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/

\

Paga-E-11'-sunday Times-Sentinel

.
•

Ohio---Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Glenn Frankel olthe Washington
Post and Bll! Keller of The New
York Times.
Feature writing - David Zuc·
chino ol . the Philadelphia
Inquirer.
'
·
Commentary- Clarence Page
of the Chicago Tribune.
Criticism - Michael Skube of
The News and Observer of
Raleigh, !'I.C.
. Editorial writing - Lois Wille
of the Chicago Tribune.
Editorial cartocinlng - Jack
Qlgglns of tile Chicago Sun·
Times.
Spot news photography - Ron
Olshwanger, a free-lance photographer for the St. Louis Post·
Dispatch.
Feature photography Manny Crisostomo of the Detroit

r

Free Press.·
Fiction - "Bnathlng lA!ssons," by Anne Tyler.
Drama - "The Heidi Chronicles" by Wendy Wasserateln.
History - "Parting the Waters: America In the Kill&amp;' Year1,
1954-63," bji'-Taylor Brarich, aud
"Battlecry of Freedom: The
Civil War Era," by. Jamea M.
McPherson.
Biography - "Oscar Wilde,"
by Richard Ellmann.
·
Poetry -:- "New and Collected
Poems," by Richard Wilbur.
Nonfiction - "A Bright ShinIng Ue: John paul Vann and
America In Vietnam" by Nell
Sheehan.
Music - "Whispers out of
Time" by Roger Reynolds.

Lottery

Spring
....
training
-ends Sunday ·

Pulitzer Prize winners
listed
•
NEW YORK (UPI)- Here are
the 1989 Pulitzer Prize•wlnners:
PubliC service - The Anchorage Dally News.
General news reporting - The
Louisville Courier-Journal staff.
Invesl!gal!ve reporting - Bill
Dedman of the Atlanta Journal
and Constitutlon.
Explanatory journalism · David Hanners, William Snyder
and Karen .Blessen of the Dallas
Morning News. .
Specialize~! reporting Ed·
ward Humes of the Orange
County Register In Santa Ana,
Calif.
National reporting - Donald
L. Barlett and James B. Steele of
the Philadelphia Inquirer.
International reporting -

(
•

Pick3

198.
Pick4'

· Super Lotto
5-7-35-38-40-17
Kicker 430448

Page 3
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Vot.39, No.228

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·-

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EXPlANATORY - Dalla Mondllr News
reporter David Hanners, (left) II'&amp;Phlc artlat
Karen Blenea, (ceuter) aad pholop'apber '
WIUiam Snyder rejoice after learnlnc that lhelr
•

combined eftonln ·produclnc the lt-p&amp;~e sectlou
end&amp;led "Anatomy of an Air Disaster: 'lbe Flual
Fllrht of 1141 Sierra Kilo" had earlled them a
Pulitzer Prize In explanatory Joumallllm. UPI

Pulitzers... .._.'....;...._.,...-__;_&lt;c_on_un_ue_d...;.rr...;.om;;;.;E7;;;.;..:...)- - - : - " - - - - - -

tl

••

,.
SOVIET LEADilB Vl8ri'S CUBA - Cuban
Presldeut Fidel Caslro and $oVtelleader Mlldulll
Gorbachev. sit together durfnr lint round talkll

.
WASHINGTON -Thelpterna"The martcets may lose pationa! Monetary Fund boldly lienee" with the global flnimcial
warned Monday that President Imbalances created by persistBush's budget forecasts are lng U.S. fiscal and trade deficits.
unrealistic and a U.S. failure to said IMF research director
cut tl!cal and trade deflci!a could Jacob Frankel In presenting the
. dep~s the world economy. .. . . Fund's World Ecoriomlc Outlook

tum park over to state this week

I

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. sett Island Historical Park gets a
(UP!) - Wood ,County· legisla- helping hand.
tors think they hiiVe a good deal - The House of Delegates has
for the state: the Department o( approved a measu~e that would
Commerce gets a unique Island turn the park over to the state,
attraction, and the Blennerhas- and the Senate Is expected to

.....

·

The price of the Quantity User l:'en'nlt was Increased from $10
to $15 at the recent meeting of the Racine Board of Public
Affairs.
· The permits are req11ired lor residents who will exceed the
normal amount of water usage such as for washing cars,
watering lawn and garden and. filling swimming pools, the
board reported.
·. ·
·
Swimming pools that require more than 11,000, gallons of
water t~ !Ill will be charged accol'dlng to the metered rate for
the lfallbns required tp fill the pool, 1t was decided.
. The Quantity User Permits may~ obtained at the Racine
J1epartment Store.
·
T)le Board ol Public Affairs also;&gt; adopted a policy for a late
payment charge. It was deelded that a $2 fee will be added to the
bills of water and refuse customers who do not pay by the
required time and have to be Issued a ~hut-off notice.
It was pointed out by 'the trusleea that a certain number of
customers repeatedly"fall to PaY on time and refuse to PaY until
a shut-off notice ha~ be~tn lllsued. The additional charge Is being
made to cover lh~ jliOSt qJ lssulrig the notice and also to
discourage water 'U&amp;ers ftl:lm delay IJ! paymenta.
The additional S2 fee lor IssUing lh~ shu t.off notice will be In
·addition to the $3late lee. The$5 fee remains In effect for turning
· off tlle water due to latfl payment.

•

Probe mail box dCrmage .

shoots trooper, woman

A row ol mailboxes In the C~rpeJ!ter area was damaged a!ld
thrown around the area by unknown subjects sometime 11round ,
2:30 a.m. Saturday, according to the 1'eport of Meigs Col!nty '
Sheriff James M. Souls by.
.
According to the report, a man advised that lie heard tires
squeal lug around 2: ;lO a.m. The vehlclj! used to al&lt;;l the subjects
In the ('andallsm Is believed to be chryaler mudel.
In another Incident Saturday evening, Frank J. Kill&amp;',· King
Ridge, Pomeroy, r~ that sometime during tlie last 30
days, several radiators, air tools, and a weed eater were taken.
On Friday evening, William "Z!ke" CollinS, charged with the
Easter morning murder of his uncle VlrJII Collins, was
transported to the Athens Mental llealth &lt;;:enter under court
order.
· 'l1le sheriff also reported tbat Ronnie E. Taylor; Rt. 1, Long
Elot\Om. was arrested Saturday evenlnJ on ·an tndlcl!Jlent
Warrant charging him with Jl'IIDd theft. H~ Is to appear In the
Coui;( of lrommon Pleaa on Wedllelday.

a

EMS has 10 weekend calls
)

Units of the .Meigs County Emeraency Medical Service ·
·
·
respond..d ~ 10 calla this .weekelld.
On Sat~y at 1:41 a.m. the RaCineuultat waacalle4toState
Route 338 oa an auto ac:cldeDt In which Robert Milliron wu
treated but not tranapbrted.
·
,
ConUnued oo .P«ae 10

•n

J

Local.news briefsBoard increases user permit ~5

-~

·

at a news conference.
The WEO was presented at the
Spring Meetings of the IMF's
interim Comniltte and the joint
IMF and World Bank's Developmen! Committee. the adviSory ·
(Continued on page lD)

'\f;;i··v~r@ittia' 'senate exPMie(f 1t;

.

Tourist pluc;ked from _E~t River by helicopter

belweeu the two leaders. Gorbachev arrived In
Cuba Sunday lor a three-day. visit. (UPI)

IMF says President '-IJush's.
·.b udget .forecasts 'unrealistic'

•
Residents. notice .new.obituary poI ICY

wt
ViuN.t

.~

1 Section, 10 PogH

26 Centa

A Muttimedia Inc. Newtp1per

Cubans give Soviet
·chief hero's welcome

announcement, after returning of 1988.
I'm so pleased that they've come
.
·
at me again.
'
to his Prlnce.ton·home from a day
Wllbu r was given the poefry
of teaching and personal er- prize for "New and Collected
Wilbur won his first ·Pulitzer
rands. "I knew I'd been nomi- ' Poems." He served a one-year
prize In 1956 .for a collection of
nated, but I knew there were a lot term as poet !.aureate, succeed·
poems titled "Things or the
pf worthy books.''
· ·
World.
lng Robert Penn Warren In 1987.
Ellmann, a natlv~ofMichigan,
Tile . music prize went jo
H,ls first book ot poetry, "The
died In 1987 at age 69 just after Beautiful Changes," was pubReynolds, 54, lor a symphonic
finishing "Oscar Wilde. " ,He bad 'llshed In 1947 and he has since
work, "Whispers Out of Time,"
held teaching positions at Harwhich was premiered at Ambers!
published several other volumes
vard, Yale, . North.western.
College last Dec. 11. A native of
of .poems, criticism !llld translaEmory, and the University of tions of Moliere and Racine.
Detroit, he studied at the UniverChicago and was, Goldsmith's .
Wilbur ,"67, was the lyrlcistlor _ sity of Michigan and Is . a
. Professor of En·giish Llterat11re Leonard ·Bernstein's musical
professor at tiKi University of
California,
San Dlj!gO.
coUeague
Jack
mgi!IDI
after
lhe
latter
won
'
at
England's
New
College,
Oxof
'Voltaire's
''Cim(ll!le,"
version
CARTOON WINNER - TV critic Dan Rulh of
Reynolds'
music has . been
1989
Pulitzer
Prize
for
editorial
cartooning
lord,
at.
the
time
ol
his
death.
·
·
performed
on
Broadway
_.nd'
the
the C!tlcago Sua-Times pours champagne on
played widely ·by 'American or-'
Thursday. UPI
·
EHmann was best known for
New York City ()ptp. His
,
his biography · of James Joyce,- translation of Mallei-A "The chestras and his works have been
whlch won the · National Book Mlsantl!rope': was produced o~flncluded.ln festivals lltJapan and
Award In 1959. He also won Broadway; · ·
Poland. He has a background In
·
1
engineering
physics and has
crlll~lal· pralse lor two books on
'I'm astoniShed and pleased,"
William Butler Yeats, tll(o vo- said Wlll!ur, who learned the been active In thedevelopmentof
"Most Importantly, obituaries and "Liked strong beers" are a lumes ol James Joyce letters,
By CHARLES GOLDSMITH
digital processing techniques for
news In a phone call to his w111ter
are news," said Kellogg, who couple df recent vintage.
and several collections of essays.
home In Key West, Fla. "'I really computer muslq, a fast-·
suggested the format change:
PORTLAND, Maine (UP!) "We realize we won't hit the "Ol!Car Wilde" was on the hadn't been counting on a thing.
developing avant-glatde art.
"(They) constitute the final mark precisely every 1\me," nation's.best-seller llsta for most
Condo construction and waterchapter IIi the lives of people who Kellogg said In the colulhn. ''But
·
front development have been
lived and worked In communities we do think II Is worth the effort
temporarily replaced as the talk
served by our newspapers.
of the town by a new obituary
·to \TY to capture the dignity and
individuality Qf those who have
policy In the morning newspaper
·'The second li!le helps IdentifY
'
.of Maine's largest city.
died. I assure you It Is a beadllm!
these people to readers who
The 65,000-circulation Pormight want to note a death but written Wiih respect."
tland Press · Herald recently
who might not recognize an
Kellogg said letters concerning
began publishing a secind line
acquaintance just by the name,"
the format change have rurt 60
under the names of deceased
he said.
percent to 40 percent against the
persons on Its obituary page, and·
Kellogg said some readers had
new
fonnat. He said the policy
the change did not go unnoticed: complained that the second-line
was
still
being reviewed, with a
The second lines In a recent
summary "may not capture the
final
determination
due after a
issue Included "hospital volunmost significant achievement of
scientific
survey.
·
teer,~· ''former bakery owner,''
a person's lite.~·
.
"member White Rock grange,"
''That's true," he said. "Many
•'I thought It was'golng to be an
"former 'bookkeeper," "retired · of · our readers accomplish a
Improvement, "' Kellogg said In a
contractor" and "former textile
great deal In their lives. Choosing telephone Interview. "I dl(! not
one achievement to note In a
mill worker."
anticipate the Intensity of the
"To say you are trlvlallzing a · · headline does not preclude all
reaction, and some of the
human life with your 'personal other accomplishments. They
hostility.
·
references' is the understateall! all Included In the obituary."
"This newspaper has a very
ment of the year," a man wrote in
Some have objected not that a
Intimate relationship' with -readone of 16 letters to the editor
well-rounded person's many
FEATURE PHOTO - Detroit Free .Preas
ers," he said. "It's Interes ling
iniiabUIDC•l~ that
won lhe 1981 PuBtzer
published a couple of Saturdays achievements may be slighted, . and very gratifying when they
Photographer Manny Crllloatomo Ia lifted by cblef
Prize
lor
feature
photography
for a series on a
ago. "You've hit a new low In bad
but rather that a pt!fMln's relaphotographer Tony SplDa (left) and John Stano
are pleased and II stings' when
Detroit
hlp
school.
UPI
taste, bad · form and bad
tive lack of accompllslifuent will
they are not"
journalism."
be hlghllgllted by the second line.
Other choice comments: "pre"One lady that I knew well lor
sumptuous and condescending," 20 years had 'shoeworker' alter
" poor taste to downright her name," one reader wrote. ''I
crummy ...
did not ldentUy her with that
Several letter writers praised label at all. I knew her for the
the new format, which Is also love ·and strength that she
the ivay around (because of) the
•They just got lucky," EmerBy WILLIAM"K. R~HBAUM
Bellevue Hospital, where a spoused jn many other newspapers exhibited with her family, for her
rapid ~sponse of the repair shop son said ol pilot Russell Franks
kesman said he was lis ted In
around the nation.
faith, for her special skills."
NEW YORK (UPI) -A tourist guarded but ·stable condition. ·
crew and fact that the helicopter and traffic reporter Andy
"The d~talled second line Is the
Even supporters of the new .'photographing New York City's
O'Rourke, known as Altitude
Smith said Connor was In the
was able to spot him."
best change In the newspaper of format admit It may not work lor skyline Friday stumbled Into the 40-degree waters for about 15
The helicopter flew over the Lou. ''They heard there was a
the year. Stick with It," said one every deceased person.
scene ane~ the crew heard guy In the water and they went,
chilly East River and was swept minutes.
reader. "I found that I'm readl.ng
"I am a 75-year·old resident of downstream and out otslght, but
''He ·. was on the border of
reports on a pollee radio of a man over there and found the guy In
the second line before the first."
Portland who has accomplished a tralflc helicopter spotted hlm hypothermia doing him In," the 'In the water, said Hot 97 News the water."
Another reader urged the edinothing," Louis B. Smith wrote In
al)d pollee plucked h~om the sergeant said. "He was lucky all · Director J. Paul Emerson.
tors to "let a dece~sed person's a letter to the editor. "You will water.
;
family . decide If they want a
have a hard time coming up with
James . Connor, of South Basheadline. 1t should not be the a second line lor that."
. ton, Mass., who was qelebratlng
ne~spaper's decision."
The debate has reached the his 49th birthday, '!'IS tak~
The newspaper's managing city's barrooms, where jokeslers pictUre$ from a ·work barge
editor for reporting, Jon Kellogg,
mockingly make up their own shortly before 8 a·. m. when he lost
respOnded to tile tempe~! In a ·second-Hue summaries lor
his tootlllg, said Sgt. Howard
March 12 column.
friends: "Great CD collection" Smith of the Pollee Harbor Unit.
Connor was car tied downriver
and about 250 to · 300 yards
• offshore by the swift-moving
current - one of the fastest In
LEEDS, Maine (UJ;'I) - A
Grover then shot himself In the · New York area waters- and two
Harbor Unit pol,lce ofllcers
man with a rifle burst out ol a
head, Nichols said. He was f9und
aboard
a 30-loot boat were unable
mobile home Friday,. killed a · on the ground near thebacklloor
him,
Smith said.
to
find
state trooper and a woman the of the mobile home.
trooper was ·questioning In his
Emergency crews worked on
"When they got around 34th
pollee cruiser, then fatally shot Grover.for nearly an hour but he · Street they couldn't see the man
In the rough water," said Smith.
himself In the head, state pollee
was pronounced dead at Central
"But then they o~rved off 23rd
said.
Maine Medical center In Lewis·
ton, about 15 mlles south of Street - about 251&gt; to 300 yarda ' ·
Tlje trooper was Identified as
,Detective Giles R. Landry, 36, ·or
LeeC!s.
offshore,- they observed the Hot
Lewiston, a 13-year veteran of • Jlllcbols would not say why
97 helicopter hov+rjng low over
the State Police and the seventh
Landry was at the moblle home.
the water."
·
The helicopter, ·which waa
to die In the line of duty.
"It was part of an lnvesUrallon
unable to land pn the ·choppy
Landry was parked In the
... Into a criminal clile," Nichols
drlvew41y of a mobile home,
said.
water and tried IIIIS\ICcealfull)' to
drop a life p~ to the maD,
question~ Barbara H. Wells,
Nichola 'also said he did not
31, of Leedi. Davtd L. Grover, 36, • know the relatlonsblp between Is owned by ~1'0 Trlffk
burstoutottllemobllebomeand · Wells and Grover.
,
Control and co~acted to radio
shot Wells In the bead with a
'They both lilted the ·same station WQHT ·fOr the II10l'llllllr
bunllnr riDe, kllllll&amp;' her In- .,..ddrella and as far aa we know
rulb hour. atattOn offlclall ana
llantl,y, said state pollee spokes· 9\hey were lMq toptber," Ni·
Metro Tratfle aa,d.
mao RIMY Nlcbola.
chilli utd. .
The two officer• 1ped down·
'Lmlry was11ppareutly lhot aa
Nlcbi'IU llld ~lldbeeba river, apottecl 11pe III&amp;D, by now
lie '*"to ICI'Imble out of hla
patrol oftlc!lr tOt ~ Cit hill UDCOIIICIOUI, ~_,-aied 111m IIWI
co•, Hll bod)' wu found C111181'· )ltlt wu ll'cdlotld to from t11e •••· ,smith util.
' The
•erl admllllatered carJprawJed oa tile IP'IIWICI near the detective
~
doGJ'; ~ Welll'a body was
LaJidlll
dd had diOpulmcllllt)o.nsllldtatlon anc1
revived Connor. He was aent to
1olllld Ill the cndlilr.
at leMt one cldlll, Nklloll utd.
(
•

~an

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday. April 31 1989

Copyrtphted 11189

~ 989

'•

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a1

_,I

•'.i"' .

_xitf
Wft··

LOw tonight In mld-1108.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Tuesday, cloudy, 1141 pen;ent
chance of rain. IUgh In mid
60s. .

8393

•

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approve the measure sometime.
this week.
Park director Jim Todd said
the move will allow the park to
grow.
"It lakes us out of the political
·arena and puts us hi the administrative arena where we.belong,"
Todd said.' "It's ·a n Idea whose
time lias come.
"Other benellts to be accrued
ore the services available to all
other parks In the system but not
this particular park. For example, the Departnient of Commerce employs people to produce lour-color brochures for
every park, bu I not Blennerhassett Island. U we do that,il'co!lJes
out a! our regular appropriation
from-the state.
"We're all:eady running the
park. We're not asking for any
more money !rom the Depart·
ment of Commerce." ('
Included In the deal, ~hould It
be approved, would be the
transfer of all assets from the
commwton to the Depariment of
Commerce. Those Include the
Island Itself-' home to more than
500 free-roaming deer- and all
tbe bulldlngs on the Ohio Rhler
· Island and a renovated oUice
buldlng In downtown
Parkersburg.
The Island was bought ·by .
Harman Blelinerhassett and his
. wife, Marga~t. In 1739. They
built a mansion on the Island and
craned several gardens lor ex·
otic plans.
·
But they abandoed their retreat when they lied the wrath ol
·. President Thomas Jefferson,
w~o wanted Harman Blennef·
bassett tried fpr treason in a plol
hatched by former VIce President Aaron Burr to acquire
Texas from Me)\lco and start his
own·countl'y.
Blennerhassett eventually was .
caught and sent to priiQ.n fot
treason. Be ed Mcargaret were
' united after his release. He died
In poverty In Mlllilllplln 1831.
The ortglual manaion burned
doWllln llll,lplledaccldentally
l!Y slaves who llahted tona . of
mariJuua stored In the ~liar.
The. laland was first o~ed aa a
par~ Ia l886 aud It waa qperated
as an amutement center for
sevl!ral yeari. It wu revived a
few year•1111 and the restoratioQ
bepn.

