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                  <text>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~
•

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•11 pe.a k
M
C

t"n

St~i~surerOM~~!~n

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

Jl

Council has second
reading of pay hike ordin_ance

. ·-

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'

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

'

�Commentary·.

P 11 2;_Ttw Dillt 8111i.1el
P\w1:Jeiov-M!M1;0~1. Ohio
Tund f, Aprl4, 1988
•

'

I

·.
•
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wins ·: NCAA crown

r=========~====~~~--~~~~--~~~~~--~·~~~1

Soviets closer to agricultural refonn

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court S&amp;~
PomeroJ,Ohlo

DEVOTED TO TilE INTERE8T8 OF THE MEIGS.MASON ABEA

glb
~~ ,..,_,._..,..,,...._c:l,_
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ROBERT L. WINGETr

Generai'Manager

PubUiber

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Pub11811er/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Pllbllshers Association.
·
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edtl!ng and must be signed with
name, address and .telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Lettersshoukl be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

~

WASHINGTON- When Soviet
leader Nlklta Kllrulbcbev toured
American farms In ~ It was
durtne tlie most frigid part of the
Cold War. Now that relations
between the two nations have
warmed, It may be time to host
another tour. ~
But this one would have a
, different agenda - to help the
current Soviet leader Mikhail
'Gorbachev win an Ideological
liattle against his conservative
rival Yegor Llgacbev.
Gorbachev got Ltgachev demoted to the post of the Communlst Party's farm chief, a position In which Ltgachev has
continued to tout the benefits of
cOllectjve farming. That system
bas turned the once-rich agricultural sector of the Soviet Union

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Into an lmpiltentlnduatry responsible for chrOIIIc food shortaaes: to at least appear to be In
Gorbacbev wants to 'alve hii.rmony with bl8 leader while
farmers more treec:tom. butLI&amp;a· not ch&amp;Dglqg 1111.OWll position. ~·1
c~ can be the Ideological
want to stress that everythlna
equivalent of cement.
will be _based on the principle of
On a recent visit to close the common ownership and common
distance between himself and property," he said.
·
'
Gorbachev by announcing at a
To help Gorbachey· In this •
press conference tn Moscow that Ideological struggle that goes ·
he sees the need to reform the bexond farm policy, some Bush ,
Sovtet.agrlcultural syslem.
· administ ration strateelstl
He announCed new policies to wonder whether an Invitation to
permit Soviet farmers to lease Llgachev to v~&amp;lt America's
lal!d from the state and, In some productive farmlilnds might not
cases, topassthatlandontothelr cut the ground out from under
children as a quasi-Inheritance, him.
The concesaloni are small and
Those experis.doubt that Llgawould not even begin to give chev could be transformed Into a
farmers the freedom and (ncen- booster of American techniques.
tlve they need to produce. Butthe He Is too dogmatic for that'klnd of
announcem-mt allowed Ltaachev turnaround. Besides, the farm
question Is just 'he Issue Ltga-

Raising 'sin' taxes ·
t~ set a social agenda

,I

COLUMBUS .....: The Ohio Senate Is trying to !ace up to the tough
quesdon of how far you can go In using taxes to cu~ social evils.
The House has passed and sent to the Senate a budget with health
care and elder care programs strongly flrujanced with lncrfased
taxes on cigarettes, other tobacco products and alcoholic beverages.
The 7-cent-11-pack Increase In' the cigarette tax and the 25 percent
t8lt on the wholesale price of pipe tobacco, snuff and cigars would
generate $179 million over two years for health services for the
elderly, health checks for Infants and young children and community
· health care for adults:
Tite Increased liquor permittees and a small tax hike on draft beer
are designated for a new Department of Recovery Services to
coordinate all stale progra~t~s lighting drug and alcohol abuse.
It Is one thing to Increase tobacco and alcohol taxes to raise money
for general government programs.
But the opponents of these kinds of taxes think It's wrong to attempt
to set social policy -that Is, try to discourage people from smoking
and drinking by making It too expensive- through tax pollcy.
"Would you tax sugar to fund diabetes research and trealment?"
asked James DeLeone, a Columbu's attorney who represents a.major
brewery. "If this Is a societal problem, II should be paid for by society.
"Why tax the 'user?" asked DeLeone. "Tax the a.buser." He
recommends that convicted drunken drivers pay for alcohol abuse
programs through Increased.court fees.
'·
But Raul Coleman, director of the Governor's Office of Advocacy
for Recovery Services and a recovering alcoholic, believes alcohol
should be singled out as the threshold drug for young people.
Coleman Said surveys show that 50 percent to 65 percent of young
people are using alcohol at least periodically, while fewer than 20
percent are using marijuana or harder drugs.
•'Time after time, It has been proven that the drug of choice among
young people Is alcohol," said Coleman. "If we're looking toward
stopplng·thls problem, we'd better start with our own carryouts and
our liquor cabinets.''
Gov. Richard Celeste annoyed major tobacco companies when he
used the cigarette tax Increase, which he originally proposed at10
cents, to cr11sade against smoking._
,·
State Health Director Ronald Fletcher continued to take this
approach In his testimony last week before the Senate Ways and
Mearis Committee.
He said the cost of cigarette smoking to Ohioans In terms of health
care and loss of productivity amounts to $240 a year to every man,
woman and child ..Therefore, he said, the savings will be enormous If
people can be convinced to quit.
Advocates of the "sin" taxes point outthat the beer tax has not been
raised In 30 years, and that tobacco company price Increases on
cigarettes have far outstripped any taxes on smoking.
Opponents say Ills useless to tax alcohol and tobacco products out
of reach of consumers; w~en fewer pe!Jp'le drink and smoke, the
revenues will disappear for the health care programs supported by
the taxes.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincln!lfll. chairman of the Ways and
Means Committee, seems especl~ vulnerable to this argument. In
his area. smuggling of cigarettes and liquor from Kentucky Is a way
·
.
of life, magnified by higher Ohio taxes.
DeLeone was a strong force In getting bottled beer and wine tax
hikes out of the budget In the House. II will be Interesting to see how
the tobacco and alcohOl lobbies fare In the Senate with so much health
care assistance riding on the outcome.

