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D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midrlaport-GIIipoll. Ohio Point Pausm. W. Va.

March weather may be.
r:ough on trees .around Ohio.

Weeds among daffodils can be controUed ·. :

COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UP{) - II
weeds put the squeeze on your
llaffodlls, researchers at Ohio
State University say you might
want to try pre-emergence
herbicides.
possible."
bcanch attaches 10 the trunk. ·
Horticulturists Elton Smith
If the tree can be salvaged,
To; help heal torn bark, care- and Sharon Treaster say that
remove small damaged . fully trim it With a sharp knife. Devrlnol (napropamlde) and
branches with pruners or shears,
Be careful to cut only the bark Sur!lan (oryzalinl. both comHeitigmann says. Cut the . and not the wood.
manly used in landscape malntebranches where I hey attach ' to
Applying commercially avail- .· nance, will effectlvelv control
the main stem, or just beyond a
able paint called wounC! dressing weeds without damaging the
side branch or bud .
will not ·help the tree. heal faster,
b,ulbs' blooms or foliage.
Use a saw to cut larger
"
Helllgmann says.
The herbicides can ""' applied
""
branches, Heiligmann says. Cut
"A wound dtesslng may be .in spring or fall.
them just ··beyond a sid.e branch
applied to Improve the iook offhe
The compounds a. re the sole
or In the natural depression close
damaged area," Hei!lgmann pre-emergence herbicides perto the trunk.
.
says; ·" But it won't of!er any mltted for use on daffOdils, says
It a damaged branch is3 inches
protection or" increase the heal· Smith, a professor of hortlculin diameter or larger, use a
log rate."
ture. They're · m~tly used in
thi'ee·step procedure to avoid
Branches from fallen trees large plantings wher11 mechanlfurther damage, such as the
need not be .)(tasted. Large ones
tearlng'of'bark on the main stem,
can be u$ed for firewood. Smaller
Helltgmann says.
branches and twigs can be used
First, make an undercut 1 to 1 as kindling or added to the
% inches deep on the branch compost pile.
.
about 1 footfrom the trunk. Then,
"After cleanup of damaged .
, about 2 to 3 .Inches beyond the
trees, thinjc about planting spe. undercut, cut the upper side of cies to reduce ,' future maintethe branch 1 to 2 Inches deep. nance problems," .. Heillgmann
, COLtiMBUS, Ohio tUP!) _
When the· cut is about halfway
Sprl,ng's '. first mowing could be
says. "Plant trees that are hardy
·dangerous · for. those who• don't
through the branch, the llmb will · for your geographical area. But
break loose and fall.
clean the lawn before they stari:
• don't plant a tree that will be too
Next, cut off the remaining
'" A sure sign of spring is the
large for the site a~ maturity."
stub In the natural · depression
sound
of mower blades hi tUng
If you plan to work In trees and
where the limb joins the trunk.
rocks and branches.'' says Bill
use pruning equipment, be espeBe careful to cut on the outside cially careful of utility lines ,
Pound, turf specialist at Ohio
edge of the branch collar, which Heillgmann says.
State University, "An amazing
is the swollen area where the
amount of debris ends up on
lawns over winter.
: "If you don't p!ck it up before

cal weed cpntrolls unfeasible.
For large plantl'ngs, formulations and rates are Devrlnol 50
wettable powder at 5 ·pounds
active Ingredient an acre and
Surflan 75 wettable powder, 3
pounds active ingredient a nacre.

' '

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI ) Although spring Is around the
cohler, Ohio's unpredictable
March weather still can damage

trees.

"Almost any type ortree can be
severely damaged from high
whlds and ice." says Randall
Helllgmann. forestry specialist
at Ohio State Universitv. "Limbs
may break and s pUiner, and
entire trees may be uprooted. •·
If a tree gets damaged , Helligmann says to eval uate whether
the tree is worth treating. Try to
save a tree only if most of it Is
intact and only if you value it
highly .
Carefully consider whether
you wan I to spend money to save
brittle. fast-growing , low.value
trees likely io be damaged froin
future storms. Such trees Include
silver map!&lt;: and cottonwood.
"Often, it makes more sense to
, remove the damaged tree and
replace It with another one,"
Heillgmann says. "If you ·have
doubt s, speak with a professional
tree service, consulting or urban
forester, or someone at vour
local nursery. If you can't save
the tr~e. remove" it as soon as

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -A
product in Ohio, Michigan, West
food scientist at Ohio State
Virginia, Pennsylvania, Indtaria
. UniversitY, says the recent reca ll
and Wisconsin, and from . milof -a microwavable soup
itary commissaries in several
shouldn't scare consumers from
other
states. Onlv containers
buying food in ·plastic cans and
with
the
code " Dec. 90 EST 4R
containers.
C09J" are being recalled.
"All food containers undergo
Heat processing Is vital to any
extensive testing before they can
canned product , Bhowmlk says.
be used," Santi. Bhowmlk says.
Canned products must be heated
''It doesn 't matter if the con long enough 10 kill' any orgatainer Is plastic, metal or glass.
nisms, but quickly enough to
People can be sure that food on
preserve the product's taste and
s,upermarket she! ves is safe,
texture. The shorter tlie prqcess ~
unless some mistake is made
ing time, the b.e tter a product's
during processing·. ".
quality:
A processing mistake is exDuring processing, tempera·
actly what h'appened In De· lures reach 240 to 255 . degrees
cemb~r. when some "Campbell's
Fahrenheit, Bhowmik says. Pro· Microwave Chunky Beef" soup,
cessing. could take anywhere
sold in plastic bowl·shaped confrom 20 mlnu.tes to 200 minutes,
tainers, left the plan t without
depending on what the container
being heat processed.
Is made of,,its size and·the kind of
On March5, Campbel!Souvco.
food inside II.
Issued a recall of the test·market . ' When manufacturers first be.
came lnterj?sted in plastic cantainers, researchers had to find a
' plastic that wouldn't deform
und~r such high temperatures,
Bhowm ik says. Also, since plastic doesn't conduct heat as well
WOOSTER, Ohio !UP!) -Tht\
4~rd annual Ohlo 'Sheep Day will
as metal doe• , it took time to find
the proper heating temperatures
be held at (he Ohio Agrlctiltural
and times needed for processing.
Research and Development Cenier Friday. May 18,9 a.m. to 3:30
In the last three years, Bhowp.m.
,
mik and his graduate students
i Site of the 1990 program is the
have developed a compute~ program to take much of the
research center's Sheep Unit 2 on
Fredericksburg Road (Wayne
guesswork out of processing food
Counw Roaj:l 501). about two
in new kinds of plastic cylindrical
miles south of U.S. 250. The event
.containers. The program can
calculate "{hat happens if. a can's
. Is free and open to the public.

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The Final
Four•••

Daily Number
005
Pick-4

1870
Super Ldto
1-7·23-29-40-43

Page4

•• ,
REBA,.E!
•
AHentlon 1• nme Buyers,
College Grads, ·and ~ndergrads Save An Additional $600.00 On New Pontlacs -.
Us For
.

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Clear Monday tonll:ht. Low
In mld-!Os. Sunny Tuelday.
High near 50.

Kicker 865153

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Vol.40, No .223
Copyrighted 1180

•
1 Section. 10 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, March 26, 1 1;190

26 Conto

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Arson suspect .placed in protective custody
NEW YORK (UP!)- Author!·
ties launched a massive crack~
down on Illegal social clubs
Monday, hoping to prevent a
repeat of the "gruesome circum·
stances" that left 87 people dead
·in an arson inferno at a crowded
unlicensed nightspot .
Julio Gonzalez, 36, a Cuban
emigre accused of setting a
weekend blaze at the Happy
Land social · club, was held
without bail at hls arraignmfnt
early Monday on 87 counts of
murder in the worst mass slaying
in U.S. history.
Authorities said .the remorseful .suspect was ordered held In
maximum security protective
custody under a sulcldewatch In
the city jan on Rlkers Island.

Gonzalez, who came to the
United States tn · the Marlel
boatllft, was seen . arguing with
his ex-girlfriend. a ticket-taker
at the club, and was thrown out
by a bouncer shortly before the
two-story . building erupted In
flames.
The pre-dawn blaze was the
deadliest In New York since
flames roared through the Triangle Shirt Waist factory 79 years
ago to the day, killing 145people.
While Gonzalez was being
arraigned by Bronx Criminal
Court Judge Alexander Hunter,
rnore than 10(! pollee and fire and
building inspectors began the
crackdown, visiting 173 social
clubs that have already received
vacate orders.

Authorities have estimated
there are a total 230 illegal social
clubs in the city..
"We will check those clubs to
make sure they are Indeed
closed," ·said Mayor David
Dinkins.
Dinkins, who was visibly
shaken after touring the smolderIng ruins while firefighters
pullect' out bodies and laid them
on the sidewalk beneath pale blue
sheets, vowed Sunday to close all
the city's lllegal social clubs.
"Part of what we need ... is to
spreag the taleofthese gruesome
ctrcuillstances so that the general pubic will know that these
are not safe places to go," the
mayor said somberly.
"And believe me, if anyone

could view and witness It, they
woull! not. wish to go, I don't care
!)ow good the music, how fine the
company, haw great the comraderie - they would not want to be
there."
Pollee believe only three or
four people - including the
suspect's ex-girlfriend, the clubs
disc jockey and the owner's wife
- survived the blaze.
Gonzalez, who had been drinkIng In the club a~d argued with
his ex-girlfriend after apparently
trying to woo · her bac)(, was
thrown out by a bouncer and later
returned enraged and t9rched
the nightspot, pollee said.
The club in the run-down East
Tremont section of the Bronx,
where flames blocked the soli-

chairs. ·
Some were crushed in a stampede to get out, but FireCommis·
sloner Car los Rivera said most
victims died on the second floor
from smoke inhalation. The

tary exit and entrance and
trapped 87 people Inside, was
ordered closed In November 1988
by the Buildings Department.
But lhf club continued to operate, without a liquor or cabaret
license, catering mostly to Hon·
durans and other Central America n Immigrants.
Horrified firefighters discovered nearly 20 bodies on the
club's ground noor and found the
rest upstairs, where many stlll
had glasses In thell' hands and
some nad their legs entwined in
bar stools, au thor! ties said.
Firefighters, who found flam es
leaping out the two front doors
when they arrived, .said at least
one couple was holding hands
and' some were still seated In

club's

rear · windows

were

\

bricked up and the front window
was barred.
"The smoke was so heavy you
couldn't · see , anything," said
Frank Curtin, one of the first
firefighters to arrive at the
scene. "We were actually stepping on bodies downstairs before
we realized we had people in
tliere." ·
The bodies of 61 men and 26
women, more than ha lf of them
under the age of 25, were pulled
Continued on Pilge 10

Supreme Court agrees .to _review -policy
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The try, decided to bar potential
Supreme Court agreed Monday child-bearing women from workto decide If employers can bar lng wtth lead.
• women of child bearing age from
Such "te!al protection pollcertain jobs because the work cies" have become lncreasingiy
· ·could lead to birth detects..
· widespread In industries where
The court will hear arguments lead or other chemicals are used,
In the fallln the case brought by a and are a common feature in the
group of Wisconsin women seek- high-tech semiconductor Induslog review of a ruling by the 7th try. Defenders~ay they're
U.S. ClrcultCourtofAppeals that needed to prevent amage to the
upheld the ban. A decision Is not unborn child, an to shield a
expected before next year.
company from b g sued as a
At issue is a clash between job consequence:
Women's groups and labor
safety and women's rlghts. The
employer, Johnson Controls Inc., unions, however, say the policies
makes batteries of which the cjl~riminate against women ,bY
primary material used Is. lead,
barring them from hlgh-pald
.. .tyhlcb ' ,ts .:a ~!!!zed- health ~. jobs O!l;. liJe .. mere, belief they
•nazard . to ,\.vork~s. Medical ex- might beC.oml!"pl'egltant'a'nil the
perts ats·o believe lead posj!s a work ·mlght pose a danger to a
,
serious . tbreat to a developing fetus.
fetus that can lead to stillbirth,
While courts have generally
reduced birth weight and
stated such policies do discrimi• nate against women, they have
retardation,
The company, which owns also said such policies can be
battery plants around the coun- justified.
STATE ~MPION - Lynn Young, BurUngham, recently
competed In the Ohio Archen Indoor 300 in which she finished fll'llt
place. She received a plaque, belt buckle, and cerUflcate for
scoring 288 out of 300 p08Sible points. She Is a member of the
Chester ·B owhunters and the 81 g. Bend Bowhunters. She was
sponsored In the competition by Joey's Archery, Letart, W.Va.
WASHINGTON IUPI)- Eight most, if only on a personal leveL
hours of videotaped testimony by
In his testimony, presented by
former Pr.e sldent Ronald Rea- videotape, Reagan repeatedly
gan, a defense witness, did not said he could not recl!ll key
seem to bolster the case of John
details or the scandal and added
Poindexter. his former national
that he always told his aides to
· security adviser.
obey the law.
. Bi-et A: Rood, 18, of Reedsville, and came to rest on the driver's
Former Attorney General EdThe next witness, Meese. tesUson of.Jack B. Rood, of Tuppers side, pinning Rood, who had been
win Meese, another witness for fled emphatically that PoindexPlains, and Charlotte Durst, of partially ejected through the
Poindexter, who Is charged with
ter never !led to him and he never
Reedsvllle, was killed early driver's window. He was not
five felony counts of lying and
heard any cover-up plan disSunday morning in a motor wearing a seat bell obstructing a congressional In· cussed at the ·Whlte House after
Rood was a 1989 _graduate of
vehicle accident in Athens
vesUgatlon of the Iran-Contra
the scandal became public.
County. The crash occurred Eastern High School and a
scandal, gave more useful tesThe most interesting twist so
about 4:50a.m. on U.S. Route 5(1 student at Hocking Technical
timony for the defense. ·
far in the Poindexter defense
approximately two miles from College, Nelsonville. He was
But it was the arrival of the effort came late Friday, wit)! the
employed at Kroger In Athens
Coolville.
·
defendant 's 26-year-old son,
revelation that a congressional
According to a report from the and was on his way home from . Mark - a Navy lleuten;mt who aide received a lead .from the
Athens County Post of the Ohio work when the accident oc- wore hls uniform to court - that National Security Agency in late
Highway Patrol, Rood was alone curred, althOugh the spokesper.
seemed to buoy Poindexter the 1985 that the United States was
in a1986 Ford Escort which was son .for the highway patrol was
\)wned by his father. He was east
not sure If the young man had
bound on u. S. 50 when he lost stopped at other places before
control in an S-curve, ran off the heading home.
·
rlghl side of the road; then off the
The body was removed from
·. ..
left side, striking the embankthe scene to the Hughes Funeral
any losses, but opponents say the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ment . The car rolled over twice
Home, Athens.
guarantee was not legally bindThe Ohio House of Representatives Is scheduled to vote Tues- Ing, and that the sponsors alday on a Senate-passed $138 lowed the losses only because
they knew the state would cover
mlllioh supplemental budget
them.
aimed in part at stopping the
The House Is to reconvene
hemorrhaging of state Medicaid
money this year.
Tuesday at 11 a.m. and the
at the scene.
Irving Karr, Jr., long-time
Once passed by the House, the Senate at 1: 30 p.m .. ·
The coroner reported that Mr. bill will go to Gal(. Richard
PomeroY businessman, died of a
Business and labor have
Karr left a note which Indicated Celeste alter routine Senate agreed to freeze benefits and
self·lnfllcted gunshot wound at
that he was depressed about ·concurrence in minor changes ..
his home In Mason, W. Va,
returning to the nursing home.
The blll contains $92 mUllan to
Sunday afternoon, according to
For the past couple of weeks he eliminate a projected shortfall in
Muon Colinty Breton Morgan,
had been staying at Overbrook in Medicaid funds. Medicaid Is the
coroner.
Middleport.
.
The co'roner reported that he
state's health care program for
For
many
years,
Mr.
Karr
those who cannot afA:Ird private
wu called to the scene about 4
operated the Karr-VanZandt Ca- coverage.
p.m. along with officials of the
dillac Oldsmobile Agency In
Muon County Sheriffs DepartIt also provides extra funds for
"As (ar as I know, I have neva
Pomeroy, selling It In the late . business development loans, the
ment alid tbe West VIrginia State
haul~ lilY hazardous materials for
1970's when he retired. .
Poilce alter the body was disco,
public defender's office and the
E&amp;:H
Recycling."
Funeral arrangements are be- Ohio Departnient of Corrections
vered by Mr. Karr's daughter,
This was the statement made
ing handled by Ewing Funeral as a result of b!Jrgeonlng crime,
Mr9. Fred .caney, wbo live~~
by Ed Carson, owner of Caraon
Home, Pomeroy.
and $4.2 mllUon for planning
nearby. He was pronounced dead
F~~orma Trucking, which wa~
AmeriFlora, a giant lnterna·
mentioned
In the Sunday-Times
ttonal flower show being staeed
Sentinel,
concerning
the Depart·
ln COlumbus In two years.
ment
of
Natural
Resources
DlvThe supplemental budget,
producing Industries by 28,000
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) of
Waste
Management
illon
made necessary, by chanps In
jobl.
.
The Oblo Bureau of Employmenl
lnvesttgatlon of EI:H Recycling
Key advances ln services and revenue projectlona since the
Service~' moet recent employer
on
Wadsworth Avenue, near
In retall trade contributed to an two-year appropriation was
survey &amp;hOWl the state's non·
Point
Pleasant.
Increase of 14,000 Joba In servlc• enacted last June, also contalrui
agricultural waee and aalary
Sl mUIIon u the state' a share for
The local tmcklng finQ
producing lnduatries.
employment lncreued by 42,000
"Son of Heaven," a Cblnele arts tioned as ~ iiWorlal for the
Among .Industry sectors, emJobllast month, to 4.889 mUIIon.
display which lost $1.7 mllllon In ra:yclilla catter, wtacb a11110 UDt1ea'
ployment In the servlc• sector
Recalls from · Jayofls In the
Columbus
last aummer .
IICJUiiny followlna the 8rins of
wljS hllthest at 1.159 mlWpn Jobs,
automotive l!lduatry heJped
Spo1110ra claimed tbe state had tine employees who Jefuaed to
boolt employment . In eoodsConttnued on page 10
guaranteed $1 million aealnst ·
sub-contracu 's apement.

the Civil Rights Act that bars
In other action, the court: '
-Agreed to decide at what discrimination based 011 sex.
They also said that exposure to
point a . desegregation order"
lead
can also cause reproductive
should be ll.l'ted for a public
harm
in men by lowering sperm .
school that has achieved 'Integracounts
and cause genetic dam·
tion goals. The case concerns the
age
that
can lead to birth defects
Oklahoma City schooi system.
In
offspring,
contentions that
which contends confusion exists
were
disputed
by varying
over a school system's obligation
experts.
to a desegregation order once
A number of women's groups
that order has been met.
-Refused to become Involved and labor unions, in a friend -ofIn a lawsuit arising from the the-court brief, also urged the
McMartin Pre-School child mo- court to hear the case and said it
lestation case, the longest and could affect as many as 20 million
costliest criminal ti-Jal In U.S. women.
' 'The truth Is that most women
history.
work
because they have to;
-Refused to enter a case
lnvo~ving . a claim that a bank . ;~·he\~.~r 1,!1, st~~le-par1111 t hor In
di'sctimtnated against a man for t.wo wage-earner house olds,
refusing to· Issue him a cl·edlt · women's contributions to family
card because he was not a U.S. ·income are critical," the~ sat d.
"Johnson Control's policy and
citizen.
In seeking high court review, others like It thiis require women
lawyers for the women argued to make an Impossible choice
that previous lower court tulings between their fertility and their
significantly narrowed Title 7 of jobs."
.

.

Poindexter's Iran-Contra trial resumes

Meigs driver killed in·
Sunday morning wreck

" directing" Contra operations In . organizations that monitors sen·
sitlve communications
Nicaragua almost a year after
worldwide.
Congress banned ald .
· Before Adams could answer
The disclosure came during
questioning of Ralph W. Adams,_ the question, there was "an
immediate objection from proan official of the National Secursecutors and a series of hushed
Ity Agency. called as a Po Index·
bench conferences with U.S.
ter defense witness.
District Judge Harold Greene.
Poindexter's lawyer, Richard
Beckler. asked Adams If he had
After about 40 minutes of private
discussions. Beckler was allowed
provided "highly rella ble intelll·
to read into the record a "stipulagence Information" about the
tion" agreed to by both sides.
Contras to a congressional staff
Until the development, the
member In 1985.
phrase had always been used in '
reference to NSA monitoring of
The phrase " highly reliable
every
detail of the secret shiplritelllgence Information" is be·
ment of U.S. missiles to Iran In
lleved to refer lo electronic
November 19&amp;~ .- not about
eavesdropping by the NSA, one of
the government's most secret · Central America.

Supplemental budget bill vote Tuesday

Mason resident dies
from gunshot wound

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Sale Price...... 11O,:JM
1st Time Buyer or
College Grad

Eul

FAFBEL

I

'2,000

'

Since the bidding system bas not yet
been invented tltat ~an inquire wheth·
er partner has the spade queen or club
South bad a -difficult biddlnl
!em. (At rubber bridce we lboula
all have such problema!) Soutlt jumped
to six no-trtiiJip, since be felt he migbl
make it even if bis partner held noth·
.
Gramps lives in a very small ing at all.
Even
wit~
35
high-card
points
in Ute
town . His payment to the combined .hands, 12 trlcu were
in
electric
COmpany
WaS jeopardy. A·K·Q of hearts dllclOIIed
returned
for
insufficienl , that that suit was splittiag badly. West
· , , ·
llhowed out on the second spade,
dd
a ress, so he added Its nexl' throwing a small ~lub.lt would DOW be
to the --·· ------!"
easy for declarer 10 overtake t1te )llct
of spades and take a club flneae.
Since
all Ute lllllts had broken
3-~s
perhaps a simple flneue wwtd
.
Complete .'he chuckle quoted But there wu an even better Wly. ReIt
10
by follong on the missing words memiJer, Welt had shown four beartl,
you develop from step No. 3 below. five cllamondl and oaly -lplde. So
declarer played out btl hiP dlamondl,
216&gt;"'1~~mrl~~r---rr-lt
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tbrowin&amp;cluhlfromdUminy,alldUtee
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cubed Ute -ofcll'be, U you thiDII
5
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that stranae. COIIIIdet' t1te clefellden' •
renvlning cards. WeSt lteld a blp
heart and dlaiiiOIICI, Ud, after declarer plaJI Ute club ace, oetly one ~lub,
perbaps tbe klnl· Declarer now plaJI
ttie jlld of spades. w.t tllron •
red card away, that malt• Ute eorreo
•pmdlq red card pod for tile declar301.:1:10 !SOd
er. ff he throws Ute cltlb
IWIJ, de!SidAl.
clarer will score lite club ~- U be
.. i301:1.:f0
31:1.:1\'8
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!SOd 94J OJ lX9U S.ll. peppe 84 OS
(RJIPIIII lte tdlttltl witiii·JI of~
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t!Rlitrer W.llle lrlek wtt~~a.
'sseJppatuat::llunsut JO! peuJnt&amp;J ~
31osn~

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LISt... '12,394

Opening lead: • 9

I I 13 I I I
CUMElS
I I !5· I' I I I
L0 VI I N
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PHONE .(614) 446~5131'

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: South· ,

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HOLZER
MEDICAL (ENTER

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NORTii

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simple words: Prin t leiters of
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.,
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JAMES
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0 words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6

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WE HOPE YOU DON'T...
.BUT, IF YOU DO NEED
RADIATION ONCO.LOGV '
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OR OTHER U"'ER. THERAPIES,

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WOlD
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T~~:~~y S©R4U~-/£t~S® GAME
Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN

raked, " Pound says. "Consider State's Ohio. Agricultural Jl,ecompostl";ll,._c.. oUected leaves or search and Development Center. ·
branches. ,.
A free reprint of the report, .
While ,W&lt;\l.king the lawn, also titled "A Two-Year Tolerance
.look for areas that lifted up over Study of Narcissus Culttvars to ·
wt.~ter.
,
Selected Pre-emergence. Her,bl- .
Freezing and thawing cycles ctdes," is available by wri)lng .
Can ..Cause areas
. Of.. Wet
. Iurf Io Narcissus Tolerance Reprint, 203
rise, Pound says. These areas Research SerVices Buildihg·, :
should be rolled to allow for OARDC, 1~ Madison · AVe.;:_
smooth and even mowing."
Wooster, Ohio 44691,
, . •. ,........_ _ _ _ _ _.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,......;; •

you mow, you endanger yourself
and
your equipment...
size, thickness or thermal prop:
erues are changed. ·
Although cleaning the lawn
may .take a few hours, Pound
Bowl-shaped containers have
says it can . 1\eev · you from
challenged researchers even
damaging
the 'mower or from
more, Bhowmlk says. Traditionbeing
Injured
by flying debris .'
ally, processing temperatures
Before.
that
first
mowing, just
and times were determined using
walk
across
the
gras~
and pick up
cylindrical cans' diameter.
or rake any trash, branches,
No matter the 'size, shape or
gravel
or pieces of pavement.
composition of a fOod container,
The
highest
concentrations of
Bhowmlk maintains that canned
debris
usually
occur at the
food on American grocery
lawn-sidewalk
border.
where ·
shelves Is the safest it ·can be. ·
snow-clearing
often
throws
lit"LOQk at the incidence of
ter,
rocks
and
even
chtinks
of
food-borne Illness stemming
paveme~j
.
·
,
from .canned prod~cts; It's very, .
"Scattered leaves can be left
very low," Bh!&gt;wm lk says.
on the lawn·. but leaws and other
"Properly heat-processed food
debris .that are piled up could
can last for years wi(hout
smother tHe grass and should be
preservatives."