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

tro held a frozen salute. GorbaHAVANA, Cuba (UPI) - So- Soviet-Cuban relations.
viet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
Ear ller, Castro j o lned 100 chev' kept his hands dt his side.
Castro led · his guest down a
received a hero's welcome Sun- Cuban Communist Party and
day on his first visit to Havana, government dignitaries In ap- receiving line of Cuba's party
where he said he had "plenty to plause as the door of Gorba- and government elite - which
talk a bout" with Cuban leader chev's special Aeroflot llyushln included Raul Castro, the host's
Fidel Castro.
··
62 .jetl!ner swung open and the brother and chief of the Cuban
Cuba's official Prensa Latina smiling Kremlin chief . strode armed forces - and then joined
news agency said Gorbachev's down a pOrtable . staircase to Gorbachev for photographs
discussions with Castro during begin .t he . three-day vlsll to taken by some of the 600 foreign
journalists gat~ered ·tn Havana
the three-day visit might result In Moscow's stau~hest ally outside
lor
the Soviet leader's his torlc
an announcement that Moscow Is Eastern Europe.
visit.
canceling ·part or all of the debt
Castro, dressed In his trade· Among the senior Soviet offiCuba owes the Soviet Union. It mark green fatigue uni!orm,
cials
accompanying Gorbachev
gave no figures.
embraced · Gorbachev at Jose
were Foreign Minister Eduard
Gorbachev attended a banquet Marti International Alrport and
Shevardnadze and Politburo
h9sted by Castro Sunday night!-&lt;&gt; kissed Gorbachev's wife Ralsa
ideology chief Alexander Yakoand bo.th leaders were to hold on both cheeks..
vlev. Soviet Ambassador to HaWhile the two men stood
three more , formal rounds of
vana Yurl Pet rov greeted Gorhatalks during the visit, the first by together on the airport tarmac,
chev
and the other dignitaries at
.soldiers
gave
Gorbachev
a
21the Soviet leader: .
the
airport.
gun
salute
and
a
military
band
·f'allowing an Initial tour of the
After the arrival ceremony,
city with Castro at his guide, played the Cuban and Soviet
Castro.and
Gorbacbev departed
Gorbachev said he was moved by . national anthems.
on
a
15-mile
motorcade ride
the estimated 600,000 Havana
As
Cuban
troops
marched
past
through
the
streets
·of Havana In
residents lining the streets . to
the
communist
leaders
In
a
an
open
Soviet-made
· zn
greet him.
full'dress
military
parade,
Caslimousine.
"Everything comes across
·very clearly- our friendship, In
'
the hearts, In the soul, In the
faces of the people,': Prensa
Latina quoted -the Soviet leader
as saying. "Nowallwehavetodo
Is talk, and we do have plenty to
talk about."
· Havana-based diplomats predicted the two leaders would try
to . doW!Iplay their differences,
COVINGTON, Tenn. (UP!) flooding rains, apparently
lnclud_lng C:astro's 'opposition to The death toll In the collapse of eroded the concrete base of the
Gorbachev's· -sweeping ·reform . the Hatclile"Rlver brtdge stood at. lirldge and cauSed the 'collapse,
program. Prensa Latina de- seven Monday with storms delay- Moore said.
·
clared Sunday. night ·that there ll!g the search for more victims,
"It undermined the founda. were absolutely no differences In and state officials defended In- tion. That would be a · logical
spectors who had declared the · explanation," Moore said.
55-year-old span safe.
Transportation Department ot~ "The state cannot replace all
llclals said a recent .· report
the old bridges It would like to," graded 46 percent of Tennessee
said Bill Moore, regional engi- bridges deftclent, butMooresald
•
neer for the state Transportation this bridge was thought to be
Department. . "I think we have structurally sound. It was last
10,000 bridges In the state and a
Inspected In September 1987 and
number of them are old. It gets was due for another lnspec'\lon
Into a funding problem. We felt this September.
like the bridge was safe." ·
By United Press International
Two 28-foot sections of the
A minister, his wife and their
· Major petroleUm refiners, 4-year-old daughter were among biildge collapsed at 8:15 p.m.
partly In reaction to the Alaskan those killed In Saturday night's Saturday, sending the cars and
an spill, have Increased the price collapse of the .two-lane north- tractor-trailer rig Into the water.
of gasoline In Ohio by about a bound span of the concrete One• of the vehicles struck a
nickel a gallon.
bridge on U.S. Highway 51. At bridge support In the river and
BP America of Cleveland, least four cars and a tractor• caused another 28-toot slab of
which controls 26 percent ol the trailer rig len 25 feet Into the .9oncrete to fall atop the fou~
state's market, led · the way by dark, swirling water of the cars, ofllclals said.
announcing a 5-cent-a-gallon In- Hatcble River.
·
Rescue teams were-using two
crease at Its company-owned ·
Divers pulled seven bodies jackhammers to break apart th@
stations around Ohio. •
from the 30-foot-deep river · by concrete so divers could check
Anne ·Stral tiff, spokeswoman
Sunday · night. Thunderstorms lor more victims.
lor subsidiary BP-Oil, said the
A strong current made the
· wholesale price ol gas sOld to then • rumbled . through with
drenching rain and lightning and diving "extremely dangerous,"
dealer-operated stations also
delayed the search of the sub- said Ron Collins of the Tennessee
was 111creased.
Emergency Management
BP America, formerly the merged cars. '
''They
believe
two
or
three
Agency. "lt'sdlrty-waterdlvlng.
Standard 01) Co., bas about 640
more
people
are
down
there.
Thtt&gt;
are doing It by feel.:·
company-owned stations and 420
They're not really sure because
Terry Petty, a diver with the
dealer stations.
'
the water Is rushing and It's so Tennessee Highway Patrol,
The Shell Oil Co., which has 270
high,'' Tlpson County sherlfrs . swam. Into the mangled wre&lt;;kmostly dealer-owned stations In
dlspatcher Monica White said.
age of one car to pull a victim
the state, raised the price of
The Hatchle River, swollen by from the river.
gasoline to Its dealers by 4 cents a
gallon .
Marathon Oil spokesman Blll
Ryder, who predicted a very
volatile market for the next
week, said . h,ls company raised
prices 5 cents a gallon at Its
company-Owned stations In Ohio.
The price for dealers also was
Increased.
Marathon reportedly controls
17 percent o{ the statewide
market through some 1,200
company-owned and dealer
stations.
Those operated b_y the company- are - C!leker, Speedway., . --f.''"t-"':;4;1\'.:t
Gastown and Bonded. Dealer
stations operate as Marathon.
Otber companies are expected
to follow with similar Increases. .
"Once people see Sohio (BP
Amcuk:a) moving, 1. think others .
wlli follow," said Robert Gates,
Sbell sales manq,r for Olilo.
The lncreasea, besides stem·
mlng frMI the oil spill In Alaska,
alsO are seea as
Prlcea
typically rille this t.trne each year
as demand lor aasoUae begins to
build lor the vacation season.
Also affecting the price are
low:er vapor pressure re&amp;~~la.:
tiona, wblch 1\'UI Increase reflnlhJ coals, lasued by tile Environmental Protection AJency,_ said
Straltlff.

Tennessee bridge
falls;, death toll l7

Price of
•
gas IS up
in Ohio

•-1.

..

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.
'
ta
·
C
t.;om menmry_. :·

'

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~==============================~---~~--~-~------~--~~~~------~.----~------~~-------------------: .
The Daily Senti1;1el A .fonnidable foe ___J...,.....ac_k_A_nd......,.e_rso_n_a__,rul.--Da_le_~_an_A_t_·ta
WASHINGTON -.Joaquin
·A few days later, Van Atta·
Hernandez Galicia. the fat-cat
went to ctudad Madero, a flyspeck town on the Gulf of Mexico,
leader of Mexico's 200,000 oil
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!J.MASON AREA
and the home of La Quina. He
workers, may have met a canary
~lb
.
picked- up an interpreter - the ·
he can •t swallow. Mexico's new
Bmi!ti ~......-r,~c::~.""' ·
first person he met at the airport ,
t&gt;resldent Carlos Salinas de Gor·
~v
woo SPQke English - an elderly
. tart · as one of his first preslden·
tlal
·acts,
,llad
Hernandez
ar·
man who turned out wbe an oil
ROB'ERT L. \fiNGETI'
.
WWTEHEA.D
worker·
and a reverent fan of La
rested
In
'
J
anuary.
.Publlsher
Aialltaat Publisher/Controller
Quina.
·
·
The story of Hernandez, known
CHABJ.ENE HOEFLICH, Geueral Mauarer ·
as "La Quina/' Is one we can tell
Many of Mexico's petroleras
first hand. Dale Van Alta. Ira·
would
make pllgfimages to I:.a
A MEMBER of The United Prels lnterniltlonal, Inland
veled to Mexl&lt;:o In 1986 to
Quina
's
home and walt for. days
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish.. Investigate La Quina. He uncotoseeblm;Onsomee:ventngs,
the
vered evidence of possible fraud,
ers Association.
·
godfather
would
grant
audiences
embezzlement and featherbed·
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
ding by La Quina aild the union and bestow favors. Men pleaded
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be slgried wit~
leadership and tracked a history· tor work or a loan. Women with
name, address anc~ telephone num~. No unsjgned letters wUI be pu.b~
of violence and murder against unfaithful husbands asked La
llshed. Letters should )le In good taste, addtesslng Issues, not personal!·
Quina to punish the philanderers.
La Quina's critics.
ties.
Children delivered gl.tts.
Successive presidents of Mex·
But La Quina has no time fol'
'teo. since 1962, were afraid to
journalists. He despised repor·
take on La Quina and the union.
'In the meantime. billions of ters unless they were pn his
dollars were diverted by the payroll. One journalist who crt·
union · while Mexicans were ttclzed La QUina was beatennand
A few seconds,. three shots of
kicked by his bodyguards while
starving.
gun!lre, · and Greg Rader lay
La
Quina shouted; "I don't have
Van A tta met with one Mexican
dead, unable to hide his dark
•
any
obligation to tell journalists
Cabinet minister who appeare4
secret any more. Near the
anything.
You are swine."
cates the driver's license photo to be unafraid of La Quina 30-yea~·old part·tlme Baptist
Van
Alta
bluffed his way past
Salinas, who was then the secredeacon lay a mask !llade of Rader carried In his pocket.
the
gun-toting
guards outside La
tary of programming and
H I were the woman who
pantyhose, - and part of a ski
budget. Salinas was cautious at Quina's home, called "The
Identified Rader as her attacker,
mask. Also found Y(ere strips of
first. He acknowledged the need Bunker. •• He found La Quina at a
cloth and a pair of disposable I'd be looking tor a Ia wyer. And If
to reform the union and oust La . small deilk surrounded by picI . were In' charge of security at
plastic gloves.
Quina,
but said the time had not tures of Don Quixote and legend·
· Just moments before, accord· other universities, I'd be Jooktns . yet come. Salinas then, urged ,. ary Mextc'a n peasant·heroes. Thrle
at SMSU as a valuable lesson tn·
lng to the pollee, Rader had been
Van Atta not to .visit La Quina small man was soft-spoken; l!.nt
crouching In the bedroom of a how NOT to run a campu~
Van Atta began asking about·
alone.
popular Springfield, Mo., TV security system.
.'
news anchor, walling for her to
come home. The authorities
reported: Someone had attempted to break Into the woman's
apartment two nights before.
That prompted her boyfriend to
accompany her home this March
night, armed with a pistol. When
. Rader jumped outatthewoman,
her boyfriend shot him dead.
Peop,le In Rader's small
southwest Missouri hometown
were stunned that the boy elected
"Most Ll kely to Succeed" 15
years earlier could have done
this. They knew him as a church
leader who had been .a popular
and smart high-school kid who
went on to excel in college.
For days Intense media cover·
age continued. Those who knew
Rader - from the hometown
folks, to the stude111s at Spring·
field's Drury College, where he .
worked as head resident of a
dormrtory, to !ellow · church
members where he taught prim·
ary Sunday school - expressed
i shock and dlsbell~f.
.
111 Court Street
Pomero:r, Olllo

.

PAT

.

Campus life 'risky

Sarah Overstreet

skimming union money. La
Quina was Insulted . The nervous
translator. sweating vrofusely,
refuaed to translate any more
untll La Quina ordered hltn to.
AllOut 10 minutes Into the tense
Interview, several or the guards ·
stood up, one pointing an Uzl
submachlne gun at Van Atta.
Again and again La Quina
answered questions by saying Ills
·affairs were not the business of
an American.
La· Quina was furious, and his
guards wl!l'e waiting for an order
to silence the American colurn·

Today m ~istory·

POMEROY

th,~nnirertlltg

·

then, a week after the shoot·
lng, a statement said to have
been made by Rader In 1980
appeared mysteriously at
·another TV station's door. These
facts were reported: The statement was from Rader's student
file at Southwest Missouri State
University In Springfield . In a
letter that was placed In his file,
Rader confessed to severallncl·
dents of peeping Into women's
rooms at or near the university
over a per.lod of years. ·On three
consecutive nights In 1980, Rader
was caught "window peeping•:
by campus security. "I believe I
am sick," Rader wrote In his
confession, admitting to a "sick
·Urge to see women nud~." Hew as
sent orr lor counseling at the
university's counseling center.
The deeds and des Ires Greg
Rade ultimately . thought he'd
kept secret for so long were not a
secret to everyone. Several
SMSU employees had known of
his "problem" for almost 10
years. Yet Rader was allowed
after graduating to work at that
university as a dorm supervisor,
and when he applied for the same
job across town at Drury, his
. prospective employers were
never told of his little
peccadilloes.
.
SMSU personnel now defend
themselves by claiming that
federal privacy laws forbade
them from Including Information
about "disciplinary action" · In
either academic or employment.
transcripts. About that, they are
right.
But recurrent window peeping
ISn't a school "disciplinary ac·
tlon:" It's a pollee matter. A
untveralty lsn' t a small town
where aecurlty guards who dress ·
up aa cops have the r!Pt to
supersede real pollee.
·
Ourlni the same era ·m which
Rader apparently waa repeat·
~ peeplni thrOUJh ·women's
wtlulows, several lnclden!isf
rape and attempted rape · r
the SMSU campua bad w
atud•ts a~d to walk !rom
r' IIJOt oialle'l to tllelr can, or to
._ t11J !"'mP'" traeli: or 1)'1111

·. Starts April 3rd

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...

..

By GE;NE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS - Luis Aguayo
scored the on a throwing error In
the top oftheelght.h Inning to give·
the Cleveland Indians a 1·0 win
over the Cinclnnali Reds Sunday
in the first Ohio Cup game.

The Southeastern Ohio League lumber. The SEO had 16
Girls All-Stars edged the Trl·
turnovers.
Valle~ Conference Girls All·
The TVC' All-Stars hit 28 of 52
Stars, 64-63, on a three-point goal field goal attempts for 53 per·
THE WOODLANDS, Texas Players Championship March 19,
by Athens' Sheila Ross with 30 cent, seven of 22 charity topsses
(UP!) -Mike Sullivan has had a had to walt about 90 minutes
seconds left Saturday night.
change of plans lor next week. after he finished to find out he
for 31 percent and had 32
The game was played at
Instead of going fishing , he's won. Because he opened the
rebounds, 14 by Lori Williams .
Trimble High School. . ,
going to. golf's prestigious Houston event with a 4-over 76,
The losers had eight assists,
me SEO led 15·12 after one three by Miller' f Shelly Simmons Masters.
followed by rounds of 71 and 68,
!
·
~rlod. but t~alled 32·30 dutlng
SuUivan was Invited to the he entered the final round at
and .seven steals, three by
the halftime lntermlsslorl. TVC Wlll!ams. They had 14 turnovers.
Augusta N.atlonal Golf Club after 1-under 215, seven strokes behind
hiked tt.nead to 40-34 aftrer three
. he charged back from a seven· bonald, and had an early tee
· quarters of play .
stroke deficit with a 65 Sunday to time.
Box score:
Ross led the winners' attack
finish with an 8-under·par 280 to
Sullivan, 34. of Ocala, Fla.,
SEOAL GIRLS (.... ) -Tammy
with 26 points. Jackson's Cindy Elliott, GAHS, 2.0-4; . Cindy
win the $800,000 Independent sank birdies on the firsttwo holes
Ridgeway added 16 and Alhens' Ridgeway. JHS, 8·0·16; ·shellB&gt;
Insurance Agent Open by one and when he reached No. 8, he
Ashley Ferguson tossed In ·14. Ross, AHS. 64-2·26; Ashley Fer·
stroke over Craig Stadler.
proceeded to birdie five of the ,
Shelly Simmons, Miller, tallied guson. AHS. 3·8·14; Shay Moore,
The victory for Sullivan. who next six holes to drop to 8·under.
picked up $144,000, was his
23 points for the losers: Lori MHS, 1·0-2; Candy Columber,
He birdied No. 16, dropping to
Williams of Federal Hocking LHS, 0·0.0; Julie Murray. AHS,
second on the PGA Tour - he 9-under, then had his only bogey
added 22 while Rhonda Toth of 1·0·2. TOTALS 21·4-10-414.
won the Southern.Open In 1980- of the day, missing a 60-loot putt
Miller chipped In with 10.
and was the largest come-from· for par on No. 18 to finish with a 65
;t;VC GIRLS (83) - . Lori
behind victory since Sandy Lyle lor tHe round and an 8-under 280
; The SEO hit 25 of 61 field goal Wllilams, FH, 9·4·22; Shelly
matched ' the feat at last year 's for the tournament. He then had
altempts for 40 percent. The Simmons, Miller, 114·23;
Phoenix Open.
to sit and watt.
winners were 10 of 16 from the Rhonda Toth, . Miller, 5·0·10:
· It also pushed his career
"l had hopes I'd win, but I
line and had 33 rebounds, seven Trtcla Hart, F}{, 0-2·2: Joanna
earnings over the $1 million dldn · t think It would happen, "
each by Ross and Alhens' Julie School, FH, 3·0·6. TOTALS ZS..7·
mark:
said Sullivan, who shot a re~ord
Murray. The SEO had 18 assists, . 83.
•
"I
was
committed
to
going
63 on the TPC course In 1986. ' 'I
11 by Athens' Ferguson,13 steals, ' Score by quarter!!! .
fishing,"
Sullivan
said.
"It
certainly dldn'l think I'd get
. three each by Jackson's Ridge- SEO .................. 15 15 l4 20-64
d~n·t feel as good, being a
away without a playoff."
way and ,Logan's Cand:v Co· TVC ... : .............. 12 !!0 18 13-63
mUlionalre as being the IIAO
The Houston ev~nt had been
champion or going to Augusta. decided by a playoff the last two
You can almost keep the money. years and appeared headed for
It's nice having a trophy lor a another.
cHange."
Stadler slarted the round at
SuUivan's only other apper- 5·under, birdied the first two
anceat the Masterscameln1981. hoies and wen I to8-underonNo. 7
Stadler shot a 2-under 70 to after another birdie.
DARLINGTON, S.C. (UPl) _ ; Allison. who w,as fourth on the
finish
at 209 while Mike Q&lt;mald,
He birdied again on No. 11 and
Harry Gant broke a 90-race restart, passed Marlin with two
who
led
the
tournamen
I
from
the
was
In sole possession of first'
jVInless streak Sunday wjth a: laps remaining and .. slipped
start,
shot
a
2-over
74
and
place
on the next hole as Sullivan
. yictory In the TranSouth 500 at around Bodine on t11e final lap to
finished In a tie for third at bogeyed No. 18.
Qarllngton Raceway.
claim second.
6-under
282 with Seve Ballesteros
But on the par-5. 525-yard No.
: Gant, driving an Oldsmobile,
"We had great pit stops and I
and
Mike
Reid.
Ballesteros
shot
13,
Stadler's second shot to the
finished 1.31 seconds ahead of had an easy job driving It ·
even
par
72
whlle
Reid
fired
a
70
island
green landed In the water
Davey Allison In a Ford. Third. (Ford)," Allison said after his
Sunday
.
and
the
bogey dropped him to
went to Geoff Bodine In a best!lnish this season.
They
were
followed
by
defend·
8-under.
He
missed a short putt
Gant, 49, took the- lead for the
Chevrolet, while Sterling Marlin
champion
Curtis
Strange
(72
l
ng
for
par
on
No.
15 to go to 7-under
placed fourth In an Oldsmobile. first time on •lap I78 and-c)llas
Sunday),'
Hal
Sutton
(7-2)
and
and
never
recovered.
Filth went to 'Bill Elliott In a confident at that point about'llls
David Frost (69) at 283.
"I gave one away," Stadler
Ford.
chances for a victory.
·
Sullivan,
whose
best
finish
this
said.
"I turned around on No. 15
The win at tile 1.366-mlle track
"Unlesa we wrecked. J ·knew
year
was
a
tie
for
17th
at
The
and did was I did the first two
was Gant's flr$t victory 'since we'd win ·the race h-om the first '
.
'
1985 when he won the tall race at tt.me I took the lead because I
North Wilkesboro, N.C.
neVer pushed the car," said
Dwlnt all of 1919 wt art eel• .
"We are really tickled," Gant Gant, of Taylorsville. N.C.
.
tllraling •• 40th year at bring·
said after 'c ollecting $65,035.
"''d been setting on 7,700rpms ~
~ Wttor htar1ng Ia our·
"T~e team did a super job on pit . all day. I never tlirned 8,000 until
stops and the car ran flawless. 1 "' the final three la'pS." ·
fns•• clients. II is gratifring
had more power than I needed.
Gant .averaged 115.312 mpilcln
to know that we han devil·.
"l just tried to ease up to the
the race slowed bY seven caution
.,... • .....,.8tlon.for int.rity:
front and then run smooth so 1 .flags lor 68 laps. There weN 16
.IN .
We wort
wouldn't wear the tires out."
lead changes amoue 10 drivers. •
..... , • • •,, ..,., to ....
Gant dominated the 367-lap
Gant's third win a1 Darll~tllon
htrt tallsrroWJ tJIIII our obligo·
race, leadlft8 four times for 179 and his second In the TranSoulh
tlon toeJ!U II to 1M awallablt
laps. Once during the race Gal!t 500 qua)lfled the team owned by
(eworr
tli;l as pu llllllw, with ·
possessed a lap on the field, but at Leo Jack.ton for ·NASCAR's
the end It appeared he might be Winner's Clrcl~ plf~·
the 111111
·technolo·
1Y
tllllt
II
to
1M
fouM.IIIorilll
faced with one of the toughest r--:=:;-::==-==-~1
..--.? 11aari11g alii ~m?
battles of his career.
flOW

OPR FOI

On the 35lst lap, Greg Sack.t
lost an enilne In hll Po11Uac, ~..
sideways tllroUih turn one, camt'- ·
up the track I!Dd collected ttve
Other CIU'f.1r took 13lapt to clear
. the track, and wben the race
returned !O gree11, onb' three laps
remained.
· But Gant eaally pulled. away
from the field when the race
restarted, leavlntr the next three·
lll'lvera w llattle ftr .. _...

··

Sf. .ISUSOII .

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Indians win on error, pickoff play
A crowd of 15,978 in Cooper
Stadium endured a steady rain
and temperatures In the mid 40s
to watch Ohio's two major league
teams meet (n the final exhibition
game for both clubs before
opening their regu tar seasons
Monday.

WEDNQDAY'IJtl THE "PM"

.