I

'

'

SCO~ tJI!tfiiNG POINTS Michigan pard Rumeal
Robln8011 shliob and ~eores the wlnnln1 free throws In the la8t
three seconds of !'Verllm~ to 11lve the Wolverines ah 80-79 victory
over ~lon"Halllh the NOAA cbamplolll!hlp same Monday night In
Se.atlle. Robinson, who sank nine of 10 foul sbota In the game
helped Michigan capture Its fl1'81 NCAA basketball' tllle. (UPI) '

•

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T oront o

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New Voflk
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Calllorllla .1 ... ·, '•
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•

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I

Minimum-wage proposal has flaws
"Score one for the president,"
. began a recent Congressional
Quarterly article. "The sub·
minimum training wage Is now
on the table."
Score zero for the bottom rung
of · American laborers If the
president's Idea lkcomes law.
Bush says he will support a
three-year Increase In the min·
!mum wage, up to $4.25, If
Congress agrees to pay all those
newly hired workers a "training
wage" - lower than minimum
wage - for the first six months
on the job. U AmeriCan busV
nesses are given this ·c arte
blanche to cheap labor, the
lowest classes can kiss any ho)ie
for a kinder and gentler nation
goodbye.
On March 23, the House of
Representatives voted to raise
the minimum-raise to $4.55 an
hour, and Included provisions for
a sub-minimum training wage.
The House. hopes the provision
will win over the president and

avoid hl,,,veto. B~sh argues that
wltb a minimum wage that'hleh,
many jobs will be lost because
employers will cuI back and not
create any new jolls. Labor
Secretary Elizabeth Dole estimates that the proposed waee
Increase· would sacrifice ~.000
jobs.
They are right to try lo offset
the lost jobs: to NOT fry to save
them would be ridiculous. But
you don't achieve balance , by
proposing something even more
ridiculous; there have been few
proposals ·In memory more asinine than the notion thai It takes
six months to learn to fry
hamburgers or wash cars. I've
done · em ·both, and while you
don't learn the job In one day,'·
neither does It lake six months. I
think I could squtrt sauce a
McDonald's with the bestofthe ·
after abo11t four days.
A minimum-wage job doesn't
usually require a great deal of
expertise, and_doesn't require

the worker to get much better at
lt. And most of these jobs are held
by the pootest among us, who
desperately· need 11 ·living wage.
I'm not about to suggest that
there aren't employers In this
country who would pay the
"training wage" during Its lawful time· period, and then keep
that employee and Increase his
or her wages In fair measure. l'm
also not about to suggest that
those employers would be In the
majority.
·
Many would use the law as a
steady supply of cut-rate labor.
As soon as the lawful "training
wage" expired, they'd boot the
newly"'skllled" worker for a new
"trainee." They might even care
ough about appearances to
make up some excuse for the
firing, like It took six months to
discover he co11ldn't cut the
mustard on the Coney Deluxe.
There Is nothing In the president's proposal to prevent lt.
Proponents Uke · Dole say the

The brand new bipartisan
American policy In Central
America Isn't brand new. But It
Isn't quite brand old. T)lere Is a
new terrain.
Part of the new terrain can best
be descrll3ed by recounting some
table chatter that took place last
year during the first top-level
meetlnp between the contras
and the Sandlnlstu. Before the
negotlat~g began, the 'Sandi·
nllta officials taunted their contra adversaries. "Tbe Yankee1
will sell you out," they said.
"They sold out their a111es In
VIetnam, they'll do It to you."
But not lone after that, the
. Sovlell anDOIUICed that they
, . would leave .Aflhanlltan, selling
out .their communlat alllel.' Moreover, Ill the dominated nallou
of Eutern Europe, In part1 of
the Soviet Ullloll lllelt, people
, .yearnlnl for space and freedom
are pullbiD&amp; the Soviet•. In 10me
waya the Soviets are yleldlnl
IOmewbat.
.
~, It'·• not a II!Ctlre
time fer any dlru.t41114 ward ot
tile
'cel1alll\Y DOt the
lndltlltia. ' TH .Nlearquaa
q
5 I f t. a Juidi;ard. WStb

. . . . . .,.... . . . .. lldlltloa
. . . . . . . . . . . . . , • COJdrll to

1ilaiDe It 011. At Ill)' flllllre
!.1"*'
... ~~..·wlllloln
oallttaiJIUDI, •- UIIUwlll
· 1111 'Gil oal; tHJ ·dl4 It Ia

•

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

. Afllidlitan IUICI111ty'U do lt to
you.u
.
Tile otiier tiew_ patt of the

•'
•

Sarah Overstreet :
ll}~rket

would take care of the
problem, that the coat oftrallllng
a new worker would exceed tbe
expense of promoting the "tral·
nee" to fuU mlnlmun wageearner&gt;Get real. If the minimum
wage reaches Bush's propo1ed
$4.25, that' s $1.90 an hour more
than his "training wage" of $3.35.
Over a 40-bour work week, that's '
$7,6 more for the worker than the· ~
"training wage." Over six
m~mths, that's $1,97~. To save
two grand, you can train a newly
hired employee to 's purt sauce
pretty quick.
There's nothing wrong with
training. But before we sentence
workers to a never-ending round
of "training jobs" that end at six
months, we have to fornnulilte
some reasonable guidelines to
ensure that when the traln!nl
ends, work - and Its al!companylng wage - bel[lns.