.

.

The recommendations are
based on Smith and Treaster's
.two-year s!udy of N;~rclssus
tolerance to pre-emergence
heHrblcldes.
erbicides In the study ineluded Devrtnol and Sur!lan as
well as Endurance lprodjaminel
and Snapshot ioryzalln and isox·
...
E
a.,.,n). ndurance and Snapshot
were available for research only
and cannot be USed for daffodils.
In the stu~y. weed control and
plant damage from the four

herbicides were tested In four ·
daffodil varieties over two groW- .
i!lll seasons. All four herbicides.
eflectlvely controlled weeds
without plant damage for an
extended period of time.
The daffodils. c~sen to rep resent a range of characteriStics,
were February Gold, Golden
Perfection. 'Barrell Brownlnf;
.and Geranium.
.
.
Weeds controlled in the study
included yellow sweetclover.
wlld lettuce, · oxalis and wlld ·
.
sweet potato, which Smith says
c-an be difficult to suppress with
pre·emergence herbicides .
The herbicides were applied in
.mid -October, seven· days after '
· bulbs were planted. Damag~was · .1
checked in April; weed controlwas evaluated. In Ma;l' and June:&lt;"
Smith' says similar results·
could be expect~d if herbicide~~ ~ ·
are applied in spring just beri&gt;re
the daffodils bloom.
'
The tearp ~ported ~he study In ·

Clean .lawn
before
.
•
·
·
f•
·
Jl:\ak.mg.. IrS( mow . ' ~~~s~~ialpuc;:;~:ti~~llta~y p~~:~·

Plastic containers safe as met~t ones

Sheep Day
at wooster .

March 26. 1990

.

increase employer assessments
to balance the fund, which
protects jobless workers, but
once the blll clears the House it
may have difficulty in the Senate, where roadblocks are being
'
set.
A Senate committee may vote
this week on a controversial
waste recycling blll involving
mandatory deposits on cans and

o

bottles sold In Ohio.
The bottle bill Is being pitted
against a more comprehensive
recyCling measure in the House
that covers metal, glass, plastic,
paper, cardboard, styrofoam,
yard clippings and other waste,
but it Is voluntary and there is no
funding mechanism. Opponents
warn It may result In additional
taxes.

_Carson says his firm has never
hauled any hazardous materials

~on~ag

employment increases

-mea·

sisn•

According to lhe Federal MQtor

Carrier , Safety
ResuJajions,
publislted by the u.s. Deplnment
of Transportation, every shipment
of hazardous tlllllerial must be IC·

Pa., and 10 Elbm Metals of Alloy,
W.Va.. plus others.

Among the items haul~ wen:
magnesium ferrosilicon sludge,
draa remelt, and dross Wldersize.
~psm~byap~yp~
Joyce Moore of lhe DNR 's Point
Pleulut office, who lOOt 111111ples
~Oi:li it is the respon- ·fnlm
the recycling center 111 Friday,
sibility of the sltipper 10 cleamlne
if the tniCk is hw,tiq 111z1rc1ous · llid dlis IIICfting the telt8 lave 1101
lllllerials, end that 110 ... MYa been compleel.
"We n ~ to IriCk down a
beca
buardoul
01'· 101 of thinp, includin&amp; tell telulls
den
baulina for BAH.
Clnon, wbo IWed lie beps t~trd at York, Pl. (the CCIIII·
detaiiCid JeCOids cl every ...... pmy I bonte oftice),llltl wblllbey
lion he lllllw. said lie ... '-led ........ for," Moen llld.
"We ... ehedrin&amp; owry ..... 10
matail1s from BaH to Mlpem
If tlloy 1111 ~
Metals of Sprillgdale, Pa., lionl
Wille, tbey lt'e . . . 10
American Alloys 10 E.tH, Jdrle • haztwdoul
Fines, Calvert City, Ky. to York, pcopedy," lho tOIICludlll.

.Lflll

..w

"* -

~

.. ,

~

•.

�.'

.·Commentary

Pomaoy-Mict'1port. Ohio

Oliver eyes shot as Reds' catcher

Plgt 2-The Deily .........

Pon•or' Mlddlaport. 'Ohio
Monday. Menlh 28. 1810

PLANT C!Tl(, Fla. !UPI) -' · out of the frame and mind of just
Joe Oliver wanta the No. 1 plllylng good baseball and what's
catcher's job for the Cincinnati best for Joe Oliver."
Reds so much that he lost nearly
He and his agent took a long
30 pbunds to become more look at what Oliver had to do to
competitive.
get back to Cincinnati.
A year and a half ago Oliver
·;I felt If t got In the best shape I
ballooned to 238, the heaviest he
had ever been. He bad undergone could, It would show the front
arthrOICOplc surgery In the office I was willing to work and
spring of 1988, and was sent to willing to make sacrifices," he
Nashville In Triple·A to prepare said.
Oliver went on · a ·diet and
to return to the Reds. But
ln$tead, he went to Double-A · augmented It with agility drills
Chattanooga because his play and welght-) lrtlng. This time last
wasn't of a major league quality. year he was down to 210.
He heads Into this ~eason as the
"I w11s never that fat In my ·
top
prospect for catcher. He has
life," Oliver ·said of his 238
some
experience, filling In last
pounds. " It was probably out of
season
when Bo Dlaz was
self-pity. I was having a bad
plagued by Injuries and Jeff
year. !just got sent down and got

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Lawyers .cash in on thrift debacle

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreet
Pomeroy, Oblo

.

DEVOTED TO THE 11qEREST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~

Blm1i:,l
.............
~v
. ._"T',,....,..c=t.""'
.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Generlll Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assilltant Publlsber/ControUer
A MEMBER or The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub:\!,.~ · Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personall-

Rounding.out IBJ
By ARNOW SAWISLAK
UPl Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- One reason some artists won't let anyone look at
their works-In-progress Is that the underpalntlng on unfinished
pictures can give a mistaken Idea of what the completed Job will look
like.
But sometimes, as In the case of a mammoth biography of the sort
that Robert Caro Is writing about Lyndon Johnson, the picture being
p~lnted has to be unveiled In ·stages.
.
Caro has written two volumes of a projected four-part biography
and both books l!ave provoked plenty of controversy.
.
The first book got LBJ from birth through his care~r In the House of
Representatives and depleted an ambitious, hard-working young
man striving for success In politics, occasionally · lapsing Into
questionable ethical COnduct to make his way .
The second volume, just out, covers the World War II period and the
immediate aftermath, when Johnson made an all-out effort to move
from the House to the Senate. This book sho-..:s an odious, dishonest,
rapacious, unscrupulous scoundrel wllllnmg to do anything or anyone
to win.
So far, the story line seems to lead to a conclusion that Caro ts
writing the life of the most hideous vllllan ever to occupy the national
stage. But judging from the foreword to the new book, Carols going to
compare Johnson to Abraham Lincoln when he gets to his subject's
vital role In the civil rights revolution of the 19605.
That. apparently means Caro Is going to attempt In the last two
volumes of this vast blograph,cal journey to at least partially
rehabilitate the sleazy bum he has created In the first two. As one
revlewe,r of the new book has observed; Caro may have made Johnson
so bad that no one will believe he had redeeming qualities.
But II he can do it, Caro may come out with a recognizable portrait
of the LBJ that those who watched his rise and fall In Washington
knew. That picture, In order to be true, does have to show a man of
Immense complexity and seemingly lrreconclla ble conflicts of
character and conduct.
\)lere are dozel)s of stories that Illustratethe dark and bright sides
of Lyndon Johnson. One was told by the novelist-playwright Larry
King, who. once was an aide to a Texas congressman named J.T.
Rutherford. Rutherford assigned King_to help Johnson during a quick
campaign swing through In his district. The trip went badly and at the
end of the day, a furious Johnson chewed · out everyone In sight,
especially Including King.
Outraged by the tongue-lashing, King told Johnson, •'I work for Mr,
Rutherford, not you and I don't have to take. (bleep) from you." He
stomped out or the room, thinking he surely would be fired tl\e next
·
day.
At 4 a.m. King's hotel room phone rang. It was Johnson, who,
saying he copuldn't sleep, politely Invited King to have a drink.
Hating Johnson even more, the sleepy young aide went to the
senator's room where LB.J mumbled something akin to an apology for
his earlier outburst and then regaled King wtth· stories about New
Deal days and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
King said when the time came for Johnson to leaye for the airport to
return to Washington, one of LBJ's own aides came to .the room t.o
carry the senator's suitcase to the plane.
"He had to fight me for it." King said.

Berry's World

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta .

ment has seized 393 thrifts with
$193 biiUon In assets. Another 157
thrifts with $113 billion In assets
Milberg aJJd Weiss of New ·
are Insolvent and 400 more with
The law firms making the most
$300 biiUon In assets are stck and money are those with offices In York, $2.74 mllllon; Sidley and
probably have 5,000 by the end of
the depresse areas of (he coun- ·Austin of Chicago, $2.5 mUllan;
Morrison and Hecker of Kansas
this year.
try, such as Texas.
City,
Mo., $2.37 mUiion; Jenkens
The assets that the Rtc will
We have obtatne a confidential
Gllchrlat
of Dallas, $2.29
and
handlehmehlt the largest finan·
Internal FDIC memo listing the
mUllen;
.
Mayer
and Brown of
eta! Institution In the world, the
top 20 law firms and l'he legal fees
Chicago,
$2.18
million;
Leonar
target single owner or real estate
paid to them by the FDIC In 1989
Fort
Worth,
Texas.
and
Marsh
of
and junk bonds and the largest far commercial banks and sav$1.96
million;
Brown
and
Maroauction firm In the country.
Ings and loan work.
ney
of
Austin,
Texas,
$1.53
't:he combination draws lawyThe geographic area supplying
ers like birds to carrion. One
the most law firms In the top 20 mUIIon; Jones and Day of Dallas,
source at the RTC told us the
list Is Texas with five. There are $1.52 million. Morton and Lewls
government will be Involved with
four from Chicago and two each or Knoxville, 'l:enn., $1.51 mD·
an estimated 80,000 lawyers this
from New York, F1orlda and lion; Reid and Priest of New
York City, $1.5 million, Stuzln
year over savings and loan
Tennessee.
Camner of Miami, $1.46
and
matters. That covers lawsuits
At the top of the list Is Hopkins,
million;
(;able and Gotwals of
file by the government and
Sutter, Hamel and Park,, a
Tulsa,
Okla.,
$1.36 million; Sachagainst the government sur- . Chicago firm in the Ideal position
noff
and
Weaver
of Chicago, $1.3
rounding the disposal of thrift
of having strong offices In Dallas
mUllon;
Miller
and
Martin of
assets.
and Washington. Hopkins, Sutter
Chattanooga,
Tenn.,
·$1.14
milThe FDIC and the RTC have a
earne $3.58 million from the
pool of 400 quallfle law firms
government In legal fees last lion; DOrsey and Whitney of ·
from which to choose, and tbe
year, according to the Internal Minneapolis, $1 million; Kemp .
and Smith of El Paso, Texas,
agencies divvy out the work to
memo.
those on the approve Its t based on
Here are the rest of the top 20 $996,000; and Adams and Howe of ,
Des Moines, Iowa, $787,000.
,,
expertise and location.
firms In descending order:

WASHINGTON - Not everyone Is mourning the catastrophic failure .of the savings and
loan Industry. Lawyers, the
vulture capitalists of this disaster, are making a bundle off the
carcasses of dead financial
Institutions.
The man hiring law firms to
represent the taxpayers Is William Seidman, chairman or the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Our sources say .that Seidman
expects to pay a whopping $500
mUUon this year to lawyers for
leial work relating primarily to
thrlfl matters.
Seidman privately lamented to
a group of bankers last week that
the FDIC and the Resolution
Trust Corp. may "slrfglehand~ly be responsible for the
flrsst lawyer shortage In U.S.
history."
· The RTC Is the stepchild that
came Into being last August to
sell of alllng thrifts which the
_government has been forced to
take over.
By one estimate, the govern-

Charland seeks to pitch for Indians

I.

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'.
(.

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I

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.•

Hot air surrounds Earth Day __·R_ob_er_tW,_a_lte_rs
MEDINA, Wash. (NEA) -Not
long ago, Edward W. Furia
envisioned that he would preside
over a global environmental
extravaganza with a $30 million
budget to mark the 20th annlver·
sary revival of Earth Day this
year.
Furia'~ Earth Day 20 organization never . opene an office because · he claimed he could
orchestrate a dizzying array of
concerts, rallies, speeches and
other events from his home In a
·
Seattle suburb.
The financing, Furia predicted
late last year, would be provided
by six corporate sponsors donatIng $5 million apiece. The centerpiece of his efforts was to have
. been Earth Week Expo, on the
banks of the Columbia River In
central Washington. .
That "global theater" was to
provide a showcase for "guest
celebrities," live mlislc, "major
addresses by leading figures,"
elaborate displays and "kinetic
exhibits."
·
But the money has never been
forthcoming. "For the most part,
It hasn't materialized," admits

Furia. The drastically scaled
back Earth Week Expo now Is
likely to resemble the half-dozen
concerts a winery routinely sponsors every summer at tile amphitheater Furia selected as the site
·
for the event.
Earth Day 20's tribulations
unfortunately are emblematic of
recent developments as the nation prepares to commemorate
the 20th annlverary of the April
22, 1970, events widely credited
as having launched the contemporary envl ron men tal
movement.
.
The spontaneity and authenticIty of the original Earth Day have
been supplanted by commerclaltsm and exploitation. A halfdozen different organizations, all
self-proclaimed defenders of the
environment, maneuver shamelessly for pub! lei ty, acclaim and
the presumed honor of being the
day's leading sponsor.
In New York, the chairman of
the Earth Society Foundation,
John McConnell, claims that he
Is the originator of Earth Day,
that others have stolen the Idea

and that It should be held In
have·done more than their share
March rather than AprU.
to contaminate, pollute and othLike other sponsoring organi- erwise despoil the planet's natuzations, Earth Day 1990 has been
ral resources, says Earth Day Is
overzealous In collecting endor"a unique opportunity to a safe,
sements. . As a result, It has
healthy and ever-Improving
assembled of 115"member Naenvironrnen t."
.
tional Board or Dlreetors. a
Ashlan!J Oil, responsible for a ·
38-member International Board
tank rupture that two years ago
of Sponsors, a ?().member Envirdumped 3.8 mllllori gallons of oil
onmental Advisory Council and a
Into the Monongahela River,
list of 155 cooperating "Particisays Earth Day Is an occasion to
pating Organizations."
remind Its stockholders of "ihe
In Washington, D.C., the
efforts Ashland Is making to
.E;arthTecb '90 Technology Fair ensure a heal thy environment."
and International forum will be
Union Carbide, whose 1984
held on Capitol Hill and the Mall chemical plant leak · of methyl ·
two weeks prior to Earth Day,
Isocyanate In Bhopal, India, .
while the National Celebration of
k tiled more than 3,300 people and
the Outdoors Is scheduled for the
adversely affected the health of
week Immediately after Earth
20,000 others, urges el'lvironmenDay .
taltsts "not to miss the opportunMeanwhile, companies hawk-· Ity to Involve business In a
lng everything from ketchup to positive way In your Earth Day
costume jewelry glibly proclaim program."
.
their products to be "environOnly a bottom-up commemora·
mentally sensitive" and view lion on April 22 by concerne
Earth Day as merely a "green Individuals can make Earth Day
marketing" opportunity .
a legitimate event. The top-down
The' Cbemtcal Manufacturers efforts already are an embarAssociation, whose members rasstng.l allure.

FANS

widespread approval, spurred by
Deng Xlaoplng's readiness to use
free-market techniques to lnvlgorate China's economy. Even on
T!llwan, the' tendency seemed to
be to allow broader associations
with the mainland.
Then came the June massa-·
cres tn•Tiananmen Square. The
world receDed In horror duriq
the extensive television coverage
cit the communist crackdown.
Deng Xlaoping and his co~rie
were seen afresh for what they
bave always been, but what 20
year•. of maaAiiDg by Richard
Nixon, Jimmy Carter and the
State Department had managed
to oblcure: a bloodstained illlli

,..,
--lay .m· •story ___;.;..._~---re-ilme
___
.1. till

.n__P_e_klq
_ _b_aa_ked
___·_n_o_f-e-lde_r_ly_th_ugs
__• -b-loc_k_lng_wt_th_

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.
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B:r United
• Today Ia Monday, March 26, the 85th day of 1990 with 280 to follow .
The moon II new.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evenlllg atars are Mercury and Jupiter.
'l'llole born on thll date In blltory are under the sip of Arlee. They
playwright T.nMCtae Wllilama In
taclude poet Robert F'rolt Ia
1911, French compolel'-eoaductor Pierre Boulez In 1925 (age 65),
$CiorsSterliDrHaydenln ·1 911,LeonardNlmoyiD193l(aaeli8),Alan
Arkin In 1931 (Hie !16) and James Caan In 1939 (age 51), Supreme

m•.

~

~

F

.

Court Justice 8andra Day O'CoDrtor In 193&gt; (age 60) and au thor Erica
Joq_ln 1942 (age 48).

On this date In history:
·
·
In 18d8, astronomers reported sighting a new planet In an orbit near
thai of Mercury. They named It Vulcan. It'• now believed to have been
a "rorue asteroid" maklq a one-time paas cloee to the 1un.
In 1975, the city of Hue In South VIetnam Jell to the North
VIetnamese army. · ·~

every ml!llns at their command
the democratization of China.
Almost worse (fr011l ihe standpoint of the Red Chinese), the
rest of the communist world
chose that moment to sink Into Its
death agony, acknowledging
with Its dying breatl) agony,
acknowledging with Its dying
breath Its Inability 10 provide a
decent lite for the peoples of
Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union. Militant communism
shrank almost over1Jight to a
handful of abandoned outposts:
Albania Castro's Cuba ·and that
bloodt '
'
ed
·
hlrsty, doome and ~solat
~;!~J'~f t~.!'a~ple 1 (sic)
And what was the Republic of
China on Taiwan doing whjle .all
thll waa going on? Well, It was
holdlq the trees t electlona Iince
It left the mainland In 1949. New
oppoeltlon partle8, bavlng been
legalized two yeara aiQ, cam·
· palpecl vliQrouaty and ICOred
respectably, though they fell
abort of ousdni the Nationalists
from power.
Whatever befalls,. you can be
surelhattheNatlonallltgovern·
· ment In Taipei, with powerful