AT HOiiZIII CLINIC
OAWjii()US, OHIO

.DILES· HEARING ·cENTER
(6141 594-3571
TOU.flll Ill OliO 1·100·137·7716
316 WIST IliON Sllliif
AIIIINS, 41_1110 45701

days - horrible putting. On the
18th, I knew I needed a shot at
birdie. It was surprising to
everyone that some shot 7-under
par today. " •
Donald birdied two of the first
four holes to drop to 10-under, .
then bogeyed lhree of the next
five holes to fall t.o 7-under.
After a birdie. he bogeyed Nos.
14 and 16, dropping to 6-under
where he finished.
·'I waited all week for someone
to come !rom behind," Donald
said. "I felt I gave it away with
bogeys on Nos. 9 and 10."
Ballesteros. who trailed Donald by two strokes to start the
day, had one birdie through 12,
then reached the No. 13 Island
green In t.wo shots and sank an
SO•Ioot putt for an eagle to go to
7-under. He then moved Into a
share of first place with a birdie
on No. 14.
But he double-bogeyed No. 15 '
as his second shot went out of
bounds. and his next s!iot"was In
almost the same spot , dropping
, him· to 6-under, where he
finished . ·
"The first eight holes, I had
many chances," Ballesteros
said. "I just didn 't drop It In the
'hole. I didn't win this week
because every day I had two or
three bad holes ."
With all that transpiring, Sulll·
van was trying to not think about
the outcome.
"I tried to keep myself busy
waiting In the clubhouse," he
said. "} feU like with a round like ·'
I shot today,lt would be a top five.
finish at best. The biggest thing is
I went out and, without playing
recklessly, played as aggressive
and lntelllgent as I could "

.

Continued on page 4

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'.

The Reds open the Na tiona! '
League season Monday after·
noon at home against the world
champion Los Angeles Dodgers · ··
and the Indians begin play in the •·
American League by hosting the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Aguayo. who 'liso made a
diving catch of a line drive hit by
Cincinnati catcher Jeff Reed In ·
the fourth Inning, robbing the
Reds of a run, opened the
Indians' eighth with a ~ ngle off
Mike Griffin, the third Reds'
pitcher and loser .
~guayo, who played third base
In place of Brook Jijcoby, took

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pre-season exhibition game. The Cubs won,
Twins catcher Is Brian Harper. ( UPI)

DAWSON FANS - Chicago third baseman
Shawn Dawson (right) reacts to slrlklngoutln the
fifth lnnln~ against Minnesota Sunday In the. final

uia·to-••·

earingr,

•

3U ·~DAVE., GALLIPOLIS

game-winning run In the sixth
nlngs at the Red Sox's homeflel&lt;!
By United Prl!lls international
Inning to lead the Tigers, who
Roger Clemens r~lved a In Winter Haven, Fla .. he walked
tinished Grapefruit League play
brushback Sunday from the off the field becaulll! hedldn'tllke
with a 15-16·1 record.
Baltll!lore Orioles head the condition of the mound.
At Minneapolis, the Cubs took
Qemens was allowed to leave
· groundskeeper.
.
advantage
of two errors to jump
the
mound
In
Winter
.Haven
Pat Santarone, who has held
4-0
lead
In the second inning
to
a
unchallenged,
but
Santarone,
his position for 21 years, Is
and
coast
to
victory.
who
said
he's
faced
·
simDar
warning the Boston Red Sox ace
F1a., Ron Jones
At
Dunedin,
against complaining about the complaints from the Red Sox
homered
and
Don
Carman aJ.
hurler and from nobody else, said
pitcher's mound.
.
lowed
just
one
run
on
three hits
he won't put up with It any more.
"If. Clemens has got anything
:over
six
fnnlngs,
leading
the
"I just think that's a joke,"
to say about It, he's going to get
.
P
hlllles.
The.
Blue
Jays
leave
his ears knocked off," said said Santarone, jVhO .worked for
Florida with' the major leagues'
such Baltimore stars as Jim
Simtarone. ·'He's a great pit~ her.
best exhibition record, 21·10.
an!! I don't think he needs all the Palmer, Mike Cuellar, Dave
Philadelphia finished 12-16.
McNally and Pat Dobson.
,bull to make him anY better."
At New York, Ken Phelps and
In other games on the last day
Clemens walked off the field
Tom Brookens drove In two runs
during a game last week In' of spring training, Detroit nipped
Florida because he dldn' t like the . Boston · 3·2, the Chicago Cubs· apiece to give the Yankees a
victory over the Mets and a
pitching mound. A two-time downed Minnesota 6·4, Phlladel·
sweep of their two-game weephla
beat
Toronto
6-4,
the
New
winner of the Cy Young Award,
kend exhibition series. Yankees
Clemens Is developing a reputa· York Yankees topped the New
starter
John Candelerla worked
tlon as a crybaby. During con· York Mets 4·0, Cleveland nipped
five
Innings,
and was credited
tract lalks earlier this spring he Cincinnati 1·0, Baltimore d~
with
the
victory
at Shea Stadium.
complained about the burdens of !eated St. Louts 7·6 In 10 Innings,
At
ColUmbus,
Ohio, Luis
having to carry his own luggage Houston beat Texas l0·5, Edmon·
Aquayo
scored
on
a throwing
ton toppled California 13·1, and
on road trips .
error
In
the
top
of
the
eighth to
the Chicago 'White Sox st.opped
That reputation was taken to a
lead
the
Indians
In
the
first
Ohio
·
new level this past Wednesday Seattle 7-4.
Cup ·gljme. A crowd of 15,978 In
At Lakeland, Fla .. Kenny Willi·
when, after pitching three In·
Cooper .Stadium · endured a
ams drove In Billy Bean with the
steady rain and tell'lkratures In
· the mid 40s to wail!li Ohio's two
major league teams meet tn.thelr
final exhlbltloJI game.
At Washington, Brady Anderson beat out a two·out Infield hit
to score Randy Milligan from
second base In the lOth to lead the.Orioles. Jay Tibbs, 1-1, pitched
'
Corrigan
(A.thens)
3·2·0-12;
Matt
the' final four Innings lor the
With six three·P&lt;&gt;inter~ and
Creer
(Athens)
5-0.2-12;
Greg
Victory.
,
eight players scorln'g In double
Ha.rris
(Jackson)
4-1·0-11;
Brent
At
Oklahoma
City,
Alan Ashby
figures, the SEOAL boys were
scored two runs , Including a solo
able t.o overcome a joint 34-point' McKenna &lt;Marietta) 4~0·3'11;
~omer. and drove In three RBis
venture by Meigs cagers Mat ·. Justin .Herb (Marietta) 5·0-0-10;
. Tyler .Barnes (Warren Local) ~to power the Astros to victory
Baker and John Burdette to b
0.1·2·5: Joe Owen (GAHS) 2·0-0.4.
over the Rangers. Rafael Rathe TVC squad 109-92.
mlrez went J,for-4, scored two
Baker sank a gam~
19 TOTALS- 38-t-)3-119
TVC (92) - · Matt Baker runs and had one RBI for
points, while Burdette was right
Houston.
behind with 15. Marauder team· · (Meigs) 8·0·3-19; John Burdetle
At Anaheim, Calif., Jim Abbott
(Meigs) 4·2·1-15; Larry Riehl
' mate Todd Powell chipped in
(Nelsonvllle·York) 6·0·0-12;
allowed three hits over si&gt;&lt;"
With tWQ. .
Denny Jarvis (Alexander) 5·0·1·
Innings and Mike Brown col·
TheSEOAL was led by Logan's
11;
Adam
Conway
(VInton
Co.)
lected
lour hits and four RBI to
Doug Stiverson and Athens'
5-0·0.10;
Charles
Bowden
(VInton
power
Edmonton of the Pacific
Brian Walsh, both ot whom
Co.) 4·0.0.8; Jtr:n Martin (Aleit· Coast League (AAA) over its
scored 15 points.
ander) 2·1-1·8: Mike Eckels paren~ club.
SEOAL (109)'- Doug Sliver·
(Nelsonvllle·York) 2·1·0-7; :rood . jn Las Vegas, Nev., the White
son (Logan) 5·1·2·15; · Brian
Powell (Meigs) 1·0·0·2. TOT~ Spx. topped the Mariners with a
Walsh' (Athens) 6·0:3·15; Tim
run ln 'the seventh and two In the
Moore (Logan) 5·1·1·14; Cory - 3'1-4-6-92
eighth inning. Bobby Thigpen
secured the victory for Chicago
and :Julio Solano took the loss .

•r••••blllty.

rf!SIS.

• LAYAWAY
• DISCOVER

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Gant wins TransSouth
500, endirlg drought' ·

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.' -

Sullivan captures Houston tourney

DIRECT FROM THE BLACK HILLS
OF SOUTH DOKOTA TO YOU

Ill Al K IIIU.S (;OLD
t :IU AllONS'

-...

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•

At CLARK'S JEWELRY
We're Committed To Offering You The Best
Pos'sible Price On The Best Quality
Merchandise.
Stop In Today And Save!.

Special Sale Prices Every Day .

•

On this date In history:
..
In 18&amp;0, the Pony Express postal serVIce began With riders leaving
. St.· Joseph, Jl4o., and Sacrarnento, Callf., at the same time.
In 1962, the fe4eral government ordered New Orteans to Integrate
the first six grades of public schools.

CLARK'S JEWELRY=j
GALLIPOLIS -

nlst. Before La Quina could
weigh the optlou, Van At~ left
with the terrified tra~lator In
tow.
.
When Salinas got word of the
encowiter, be wrote to Van Atta
and promised that someday
someone would do something
about La Quina. Salinas was
Inaugurated p~;esldent last Dec.
1. Then, 45 days ~ter. he sent the,
Army to raid La Quina's home
for a cache of weapons. A federal
officer was !Qiled In the sbootout
. and La Quina now stands ac·
CJ.Ised of the killing.

.
.
:•
.
By United Preaa IDiernalloaal
.,
• Today Is Monday, Aprll,3, the 93rd day of 1989 with 272 to follow.
, The IJlOOn ls·wanlng, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury. Venus and Silturn ..
.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Tho.ae born on this date are under the sign or Aries. They lnc)ude
hlsrorlan and story writer Washington Irving In 1783, comedian
George Jesse! and publisher Henry Luce, both In 1898, actress Doris
Day and actor Marlon Brando, both In 1924 (age65), astronau; VIrgil
"Gus" Grissom In 1926, anthropologist Jane Goodallln 1934 (age 55),
actress Marsha Mason and entertainer Wayrie Newton, both In 1942
(age 47), and actor-comedian Eddie Murphy In 1961 (age 28)..

.

Spring training ends

Page-2-lbe Dally Sealinel

..

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Mondliy, April 3. 1989 /

·.~c:,:-:.~·=90hio _

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Mondily, April3, 1989

Pomeeoy-Middaport. Ohio

'

Michigail, ~eton ·Hall
battle fOr NCAA ·title
Michigan o~dinarUy is a disappointment caine the NCAA Tournament, havlnglqst In the second
SEATTLE (UPI) -The coF round in three Of the last five
lege bll5ketball season ends years under Coach Bill Frieder.
Monday nlgl\t · with a game But Frieder was replaced by
-between
school long a rnys· Fisher two days before the
· tery to much of the cpuntry and. t011rnarnent and the Wolverines
another whose will was 'Stisjlect have l!een riding an exhilarating
wave since.
come tournament ·tlme.
Before the season, Seton Hall
The latest crest came in
was picked to finish seventh in its .
conference. The coach wondered Saturday's semifinals when the
how his team would survive Wolverines beal Illinois 83-81 on
Georgetown and Syracuse and Sean Higgins' follow shot with
two seconds left. Fisher slept
the rest.
Before the season, Steve well that night.
"Every time I rolled over," he
· Fisher of Michigan decided to
talk to his athletic dlrectortAfter said, "! had a sr,nlle O!l my face."
Seton lfall, as evidenced by its
all, he was 43 years aid and an
assistant coach, and he won· 95-78 victory orer Duke In 'the
other '$emifinal\ is clearly capa·
dered where he was heading.
There Is no question atiout the · ble of wiping ott that smile In a
destination any more. Michigan,' hllrry.
29-7, and Seton Hall, 31-6, play for
In Its last _three tournament
their first NCAA IItle (9: 12 p.m. games, it has beaten Indiana,
EDT) in an improbable finish to Nevada· Las Vegas and Duke, all
by double digits. If this Is
the season.
"!don't think anybody thought Cinderella, as some mistakenly
we'd bj! playing for the national insist, she is armed and
championship," Setim Hall dangerous.
Coach P.J. Carlesirno said · . •'Seton Hall is playirtg a lot like
us now," Fisher said. "They
S!inday.
Least of all his Big East· h'a ve tremendous confidence.
coaches, who looked at a prO' They have It good feeling for
gram that was 6.23 a few years everyone and; they're getting
ago and · were not overly , good play from everyone.''
impressed.
1
The ~lrates · ~irnply wear down
"You have to understand," opponents. They get good work
Carlesimo said, "the intelligence off the bench and play unforgiV·
factor of tbe eight otber coaches ing defense. es!Jecialiy do\\ln the
In our conference is not very stretch. Duke was reduced to 36
higl) ...
percent shooting.
"They iike.tQ punch the bail,"
- If Seton Hall struggles with an
Michigan forWard Terry Mills
· Inferiority complex, It ts under- said. "They're very impressive.
-standable. The New Jersey
school has been oVershadowed in When I left the hotel !Saturday)
the East and unknown t'o many they were down 26-8. When·1 got
outside the area. It has played to.the arena they were up by ~lx
basketball sin~ 1903 and been to or eight. They .h ave a lot of
·the NCAA Tournament but twice, class~ "
Mills forms
frontline with.
At Sunday's news conference,
and
·Loy
Vaught. The
Glen
Rice
in a show of hands, only'twoofsix·
three
were
responsible
responsi·
Mlchigari players knew before
ble
for
containing
lilinois
on the ·
the tournament where Seton Hall
boards. the , game's decisive
was located.
.
By FRED LIEF
UPI Aaslstanf Sports Editor

one

GIANT KILLERS - Seton Hall players Pirates will bailie Ml chlgaa at 9 this evening for
celebrate Saturday's 95- '18 semi-final victory over the national crown. Michigan edged Illinois, 113-81,
Duke In the NCAA tournament at, Seallle. The In Saturday's nightcap. (~I)

: · ·N~ts lose 12t~ ·straight' road· game

I
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By United Press International
shots and had too many key
Hawk~! 132. Pacers 109
: Apparently, the only one who
turnovers," said New Jersey
At Ind'timapolis, Reggie Theus
;cou ld figure out what might
Coach Willis Reed, whose club scored · 27 points to lead a
; make Michael Jordan an even
has lost nine straight at Cl\Jcago balanced Atlanta attack. Three
·, better basketball player was the
Stadi~~·
"We played fairly other Hawks scored more than 20
: MVP himself.
decently from our side. but we're points: Moses Maione with 25,
·. Thirteen ga'n'ies ago; Jordan
just not good enough yet. We're Doc Rivers with 24 and Dorni·
;was switched, to point guard at
just a couple of players away."
nlque Wilkins with '23. Indiana,
·his ow n s uggestion by Chicago
Elsewhere Sunday night It 22·49, was led ])y Chuck Person
:c oach Doug Coiiins, After grow·
was: Philadelphia 108, Houston with 2$ points.
: :Ing in th e role for eight games. he
99; Cleveland 117, Boston 100;
BuUets 120, Warriors 103
·: has since regis tered five straight
At Landover, Md.. Darrell
Atlanta 132. Indiana 109; Wa·
: trip ie·da ubl es, giving him 10 this
shington 120, Golden State 103;
Walker collected 16 points, 10
• season and l!i in his career.
Dallas 98. Miami96; Detroit 117. rebounds and 9 assists to help
• · He registered game·highs of 28
LA Clippers 101; and the Los Washington extend its horne
: points, 14 rebounds and·12 assists
Angeles Lakers 118, Milwaukee winning streak to 13 games.
•
· ·sund ay, and added 2 steals and 2 117.
Walker, who sat out the final 15
·. ·blocked shots to help the Bulls to
minutes, had 14 points, 8 re·
Slxers 108,1Wckets 99
:: a 106·95 viet or'y over the New
bounds and 7 assists at intermis• Jersey Nets. who have lost 12
AI Philadelphia, Charles Bark·
sian. With the victory ,Wasb,ing·
·• j lrai ght on the road.
·
ton moved within three giullls of
ley scored 26. points and Hersey
;; "It's fun when you win," Hawkins added 23 to pace the
the Celtics for the eightif'and
•. ·Jordan·
said
.
"Yeah,
I
can
feel
it.
Sixers. The loss was Houston's final Eastern Conference playoff
.
, . 1 can feel when everyone's 22nd straight at the Spectrum,
berth.
; "involved. I can feel when I'm dating back to·1974. Otis Thorpe
Mavericks 98, Heal 9G
:. having a pretty. good game and scored ri career·high 37 for
At Dallas, Adrian .Dantley hit
.... moving in on a triple-double."
Houston, tiut Akeem Olajuwon an lS·foot jump shot at the final
:: Jordan's tr!p.le·doubles have was held ·to 10. 15 below his . buzzer and scored 25 points to
. :; not all come against league season average.
pace the Mavericks. Rolando
:-:: doormats. His previous ones in
Blackman added 20 and Sam
Cavaliers 117•. Celtlcs 100
··' the strea k came against Seattle.
AI Richfield , Ohio, Ron Harper
Perkins 19 for the Mavericks.
Go lden State, Milwaukee and score'd 28 points and Brad Daugh·
Kevin· Edwards led Miami with
Cleveland.
erty added 27 as · Cleveland 27 points.
Scottie Pippen added 23 points. contlnued its dominance over
Pistons 117, Clippers 101
for the Bulls. including 8 in a 16·2 Boston. It was the fourth time the
At Los Angeles, Joe Dumars
run m idway through the third Cavaliers have beaten theCellics
scored 23 points as Detroit won
• quarter that helped Chicago pull this season and seventh time at
its eighth straight. Bill Laimbeer
· away.
The Coliseum since Lennv
had 22 points and 18 rebounds and
New Jersey, 24-49, lost its third Wilkens took over as coach.
Vinnie Johnson came oft the
.straight and 13th in it s last 14 Daugherty hit his first 10 shO\S.
bench to score 12 o( his 22 points
· .g.arnes,
Kevin McHale came off the
in the fourth quarter for the
"We just missed too many Boston bench to score 34.
Pistons, who have won 17 of 18.
I
Ken Norman had 24 to lead the
Clippers.
Lakers 118, Bucks 117
At Inglewood. Calif.. Bryon
Scott scored 32 points, Including
five 3·pointers. as Los Angeles
Snpytllt' Dlv~to 11
Majors
outlasted Milwaukee. Magic
y-f "oal.-y
l1 n fl u; .. :aM ..:~•
~ -•.o~ M~d
n 31 7 91 ~~~~~ 333
Johnson had 24 points, A.C .
,\.'HERJf,\."11 J.E ,\G Ct:
~ - \' llnt'OIIWr
33 :11 M ";4 '!51 '!5:1
Ry t.: nlwd rrl""~ lnh·r~lhnatl
Green
20 and James Worthy 19
Winnlpt'lf
!6 I'! I'! &amp;-1 :IM 3ll
x~ ·llra-hil"d plu;t·oflllfrth
for
the
Lakers. Ricky Pierce' led
W 1. rc·1. r.n
Y·t·l irw: ht'd dlvl!don tiiiP
II 0 .UINI Raltirnttl"''
the
Bucks
with 29 points, Jack
~urdu,y'~ Re,.,utl!'l
I! 0 .flOO Rn;dnn $, Qu••l'w&gt;t" ~
Sikma
added
27 and Terry
II II .1100 flt'\'t•land
Rurtlllo -t, NY ll'lwldrr!o 3
l&gt;t&gt;trnll
" II .000 Cummings
19.
Kareem
Abdul·
PIU,.IIUI'Jth 1), Nl' Klut~·r!O 't
t! II ,II!MI :'otiiWilUII:t•
\h,;lalnjt~on fi, !";c&gt;\1' ,JerNP~ .a
Jabbar
had
his
goggles
torn
off
!'lrlt'" ' 'fork
II 0 ,0/Nl Hatrtfurd i, (blca•o I
,
Turunlo
his
face
and
retalia'ted
by
shov·
" 0 .1100 l'hlllldt•lphla 't, MPfti"'al 't ( lit• )
~. Louloo t , Toronlo:l (OT)
ing Larry Krystkowiak. Abdul·
( 'altlnr"&lt;~.
11 "' .!100 l.a~&lt; An~~" 6, VIUlt'eUWr -1
C'hl t · ll.~
0 0 .flotl Jabbar was called for a techni·
Sunday'~ Hhull'!o.
Han*"' ('it)'
II 0 ,(tOO C'ul pry t. Edmonlon ~
cal,
though no punches were
u n . tM~I Mlnl'll'"'•'•
" 'lnniPl'A 3, Minre.otu ~
Oukl~~nd
fl II .000 thrown.
Rn~olnn 3 , Hlll'lfnnt ~
St&gt;aHio·

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Scoreboard ...
F_.a_~t

....... )

T•·~u!'&gt;

41

II .900 -

fl

.IIIMJ -

n

MundM,f '!~j (ia'm t'!'l

R""'lon ( C'Ii! m l.'"" IIH'!J al Rlllllmnno

!St•hmhll 1'· 31. :!:03 p.m.
Tvronl01 ! K••)' I t·~~ at N a ntiUi flty
(Gullit"l.ll 21Hi t. '!::J.i p.m .
.''111.-·aull•t&gt; ( t\u~ llt 1:1-j ) 1&amp;1 fl f'\' f'i~&amp;nd
iS" •tndl•ll HI· II J. J: 3.'i p.m .
l'i('!dll(' [LiUI,I;SIOn 15-11 ) at Ootkllllld
(Sil'wart 21 · 1"!). I i: OS p.m .

I

1\u_
"'WWu,v ·i'i Gam ~
Ch icl\111!1 ;aa falil••rnlll
Nt•ll' l 'ork 11.1 Minll'~otu . nl~~:ht
Dl·t rnlt •ott T( 'XLlS, niK!C
· Wt•Gtt•!idu,~'.,.(;amt':'&gt;
~ · !dtlt; :II Oaklllnrl
8n~thln al Rwlllmon·. nlxht
Mllwu u I.·P at ~ 'lt•\· t • htnd, nl~~:ht
Nt'Vo' \ 'nrk .11.1 Mln,.,liflla. nil(ht
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and Paul O'Neill walked. Win·
ningham forced O'Neill at se·
cond, with Benzinger. moving to
third. Reed then sent a low liner
towar(\5 left field, but Aguaro
made a diving catch for the
second -out and Yett then struck
out Ron Oester to end' the inning.
That was the only time In t)le
game the Reds had a runner past
first base. ·
Rose · sat by himself ln the
dugout and fielded questions
from reporters prior to the game.
bu I, as has been the case all
spring, only about baseball.
Rose started his opening day
lineup, with the exception of ·
Winningham in center in place of
Eric Davis, who was used as the
Reds ' designated hitter.
Neither .Joe Carter nor Cory
Snyder started for Clevel&lt;!nd,
although both singled lnplnchhlt·
ting roles late In the game.