i

terrain concerns the Democrats. Is a sham? Or will they .offer wants fuller detente with the 1 ·
United States. Will Buah .and ,.
All along they have made an "If more excuses for the Sandlnlstas
Baker plliy hardball with Gorby? ·
only" case. If only military aid to even though there are no excuses
On the surface, the new aeree- :
the contras was stopped, the left? ·
The other new part of the
ment sounds pathetically famU- ;
Arias Plan could succeed. If only
lar. Now, as before. we send •
that devil Elliott Abrams and his terrain concerns George Bush
humanitarian aid to the contras, ·
aged puppet · Ronald Reagan and Jam~s Baker. They are
supposed
to
be
the
moderate,
won't · let them use their guu, :
stopped confronting. Congress
pragmatic
deseendants
of
Rea·
walt
to see whether the Sandin II· t
and started coojleratlng, things
gan. But they too have read the tas - wltho11t mllltary ·pressure i
would be different . .
- will move to democratic rule. 1
OK. The 'm ilitary aid was results of Afghanistan. The adThe only difference: A policy • .
slOpped and will stay stopped for ministration's statement on Cenanother year. The Aged One Is In . tral ~merlca Is tough and says ·that inost Democrats and Repub- ;
California, chopplne lop and the Soviets have no business In Ileana denounced Is now a policy :
that Is endorsed blpartlsanly.
·
giving speeches. The Evil One Is Central America. There was
some
logic
for
Brezhnev's
thugs
That's
only
on
the
surface.
The
openlnl a law practice In Wa·
shJngton. The Republl~an &amp;dmln· to support revolution ID Central pause ~tton has been pushed. ,
lstratlon cooperated with the AmeriCa. But If the Prince of But when the tape•starts to plily
Conii11!&amp;S, and the Democrats Perestroika Is IM!l'lous ab9ut aaaln, If Bulb Is toqb, and the
signed a statement that calla for "new thinking," why b he still Democrat·s are honorable, the
pouring a billion dollars a year musiC could 1M! different.
'
democratization In Nlcaraaua.
•.
In the Arias Plan the S&amp;ndlnls- Into .Nicaragua? Gorbachev
tu pledged to have free elections, free press and 'freedom to
ortanlze pol\tlcally. They
· By Ualed ..,_ lnter-*lelllll
reneled.
Today Is Tuesday, AprU i, the Nth day of 19119 with 271 to follow .
A national electiOn in Nlcara·
The moon Is wantq, movlpa tow~ llllle)IJ phase. ·
aua~d~eulynnt~ar.Th•
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
"
Salldlnlltas say It wUl be tree and
•
The
eventne star II Jupiter.
.
fair. But what If they renqe!
Thoee born on thll dale are tiJ1der the 11111 of Ariel. They Include
wm eoncreutoul Democrau IIOCial
refonner Dorolbea Dill ID 11103, IDwatar Llaua Yale, ~Ioper '
blbaw boaora~ lllld hold them
of
tbe
cylinder
~k. I• 1821, d~ ICIIool folllldef Arthur Murny ID
to account! WUI tile Democrat•
11ltll
(ap
9f),
buellall Hall ,of FilM!' Trwtram Speaker 1D 18,
diiNIId tllat the aatt--S.Jidlw!tta
OJIIIOIItlotliD llaDqul pta a fair autbor-playwrtaht Robert E. Sberwflod Ia J896, broadcaat eonunfttator John ea~away. ID1906 (ap&amp;1), blues mllllclan
clluee to aet Ita eiiCIIoD Muddy Waten, born MeKlnley Moraanfleld, In 1915, actar Aatlilmy
~a~e on televlsloaT Will DemocratiC conarentollal t1ove1 Uke Perldllllln 1932 (ap 51) hd SOtltb Afrlculllllliclali Hlllb Muebla
Ia 19311 (liP 50).
·
.
·
David
Ta~llo 1U1C1
A
tJaouebUortbeday:
Dr,
MarUnLiiilr.rKJJ18Jr.o-•ld,
"llltbe
David Obey be
to tum
the ~Crew&amp; on
. ta leader ~~!~ collfullon cc;&gt;nfrontblf our IOCiety, vloleace,llll7 addl to tJie
Daniel Ortep If deiilocratlzatloll

Bonlor,=

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FhlladelpNaal .4Uanla, nlpi
Utah at PhMnb 1alp.

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Dhlltl.. !!lrm11...&amp;8

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llaltlmoft' 5, Bollt... ( lllnn.l
Toronto t , Kllll*" Cll y 3
flf'\'el-"12. Mllwa u W!r 1
Ollklllnd 3. Se aitkl t
Tuescht¥ '" G11m&lt;M~
Olleqo 1Rfou111 13-!1 ) "' f. allforahr.
'"'Itt I:J-18). , :0$ p.m .
New York (.l ~ hn 11-1! ) Ill Mln~1uWu

Phlladelpllla ~ W'•hlnKtoR

Aprl S - Pbl...elptlla at W-"lnaton,
7: 35p.m.