.,

Toledo results

youcoQare
efficiencies, the Heat P~
beats the others 3tot~

Prost wins Brazilian Grand Prix

~~~:,-·---

Score boar d ...
--liP•

MiaMI I...

M.UOR INDOOR IOCCI!:B LEAGUE
. . . . . .8 ....

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Clll.e.

Kan. .
DaiiM a
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'·

GoU
Eduardo Romero of Argentina
shot a 67 In the final round to win
the $330,000 Volvo Open at
'Florence, Italy, by one stroke
O'!er Br.ltons Russell Claydon and
Colin Montgomerte. Romero fin·
!shed at 23-under-265.
Motorcycle Racine
Wayne Rainey· . of Norwalk,
Calif., led from start to finish to
win the 500cc race at Suzuka,
Japan. to open the 15-raceGrand
Prix season. Rainey began from
the pole position and edged
Australian Wayne Gardner by
3.237 seconds In the 22·1ap race.

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Results
'N.4.TION"L BAIIU:Oi\LL Allor.

armed forces of Its own and an
economy that Is the envy of the
rest of East Asia, will be
watching events carefully and
·Intervening (quietly) at wellchosen pressure points. When at
last a post-communist regime 11
constructed for the mainland, It
seems almost Inevitable that one
component of It will be the
government In Taipei.
One sidebar to these developments deserves mention: In:
recent years, the drive to declare
Taiwan a nation Iii Ita own rtaht,
Independent of the rest of China,
has won considerable sympathy
,In theWesternworld.1'lalnly, the
, Taiwanese have not the allihteat
deelra to subject themlelve~ 10
' commllllllt rule; why not break
· ihe old mainland ties altoaether?
. But wltb communllm oil the
mainland on 111 way out, t1111 Ia
J certainly no tbne for Taiwan to
·cut ltaelf adrift from the relit of
; China. On the contrary, Tliftll
clearly has a brllllaDt role to play
In theconatructlonoftQfnelnd
pr01per0111 Clllnele nation, once
i the elderly commuallt t:h1lp IIi
1Peking have-been draaecl OU the
/ staae of blato~.
\

.

.

..

Amid change8, Taiwan lucky_w;_u_lia_m_.;...A.. .,. .:. Rus~he:.:.:. r . :
Recently In this space I pointe
out th,aj, by virtue of the Free
World s victory In the Cold War,
. Israel (which bet on the United
States, leaving Its Arab enemies
to accept the patronaie of the
. Soviet Union) had acquire a new
lease on life.
.
Another nation that has benefiled almost equally, though
rather differently, Is ihe Republie of China on Taiwan .
A year ago Taiwan, though
e co0 omtcally proeperous and
still under ihe Implicit mtlltary
protection of the United States,
waa Ill some respects an embar·
i'llslna leftover from the days of
America's hostility to Communllt China. The ccommunllt

A......._

Richard R. is another potential
Kentuc~y Derby starter for Lukas-

•

...

TUCSON, Ariz. &lt;UPI) - Talk with a 2.51 earned run average ·players were trytnr to help the
younger guys, but at the same
and led 'the California league In
aboutforeshadowlng.
·
time It hurt a lot of younger guys
In early January, Colin ·Char, wins and shutouts !121 .
Tomorrow the Indiana play the San.
Ia
GOES OVER· POINTBRS- Clevelaad'bdlau
becauSe
It prevented them trom
Last year. In AAA Edmonton.
land, a young . pitcher In · the
1J'ancllllo Olanta In Scottadale, Ariz. (UPI)
JllllllAier John MeNIIIIAra
oyer a few pol8ta
getting
a
long look In camp.
California organization. rented Charland struggled to a 5·10
wllll 'blll team before the
., 1taa1 of todQ'I worko•ta
Teams
·
have
to worry about
the movie "Major League." The mark with a 5.49 ERA.
their
top
pitchers enough
getting
"1 th.rew a .Jot of Innings the
next day, he was traded to
work before they can look at a
year before. then played wlnt.er
Cleveland.
young guy like me."
"I didn't know much about the ball, then went to Triple-A.''
organization, but I thought about Charland said of his 1989 season.
the movie when 1 found out about "1 think all that work caught up
The Daily Sentinel
with me. But It was a good
the trade," Charland said.
learning
experience.''
Joining the India s, the subject
(USPS II ..... )
This spring, Charland learned
of the movie, Is not high on the list
A Dlvllloa of M•lllm•a.. ltlc.
of many major league players' about the negative slee effects of
longs In 1: 00 3-5 at S3nta An Ita
$170,~00 San Felipe Handicap
By POBLA SMITH
Published every ahe~. Monday
Sunday, while Mister Frisky . aspirallons. But Charland, 24 , the basebalilockout. Under norrespectively.
UPI Spolia Wrker
throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
mal
circumstances.
Charland
feared he was In danger of being
covered a · mUe . under regular
Less than seven weeks after h~
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-ll$hlng Company/ Multbnedla, Inc.,
overlooke4 In the · California may have bad a chance to
Lukas said he Is still uncertain rider Clary Stevens In 1:40 2-5 .
.lost his best 3-year-old to a leg
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992,2156. Se·
lin press the Indians' coaches and
·Tarascon,' the winner of Oak- . system.
whether Richard R. and KenInjury, trainer D. Wayne Lukas
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
The Indians acquired the lef.. win a spot on the roster . .
tucky Jazz have the stamina to go
lawn's Southwest Stakes, worked
Ohio ..
· has found himself prepping an
Now,
the
emphasis
In
spring
!handed
Charland,
6-3,
205
the
mile.
and
a
quarter
distance
or
mile
over
the
same
track
In
a
unwieldy group of five 3-year- ·
Member : United Press International,
pounds, and Infielder Jeff Manto training will be on the proven
the Kentucky Derby . He plans to
preparation for next Saturday's
olds for possible starts In the May
Jnland Dally Press Association and the
In exchange for le(ty Scott Balles pitchers, making unknowns like
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Rebel Stakes In 1: 41 . .
try to stretch both of them out
·
5 Kentucky Derby.
Advertising Representative, Branham
Charland
an
even
longer
shot.
on Jan. 9. Even though the
gradually by racing them next In
Summer Squall, who returned
"I don't plan to take that
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
"The
lockout
was
discouragstrength of the Cleveland staff Is
the 1-mlle Gotham StakesAprll7,
from a six-month layoff with a
many." Lukas said Sunday, "but
New Y ork, New York 10017.
pitching, Charland believes he Ing," Charland said. "I know the
leg fracture and a pulmonary
the third of Aqueduct's four
If they ell!'n their way and look
POS1MASTER: send address chanaee
has a better chance to make It to
bleeding condition to finish seDerby preps.
like they have . a legjtlmate
to The Dilly Sentinel, lll Coun St.,
the major leagues with the
cond In the Swale Stakes March
Real Cash will race next
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
chance, we'll run th~ . "
Indians.
17, arrived at Turfway Park
against current Derby favorite
Richard R. emerged·as Lukas'
TOLEDO, Ohio iUP li
SUBSCRIMJON HATES
"With all the pitchers Caltfor- Golden Ore. a 126-to-one odds on
Sunday to prepare for next
Mister Frisky In the $500,000
fifth potential Derby horse SaturBy Carrier or Motor Route
On• Weok ....... ..... ..:.... ................$1.40
Saturday's 5500.000 Jim Beam .. n Ia bas been signing, the younger favorite, crossed the finish line tn
Santa 'Anita Derby, at 11-8 mUes,
day by surviving a long, tough
OnE" Month ...... ............. ......... :.... $.6.10
In
tHat
organization
are
pitchers
April
7;
Ljlnd
Rush,
who
finished
Stakes.
Tight
Spot,
one
of
three
the seventh race at Raceway
stretch duel with For Really to
Ont&gt; Year ... ... ........................... S72.80
!lftl\ IIi the San Felipe after hOrses Ron McAnally Is prepping getting sort of burled," Charland Park Sunday night, for a record
win Aqueduct's $116,800 Bay
SINGLE COPY
said. ;,'Some pitchers coule rot In breaking payoff of $254.40 towln ,
for potential Derby starts,
getting left in .the gate•. Is being
Shore Stakes, a seven·furlong
PHICI!
DallY .... ........ ..... ......... ..... .... 25 Cents
that farm system. That's why · topping the old mark of $193 set
shipped from California to Turfevent and the only major 3-year- . pointed to the $250,000 Blue Grass
I'm glad to be with Cleveland. Apttl17, 1988.
way for the Jim Beam Saturday
Stakes, also at 1 1-8 miles, at
Subscribers not de!llrlngtopay the carold r!Jce ol the weekend. It was
rier may remit '" advance direct to
There's a much better opportunKeeneland April 15:
·
night.
The 10-year-old mare owned by
the fifth stakes victory of his
The Dally SenClnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
Ity for me here. "
Lukas Is still undecided about
Dave Novak of Lavonia, Mich .,
career but followed two straight
bas ts. Credit will begtvencarrlereach
week .
Hall Atlllntis, whose front- --Sports briefs-paid $83.20 to place and $12.40 to
losses In the Feb. 17 Whirlaway
The opportunity. probably
·
running style Is reminiscent of
Breeders' Cup and the March 10
won't come right away. The show.
No su bscriptions by mall permitted in
Unlt!!d Preu International
areas whf'I'P ho me carrier service Is
Winning
Colors,
the
filly
who
It was Golden Ore' s fifth win In
Swift Stakes, both at Aqueduct.
Indians have 17 pitchers on their
Auto Racing
availabl e.
broke Lukas' 0-for-12 · Derby
The other 3-year-olds Lukas
major league roster, and will the last 46 sta~ts, dating back
French world champion Alain
schneld with a wlre·to-wlre vic· Prost benefited from Ayrton
Moll So'-crlptlotto
considers potentiai Derby siarhead north with 12 or 13 hurlers through the 1989 season .
lu~e Melp CouM)
tory In 1988. Hall Atlantis also Is Senna's accld~nt to win his sixth
Finishing second In the 4,000
ters are Land R11sh. Kentucky
on the expanded 27-man rost.er .
13 Wecks ....... .... .. ........ ... ....... ... $19.24
nominated for all the major filly
Jazz, Real Cash and the Seattle
Even though there are fiv e or Claiming Pace for a purse of
26 Weeks .. ..... .. .. .. ...... .. .. .... .. .. ... $37.96
Brazilian Grand Prix . Senna,
52 Wee-ks ...... ... ~ .... .... ; .......... ..... $74.36
race$, and Lukas said . he Is driving a McLare.n In front of his
six spots open. the I!!dlans $1,600 was Five Iron driven by
Slew filly, ·!:J!lll'~llBIIII~· 1()u&amp;alde Melp County
leaning towards ~tirtlng her In · home crowd ' In Sao Paolo, colThe latter two were not among
Probably' would · like to put owner-trainer Mike Murphy . The
13 Weeks ..•... ... _. ..,.......... ... ........ $20.80
the original group of 20 3-year: . the Fantasy Stakes (or 3-year-old lided .with Satoru Nakajima's
26 Wccks ... .. .............................. $40.30
Charland through another sea- show horse was track favorite
$2
We•ks ............................ ,..... $1~. 40
olds headed by Injured winter- ,· fillies at Oaklawn Park April 20, Tyrrell when trying to pass the
Sovereign's
Glory
drtven
by
son of AAA ball. In 1988at Class A
boo!c .favorite Grand . Cl!nyon,- the day before the Arkansas Japanese tr$ller on the Inside. . Palm Springs. Charland was 17-5 Mike Wolfe .
Derby.
whom Lukas nominated to the
Senna was leading at the time,
"But we're liable to show up but rejoined the race ' In . third
Tflple Crown races In J anu~ry .
any place with her," Lukas said. after a new nose cone was fitted
The trainer. who has entered at
"We know L11nd Rush, Real to his car. He finished third.
least one horse In every Derby
since 1981, supplementajly nomi-- Cash and Hall Atlantis aren't just Prost won In his second race In a
mllers and will go the distance," Ferrari after switching from
nated Hall Atlantis and Real
he said. "And we've got to find McLaren after last season. ...
Cash ·just last weekend, shortly
out If Kentucky Jazz wants to go Veterans Teo Fabl and John
before they became serious
that far. Same wlt)l Richard R." Andrei t1 were named as drivers
Derby candidates by winning the
Hall Atlantis worked live fur- for · a five-car Porsche team
$212,800 Santa Anita Oaks and the
entered for the May 27 Indianapolis 500. Fabl, 34 , and Andretti, 27,
were listed as drivers of 1990
'
Marches
with Porsche 'engines
SAO PALO iUPil - French time of the collision, had to h;we
for
the
Prosche Motorsports
world · champion Alain Prost a new nose cone fitted to his car
team
of
Warrington, Pa. No
driving a ~errarl won the Brazi- and rejoined the race In third
driver
was
named for a third 1990
·When it comes to energy efficiencies, no other
place, leaving him -with too much
lian Grand prix for the sixth time
March-Porsche
or for two 1989
ground to make up.
Sundav.
system comes close to the modem electric heat
· But ·he had to cash In on a an
Proust recorded his 40th grand machines.
pump. 'JYpically, existing gas furnaces range from
Boxing
prix victory with a 13.5 second
error by McLaren driver Ayfton
James
Heavyweight
champion
advantage
over
Senna's
Austrian
Senna, winner of the U.S. Grand
SS'Io to 7001• efficient. But the heat pump is up to HOME tM~ENT EXPERT
Prix lnPhoenix ·11fpweeksago, to teammate Gerhard Berger. ·'Buster'' Douglas dentes there Is
300'/o efflcient~ That means greater
And because it's nameless, it's
any rift between him and his
take the flag.
.·
·
Senna held on to third. place.
cleaner and safer, too.
Senna., In front of his home · Brittan's Nigel Mansell, the manager John Johnson. Douglas
crowd. collided with Japanese winner ol the 1989 Brazilian race, called a news conference In his ·
~'11 show you how the heat
backmarker Sato~u NakaJII'I!a conipieted a great day for the hometown of Columbus, Ohio,
Saturday to clarlfr the relation·
pump's efficiency can help
when trying to pass on the !Jfslde Ferrari team by.flnlshlng.fourth.
after
promoter
Don
King
shl'p
It was o"nly Proust's second
of Nakajima's Tyrrell.
you lower your heating and
The 30-year-old Brazilian,.who race. for Ferrari after switching arrived In the city late l~st week.
cooling bills. Call us today at
seemed to be heading for his from McLaren at the end of last Allegations of racism surfaced
last week after King appeared on
992-3786
second straight victory at the season.
a · two-hour call-In radio show.
Douglas called racist charges .
against
Johnson

see.

CeNSUS WoRI(eRs FIND IT DIFFICULT To (OUNT 1J1tt l40tf\e~SS. CAN 'YOU HeLP?

.10-

Reed was playlni every day.
Oliver hit .272 In 49 games,
getting eight doublel, and three
homers and drlvlqln 23 runa.
Those 49games IInce July 1511
too many for him to be cons!- .
dered a candidate for thll year's
rookie of the year. He 'a not
concerned about that, but rather
doing the job. - ·
And although his hero Is the
Reds Hall or Fame catcher
Johnny Bench, he's not iOIIII to
try to become a second Bench.
"I try not to get caught up
trying to ftll Johnny's shoes," he
said. "Those are humongous
shoes to fill. I woukin't even try
to. I want to try to do my job, the
best Joe Oliver can do."

c:a ,, '\

'

V.I • ...,. _ _.

.

'

'

•EFFICIENCY
ELECTRIC
HEAT PUMP.

GAS

FURNACE

�Pege 4 The Deily Sentinel

~oy-Midd'tport,

. .. '

Ohio

~ With wins over Minnesota, LMU,

· Georgia Tech, UNLV co~plete NCAA Fin~

EYE LOOSE BALL - UNLV's Travis Blce (13) and James
Jones (34) eye a loose ball along with LMU's John O'Connell (L) In
the first half of Sunday's NCAA West Regional final. The Runnln'
Rebels downed the Lions 131-101 to advance to the Final Four.
(UPI)

.St. Henry knocks off No•.1
Youngstown for III crown

By United Preas International
The Final Four matchups were
completed Sunday with one
school making history while the
other stopped the momentum of a
team on an Improbable journey.
Georgia Tech recorded a 93-91
victory over Minnesota In the
NCAA Southeast Regional final
for Its first trip ever to ,t he Final
Four. Nevada· Las Vegas routed
Loyola Marymountl31·10lln the
West Regional, ending the 11th·
seeded Lions' emotional tourna·
ment streak for their star and
leader Hank Gathen, who died
three weeks ago after collapsing
during a conference tournament
,
game.
The Runnin' Rebels, the only
top seed to advance to the Final
Four, face Georgia Tech and
Duke meets Arkansas In the
semifinals Saturday in Denver.
The winners play Monday for the
national title.
.
At New -Orleans, Dennis Scott
ended a shooting slump with 40
points and Georgia Tech, 28-6,
outscored Minnesota, 23·9, by 22
points at the foul line. The
seventh-ranked Yellow Jackets
set a school record with thter 28th
victory and. Improved Its record
outside the Atlantic Coast Con·
terence to 17·0.
Scott, who shot 17-(or-54 from
the floor over his previous two
games, sank seven three·
pointers Sunday. Freshman of
the Year and regional Outstand•
ing Player Kenny Anderson
contributed 30 points and Brian
Oliver 19 as Georgia Tech's big
three accounted for all but two
baskets.
"Right now, I just feel great,"
Anderson said. "All year, people
doubted us. We were a young,
inexperienced-team, bu twe put it
all together in tough situations. "
Georgia Tech held a 27-5
advantage In free throws, yet the
outcome remained ill doubt until
a desperation shot by Minnesota's Kevin Lynch. failed at the

buzzer.

,.

trip to tbe Final Four.
At Oakland, Calif., Stacey
Augmon scored 25 of his 33 points
In the first -half and Anderson
Hunt added 30 to power Nevada·
Las Vegas. 33·5.
The Lions, adopted by the
nat ion since the Gathers tragedy
March4,pk:kedupmomentwnln
the tournament after defeating
New Mexico State, defending
champion Michlga n and
Alabama.
" They ithl! national support)
wanted to make us feel good
about ourselves (after Gathers
death) ," said LMU guard Terrell
Lowery. "They didn't want us to .
lose the first game Hbe victory
over New Mexico State) because
they didn't want us to go out like
losers. They wanted us to go out
champions and that's . what we
did."
·
Gathers, a potential first ·
round draft pick in the NBA,
averaged 29 points · and 10.8
rebounds before dying of heart
failure.
Bo Kimble, Gather's cloSest
friend and the country's leading
scorer, added 42 points for
Loyola Marymount. He left to a
thunderous standing · ovation
with 63 seconds to go.
The Rebels shot 62 percent in
the first half and used three
spurts for a 67-47 halftime lead.
The closest I,.oyola Marymount
got In the second half was 13
points.
"Any time you go to the Final
Four Is sweet," tiN LV coach
Jerry Tarkanlan said .•"I told the
kids the greatest sporting event,
in my opinion, Is theFlnalFour."
UNL V, trounced by Seton Hall
In the 1989 West Regional final,
last reached the Final Four in
1987.
As for Saturday 's semifinal
matchups. a few opinion~ were
offered on the outcomes.
"l think,Georgia Tech will give
them (the Rebels) a . run, but I
don't see anybody in the country
with a front line as strong as
theirs," Loyola guard Tom Peab·
ody said.
"I think we can go all the way,"
Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson said. "I think we can win the
national championship."
Arkansas, which defeated
Texas In the M!dwes t Regional
final Saturday, wtll be making its
first ti-tp to the Final Four since
1978. The Razorbacks, 30-4, face
l)uke, 28·8, which will be making
Its third straight appearance in
the t,ournament semifinals. The
Blue Devils defeated Connecticut
in the East Regional.
"The reason I think they
(Razorbacks) have a great
chance to go all the way," Texas
coach Tom ~enljers said, ''is that
they are so hard to inatch up
with. They are one of the. few
teams in the country as quick or
quicker than we are.
"Arkansas Is a great , great
basketball' team. "

-·

a

·: Area rosters, schedules

.Brunswick top
Division HI player

.(..US

MWI.IN MUSSEl

1

INSURANCE

c-...........................
I

sav•o
•os c011m

I

fo~r ·pictt•.•·e
~.......

~

· ....

-

..

··

-

Monct.y, MM:h 21, 1880 ·
P111 &amp;

Beat of the bend

Athens UMW district
planning .for retreat

Parenting a science
'··

CELEBRATE VICTORY- Geol'lla Tecll'a Ku-1 Brown (II and
Johnny McNeil ( 44) celebrates their 93-11 victory over Minnesota
Sunday lo send them to tile final four. (UPI)

.

.

TrQjans fall7l-57 in
Division II title tilt
points and Brian Kelley and Scott
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ;_
Barnes
with eight each.
Tarented Dayton Colonel White
Su'
r
prisingly,
Portsmouth had
pulled away in the .second half
a
48·39
rebounding
edge over the
Saturday night for a 71-57 victory
bigger
Cougars,
with
Kelly and
over Portsmouth in the cham·
Eric Mtller each with nine.
p!onship game of the boys
But the Trojans shot just 35.1
Division II state high school
percent from the field, hitting 26
basketball tournament at St.
of 74 shots. White was 27 of 55 for
John Arena.
Colonel White, making Its first· 49.1 percent.
appearance in the st;~te tourna· · Box score:
COLONEL WHITE (71) ment, had five players in double '
Watkins 4-6 1·3 11, Elder 5-9
figures, led by Ivan Patterson
2·3 12, Scales 5·9 2·10 12,
and Ricardo Hamtlton with 14
Amerson
1·2 0-0 2, Patterson
points each, as the Cougars
6-17 1·3 14, Norton 0·0 1·3 1,
bounced back from a 13·7 regular
Jenkins 0·2 5·6 5, Caldwell 0-1
season to finish 19·7' Qverall.
0-0 0, Hamtlton 6·8 2·2 14,
Colonel White trailed only
Gladney 0-1 0·0 0. TOTA~ 2'7·55
briefly very early In the game.
14-30 71 . .
Once the Cougars took the lead
PORTSMOUTH (57) - Man·
for good at 7-6 on a slam dunk by
non 3-110-0 6; Wbitehead 2·10 0·1
WUI Watkins with 3: 18left In the
4, L!sath 6-181-313, Kelly 3·62·2 8,
first period, they pulled steadily
Mtller 3-4 0-1 6, Skaggs 0-3 0-0 0,
away.
Whitel-10-00, Austln 2·4 0-0 4,
The Cougars led 31·22 at
Lewis 1·2 ·2-2 4, Barnes 4-14 0-2
halftime and increased· lhat
margin to53-37 at theendofthree 8, Estep 1·1 0·9 •2. TOTA~ :.74
5·11 57.
.
quarters .
Three-point goals..:.Colonel
Jervaughn Scales, who led White ·3·3 (Watkins 2·2, Patter·
Colonel Whiie to its semifinal win son 1·1), Portsmouth 0·9 (Man·
over Canton South Friday night non 0-3. L!sath 0-3, Lewis 0-1,
with 32 points, scored just 12, bill Barnes 0-2), fouled .out-Scales,
also added 13 rebounds: Jeff M1ller .· Total fouls-Colonel
Elder also scored 12 points and
Whtfe 15, Portsmouth 22. ReWUI Watkins 11 for White.
bounds-Colonel White 39
Portsmouth, Which WIIS seek.
(Scales 13), Portsmouth 48
ing Its second title In the last
(Kelley, Miller 9). Assists-co..
three years and fifth overall, was
lone! White 18 (Patterson,
led by Darryl L!satb with 13 Hamilfon 3), Portsmouth 17
!Llsath 6). Technicals-None.
A-10,949.
By quarters:
Dayton Col. White 11 20 22 18-71
Portsmouth ....... .. 10 12 15 20-57
COLUMBUS Jervaughn
Scales, who Ied Dayton Colonel
Riverside Driving R110ge
, WhltetotheDivistonllboysstate
RT. 33
'
IIASOII, WY
high school championship, was
selected the tournament's most
valuable player.
.
· Scales, a 6·6 senior, scored 12
Present '
points and pulled down 13 re·
•