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·COMPLETE PAYIOU
PIOCESSING AND
PAYIOLL CHECK .,.

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Sallllbllry J$rowale Troop 1220 1
Thlnklna' day was oliserved at
the recent meeting of the Salls·
bury Brownie Troop 1220.
.Wently Halar was in charge or
the program on Yugoslavia In
which the girLs wore costumes,sang a birthday song, counted to .
ten, and had a cake from the
country.
.
Investiture and dedication was
observed With the following girls
being named, Morgan Mathews,
Anna Story, Leann Dill, Kim
Peavley, Marjorie Halar, Becky
Johnson, Bei Wilson, Beverly
Burdette, and ErnUy Dillard.
Girls Scout Sunday was March
12 and tile girls observed the day
by wearing their uniforms to
church.
Top Seller In the cookie sale§,
was ErnUy Dillard.
The groop also took 11 trip to
Tri-County Recycling where they
learned about the recycling process and donated aluminum
cans.
· At the r~l)t.Salisbury P .T.O.
the girls led the group In a pledge
to the flag.
Refreshments were served by
Morgan Mathews, Tamara
O'Dell, Melissa Ramsburg, and
Emily Dillard.
Troop leader Is Tracy O'Dell.
SERVICE UNIT TOPICS
Final plans for a JunlorCadette Girl Scout overnighter
and a "backwards dance" for
Brownie and Daisy age Girl
Scouts were made at the March
meeting ot the Big Bend East
Service Unit. The meeting was
held · at the Syracuse· United
Methodist Church.
Both events are scheduled for
Sa~urday, AprU 1. The overnlgh·
ter will be held at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center
from 6:30p.m. Saturday to 9 a.m .
Sunday. Junior girls will ear11
their· dance badge and cadettes
their dance Interest patch during
the course of the evening. The
,Brownie-Daisy • 'backwards
• dance" will be held 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday at the Chester Elementary SchOOl.
' Plans for the annual mother·
daughter banquet were also
flrtallzed :at the March meeting.
The banquet will be held Satur·
,d ay, AprU 8, 1 at Eastern Higb
Schooi; Sci11it leaders are to meet
at the school at approximately 2
· p.m. to set up for the evening.
Troops must paY. $7 for the
banquet, 'with the exception .of
Daisy troops which will pay $5.
Troop contrlbuJ.Ions will be
used to provide the meats for the
banquet. Troops were assigned
specific food Items for the
banquet and each troop should
also bring tableservlce, butter,
salt and pepper, and two gallons
.of tea or koolald. Troop contrlbu·
tions may be sent to Debbie
-Cooke, 43275 F.rank Road, Pome·
roy, or call Cooke at 992·3155 or
992-3771.
It was reported that Big Bend
East' Service Unit sold 125 more
cases of Girl Scout Cookies this
year than In 1988. Altogether,
scouts In Black Diamond Girl
Scout Cooncll sold 1,190,244 boxes
of coolcles this year, which .is
103,000 more than last year.

FDI

2 MEDIUM PIIIAS

sa.aa·

---

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11•-l•fri.s.t.

SHEILA~S TANNING
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
WITH NEW NUVAUIIUM BULBS

COURrN£Y N. RIFE

•

'

1 Rife birthday
~

Cour!IJey Noelll! Rife, daugh• ter of Jan and Martin Andrew,
recently celebrated her second
birthday at her home.
Attending were her grandpar·
ents Charles and Ellen Rife,
• grandmother Toni Andrew,
Dusly\,Andrew, Chrlltopher Trl·
plett, Adam Hantna. and Kenny
and Cheryl Lee. .
Sending gins were James and
Ruth .J''rlddy and Tracy, Rutland,
and Fern and Curt Roush,
Pomeroy.

Easter SUeitJ'
Easter Sunday.dlnner guests of
; Mr. and Mra. Mike B1111ell. and
· tamUy of Pomeroy were Mr. and
: Mra. Tom ·Groeneveld and
: Tommy, Wortb(JIIton; Mr. and
. Mra:· Mark Miller and Eddie
: Hayman, Westerville; Mr. and
· . Mrs. Mike Shlpllowllll, Powelt
Mri. Tli'ty Huber, Tara and
: Terry Jr. of GallOway; Harold
· · and Judy Holter1 Mae McPeek.
: Ada ancl Kennetn BIBiell, Loag
•· Bottcim; and James Howard of

:.: and

~~.

Mldll ..., t: II p.m.

overtime.
The Smythe Division playoff
picture was previously settled,
with Vancouver opening at Cal·
gary, and Edmonton at Los
·
Angeles.
In the Patrick Div~ion, the
New York Rangers avoided
completing their stretch-run collapse with a fall to fourth place
but received outside help when
Pittsburgh beat Philadelphia.
The Rangers, who lost their shot
at .second the prevlo~s night.
entered their 6·4 loss to the
eliminated New York Islanders
two points ahead of Philadelphia,
which lost to the runner-up
Penguins 6·5 In oVertime.
· The Rangers will visit Pitts·
burgh in the playoffs while
Philadelphia opens at ihe Patrick champion Washll)gton Capitals, who finished , th.lrd overall
in the NHL. .

..

Pllmeroy:

.

.

"'

Monday. April 3. 1989

Page-6

Meigs County :Girl Sc~ut Diary

'·

n,.

l'lllll~phla at N- l'ork . H: 30 p.m.

NATION.\L HOCIEV Ll!ii\GUE

. '

Tradl'd minur· h·uaatr otl·

·.500, swarmed . each other in
By LISA HARRIS
congratulations before a crowd
UPI Sports' Writer
For those who believe the NHL ofl7,732in the arena hailed as the
season is too long and the Stanley league's loudesj.
'
Cup playoff fi~ld too large, the
"We
could have died easily In
Chicago Blackhawks needed 48 that third period, be)ng behind.
extra seconds to trip i)ltQ the &lt;But we·didn/,t, an.d w.e just have to
postseason a"' the 16tlt qualifier. , build on that," .said Murray.
The Blackhawks beat the Not.
Toronto, '28&lt;46-6; last missed ·.
ris Division rival Toronto l\faple the playoffs in tl)e 1984·85 season.
Leafs 4·3 in overtime Sunday
The Blackhawks won only four
night to wrap up the (Qurth and of their final)&amp; games. Toronto
rtnal berth in a division which closed in by winning tbree of. the
featured no team with a winning five prior to Sunday .
record.
Chicago's Dltk Graham and
. Chicago, 27-41-12, will open ,the Bob Bassen - on a perfect pass
postseason at Detroit against the from Murr,a y - scored within 91
Norris champion Red Wings, seconds of the third period to
who lost at St. Louis Ia drop to send the game . into overtime. ·
34-34-12 .
Murnay then s.tole the,puck from
Troy Murray scored 48 seconds Toronto defenseman Todd Gill
Into overtime after setting up the ·deep in the Map)eLeafs'. zone and
tying goal to help Chicago avoid fired a quick shot past Allan
missing the playoffs for the first Be&amp;ter' on the only shot of
time since the 1S68·69 season.
The Blackhawks, finishing the
regular season 14 games below
110¥f OP.EII

___

' second on a single by Pat Keedy.
After Brad Korilminsk fouled to
first baseman Todd Benzinger.
Joel Skinner got his second hit of
the game, a sharp single · to
center.
Aguayo stopped at third, but
when Herm Winningham's throw
home bounced a way from
catcller Terry McGriff; he
streaked in with the only run of
!he game.
The Indians , who finished
spring training with a 19·11-1
record. their most ~ins since
1973, were held hitless for the
first four innings by Rick Mahler,
who went six shutout innings and
surrendered two hits, the ldenti·
cal figures posted by Cleveland
starter Rich Yett.
Cincinnati, which had a 16·14·2
exhibition record , had its only
scoring opportunity in the fifth. ·
';lenzinger led off with a single

element.
In the backcouri, the Wolve·
rines have an excejltional point
guard In Rumeal Robinson and a
defensive speCialist in Mike
Griffin. There is also Higgins,
~foot·9 and a threat from 3·point
range.
·
"They're unusual in that they .
have that combination of size,
strepgth and quickness," Carle·
sima sa iii. "But that's the kind of
team you're going to play tor the
national ch_ampionship." ,
Carlesimo watched only four
minutes of the Michigan· Illinois
game . .
·'That was enough · to get
scared," he said.
Rice being but one reason. He
burned Illinois for 28 points and
will be guard!!&lt;~ Monday night by
Darryli Walker or John Morton
with help from Michael Cooper.
But Seton Hall is an old hand at
this. Duke presented a similar
obstacle with Danny Ferry. He
got his 34 points, It .was no:
enough.
.'The key is not gonna be to stop
Glen Rice," Carleslmo said. ·
"The key Is to make him work
hard."
The matchup at guard is
particularly good: Robinson
against Gerald Greene, who ran
the floor bea'utifully against ,
Duke.
· ··
"As great as Rumeal is, so is
Gerald," Carlesirno said.
Andrew Gaze, the. Australian
Olympic star who was flawless in
the second half Saturday, gives the Pirates outside fire'. Morton
is the team's top scorer and
Ramon Ramos takes up space
down low. And, of course, the
reserves keep coming.
Whether Seton Hall has the
quickness and brute force to stay
with Michigan remains to be
seen. But Greene is certain of at
least one thing.
"We can't get down by 18
points." he said, "and think it's
gonna work out."

Blackhawks ar~ 16th NHL. qualifier·

n..-onat ........ 7:10p.m.

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Pro results

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l"htl&amp;ldt•lphl~ Si~d
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S i\TION ,\1. U :.\GI 'F.:
('hit'lti(O

Bufl ..o

a·

-- ..

Tlte Daily ·Sentinel

:By The Bend.

-,,,
'

Some troops In Big Bend East
Service Unit sUI! have a few
boxes of cookies left to sell&gt;
Anyone wishllig more cookies
may contact 'Big Bend East
Service Unit Director Shttley
Cogar, at 992·:1668, for lnforma·
tlon regarding extra cookies.
Cogar reminded Brownie lead·
ers that third grade girls may
participate In !lie spring Plug· In
programs which are scheduled
tllr'oughout April and May. Infor·
matlon on Plug: Ins are available
from the Girl Scout field office In
Athens.
- T•
Cogar also ~assed along a
safety alert from the U.S . Consu·
mer Product \Saf.ety Agency
cautioning scout ·leaders to beware when usinj: folding tables;
the kind found \D many schools
and churches. U not set up
properly, the tables may easily
tip over. Scouts should not be
. permitted to pl~y near folding
tables or allowed to fold or unfold
the tables.
'
Finally, Cade~tes, Wendy Har·
mon and Anl~l!homas, were
named as Girl :&gt;t'"ut representa· .
lives to the Meigs County Junior.
Fair Board.
I·
·
The next meeltng of Big Bend
East Service unlit will be Thurs·
day, April 6, 7. p.m., at the
Chester Fire Station.
1 .

lob

Raelne TrOO()
Racine Junior Troop 1042 spent
the weeks of February learning
about the countcy of Greece. The
girls learned a qreek folk dance
which they performed on Tblnk·
lng Day, Feb. l25, at Chester
Elementary. Members of Racine
Brownie Troop .259, which stu·
died the countl)j of South Korea
tor Thinking Day, assisted the
Juniors with thflr presentation
on Greece by ,a cting as Opponents
in an "OlympiC' , race.
After Think~ Day, the girls
were kept buSY' delivering Girl
Scout cookies, working on profl·
clency badges and planning their
April trip to the Center of Science
and Industry In Columbus.
Also during February, the girls
cofnpleted requirements for
tbelr Girl Scout Cookie patches.

Library lines

shared Information on Italy ·
during ThInking Day activities at
Chester Elementary.
Sl nee Thinking Day, the girls of
Troop 1037 have been busy
getting ready for spring. They
have been tearing about wildlife
and conservation and we.r e vi·
sited by Meigs County Game
Protector Keith Wood who prO'
vl!led them with materials .and
Information on birds of this area.
· In learning aboutfood prepara·
tlon, the girls were permitted to
tour Pizza Hut.
During Girl Scout Week, the
glris made Individual trefoil
emblems to display outside their ·
homes and combined eftorts on a
poster which was displayed at
the Merri-Cllpper in Chester.

a book titled "My Library ," but
the library needs you tq write the
By Ruth l'owers
pages for the book.
Hey kids! In observance of
The subject of the book Is
National · Library Week · (April · "What tlfti' Library Means to
10-15), the library Is publishing Me.''

'

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
Pomeroy Btownle Girl Scouts
have been busy since the first of
the year.- The glrll completed
requirements for the People of
the World try·lt badgedurlngthe ·
month of Jariuary.
During February, the girls
provided tray r avors for the
month for Overbrook Nursrng
Center and favors for Valentine's
Day for the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Extended Care Center.
Also during February, the girls
were 'Instructed In knot tying by
Todd Smith, father of troop
member Amy Smith.
The troop sold 155 cases of Girl
Scout cookies OJ Is year to finance
a trip to the Columbus Zoo. The .
girls are also making plans for a
spring hike and bicycle rodeo.
The third grade girls In the
troop have been visiting the
Pomeroy Library one time a
month to work on fly-up requi~­
ments for their transition to the
Junior level of scouting,
The troop has 33 registered
scouts. 'I)'oop leader Brenda
Neutzllng Is assisted by Pam
Roach, Nancy Smith, April
Smith, Imojean Blevins and Jane
Moon.

r------------

Chesler Brownie Troop 108'1
Girl Scouts In Chester Browrile
Troop 1067 began the new year
' learning ' about the . different .
types of cookie~~ they would be
selling ti&amp;IJing ·the annual Girl
Scout Coolie Sale. The girls also
.learned how to sell the cookies,
and shared many original Ideas
about marketing, all part of the
fequlrernents to earn the patches
·
for cookie saleS.
Tbe girls also went to the
Chester horne of Mrs. Batbara
Pulver where they printed their
own tee shirts. The rest of
January was devoted to plans for ·
Thinking Day, which was held
Feb. 25. The Clrester Brownies

Middleport
Garden:Club ·
has m~ting
Mrs. Dana Kessinger pres·
ented a review or two books,
"Flower Gardens" and Victory
Gardens" by Crochett, at the
recent meeting qr the Middleport
Garden Oub he\d at the home
Jeanne Bowen In Syracuse.
Both books w,re enjoyable as
well as lnformable. The author
noted that a gardener's year is a
circle With no beginning and no"
end. Tbe books ~ke the gardener
through an entire year, month by
month. Each rjnonth specified
what tasks ~ to be done and
Instructions for constructions tor
cold framj!S and other things
nlte&lt;led for gardj!l)lng.
Mrs. Kesslngj r concluded the
· program by reading "The
Garden" from ~he book ." Lord
Let Me Love" by Mar jorle
Holmes.
Roll call wa~ answered with
members naming a . favorite
sprtna flower. '
The meetlne opened wtth Rae
Reynolds, president, reading .a ·

poem.
Members were reminded that
the regional tneetlng will be
Saturday at the Quality Inn In
Nelsonville. Reservations are ~ .
and must be made by Tuesday.
The gr011p Is re~~ponslble for
helpln~th refreshments. 'providing a cfliM1irize, and making
an IUTIUI~t for the flower
sbow. Dorothy Morris l.s to mike
that arrailpment .
' • RetrealuMD'- were 1ervecl by
Mra. Bowen and Mra. Morris'.
The centerpiece wu a ceramic
bunny surrounded by mauve
m~ and white and yellow
carnations pr!(lared by Mrs.

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Wav'.to
. Lose Weight

•

BAUSCH&amp;
UMJB

RITE AID
CIITJlHI

SWABS
-'S

SALINE
SOWTION

SENSITIVE EYES"' BRAND OR
ITERILE fJRESERVEO-tZ OZ.

79

~~T
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Speeiai)An amazing new weighlloss pill called
"fat·ffi8&amp;1ld" has reCently been devel·
oped and perfected by l¥oO
doctors a1 a IMirld liinous
iral in
Los Ayes thai reponedly "guarantees"
steady fll 1ou and caloric
reductiOII by simply takina !heir~
'and prcNe11 new pill.
The
pcrnmcnthasjust approved lhe doctors claims fur a hard·to-get
palenl that c:onfinns ''there has never

c;unent

roo

u.s.

MYLANTA·tl

UQUID
ANTACID

=

bcenanythin&amp;liketheirfat-bondingpill
proceui:JeiR."II is allltallynew ·
scientific breaklhroulh IIIII is
lionizing the weiabt fillS industry.
. . Caa "f.at Nonnally"
Best i:I aU, ")'011 can CQntinuc to
eat )001' &amp;lvotite lbods IIIII you·don't
hiM to change your normal eating
habits. You CaD start ioaiag Jilt aniJ
reduce calories from the very first day,
until you IIChieYe the idell wei&amp;ht )'OU
desire wilhout excn;' · ",
n - .·r.t
Body
~ new pill is IDPI'OPriately called
the ''fai·IIIIIIJICI" pDf beCause it breaks
irm thouslnd&amp;ofpanic:les, each acti1111
lie a tiny J111111d, ''llincting" IUid

1Z oz.

59

0::,

SAVINGS EVERYDAY ON
ctJCA.COlA PRODUCI'S
AT RIJE AID ·

trappil:atimea~~~=

andCI!oriea IJe naturally ''ftuWd'"
right OUI of your body because they
cannot be ablorbed. '
Wllllin 2 d¥ you should notice a

2 UTER BOTTLE

changeintheailorof)'OUrSIOOI,CIII!ed
by the lit par1icles beinJ eliminated.

"AutiimMMcaab"lole tal

.

~tooneol'tlteinYenlors, Dr.

Willi~m SllcH, hean specialist and
associate professot of medicine at
UCLA meilicaliChool, "!he new fit·

bondifllprOceu Is a "lazy uy"to lose

weight because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories by

HEll'$

elinliniiiD.I dielaryfrrt. lt is 100~ Ilk

SNACKS

andnoudq."
·
The fat·mqnet pill• are already
swecpiag the COUDtry with llowina
repurll ~.,... loll from &amp;mcrly
MI'W8iahl peOple IIi all walks of life
wbo 11'1: rwiw slimmer, trimmer and

~:;:v'*·
IJe

tryiJic Ill

AI Varieties
1111 ••• lap

.4/89C

....,.,,.
,,.,,
ANI.',_.,...

Public
50, 100
)'OUr

• ,.., ancnw

IUC·

a ,., • • .,...--,., •"'
alltiiiTillfl
•
. - "'u.r
.

'
'

,,•

'

IRE AID DISCOUNT

PHARMACY'~

106 lAST IIAIN STilET
.....Y,OHIO

PRIIIIACY PHOIII: 992·2516

Bowen.

r
Tbe next m~lng. wlll.be at tbe

home of Mra. Mary Skinner. All
members are to take a miniature
· arranpmen~. I
,.

II

Show off your writing skills by
coming to the Pomeroy or
Middleport Libraries and pick· .
tng up "your page" of the book .
and writing your story of what
the library means to you.

,.

.. - ·"'-

•

.•

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.. \:.._ ..

•

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•

�..... -.... ·- ·- . .

.

...- -~·

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

' TOPS OH 570 has meeting
the meeting with a prayer and

Peggl VIning, assistant weight
recorder, reported that the best
losers for the week of 3-20 were
Kay Morris and Darlene Buckley
at the recent meeting of Ohio
TOPS 570, Runner:up was Lenni
Aleshire.
Mrs. Aleshire, leader, opened

pl,edge.
..
..
The fruit basket was won by
Nellle Grover and the surprise
package was won by Phyll_ls
McMillan.
Mrs. Morris won the Easter
contest.

..

~··

·•·

.....

~

. . ., .

Monday, April 3, 1989

· Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Rutland Gardend· Club meets
I
Ruth and Ed Durst presented a Turner and tile creed and coUecl
program on "Seed Planting at was given In unison.
the Greenhouse"' at the recent
.Reports were given nn the
meeting ol the ·Rutland Garden therapy prcigram at the LoalllpoClub held at the home of Ann lls 'Development Center and the
Eliza beth Turner with Binda · recently attended 50th annlver·
sary ~elebrallon of 'the Chesler
Diehl as co-hostess.
The Dursts use a potting mix Garden Club.
Arrangements were made to
' finer than most and keep the
temperature at about70 degrees. attend the regional m~tlng at
According to the report, If seed · Nelsonvllle on Salurday with the
flats are uncovered they need group to furnlsh"a door prize and
watering two or tllree a day. and favors lor the tables.
If the · flats are covered with
Ne.va Nicholson, Dorothy Wooplastic, they should be watered dard, Margaret Weber, Pauline
Atkins, Mrs . Robson, antH.farcla
every two days.
Eva Robson spoke on "Cinder Denison furnished flowers for the
·
Blocks Make Herbs Thrive." She churches.
made
an ar·
Pearle
Canaday
stated that lfthere Is a problem In
rangement
of
earlY
blooms,
Mrs.
finding space for herb gardens
Diehl
made
a
tl'ble
arrangement,
that the holes "tn cinder block can
be filled ,with dirt and planted and Mrs. Nicholson made an , .
arrangement with white
with herbs.'
daffodils.
Devotions were given by Mrs.

.

IN IEIORY OF
JENNIFER FIIEIID
It h• llttn I ,.... 1inc1
01r swtll' little airl h•
pustd 1W1J lid WI IIIII
her very much.
.
Jesus h• llkla 1 b11utlful
bud,
'
Cut ol Ollfo111'dln of lavt;
Bonte it_, to !111 City of
God,
Homnf thiM•-•
Grlndtu

•

.