April I - Phlladriphla at W••lnston,
p.m.
April A- Walltlln~ton lit Phlllldelphh.
11U p.m.
I I

1 : 3~

St-anko lit O akllr.ntl
Boillon Itt Balllmo"', nlpt

,.;-r\prU 13 -

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PhiiY.dell*l•

Plhllhu11h
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Wt'!lt

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San Frll ntiscfl
AtiiUita

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a l.llto

Houlton
lA!" Alll~t•l f"ll

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Apr i a - PIUIIhutP at NV Hanrwerll.

1/r

8:J5 p.m.
Apr I f - PIUIIhu l'l(h •t NV R~&amp;~~terll.
'T: JS p.m.
:.-A,i'll"t I - N\' Ran~r M MlPIUihu l'l'h.
1:35 p.m.
x-.o\flr" 13-PIUIIhuiJh lll NV RMI8'8,
1:S:t p.m.
·
X· A,rU 15 - t'iV RM~ !I at PltllhU flh ,
1:~p. m .
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Monlht,¥'111 Reltulb
f lnclnftltlll. Lt111 Allk''lr.M .f

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San Di elO

Ad limN Dhrl'llon

p.m.

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April li -

,\prU M - MOnlrt'W .t Bardord, 1': U
p.m.
Aprll1f - Montrt'MJ .e lhrtl"rd, 7: 11

P-1!'·

1 - AprU

II - H•rtford a1 Montrtaf, 7: U

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x- AprU I:J- .W.nll'f'al at Hartford , 7: 3S

San FranciM·O t D~Mt· ~ IS-t) at 1'\ an

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x•AprU 15 - llllrUord at Mllntrtal,1t: 05
p.m.
Buffalo v ~. Bol'flln

Dl ep cHurst IHJ, 10:05 p.m.
Wf'dMIICI"''' II Gamt'!l

st . l.oUIII !II NN!o' l"ork
Sun FriUiciM:o HI ~ ... DIC'IO ·

April 5- Buffalo •• Bo" ton, 1::Sll p. m .

Aprllt - Buffalo 111 Bo"ton, 1:35 p.m .
ApriiJl -laWton IIi hfr.lo, 1:3$ p. m .
AprU !I- BoMtonl&amp;t B•ffltlo, 1:15 p.m .
x-Aflrl II - BIIQalo 11t lla111011, 1:35

PIU!Itul"l(hal MoMreaJ, nl~
Allan.. at Htau!ltop , n .l~

p.m.
li[-Aprl l.t p.m.
x· Apr l U -

Pro results
'1'\l f'!lolf!Q''M Sportfl (!lllftMI.-

'

S,ftalo at lo11loft, '): 01

~l"''tK

Coilf~IK! e

Dh-laloa

Chlcap vs. OPt roll

Ap~~ - ·a.leq• at Oft roll, 1:3$ p: m .
"-P,i111 - O.kq•at Ddn11.1:Sip.m .
AP,rl A- 0111!\roll .. Cllkqo, 811$p.m .
A&amp;\rl t - Dtttott a1 Clllcap,II:Sip.m .
·x- Aprllt - ChlcllP at Delroi&amp;.1:SI

1!: 91 p.m.

NaatDnaiiA!...,.
Plttllhu rw:h at M••ft' ... I : :SS: p.m.
Phlh•d~lptr.b 111 Ollu p. t :il p.m .

AUanca a&amp;: Hou!IIM. ~ : JI p.m• .
San FranciMCO 111 SuDi eao, 11:15p.m.

p .m .

•

" ·Aflrl IJ - Detrell at Cllllup, ll: II

.

p.m.
li[•Aprl li - Clllca«a a t Del Nil, 1: It

WIA .Ju.rFelldler":riJIIII TUir

,.m.

In jP;tewOCMI, C11 IU. - olulUI .Jow EHt•d•

vs. JI'II LI!I Poll

Ml~tpH~ n . St. Lo ...
April - Mle~ at,8t ~• . 11: 11
p.m.
.
April I - Mln.-cU a&amp; S&amp;. Lo~•. II: :si

Ft• aiherwei.Wr~

Phoenl" .:.. l..oulli E Mpln or.a

I•Hde, 1: Jfi

,

Campbell

Dl't roll 111 Tt!llU, K: SJ p.m.

Bad•s

.u.

Ro•ton

p.m.

A.m t"rk-*' lA' llfllt
Chl «·ap lU C•llforlll.., !\:fl' p.m.
Yark•~ Mlnni!M~ ,

Hartlord llt Monlru l. 7: 35

p.m.

(De. MIU"anf'Z 1$·13) , 1::15 p.m.
Plr.lli&amp;dclptiM (\ 'OUQIII.DM3·fllll rhh:lllO
(S.tdlft"r IJ-1 .. ) , '!: to P-111 ·
Atlanta I Z. ~ miUI 5-IO!at Houlttoa
(St'O ttl-l-R) , K:3$ p.ni .
'

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Harlfonl VII. Mllnl11!al
April 5 - Harthud JU Mofllrtal, 7: 31

Nt•w York K, St. Loulll .f
San Fratu.-l!W.'O ~ . ~an Dltop 3
Tu~ -.Y's Gamt'M
· Plll!lbuqh (Walk 1%·10 ) Ill Molltre.W.

' BMr hall

at Philadel-

,.;-A,rll5 - Phll•df!lpW•Iol W•hln(fton. 7::1$ p.m .
NV RIUI!ItfA VII.. l"'ltlhuflll
April S' - N\' IUpt'M at Pktllturwh.
7 : 35 p.m.
April i - NV IUIIHI at Pkllltlul'lll.
1:3$ p.m. ,

t\' L Fd . Gil
I OUIM -

C hl c~~o~o

W•lUn~on

phia, 'T: 35 p.m.