This Ad
bounds in White's 71-57 win over
Portsmouth Saturday night in
_For
the title game.
'1.000ff
In the semifinals,. Scales
scored 32 points and grabbed 17
Any-Size
rebounds against Canton South.
~ucket
Joining Scales on the six-man
all·tournamenl team were
Of Balls
Scales' Colonel Wbite teamAfter
. mates, Ivan Patterson and Jeff
Elder, sophomore JQe ,Gafdner
4p.m.
'
of Van Wert, sophomore Miklf
SttJp , An4. CIJeclll Q# ow IIJno
Singleton of Canton South and
CNI PJM'IIW.., m i I ' I
Portsmouth's artan Kelly.
·.l.

Oliver's two free throws pu tthe
Yellow Jackets ahead to stay
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) rebounding with lOand had seven 84-83 with · 3: 50 left , .and Scott.
assists.
· made two free throws after a
Pat Droesclt scored 25 points and
Scott Brunswick 18, leading No.4
steal. Anderson's three-pointer
Droesch, a 6-foot-4 s!&gt;nior,
opened an .89·84 advantage, but
St. He nry to a 71-60 win over
made 11 ofl7 shots from the field
Wtllle Burton responded with a
previously unbeaten and No. 1 as St. Henry ftl'ished with a
shooting ·percentage of 55.6 on 30 three-pointer.
Youngstown Liberty Saturday
night in the championship game of 54. Liberty settled for 23 of 62
Lynch added a free throw with
and
37.1
percent.
35
seconds left tci pr!ng Mtnrie·
·of the boys Division III state high
sota wltllin 89·88, but Oliver and
school basketball tournament at
Anderson sank two foul shots
St. John Arena . .
Patton 's five 3-potnt field goals
each to butld the lead to 93·88.
The Redskins who lost only, I&lt;) was a new state tournament
After Burton made a three'
Dtvisi()n III semifinalist Van
record, as was the 10 Liberty had
pointer with eight seconds re·
Wert In 26 games, controlled the
and the combined 12 by both
matntng,
Anderson · missed the
game· most of the way and took
t.e ams.
front
end
of a one-and-one free
the lead for good. 25·24-. on a
BoJ&lt; score:
throw
basket by Brunswick with 5: 19 '
situation
wtth:stx seconds
ST. HENRY (71) - Droesch
left.
left in the seco.nd quarter.
11-17 3-5 25, T. Niekamp 3'8 0·0 6,
Liberty, whic h had carried a
The Golden Gophers hurried
K. Niekamp 14·8 0·0 8, Brunsw)ck
27-game winning streak Into the
6-8 6- 6 18, Hoying 4-11 0·1 10, downcourt and Lynch threw up
title contest, remained close· in
Heitkamp 2·2 0-0 4. Totals 30·54 an air batl as time expired. Jim
the first half only through the
Shikenjanskt scored a season·
9·12 71.
long-range shooting of all-Ohio
LmERTY (60) - Greene 2·6 high 19 points for the Golden
guard Bobby Patton.
0-0 5, Richardson 7-12 1·2 15, . Gophers and Melvin Newbern
Patton scored 17 .first-half
·
·
Karmtndro 1·1 0·0 2, Patton 6-21 added 15.
points, hitting five of six 3-point
Mlnnesot.
a
was
seekin~
Its first
3-3 20, Majick 6-18 0-0 16,
attempts and the Leopards still
Mtiler 0·1 0-0 0, Goodman 1·1 0·0 .
trailed 40-37 at halftime.
2, Wolf 0·1 0-0 0, Putko 0-1 0·0 0.
St. Henry, which won the then
Totals 23-62 4-5 60.
Class A title in 1979 in its only
By quarters:
• other trip to the stat e t9urna·
St. Henry .... ... ...... 15 25 17 14-71
• ment , scored the first six points
Y'lown Liberty .... 16 21 12 11--60
~ ofthethirdquarter totakea46-37
· lead and Liberty, despite Mark
By STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI
made one free throw for Detroit
; Majick's 13 second half points,
Three-point goals-St. Henry
before Harper hit a three-pointer
UPI Sporl8 Writer
2·5 (Oro- esch 0-1, Hoying
: couldn't get closer than four
Dallas rallied to defeat Detroit
to tie the score 96-96. Harper and
2·4), Liberty 10·26 (Greene
•. points the rest of the way.
·night,
accomplishing
Herb
Williams then teamed up to
Sunday
•• Patton scored just three points 1·2, Patton 5-11, Majick 4·12, what the Pistons usually do to steal the
ball from I slab Thomas,
Putko 0-1). Fouled out-None. win: play good defense.
~ in the second half, making only
, · with Williams feeding the ball to
Total fouls -St. Henry.7, Liberty
: one of 11 shots , and finished wilh
Harper for a layup and a 98-96
Herb Wtlllams stOle the ball
13. Rebounds-St. Henry 37 . and fed it to Derek Harper for a
• 20 points. Majick ha d 16 and Bob
Dallas victory.
(Brunswick 10), Liberty 25 layup with eight seconds ie n
_ : Richardson 15. Bob Hoying had
~tab would get the
"We k
(Richardson 5) . Assists-St.
:. 10 for St. Henry.
overtime, gtvtng Dallas a 98ball on hat lllst tnbounds PlaY
Henry 19 (Brunswick 7), Lib- v!ctory over the defending cham· '-~JeC:i!U~ he makes so many
.- The 6-foot-1 Br unswick, an
erty
18 (Patton 6). Technicals· pions. The Mavericks rallied
; ail-Ohio split end in football the
things happen," Harper added.
-None.
A-12,614.
; past season. also led St. Henry in
"We double teamed htm and
from a five-point deficit with 30
seconds left in .overtlme to send
Herb got hand on the ball and
''
'
Upped It to me for the layup. This
the Pistons to their third straight
win Is a great confidence builder
loss:
and we just have to keep It up."
"Our defense really keyed our
•• 1190 SOUTHERN BASEBALL 8CHE·
win,"
Harper
said.
"It
kept
us
·
Detroit coach Chuck Daly gave
EAITBIIN HIGH SCHOOL
,
1111
11181.8
SOPTBALL
•
DULE
close enough to do It at the end.
the Mavericks credit for the
Victory.
Brad
(Davis)
came
Into
the
DATE-OPPONENT
L()(;ATJON
: DATE-OPPONENT
L()(;ATJON
March 23-Warren(scrlmmage) ............. H
game and realty gave us a lift. He
• March 23-Ravenswood ..................... .... A
·'Obviously this Is , a tough
March 26-Soutllweatern .. .. ................ .... H
• March 26-North Gallla .. ...... .... .... .. ....... A
made seven (points) In the OTto loss," Daly said. "It's tough to
March
27-Wahama
...............................
A
• March 28-Hannan Trace ... .. :......J•••••••••• H
help us keep pace."
Mar&lt;h 29-Wattrforcl ..... ,....................... H
• March lJ..Symme! Valley ................... ,. A
lose a game on a steal and
March .».Kyger Creek ......................... H
• April 02--Southweslern .............., ........... A
With 30 seconds left, Davis hit a
tliree-potnt transtuon s!lo(s. Both
April 02-Norlh Galtla .............. ....... ...... H
: April ()4.()ak Hill .. , ......... ... ... ......... .~ ..... A
three-pointer to move Dallas
AprU 04-Hannan Trace........ .. ............... H
.. April 0$-Federal Hocking ..................... A
were Incredible shots. We were In
April 06-Sou1bern ....... .......................... A
• April QG.Eastern .. ........ ........................ H
within 9~93. Btll Latmbeer then
position to wl!i, butthey stole It at
AprU 09-Symmes Valley ........... ............ H
• Aprtt 07-Fort Frye tDH 1 .............. ......... H
April J.O.Wa1erford .................... ......... .. A
the end. In more ways than one."
• Aprtt 09-KygEr Creek ....... .................... A
April ll·NoliClll\'ute........ ... ................... A
.: April 10-Wahama ..................... ............ A.
Mark Aguirre, making his first
Apr11J2,Wahama ............................. .... H
• Aprilll-Aiexander ............. .......... ...... .. H
appearance In Dallas alnce being
AprU 16-Soutllweltern .......................... A
, Apr1116-North Gallla ........................... H
AprU lJ.Fedll'tll Hocking ..................... A
" Aprii17-Wahama .. , .............................. H
tr11ded for Adrian Dantiey last
AprU 20-Kyrer Creek.. ......................... A
" AprU 18-Hannan Trace .. : ...................... A
season,
was booed loudly by the
• Apr1119-Atexander ................ ............... A • April 23-Nortll Gatlta ........................... A
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI) April 25-HIRIWI Trace......................... A
,.. Apt11 20-Symmes Valley ....................... R
Dallas fans durtng the tntroduC·
April 26-Trlmbte·................ .... ............. . A
~ Aprll 23-SOuthweatern .......................... H
Scott Brunswick, who had 16
tlons and each time he touched
April 2'7-Soulhen ................................. H
, Apr1126-0ak HIII ............. ..................... H
points, 10 rebounds and seven
AprU 311-Symma Vattey ......... :...... ....... A
• AprU 27-Eastern .................... ,... :·......... A
the ball. Aguirre ttnished with 14
May 02-Trbnble ................ ................... H
, AprU 30-KygEr Creek ..... .......... :........... H
assists In St. Henry's 71-60 win
pollltB.
.
.. May 03-Raven•wood ............................ H
over Youngstown Liberty In the · . Rolando Blackman scored 23
·May 07-FedEral Hocklng .......... , .. .,,. .... , H
•
championship game Saturday
poblta tor Dallas and Harper
•
EMTERN HIGH SCHOOL
night, was selected the Division
1111 JIOY8 BMEBALL
tlnblb~ will! 2l.Thomas teet-the
•
rn tournament's most valualile Pistons ·with 22 points ·
. : PATE-OPPONENT
L()(;ATION
IIAI'IDN HIG8llCIIOOL
player.
• March 22-Federal HockJn1 ................... H
ltltGIBU• March 26-Southwettern ....................·.... H
Brunswick, who also had 16
~ March 27-Wahama ............................... A
PIAYDI
YEA&amp;
points and seven assists in the
•, Mardi 28-0111 Hill.. ... ........................... A
Amy Mu.,... ................ ............. ........... '
~kins' semifinal win over
• MIU'Cb :lf.Watrrlorci ............................. H
Malldle Jlari11 ......... ... ,..................... ..... 3
' Martb 30-Kner Creek ........ .......... ....... H
Lorrie Ball« .... ,.............................. ..... 3 Richmond Dale Southeastern,
: Aprtl 02-North Gall Ia ............ .. .. ........... H
Tollp HID .............................................. 3 was joined on the six-man
AprU Of..HaDIIIUI Trace., ...... .. ............ , .. H
Edna Drlla ......................................... 3
, AprU CJI.!Ioll111ern ........... .......... ............ A
all-tournament squad by St.
Mary Au'"Tabbl e ........................ ,. ........ 3
•, Ajlrtl CJI.Symrnll Val10l' ..... .... .. .......... ,. H
A.llfeMullllw ...................................... 3 Henry teammatea .Bob Hoying
• AJirU 10-W_,.rci ............................... A
Catrle Glllllail ........ .................... " ........ 2
and Pat Droesch, who scored 25
~ ' Ajlrtl JS.WIIblnll ............. ,................... H
1'1111~ ....................................... 2
111 S.lllll St., rirlny
'Aprtll'-llou_,.tem .......................... A . AniY w.u ...................................... " .... l
In the championship game.
; Aprtiii-OU Hill .................................. H
IAe Gtllllu .......................................... 2
Others named to the allYOII . .IPINDiffr . i '
, Aprtllt-.....,..11 Hoddn1 .......... ........... A
Tablly Plllltlpo ....................... :.............. 2
• AprU »KYa•
A
MaryJoi!Nd ...................................... 2 tournament squad were Bobby
AGINTS
• AprU 113-Ni&gt;rtll Gallt. ........................... A
1-lu GoW. ............................... :.......... 2 Patton and Mark Mallek of
• Aprt115-Haonan Trace......................... A
Mldlelle La...,ery ................................ 2
runnerup YOUII&amp;Jtown Uberty
• AJirU :16-Trlmllle .................................. A
Carrie Morrlaaey ...... .... ........................ 1
: AprU 27·SouUI«a ................... .. ............ H
Mldlelle Doaovan ....... .......................... l
and
Mike mevtns ot Columbus
SIICIU61
, :r.r:JII.IymmetVIII"l'-•.. ................... A
Milly Newell ....... ...... ..... .............. ........ 1
Hardey.
·
cn.Trbnble ........... ........................ H

Dallas posts 98-96
win.over Detroit

,'

·~~·-'

The Daily. Sentinel

Scales tabbed MVP
in Division II play

NOW OPEN

lly BOB HOEFUCH
You don't have to l09k too far
today to find numerous news·
paper ·and mag.
azlne articles on
parenting.
Apparently,
parenting Is now
a science and
there are a lot
author! ties
around who tell you just how to
rear the kids . I'm sure there
must be good parenting and bad
parenting. I assume the numer·
ous articles deal with good
· parent1n11.
.
.I don't know what yesterday's
parents &lt;ltd without all of this
advice on how to bring up the
you!Ji 'uns. Apparently, they
followed their Instincts and did
what came naturally. Despite
the lack of advice, I somehow feel
· they didn't do It all that badly.
By today's standards, of
course, many of them were
probably gutlty of child abuse
because. they dld live by the
adage, Spare .the Rod and Spoil
the Child. They didn't have the
.time, the energy or . even the
concern to get Involved In· long
discussions with their offspring
as they attempted to sort things
out. Sort things out- now that's
really a today expression, huh?
Speaking of adages, It seems
that a good many parents did
· parenting through them. I mean,
· tor every problem that arose,
· they had a adage. Perhaps, the
adages took the place of today's
lengthy communications be·
tween ·parents and children recommended by some parenting
au thortties.
Ol eourse, how your _parents
said the al(age wblcb seemed to .
cover about any situation which
might arise was Important back
then. If an adage fell on you rears
as '!bough It Cl!llle from between
· clenched Ieeth and without any
·enthustasni, you got the cue. By
·the same token, tr the adage had
·a bit of enthusiastic tone as It
reached you, then you also knew
which dli'ectlon · you were sup.( posed .to 1p. ' Your ,patent had
spoken!
· A ·standard adage by many
parents otthetnnocent age, was:
A Penny SaVed Is a Penny
This diverted your
· Earned.
attentio'n from the fantastic
penny . ciuldtes . which were' a
co_nsllint temptation. If you
proceeded to spend the penny or
even two or three In a frivolous
sprj!e at the general store, then
you lntght well hear from the lips
of a parent, the comment:. AFoot
al)d Ats Money Are Soon Parted.
Waste Not, Want Not was good
for a gutlt trip too.
Back then, procrastination
' wasn't espeetally well received.
·u you put off your chore of
mowing the grass or rtlltng the
coal buckets, your were advised
that Time Watt~ for No Man and

He Who Hesitates Is Lost. You
knew that you '¥ere expected to
pitch In to help with any family
project 'having learned that
Many Hands Make Light Work.
On the. other hand , you were
aware when you abtltty to help
was Inadequate because Too
Many Cooks Spoil the Broth. It
all boiled down to finding a happy
medium which would hav~ you
perform In a manner that would
please Mama and Papa. That
was the order of bu slness back
then; the children worked at
pleasing the parents. '
Depression was basicallY un·
heard of. . After all, you had
absorbed the advice, I,augh and
the World Laughs With You; Cry
.a nd You' Cry Alone before you
were dry behind the ears. And
you took bad news pretty calmly
because you had been told that
The Calf Who Bawls the Loudest,
Forgets the Qutckesthand you
certainly didn't want to fall Into
that slot. Yo\1 played It cool
before the expression even came
into being.
Children Were to be Seen But
Not Heard and·besides too much
reaction to any situation many
times meant a slap across the
mouth or against the side of the
head. By the way, this wasn't
exclusively a parenting right ;
teachers could handle over reac·
lion In much the same mannerand did so.
There was a definite bed time
because Early to Bed. ~arly to
Rise; Make a Man Healthy,
Weathy and Wise. Girls operated
under the same rule. You were
not allowed to Burn the Candle on
Both Ends. You dared not exert
too mucll enthusiasm towards
the future or you would be
.Counting Your ChiCkens Before
They' Are Hatched and further·
more it could easily be that You
Had the Horse Before the Cart.
The rules were set down and we
abided by them- at least In front
of our parents - but we soon
learned that What They Didn't
Know Didn't Hurt Them, al·
though our unleased behavior
patterns which violated the rules
sometimes came back to hurt us.
Oh well,. you know how that goes
-If Youpance, You Have to Pay
the Fiddler. And when you got
caught ~p, you remembered too
late that If You Sleep With Dogs
You Get Up With Fleas and that
the attitude towards you was to
, be: You Made Your Own Bed,
Now Lie In It . If an Infraction of
the rules was finally forgotten
after many I Told You so's, you
were pretty glad )O Let Sleeping
Dogs Lie.
. Maybe some of you young
parents wtll want to pick up on
these good sayings of yesteryear
parenting. If so, however, avoid
the one about the Penny Saved. It
just won't fly In 1990. Silence Is
Golden might work. Do keep
smtllng.

The Athens District United
Methodist Women wtll hold a
spring retreat on Friday and
Saturday at Vamp Francis Asbury, Rlo Grande.
Regtstrat ion will be 4-6 p.m . on
Friday with a carry In dinner at
6:30p.m. Saturday breakfast will
be at 8 a .m. Sessions wlll be held
throughout the day w!ht dtsm Is·
sal at 2:30p.m.
Helen· Peters, from Columbus ·
·South District, wtil be the retreat
leader. She is a reg~tered nurse

Laurel Cliff news notes
S'I'VPEJ"'TS ·oF THE WEEK - Kelty Smith, Jell, and MarJe
Flowers, riJIIt, were ch011en as the _students of the week at Melp
JuniOr Hlgb School for 1eleace and class behavior. Pictured with
-them Is Mra. Chris Dowler.
·

Agency
on
Aging
meets
.,
Richard Jones, James Diehl,
visitation rights for grandpar·
William Mtddleswarth: •Florence
ents had .b ecome law In Ohio and
Smith, :and .Eleanor Thomas
that legislation concerning long
represented the Meigs County
term ombudsman policy for
senior health had passed both
Council on ,'\g!ng at thl' bl·
monthly meeting, held recently
houses and was in conference.
in Pomeroy, of the advisory
The committee noted that it Is
council to the Area Agency on
continuing Its study ortheuntver·
Aging for the Buckeye Hills·
sal health insurance and spousal .
Hocking Valley Regional Devei·
impoverishment bills as well as
others relating to senior housing.
opment District.
The principal item on · the
agenda was updating the council
The following announcements
on the progress of the Eider Care
were made: the Governor's
Conference on Aging will be held
programs enacted by the legtsla·
t.ure last year. The eight counties
at the Ohio State Fairgrounds on
of the Buckeye Htli DiStrict. · May 9 adn 10; Senior Citizens
Day is to be celebrated on May
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, ~on· ·
roe, Morgan, Noble, Perry, and · 15; and the next meeting of the
council will be in Perry County on
Washington, togetper with Mus·
ktngum County wtli constitute
May 11.
•·
one unit of the Elder ·Care
Ralph Pounds,· vice president.
presided at the meeting In t.he
Admintstrat ton.
abserlce of the Mer! Haney,
The advocacy committee re'
·
·
ported tpat the btli providing president.

Tribute made by ·church
Rev. and Patty Donahue, Marvin
A tribute to Lee McComas was
and
Martha Dawson, Bob and
held at the Heath United Metho·
· Bumgarner, Bob and
Ruth
dtst Church recently :
JoAnn
Robinson, adn Clemente
Eric Chambers served as mas·
Zuniga.
terof ceremonies in which ail of
Steve l:fouchtns presented him
McComas' favorite hymns and
with a plaque and ;Emma ~lat·
anthems were sung. Darlene
worthy made the presentation of
Rtndrtiesch sang a solo. His
VCR from the congregation.
favorite scripture. the 23rd
A tape of Sonny Zuniga singing
Psalm was repeated by the
"MY
Tribu t.e " was played before
audience.
the benediction.
Giving special tributes were
A social hOur was enjoyed In
Eric Chambers, Jennifer Harrl·
son, Juanita Bachtel,· Nan . the P!lrty room and·refreshments.
were served and a card shower
Moore, Emtly Sprague, James
was given.
Diehl, and James Clatworthy. ·,
Due ro ill health, McComas was
A delegation of Rotarians sang
unable to attend, so a video of the
an opening song, ·
service was made and given to
Emma Ciatworthy read t.he
letters from five living former . htm.
The service was well' attended
pastors and wives.
.
by the public.
. There were tributes from the

The Southeast Ohio Rabbit
Breeders Association met Tues·
day evening at the Meigs County
. Extension Orrtce with 31
members and guests pn!Semtt..

.

Banqu~et
.
Dinner &amp; Dance

Spring

SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1:990
lOYAL OAK USOIT
SOCIAL HOUI
DINNEI (Steclld
6 P.M.·7 P.M.;
7P
.. ...
...
DANCE 1:30 P.M.-12 MIDNIGHT

ADMISSION

SJ5,00 PEl COUPLE $15.00 SINGU
WI.LIESIIVE lULlS FOI 5 ot 11011 COIP&amp;ES
IESEIVAIIOIS . . 10 Rll IY IIAICI26, 1ttO

'' na cHa••• or co••lCI

FOIIIOIE IIFOIIIlnON 992·500~

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford ,Jacbos
and Rev . Mel Franklin were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Thor Carsey at Bonanza in
Jackson. Mrs. Jacobs and Rev ,
Franklin observed birthdays.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mash and
chtldren have returned to their
home from South Caroifna.
Darb! Dorst. Marysville, Is
spending the week with her great
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Haggy and family .
Mr. and Mrs . William Jacobs,
Columbus, are vlslttng her

molber, Mrs. Tina Jacobs for a
couple of days.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marr and
Mr. and Mrs . Ernes t Van lnwa·
gen spent Sunday .In Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dunmire,
of Tennessee, were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs . on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Glad·
well and children, Paul and Lea,..
Lima, spent the weekend with
Rev . and Mrs. Wiltlam Wtlllams.
Roy Howells~nt a few days In
Florida vlsltlilg Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Walker and sons.

Shade Valley Floral Arts group
meets; topic is conservation
Mike [)uhl, from the Sotl and
Water Conservation · Depa{t·'
merit, was the guest speaker at
the recent meeting of the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts held
at the home of Mrs. Alice
Thompson on Tuesday .
·Dub! spoke on the trees in Ohio
stating that some of the finest
hardwoods are found ln Ohio and
Meigs County Is 57 percent
forested. He went. on to say that
Ohio ranks fourth nationally in
maple syrup production. He gave
the group handouts on the differ·
ent kinds or trees in Ohio and how
to identify them.
Roll call was answered with
members naming a color and
their response to it.

The Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs meeting wtl! be
held April 28 at the Quaitty Inn
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge.
The regional board meeting Is
April 17 at the Chester United
Methodist Church.
I1 was noted that National
Garden Club Week is April 8·14.
The Winding Trail Garden
Club is sponsoring a sesquicentennial ftower ·and quilt show on
April 28 at the former Pomeroy
Senior High Auditorium.
Mrs. Alice Thompson did an
arrangement featuring·
for
St. Patrick's Day. She used all
green leaves In a green