•
'•'
'•

Elberfeld wlll plant flowers at
. the Flatwoods Church for the
Wildwood Garden ,Club &lt;tt the
recent meeting of 'the group at
'the home of Doris Grueser. Hilda
Yeauger was the host.
Devotions were given by Janet
Theiss who read "His Easter
Gift" and '.'God's C:tlt." RoD call
was answered ·by naming a song
with a flower In the title.
Members were reminded oft he
spring regional meeting on Sat·
SURPRISE -In a surP.rlse geature, Rita Radford, RockSpringS
: Road, Pomeroy, was honored by co-workers at Veterans Memorial
H1111pltal Friday to mark hel' retirement atter 20 years at the .·
hospl&amp;al 011 Salurday. A nursing assisting In acute care, he was
'presented a watch and candlelamp by co-workers and flowers by
head nurse Tammy BaiL With her In the photograph are Karen
: ft!lull aad Doris Woodyard. Mrs. Radford plans to devote her
: spare lime to flower and vegetable gardening. "I will miss the
people and patients," she said.

· Comm~nity'
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT-,Meigs Chap·
ter, Order of DeMolay,,wlll meet
Monday. 7: 30p.m. at lhe Middle·
port Masonic Tempole. The state
scr)be will be a guest. Members
and potential members are Invited to attend.

GALLIPOLIS - A Calling of
Eagles, for all men In the Meigs.
GaiDa, Mason area, who were
Eagle scouts, will be held Tuesday, 7 p.m .• In the back room of
Dale's Smorgasbord,---in the
Sliver Bridge Plaza. All fo rmer
Eagle scouts are welcome to
attend.

SYRACUSE - Sutton '!'ownship Trustees wlll meet Monday,
7:30 -p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Bulldlng.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Garden Club will meet
Monday, 7: 30p.m. , at the home
of Mrs. Arthur Skinner. Hostess
will be Mrs. Skinner and Nellie
Zirkle. All members are to bring
a miniature arrangement.

POMEROY- A special meet·
lng o! Pomeroy Lodge 164 w ~e
held Tuesday, 12 noon, at the
Jemple on Mulberry Ave.

---

I

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -The ·regular
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge 164
will be he!!) Wednesday. 7:30
p.m., al the Middleport Temple.
Refreshments wlll be served
following the meeting.

' HARRISONVILLE - There
will be a missionary meeting at
Harrisonville Holiness Church,
State Route 684, on Wednesday at
7: 30p.m. Don DeLong will be the
speaker. Pastor David Ferrell
Invites the public.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Literary Club will meet on
Wednesday at 2 p.m. althe home
of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Everett Hayes will review a
biography of George Eliot and
roll call will be an example of
women In a man's world ,_

HARRISONVILLE -The Co·
lumbla ·:I'ownshlp Trustees will
Jlleet Monday. 2 p.m., Instead of
7:30p.m .. at the llrehouse.

.

--FALLS

,
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, will have a a
regular meeting Thursday at
7:30p.m, Past matrons and past
patrons wlll be hohored. Past
matrons are to wear their past
matrons' dress. Inlatory work
wlll be exemplified. Officers are
to wear chapter dresses .

.

LETART
- Letart
Falls PTO will meet Monday, 7
p.m .. at the school. Election or
officers will be held. All parents
are urged to attend.

•

•

POMEROY . - The Ladles
Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order
.of Eagles, 2171, will have a
meeting . 8 . p.m . Tuesday .
Members are asked to bring a
covered dish.
·

POUCIES

•Acfe outside Meig1,

O~lia

•Rec;eiYe IS .SO discount for adt pt~id in advance.
•f,...Mis- Giveawey and found tds under15~dtwill be
run 3 diiVI at no ch•ge.
•Price ol ad for all cephal IMtlfl it double price of ad cost
•1 point line type anty w.d.

•&amp;..,tinal is nat rnponsibl11 fOJ 8ff0fllfttr fir1t d., .. ICt"llck
tor erran fi{ll dey ad runa in pal*'). Cell before 2 :00 r. .m.
d.v after public:alion to make cot'rectian.
'
•Ad• that mull bt paid In tdvtnct ere
Ctrd of Thankt
~
Heppv Ads
In Memoriam
. Y•d Salt1 .
•a cl111ified tdvenlMment placed In TheOailv Sentini!tl lexcep,t - cl•sifled displ-v. lu•in•• Ctrd and legll notic~)
will al1o app. . in th11 Pt. Pt. .ent R•gilter and the Gtlhpoli• Daily Tribune, reaching over 18. 000 hom•.

Meeting canceled
POMEROY - The April 3
meeting of the Meigs Association
for Retarded Citizens has been
postponed until April 10. A dish
towel shower for the kitchen wlll
be held at this time.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2,00 P.M. MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2,00 P.M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 ,00 P.M. WEDNESOAY
'('HURSDAY PAPER'
- 2 •00 P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

-

SUNDAY PAPER

2:00P .M . FRIDAY

.

Classified ppges cover (he
.
.
following telephone exchanges ...

.
'
GaUlt County
Area Code 014 '

367-Ch•hir•

388- Vinton
241- Ria Grande

251- Guyen Dlst.
643- Arabia Oist .
379- W.anu-t

_.

' Melga County · Mason Co .. ~V
A,.• Code 614
Area Cod11 304
992- Middltpan

Pam•ov

9111- Ch•llr
1143- Portltnd
247-Lelert FtUI
848- Aec:int
742-Rutll!l"'d
167- Cootville

176- Pt. Pl . . .'n t
418 - t.ton

576- Appl• Grove
773- Mpon

16·26 WORDS
$6.00
$8 .00
$13.00
$8.00
$13 .00
$21 .00
$51.00
~33 . 00

$4.00
$5.00

1-----6rd of Th enkt
2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucements
4 - Giveaway
5 - Happy Adt
6 - loat and Found
.'7 - Varct SeltiP&amp;id in edvancut
8 - Public Sale&amp;. Auction
9- ~111tlld to Buy

28-35 WORDS
$7.00
$10.00
• $16.00
•26.00
$60.00

Merchamlise
51 1125354 56 58 57 -

Houeehold Gooch
Sponing G~
AI1tiquaa
Mile. MMphei1dite
Building Suppli•
Pets tor Sale
Mulicif lnsbummta

59 - For Sale or Trade

Farm Suppltes
&amp; L1veslock

·1 1 - Hetp Wanted
12- Situation Wanted
I
13- lnsurance
14 - Busin•• Training
1 &amp;- School• &amp; Instruction
1 6 :-Radio. TV &amp; C B Aup air
17- Mi•c•llaneoue ·
18- W.nted To Do ·

61 826364 66 -

,o loan

73.'74 715 78 77 78 79 -

Hom81 for S.et
MDbila HomM for Site
Ferma tor Sale
Butln•• Buildings
Lots &amp; Acre~ge
Aetl e... ,, Wented

Vans &amp; 4 WO' a
Motorcycl•
B"ott• &amp; Motors tor s .. e
Auto Parts II Acc•eor lll
Auto Rep 1ir
Camping Equipment
Cempera 6 Motor Hom•

L•••

Public Notice ·

--MIDDLEPORT -The re·gutar

-vo- JOHNIE C. DO·

meeting of Mlddleporl Lodge 363,

FAAM, will be Tuesday. 7:30
p.m., with work In the fellowcrafl
dqree. The Deputy Grand Mas·
ter will present a 70-year-pln to
qodne)' Downing. Plans will' be
_... for the annual Church
SUDtlay for the lodJe.

to"owll)g reel Ntate. being

Vlltege.

and In

--

•

·POMEROY- From now 'on,
die Llldlel Awdllary of the
Frateraal Order of Ealles, 2171,
Will meet at ~ p.m. on Tut!ldilya.
Mlnlllln ate uked to brlnl a
cowred 111111 fiJI' pot luck.

We Servlcto

.

:!

20.HSSIONS $3$.~00
•

Open Monday-Saturday
9 A.M.·9 P.M.
CaD For Appointment
949-1433 ' .

.

A'li ,The Comforts of Home

United State1 M•r•h•l .
Southhern Dltlllcl of Ohio.

.

Li~· Smith &amp; Janet Warner

Owner•

·BODY..TALK
TANNING SALON

.,

..

....

.....

., '
•

l,

•

THE" lEST ~ ~·.

THE lEST
ARE AlREADY ,HERE
~""

11· 1 B-'88-tfn

I
I

I

TilliS. LL 6:45P.M. 1
5UII. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. 1
.
DOOI PIIZI
,
2 H.D. FREE with coupon and I

·

·lliln:h.. of min. H.C. Pack· I
... Lim~ 1 coupon Jltr cus- j
tomer por binJJ sess1on.
1
Wo , ,

•so.oo P• Gonoo
10 Pqple 165.00 1
I

I Over
I'
PJr Game
1,u. aoos.n

2·3-lll

1

COUNTRY
MOBILE.
HOME PARK
•Mobile

..

.J&amp;L

INSULATION

Home ~

Part~ ...
•Mobile Home
Rantala
•Lot Rentals

Call 992-2772

.---------..:..--------,
LIMESTONE
HAULED

Holzer '
Medical
Center
.

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS·
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS.
ROTOTILLERS
. fi .... . . •
ETC.

DAVE'S ENGINE
IE PAll
992-6506

, ... the pain out of
palnt)"'l· Let - do
it for yoe.
. YEIY IIASONMU
HAYIIIFIIINCI

mo.