MllwauJre at Of'\·eland, allht
New Yor li. Mt Ml ...e•otR, nllhl
Toronto al Kaa~ Cliy, nl ...
ChiCilJO at C ~t.lltorlia, nllht
N.\TIONArl. LE..tGUE

n. Mlll'n

GIU't' lll

Bukrihall
Nrw ,J t•ut y 111 WMhlnllf.lln, 1:30 p.m .
Atlanc.&amp;l Rl ('lt&gt;Vf'IMd. 1:11 p.m.
llllullo• 111 lndl,..., 1 :JO p.m.
Phlladel,..aat New Vork.l\:111 p.m .
Cllitrlolk' at Chh.:alo. II; IIJ p.m.
Mlut~l at San Anleftlo 1 H:Jt p.m.
Sacnamttlto .a D!n\lel', 1:31 p.m.
Dalla a1 Ulah, 8;31 p.m..

p.m.

•
.
April I - Mt. Lolilllt; a1 Mj1unota, M: ~~

p,m.

,.\prfl t -

p.m.

*·Lo•

,

By SCOTI' WOLFE
With one out senior first
SenUoeiCorreepondenl
baseman Wade .McQueen ham·
Eastern widened a 2-1 first- mered his third triple of the year
Inning lead to 3-l In the second, · for two RBI's and a 2-0 EHS lead.
then gained some Insurance In
Johnson then struck out the
the seventh todefeatSouthern6-1 side.
Monday evening In ·o:·ea high
In the bottom hall of-the frame.
school boys' baseball action.
Chris Stout gathered a two out
Eastern Is 3-0 overall and In the single, Jason Quillen singled, and
SVAC, while Southern drops to Mark Porter delivered an RBI
double.
·
2-1 and 2·4 overall.
Scott Fitch was the winning
Leading 2-1 E~stern gained a
pitcher to boost his personal bonus run In the second when"
record to 2-0 In as many starts for desllltJated hltfer Howle Lawhis second complete game. A rence walked, stole second, and
week lay-off due to Inclement came home on a throwing error
weather took away some qf on a ball hit by Lance.
The score stood at 3-1 until the
Fitch's sharpness, but the lanky
junior hurler got the lob down seventh because Eastern's dewhen necessary.
fense was near perfect In the
Filch with the aid . t batter- field. Outstanding diving,
mate Jason Hager fanned four, stretching plays by Infielders
walked none, and hit one batter, Jeff Durst. Jarod Barber, and
wl)lle giving up just 'one earned Wade McQueeif'gave Fitch's arm
run.
an extra boost.
Sophomore hurler ltuy JohnEastern hitters were Scott
Fitch
a single, McQueen a triple
son of 'Southern pitched a super
game before tiring In the sev- and single with three RBI's, and
enth. The young hurler compDed· Howle Lawrence a single. Kenny
some Impressive slats, striking Caldwell and Scott Miller had
out 13, walking five, and giving ·bases loaded walks to force In
up just five hits. Andy Ba~r · runs for RBI's In the seventh.
pitched the lilst one-third Inning,
Mark Porter led the Southern
walking two and striking out ope. hitting brigade with a double and
Eastern struck first when sharp single. Jason QuUien. aod
· lead,off batter Chris Lance Chris Stout each singled.
walked al!d Jeff Horner reached
Southern goes to Wahama
on an error to put runners at firs! Tuesday, while Eastern hosts
and second.
Symmes Valley Wednesday,
goes to Federal Hocklne Thurs.'
day,
and Oak Hill Frlday1
~dies

Vols

a1 Ml b ~nota, 11:31

" · Aprl ll .... FIII•I!Ha&amp;.a I&amp; 81 . t..U,

IU IJ.m.

......

to• Ill Mlli!W'IIIIa,

,... .

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praise . greens

!("UI,;

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shot to Sandy Lyle and who Is the
second leading money winner on
this year's tour. " They are not
too soft and not too firm: It takes
a good shot to hold the ball on the
greens and that's the way II
should be."
·
Several players were harshly
crltk:al of the greens last year,
contending they were so hard
that luck, ralher than skill, was
needed to play tbe course.
''They will probably try to firm
them up and speed them up by
Thursday (when the tournamenl
begins) ," Calcavecchla said.
"But we mv get some rain
between now il'nd then. 1shot a 72
(even par) today . and played
pretty good, so I think the course
Is In perfect shape."
Calcavecchla; however. took
Issue Y(lth one change In the
COUI'$t'. In the past, thecreektbat
trickles In front of the par-5 13th
green was only a few Inches deep.
If a player wanted to risk It, he
could climb down In the creek
and try to slash his ball out of
trouble In hopes of saving par.
Now, however, the creek has
been dammed up so that any ball
landing In It Is unplayable.
"I'm sure If you ask the 85
players here, 80 would be against

Ex-Marauder. joins
Muskingum nine
Bryan Durst (Meigs '881, a
freshman at Musklngum College, Is among the newesl faces
on the school's baseball team.
At Meigs High School, . he
played varsity baseball for four
years and was first-team ali-TVC
In his last two year's · and·
all-league honorable mention as
a sophomore. In addition, he
played football three years 1allconference as a senior), basketball three years (all-league as a
junior) and won one varsity
letter tn track.
He Is the son of C::ary and Ruth
Durst of S.R. 681, Reedsville.