container.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

green

Serenity House trustees meet
The Serenity House Board of
Trustees met recently at Wood·
land Centers.
Members attending were
Linda Warner, chairman, Jennie
Lewis, CaroiAult, Pat Tope, Rita
Fields, Tom Reed , Nancy Scar·
brough, Leslie Chambers, Sister
Jean Kaiser, Sue Huds9n, and
-Tom Hairston .
Others attending were Lor ·

ratne Newson. Sharon Turner,
Gwen Sheets, Linda Koeskt ,
guest speaker, a representative
from Southeastern Legal Aid,
who spoke on legal Issues regard·
!ng domestic violence.
The next board meeting Wtli be
held AprU 9 from 5: 30·7 p.m. at
Woodland Centers. The public Is
Invited to attend.

Rabbit Breeders group meets

•

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

who sj!ends most of her time In
volunteer opportunities such as
4H leader, Red CrOll . .sChOOl
organization and hospital.
She Is married and has two
sons. The family operates KDH
Farms. She also has two daugh·
ters who are teachers.
She is currently serving as
Christian Personhood chatrper·
son in Columbus Southern
District.
Her topic for the retreat wtll be
"Fairy Tales and Parables."

AMBER VINING

Vining birthdays cele~rated
...
.

'•

Attend funeral

"

-. J.R. Scarberry,Carln
Jennifer and .Amber VIning, , donSmttb,
daughters of Greg and Brenda
and Rachel Taylor, Heathe'r
Vintne. Middleport, recelJUY
Wlile, Raent -Wood,.NatlllteGran.
· celebrated their birthdays with a
dal, Jeanie, Kenda and Dave
party held at tbe Skate A Way
Reynolds, Kathy, Tonya and
rtnk near Chester.
Heather Phalin, Jtll, Matt, and
Attending were Carrie Hart·
Sarah Wtlltams, Debres Tyree, ·
son, Jenny · Hayman, Rachel
J .C. Buzzard, Donna and Pamela ·
Ashley, 'Mike Wyatt, BrUnt Be·
Neece, Steve, Stephanie and
'van, Leah Morrow, Amy Sarver,
Ashley Burton, Gene, and Mindy
Brandy Stevens, Erin and Bral!·
Halley, Dave, Tammy, and Sa·
mantha Cole, James Hudson,
Phylls, Jenny, and Lucy Hower·
lon, Shane and · Cryatal Leach,
· The Rocktn Robina 4H Club
Chuckle Shamblin, Cindy Lewis,
~recently at the home or Faye
Dollald Gollen, TIJIIY Lauder·
Clifford with seven members and
mUt, Amlllda Neue, Cindy,
advisor, Stella Blanllenthtp, In
Amber, and Chrllt Hayes,
attendance.
Jeremy adn Detek Michael.
DurlnJ the meeting the JI'OUp
Sendilll 111t1 were Sbella
voted on officers, lei tile next
Neace, Tom, Trlllll, aDd TaJWIIY .
meeting, and dtacuued candy
Rolllh. Middleport: Mr. and Mrs.
bars.
Scatt Greee oct dalllllter, New
Refreshments were ll!rved by
Havetl, W.Va., Mr. ud Mrs. Leo
Mellllaa and Jennfter Cltftord
Vlnlnc, Pomeroy; and Mr. and
8Dd tbe next meettne will be
Mrs. Wlllll Patteraon, Sprana.
March31.
·
Pa.

Plans were made for a work
·shop t!N:te held ·dn April 29 at 2
p.m. at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds .
The workshop Is open to the
public and the 4H members
Interested in raising rabbits for
show, meat, and profit. There
will be approximately 17 differ·
en t breeds shown and breeding
stock a'vallable.
There will also tie someone at
t!le workshOp to tattoo the
animals and give showmanship
demons!ratlona.
The club Is alsq )~ntng an
open class rabbit show. S· June
30.
. .
The next meeting will be eld
· April 17 at 7 p.m. In the county
extension office.

'

RANKIN IWii'lbiAY David Ra•JII•, Tappen
PI~-. celebl atld bll etptb
birthday recenll)' with a party
at Show Bbt Plzula Pu-kerll'
hal'l, W.VL
He II the 100 of lolln and
Connie RanklrL

4H news

'

·Out of town guests attending
the funeral of Paut.Orr were Mt.
and Mrs. James Platt, Ashley:
.Mr. · and Mrs. Ed Newman,
Gallon; David Newman, Center·
borg; Mr. a11d .Mrs. Roier
Grueser, Logan; Mrs. Bruce
Beacon, Johnstown; Mrs. James
FOlller, Grove City; Rev. Roy
Bookman, Buchtel; and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Rose, Little
Hocking.

JOHN A. ·WADE, MD., Inc.:

~USSELL

STOYEI
BOXED &amp; ASSORTED EASTER

CANDY AND EASTER BASKETS

'-'!"!~WICKER EAml

~
BASinS ·
EASTEI DECOIATIONS
•EGGS •STUFFED ANIMALS
•CERAMICS •EXCELSIOR
NA1WL OLD FASIION GlASS ·

SPICIAL' PWSH EASTD

~=:rg.~~~~;.
•

. . . . . . 99 c

Wftl A IJ,M ,.CIIASE

. Of ·caa'IOI IASTD CA~.
YOUR 1990 EASTER.
HEADQUARTERS!!
.
. . . . . - . . . !.

PIIUAIII'
·
.
. .VAllO
. HOSPITAL·
.
'

··EAR, NOSE &amp; THIOAT
GENIUL ALLEIIGIST
"WE lAVE HEARIIII AIDS'(
(304) 675·1244

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
991-6669
271 leu lh Secend
Mld~epert, Olllo

�Page 6- The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

D of A meets

junior High sports banquet
held in Racirze for 250 people.

The charter was draped for
Nettle Hayes with five family
members attending the recent .
meeting of the Ches ter Council
.123 Daughters of Amerlc~ held at
!)le hall . with Bulah Maxey
pres iding.
·
Pledge to the Christian and
American flags were given and
. t he first s.tanza of the Star
Spangled Banner was sung.
Scripture reading was from
Matthew ~1 : 22- 27.
Reported Ill were Brenda Cun·
ningham 's granddaughter. It
was reported that .Todd Bissell
has a new baby boy. Mary Hayes
· and Thelma McMa nis are home
from the hospital. Elizabeth
Hayes Is Ill, and Zana Gainer fell
and broke her hlp and she had a
replacement join! put ln. Esther
Harden Is doing better and Is hi
room 518 at Riverside Hospital in
Columbus.
Sadie Trussell thanked all who
c am e and sent cards at the
surprise birthday par ty. Esther
Sm ith thanked those who ·at·
tended the rally and for·gifts.
Erma Cleland read "Colors or
Spring" and a double pie walk .
was held after lodge for the home
GUEST SPEAKER - Margie J . Lawson, · D.D.S.", ~lae;
a nd orphans. The winner was
recenlly visited the fourth grade class of.Mrs. Karen' Walker at
Esther Smith and Opal Hollon.
Salisbury Elemeniary. Mrs. Walker's class had been sludylnl
The meeting closed In regular
dental health and Dr. Lawson ·showed a movie about dental
form and quarterly birthdays
sealanls and answered queslions-studPnts had about dental health.
~ere observed by Sadie Trussell,
JoAnn Ba.um, Genleve Ward, Mary Holter. Lillian Demosky,
Opal Holl11n, Marcia Keller, and Margaret Amberger , Gold ie
Betty Biggs.
Frederick, E.thel Orr, J oAnn
Attending were Helen Wolf, . Baum, Alta Ballard, Ada BlsS&lt;'ll,
Dorothy Rllchle, Doris Greu ser , Mae McPeek, Genleve Wa rd,
Bulah Maxey, Esther Smith. Eva Robson, Virgin ia Lee, Bon·
Erma Cleland.. Faye Kirkhart , . nle Landers, Cha rlotte Grant ,
Lora Damewood, Opal Hollon, Kathryn BiJ.um, Betty Roush,
. Thelma White, Sandy White, .Belly Biggs , Mr. and Mrs. Wa lter
Sadie Trussell, . Betty Young. Hayes, Mrs. Gene Hayes, and
Betty Denny, Marcia Keller , granddaughter s.

l

Jim Hill or Pleasers was
thanked for his numerou s contrl·
butlons to the concession stand.

Flora l decorations distributed
as door prizes were donated by
Circle's Greenhou se, Ha r ri s
·Farms . .Hill's Greenhouse, Hub·
ba rd's Greenhouse, Norris '
Greenhouse, and the Southern
Vo·J\11 class.
Howle Caldwell, Southern' s
athletic- director, delivered a
speech encouraging the young
athletes to practice the three D's ,
dedication. dl~lpUne, and deter·
minatlon, as (hey consider the
prior ities ·or'·famlly , education,
religion. and sports In their
upcoming high school years.
The evening concl uded at the
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes with a
bowling party for the students .

Spring carnjval set at Eastern
The junior class of Easter n
High School will sponsor a spring
carnival · on Saturday from 4·9
, p.m . at the 'hljlh school.
Dl nner will be served by the
· athletic boosters from 4-6 p.m.
and games will begin -at 6 p.m.
Games IncludE&gt; fish pond, pop
toss, football toss, foul shooting,

archery. golf, darts, cakewalk, a
pie In the face contest, and more.
Admission Is 25 cents and ticket s
are five for $1.
· Other iundralsldg Items will
include a Nlntendo game and a
shotgun . ..
The public Is invited to attend.

,

to prayer and self denia l and
world day of prayer.
Nine members were present
and 157 sick calls wer e reported
for the las t two months.
Florence ·Ann Spencer had the
. prayer calender and chose Eliza·.
beth Lamb, .missionary In Sal·
vlna,' Ala. The gr_oup signed a
birthday card for her.
During the social hour Nina
Robil)son served sandwiches and
· St . Patrick's salad to those
mentioned and to Sara Caldwell,
Mar tha Poole. Osie Mae Follrod,
Charlotte VanMeter . and Nellie
Parker .
·
The next meeting will bE&gt; held
at the church with Mrs. Van
·Meter and Gertrude Robinson as
hostesses. Nellie Parker will
present the program. "Who Will
Roll the Stone Away?"

TO I'LACE AN AD CALl 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

LEAH D. WHITI'EKIND

Whittekind.
birth
.

' stanley Wells and Juanita
\Vella, parcel, til Robert Headley,
Olive.
Robert Molden, dec' d, cert.
trans, to Gladys Molden, Rutland
Village.
'Alfred M. Conard, 2.25 A, to
· Robert E . )loble, Bedford.
•Charles David Jeffers and
Brenda K. Jeffers, 20.69 A, to
Todd B. Grover and Connie L.
Smith, Rutland.
Lawrence Edmonds, Jr. and
Brenda K. Edmonds, 4.2 A., to
Elroy E. Kaylor and Thelma F .
Kaylor, 911ve.
•
Russell Culhnns, dec'd amend.
atfld, to Etta Collums, Bedford.
Aaa Dale Stansbury dec'd
affld., Wanda Oxley, Golden
Faye Slana bury, Columbia.
c;;olden Faye Stansbury, parcels, to Wa11da Lou Oxley,
Clarice Eileen · Gryctko, Clair
Dale Stansbury and Larry Jay
St!lnsbury, Columbia.
lAndon H. Adkins and Sharon
L. - Adkins, 1.13 A., to Kelly C.
Wlnebrenner and Becky K. Winebrenner, Sutton. ·
' .
Cella Elizabeth Collins, parcel,
to PaulL. Collin$, Olive.
· Charles L. Collins and lola A.
Collins, easement, to Paul L.
Collins, Meigs.
Timothy R. Dllion and Paula
K. Dillon, 1 A.. to Max Cheyney,
Jr. and James C, Stamper, Olive. .·
Louise Bearks and Hugh
Bearks, parcels, to Ronald H:

Bearks, Salisbury.
Mary Kennedy fka Mary Gil·
key, pt. lot, to Bob Manley and
Nancy L. Manley, Middleport
·
Village.
Anna Elizabeth Sprague, parcels, to Dwight J . Sprague,
Salem.
Nathan Poston, dec 'd, Affld, to
Jacqueline Poston, Lebanon. ·
Mary Jane Tal·bott, Kyle K.
Talbott, Sandra J. Talbott
Bryan Clark Talbott, Karen Su~
Talbott and Teres Talbott Barrows, lots, to James W. Nelson,
Pomeory Village.
Full Gospel u'ghthous, Inc. by
trustees, Rlght·.of-way, to Home ·
Creek Enterprises, Salisbury.
Margaret E . Christy , dec'd,
affld., to Roy R. Chr !sty, Chester.
Waiter William White, dec'd,
affld., to : Margaret Madelyn
White, Pomeory Village.
Ella M. Rollins, dec' d Affld., to
Roy E. Rol\ins, Tuppers Pl.alns.
Karen Blackburn, parcel, to
Nick Blackburn, Olive.
As\lland Oil, Inc. , lots 12·18, to
SuperAmerlca Group , Inc . ,
Pomeroy.
Ashland 011, Inc., lots 28-29, to
SuperAmerlca Group, Inc . ,
Pomeroy.
Ashland Oil, Inc.,·pt. lot 60, to
Ashland Branded Market lng,
Inc., Pomeroy.
Ashland Oil, Inc., 2.52 A., to
Ashland Branded Marketing,
Inc., Sutton.
John R. Stout, 13A., to ~Y ;
Scouts of . America, Tri State •
Area Council, Chester.
'

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

(

....
edwlllw'4::t•
'. ' ..........
allioMn
I'IIVY·
COle ..... hotpJiatt
roll and
lorry, no ........._ r IIIII tleJaaga

I

'

wltll 8Cidllionll ..,.,.. ..

FOI JIST

$325
•

.

NOW FEATURING HGMEMADE DiNNER ROLL,

F

.STAUIAIT

Pl. fft•JGI
POP2FIOY, r.1wl I l1 ...., frilll O'd•
(

;

,

SUN'S UP lANNlNG

3
8

16

·

123450789-

Card ofTh~nks
ln Memory
Annouetm tnts
Gi¥t1W I Y
Happy Adt
Lolt tnd Found
Ytrd Selt (Daid i n' a~Ntncel
Public Sale&amp; AuctioM
Wen&amp;td to luy

o_.y,BEFORE PUBLICATION

- 1 t :OO A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . THURSDAY

TUESDAY PAPER

WEDNESDAY PAP ER

THURSDAY PAPER
FAIOAY PAPER

-

SUNDAY PAPER

2 :00P.M FRIDA,Y

Classifie.d p~f(es cot-er rhe
following telephone exchanf(es...

143 - Arsbl• Ois t
379 - Walnut

Metp Count y
Area Code 014

M11on Co .. WV
Area Code 304

992 - Mictdl.,ott

675 - Pt . Ple••nt

Pomttov
9815 - Chette"

843 - Port~nd

247 - LIItrt Folio
948 - fhcine

7•2 - Rudend

•sa- Leon

571 - Apple Grove

77·3 - Miton
882 - NtW Hl\len
89&amp; - L-_ter t

93? - luftalo

687- Cool\l"l•

I'IIIIY

992~6421

61 --Farm I!Quipment

12- Wtnlid to Buy

••- H•v

ElWIN
CONSTIUCTION

RAC:INE

Custom Buih
Homes,
Remodeling 8t

75- BOIU a M!)t Ort for Slle
76 - Auto Ptru &amp; AccMIOfi•
77 -~ Aulo Repair
71 - Camping Equ;pment
79 - c;::ampet ~ 6 Moror Homes

EVElY SUNDAY

Repair Work

Starfl at 1:00

915·3365 .·

Factor¥ Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-6·19-lfn

POMEIOY, OHIO

Serv11:es

----:o.2·-6·'

81 -· Home lmpro..,.mtnl l
82 - Piumbinv' He•lMg

l'otto.

83- Excavetina

'

a• - Eiectrieel &amp;. Refrig•ation
85 - Genttll H1uling
It - Mobile Home At91l'

FURNACE

PI.UMIING &amp;

17 - Up~l•ttrv

Melga, Monroe, Margen. No dlloctoble amaunt of
NOTICE TO
Noble; VInton •d W•hlnfl' INd CONTRACTORS
found In the leod·
ton Countiea. Ohio. on Sec- ing C - WIIIJ IUptlly. ,
STATE OF OHIO
tion ATH 33-0 .00 on United
The Village u - no lead In
DEPARTMENT OF
St.IIOI Route 33 In Athens
ito dlotrlbutian ..,.,.....
TRANePORTATION
County end other verioua
Ohio EPA regtlllltlano 1'1·
Columbuo. Ohio
rout• · lind · NOtiona In quire the following heelth
Morch 11, 1980
Cantroct Saloo
. Athlnt, Glllllo, H-lng. lflocto lntonn.tlon to be
Melga. Monroe. Margen, provided to thlt cuotom"o:
legal Copy No. 80-320
Noble, VInton and -hlntl'
"'Tho United IUttll Env~
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
s..tod propoalo will be tan Countlu, by furnlthlng ronmenul Protection A~
lnotalllng rolsod PeYI· ency tU .I. EPA) drln ·
· - at tho office of the ond
Dlractor of the Ohio Deport· m..,t mort&lt;ar materlalo.
·lng - · otllndardland h ·
Pro]oat length: 0.00 feet detormlned thlt toed 11 •
motot of T...,oporlltian, Col·
lllilbw, Ohio, unt110:00 A. or 0 .00 mile: Warll L.ongth: hiJith. concern ol cerlltln
mHe; lev• of ••po•ure. There 11
M., Ohio ltanolard nme, Verlaut flet or
.cunwntly o oUtndlrd of
T.,..dey, Aprft 10, 1810, for Pltve"*lt Width: vort..
"The d - -for compl• 0 .050 pttrto per mMIIon
lmp........,enta-ln: '
tlon of thlt work ahltl "- •• !ppm). lleoed on new hollltN
Pltrta 1 thru 181notuoolvo
- forth In thl bldclng pr,. informllian, U. 8. EPA to II·
•ro
- · • on
- pOMI."
. koty to lower thlo atendard
andaffirM~•
wll .,. •notdar..t
Eocll bidder olooll . be r• oltr.llflcantly.
the ""'"'of the tOtal
qulr..t to fllo wHh hlo bid o
amount btd.
·
'Pert .of the purpoH of
conlflod chectc or caahler'o thlo notlae It to Inform you
Plirto 1 thru 8
P,.thena, .Hootdng. M..111 checto for on amount equal of the potential ttdverH
end VInton Cauntlet, Ohio. to five per cent of hit bid. but hiJith offecto of IHCI . This 1o
though
·an vortoua rou1111 and - · In no event more thlln fifty being· dane
llano, the Village of Albotny, thou-d dollaro, or • bond your w.t• may not beln vioIn Athono, Hocking, M ..lll for Mn per cent of hll bid. lation of the cu,...nt oDin·
de rd.
ond Vinton Cauntlet, by payable to the Director.
Bidden muotapply, on the
"U. S . EPA and othorure
mowing.
I. Work
propor forma. for quatlflc•· . aoncerned about leed In
L.ongth: 58.88 mit-.
tlon at INtt tar! d!lY• prior to drinking wltw. ToO much
Pelt• 9 thru 18
Athens, Hooking, M•ga th• dato Mt far ajoenlng bldl teed In the humM body can
and Vinton Countlet, Ohio, In eccordlnce with Ch~Mor ceu• Hrioue d•mage to the
broln, kldnll\lt, nervous ay•
on varlou• rout.. end eec· 65211 Ohio Reviled Code.
end opoalflclllono ttm. and red blood cells. Tho
tlons, the VHiego of Albllny,
in Athelno, Hootdng. Melga .,. an !loin tho O.pertrilent grNtttt rltk. even with
end Vinton Cauntlot, by of Tronsporllttian end tht of' . llhort-tenn upoeure, Ia -to
mowlo!l. Philo II. Work lie. of the Dlotrlct Deputy young chlldron end pregn•nt
Director.
women.
length: 58.81 m111.
.. The dN Ht forco·m pa. Tho Director ,..e,... the
"Load t...ti In your drink·
· lion of ihlto work alooll b• ·11 right to reject ..., end on. lng water are llketv to"" hi·
ghilt:
Ht foo1h In the bidding pr,. blclt.
BERNARD 8. HURST
po...:·
- if your home or wat•
DIRECTOR ..,otem hoo lead plj&gt;os, or
Each bidder olooll be r•
qulred to .1111 with hio bid a MARCH 26; APRIL 2
If vaur homo hoo coppar
cortllied chiCk or _ .... •
plpea with toed aotder, AND
ohiiOk for an amount equal
- If the home Ia le11 than
Public NotiCe
to five per cent of hit bid, but
five
old,. or . '
In no ...nt more thin fifty
-If
vou
htve
oaft or oclclc
PUBLIC NOTICE
thou and dollara, or a bond
The Rutlllnd water ay ... m water. or
-If woter sitaln the plpea
for per c111t of hit bid; lo required by tho Phio EPA
pttyabfo to the Dlractar.
to
provldo
tho
following
ape- for -houra."
llddaro muot apply, on the
CultOmera may Wllnt to
notlllcelion obout load
p t - fonno, for quallfl- ciel
In drinking _,., to each of minimize tha r ilk at toed
tion ot liNt 111n dooysprfo&lt;to our cultomere, whither or ~ntomlnotlon by fluthlng
tho
11 bidl not the watar wo auppty ••· their watlr 1noa In the mornIn •
with C"-pt!lr try - · - t h e OUrNnt f•·
ing and .Venlng be!orouolng
1111211 Ollio llevloed Code.
the water for cooking or
der•l
load
.-dlrd
of
50
Plano :end specllloetiono pen~ joor billion (ptlbJ, Be· drinking. Uauatty, rurtlllng
oro on file in tho Doportment couttllod
plpee, Nldar, .,d WIIIJ through thlllnoo for a
of Tronaporllotlon andthot of·
ather · plumbing m.tD&lt;I* couple of min- wAI do.
flc. of' t'- Dlatrlct Deputy can
In th4&gt;
contarnln_.. drinking Wator that hlo DINetOr.
plpea overnight ardurlngthl
Mter ooftor It ..... tho WI·
'Tho Dl..-ar ,..,,... ''day without u• hM 1 .g rHright ~a l'ljoot any ond all tlr tl'lltmont plant, cuatom· ter chonco at containing
••
.-talm-howtoflnd
bldl. ·
.
lied, slncl it may h..o BERNARD B. HURST out whether their -tor con· In i:onUtct with toed s'!Jder 1n
telna unule ,..,.., of • -·.
DIRECTOR and
If oawhoot to do obout lt. the plptt lalnta far ....,., .
(3) 211 (41 2. 2tc
Th4&gt;watoryau - • c u r · houro. People thauld uH
complloo with , the only cold )Nitar far drlnldt!g,
otanderdfor- cootdng, and •poalattv for
Public NotiCe
proporlng baby formula.
olnco h o t - h•• grootor
NOTICE TO
poUtntltl to become conCONTIIACTORS
tamlnoted with INd.
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANIPORTATION
Calumbuo, Ohio
Mardl11. 1190

-n

Ph••

PI••

SECTIONAL CHAMPS: The Southem Tomadoe. nnlohed the
Taylor, Chrlo Murphy, Jayson COdner, and Troy
ma·
year wilh a 15-9 reeord and their .11th Sectional crown In 14 · nager. Back row: Coach ·Scott Wickline, Kenny Clark. Todd
yearo. Pictured are cheerleaden and team memben I Front,
Grindllaff, Roy Lee Bailey, Jeremy Roee~ Brf!llt Shuler, Brad
•eated, left to right, Jodi Hayes, Miehellr MeCoy, Marcy Hill,
Maynard, Andy Baer, and Head Coaeh Howle Clldwell.l p from
Chrio Harmon, Amher Cummlngo, and Robin Stout. Seal, oec·
the reserve team, but nol pictured, Ill 6-5 ·oophomorr Ml~ha.,l .
ond row : John Hoback, Kevin Burgtl&amp;A, Michael Kincaid, Chad
Russel(,

v•••

::.c!:r ........

SVAC
'RESERVE .
CHAMPIONS
THE SOt:THERN RESERVE
TEAM won thr S.V.A.C. Cham·
pionohlp with a 19·1 record. ,
Pictured in lh".front row, left to
right, are Scott Liole, Billy
bavlli, Chad W,ioe, Jeremy ·
Rouoh, Eiic Shoullll, Joohua
Codner. Se'cond Row, left lo
right, Jan Wllllanu, mana·
ger; Dawn Shuler, manager1
' Michael Evans, Michael Rue·
oell, Shane Cirele, Jamie Prof.
flu. Not pictured are .Je.nny
Llole, manager; Rueeell Sinfle·
ton and Coaeh Ron Quillen.

Con!Naleloo
8oeltd propolllo wtll Ito

ST. IT. 124
SYRACUSE
992-6333
'

Happy Ada

5

My, My At 61
Look who is

, Still Having

Business
Services
MICROWAVE
OYEII IEPAIR
ALL MAlliS
Bring It h1 Or We
Pick Up. ·

KEN'S lPPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 II' 915-3561

&amp;cr... ,.., Poot OHI.
217 E. S.C. P-•Y

POMEIOY, 01110
·

:116/'90/tln

UNDA
PAINTIJIG &amp; CO.
11111101 IDDIOI
FREE ESTIMATES ·
, .., tho pain out of

puling.
lot us do II for you.
VERY IEASONAIU
HAVE IEFUEHaS

AnD6P.M.

(614)915·41.10

. ,,

lofore6p.m.

ISA
AD
Wanted

.

PART:L~~:~:Vli;:E

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wo

YOUNG'S

-Room Additlont
-Gut111t Work
- El-tcal • Plumbing
- Concratt Work
-Roofing
- t-•E-ior
Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATEIJ

V. C. YOUNG II

. 992·6215

I and J CONSTRUCTION
GIEG

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

Phone
Blllt

992-5335 01' 915-3561
AcrOII . . . .

Post

Offlq

A Great Combination-.
"Quality and Rtasonable Prices"

· WE GO THE EXTIA
992-6110

SHO~T
IACIIIE
FIRE DEPl.

SYIACUSI, OliO
lt\bow• Plua Sllottl

•Moblla Homo

IN STOCK: oe..n_, Potch
ao... •Cetn...-, FloWer

Ptno ·

•Mobil• Home
Ren•l•

V•• •CI-r ltrd lltM
•Cem~nt llrd ...hi
•Founlliln llrd
e Plus

••h•
o.• .
Anatls end
Oth• Y•d Orn•••
Frog~.

·•Lot RMitalo ·.

I

Buy From Uo &amp; Save!
9 .·$92. ¥!.511 ...

• 992-7479
lt. 33 llerth of
·-r•r; Ohio

DOZER
We can r~r and rt·

con radtators and
hlat1r COI'es. We can
~~ acid boil !IIIII rtHI
out radiators. W1 also
repair Ga1 Tanlu•

PAT HILL FOlD

992·2198
Middleport, Ohio
1·13·tiC

r-oy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK . .:
II. 124,

EYEIJ·
SAY. NIGHT

REPAIR

Al11 TrtstMittles

6:30P.M.

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Factory cholot
12 Gavgt Shotguos Only

Stricklty lnflfcod
10·9-lfn

4-25·1fn

Howard L Wrlt-1

MOBIU
HOME PARK

IS IIDW OPEN
FOI BUSINESS.

Hysell
Garage

la•n hiding

IV13/'H tfn

•u.....

~oger

GUN

217 E. S.C. ' - • Y

JO'S GtFT SHOP

BAI~EY

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

GAS OR ELECTRIC

flohlno lupptl•

SITEWORK • ROADS
•
CLEARING

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

949-2161
2·1·'90-"1 mo. prl.

Announcements

3 Announcementl
-to -moota to OU 11prtng '
Ouaolll', - " ' llloe to join • oor:
pooto, 114-441-.

~"\:l..lj'C.~'::

druulf.
lntonnatlon
rdtn.tor, 114-317~7•12.

EUM HOME

loatit&amp;hutlftr
Stnltr Cltla- attd

lllln.ca(l(llll

Good Rotoo
T.L.C .
.27 Yro. E•P·
Rofarancea

I •.L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CIIESTD, OHIO

Frao

pu-, lllnp

"FIREWOOD

992·6173

BILL SLACK

209 Soutll 4th St.
Mitltll.,.,t, Oh.

992-2269

"IDW IICOMI KOMI"

3· Z8· 'l().ofn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
PH. 949·2101
or IlL 949•216d
Day or Night
NO SUNDA YCAU.S

EVENINGS

1 · 11 ·9D·tfn
•VINYL SIDING .
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

... ........

cuun

COJITROL

Heathlg, Coell~~g,
lefrlpratlon
Service
Relldentlll •

Commercii I

CALL
992·5519

Dog/'1, 1 '

=~-- andt.mato,

-to . .
__
_,__
.. •a
--.wt-raof, . . .:
~ •·

3104.

t....... -~ old. LiUo
alllldown. To .. to IIDOd

1~711.

:::.'t!r.~:T.'b'l':'" foul •
Ono

,..r

old, ...... " - ...
o.la tid, litter tralnild. ,.. alw·
10 good - · Colt ., ..