614-915-4180

,.... lila pllce of beginning

DRill: lyrwou•. Ohio
of S.to: C•h
~~~ _.., of Mia. I r•ervethe
213
·lilht "' rejeOI MY and au
~,;:::;~~---...1.1 llfdl. llobor1 W. Fo-•

r•••llfl
....... ...............
..

~OY- TlleAllhelmers
••• ,. ...... will llleat ~t tile

"

'

,.

v \.

I

T-•

Wanace Bradford,
t. o. McCoy

Commi11ionera of Juror•

14) 3. 1tc:

Pl. .w. WV 2511i&amp;O In c•e of
thtRiglt1er. CimpConl-..lf•.

Wll'lt_. 1t11nclng timber, peytng
top prico; 304-548·15824 tltw

1he mtnt-'1¥ rllt•ded. R.t•-

8 :00PM .

Part - tim~~ r•pit• c••

uN"• for

..,._ •d •wtenDt r ..uirld.
StndriiUme •OJC C1&amp; in eve of
Pt. PI _ _, Roglo1•. 200 Mlln
St. Pt. PI-tnt. WV 2511150.

.

70 or 80 cckid:ltl"'ii bike. phone

'-': time rllilble l.t¥ to IUIIt"'"'
wilh elderly IMir -. h• home.
Ref•enc:. r.,ited. Send inqulrll to Box C-1 , c.e Paint
Ple•lftt Regilt•, 200 Main St.~~
Pblnt PI. .IM, W. Vt. 261560.

Help Wanted
"1""2-""S"'it"'u-a-t"'io_n_s_ _~ ·'
' "
Wanted

Eern tiC 'In mOntv toryouraprlng

- ..,..----- ...:.' ...

-1

Will do bobyoltting. 304-578- ,
29H.
,
:

V18AIMAITERCARD
USCHAAGEG-_,tod
Ret•&lt;~•• ofCrtdtt Reting. Call
12131 925-9908 •t. u
2524.
.

tim• &amp; p.. time
n.-...
''"wing -lty. E-... alory
Full

LPN'•
100 ' bad ' 1kill_.

M

School a
Instruction

16

- - - - - - - - - ,; d

• beneflta. Appt, In P«ton at
Scenic Hlllt Nursing c.nt• or

coli 814-448-71150.

·

3·13· '89·1 mo.

Ann nunc e111 ~ 111 s

VAUGHN'S
AUTO ~ DIESEL
SERVICE .
SYIACUSf, 01110

BOGGS

1..,.

Homo typo
Aa• 41f-81 to 18 Wanted to Do
ltte in. Frw room li bo•d. Cel 1 - - - - - - - - -

Giveaway

814-44.3419.

SAliS &amp; SUVICE
GUYSYW. 0110

\WI be,11t In '!'i home. Rio ·
c.11 &amp;14-2415- ,

John
Oe••· N- Holl..,d,
' Buah'Hog Farm
Equpmant Deater.
ht........,
.... , t.Yiet

Or•• ....

Aulhor~

Dom•lic Vllhid•
A/C Service

All Mojor • Minor
Ropolr.
NIASE Certtfild M•ch~nlc

CAU 992-6756
"DO&lt;" VAUGMN

1·3-'18-tfc

Certified Licen•• Shop

6-28-'18-""

' •VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Help Wanted

BISSELL
SIDINC CO.

···-Wt

Leeaa Murphey
&amp; AOAoclateo

"F"' Eatlmete."

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 9119·2160

108 HIRh.SI,.rt
Pomft'Oy, Ohio 45769
Phono (6L&lt;I) 992-2922

NO SUNDAY

1448.

Will do bob¥ tilling In my,llomo.
Very good hoi"''W .,d flmlty

envtronmenl. Cell 014-4411418.
To good horne. Boxet('A Pttl Wll
4 •...vect famll•. 3 mil•.
C"""'od - · d~i*od ttlt,
thota. Calllar._• Priddr, 814742-2817.
Frw p u - mlocod hound. 8
....... old. 304-87!f-3018.

6

LOst and Found

D'*•

7

Yard Sale

614·245-tSS1

3·1 0· 'lt-1 mo.

yordt. Coll814-21!f-8281 '
.. 114-441f-3119.
•.

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER
lmmodl•• opening fof dogrtod

Uwn mowing. churctt.. cem• ·
terill . lnlurtd. A••onebl.e '
rota Alto odd lobo. Ll...

aJifMMY, N. A ..ora. IL 10142.

I.E. wtlh 10

or mor• ye..

txl*ienc. in m•• aumping &amp;

h ..

lln. 114-992·1339.

........,.hlp.

welding op•atione. Knowlldll•
Wtilpop• .,d pointing. Qutllty
111:11• tn c:antt..u:tfng time ltucl• ·
zo
apo•d•.ttingw.ger•• -.lunktn rl. . .. Col l·304-773-a3U ·

v-•

WOIIoton. - - Qhlo. Tho

w•

SUCC.Ilil CM~efor tNI kf¥
potiUon
hare DveiVWI(te

eklll in comr.Nnl~lone wllh
production pononnol In tho
dwlllopnwlt of w...tl; lt81ktn

lorauto• .,d in m•hodt. .,g~- ·
ne.rlng. , Ht or at. mill &amp;.

.
21

'

Buslnes1 .
Opportunity

wiling to bo In tho bolron1 In

.......Gallip-olis ........ ..
&amp; Vicinity

DIUVDD &amp; SPIW
GlWl CO. AliA
17.50 I'll TOll
Cetot•t ...._ ,..,..,

Aetld'Booa bPiyr •100adtl•

Wrlto' ""'•330. 1a1 S. IJn.

foolllty. IIOpooting to tho Pltn1
Min .... of 1 '"'. . ~ pltnt In

LOST: Ropo brocl•. K-Mon, L~
br.-y,
c........ or Foodo
l.,d. Coil 114-448-41125.

n

noNE·

,.

Ape •d Tr.-cNngwork ~~~~ .. "
bit. CoN 814-446-0159.

U. S.IJ. SO UST
614·662·3121

Mo.. Foreign and

2-3-'89 I

4

Mordl 31. Aprl1;1-4-5-lf-7·

ont.,_

-

8 . Rein or ..-a Llr11 t•IV•

- . Mony

wood--·-·

,.,.,~

l'flng •turquolu j&lt;owolry. Homo
lm-. &lt;Mr 100 ~ Bur·

dovoloping .,d lmplwnln11ng
I.E. progr.ne c:onallt• with

J .I.T. """dtol•. Muot bowlllng
to r16oolte. lend ~"" •
MillY r8:tUirtnMnt1 to: ""•
Frldl·Oolooh• -focturing

--·

co
.....43130.
o . ... A1tontion:
711. ' - - · ·
Ohio
W.C.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO YIILLI!Y PUBLISHING CO. ,_mmon.lhot yao
do tlulin- wtth P•ple you

know. •d NOT to Mndmon.,·

through the"' .. untl you hwe

-lg•ectthooW.Ing.

EEO

s..m...., •rntrk&gt;l- bOon.

Honinlll' Pork In liltklopcrrt.

.. bolo\' .........
Oltl1ooll, AppAallio• ......_., at
tho lllltyor' I 0111 .. b tho
t6qu.. furnM:u ... 701 Ch..-y II. pooilioow of owl.,.,a pool
.... Vinton. Ohio.
,..,.or, oivlmmna lnolnlctor

.._

dlt-

Y•d 811.014 111. 1eo e • - · Al)ll 3rd thou 7111. TV'o.
fumiluro.
dOII*II

lfomllyyordo... 101-..-.o

Dr. Mon .• Tu-., • w.cL AprM
3rd. 4th. • llh. '

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

tndlh . . . .

QMIIP n - for ICFIMR
toallty. lloqu~•
4
-,.,...
......
•one
__
_

lmum. Ful blnlffta • oompen-

atrblo iel-v. 0,.-. lnt.,.lowt
... be hold
31'M, April
llfr•the Mlrl&lt;rllolfDII.dlv tm.

""'"'to

Olotloltn • lloclol Worltor
neodedonear_g_b
., ICF /Mil ,_.,, [Dottldln
Merlolt8. Ohio. Ot&gt;illint..lowo
... behtldfr•dto31'M."-'

Rot'!ll truoln- b tole: Mloldl.. ,
port, Ohio. Jot.Dn'• V.llloro !B., F,.,kllnl. 1 -304•

771-8301 oft• IODp.m .

H;•.Jilsl.ilt•

,,
31 Hamel for Sale ,

llh oltfle - · - · !M.

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

WllhHf Notlall

. . (OfPII
......
ll:t (OfPII --65• "'

..._Colt_.,.

I .................~

- - - " 52• "'

...........,ton_

41771.

MlhogMy Of ch•rv wood. CAJ

(s..jlctt.~

Commilaiontra.of Jurors,
Moip Countv. Ohio

far thll deoarip1lon; thence
March 29, tQ89
._71deg.11'WMt100
'fHt: lhenOOI North I d~~g; · To All Whom It Moy
24' IIIIeR 13 feet: thence Concern :
On Monday. lilt 10th doy
.n-17 deg. 11' Eaot 100
., _ tllenw Iouth I lltg. of Aprl 1889, et 10:00
24'11111 13 feel to the plaOa o'ctoctc A. M.. lithe office
of begin-., containing ot the Commlotionoro of
J'uron ot Meial Countv •
.11 - - more or leu. The
fur. OhiD. Ju10r1 wlf be publicly
nflhed by · H - Hy... - n far lbe May 198t
Rl-.,aalllliooillll.,;edid IUUIW\'01 No. Term of the Common Plooa
2274. PIIOHIITY
AD· Court of uld Count¥.

814-992·2383.

3·20- '18·1 mo.

.,Paying today
Jan. 14, 1919

NOTICE OF DRAWING
OF JURORS
Offlae of

4 • 7. Prtfw ot mv home.
Dovohlft. Roplv to: 80K C-22. ~t.

992-2284

2·15·'88·1 mo.

9 AM. 7 ••

Public Notice

oa•

Queen liM Pottw beet Pr.t.,

FAII.C .SHOP

lend deeded from John
McCoy 10 Archie loti, , .
corded In DHd Book No.
239, Pege 713, Deod Ro·
corda of Meigo • Countv.

of

Babysltt• needld tor 2 chH*.,

2048.

110 Woof .... h••or

RECYCLING ·.......Pomeroy ..........
OPa 7 DAIS

oor- of a 8 .1 acretreC1

17!f-4340. AA-EOE.

Uaed furniture and houltlhold
1ppli•nae1. Phon• 114-742·

w•rctrobe. Avon. C.l S.. 61444!f-4882 01 Cartl44!f-4397.

MASTIIS TUXEDO liNT AI.
DIY ClEANING SIIVK£
SCISSORS SHAIPlNED
USED SEWING MACHINES
ALTEIAnONS
SINGER AND WilT£
SIWING MACHINES
SING£1 1111T11.NG
MACHINES

FREE EST.IMATES

MT or MLT ASCP. · Ful time
potltiona. floll tech llllec:tions.'
must be tbletoworkct.va.-detl
ehift. Clll p..onriet office 304-

Coth ooid- COII814-992·&amp;e57
or 114-192·24~1 .

11

3·7·'89·1

INTEIIOI-EXTEIIOI

BU-21411.

Qoillo .
Pra 1940 quilts. Any COtldltion.

Snrv1ces

Call AI 742-2328
LINDA S
PAINTING

-...m c.H Marltvn w..,.,, 30 ...

114-742-2418.

tlloiJIIIYIIII:Iil

DRIYEWA YS &amp; ETC.

It. 33 Nerth of
P4JHroy.J.mt,iJn

h.,e a ~-1 Either W.;, Avoo
can hllp you bet he t.1 vou can

Ueed ltrnllure b¥ the piece or
.ntire houMhald •so alllng.

304-87!f-41181 .

'

' 992-7479

Just wlftt to ewn 1 little
monev? Or would you • •

814-241f-1223111• 4pm.

Mastic - CwtaintMCI®
Vlnyt Siding
525 North Second
Seamless Gutter
Middleport, Ohio
Replacement Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 .ji.M.
llown Insulation
SUNDAY 7 ,oo P.M.
Storm D-s &amp;
WEDNESDAY 7:00 P.M.
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES .
Putor Jamea E. Keeaee

•

•tr•tq

"20o .. 25o. c.n

4 -··

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

Lot No. J.BI,
Sutton Townohlp.
olga . Subject to 1'1111 ..tate taxn.
County. Ohio; and -rlbed
pen.atles 11nd aueatments
• followo: Beginning at • 2 not yet due and pay1bla.
lnall pipe on 1he oouth-1
(31 t 3, 20. 27: 141 3, 4tc

;oo Aero

Olilo; thence· WMI 348.61
. _____,:::;:;:;:::;::;:;::::,_ _ _ _J l fMI; thence Nonh 13.9

r

-

·

1

UKE TO WORK HERE
... be(aUSe

81 - - Homelmprovements
82- Piumblng &amp; Heating
83- Ext811ating
84- Eiectrlcll • Refrigeration
.86- Gen•al Hauling
86- Mobil• Home Repair
87- Upholstery

41- Spaca for Rent
47- W.nted to Rant
, 48 -l!qwipm~t for Rent

in Syrecu•

SiiVICE
915-)$61 '

20 session signup, bring a
friend to sign up, and
you'll receive one "FREE

•. '

•
NAHUE li. e1 et .. I will offer
tor -'• to 1he hlgheot bidder
on Apri112, 1988 e112:00
19•. "' 1111 u - lltMII et the front door of1he
Oio1llalc.rtblhelloo 1M11 , Meltlo County Coui1hou•.
Oio1llal
of Ohio. bo1tm '11onieroy, Ohio, 1he toll-·
Dllrlllon, .. c.tumllua. Ohio In lng " - ' 1 - rMI pro-:
CIYI No. C2-1..0181), UN I· IMUIIH In the Stete ot
TEO 8TATEI OF AMERICA Ohio, County of Mol111: The

.

IIIDIJLEPROT - A nice
14x65 Mobile Home in
beau)dul condition. .New
front deck and screened
rear porch. New carPI!!·
•inyl, paneling and ceiling
fans. Storage building and
chain link fenced yuard.
Nolhing to do but move in.
$24,000.00.
lllnll E. Clll111d
992-&amp;191
.1t111 Tru1111f ..... 949-2610
DoHI1 .Tum« "'i' 9!12-5892
~o Hill ...........~ .. 915-44e&amp;
Olflce ................ 99H259
.
NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe h•t buJtrl lor laip .
Coutdy ProplltJ. Ust with
us fer b•t 1111111.
,

.1,

Services

HouMI tor Rant
Moblle Homet tor Rent
Farms for Rent '
Apartment lor Rent

(304) 675·1244
NOTICE OF SALE: B y of "' Onl• fa&lt; Slle ilouod on
the 14111 d., of Decuulbil,

l;:-.;1=.:~1

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport,

11

72 --,Tru~a for Sale

Real !:stale

, 49-For

•Waahara •Drier•
•Rangel •FN&amp;Z8rl
•R.,Igarators

992-6282

Ftrm Equipm~nt
Wanr.d 10 Buy
livtstodl
Hay &amp;.Grain
Seed &amp; Fertili1er

71 - Alrtot for Slit '

23- Prof•eiontl Services

, 41- FurnillhMI Rooms

Get Retulfl feet

.

DIAD 01 AUVE

Body Talk. Tanning
Salon.
.

T1 ansportalton

21 - Buein•• Opportunity

41 4243« -

· WANTED

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp;.HEAnNG
'

. RACINE, OHIO

89~ - letart

937 - Buffelo

S..

lllDDLEPORT - 2 story
fram~ 3 bedrooms. bath,
carpel, F.A.N.G. heat, re·
cently remodeled and in
,go~ condilion. $47,0llq.OO..

•P•-··--:-·

985-4141

,....--~-------··

.·

68 - Fru!tt II V!'gBI:abl•

Empl,lymenl
St:rv1cr.s

882- New Haven

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9976

.•

1

l1 32333o&amp;3636-

(It

•ZETOR TRACTORS
oHOWARD
.
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERSTATE
· BATTERIES
LAWN &amp; GAR DEN
SUPPLIES
742~·245•5

' .

IIlDDLEPORT ~ Beautiful
Col_ooiat ~U.el'lol. 2iar·
ag~ · nas ornate trim. alii~ studio w/skylight.Well ilsulale!l
MAKE OFFER! $49,900.00.

u Mptrtte aitt

I

Night
NO 5UNDAY

OWNER .WANTS TO SELL-

All•• ,,.. fOf conNcutivt runs. broken updevswill be ch•ged

22 - Mon~~tt

' Day

POMEI:J.:lGUS

$21,900.00. ' ·

Financta l

In 1688 the Brltilb hired American
capt. wunam Kidd to fl&amp;bt pirates
who took Brltllb booty. He became a
pirate blmaelf.

PH. 9497,2101 .
. 011 .... 949-2140

lllODLEPOIIJ- 6.09 Beautf
lui Courtr} Actes close to
lown. 3 bedroom mctile
home, small ba-n and half
kups lor 2nd mobile home.

0 ·15 WORDS

or Mann counti• murt be pre-

HO.S &amp; GAUGES
"At llla-.allli Pricll"

EQUIPMENT

PRICE REDUC,D.

lNG $6.000.00.

H&amp;R BLOCK DO:-i'TSETTLEFORLESS!

PIId.

MIDDLEPORT - Past Ma·
trpM of Evangeline. Chapter No.
1~. Order of Eastern SU1r, will
meet Tuesday. 7: :ll p.m., at lhe
. home of VIrginia Buchanan.
Members are asked to wear their
lj;aster bonnets.

•

..

• 1 DAY
3 DAYS
'.' 6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

auit.Dns
CUSTOM IUIT

POIIEtlllil' ;:: 2 story·frame
house w~h .c'bedrooms and
bath, wi~ood floors and
some 'liny[ coverina. .ASK·

PHONE 992-6674-POMEROY. OHIO
OPEN 9 AM·S PM WEEKDAYS, 9-6 -SAT.
Appointments Available

y

Ell, NOSE &amp; THIOAT
GEREUL ·ALLERGIST
"WE IIA~E IEARINI AIDS"

'

"or~

GINDAL CONTilCTORS

P----------11-----·--·---~
MOftiS
'BINGO
I

BISSELL

.,11

$41,960.00.

ll Makes

VISA • MASTEACHARGE
HOURI: Mon. 9·7
Tues.·S•t. 8-5; Clol8(1Sun
3 131 / 88 / 1 mo.

POIIE.OY -r A beautiful modern kitchen compliments
th~ 3 bedroom home. F.ull basemllflt newer back dedi, kts
ol dose! SIJIIC!, niQI wood·

618 EAST MAIN STREET

TO PlACE AN,. AD CALl 992-2156 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

SALJSBURY - .The Salisbury
P.T.O. will have an aluminum
can recycling day on AprilS from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m . at the Salisbury
Elementary School.. Money
raised will be used to purchase
new playground equipment.

- PLIWNT YAUEY HOSPRAL

1

•

• l

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KI"FCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG. REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

949-2969

fan~$47,000.
,.

extra hours through April 17. It's not too
late to help·you get tlie maximum refund {
ydu're entitled to.

--

PiiCUitDUCED- Lanp·
·111111 - Commercial store
building IOO'xl251o( Has
iliter and electric available.
Has had some remodllling.
$6,000.00.
• FIAT·
OLD FORm ROADWOOD, 11 acres, pond. pr·
1111 front jl(J!Ch and II'~
vacy. Spacious home with 4-5
bedrooms. fireplace. new Clll'·
pet, large windows and ceiling

*

•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc

will

•

• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

44ti- Gtllipolil

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion
meet 7 p.m. Tuesday. Refreshments wlll be serve~.

NEw usn•G- LETARTMobile home.$ite, one acre
landscaped lor"inobll~ home
or building ~~e. A steal al
$3,500.00.

lossifie

.,...--

.

.._

Our experi~ced preparers are worki11-g

the meeting with prayer and
Mrs. · Eads .had t)le scripture
reading on Proverbs, chapter .
three. A special reading entitled
· "Asking, Not Demanding" was
read by s·andy Boothe.
The group plans to visit people
who are In a home or hospital.
·Plans were also completed for
the. upcoming pastors apprecla·
Uon day on April 9 with a dinner
Immediately following Sunday
school. Friends and acqualntan.ces of Rev. Salterfleld are lnvlt~!d
to attend the dinner which will
begin at approximately 12.noon . .
The next meetlng~lll be April
25 ai the church.

FRIDAY
'.
MIDDLEPORT - The Evan·
gellne Order of the Eastern Star
wlll be having a spagettl dinner
RACINE - A special Southern on April 7 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Junior High Boosters· meeting_ _ at the Masonic Temple In Middlewill be held Tuesday, 7:30 p,m. , port . Cost wlll be $3.50 for adults
at the school. Election of officers and $1.75 for children under 12.
wlll be lield. Parents 'ot current
sixth grade sludents are welSATURDM'
come to attend.
POMEROY - Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their first
' PORTLAND -Lebanon Town· dance of lhe year on Saturday
ship Trustees wlll meet Tuesday . from 8 to l1 p.m. at the Royal Oak
6:30 p.m., at the township Park. Come and enjoy an even·
building.
ing of fun and fellowship.

LETART- The Letart Township trustees will met Monday at
7 p.m at. the office buUdlng.

rI

for the picture sale was inet and
the project successful at the
recent meeting or the Mt. Moriah
Church of God Ladles meeting
held at the home ol Mrs. 4oulse
Eads In Rutland.
Harriett Laudermllt. · opened

Calendar

Overbrook Nursing Home on
April 4 at 3 p.m. The topic for
discussion wlll be "Joys and
Guilt. " t;tefreshments wlll be
served.

POMEROY - Revival servl·
ces will be held at the Mt .
Hermon U. B. Church, Monday
through April 9. Rev. William
Halfleld will be the evangelist.
There will be special singing
every night.

It was aQnciunced !hilt the goal

- ,881•2218
_._.... -.

-·.

CRISTO, OliO

I IIDIUII MOWDS
ICIIO SAWS &amp; 11MJIS
0110011 IllS, CHAINS
lUll SIIYICI Cllllll
Pafh &amp; S.rvlct On

POMa.ov. OH.

The tax
deadline is
almost here. ~...."~ ~.,..(

MARCUM

EAGLE .RIDG.E
SMALL ENGINE

101

RETIREMENT RECOGNrl'ION - Tom Reuter, left, Pomeroy
postmaster ,Is seen here presenting_a well deserved service award •
urday at the. Qu_allty Inn In , certificate to Elmer C. Flnlaw Jr. Flnlaw, who has worked for the
postal service for 27 ye'ars, retired on Friday. He and hlswlfeAvice
Nelsonville. The gro11p Is to take · reside In the Hornet Hlll area of Melp County.
'
a Uve Inch miniature arrange· '
men.t and also help at. the sales
table.
.
A letter was received from the
Galllpolis Development Center
Inviting all members to an
appreciation dinner on April 23.
Refreshments were served to
11 members.
The next meeting wlll be at the
_,!;...,. ·¢
home of Kathryn Miller with
Debbie Ball as co-host.

Church of God women meet

·'

t.-

WildwOod Garden Club meets
It was decided that Heidi

'

'

"''"'Pi'Pfiiiirii""'"
8a VIcinity
····--·-· ................................

�'ttl

Television
•
Viewing

~~

A. eosw» c.ot!F&amp;f!61X:€ u.sr
UIOHr ~ oor PLA'(U&gt; fa'~

'l''l!l

M

~liPSi~

MON.. APRIL 3

"--"";.., OF ~
EVENING

MoiiJI County. Choot• Twp.
Good loCIIIorL 1 ocu 1 room hauM wfth 2 or 3
.,......... 1)0111111&amp; Off 111-op
ro.t. -v 8CCIIa to Rt. 7.
Alldn9 t18.000. llorlouolnqu.._
I• on~r. '" -n• 111•1 M?· t?O•
aft .. I :GO p.m.

..

I:CIO Cll aon.nu: The Lott
ilpllodae
et2l m e&lt;ll a eo

.......

(I) . . _ - "'8porta

.

T-

Muot . . 1 I ve- old tri-lo01ol.
c lott to town. 3 Mctoonw. 2
boll'o. 1131 aq. ft. No r - •
ble off• refuted. C.H nm ihlt
81'4-at:Z..8e74 0&lt; 114-742·
2880.
In

•
~
!
.
s
. I~==~~:~=~===~~
I I I I

Cll Tha Po- of Cholc•
Learn how to handle
pr.. sura In waya1hal aerva

I~~::,"=" r;l

Po-ov. Aarnodolad 2HCII'f,

L U Q I T . ..

.

your beat lnlerest.

_

Gil'- of Ute

3 badroo"' 2 bat!\ • .., wlrln~
plumbing. cerp-.:, ublnlll,

IIJBIIelle

nuw.. Nfrlo-.tor, .._._ 1nd
drv-, ta.l b•.mtnt. UI,IOO.
Low down pmt .. .,_, lk• rtnt.
114-849-2121 0&lt; 114-112·
2841.

1:111 Cll Allee
1:30 ~(2)
NIC Nightly

GELYAC

I

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing word~
L.-1-..!.-L..!.-L--' you dev~lop from step No. 3 below.

. (I) 3-2·1 Can-. r;l

a eOCIINeWe

e10 WICRP In Clnclnllllll

m.
W

PRIN T NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES .
•

A
V

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•'

21R .• c1ble
""• viM' ~

Alto Trell• ....,._ AI hook·_4.4)1.

CAn oft• 2P.m. 304-n:J.
remodolad. t228 ,.. 5151
. Muon WV.
·
(. "J
month. 0100 dopoolt. In Rio
. Granda CoU 8.1 4-245-5111.

•

No• LacOo, 2 IR , Rof. • Oop. 48 Spacit for Rent
t121/ mo. O.rdu
...... c.n 114-441-771!14 Or
843-2844.
Trol• • - in Kygor C 8chool Olotrl«. t88 ..,, lnTral• for rene. Nlc. 3 IRa. oludoo - - • t•bllll~ Col
ex.,.u:b, Uvlng room.l•oe'ltrd. 114-387·1217 waniniJI.
ICon&amp;Jgo. Col814-4411-7471
For R.nt: lArge o-.a. o-'111&amp;
Nice 1-70. 21R. unfurn'ed. air ,..,. of bulclnt on ..,..,., of
condtloned. One nllle from S.oond 111d Pine. Goll~lo,·Col
town. O.oett .,'d ,.,• .,.. .. 114-4411-4421, 1144248
114-448-2321.
Col 114-448-8180,

Two 12i&lt;IO 1872-te.210..
1919-fll.410.. 2 BR ol-lc.
g•both • • ne.v. New Clrpa.
Coll814-44&amp;-0175.

44

FR, ht. pump.ldtdl.,. WB, .nc;l

Af*l tment
for Rent

lmpnjYeiNntl .

64 Misc. Merchendlae

undwplnnln9 Pncod lor ,::..':
111e. Fa.t.,..t MobltHom•
114-44&amp;-1102.

__
Home

81
~_.:....
·

12&gt;&lt;70. 3 BR .. 2 loll boll'o. , _
c.plt. Hou.. tvpe windawL

n.,

G••

oa•

ch*'

•eo

..-.u..

ac:r•

••o.

•It•

N,.

R1:nlals

on-

eon 11"' 171-2111. ·

United S1111s really plan to
uM nuclear weapons?

alttlrlor motivn when hB 1118
up Lila ancj his COich. 1;1
e10 MOVII!: llltghton
IIHch Mamolrw (PG13) (1 :501
aJ Prlml... wa
g 01g1111 011 cavet r

;,.
-;

u, .,.......,. DWfil
Cl•••· one "alf mla up

...,., paot&amp; and .......... -

,
V..Ufft.. \

Ooor. .

c- ""·

...........

1:111 Cll MOVIE: Under liege l'llrl

'-•· _...,..dry-........
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liNR) (1:301

IDb or '

a

~, for la·le
72 . T..
-

117-H;m.

1. . -

King aob.

IION'I Telftlolon lervln.

and

horo... Col 114-•a.1911"'
31.H2&amp;

hno

noo.-

Ch"'*•-ln~-­
trrftated
Pro,_..•
and holr goaw1h far • • and
em. Con•ln• NO ..,nlhltic

•*·

pu- -

11..unv

PYrOihrol•l 11•0 ·Supply 311 W. Moln Ill.

llouoa

""""'.. wofli.r ,.,.,..._ Mou..

--......--..
-;e .....

"'""' .. • tiD"" loath . . . .

tolnC"" """"'• ond-oduM

Co8114-

tain Cu"•· 114-742·241-2.
Snowdon'o - .nol. At. 1, Ru-

AOHAI174 ...htol- Nloo
"'•""'"' No lied - . . - . lont - Col 114.2411-8474

AedbDnel, Walk. . Md Moun-

tl~nd.

b"'""-I
"'

Roh T111k. 2413 Joobon Avo.
Point P I - t 304-178-2083
101Jo1 oot up 01491ond 101Jo1
campi•• •43.21.

57

Joroor

lnstru11141nt1
lndlv-1
"" ...gubrilt.
~-- IN~
""'
ginn
... Mrloua

tor-Col1114-•tI'M.

""'
lolCoi.-14-2Sf.BU:I.
..Ouort• - ·
,.., ...

M.

Cow far Oil&amp;
Oonii&amp;_,..D,.to- . Ooodrn••· .,.,... Ohio
114--12:14.

Plao lor -

C.l 114-'*

20"17.

••clio
Muolc. 814--0117,
Jofl WOrnol., lnotruotor. 114- v.-, "'...
4411-8077. Llmltod olltftlnto.
fell Ill Sill''" II";
!\. j IV f' J 1I, r\

MoCCI'/ ,...

lferalar., 01-304-1711-2448.

i4

w.v..

Hey i Grliln

4 0 0 - 1111• .. "- ........

c:uttlnt Alfalfa and 11_,,..
Nav•--.c .. ..,
June II. 01.10 ,... bole or

flrot

Now

Fc&gt;&lt;d 3810 42 ... cl•ol
tl70.00 dDwn .,.,..
ment lnd •211a.oo per ·monrh
fDr eo montM • • ....
purdl•o 1t1r ~
- - Holand .ld 01ldadwo. r. bal .... a bal ....
t~ A oolltlllolo h., lool
Hna Hol.,d 1111• - ·
10.oqOft. 121.00 ·7,:10011. b
boling I I - 100ft.,_.,_
man11h 121.00. 10 btl• or
mora Keefwa lwvtoe Cent•.
lt. Rt B7 Leo" WV. 304-••
3874.

1. . ~oocr• ,..,. 4

.......

.,1..

ltO.OOJWtan. c - _ . ,
1!. .... 114-817--8.

-b -"" . .
•ooolg304-171-1101.

::::::2:::::~~=;;..t::::::::::::::::::~

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AM·fM·IIP&amp;
114-441-

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.. d .........