that change.'' Calcavecchla said.
"That takes away the greatness
of the hole.
"I guarantee you that If I hit
the ball In the creek there before, :
I would have rolled up my pants ·
leg and got down In there and
tried to hit II out.
.
"I think now you will see a lot •
more of players laying up there
to play safe. It won't be a:s ·
exclt'lng a hole as II was hefQte." ,
Although many of the gteitest ·,
names In golf were on the course •
Monday, they had to share the ,
billing . with the flowering
shrubbery and trees.
'•

The Daily Sentinel
t1111'81tMtl)
A ~Dl.,Woa

Pllblilbed

ollltdtlmfi!Da, 1.:•

eveiy afternOCII1 Moaday .

thr...,h Friday, 111 Court St., PI&gt;- '
meroy, lllllo, by the otuo vaue,r Publllllllll ComPIIIyiMultlmedla, Iooe.,
Pomeroy, Olllo Ulll,l'll. 1112-2116. Second el- poota1e ~4 at Pomeroy,
Olllo.
Member: Unlled l'lfta International,
lnlallllllelly PrOia Alaadatlonaad tbe ·
Oblo New;TiAaoclatm National
Adve&amp;·U.IDC

rneatattve-, Branbar:n

New ,paper ea, '1311blnl Awenue, ' New York. New Yorll10017.

Pari'MAS'I1ll:
!lend ·1U
-Court
.....st.,
IIIli
to 11ie DollY Sentinel,
Pomeroy, IIIlo-.' ..

' 8tJiljliCRIPI'ION UTili

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O..e
O..e Month ................................ .$6.11!

. o..o v.ar ................................. 112.10
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Dotty,................................... 211 Ceooto
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Sublcrlberl notd•lrlnatopay dlecar.

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balta: crodlt ortU be 111... oarrler eacb

week.

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No •ttlllcrlptlona by mao permitted bo
area wher! laorre carrter ervtce 11
available.
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\ 13W.eta . ...................... ...... ... ...... Sll.~

26 Wo!eu .................................. A'I.t6
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we.u ..................................S?U&amp;
• Oodolole lldp (lwiiJ

U Woeka .................................. IIIUII
2ll Woeka ................... .............. . M!UO

~2 W~ ................................. . S7UO

THE CENTRAL TRUST ...
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SPECIAL

u-re ·

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Eastern .... .. ....... 210 000 3-6-4-2
Southern............ lllO 000 O-t-4-3
Batteries: Scott Fitch (WP)
and Jason Hager
Roy Johnson ·(LPl, Andy Baer
7th, and Mike Amos.

. ..

6 MONtrH

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CERTIFIC~T.E . OF
DEPO-S it
Subltantlal Penalty tor Etrty Wlthdrawtl

A.UAL
,
RATE 8.35°/o-8.68°/o ..

Local bowling results

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13,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

•. '

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•
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THE CEN'I'RAL TRUST COMPANY
OF IOUTHIAITERN OMIO, N.A.

•

The Bank Tlu.e Make•· ThinB' Happen

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GAWPOUS

MIDDLIIlOIIT

441·0102

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cop tide

TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) _ 8 :11 , ....
Brldgette
Gordon likes to wear at
LA Lallen4i&amp;!lellltlf-, 10 p.M.
s.•Afril II - Mle. . ola -'St. t..tll•,
Bo!tlon at. LA a.,~.._ 11:31 p.m.
least 40 pieces of jewelry, but her
ll :ll P·P'·
Mllwaulre • Goldll!nSlal r,II: Jip.m.
lm)'•eotv .. ••
most . Impressive collection of
Detroit ai PortiMd.ll :• p.ll'l.
v__...,...
v-. calfPI
gold can be found In her trophy
Ap..._ S - VMtW~~wr at Calp.,., t : Ji
MIIIL
case. ·
.
No llllmetl tteh•te•
April- VMOMIWF .. Calpi'J, 1~ 11
'fe••
,.m.
The Tennessee forward added
Hlhoa He-.._ s.r. - F•miiJDrde CIIp
,tprl I - Cal prJ.&amp; Vuro.wr, 8:11
to her slltterlng string of success
p.m.
NATIONAL BMIETII..tLLM80C.
Aprtt- ca~..,., .. v~•"'"' · 11:e1
S11nday, tying an NCAA cham·
Mo.a.,·.aa.....
H'·
plonshlp record with 27 points In
No lllmetJ .chdll!d
lier tlnal college game to carry
the' Lady Volunteers to a ~·60
ti'lumph over Auburn and thelt
secoild women's NCAA• title In
IU.LEY V.\1'11
. . _ 11, three years.
·
,
Mardi H.~
Tenne~aee, which defeated Ill
TBAM
TOT.U. POINTI
TEAll
.
TOTAL POINT8
So11tbeUtern Cohference rival
= d Ladll!o ,.'011 ......................... 13)
~~:-.~~~:.::::::::::::::::::::::::m
for the. second time In three
- - k ( • a.......... ,,,., ,,, . ,,,,,,, ,, ,,,.l21
t24 ·
••.•.•,,; ........... , ................. .
.. lloa'ard ..... .... ".... .. .. . .. . .... ...... .. .. .. ... 24 '
......... ...... " ...................... .128 meeUnp thb aeaaon, closed with
113 Ken-.................................. ., .. .. 1:11
Wbll_.. utoPirla, ............ ..........,.. 111 17 straight victories and a
Wbool~l Auto Parto......... ................. U7
Jim COllll Ollbo, cadlllao a Cit... _.....:W
achool-record 35 wlaa In 37
Jim c:oblJ llllb .. Codlllac a Cllev. .. .. ... 101
AardYark- ............ ............ ...... .. M
AardYarlBoullda ................................ Jl
.
Dullllt eames.
For the second ltr&amp;lil!t year.the LadY Tt&amp;en l01t .the cbam·
p~lp pme at tbe Tacoma
QtNiie. Tiley flallbed 32-t, wltb
botb defeats comlne to
X·AprU 1:1 - It,