~~~~---~·~----- ~

8

Lost &amp; Found

Pl. 949-2101
or las. 949·2160
NO SUIIIAY CAUS

7
-YardSall
- - -··

RUTLAND TIRE
SAUS and
SEIVICE
741·3011

•nre Sal..

. •Front

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AUYnlotoa-·l'oklln
- . . . .. DEADUNI: 1:00 p.m. : •
tho dot ...... tho ell "' 10 ""'·
~ • 1:00 ,..... •

~~ ....~·2:00 ·.

End

· Alignment
•Oil Change • Lube

B

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

•Brtb Work

llllltln.,IIVII.MI
1·15-'tO-tltt

· 2-2.'90-l mo.
'

J&amp;L

INSULATIOII
lfllttr ltttlti'Ot
VlfYLSIDIItiG
VINYliiPUCu.tn
WltDOWS
FREE EITIMATEI

992-2772

.

"FrH Eltimllttl"

l-l·lf.f111

HMPHIEY'S

to
I

Fotandly,omotl -~~ cat 1 thoot

985-4422

7· 11-'19-tfn

-Ilion

kllton, hell
arown. llttor trolned. It 4-441-.
3117.
r·

AT ALL

Grant A, Newland

Folr

gtveiWIJ. 114-111 ft'll

Fotandly

~ANYTHING

Sand·StO!li·Dirt
(614) 667-3271

Couch:

FNI 10 good home 4 pupplaa. '
..... lloiocl.t14-ZM-11121

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

DUMP TRUCK

*LIGHT HAULING

~...

2 cuto. pu- to ......,,
......
,-01... .

NE.,WLAND
ENTERPRISES

"SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·.

Cor-

. GIYeaway .

4

- · eon tt

"At lla10tttlllll Prices"

CARPENTER SERVICE

Lqal Copy No. 10-318
UNfr t'RICI! CONTRACT

rocoolytd at the office of tho
Of...... of tho Ohio D-rt·
mont of Trantporllolloo!, Col·
umbuo, Dtolo, untl 10:00 A.
M.. Ohio lt8ndard Tlmo.
T.,..diiY, Apr110, 1180, far
lmp-WIIIfttlln:
A"-. Oellle, Haaloing.

Cuatamero whaH hornoo
meet the obove doocrlptlona
m1y went to have their watoranetymd byoprlvotelabo· 1
retory JO determine If unufe
le~ela of INd oro ptooent.
Hom.owner• may be able to
tell If they hovol•d plpu or
oolclored Joints by visual In·
apoctlon; INd wit be dul
grey and 1oft enough to
ocratch euHy whh 1 ICI'IW·
drlvor or key. When -"raped,
Iold will bl thlny. Conaumera ahOukl 1110 m•• IA.Irl
that all ntw plumbing end ·
plumbing ropalro ere 1111dl
with load-fteo mllorlalo.
Pl...,• aontect l•ndre
&amp;mill! at 742-2121 for fur·
thor lnformotlon llllween
the houra of 9:00 e.m. and

lnfulm•lon It
alto •1111111 from: U. 8. EPA
Sltfo Doilllilll H-o,
In -'*'titan. D. C. 11·1100426-4781) or fram U. &amp;.
EPA 'a Rogton V In Chicago (1 ·
1100-121·8431 J.
121 21; (31 28; (4) 21. 3tc

FUINACE

Midlllo,art, Ohio 45760

PubliC NotiCe

5::::;.. .

992·2228

FURNACE

Now location:

161 North Soceottl

Public Nollce

LDWm PIICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
FREE LOCAl DEliVERY
POMEIOY AND IIIDDLEPOIT'S ONLY
LOCAU.Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.
· Pizza·Subs-.Salods·De~ily Specials

GUN .CLUB
GUN SHOOT

CIIESTEI, 0110

71.- Autos for Sele
72- Truck• tor S•l•
73- Vant S. 'wo·s
74- MotorcvciN

· 41 - Houaes for

STREET
PIZZA

'' 80-1 mo.

6 3- LN'estock
&amp; Gr"aln
16- Seed • Ftrtili.1er

'

L•••

YMOITH

DODGE
s. TNrd, .• . . .port

f;l! 11! Siip;tltl"
l'i IIVI!SIIIr:k

. 36629 5a7

-lou•

949·2210

''

PAT HILL

Transpor t al ton

31 - Mama for Stlt
32 - Mobltt Hom• tor S11e
33 - flrm• for Sale
34 - Bulin•s Buildings
36 - Lott &amp; Acralg e
36 - f'eal !nate Wllnud

ColeMan, 742

DALE HILL

&amp;9 - F-Of' Slit Of Trtdt

21 - Bu1in•• Opporhmity
22 - Monw to Loan ·
23 - Prof•Ji9nal ServiCe~

~an

.Stop In and See

51- Fi"ulte &amp; Vetfl•t~t•

12 - Situ•tion Wantad
1 J - ln11,1rance
14- lu•in•• Tr1in i" O
16- School• &amp; ln n ructio "
11- 'hdio, TV &amp; CB Rape ir
17- Miactlllntoul
1 8 - Wented To Do

.

..

CaH

IS3- 'AMtiqUtl
s• - Misc. MtrchM~Ui t
151- Buflding SupP:II •
58- Peu for Sl!tt
57- Muaic: .. lnttrumant1

-11 - Htlp Wartttd

MEIGS SECTIONAL TOU.INAMENT CHAMPS
.

3rd ST.·
RACINE

LOTIONS - STICKERS

51 - Houtehold Goods
12- II)Of1fng Goodl

~l'rVIr:l~\

"42 - Moblle Homft for Rent
•3 - Fermt fo r Rent
44 - Apartment tor Rent
'1- Furnithad Rooms
41 - Sp•e• for Ren'
47- Warned to Rent
48 - £quipment for Rem
•t- For

Cat Reealft fast

Clllll'l
WEIUV
ITARlliiB.

f lllplnynlr·nt

•A c:la ..Hitd ld\leniMrn.,..t plec!NI it' ·TheOtily Sentin .. , .. .
cept - cl•sified'displ~ , lutln•• Card end tegM noticesl
will 1110 appeet In the Pt. Ill-tnt Retilier and t t'tl G1 ll i·
polis Deily Tribune, re•ehint over 18,000 homn.
CO,Y D.EAOLiNE ...,
MONDAY PAPER

16

Ov•r 15 Wordl
.
.20
.30
.42
ee.oo
.10
113.00
.05/ diV
11.;J01diY

1 S..lion ······"······························" IJ.SO
6 StssiOIII •••- ...-················~·,······- f12.00
12 S.llions..........................- .•••.••t20.00
15 StssiMS................................... S25.00
FIRST VISIT FREE ~ POSSIILY MORE

Ratt
14.00
11.00

~"''01•~•!•• con•cutilla runs. broken up dr/NswiH ba ctt•ged
.. Mparate~•;;;••~-----,....--

or Meaon counti• mutt bti pte·

•Ada thll mutt bt lllid in tdy.lnce trt
Catd Of f henkt
Heppy Ads
In Mtmortwn'
Yll'd Sal•

251 - GuYin Dist

18

10
Monthly

'"'or'

G•II ipolis
Ch•hir e
Vtntoon
Rio Gr•nde

Words
18
. 15

DIY I

paid .
•Receirwe 1.10 ditcounl tor 1d1 pa id 11'1 •dv•nce.
·
•frttedl - Oivt.-ay •nd Found 1dti und" 1&amp; woords.,ill be
run 3 d.,1 at no ct'•O•·
•IITlot ol 1d fOf al1 t•it•l l«ten ia double price of ad colt.
•7 p_oim lint type onty wetd .
'lentinll Ia not rnponttblt tor errorsaftet first d~ . ICheek
for
flr't d~ acl •unsln P.,..l . ~.,, bflio re 2 :00p.m .
day tf1er piolblielltton to mth eorraction,

4•1 317 381 2•1 -

..
CDillll . . . Clltlyl

'?i.~E:M:e:;p=.~~~lll•

'

Mr. and Mrs. J:tilroid •..:&gt;laney'.
Snlden Whlttekind. Pomt&gt;rov .
are announclng ·the birth or their
third child. · a.' daughtPr. Leah
Danlelle, on Mar&lt;'h 2 at Holzer
Medical Center. ·
, •The · lnfan t · WE&gt;ighP&lt;I Plght
' pounds and tliree ourit·e• and wa~
21 Inches long.
Maternal grandparPnt' are
Mrs . Mamie Stephenson. and the
la te Paul Snider. Pomero~· .
Paternal grandparents arE&gt; Mr.
and Mrs. WoodiP WhltrPklnd.
Marietta'. Paternal gre at grand·
mother Is ·Mary KParn•. Hartford, W.Va.
Other c h lldren arP two sons.
Shaun Lee. ag!' 12; and Daniel
Shane. age 10.
·'
. '

- -·Land transfers___;..._
CompUed by:
. Emmo1ene Bolatela Coap
Recerder, Melp Couilly, Ohio

8
... u..a Ill., .......... ow.

. ·. . utlng ~ 1989· 9
Southetn rol'nsode~ Re~efre and Vat~itg
Bstkeths/1 Chsmpion1

Alfred UMW m~ets
Gertrude Robinson presented
" Hope Cor tHe Homeless" on the
. call to prayer and self denial
program when the Alfred United
Methodist Women met recently
a1 the church.
: All members read and dis·
cussed ·the program which high
· lighted the Blj)le account of Ruth
and Naomi.
Members gave Individual his·
torles or present day homelessness brought on by job closings
and job changes, beyond the
Individual's control. Thelma .
Henderson told th.a t there are
350,000 homeless on a ily given
l{lght. Their plight creates a new
underclass which has little. hope
of betterment. All agreed ,that
continuing prayer and practical
help are needed.
' ·
·
The group collected for the call ·

The Southern Junior High all
sports banquet was held March
171n the junior high gymnasium
in Racine .
Approximately 250 people at·
tended the banquet In which eli or
the coaches were . presented
~ms composed by J an Hill
especiAlly Cor the occasslon. ,
Specia l awards went to Shelly
Winebrenner." Jenny Damron,
Kenda Rizer , Dave Grindstaff,
and I'IIII'Downie for their assist·
ance during the . basketball
season.

•t•
SSI II

DA.VI'S
SMAll ..GI.

. -~~···

hall4etYelltl

I r

111m:=
Olt. '
Aa..,..
...t ... .
HoMIIIIIl. 'Weadwtw,

*ATS

l'or ....,

I,
IIRVICE
4-cyclo ·

------•

W.lted to luy

Colt
•nn

,.............. .
ltiMIGfi,

H·'•l•o.

Fun!!
HAPPY

BIRTHDAY
.__...
A. ..11...
1 __..
'•
~--------

Lany

LlwtJ ....

�\

P.Qe-8-The Daily Sentinel
Wanted to Buy

9

Apartment

~
-------

Ernplovrnent Servrces
11

-.. ·-·

Help Wanted

.

DT'N'

Houlehold
Goode

for Rent

LAFF-A·DAY

llur:0111.
~ -•
•To
,. 1,.

51

. : ,.
ONe;

Malay, March 26, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

73 v.ne•4~'1
........... Lorain ......

M MQN.. MARCH 21

--.-

Sorry,IOM7So'IMI.

Dotlolo. ( f ) - - Ext. Y·
10111.,

"" , _ ol ll?l4m.

"This won't

ta~e

UR T- Senrli.e, Topping,
Roc-ion Deportment, P.O. . ttfmmlng, lhlv"!L~-~- tree
Bo• 111, Mlddfoport, 011 otll'IO- Nmovor. Pruning ....._. 114-

48771 to oll!lly oriel roalllor lor

EARN MONEY
-Inti110111111o1.
-·
$30,000/vr
._
Dotollo. (1) - - Eat. y.
4112.

NltJht limo

·a .

I l l - . with

L";'to run bor, 11..aa.
114-- • • ...ytlrftll If..

-In

.,,,,,3-..........

toklrlg ............... ..

for

Buslnlll
Opportunity

Ext.14112.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUILJIIING CO.

R - o d Nuroa Wllllod lor
holM I.Y. bllll,_, good .......
aood poy, Nnd ,_,ma to:
Jenklno llhlrmOCY P.O. Box !'18,
Ook HI)!; OH 411M er ooll, 114-

112 It• ._. • ..., ...m.~p.m.
Rlllablo lady t o - Inn.....,

at .... loCot ch....h .......
Ioiii ol For
I -....,.
._
Ro
-trod.
lnfort!tll~. 11 •••• 3418.

dot:.:."·

-=

reCOinmendl

.thlt:

~

do

COKE-PEPSI

.._, RoutM far Solo. 1 74tol000.

Real Estate
31 Homea for Sale ·
212 MUIIIFf'J Avlnue. Pomaroy.
11v
-2 "'""· a load..-.
...,, 1141121436
....1-118.
0

With monogor'o
Stytlot
llconoo ....,.... . but n o t oory. Cluo..,.ood •tory "No
a...•. Full or pili 114UI 1122 or ..011 In at r:tn.t
StylinG Solo!l, UIO Eootom
A- Qolllpollo.
The Molgo .._, School Dlllrlci

3 bodnMim,

........,

-ng

....

pllcltlorw
....
pllconto
lor -on E-.
, Prlft.
clpolontl o . _ . - . , -

........ ~lor ... 1'11M1
ochool , yoor. ADallelnto m'UII

hold • illlkl Ohio . . .,...,
Prlnolpol'o oortl- lor thl
orlnclpol pc&gt;OIIIon oncl 1 vlffd

btlto

•-•na -111c1•

11111

certlflclt• lri ...,._ mldhlrw
and CPR lor tho -~~~
poeltlon. Por10111 lnt-od
ohould contoct ~lm Clrpenter,
!klporlnto,_, o1 Locol

Sc-

II P.O. Boo 272, 320
Eo• Moln SlOhio.
. In P"""'"'Y·
.
~ptlonlot,

of-

COINniMk:otiOn
kJuo.. lldga ol bull,..
1111, InclUding _ ,........
ondbo-lo......, .tobllohod ollloo ,.,-urao.
Muol tio oblo to loito- wfth
voluntNra. AMpo~ altlltdH ln-

:'.."'':..:C..~~

n::t..=

u.- _...be toct~, oblo to

olflcTontiJ
-.p~

IOW throug

a tun bothl. . _ .

1 oan.L!IIY • - · $21,1100. 1104m-31311.

EH:;.

3 tlad~
dtoiL 171
South Fourth.
a~ 1t (n.r
...... Jr. High). tii,OOO. .....

-~.

'

od toioks oncl loiahctlv.t,. Oli-

_...,., ......... ond-.nd
worL ~~~·-- ..........
••• I H. hndt.tterollni...C,
,...... and two an.,eorrMnl

,....,CI, to,_..,..

p.,....

·
- al - Ohio, Ohio
:ne
Rlohloncl
Ave.._~.
· ............. 1110.
E.O.EA.S.P.

Clio\-

-ASTERCARD
U.S.
GUARANTI!I!D.
REGARDLIBB 01' CREDIT
RATING. CALL NOWI1oiOHGo
1CMI71ixl U2124.

and 11lwa en · ,...
qulrod. (fill por - h . onc1 ... rwoold~4 por
montfi, . . . .
. Cltl
l1t 441 tt21,
11
241,
114 441

wtth -ao
- 114 -•1111.
.,......_.,
U,IOO.

w- --·

ow-:

141

wtth till
11
WIM
Townol~p, Vinton Coonty, Ohio.
No ~ on ..,..,. r For
~ In

··-lion
- 221,
.....
wold
lnquirtM
til P.O
.. Boo
"""-~;Ohio 440111. '
"'
Leta Md
anlltllll for

4

u-

LOfoly

__

torvo

..,lfll. lndu~

e~CounQ
IIJ
.
ill Mle VIce Crockett
raoes to prevent 1 dellh row
man from being electrocUte&lt;l.
Stereo.
·
Mualc flow VIdeo
Ill A - And C -

hiatoflc horne, do uuntown,
IWiao. Rofrtgont1or,
mMito. Udllltia nat inillludtd,

Sc-.---:ii'":Z
In_
tulwfth CIA. Goltl
,
In nfco

1141. Nl2,11
1-112

.

lo fur-

r=lalo. m.aoo. CAIII14-f81.
• -

11-,

nice-=:
both, -

furniture,

tile. All $21,000.
......... 1100. 814-7

Merch&lt;md1se

51

1\oo ilr thrao bod.-. root, ....., rtdna,.tlld. llrae
b
gnt.
1170
Unc:aln

mobile

homl, aooonM.~.

At;,

3 .,.
,

o1 o-M7 TIJ 1 -

-·
.

traa- unit.

t m - 11omo. 2111. otowo,

school's dress coda. and

&gt;EEK

~.__

=
2· ..
==

Alncl l

~ICII 81.

town, Rl.141 . 114 411 •124.

~14M,
Point PI
rt.

=

~-:....~'r~
:::un..=:~.::..=
Roq'd 11WIIIo1414 oflor llp.m.
I o.m. to I p.m. - · - · 814-ilpollo,lll!.
Ul'l 127 lid. - · 0

GOOD

AJitiUANCU

dryorl, ............

='-· eo•

-;;;:.~;i,"";;;;;;;u;;;:;;
I- ..
- · t22Simo. 171-6112:·

~ ':;:.:"~

"""iiooii..

-

.::;::~

11 ....,..7111.

1..,..., • .., -

'

~

Nlwi'Uiod

Building

e

.1....,.

~"T. ~ t10,000. 114-

,.. Col!!i!er-'- toks
pqii.U. ~772:1.

:s:..,-·,.....
a...,..._.......................... l'or-.-.
=a,T"• ..... -. ....
tiO Dlolol, ,..,, I I

,..

56

..

Pete for Sale

AKC ••..., ........... -

~

•......

=--h.--:;""...!=
... _ 1111.

JD••-a.•r-....,.,
_ .................. il

.

AKC ....... I 11111,-11,

~ ~... ~-·"

. . . .'hu,

~~TNd.W•.....,,

!!!!!!'l..tnt•
0111;

-••n.

and
tc.nniL
........... ~-··,. ~,.. ......
'
p.m.
II

·

11~

... :r:. .. .,...

.

....,.
"'- -

IIIII

_,.loo, 304- ,.'
Servlca, ''

law-Vee

DMrla

On F

Cra.k Rd. Puta, ·~ \

~up,llld ...... , . ..... .

~rod

:wrl'o,- , ....

-fllr 111111U,
.I. :l#.r:o.e:·-.711.
.
I

11

1

114-

72 Trucke for Sale

1m

~

~ ~·-- ..,._.

·JI.OOO. 114 ...
~111•.•

U:. !'«&lt;I '""* 1100• -

.......

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

l!lfll!o T""" Pu........ "!!LOllila

Co.E-l!NTIR""IIES,
Joe-., 0111:10Ns7- '
-....; ,;

~~w:Bi. ~ t~ ,

~;~~~~r~~··

TrooltumD-..u:.. ...... lf4al 2411.

82

:·
I

11111 e1111 1111,.., .,_

MDII, ftncla !llmMif on a.
hljal;kaclltne with a nuclear

BARNEY
·pAISfJN II

YO'RE JEST
IN TIME. FER

. SUPPII'II

THANKY, MA'AM··
BUT l JEST HAD
A lltl SUPPII
AT HOME

t:OifLIIl't ·

•

;ma:H!..,&amp;.
George
and Slkea follOw a
of
lrlil
bOdlls. (R) Stereo: Q
IIJ L8rry King LJval

ill WWP: The Ultimata

Clla. .lfll Hulk Hogan VI

Tha Ultimate Warrior: Macho
King Randy lllvage vs Dully
Rh0Cia4i.
• N•h... Now COuntry
muale'a hOtlllt awa ara
laaturld ....
t:30 a e1111 Dealgnlng w. Tha 8ugarbekn dlalpprove
at Anthony' a naw glrtlrtand.

·.rs

(R)Q

1:80 Ill MOYII: llonllle And

-Wit&amp; Cllllt
l'ood
Dlolor.
t 4.. DIJ I.

ClyCII (PG) (2: 10)

10:00 (IJ 700 Clull Wl1h Pat

Llv?ltcCk

=---=

_..,.• ...,.. .... caro_

p

.

Wll ..,. tor a -.,
- ._,~...,.r y _.,.. In my - ·

.... 101. In

IIIIDAt:tfJU$ PIAt:H

MOVE OVER,
BREAD
PUDOIN' !!

PlUmbing •
Heating

A.....RIII

Wll .... lor -

HAVE YOU GOT
ROOM FER SOME

-·

11112,

.... 101. In

MoWN (2:001 c
WCalagalaa'llaiHII
• • • Cll82ncl Mnual
Acad•;tt..- * Uva Q
(l) (f)
Line lpulal
Debe.. Thll debate oentera
on the topic ol drug
legellzatiOn. In favor Ia
Wl..m F. Buckley and
agalnat " Ia Representetiva
Pat Schroeder. (2:00)

oo-.:

- . . .... ljcllng.
anct AMiona. Frw aatlanafH. ·~
Frool llorks 104-f73.8111 or'
_
..,.. --1711.

-Clra •1f
llliiiMllrii6.
.._ AI

t a k a - - 1104-

NBC - · Nlgllt At The

,...., ... ...... tOOl - " " · .
platldeamadri. ,

T
Hlilllnd Cllli....

..__ .. eom•m-

Ill MIA 8aakalbell
t:OO e (J) 8 MOYII!: 'lwlmauH'

AND HE eAVE: Me
Ac:ot t A.R.

. . . . . . . . DDII

1fll4

old Apott 2. 114-74N771.

AKC ':C:Nd _ . , . , . . . .

over

e

eOn

and you'H Rnd "· The Aalro-Greph
Matcttn\ak• lnatanlly ,....... whiCh
llgne n ..-tlcally perllcl lor you.
Milt 12 lo Ml1chmak•. c/o thla - .
--·P.O. Box 91428, Cleo; eland, OH

ar. .,,. ., - · ,,.....,

Wll .... lor -

• ChurollllrHI 8tallon
tlll!lulla Eye
1:30 (J)
Hoge Family
Willie aaks David to be hll
personal trainer for a IriCk
!118111. (RI Q
1111 Time To cara .
•1121 City A devalopmer\t
project crealel havoc whan H
levels ~eyard . (R) Q

CorDot -ion oncl ...,..,.,
c.tf tar ......... 114 t tt4Bo.

1117- Am PW'"'- . . -

Suppllla

IIINltM or 1114:1!41.
1. . Clayton tlluupart. 14110.

SHuatlon
Wanted

Williams, and Jooslca Tandy.
Also, a candid ln-w with
Paula Abdul.

~
MlE$
AID """""" ~:IJ'f,,..---"

114-

1117a-~-.

t

1 - Mobile home, lllalfrooco~
I !WI bolho with~ ....
. . . 101120 porDh,' ........,.. ..

12

Academy Annla .,_..1
lntervtewa wilh Tom Crulaa,
Jessica Lange, Robin

1u..-1ng. 112 mi. Flolt TtiJ*, 241S lo II R Ave.
JarrloM Rd. Pt. Pia
II, WV,
Palnl Pll
~ 10
ooiii104-17J.14110.
com
,,ea,a lncl 10 gill

1110 Uliorty. - - • .,.
illtlon. Fumltit""', ~··

OPrtrRIMIWI
ill IIOIIr wood lnoldar

~ 21,000 ..... Chom-

7444.
PICKENII'URN111JRE

Hc&gt;u-

'

. . --·=-·
•·
Clvlo,-Olfllrit oondlllon.
741-4 olerlp.m.

