rail strike would last long.
,
· •
However, Coons said a long sttike "might slow the pace of eco·
nomic recovery."
. ·
.
Louis Jannazo. chief rail planner for the Ohio Department of Tmnsportalion, said among the companies that could be hurt are the ones
that don't have the resources to stockpile materials.
"The guy that dcpenda on getting the (rail) car when he needs it has
to be concerned," 1annazo said.
,
.
The Association of American Railtoads says 12,213 Ohioans are
employed by the railway industry with nearly 90 percent of them '
working for Conrail, Norfolk Southern and CSX.
0( the commodities shipped from Ohio, railroad$ account for 20
percent of the total vl!lue and 17 percent of the totaliOnnage.
State transportation officials say coal, metallic ore, non-metallic
minerals and petroleum products account for more lhan 60 percent of
the state'S rail toMage.
.
·
'

'

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