The area chamber of commerce said every hotel room
within 45 miles of Augusta was
booked as golf fanatics from
around·the world flooded Into this
normally quiet town for the first
major championship of the year.
Thirty minutes afler the course
was officially opened, 1988
runner-up Mark Calcavecchla
stepped to the first tee with his
old friend Ken Green. They
played 18 holes In a little over
three hours and Calcavecchla
then had several kind things to
say about · the condition of the
course.
"If the tournament started
tomorrow. the greens would be
perfect," said Calcavecchla, who
lost last yea_r's Masters by one

. Eastern Eagles hand
Southern 6-l defeat

""rill- W111'1111111t011at l'hUaftlphl'~
1:111p.m. .
,.
N: •"rrl II - Ph1W4dphl• at W•hl~a­
\ on. '2 :11p.m.

) 5-11 ), M:35 p,m ,
\\'ednr!Odly'A Gam t'8

Nrw Vork

The grounds of the Augusta
National Golf Club opened at 8
a.m. Monday. and within an hour
there were spectators sitting
aroun4 every green.

c;i"nffftnft
Patrick Dlvlllknt

'Walfll

,C·VIo" ~4-i ),, II :, 85, P .pl . '
,
,,
Detrell (Morrl~ 15-ISJ at Tn1111 (ftoUI(h

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Phlludelphlaat fhl c~t~:•· nllfll: ·
LCI ~ &lt;\II Kt"l t'll td Clnclnrlllll,l!l_,..

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Today in history

11

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Tl'llllll'
SeaaU ~

MIMJI~tl San AniOIIto. II: to p.m.
saCram entoat.DenW!r, 1: II p.m .
DaiiM at Uhatl, t : JO p.m.
U Laken~at Seatlle, II p.M.
lloAton Ill LA Cllp,.n.:lt: St p.m.
Mllwnke~e at GoliltttSUte, II: a p.m.
ltd roll Ill PorUu.d, 11:!8 p.m.

1tt
• 0 .1110
0 I .1100 I
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AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) -:- Masters week began Monday with
one of lhe likely frontrunners
praising the conditions or the
greens and the thousands of
spectators praising the dazzling
foliage which thiS year chose the
first. days of April to reach Its
peak.
"I've been on a lot of golf
COJ!rses," an elderly gentleman
said Monday as he walked down
the lOth !airway on what he said
was his first trip to the Masters.
·
never seen anything

Alluta Ill; neW!IOd, 1: 3f p.m.
H•uiCon a1.
7: SO p.111.
PIIU.delpti11 at New York, 11:30 p.m.

ly tJnfkod Pmn• Inter •tlooral
AMERICAN lEAGUE

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made a magnUlcent postseason their way for awhile. But basket·
ball Is a game of SIU'ges and we
run and ended the season 31-7.
"I can't be any more proud of have to understand that."
With the score 76-76, Morton
these kids and the year they've
had," Seton Hall Coach P .J . burled a 3-polrlter with 2:41 to go.
Carleslmo said. "Right now, It .But those were the' last points for
just seems so difficult to put Into Seton Hall.
Greene missed a ·1-and-1 free
perspective because 'you' re so
throw
ilnd. Michigan's Terry ·disappointed."
Mills
backed
In for a turnaround
Morton scored 17 of his team's
to
draw
Michigan
within·a point
last 20 points Ia regulation. He
with
54
seconds
left.
was backed by Gerald Greene,
Morton thr~w . up an air ball ·•
who scored 13 points on his 23rd
birthday, and by Walker, who with 1o'seconds left and a.second
had 13 points with 11 rebounds. on the shot clock. The Wolverines
Gaze, the Pirates' outside threat, worked for their last shot.
did not score a field goal until Robinson drove the lane and
Greene fouled him.
overtime.
" If a·nyone was going to take • :
"The style or the game was
such that my opportunities were that last shot, II was going to be
me," Robinson said.
'
very limited, " Gaze said.
Greene, tested all game by_the
The Wolverines led 37-32 at
halftime and had breathing room bulldog 6-foot-2 guard. said he
with 3:35 to go In regulation, tliought he cut Robinson's angle
leading · 66-61. Then Morton to the basket on the critical plliy.
"l felt I was In good enough
slngle-haqdedly carried he PIrates - jamming on the break, posltloq to pick up the foul, but
hitting from the side and scoring the ref called a block," he said.
'The call was was made by John
off a floor-length drive. Walker's
Clougherty,
and Carleslmo had
free throw then put Seton Hall up
no
beef
with
the official.
with 1:12 left.
'.
'
We
couldn't
ask for anybody .
"John just look It upon himself
to get us back In the game," else we'd rather have make a call ·:
when the game's on the line," the
Carleslmo said.
But Rice was to have his lurn, coach said.
Seton Hall, which finished the
bagging a 3-polnter. Sean Higgins' pair or free throws placed regular season ranked N0. 11 .In
Michigan ahead 71-68. But soon It the counlry, won the West
was Morton again, sinking a Regional· arid beat Indiana,
3-polnter to even the score 71-71. Nevada-Las Vegas and Duke In
Rice failed on a 3-polnler, forcing Its three previous games.
overtime.
"He's a great man and 6-0 ·
'They regained the tempo," speaks for ltseU," .Vaught.sald.
Michigan center Loy Vaugh! "I can't see him not getdng the .··
said. "Things were jusl goln~ job."