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304-

Columbo

Cll

THAT E'&gt;&lt;P!.AINS ,WHY MY WEj6

ARE" FINALL.Y6TAATIN6l0 WNCU:NC:H .

1114 f"'d F-110 bplor•. Col
114-ZII-8813.

lo-· . . . k-

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cr.rr 1 -10 . . . .. , ...

Wrwett••

pluo CMnornlzod. 1
.10,000.
Notlllillll&amp; 114-.2-1320.

· 1:311. VkiHCounlry
1:35 (I) MOVIE: Under liege Pari

1171DieryCIO:ZOft.lood.11.100. 104-171·
_1..;.1....;..._ _ _ _,..,....~-:--

en~•·

llw•

truak.

q-·

12 .Plumbing

·'

8t H81tlng

11n Dodta .... - l o. . 4
- - dlilro. -lood.ID.OOO
...... ..... · -.. Col 114141-IZU
1114 ~h ""'... Von.

..... ..... .

''""' whool •twa _,., AC.

,..
-~~.--·­
~"

10:00 (J) 700 Ctub
(I)

BARNEY

;o,d , 210
•ueo.oo. ,.,.,. 30+
tiln

'.

~(NR) (1 :301

-''"'·'-' '· """ '· ....'

PAW SENT ME A

lOX OF &amp;OODlES

FROM TH' FLATLANDS
CNITI!II'I P~INO

AND HIATINO

&amp;LORY BEll

eiO._Hall

WHAT SORTA
GOODIES?

Ill EveningGl ......
10:30(ll A I - High
(I) Mamar r· Fabllc Of the
· Mind Dlecover how 1he

,;

·.... .....

11:00(J)Ra.,.lglllnltwlt ·

et2l m elll • eo

olfolft

cn.tlll IIIII

'

eiD u. Colaractlolr

,.

·=···'*'

Ill

1. . -

Auto'• Far lall

&lt;1&gt;-..C•-

-00&lt;0 .-. . . ..."'""dry

2
root.
- ·1:00.
-· c.ll 114-:188-1321 ' Ca.p-. Nloo "a~
oft•
flldl~(· ......... Col 814te2-3711. !Ott.

til~
L.-.~ ••

.....
&amp;='::t.ft·-. ••.
..........
-

'*'11

. . . .~o Wator lleuUog.
~-

.• Oiiilillllf ~

_,.,1,000•4.00Cia••

.Diolng .- -

-··"*·· . . . .
DilliN;

-

lrlrflll • -

· :10+171-4111.

i7 UPiiOtatary

lOIII&amp; I

-

~·

'.

.

,.
•

'

PEZVHAS

MKVB

ZT

M. U U M 'A N H K Z N B

..

.IVZ Y S K N·"v

I •-

QS)'ZK

-N M

D M A 5

NRS

.

"'" ~...

.

,

I

•

.~~

.

'

..

Z K N S V •

R S K .A B

PMAL

·~~~==~:.::n ·

~

••

.

.,

..·-.

· II cou.o
NOT
SUCC·-- ----t
ep11,- MARl
'!WAIN
•
·--·- .•

""·
•

•

CIIYP'I'OQUO'IE

w

'

trl_nly_r.~---...
..,.,.. ., _ _ ,.. 011
It 4-171-4 •• ••• • ••• .
··~

•n•• . .

monds. Since West has more diamonds

.

jE Y E Z K ,

..

.

than East, it becomes good percentage
to play West for the queen. Doing so
will make lhe contract.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for .._ three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
ipoetrophes, the length and formational the words are all
hlnta. Eac:b day the c:Ode letters are'different.
·

.

,r.

lilt .............L..~

.

a loser while ruffing in dummy. AU: ,
that thinking is of little avail here, ·
since East wins the heart king and
plays the third trump.
Now the play is a simple matter of
cashing the A·K·Q of clubs. When East ·
shows up with four to the jack, declar- .
er has a good partial count of West's •
hand. West started with only four:
black cards, probably five hearts after
the lead of the heart three, so it be·
comes very likely that he has four dia-

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

IIIIIIIIIIIJ"-

I "

..

Opening lead: • 3

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'a btwlowort It:

~~i~N(O:~

Couoll'Md
tllolr, lb - ·
fiiO.
:104-171-1414.

88

MMiniiiiSky

&lt;ll

Pass

Opinion

11:1111(J)NIIIOI181 GIIIIIPIID
lap 'I"' ElDorado Gold;

...

s•

1 NT

(preftx)

a•YouCiniBalllr
Vloe

-c,M&amp; 100

·~ oil' · - 1,...1"8-ltOio

cc. ,.

..

(1) Mljcll Llll'll .........,

IUD.

Pass

36 Rich cake
38Spry
40Destroy
41 Rational
41Snare
480gle
DOWN
1 Poe's bird
2 Single

. . . . . . Counfly

1174 ......
··t400
010. 710
Coliwllh
114-24.

4 NT
Pass

30Think
23 Kind
or
movie 31 1'he
17 Humanity i.5 Anecdotes 24 Defeat
lpcress - ·
(1966 film)
~~ ~dlpose 18 "Ci~izen
rapidly
25 Set free 32 Charge
Camera"
37 Fix laces
27 N. Air.
21 Colossal 21 Ship's
frsme
. ruler
311 "The 22 Gleamed
Ulvorce"
22
Winter
29
English
25 Straight
(1934
weather
river
edge
,_,......,.,._ .,.__,,_.,..,- film)
26 Devotion
27 Dolor~s
- Rio
28 Poetic
before
29 Rebuke
33 Make a
faux pll!!
34.-rhe
catcher
In the -"

35 EMy

...-.c

a Aerelpratlon

11:30-=STOIIIFt.,_

For rlnt: I 1-*oom houll,

·.

memory WOrkl, why II
sornellnleS dolln'l, and how .
~ might t. lmprond: vial!
ae-81 .-memory

,.
':j

=,--

.

(I) l'olow Up: Undar Fire
lpl D'l'

Cor. ""'rlh..,dPino .•
1'
Gol(poll. Ohio
•
Phone 11+44f.•n Of' 114- ~
441-4477

.,..14,.--...,.*'C··,..,.
r- ......

MaJor L11g1111 lallbllt

~-=:watch

Pass
Pass

7 Type size
9 Parsley
sign
• member
13 Court
10 Flee
score
12 Like a
14 Sunbathe
nsh out
l6AGabor
.of-

paychlatriaiiUrned killer. r;l
(I) IMming In A-na
This aplaocllaxemlnes the

~

4

8 Duck

lnveatlgatea a radio

.

Soutb

5 Poet's
ever
6 Cautious

·l 0 Outra~cd
ll Direction

IIMw F10111 Beverly
Hilla Kennel Club (R)
Cll elll 'Columllo AIIC

ollw. · 11 .. ~ ...ly
Tan-1101•-hell•. 0100.
Colll14-44f.114&amp;

11N

l Massage
4 Dry,
like wine
7 Window
S('rtion

(I) Dog

a,w:wuel c.ll 304-11 1331.

Easl

3 "- for
Aonzo"
( 1111;1 film)

ACROSS

Four Spacial from Seattle
Ill Neartllncl Johnny
heads to Cal~omll with a
friend when Tom and Caeey
are away. r;1
0:00 (J)
MOVIE: 'Pretty In
Pink' NIC llonclay Night at
1M Mervin (PG131 (1 :381 D

·If: .

24&amp;4.

North

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

(I) Caltla - - Final

HouH oolo en IICA: - · .
304-1'7.23t or 114-4411-

West

CROSSWORD

during 1 hOcl&lt;!l_ ma1Ch and II
gulb ab1clcen. If!

4

Cill 114-2111-

1410.

1:30 e (J) a The Hopn l"8mlly
Dtovkl Injure an opponenl \

~

GE. · .. eollllo' In z.rill\ Coli '. "

73

eon•- - "-·-·

triiCtoq

Dodta .......... 14 -

4
lloro-.
.... - · - CoB ll4-44f.
21Rofl•lpon.
1171

....... foolooy . . . . .

••• 3471.

-.Co8814--4M4.

Equipment

....- ....... 41&lt;4
CoB
114-441-480(1.

1210.
c ..
IOSI

M.uelcal

-

•eoo.

For s•la. Fem lie Pekln111
lniothor! and 2 puDIIIoo tor lOla
AJU. biGact•d. Citl 814-1122298.

81 Farm

""""
r..k .....,...,...10. Clair.
Co. liON I!IIANI 1!1111'!11PII.a.._.-.... Ohio 1·-

U-.oln lalllo- Ono 21-1 ,..,
llll'bloocl. Oro• 1 , . . full'blood.Co8114- ..........

\.OTIA..G

AloN
kX:lfJ·MIUTAA'rl AID ...

lng. lf_.lo&amp; lllmD J ~~
plll&amp; Coll814-~71-.

HAPPY JACK 8111N IAI.M:

-

iiJ Munlw,.,.-

:,
CoB 11"" • •
;

Cerpcmy won 1rt ,,.

Q

Ill eo u-1n Danny has

- 8 1 a n d - • " ' - •· ..

mla on Llneoln Pika

Sm .. 31" hou•n. . htrtot 2
M mo .. • home at EWf'gr-.

MIICGyvar II llrlou&amp;ly Injured
when his jMp crashM. (RI r;l
Cll (I) War and- In
TM Nuclear Age Does lhe

··--(oM. \

4411-0214.

'

Malmac. (RI C
.
Cll e (J) Mllalyver

1·114-237-041&amp; ....... • · ·'
,. o .I ' r t .I 1 .• e m • n t ·:

1----------

With the opening lead of a low heart,
declarer has a wealth of options. Playing low from dummy makes the slam
if (I) West has ted from the hear I king:
(2) the club jack fatls in three rounds
of the suit so that dummy's fourlh club
provides a parking place for a possible
diamond loser; (3) declarer determines the location of the queen of diamonds. But if declarer thinks it extremely unlikely that West would lead
away from the king of hearts into a
one-no-trump opening hand, he has an
extra option. He can ri~ with dum·
my's heart ace, play ace and a second
spade to his 10-spot, and then exit wtth
the queen of hearts. If East has lhe
king of hearts and originally only two
spades, he will he forced to lead into
dummy's Q-10+2 of clubs or break
the diamond suit, since the play of a
third heart would let declarer discard

confidences leod Alf to
make plan&amp;·IO roiUrn to

,- _ L.- - - · CoB ....... .

'.

By James Jacoby

el2l a ALF Broken

•

+A 10 9

.AK 3
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

garore

1:00 Cll MOVIE: 8o1'11UIIy Love~
~ INAI(I :37j

.Q5

Options

Gil JIDpJI cljii;J
10 M'/1"1'11
·

e

- •,

w.tcpcou•••

+74

.J98 5

SOUTH

OCi I • •
0 JeopaniJ r;l
Gl Night Court
• CIIIOit and Chau
7:35 Cll lantonl and 8GII

" " · - - llllllrne - - ·:

tr....

8odl,._

I

'

-', :;"

EAST
+6 43
.K J 9 7

WI!ST
• 92
.1086 .3 2
+Q86 5 '
• 76

.KJ108 7

e (J) UIA Todlr

-4 ~J

...;·_;_
·

1M !MINT

Aefrig .. air cond. , couGh • ch.,,
recUn•. Slmmont springs •
m..-... . tabla • Clf1aln, bed
11-..... dMic. Coli 114-44632.24-

Downtown 1 BR. fill. nMiv
redlcoratld, c•plt. compltte
SWAIN
ldtchon. AC. Porkln~ No P••· AUCTION • I'URNirUAE 12
Dopoo~. Colll14-448-0139.
0IIvo St.. Golllp ...
NEW· 1 pc: wood .OUR' t319. 1t84 HondO CABO, Excel.
· 1978 Fairmont 14«.70, 10dl SHADY LAWN APTS. 729 Uwlng room tuh• t118- tBI9. con d.- t371. 21 w . ft. Kenmore
adcltion. llppr!M.. 1 8a'e lot. 3 S.oond Me. Furnilhocl ollld ... Bunk bedl wllh beddlnst '241.
trntl••
good on~
blt_..oam. den, wood room. II cl• .-tlng 81: t1715 • mo. Full aiM mattr• a fDundlltk»n
t150. 2 .tee. trailing motan.
e1Hirlc.C"'2&lt;b30 outbulhlng. ce-- 1n clu':';g-• • a•boao. Col tUrtlno· •••· Recliner• n.w aond. Clll tnYtlme 6144807or 448-2102.
mll'lt noor. bl.c:ktop drN'Mev. 114lto"ln~ f99.
317-71530.
Crab Crlllk Rd. •22.000. Firm.
U8ED·
-oom
2
IR
.
apt
.•
pk.lah
cwpat.
304-875-3044.
tuhll. O.tkt, wrln~ we•Mr. • Nlnttndo wtth CDntrol p....
.... - · utilkl•port~ pold. ,o ampl•• line of uMct 'llrntture. light gun. I clrtrldg•. •200.
'17dorno. Colt 304-1711-1104 NEW· - . . boot• 031. Coli 114-1118·2341 oil• 4:00
1983 Triumph 141&lt;80, 2 87&amp;-131&amp; e1s.n31.
r~ Hi: bat hi. oentr•llllr, a1
WcNidloot• 018 &amp; up. (Stool &amp; p.m.
el•rlc. w•hlf..*v•. wit•
Farmll1. thr••IH Ti (onaptnlc.
soften•. on Nnt.t lot ..,.,... Apertment . ,. . at~t .. HUO ac- 10ft toe). Cell 11 ... 446-3118.
Ohio At. "7t. •10 waod b•n coptod Coli 304-171-1104
County APP••ce. Ina. Good ono lui longth blue. ono ...
stor~~ge bldg. underpenntng.
ulld IP_
P II.nC* md TV •••· leftgth pink, worn oncet. Sin
av•lllble lmmedl .. lly, 304- Furnilhrld 2,3. or 4 I'OOfN •
11-l2. lovonclor, II• 14 plum
Optn lAM to . .M. Mon thN
1711-2047 Of 814-317· 7120. . both. C'-'. No p-Rof. • dop. Sot. 814-44&amp;-1191. 127 3rd. potlte: bath fuN longtl\ now.
·~ulrad . Coll814-448-1119.
Avo. Golllpolll. OH.
• 10. - · Coiii14-98S.3191
or 114-992-7111.
NIMtf
turNahlld
sm1l
houll.
;35 Lots 8t Acreage
GOOD USED APPLI.NCEB
Efllcl.,ay apt.· 1 m•. MobHe W11twt, dry.,., refria.-atort. Aefrlgtntor. ~21. Electric
holM below town overlooking rangn. Sk-u_p Appll•ncH. d...,.r, •eo.
hHt• h•alna
rivlf', Cl. h.... IClllts only, .ef,
UpJ* Atv• ftl:l . bel. . Slone from ~ o•~~ae. t40. Call 114O.J . 'M\he Rd. 7 2 wooded Col 114-4411-0331.
.
·9411-2828.
.
.
c - Motol. 814-446-7318.
bullclng Iota. Apl"m· 2
each. Cal 814-241-9111 eft• Furnllhocl ollld.,c:y. 107 SoWM•bed. *110. 2pc,~aend ·
LAYfjE'S FURNITURE
6:30PM.
ooncl. Golllpollo. 0110. Sh•o
- llvlnwoom ...~•• t135. eon
both. Col448-4411oii•7PM. Sof• snd
priced from 114-742-2243, 0&lt; 114-882·
CINr"Yiew Subd. -7 mil• .auth
and 3140oftw 8p.m.
of Golllpolls. All u ndwground Two 1-bedroom unfurNthed f398 to "11. Tobl•
utitltiel. Aestrtetld. c.n 114- "' ......... In Golllpollo. 0171 up to t121. Hlda-t-ltedl t310
to •stl. Aacnn.. t221 to Wing bKk Hf• tiMP•: Oood
4411,3486.
., cit 221 pw month. Stove atd '371. Llmpo •211 lo 't121. oondll,lon t!IQ. w~h flltad
r.lrla-.c:or furnilhad. CQnv• Din._ t101.nd up to t.QI. covw •100. Coii114-99:Z.IIIIIi
11"!.1 acr• in Ohio TowfWhip, 15 nient locetlon. Aef•ena. •d
Wood tRia w-1 ohan t211 to .....go.
acr•ln Ohto Townthip. Approx.
I•••
ed. Cal 114-441- '715. Desk t100 up to t3715.
3
in Perry Tow111Np. Will 4•21 or «&amp;.2321.
IM&lt;h• f400 and up. lunlt Setllltedilh. 7ft. L..nnoJt •100.
l8fl on l•d oontrllct. Cd
beds compl«a w-menr..... TV ant.nn• ••· Origin• prloe
11 "'4411- 240"'
Furnilhocl opt.· 1 8R . 243 t28&amp;ondupto,391.Bob¥flO. . - - - · 114-814Jackson Pll•• t221 • mo. •110. MMtrMHI.orbox IPrinGt 2811
Bl.ilcingtotfor•leon 180, nt•
Ulil~l- pold. Coli 4411-4418
lin
..
twin
0811.
firm
•111.
and
· N.G .H.S., 04,1500. Coli 814- aft• 7 PM.
Paint Pkl1 Pfttaburgh Paints for
t81.~ Qu-.n • • t2150 • up,
388-8711 .
all vour pelntlng ntedl. HoKing
4
draw•
..._.
fit.
Modern 111-1BR .furowlhad
Bea~tHul home
corr. lot· apt , &amp;. 2 BR . 1at floor unllr· o.., ooblnltl I. 8 • 10 """' meowner. contrtctor or pl.-.t
melnt~nance. Contact .,. for
Cl~illw' Est, lublf..t ml•
nlohoCI opt. Rof. • clop, Coft laby mMtr .... t31 • t415. Price O.,oto. Point PIUI. 2411
hd ~~--· uo. f30 • King
below Gallipoll1. Po. .ibl• fl · 814-4411-1079.
frame t&amp;O. Q~d _._..,., of Joclcoon A w . 1304 1711-4084
n111c:in11 Coli 114-4411-115~
aft• 6 PM.
1 8R . opt. In RIO G,..da Largo bedroom euit• matel Cllbln•a. For .... Sfmmenttl 1\Abl. 1~
heldbo•dl t30 end up to "'·
la~n. 'W•tw S. ·ay.r. AI
.,._.. old. c.ll bll un 7·1 0
Lon cf. 10 mil• _,h of 36. 14
utllti• paid. t221 a mo. can 90 Dew• · ume 11 &lt;*h wtth p .m. 304-812·3285.
milo off 180. S.cludod. County 814-211f.1402.
IPPFoved c:tadft. 3 M"- out
wat•. 30· 10 KTII. Cltll 1143 · Prom O,...s... 304-1711~ ...111 Ad. Open a.m to ':1m
388-9082 0&lt; 114-4411-8980.
Furnitt.d 2 Br g•ag• . . .. Mon. thru Sot. Ph. 814-4411- 21H. .
m .,.,, Ideal for couple. No peta. 0322.
One 1crelot on Fltlwoodt Aold. Coli 114-448-2404.
18n Fc&gt;&lt;d Short bod. V-B auto.
12:1.80 ti'IIH«. carport, outbulld1178 ltorc:rofl comp•. 1987
Vall~ Furnltu.~
lniJI, 18M28 !JWOfiO. Aoking E Jdfa nice. quilt, 2 l•ge tMidNew and uud furriltura •d KM•Hki 10. Phon• 304-871029.100. 814-817-8187.
rooml. aquipptd kitchen, appllc•nc
... C.ll 114-448 ~ 71H.
lamdrv room. air, oon"t*lltnt 7172. Hours I -ll.
Tr .. • lot fDr rant n Middaport.
locotlol\ No poll. Coiii14-44S.
Aelnbow' Vae11um Cl.., ••
CAII14-992·7813.
1817.
PICKENS USED' RJRMTURI!
Iiiia n-.. wtlh MIIChmenta.
Complett hou•hold furnlt~ •181.00 cuh or t•ms •rL..rga lot ln A•cooon Creek.
Unllrn. Apt. 322ThlrdAw. No Ings. Y.tmlle-Jtmlcho. 30~175- ranged. Phone 304-17S.4411.
Hook- ut» for ttwee RV'1 or
"-'•· Cllll 814-441-3748 0&lt; 1410, 114 · 388 · 8773.
' .....,... ao.. ,.mp to crHk. C. II 211&amp;.1901
weningt.
No~ Sprue., Mit• lttna.
114-192·2398..
Thomas Nur ..ry, 304-171Furn. Apt. n•t to Llbr-v
VIA• FurNiure• Appi•CIII
4041.
BO•or•. Celn Aidte. Allo2· ont p•klng &amp; A'.C . Aof. •oq'od
acre triC'It. Pottlble owntr a.•abf• for 1 plriOn.' Cll
Ollon Oollv I AM·ll PM
tin-g. Coli 304-411).1871.
8undoy12-IPM
OolbertlwiiiiM'
814-44&amp;-03:18 .
114-441-315.8
UN ApPII..-314 Third Ill,
Building lit• •'d kilt on AIV·
1 BR furn'od . ..,1.. 10t S.oond I JIC· wood •lniii'OOm oult• ~ ..110 814-446-7471 311burn Road. 304-878-8251
Aw.. utllkloo- clop. oeq'od. t311. Alloo18'o•tllolnm•kod Dlohino;,...,. pr1- oton 01 I
down. 1-1 prlco " " ' " - oola 080. 111-Auto. - · • 2~/mo. Col 1 ,1 4-37.2171. Heavy
duty bun~ with ...riot t100.
beddln~U29. , _
_,_
Nlco 1 -oomllrnlohod"'.,. tit with purdl•• ~ of aert:•ln "-G.!• Nfe and flit with
ment In Racine. t271 • mo.
-oom ""'•· 7 pc. wood Golooo . r~ul• and E.v..,
Utllllolnoluclocl. Oopoolt. ·
-!rod. CoM 114-912- PQittr be*oom 1Uit•t741. 7 "w.ter Ph:r~ FnnhPh•rNCY·
7104 all• 1 :30PM .
41 . Hames for Rent
pc. countiy
cludlo
-~cllnnlllo
01150. •• lin- I~
All appiiW.CIIt hl¥e 30 d.,1
3BR . hou-.dolu ... Ac. t380o
IIU......M . TRAOE·IN8 • 1.,••
mo. Coli 3114-1711-1104 or
W8'll wtloo.me. Lota · of n.,.17.131..
arriYatl. ,... 14~ Cent~n.-v. 11.

\\o4.-'"6.5

•

· WATIIIPIIOOI'ING

1971 Fl ...lngo 12&gt;&lt;81, 3 beef.
roonw. Locatd nw HIITilonvilla UOOO. M.., k..., on lot.
11 "'742- 30 33.

c_.,_....,.,.

JAMES
JACOBY

Cll ~-Tonight

COMMUNITY A'f:. 65 f

..

Buy or Soli. Rlvorlno Antlquft.
1124E. Mo1n h ... PO&lt;n.,oy.
Houro: M.T.W 10..m. 10 8p.m..
Sundoy 1 to 8p.m. 114-992·
2121.
•

10.20 lalldln" t14.000 080 .
Coiii14-44S.QI502. .

+

7:30 et2l Fami(J Feud

pf JACf&lt; JfNNY
~NTift~ISfS AT -,9 ,
Aft/P 100 ,SfiAflES' Of
ACf fi!ETI~EMfNT"

Home Plrk.

1978 SChullr 141&lt;80 w/ odcf.on
(bull In 19871, 3 lA, 2 boll\ LA.

• A4
K J 32
.Q 10 4 2

7:1111)) Andy-Grllllth

,t'p l.ll&lt;f 'l'b ~vY 100 .SHA~i$
Tlif SAN FflAftiCISCO foOTiAL.L.
T~ AT 49 ••• roo SHAAEJ'

R~'ecl ,

t9100. Coli 317-7287 .....
in IJI.

.AQ5

oa

1111 •
WhMI 01
l'ortiNr;l
e10
'"""'' Company
0 lhne,..,.
GICI!eerl
iiJ Mlllml VIce
.TopCanl

NOwly

2 BR trallr tnd tot in Rutltnd.

NORTH

BIUDGE

..__(1:001

Fw'n'od. Roo"' illl utHioo P11lcl.
ohlro both. 118 Booond Aw ..
2 a, mobllo hO&lt;n&amp; A-m. 2 '125/mo. Coi814-44S.3141i.
ml• from Galllpolil on 11. Rt. SleepinG reomt wtth oooWng.
!188. Coli 114-446-1301

Ov-"'*adl llg IWiniJI'OI
n.w l u..S. lingle whltl Ito«.
Ftn.,dngA'IIIhbl&amp; F,_~CIIv
Moblt Hom•. CIR 114-44a.
93-40

"UPSTAIRS."

oar
m elll CuiNIII A11111r
Cll (I) MacNeil/ ..........

Moblt Home
1102.

1984Sicylino141&lt;70. 38R ., 11-1
blth. Rent_. lot. EJCCtfltnt.
Fln~r~dngAwhbl&amp; C.ll f.,.eh
Cloy Brok•llll&amp; 114-446-IMO.

.

Client- Usurp- Datum- RashiY .- .UPSTAIRS

et2l PM Megulne

for Saki

•

Newlywids visited wi1h elderly relatives to lell 1hem
abou1 their honeymoon. ·'Where d1d you go for your honeymoon?" asked 1he bride. The elderly woman gnnned,

(I) ~Opening

or month.
alrtlng .. t1:ZO • mo. a.•n·
Holol-11 4-4411-8880.

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1:35 Cll One Dtor at • nme
7:00(J) Our ltouM

rmt~ .-.k

I I I I

'

a ..... Collnbr

RDo,.. far

_

1

IBWKRPinCIIJ C.l1oolll!xprtN

32 Mobile Homes

lihe---;-'
0

I--T.,;:-:;-I...;_;.:.T~;._:~I7'TI-1

•

a
New,•
Cll ~~--": Newa r;l
(llllocly !lec1llc
111 IMwllz Todlr

aboul
After women
readingliving
an longer
article
than men , my grandma had
an explanation, "Someone .
has to staY. behind to pick up

•.

I,

.. '

'

�Page 10-llle Daily Sentinel

Monday, April3, 1989

Pomeroy-Middaport. Ohio
•

Trustees to meet

Program slaled

Regular meeting of the Olive
Township TI:ustees will be held '
Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire station.

A program on lawenforcerhent .
will be presented at the Senior •
CitiZens Cen-ter Thursday at 1
p.m.

,-

Michigan
captures_
NCAA title

Racine Council to meet

Pick3
462
Pick4

'

8770

Page_3

•

•.

Eight die ·on Ohio highways
By Unlled Press lnternalloiUII
_ A!least eight people, Including
one pedestrian, were killed In
Ohio tra!!ic accidents this weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said early Monday.
The count showed one death
Friday night, five Saturday, and
two Sunday.
The Patrol said a Springfield
woman died when she was hit by
a truck Saturday on a street In
Springfield.
Victims include:
Friday Nlr;ht
Medina: Howard E. Marks Jr.,
18, Medina, killed in a two-car
accident on Ohio 94 In Medina
County.
Saturday
I,.lma: Carmen Dempsey, 25,
Lima, killed lnaone-carcrashon
a Lima city s(reet.
Springfield: Billy W. L. Ro·

I MF says...

berts. Sr., 44, Enon, killed In a
one-car crash on a Clark County
road.
St. Clairsville: Kathy A. Mil·
hoan, 31, St. Clairsville, killed In
a two-c11r crash on Ohio SOO In
Belmont Coqnty.
Sprlr\gfield: Kathy L. Smith,
20, Springfield, killed',when she
was hit . by a truck on a
Springf-ield city street.
Kettering: Jennifer L. Law·
son, 18, Dayton, killed when the
car she was riding In hit a tree
along a Kettering city street.
Suoday
Van Wert: Daniel Lawrance,
20, Forest, killed when his car hit
a polem along U.S. 24 in Van Wert
County.
.
·
t'
Granville: VIcki Messina, 33,
Newark, killed when her car hit a
pole along' Ohio 13 in Licking
County.

STOREWIDE

6 DAYS-5 NIGHTS

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions-none.
Saturday discharges-Michael
Shuler, Elwood Phillips, Lisa
Johnson, and Paul Beegle.
Sunday admissions-Charles
McNickle, Racine; Agnes
Brown, Middleport; and Mary
Hall, VInton.
Sunday discharges-Stanford
Cox.

·their already bleak ~conomic
prospects.
The Fund does not agree with
Bussh's budget figures, but "it
does believe In commitments
made to reduce the imbalances,"
Frenkel said.
U.S. . financial adjustments
would avoid a crisis In financial
markets and allow a smoother
growth of the world economy, the
Fund said.
·The IMF also warned that West
Germany and Japan also have to
adjust their economies, seeking
to sustain an adequate growth of
domestic demand that would
reduce their current account
surpluses.
Frenkel said that in order to
maintain growth, Japan should
get rid of rigidities in Its "capital,
housing and land markets, and in
agriculture, , and the Europeans
should ·e llmiqate restrictive poll·
cies In their labor markets."
But Frenkel said the IMF can
no longer, as it did In past years,
advocate much morE) economic
stimulation In Industrial coun·
tries when their economies oper·
ate close to capacity. Such
measures would risk stoking
inflation.

Entow 4 ••**.ched Gay•IIMII

.

V

FREE
VACAnONS

. ' .'

A. L ~
.

..

.

T81 ·ThU1'8day
The .annual spring tea of XI
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will be held
at the home of VIcki Ault,
Thunday, 7 p.m. Members ire to
rneet Ia the upper parklq tot In
Pomeroy at 6:45p.m to go to the
Ault )lome.

Court aetion &amp;led
Bane Ohio of Columbus hu
flied 111 actloD In lbe MeJal
CountY Common Pleas Court for
Ju41ft!at In the III'DDIIIIt of
~,'10 c111e on a prorniiiOry
note',fi'Qm Lorena Davldlon. 105
Condor St., Pomeroy.

.

~()TIM(J!UU- NOUNOr'U.SI.'NTAfKJNS - fW~IIfMIC.U

-

HURRY/
SOllY,
'J'hls Is NO'f A Drawtng. The N•xl 1oo. PREVIOUS
Customera To Purchase tS99 or
PURCHASES
More In lotarchllndln Will Receive
DO NOT
A FlOrida VIICIIllon With Our

REFRIGERATOR~::~~~~"R ~~~~~~~~~~!A~PP~.LY~·~::~@~~~
• Separate ternpnmtuie
cor11rols
• Foamed.in-pltace inS11Iat i o~1
• Full·wh1111 ffeP.7er shnll
• Freezer door ~h c !t
.. Juice C ;"~fl r.11".k

•.

• ;~ 1111t r &lt;Jfl ll u" Ill 1111! ''" ''' !~-• ol·.
• I t:lJIIhJI W U d!~

• M&lt;llct r111y C~WI av ;;u l&lt;~ lilc

$489
LOW MONTt;LY PAYMENTS . .......... __ _....... ..

FREE VACATION
yu u "'·•• •lllulv m•~ •·-~ ~~ :..l~huu do. ou:.u 1111~ Y.UU~Mtlul ,;on
·m ,ol !ll rm clhiW ~I IIUI " fl'llr : .h OVttJ :..I~ C d CU ~ hiOI~Illj fills tlV\JIY 11 11.1,
1111 O:l l tllnhll lollikl k.l!.lk 11\al ln\IIICS yOU Ill lltl!oC l"lo l\. ~ .md ru iO• lv
5trttl(\n 0111 t/YOII liillf iOI ~{111"11 d~.th ! Jhl Ill lhJ :;(IU) Illtl oJ p l.tiJ[II l!J
l!ldll ot •l f.. t1Uhii11U ~ II&lt;l ~UIJI~HI y1~1 h11.11 lhholl~ ~ h or l l~ 1.\H I :;huCh(&lt;ll
.u u l ''·"·V r ,m r l.o(uoo : ~~~ ~ "'" ytMI!l .,J ,· , .rlllo. rl .uu l h o: · .llll ~~::
C\'1111 ' 11 1 hod , r~ . mollo~d wlo.rl V' " ' \."' ' ,,,. , ,,, u u · " · " '~ I

'

• If

ALL 3 PI.ECES
.

Savu On 3 Pos,itlon Recliners

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE

'

LAUNDRY
. PAIR

NOWONl Y

S199.
tllug .$ :l49)