AKC 11 I ad lloHrt... llumlur~~. CINiak ua ltlollll, .......... lid., Rol A
·Oop.l14o44N7110.
- · U-Aivor out lor quollt)o A ... prlo• on
Pe n.,
..

........

- - - . . . . . . 10 1111, , . Ford - · 4 cYI ::.:- - . . 4 , . , , I ' dolll- ............ Olll
2
iWI 1
· - · 114-1124111.

. . . ......... . . -.
t.,......·-· ................. _.....
_,.,_a-_
'-- .......
...
USED

4&amp;4.

-·

~m ...,.- :1~· l14o7U47M orl14o742-

Ko ......, 011

-·
~ .::;~..::...:OL.."'l!o:.
3br, flmlfr .room. 2 mltn froril
2001 lhora •,

Cllony

Ioiii
...
1• • , 111. 1M · - 1-10 ..... 114417·
0411
lid, h 1 - 011, 114.
~t
1117 Clw«IIT1 z.at. P8, PI, ••

55

;:....";: w.-....=-_.

1111

lwllil•1

Antiquohoi. bod
' -2 . .
0U.
llhulil
......

oftor lpow.l14-2!1-fr2tl.

«J) 21 Jump
loki II
controntacl by a distraught
stud4int. (RI Stereo. Q ·

KE-Y,
10 Rlr
UP A MUL.l\·MWaJ OOl.l.AA.
MWJMWr 10 mt mr cr

·- . 11.-IIM..:J.a':' ,!.'! .Auliomotlo. PI, PI, . . - .

II

_..

mau a ottw, o.n.t

Sbr
I1IW -CIFJMit, ..IZ3I/mO.

Apanment
tor Rent

Elizabeth challangH her

--

d,lrlrll:twllldlr11... 4

t-Ic-·
tN

114-44jl-7471.

44

seas. (R)D
ec Mlolor Dacl

1111

Scrvrces

Tlrwtl ol _ . , . - thot-

* • a••

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Examine 1111 amizlng
tormltlon ol the Atlantic

In truok oompo•
...... 4.PIO.It .......7401. .,

1100. -

I Goo 11onge'o, _... to· liB;
nlohod, lootitod 1 mite olf lit. fll lloo. - . . . •••: 4 t11lo ltB; 4 ,.. dry'o
echool, matt Rt.
10 . , . , . - .....
2 or 3 bod.-, _ ,
IIIlO; 10 -'1
redacarjated', Nloe, on Lincoln

~·....:J..

-.nn:

2Dlr40

_ , . . pool

-Rata••-..........
" " -Old
......

• bl droom houM, :t ...... tram

I ,• 111 c;ll!Ji)'l'
,\_I' /1 )jf1( k

CUt-.

a e

PI, PI, AIM=II OMIIIII, ,_,
cloiNot....... - · 11,100. 114-

._., at~ prdEI'II, . . .
114-4-,.
Alto Cl I ,,. WD ~. W11

2bod _ _ _ _ .....

Nfrtg.,- &amp; 4-, I.e. Coli

nlng,

1112 011111 -

~

32 Mobile Homn
forSIIe

114-741:2141orl14-7

w-·•·

- · 30U11o

Ford Plttto, ...,.

and Mlchaellhrow a aecret
party .for the JudQe. Q
0
Cl)aalliara
w..... .,_..1 Barbara haa
convaraatlona wilh Warren
Beatty, CheVy ChaM and
Arnold Schwarzenegger. Q
ClJ (f) Atlantic 1111rm

campers&amp;
MotOi'HomH ·

aoocl. 79

1400.
11414• or -

-

Htlghttl. l141131'11

10x10 two budrwm

or-

1•

!!!!!"!.
Dnt-n11.

zas.
;;;;~__,;,.____ I ......

_
... 112 4IJt St. -.CoiH14MBI14.

oomlorl: Wood

cook "'""!&gt; good oond, $2111 •

.
8 My Two Dllde Joey

•

41 HOU181 for Rent

_ . . _In_, =.

t17,000. -727-1010.

(2:001

risks detentiOn.·~L9

0

....... , -...- l n ........
314
·- lal. Cly - .
11~41-11116.

Ill Night Court
. 7;31 Ill NIA 8aaketball
8:00 (IJ MOYIE: 1'11r ltrlleo Out

e (J)

hi

114-112-

e !121 • :leOplnlrl Q '
IIIJCnllallle
«ll M'A'I'H

59

..................... 'I Col
24 tn: 1-IDM4Hitl

Rentals

·"-'OJ·

eCIJ MMie'l P'amly

Eor oom 12.11. 1 - · Clff

chllg hiT ln-.
In - be · oand,
......
$3ti.104-111-42Sl'.

8upor
.IMJ.._ .......
filltll,

Pan-

to4-171-a11••=•..-.
Sole..,
SUII dhMion, 3br, 1 111 ....._

1:10-UD ""' fltm, 1'4.1 to N&amp;

e

-lNG tiaol.a l'l1a 11x11' DOOL li ct t r cladll.
loft-·--~
Hull
..............'t! ........

Wontod: Prvtllr!Y In Ollllo or
llolgl CountY wfth 11M noturol
goo- 114-441-7218. .

=a~·

T:JOe!Jl ,..~ , _
8 I!IIIMalnmenl Tonight

11W7Ual.

11447-r. •
.Junior-~
... PW. 1·
'IloNa.
Roltlgllotor, " - · liB 4f11!.
bedroom lUIIe. snail· - A
cMn.tl10..,1 11tl-t11

1\oo tralor loto "" bohlnd
Kygor
Cnoli
Hlglt
·
Colt
114-347-4,4011oftor I p.m.

-

Col'ntry homo In Pliny, WI/, ot.
.... both, out liulldlngo,
quito -Iori, City ...... ........- 7 Wlfor,
acrM
llrill,
For
Ownar: p -

,1--·
. . -·-.st.,-

7:0151])~

17

-

borh

....... both,
~....-. CIIJII!Ing. • ow.. laalla rtwr, M~ ... 10 IP"

....

58

.

-...,......Rood.
homo
-Rlnl
·
poVod~--......
llano.
75,Aet. No ........
-tlaltoralpfMel.
'
~. 2.1 mlloo, Rt. 2,
Hickory eMpel Rd.. ...,
IVIIIalilo, 114-.ez74 er m4.
1
O.J . White Ad., 2 acrea •a a !ltd
building lito (raotrlclocll. Rlody
to bulkf on. l14-2411111i.
'•

-

--~·

Crtaot 111 volt
-·
loma•-11~112.

no..-.=•6-nc•

IW(d.lt4-:ll.

Wanted
Sbr1 IOII!&gt;h .. 2 Ioiii -lfOI'ItiO

a

tlpollo,

Real Estate

I rOom llftd bath. FIAI lllllrMilt
oncl - . roul ond wtndaw!t.!"*tw rem clltltd Aaldng
lull limo. SZI,UUO.
Cd 114 113 IDOl. ·

P...Uon r.qul,. • pi-nt
_ . . wfth ......nt typing
lldltl and . eaou-. m
1•
liking oblittr. - I high

11ent: "2 trailer lola,
locltloM, Our~ CrMk Rd.
OaiiiDofle Oh, 11t ... 8411,
114-1411111.
For Sill In Ylltogo 01\lln.. Lo4;

k.-, For . . . . . .,
tnd NOT to •nd rnDMY
through tho moll until yOU hovo .
mlneNI l'ldltl1
ln-tlgltod t._ allorlng.
- - ......... yOU

Sell Avonl Own 11M, _., to
trfende and rlltlttvM, fund
,.._. N.OO cen got JOU .,.,.
tod111MII·7110.

...

,_:neq_,e

I lie and-floor

LEASE: 1Wo

Dlpqell

a5 Lots &amp; Acruge

21

Poolol 'Jobl, Stort at $11.41/llr.
For n1111 &amp; tiNIIJcatlon Info. c.ll
. 7 dlyo 11.m.:10p.m. 141WI7·
2111, ElCl101.

CD (!) MacNeil Lelver
NawaHour •
.
WIIMI Of

lior L.ea11
Utt1llrnollod
- · .....
and illlltfl!ator.
No S
,,..t..

POSTAL SERVICE :lobo. Sllary
to MSK. Nat-. Entry lovol

............. Coli (1) - 7 -

'

-ns.

......., oftor ochoof. IJroiHno
onlc:me. 11 • Ut 1224.

FOR

aa•-u

• • elll CurNnt Affair

Seta, eftonlebl•, chlldcarw. M-F

1

-

w ean•a•

h~

........ 1:30 ....... Agee 2'-"·10.

DomlnD'• PIZza, ..................

W

Mih~Ua..l

UTinN'Lm
I' I, IOW?J.I-

m. . . .

85 GIMI'III Haulng
J.R...

Rail I a 1

.... Good' ..... Ex·
.....,nd.l14ft21UI.

iiERNJCE

~

... ,.ca....,,

""' rdiiUJ-1.100 or

?'

Mtllnll!r'-dorer

...f.na -. -.J1W41 1J

j

••

or t•

My thanks go to a faithful reader
Welt 'l'el!aa for tQ!Iay's deal.
11:
became quite enamored of b~
band after North bad bid two clubs and ·
then aupporled bearll, so be wu off to
the riiCes, finally settling in sl:r bearll.
When tbe dummy appeared, declarer ·
lulew he needed some luck.·He ducked
tbe openina lead and happily won
Eul's 10 with bls queen. The ace of
hearts now broupt the queen from
Eut. U that were a true card, it
seemed Ukely !hat declarer would
have to loee a trump trick and a spade
Irick for down one. But U wouldn't
burt to play the band out.
He led tbe jack of clubs, playing low
from dummy, and thet) led a club to
nilie and caabed the ace of
clubt,
a spade. Then came
ace of
and a diamond ruff,
followed by ace of spades and a spade
to dummy's king. Declarer now played
~ anoth4!1' diamond. Well had followed
the -en and tbe jack oo earlier
djamopcl plays. So declarer decided
thal Welt waa left with the lt:lng. He

--

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

tQIOU32

+to s
SOOTH
.A864
.AKJI5

t4

+QJI

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Welt
Pasa

Nor.-

z+

s•

Pass
· Pass s•
Pass It
All pass

Opening lead: • 2

dlllcarded bis lui spade, and Weifhiail
to win the king and lead away from the
10 of hearts to give South bis slam.
Very nice, faithful West Texu read,
er, but wouldn't It have been just 111
eaay lo trump the third diamond t&lt;
make 12 tricks that way?

CROSSWORD
by lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Cascade
1 Fright
(Seal.)
4 Snake
43 Sty
7llnen
DOWN
yarn
t Put on
source
guard
8 Betray
2 Event
10 Clear·
of 18t2
.witted
3 Citation
11 Trousers
4 Colorado
Yeeterday'e Answer
leature
resort
13 Sailor
5 Salt
22 Erupt
30 Hood or
14 Fluidity
(Fr.)
23 Country'
Good·
unit
6 Gtatilied
star
leilow
16 I love
7 Pastry
24 Ver·
31 Unimagi,
(Lat:)
9 Layer
batim
native
17 Board
10 Dined
25 Femme
32 Israeli
, a sleeper 12 Complete
latale
airport
19 Repose
15 Hasten
27 Beverage 37 Black
20 Expert
18 VItuperate 29 Cagney's
cuckoo
21 Russian 21 Church
Oscar
39Cato's
river .
season.
role
"hail"
~~22 Bowler's
:--tT"'"'nheadache
25 Hero's
memento
26 Bucket
27 Color
28 Table
scrap
29 Middle
33 Colorado
Indian
34 Cereal
plant
35 Gold
(Sp.)
36 Jewish
scriplures
38 Fanalical
40 Zola
heroine
41 Rapacious
DAILY CR YPTOQUOI 1!21- Here's how to work It:

-

•

F0 D VQQ H0 k P0 K N .PS VK

NAUVP

IHALD

liW

VAP

~

FH

. - ..

~~

.Q

tKJ7
+K652

ll~::::,

YOWU,

...

1I:GO (IJ MIMI: ......... Out

i

EAST
+ .Q 10 92

WEST

+JS
•toesz

By JatDet Jacoby

· VYY

,

S.Zioll

•• 74
IUS
+At 74

Making six
the hard way

Y· U 0 0

11611 ........... - . ....

.......

NORTH
+K7 3

BRIDGE

dar

...........

,

••

One letter slallds for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the lenph and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each
the code letters ere different.
'
CRYPTOQOOTE
S·l6

BEPJ!: OSOL

~

Welle. F1 EE I Rill I l'lllee.
~~

17 MIICiflaiiiOUI

wanted io Do

Engine- Quilt- Unarm - Native- EATING ·

A mother of three te!!riage boys commented that
mealtime at ner house was when the kids s~ down to
continue EATING.

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

lor
Mnd,
n
Iiiii,
-N,
·,
-.
1.
'
PabloiB ............ 1000.
.... l'llolo,lil. . . . l

my Good' ..... Ex·
,.....nil. '"412 1111

18

SCIAM LETS ANSWEIS

i(J)PMMegulna

Mloo Pouto'o Day co.. eontor.

Ftnanctal

III I

7 : 0 0 ( I J - l Mra. King

Partable S.W MUI, Molllll - . lor - · 1011110
-AI-_ , houl logo lo • mm , _ Moon. 11' - , •••
,C I I t - a:GO p.m.,
call, we'll come to you! 304-17111111,111-WV.
11117.

twlp.m.

.

combina tnlertalnmeM trivia
wilh lhe luck of the draw.
tt.ngln' In
1:31 Ill Andy Glllftill

- t o r.......
.........
.orting
. ,- _ _
Clllllo
Holot.ll4o4....aa.

~uoled

chuckle
by till ing In . the missing words
L .....J.L.....J.L.....J.-..1.........1.--1.
you develop lrom step N_o. 3 below .

e

Will houl lruh,
l~nk or ottw ui'IW'anled itefM,
.1448&amp;+t21 .
.

Co~plele .the

(J)

Rooms

01D,._

Y;...l.......;l Q

~~:I!N-Q
~-·C::::.'1. a
I8 «llTop,
'"""''
Compariy
c.d Contes-

... 8185

oncl

IIMinlonnOtiOMI,_tnor,

~ Nlghlly ,....

Ia

i .-riY,_,;
.

1:06 Ill . . ...., lllllllllllel
(J) •

TRUET

r ~~-~T,r,~...;.Arl

·

e~1na...g.

···m

I

"A bad habit; scolded my
........._..____,_..._.....--' ": mom,"if not resisted, witt soon
...-~:-::----.......;"', become a ., .... ,...•

illite-Man

32 Mobile Homes
for Bile

cllvldul'- with dllabl .... 5n -.&gt;

011

11J World'toay

lllt''l•'''
1 1
' le /)l I

I I I' I

I1---.1.:.....::;,1',..:..,;1';..:.1,.....-1 !

eroaton.

ieollaalllng
llelllllow Q
,.,.., Clllfllth • ·

,.,., 1',111

- . ....&gt;.

long."

tual jobe. lnt'""illent !WI lima

c.rtot.. !lt., ,.......

Plrk IS marked by

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

,.tumocl to: The Mldd-

I

South
Dakota'• Badlands Nalional

1

&amp;..;.._,_
______
r

plicOI"=...:;o:.noe~ u~ ,_1_s_w_._n_tecl--t.,;.o_Do.,;__
lhe Ylllogo Hill oncl ohoufd be ,-

'

'

75 Boata • Motors
fof Slle

H~LP WANlED: . Allllllcollono
... bolng occoplod . lor the

14

c lpofla

•

(l) Wid -

tt'',"'
,,,J(,,,,,

- I n 1opL-. o r t - .

pota,IOM7So14GG.

lri-

port timo omptor_,:
ochod- ..,.ultwd.
u..- t.v• Vlllld Ohio *lnr'•
1 - l l l d IMOrabllltf. - b e
oblo to . , - traMponotlon
nitty, Send ,...,..,. to:
Job Coooh, P.O. Boo 307, ISIO

I

M O.C C 1

Amerklll

---.--.·

ox·
8erid rwume to P.O.
llox 72111 P"""'"'Y·

D11L
Job 001at. needed to train 1....

(J)

~

.

And
&lt;llllll

eo
e
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low 10 form four ~lllf)lo -dt.

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Miffor. ~ booOd on

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DICKENS

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10-'l't. [Wy Sadiuel

M~. March

Pomeloy-Midclapcrt. Ohio

26. 1990

--Area deaths-- Temperatures below nor1'-al across Ohio
Ernest
Vineyard

Also surviving are tour broth·
ers, Donald. Charles, Danny and
Raymond, Hartung, all of Akron;
Ernest Dale Vineyard of Tal·
madge, formerly of Meigs
a . sil ter, Vena Marcinko, Cbes·
County, died Sunday morning at . ter, and her mother-in-law
his home.
Florence McGrath, Albany.
'
He is survived by three sisters
Bel;ides her father, she was
and a brother, along with several
Preceded In death by her husband, Tommy McGrath, Sr., in
nieces and nephews. Meigs
County survivors include a 1981, an Infant son, and an infant
grandson.
sister-In-law, Mrs. Hobart (May)
Funeral services will be held
Vineyard, R. D. Reedsville;
nephews, Ernest &lt;Bud) Vine- Tuesday at 11 a .m. at the New
yard, R.. D. Reedsville; Ernest Lite Covenant Church or God,
(Les) Damewood, Syracuse, nie- Chester. Pastor Gary Hines will
be In
ces, Mary Frances Vineyard. R. . offiCiate and burial
Meigs
Memo
ray
..
Gardens.
D. Reedsville, and Mrs. Eileen D.
Smith. Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral services will be held at Funeral Home, Monday, 4: 30 to 9
11 a.m Wednesday at Talmadge p.m.
with burial there.

will

Denford Douglas

Bret Rood

•

Coy

Clear Monday night, with a low
between 20 and 25. Sunny Tuesday, with highs near 50.
·
Exlended Forecast
Wednesday thr0,111h Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday , wltn a chance of rain on
Friday. Highs will be range {rom

36,000 more. than in the second- jobs, followed by wholesale trade
largest sector, manufacturing at at 3 percent or 8,000 jobs and
1.123 million.
construction at 2.8 percent or
Besides the auto industry, 5,000 jobs.
significant improvement .In tbe
Other Industries with l!bovegoocls-produclng industry sec· average growth rates were servi•
tors Included 4,000 inore jobs in ces, up 2.6 percent~ and finance,
fabricated metal products, 2,000 Insurance and real estate, admore In construction and 1,000 vanclng 2.3 percent.
Manufacturing employment,
more In prbnary metals.
Smaller gains lD the service- at 1.123 million last month, was
producing industry sector came 5,000 below the year-ago level.
In government, and finance, Since February 1988, employ·
insurance and real estate.
ment has fallen by 9,000 jobs
Ohio h!!S added 93,000 payroll among producers of durable
jobs since February oflast year. goods.
Non-farm employment has risen
Declines were reported in
1.9 percent, from 4.796 million tn primary metal Industries, fabrl·
February 1989 to 4.889 million cated metal products, transpor·
last month.
tat ion equipment, atone, clay and
Service-producing Industries glassware and electronic and
added 93,000 jobs during the other electric ~ulpment.
period.
.
Retan trade had tbe fastest
.1\8
growth rate, 3.8 percent or 34,000
DallY stock prices
(A8 or 11:11 a.m.)
B17ee and M11rk Smltll
of Blunt, Ellll 6 Loewl
Veii!I'&amp;DI Memorial
saturday admissions - Iva P .
Am Electric Power .............30\!t
·
Rayburn, Chester,
S&amp;turday discharges - Henry AT&amp;T ..................... ........ , .. 41%
. AlbJ.ancl Oil ..•.... ..•.• ...•.•.•.•••. 36
Carsey, Shirley Roush.
Bob Evans ........................... 13
Sunday admissions - None.
Chartnlni
Sboppes ......... ...... 9%
Sunday discharges - None.
City Holdina Co.............. ;.... 13
Federal Mogul.. ..................l8%
of
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................37%

Stoc•--

the low 40s to the mid 50s
Wednesday, and from the low 50s
to the low 60s Thursday and
Friday. Overnight lows will
range from the mid 20s to the mid
30s early Wednesday, mainly In
the 30s Thursday morning and
between 35 and 45 early Friday.

Squads have 17 calls·

.

morning.
The cold front was expected to
make Its way to the Gul1 Coast by

Tuesday and, as . It does, the
Dakotas high should build into
the Ohio Valley.

Pkk-4
Low -toal111t .. mid
htcreaslng cloud1Df!88
nesday. High Wednetclay ne.,
60. Chance of rain 40 percent. '

/

.

Vo1.40•. No.224
CoPVrlgh ..d 1990

WEATHER MAP - Cool and dry air will cover the Northeast
with mainly 1\IDny condiHons although a few motDitalnDurr[es are
Ukely. A band of rain and ral,.bowers will occur alo.._li stationary
front exlendlag &amp;ClrOB&amp; Florida Into .t he Gulf, with IICallered
showera expected· in the ,Central Slates. Unstable air . over the
Southern Rockies . will trigger some afternoon· rain · and
ral•howers while the West and Northwest \¥111 be dominated by
high pressure and fair conditions.

Arson suspect...

Continued from page l

from · the club. Many of the his sleep, made admissions and
victims were related.
· · wept; said Lt. Raymond O'Don·
Gonzalez,' who was picked up nell, a pollee spokesman.
Sunday afternoon at his 5-by-10"Baslcally, -he's saying he did
root rooming house apartment by It," ()'Donnell said. "He Is
a pollee lieutenant and two remorseful. He h~s been crydetectives who roused hbn from Ing."

goes along-way

No one big winner in the Super Lotto
CLEVE~ND ( UPi) - No big

But 105 of thenl had five of the
numbers for $1,000 while another
5,059 had four of the numbers for
$75.
.
.
The Kicker portion of the game
produced the number 865153.
Lottery otflclals said there was
one ticket with that number
worth $100,000, and It was pur:
chased In Minster.
Six or the $659,263 worth of
tickets had the first five of those
numbers for $5,000; 67 had the
first four for $1,000; 605 had the
first three for $100, and 5,970 had
the first two for $10.

winner In Saturday night's Super
Lotto drawing raised the jackpot
for Wednesday night's game to at
least~ million.
Ohio Lottery officials· said
Sunday none of the $3,545,637
worth or tickets had the numbers
1, 7, 23, 29. 40 and 43.

In Sunday's report ofthe Meigs
County Sherl1rs Department It
was stated that Anna Scarberry,
Racine, reported that she disco·
vered her trash cans had been
shot several times with a 22
callbur gun.
Tbe sheriffs report should
have stated that the trash cans
were located at the Route 33
roadside park. not at the Scar·
berry residence.

Lieense issued
A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
Mathew Todd Cummings, 22, and
Ginger Marie Hayman, 20, both
of Charlotte .Harbor, Fla.

---Meigs announcements
The Syracqse Vlllage Council

·•aaoo-..........
The CRX HF ~the dis-

&lt;bws. And body-a,lloR:d bumpets.

The kM; wide S!aOO: makes the .
5? JWUghway," it's one !X the ioo:OOr~ and invi ·
highest maca,: 4-cylindcrcar.; in Ill fact, it\; line
~
America. Fuefinjc:ction gM:s it rno-scatas on the road
1:11i11i pickup. And theR:'s a 4-whcd
The CRX HF. The
1a11:c in srylc. AI: 49 llft'cil)' and

~ wStbone ~fur a
smooch ride.
.
)0011 take pleasure in the sk:ck,

aerodyl)arnk:~.l..;uj.,&gt;cwin·

nc:YCr5CCIJ\ roc:nd.

HONDA

TI1eCRX HF

J~THE HAPPY HONDA

.AIIt~n:J

PEOPLE"

HONDA.

C~r6

IIOLITATKII&amp;&amp;I,ATHDII,OHIU a111U

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 27, 1990

26 Cente ,

A Multimedia Inc. Nawip•per

Hobson .area annexation gets final approval
. By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
, , Sentinel News ~taff
Final approval on the annexa·
tlo~ of the Hobson area Into
Middleport . Vlilag~ has been
received from s_ecretary of State
Sherrod Brown s office opening
the way lor development
planning.
That announcement was made
by . Mayor Fred Hoffman at &lt;
Monday night's meeting of Mid·
dleport VIllage Council when he
· presented the annexation docu·

ments from the Secretary of
State to Cquncll.
The. area exte,nds from the .
present corporation limits to
Story's Run Road and Includes
th~ land extending from State
Route 7 to the Ohio River bank.
The final approval culminates
years of work by Middleport
VIllage Council to bring that area
Into the corporation limits since
it Is considered prime develop·
ment land.
MayorHoffmanal so presented

at the meeting a preliminary
s!udy and ilroposal from Floyd
G. Browne and Associates, eng!·
neerlng fltm, on water and
sewage ser·vice to that area.
Council will study the proposal
before any further action Is
taken; it was decided. Getting
services into the area is the first
step· toward any development
projects or funding proposals, It
was noted.
It was also . reported that
beginning today some pollee

'

protection will be provided there. with the Ohio Department of
Tl)e mayor also advised Coun·
Developmen) and they ha:ve
ell that the village have been . suggested t.he village submit an
tur.ned. down for emergency
application for funding to , Ihat
funding through State Issue 2 agency. Council authorized the
funds for the river bank eroSion.. mayor to pr&lt;;)Ceed with that
problem near the sew age lagoons
applpcation. It was noted by
In that newly annexed area.
Hoffman that turn-around time
The village had hoped to secure on loans through Ihe ODD are
the local share of $242,000 of the usually fast , about 30 days in
Iota! project cost of $742,000 set
many cases.
by the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
In conjunction with the meet However, Mayor Hoffman did
lng the required public hearing
advise that he has been in touch was held on CommunityhDevel-

opment Block Grant Funds.
Applying for compreh ens ive
housing fund s is being ~onsl:
dered by the vil lage
Soild Waste Re~olullon
Discussed at length was the
work of the multi-co unty Solid
Waste Management District . It
was announced tha t toni ght a
meeting will be held al the
Wilkesville School with members
of the consulting firm to be
present to brief the board. The
Continued on page 10

Maintenance of Rt. 124 at
Long Bottom constant problem

Portland and Long ·Bottom, ac· By NANCY YOACHAM
Proffitt is pleased thai the
cording to Proffitl. Tons of fill
Sentinel News Staff
difficult two-weeks of repair
Some problems just don't get material have bee n dumped
work was carried out by maintebetter, and don't go away , no along different sections of the · nance crews out of Meigs Coun. matter what you do to solve road, and patching Is almost a
ty's QWn ODOT divis ion. thereby
them. One such recurring prob- weekly need, he says, bul fill and
eliminating the need for outside
. !em lies along the Ohio River patching don'l las t because the' bidding. Piling for the project'
between Portland and Long road continues to shift. "We'il
came from a n old bri&lt;Jge in
put down hot mix in June qr July,
Bottom. The problem Is called
Morgan Coun ty and ODOT pro•
and then just wait for it to go
State' Route 124.
vlded its own crane wilh pile
·driving hammer.
F.or years, erosion of the river down," he explains . .
But although · erosion of the
bani&lt; beiween Portland and Long
All of this adds up to financial
savings.
Bot.tom has played havoc with river bank is a constant concern
Route 124's pavement. Some . for Proffllt, and basic repairs of
But In addition to the savingsin
stretches of the road are ex- the road are a constant need, he
costs by using ODOT workers
tremely rough and in other Is extremely proud of one job
and machinery, mos t imporplaces, the guardrail looks like a along Route 124 which was just
tantly, says Profflll. the road
winding snake, although, assures recently completed by local
never had to be closed to traHic
James Proffitt, Meigs County oooh ·)yees.
while the repairs were made.
About the end of January . a
supermtendent for ·the Ohio DeProffill reels that most area
partment of 'fransportatlon, the section of river bank beside the
resident s who travel Route 124
guardrail was Ins tailed . In a ro'!d just dropped off, p•·actlcally
bet ween Portland a nd ·Long
stralgl)t.'llne. ..
' ·,
ovemlght. Engineers out of • -Bonoin 'o,n a .' regular basis,
ODOT's engineers are defi- ODOT' District 10 office at . understa nd· a nd have leanied 10
nitely aware · of the problems Martella began Immediately to
live ,- with the road's problems. ·
·between . Portland and Long develop plans for needed repairs
However . with plans In the works
Bottom, but beliig aware of the and shoring up of the bank and
by the Ohio Depa rtme nt of
. '
problems and coming up with a road.'
Natural Resources to construct
near
road· feasible plan to alleviate probPLEASED WITH OUTCOME - James Prol·
The plans resulted In the
an Ohio River boat launching
caved In practically overnight. Resulting repair
· fltt, Melp County 'superintendent for the Ohio
lems associated with erosion are installation or piling along a
facility along Route 124 ad ji!Cent
w.o rk was carried out hy local ODOT crews.
Department of Transportation, Is pleased with
lengthy stretch of the road, wilh
two different t~ings . Until a
to Forked Run State Park
this recently completed project along Stale Route
workable plan can be designed, each column of piling five feet
Proffitt ariticipales thai tourisi
apart and 35 feet deep. Top pieces
· Proffitt continues to send maintetraffic on Ro.ut e 124 Is going to
were
welded
onto
each
column
nance crews to Route 124 to · 'trv
increase. If, along with increased
to keep the road passable. That;s fused together to form one
traffic. comes the need for an
continuous piece along thE! bed of increase in maintenance of the ·
about all we can do," he says.
road, then Proffitt gives assuAbout 35 percent of total time the road. Fill material was
'
.
rance· that as always, Meigs
spent by local ODOT crews in brought in and now Proffitt is
malnfalnlng state highways in waiting for the highway to settle County's ODOT crews will meet
Meigs County is spent between before reln&amp;talllng guard rail the. need as best they can.
along the repaired section.
Marijuana eradication efforts defendant was convicted by a this amount will also be forfeited.
in 1989 were, In the opinion or jury and is awaiting sentencing
Monies and properties forte·
in Meigs Common Pleas Court.
Meigs ,; Prosecu tlng Attorney
ited to Ihe State ultimately end up
Stev.en L. Story, "a .great sue- ·
The recommendation of the In the Law Enforcement Trust
cess." As a result of the efforts or
prosecutor's office for each de· Fund, Story explains. This Is a
the State of Ohio. the Attorney
fendarit In these cases has been a fund authorized by law and
General's office, the Bureau •of" one-year determinate prison previously set up by the Meigs
Crbnlnal Investigation and !den·
sentence, which has been lm· County Commissioners. Funds
· tlflcation, Ihe Ohio National
posed in each case by Common placed in the Law Enforcement
Guard, the · Meigs .County ShePleas J~dge Fred W. Crow III.
Trust Fund are utilized to further
riff's Department and th.e Meigs
Also as a result of the combined other drug and complex criminal
County Prosecuting Attorney's
efforts, the prosecutor's office I nves ligations.
office, "over 8.000 marijuana
The advantage to this fund is
has sought and succeeded in
plants were seized," Story
forfeiting 125 acres of real estale that the "crlmlnals themselves
reports. :.
·
which Is in the process of being fund the law enforcement efforts
As • a direct result of these
sold. The State has additionally to catch and punish Other crlml·
combined efforts, Story reports
obtained $4,000 in lieu of forfel· nals, "Story says. ''The taxpayer
that 11 people have been Indicted
ture. In the case now pending, pays nothing for these forfeitures
and all but two have pleaded
approximately $10,000 In cash but receives the benefit ofa more
guilty tocultlvatlon charges. One
has been seized and Is awaiting efficient and better financed
case Is pending and the other . dlsposlllon. Story anticipates apprehension and prosecution of
crlm Inals," he adds.
"Forfeiture hits many crbnl·
nals a second blow," says Story.
" First, there is the very real
threat of prison if you .are
Roule 124 between Portland and Long Bottom In
ROUGH RQAD - This sip Is a warntn1 lo
suc.cessfully prosecuted for cult I·
Melp County.
molorllta to exercise caution uthey travel Stale
vatlon of marijuana or selling
Two Syracuse residents were Injured in a car-truck crash
dr·ugs,ln
Meigs
County.
Addition·
Sunday at 2:40p.m. on U.S. 33, abouthalfa 'mUewestofmlleP&lt;ist
ally, this office will take your
11; according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the Stat~ Highway
Patrol.
·
·
property if we catch you gtowlng
William R. 'Hayes, 39, and his passenger, Patricia A. Stanley ,
or selling drugs," he states
19, were taken ·by the Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial
adamantly.
when he donned a blue Hillard
you know that the job market Is
HILLIARD, Ohio CUP!) "Wildcats" T-shlrt presented by
Story believes the eradication
Hospltah Hayes and Stan ley were treated and released for neck
good
here?'
'
he
asked.
Republican gubernatorial candl·
Dina
Minton, student council
efforts, and the prosecutions and
strain.
Receiving no audible response,
date George Volnovich attemppresident.
forfeitures which have followed,
Hayes, driving a 1984 Dodge Daytona, was headingeastwhen
ted Monday to lure the votes of the candidate pointed out that
. have made a very substantial
a 1988 Dodge Ram pickup driven by Danny L. Smith, 35, or
Michael DeWlne, the candl·
some high school students by Franklin County Is one of only six
date
for lieutenant governor,
Circleville. rear-ended Hayes' car as Hayes stopped to turn left.
dent In the drug problem in Meigs
promising them reasonable col· In Ohio with an unemployment
stirred
the audience when he
County.
Smith was cited for not maintaining assured clear distance.
lege tuition rates and available rate below the national average.
revealed that he has three
'''No longer will this p~ce
In · the background was a
jobs when they graduate ..
(Meigs j;:ounty) be regarded as a
children
1!1 College, one In high
spacial
Republican
banner
pro·
Volnovich led the GOP stateschool
safe haven fOr cultivation and
and
two In grade school.
claiming
the
party
for
"Leader·
wide ti.c ket on a barnstorming
trafficking In marijuana and
"You
know
I believe that
A "very small" roof fall occurred Monday' morning at
ship,
Jobs,
Integrity
and'
bus tol!l' of western and central
other
drugs.
I
am
hopetui
that
the
education
has
to
be the priority
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Mine No. 31, said Terry
,
Ohio In an attempt to create lome Change.'' ..•
·
dubious
repu~tlon
that
we
have
for
·
the
next
governor/'
he said.
Trlmper, publiC relatlonll spokesman for the coal company.
"The Issue In this campaign Is
visibility and ln~rest In a prim·
"When
George
Voinovlch
Is
earned
lns~e
circles
for
being
a
· Trlmper expres~d concern this morning that the Incident may
ary campaign where none of the good government," Volnovlch
marijuana
growing
capital
will
governor,
George
Volnovich
will
have been rumored to be more than it was, and gave assurances
told the students. "It's not a
candidates baa opposition.
disappear quickly. Ill fact, our
be the education governor."
that the filii was jue.t minor.Republican way or a Democratic
"We've got to keep the tuition
"This Is not an ordinary
informants
!'!!port
that
many
pot
No employees were · working In the area where the fall
dowtl so you. can eo on to way of doing things. There Is a
growers who have succeeded In conege," Volnovich told about right way and a wrong way, and
election," said Robert Taft !I, the
occurred she . explained, although some employees were
growing in the put ha.V'e now 300 juniors and ·seniors at an
candidate for secretary of state.
· transferred from their regu Jar working areas to clean up the
we want to do It the right way."
moved out of county to carry on aaaembly at Hilliard High Scbool
"This election Is going to deter·
debris. The area has already been cleared, she added.
,,
Votnovlch boasted that the
I
.
their trade," Story reporls. "It is In ·s uburban Columbus. "We
mine
the political complexion or
Republican tlc!tet has "expemy advice that they give It up or want to make sure the tuition you
thla
state
for 10 years."·
rience and ·vision to provide
stay out of the collllty. If cau.ht pay 18 reasonable.
Taft
urged
the students to
'
.
. leadership" In education, clean''lake
a
part
in
shaping your
here,
they
Will
face
a
fate
similar
lug the environment, and fight·
•'We want to create the jobs our
Many Pomeroy homes on Lincoln Hill were wlt~out water for
to thoae who have atready been young people ~eed to remain In
future
.
Register
and
vote 111 tbe
log drugs and crbne."
. ~ontlnued on page i()
apprehended."
Contlnuet\,on pqe 10
He received the best reaction
Ohio, l ' added Volnovich. "Did

s

Meigs County prosecutor issues
statement on eradication .efforts

Local news briefs-:-----:......

wlll meet tonight (Monday) at 7
p.m. at the village hall.

Two' hurt in car-truck crash

ERKLI.NE

GOP candidates tour state for
votes
.

· NEW Sllplllfn OF IEIIUNE IECU.IS
Wall-away llcUne;a, ltodc·O·loungers,
Swivel Rocbr-ltecllnen, Swlvttl Rodcers
You'l i~ the .gr•t new fibrlce In an array of
. colora. a.kllne !pnlture IJ!!c.dalnduetry Qualhy
Standarda, 10 you can buy ,w hh confldance.

Key Centurion ....... , ............14%

A change of venue bas been l.anda' End ......................... 18~
granted in the Metgs Common Llmlled lnc........................41%

~tltNoK't

Pleas Court cue of Hobart A. MultJJDedla lnc.................... 79
Barlt:el', et a!, agalut Howard Ru Reltauranta .................. 2%
Frank, sheriff. Metgs County, Robbbll&amp; Myers ............... ,15~
Oblo, et Dl. The cue baa been Sholley'a I.Jic:•••••••••••••••••••••••121
tr&amp;Diferred to Gallla County for Star Baalt: ............................ 19
trial .
WMCI)'•a Int'l .......................
The cue or Wayne
Wllaou Wo111alltlkJD Ind.................~1 ~
agalut Souiheru Oblo Coal Com(ATilT ... 8&amp;ar Bank are a
pany, et al, baa been dlamllaed. diYI.... IohJ)
.I

377
1347

'

Alittle fun

Heck'a ....·... ,,,;, ..... ·•·· ·~ · ........ 3~

s.

Daily Number

•

Six killed on Ohio
roads over weekend

Chan8e

•

••

Page 4 :

Hospital news

venue81'8ftted

seheduled
Wednesday

N4TIONAL WI!ATHIA ,OAICAST TO 1 AM EST 3-27-10

Seventeen calls for help were . port went to County Road. 5 for
answered over the weekend by Freda Clark to Veterans Memor·
unlls or the Meigs Emergency lal Hospital.
Medical Services. Eight of the
Rutland at 10: 27 a.m. went to
calls were on Saturday and nine Salem St. for· Lena Carpenter to
on Sunday.
Holzer Medical Center.
Saturday at 7: 22 a.m., Pome.
'
.Middleport was called at 1P: 53
roy was called to Condor St. for a.m. to Third St. for Katherine
By Unlled Press Int.:rnatlonal
County. ·
Tabitha Watson who was taken to Knight to Holzer Medical Center.
Six
people
died
in
accidents
on
Batavia: Chris E. Babey, 15,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 2: 47 p.m. transOhio
roadways
during
!he
weeWilliamsburg,
In a three-car
Tuppers Plains wen.t to Scout ported Patricia Stanley and Bill
kend,
the
State
Highway
Patrol
on
Ohio
133
II\ Clermont
pileup
Camp Road at 9:31 a.m. for Hayes from an au to accident on
reported
Monday.
·
.
County.
Millie McGrath to Veterans Route 33 to Veterans Memorial
A patrol count showed four
Sunday
Memorial Hospital.
Hospital.
Sunday
and
two
sa·
t
urday.
deaths
Brei
A. Rood. 18,
Athens:
At 11:26 a.m., ' Syracuse· was
Charles Spencer at 4: 18 p.m.
One
of
the
victims
died
In
a
Reedsville,
when
his
car went off
called to Durst Ridge for Mar- was treated at the scene of an
crash
'
and
another
motorcycle
U.S.
50
in
Athens
County
and hit
garet Holter who was taken to auto accident at the corner of Art
was
killed
ina
car-train
collision.
an embankment.
Holzer Medical Center. ·
Lewis St. and Hartinger
The
patrol
counts
fatalities
Warren: Steven M. Wolfe, 22,
Tuppers Plains was called to Parkway.
resulting
from
accidents
on
the
Newton
Falls, when hi~ car
Route 248 at 12: 31 p.m. for Eva
The Syracuse and Racine units · slate's public roadways each colllded with a train at a
Rayburn who was taken to at 7: 58 p.m. transpo~ted Troy
weekend between 6 p.m. Friday Trumbull County crossing.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
McDaniel and Harvey Whitlatch
and midnight Sunday .Killed- . Columbus: Tracy L. Horn, 23,
At 2: 40 p.m., Racine went to from an auto accident at the
were:
Friday night
Columbus, when his truck hit a
Hoback Road for Clarence Wick- intersection of Third St. and
utility pole at the intersection of
line who was taken to Veterans College Road to Veterans Mem·
None . .
U.S.
33 and Ohio 3151n Columbus.
Memorial ~osplta).
ortal Has pital.
Saturday·
Larry L. Franks,
Mansfield:
· . Middleport at 3:16p.m. trans' Syracuse transported Mark
·Cleveland: William P. Hoover,
33,
Ashland,
when
his motorcycle
ported Cecil Teaford from the Duerr from Short Dusky St. to 34, Garfield Heights, in a two-car
crashed · on a ~lchland County
Overbrook Center to Veterans Pleasant Valley Hospital af 9:02 crash on Ohio 2 in Cuyahoga
road.
Memorial Hospital.
p.m.
Pomeroy was called · at 4:57
Charles McNickle was taken
p.m. toNyeAve. for Bob White to by Racine at 9: 25 p.m. ·from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Route 338 to ·veterans Memorial
At 9:36p.m., Middleport trans· Hospital.
ported Stanley Roush from the
Pomeroy was called at 9:48
OVerbrook Center to Veterans p.m. to the pollee department for
Memorial Hospital.
· Harvey Whitlatch to Veterans
Sunday at 8: 59. a.m., Middle- Memorial Hospital.

Sheriff C)OITedion

Continued from page 1

night, clear skies will be the rule
across much of the slate but
cloud cover and the chance for
flurries will linger in the
northeast.
Lows Monday night are expected to range from the teens In
northern Ohio to the lower 20s in
southern Ohio. Under sunny
skies, highs on Tuesday should
reach the 40s.
A cold front that extended from
Quebec across southern Ontario
to north_ern Illinois brought the
cooler temperatures to Ohio
Monday. High pressure was over
the Dakotas early Monday

Ohio Lottery

------Weather---__;__
South Ceatral Ohio

Denford 0. "Dink" Douglas,
68,
Hili Lane, Racine, died
Bret Allen Rood, 18, Reeds·
ville, died Sunday as a result of Sunday at the Holzer Medical
an auto ~ccldent at the junction Center following an extended
·
of Route 50 and Route 71n Athens illness.
County.
BQrn on Sept. 8, 1921 at Rock
Born May 16, 1971ln Parkers· Castle, W. Va. he was the son of
burg. W.Va., he was the son of the late Harry 0. Douglas and
Jack B. Rood, Tuppers Plains, Ruth Ann Barnhart Douglas. He
ana Charlotte Durst, Reedsville. was a farmer.
He is survived by a brother,
both surviving. He was a 1989
Harry
J. Douglas, and a sister,
graduate of Eastern High School
Dessle
Boggess, both of Racine,
and a student at Hocking Techni·
along
with
several ·nteces akd
cal College. He was an employee
of Kroger's of Athens, and an nephews l~ludlng Eugene Boggess and Linda Roberts, Pomeavid hunter and fisherman.
In addition to his parents, he Is roy. Besides his -parents, he was
survived by a step-mother, VickY preceded In death by two broth·
Rood; a brother, Christopher S. · ers and a sister, along with a
Rood, Tuppers Plains; maternal nephew , Robert Boggess.
Funeral services will be held at
grandparents, Dawaln and
Emma Ours t; paternal grand- 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Flormother, lola Wilson, Reedsville;
a special friend, Mandie Harrjs, ence Smith . will ·officiate and .
. Tuppers Plains; five uncles ana burial will be In the Letart Falls
three aunts.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
He was preceded in death by the funeral home from 2to4and 7
his paternal grandfather, Albert to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Rood.
Services will be held Wednes· William Mitchell
day, 1 p.m. at the White-Blower
Funeral Home In Coolville with
Wllllam Monroe Mitchell, 78, of
ministers, David Prentice and Athens, died Monday morning at
Stephen Reed officiating. Burial O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
will be In the Reedsville following an extended illness.
Cemetery.
Born in Athel)s County, Mr.
Friends may call at the funeral
Mitchell was- a son of the late
home after '7 p.m. on tuesday.
Hat de Mulpas. His adopted par·
ents, also deceased, were thE!iate
Nitz
Florence and Leen Mitchell. He
was a retired coal miner and
Family members have re- un!Qn laboror in Athens County
ceived word of the death of Coy for over 30 years.
Nltz, of Siler City. N.C., who died
Survivors Include his wire,
unexpectedly on saturday. Mr. Allee Mite bell; a daughter, Mrs.
Nltz was a former area resident. Oris (Helen) Hudnell, of Shade;
Funeral arrangements will be two sons, Ernest Mitchell Sr., of
announced by Fogelsong Fun· Pomeroy, and Harold Hudnall, of
eral Home, Mason, w.va:
Albany; six stepdaughters, Mary
Haning, ,Patricia RobinsOn, Kim
Irene McGrath
Ruth, Marilyn Smyers, Jackie
Robinson and Cathy McGee, all
M. Irene McGrath, 63, Pome- of Shade; four stepsons, Larry,
roy Pike, Racine, died ~ll!l'day Wyatt, Roy and Johnny Robin·
at Veterans Memorial Hospital son, all oi $hade; 14 grand·
following an extended Illness.
chllren, several great grand·
She was born on Aug. 6, 1926 in children; 10 step grandchildren;
Chester Township, daughter of and a brother, Jack Mitchell, or
Berneda Tuttle Hartung of Ches· Dayton.
ter and the late Earl Hartung.
In addition to hill paren!s, he
A homemaker, she was a wasprecededlndeathbyblsfirst
member of the New Life Coven· wife, Geraldine, in 1974; two
ant Church of God, Chester.
brothers, Bill and Frank Dis·
In addition to her mother, she hong; and one sister, Florene
is survived by two daughters, Pat Risley.
Services for Mr. Mitchell will
(Ed) Schaekel, Chester, and
'Barbara (Jerry) Hart, Guys- be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
ville; and three sons, Tommy Jr., . Hughes Funeral Home In Atbens.
(Ruth) McGrath, ·and Harold Burial will be In the Alexander
McGrath, Chester, and Ron Cemetery. Friends may call
(Tanowa) McGrath, Alfi'ed, and atbthe funeral home on TUesday
eight grandchildren.
from 7 to 9 p.m.

No_n-ag.,,

.

By United Pr..l•lenuiUoBoth high and low tempera.
tlll'e$ are expected to be about10
degrees cooler than. normal
across Ohio durlilg the f!i-st half
or the week.
Temperatures were expected
to reach the mid 40s in southern
Ohio Monday and the upper 30s In
northern Ohio. Normal highs for
the date range from the mld-40s
In northern Ohio to the mid-50s in
southern Ohio.
The National Weather Service
said as· clouds thicken over
northeasi Ohio, they. will bring a
ch"nce of snow flurries. Monday

NIT fmals

4"

fUIMI . . ., AfPUAICIS, 1Y'S, fLO(MfCOVIMIIII

992-3671
r

/J

. Roof fall at mine said minor

Water
line break' repaired.
.

·-~--...__--:l'--------·~---¥-------~--'4------____,~~----- ~

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