~~~ ~h toahi&lt;N I

tort':llo lcii'J

"' "'':. v.....ll

' $

fOFA

Whlite·\Ne!•1in!l~~so~ DE&lt;OO
DRYER

'"''Y

""'""''''"'"r·.

299

• Big pon:ftlain d•V'l'l .....
• Pnrmanenl p10SS Of

I.A450
WASHER

regular

'

·,_ Up-front linllllter

• Regular, dnlicale
pmmanent preSs
• 3 water lo-.Htls
• 3 temperalures

s ALL

'

$599

REMOTE
CONTROL

SIZES
ALL

"' 25'~ Dlag.

·MODELS
ON SALE NOW
,.,...

....

LCNI MONTHLY PAYMENT .... ....... S12.00

POITAIU
DIIIIWAIHIII

• Chrome plilted d~p bowls.

•279
GIBSON
FREEZER

lng Kicker game was 480448,
which · prOduced one winner,
lottery officials said.
That ticket, sold in the Lorain
area, ts worth $100,000.
or the $776,604 worth of tiCkets
sold, six had the first five
numbers, making them each
worth $5,000, The 65 with the first
four are worth $1,000 each; 711
with the first three are worth $100
each and the 6,921 with the first
two are worth $10.

' · M.IIIollill:to.ot.
l"

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

I&amp;JIIA . . . .

'
State Representative Jolynn
. J BoSteP (D-GalUpolis) l;lnd State
Senator Jan MichaEl Long '('6.
Circleville) have announced that
Meigs Manufactured Housing,
Inc. has been approved for a
$40,000 Industrial inducement
grarit.
The state funding was released
by the Controlling Board late
Wednesday afternoon.
"We applaud this decision by
the State to assist Meigs County's
local development ~fforts," Bos·
ter and Long d~~lared In a joint
,)ltatement. "The establishment
ot new business In Meigs County
can help the economy oftheState
and region. Therefore, it is
appropriate f!&gt;r the State to share
in the Initial Investment required
to make the business a reality."
The company will prOduce
manufactured housing for sale to
dealerships In a multi-state area.

......

MDAL ·

.,...

-'~•••II BED f~ES .

S388

The company f?lans to hire
approximately ISO (UlJ.ttme em·
ployl!fi!S over I the next three
years. The Stale funding will be
released to the Meigs County
Commissioners:
The Industrial inducement
grant Is part of $475;ooo in public
funding for the project. The State
funding will be used to repair and
improve Bedford Township Road
17, the company's access road.
Total project costs are estimated
at $1.076 million.
"Econom lc deveiopmen t in
Southeast Ohio requires a part·
nershlp between the State 'and
t~e 'local community," Boster
and Long added. "In this case,
the Ohio Department of Develop- .
ment, the local development
office, Farmers Bank in Po meroy, and the Meigs County
Commissioners have worked togetber to achieve this success."

·
And while authorities say Lake
Erie's level will remain 3 feet
below .~hat It was three years
ago, It still remains above the
long-term average level.
Through Sunday, an average of
nearly 7 ~ Inches of liquid
Continued on page 10

· Residents urged to boil. water
· Residents of Syracuse were warned this morning to boD their
water for at least one minute before drlr\klng it and to continue ·
to conserve water until the pump problems can be corrected.
Syracuse Water Department officials advised at 9 a.m. this
morning Ihat the only water ava-ilable was what was In the lines,
hut arrangements were being made to connect to the' Tuppers
Plains water system later iOday.
,
·
Yesterday water was being draym from the Pomeroy system. .
A new pump is being·secured 81ldtbeproblem Is expected to be
solv~d later ·thls wej!k, It was reix&gt;rled.

-....:

Meig§' ~~rd . to hold meeting
AU llf'LACIMIIIT CUSHIONS

NGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, I
106 NORTH SECOND AVE., . .INSTANT CREDIT ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760 Apply •nd receive instant
(114) 112·113&amp;
buying power"TODAYI

~Toll FraeiOO.4211181

·-

Credtt'tenns
Lay,.a-ways

Maet~rCard
CASH
Vrsa

••

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

--~
.

towed down. river', by '.'Mr. Alllo .... Salvage
oper~loas are expected lo ret underway today .In
background with the C!'PSized barge Is the motor
vesseiSteeiRanger,ownedbythelngramBarge
co.
-

Meigs firin~ approv~
for $40,000 grant

By· United Press International
With near-normal preclpita·.
tlon this year, and sUghtly above
normal for last fall, it's begin· ·
bing to look a lithe better for
those Oltio communities that
depend on groundwater or reser·
volrs for ·their drinking water.

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

...............
,~

BABGECAPSIZES-Thls195footPPGbarge
contalalnl 108 toaa of liquid caustic soda (lye) I
capllbed. jut off the Ohio shore at Long Bottom
Monda)'. Tbe PPG . barge was one of 14 being ·
.
'
'

water s~pplies are
· p Ie.ni.•She d by r· am·
re_
. .

30" ELECTRIC RANGE

• 3·6" &amp; 1-8" plug-In surface unit

• infinite heat controls
• Lift-off oven door
• 4 level legs
·

~5 SECOND AVENUE

•

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631
(114) 441 8084

·

. transferring the caustic soda.
Jordan .said late Monday that
there were no injuries and that no
leakage of the product has been
detected.
According to the PPG spokesman, the company was notified
of · the accident at 9:45 a.m.
Monday by the U. S. Coast
Guard. It occurred at Mile
Marker 212 at Long BOttom
which is about halfway between
Parkersburg and Ravenswood. ·
It was reported that the195 foot
barge was one of 15 being towed ,
downriver by a contracted tow·
tng firm and that the tow was
negotiating a · turn in the river

when the incident occurred.There was no interruption to the
rbrer channel traffic.
Barge transportation special·
ists from the PPG faclllties · In
both New Martinsville and Lake
Charles, La. were dispatched to
the scene soon after the accident.
On the scene Monday after·
noon was a crew from Kemrow
Environmental Lab at Marietta
to test the water quality. Officials
from the West Virginia and Ohio
Deparlments of Natural Resour·
ces, Coast Guard and- EPA were
also there.
Jordan described caustic sOda
Continued on page 10

Pom~roy

$89·995
.
.

'

'•

D!!;lly stock prices
(As of 10: 38 a .m.)
Bryce and Mark SlQIIb
of moat, Ellis &amp; Loewl

('1:,;·;,,

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Sa~vage operations are ex·
peeled ,to begin today on the
barge containing 500 ·tons of
liquid caustic soda (lye) owned
by PPG Industries which capsiZed Monday morning just a
hundred yards off the Ohio shore
at Long Bottom.
Craig Jordan, director of Hu·
mal). Resources at the PPG
Industries facUlty at New Mar·
tinsville, advised that environ·
mental experts are on the site to
monlter the situatk&gt;n and that
another barge has been dis·
patched there in preparation for

SIT QN A

• 10.9 cu . II . ""'" fnorl
capacilv
· ~ 3 .6 cu. 11. lrcm: ~r r:ntl&lt;:\r.ity
• Energy s~vc'r ~ wi!ch

Super jaekpot remains unelaimed
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) The SuperLotto jackpot went
, unclaimed Saturday night, so the
priZe for . Wednesday night's
drawing will be up to $9 million.
Ohio Lottery officials s~ld
Sunday none of the $4,801,747
worth.of tickets had the numbers
5, 7, 17, 35, 38 and 40. But 152 had
three numbers for $1,000 .each
and 7,499 had four numbers for
$75 each.
·
The number lr\ the accompany-

Barge overturns in
Ohio River; &gt;cleanup
operations begin today

lllfNI Will fullr

roocn~. poc:lii, INIAUran&amp;iltlddllingi'dlln.

Stocks
Am Electnc Power ............. 26~
AT&amp;T ...... ... ... ..... ... ..... .. ..... .31~
Ashland Oil ......... .. .. .......... .40~
Bob Evans. :........... .. .... .... ... 14'Va
Charming Shoppes .........,..... 15~
City Holding Co ............. , .... 16~
Federal Mogul... .... ...... ..... .. 52~
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ... .48
Heck's ....................... ........ .. ~
Key Cl!n(urion ............ .. ... ~ ..133,4
Lands' End ......................... 32~
Umlted Inc . ........ .. .... .... ..... 27¥8
Multimedia Inc ............. : .. , .. 89~
R;!X Restaurants ... ....... .. .. ... . 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15%
Shoney's Inc ...... .. ......... , .. ... . 8~
Wendy's Intl .................... . .. . 6~
Worthington Ind ....... .......... 21%

a.,.,...

peldtt nd•ltoniiDfJIIdullaiNII~• ... ,
CIII'I'M-~ LAq ~ lnn,only3Qmit11Au.w~ytrMt ... INin
III.IJQIODiltlty Wodd, Ep::ol C.W, Sea Wcdd lnCiahDIIol
Ollwwatd·~ ....... -Pt..USiacllrttlbDnut ....... M
m.nrafflurldl'• _.,• •~ lfUdl ........ IHdl Ql'
Dw,1oni Eltleb ... .. ,.torllaeallonlwilr!o IIVdoi~ ~ltd

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

•:no.'~
.-_,•'"'_}..

14.5 CU. FT. FROST-FREE

Continued from page 1

bodies of the muitUaterai organ!·
zations. The panels meet Monday
and Tuesday to evaluate the
global eeonomy and the U.S. plan
for Third World debt reduction.
The IMF said Its estimates of
the U.S. fiscal deficit are higher
than those or the Bush admlnis·
tratlon because the Fund envis·
ages slower economic growth
and higher Interest rates in the
United States:
Bush wants to cut the budget
deficit to $91 billion in fiscal year·
1990, but the IMF estimates the
red ink will reach $'1.48 billion.
While Bush counts on a $4 billion
surplus in 1993, the FMI reckons
a $114 billion deficit.
U.S. failure to reduce the fiscal
· shortfall will result in a Widening
in the U.S. deficit In the current
account of the balance of pay·
ments, from $135.3 billion in 1988
to $139.3 biijlon in 1989, and $I56.5
billion in 1!19&lt;1. In the meantime,
the surpluses of Japan and
Germany would expand.
Foreigners may become skit·
tish about lending $13 biilion per month to the United States and
could lose· confidence in the
dollar, which would plummet on
the world markets, the IMF said.
The Federal Reserve would
then have _to tighten the money
supply and raise interest rates to
dampen inflationary pressures,
crushing economic growth In the
United States and abroad, ac·
cording to the WEO medium
term forecasts.
Higher Interest rates would in
turn worsen the developing nail·
ons's debt burden, depressing

With our Compliments ~ .. .

•

1 Sect ton, 10 Pages 26 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc. New

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 4: 1989

YOUR FLORIDA GETAWAY!

·'0

•

at

HURRY!

Low tonlrht In mld 40s.
Chance of rain 20 ·percent.
Wednesday, mosUy cloudy,
hlr;h near 80. Chance of rain 40
percent .

•

--

A special meetlr\g of the Meigs Local School 'District Board of
Education ffas been called for Wedilesday at 7 p.m at the board
meeting room. Purpoae of the meeting Is to adopt policy, to hear
suspensloo appeals, to di!ICI; ''personnel, to modify appropriations, and to dlscusae and con. '1er other buslnets as Is lawful
· for a ·special meeting.
'

Schools

to

close Wednes®y

There w1n be no achool Wednesday tor students at aradbury
Harrllonvtlle, Rutland and Salem Center Elementary Schoolli
In Melp Local School Dllltrlct. School peracmnel report that
·
ConUnued on paee 10
"

By NANCY YOACHAM
· Sentinel News Stall'
Pomeroy Village Council ap·
proved the second reading of an
ordinance to increase wages for
village employees when they met
Mond;J.Y night al Pomeroy VII·

lage Hall.
If the ordinance is approv~d in
its third reading, the wage
increases would go Into effect
with the first pay period in May .
It was decided last night that
village employees currently re·

ceiving a once-a-month lnsu·
ranee day In lieu of enrollment in
the village's health insurance
plan, will continue to receive
their Insurance days. However,
anyone hired after Jan. 1, 1989
Continued on page 10

Treasurer's office in court
house
.
undergoing changes for elevator
.,

By JULIE E. DIUON
Sentlael News Staff
The treasurer's office in the
Meigs County Court House is·
undergolr\g several transitions in
order to make way for the new
elevator which will occupy aP·
proximately a 10 by 10 foot space
within the treasurer' s office and
the county court's office.
,
In order to regain some of the
spa~e lost to the elevator shaft,
MARY E. WITHROW
Meigs County Treasurer George
Colllr\s decided to have an old
removed which was taking
10 tre~urer safe
up a good portion of his office.
The safe dates back to about
1873,
according to a patent date
WI 8
found on II. Weighing approxl·
mately four tons, it Is about 48
Inches wide and 60 inches tall,
was completely enclosed with
one half Inch steel plates, had
Withrow will be the featured
steel doors on the front, was
speaker at the annual JeffersQn·
covered with concrete, and had
-Jackson Day dinner to · be
about three feet of dirt on top of
hosted Saturday at the Senior
that. To remove the safe meant
Clt~ns Center, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, . by the Meigs County
Democratic Party.
Mrs. Withrow, now serving her
second term, Is the 42nd treas·
· urer of the state. Innovative
programs, record setting earn·
. lr\gs and management efficiency
form the basis ol State Treasurer
Withrow's performance in public
office.
Her successful Investment programs are recogniZed nationally
_b y both .government and private
Investment authorities. The Ohio
Treasury accomplished recordsetting Investment earnings In
flscal .year, 19~ and fiscal year,
1986. The treasurer Is credited
with earning Ohio more than $650
million In her first term as State
Treasurer, with her pertor·
mance gaining for Ohio national
recognltlpn. In 1984, a Virginia
sw-vey rated the Ohio Treasury
number one In Investment
performance. .
Treasurer Withrow received a
Women.Executlves In State Government Fellowship Award to
attend the .J:ohn F. Kennedy
School of GOvernment, Harvard
University, In 1987. She received
the first Outstanding Elected
Democratic Woman Holdlna
Public Office &amp;\Vard a;lven bY the
300,000 member National Feder·
at ton of Democratic Women.
In 1986, Withrow wu Inducted
Into the Ohio Women's Hall or
. Fa~e. She Ia the eii!Cted first
vice president or the Natlonal
AsSQCiaUon cit 'State Auditors,
Comptrollers and Treasurers,
Continued on page 1~
•

Qh •

•11 pe.a k
M
C

t"n

St~i~surerOM~~!~n

--------~------,-:.....-.----=--~--------~----------

Jl

Council has second
reading of pay hike ordin_ance

. ·-

---~

-- -- ._. .

'

knocking a hOle In the 18 inch wail
between the old commissioners'•
office and the treasurer's office.
According to Collins, "We didn ' t
realiZe it was going to be quite as
hard to remove that (safe) as it
has been .''

'

.

Collins wanted the safe removed because it hasn't been
used since the early 60's when
there was a breaking and enter·
ing at the court house. At that
time the tumblers in the safe
were jammed making it unusa·
ble. Since that time the treasur·
er's office has used the night
depository at the bank.
Once the safe has been moved
outside it will be removed with a
boom truck and taken somewhere to be weighed. This pari of
the job has taken about two
weeks.
Funds for the first phase of the
required ren 0vatlon .toward providlng the space for the elevator

inswll~tion

are coming from a
Develop·
ment Block Grant but the expenditure of moving the safe and
repair)ng what was damaged
during that tlmewillcomefroma
$enerai fund.
Worl! on the elevator lnstalla·
lion should be completed by
November. Banks Construction
is doing the preliminary work but
the Meigs Coun!Y Commission·
ers will advertise for bids for the
actual installation of the
elevator.
~
When everything is completed,
the treasurer's office will occupy
p.a rl of their old office as well as
the old commissioners office
which has moved. up to the third
floor. The front part of the
treasurer's office will then be
used to accomodate parties that
do temporary work for the
county .such as th~ stale
. examiners.
$106,9®. Community

'

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