Early arrivals ·for Masters

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A new wine in old bottles ___;·__B_en_~_a_tte_nb_e...!::,.rg

.Berry's World

SPRING BREAKPHOTO OPPORTUNITY

chev Is usln1 to flaht GorbacM\1
- a metaphor for 1111 wbole
dispute with perestrolla.
· But other Soviet .1peclalllta
feel that an Invitation to Lila·
chev would put hhn on the hot
seat. U he accepted, 11 Krulh·
chev did, then he would bave to' ·
atteat•to Anifr.lca's prodUctivity,
It not profitability, on both tarae
and small private farrnJ .
·
Jfheretuaecl,ltewouldlookllke
a man Indisposed to eet all the
facts. U he vblled and went back
unwllllne to change biB tune, he
would "!Ill be asked toqh ques- ·
tiona about why American farms .
vasllyout-pfoducecollectlveand ·
state farms In the Soviet Union.
All of the options would make
Gorbachev look better. · ·

.WHaT Do Voll
MeaN, We'Re. LOST?

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

•

By FRED LIEF
coach to lead his team to the title.
UPJ Aulalant Sports Editor
Fisher, an assistant coach,
SEATTI.E - Not bad for an took over the team two days
assistant coach.
before the tournament, foUowlng
Three weeks ago, the Michigan the departure of Bill Frieder to
basketball team was wllhout a Arizona State. He was given the
head coach. The athletic director IItle of Interim .. coach, and
was preoccupied with spring Michigan Athletic Director Bo
football. And the Wo lverlnes Schembechler said he will decide
· were again being dlscounled as a .on Fisher's stat.us after the
contender . for. the national tournament.
championship.
But with ihls lalest victory In
Monday night, they ·won 11.
the Klngdome, Fisher made an .
Rumeal Robinson hiI' two free altogether compelling case tor
throws with three seconds left In the permanent coaching job.
overtime, giving Michigan an
"I think we ought to Interview
80-79 vlctor)i over Seton Hall and Steve Fisher," Schembechler
completing the Wolverines' revi- said. " We certainly ought to do ·
val under Interim coach Steve that. "
· .
Fisher.
· In winning their sixth straight
" I'm the happle$t man alive, " tournament game under Fisher,
Fisher said. "I'm proud and the Wolverines stayed composed
thankful that we had an oppor- when the game seemed lo be
tunity and made the most of lt." slipping away and put to rest the
In ·winning the first overtime notion they lacked fortitude In
gaine In an NCAA championship the postseason.
since 1963, Michigan received 21
Rice, whose 3-polnt shooting
points and 11 assists from Robin- bedeviled the Pirates, also
son and 31 points from Glen Rice, grabbed 11 rebo11nds and became
voted the tournament's outs tand- both the leading scorer In an
Ing player.
NCAA Tournament and the all·
The Wolverines fought off a time scoring leader In the Big
gallant Seton Hall attack, as Ten.
.
John Morton scored a career" He Is an Incredible Individhlgl! 35 points and rallied the ual," Seton Hall forward Andrew
Pirates from a 12-polnt deficit In Gaze said. ,
the second half.
The Wolverines, 30-7, not only
After Robinson's free throws, ,put the finishing touches on a
the Pirates heaved a long In- captivating season, but ended
bounds pass to Darryl Walker, Seton Hall's bid for Its first
who missed from 3-polnt range.
national title In only Its second
The Wolverines sur~ c d on the appearance In the NCAA
court, having won li'wir first rournament. ·
The Pirates, a basketball probasketball champlon~hip · and
gram
In ruins a few years ago,
making Fisher the only rookie

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

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Orioles defeat Bosox; Indians " win, 2-1
to catcher Tettleton. The presiBy United Press International
signs."
A rookie made sure a long and
With one out In the 11th, dent then watched the fltst five
embarrassing streak woula not · Tettleton drew a walk ,from .Innings of the game- with Egyplosing pitcher -Bob Stanley and tian President Hosnl Mubarak,
r.epeat itself this year .
Rookie Craig Worthington advanced to third on Randy Baseball Commissioner A. Barsingled home Mickey Tetpeton Milligan's hit -and-run single to tlett Glamatti, Amerlcan1eague
from third base with one out In .right - Milligan's second hit President ll&lt;ibby Brown and Hall
the 11th Inning, giving the Bait!- after entering as II pinch hitter In of Farner Ted Williams.
Brian Holton, making his first
more Orioles a 5-4 Opening Day the ninth.
.
appearance
as an Oriole after
Mike Smithson, Boston's fifth
victory over the Boston Red Sox. \
·
coming
over
from the Los An:
The hit prevented the Orioles pitcher, replaced Stanley after
irom s tarting the seas.on like last Milligan's hit and Boston went to geles Dodgers In the trade that
sent Eddie Murray to the world
year -with 21 straight losses.
a five-man, drawn-In Infield.
The Orioles set a major-league
''I pitched him Inside, hoping champions, pitched 4 1-3 scorerecord for consecutive losses to for a groundball," said Smithson, less Innings for the victory.
start the season and an American who said he was unaware that he Holton has produced 22 consecuLeague record for. consecutive had five Infielders behind him. tive scoreless Innings gu ing back
losses In 1988 before finally ." He got It In off his hands and to last Aug. 14.
Boston starter Roger Clemens
winning on AprU 29. Baltimore fought It off."
went
seven Innings, gave up
finished with the worst record In
Worthington floated a single
seven
hits
and four earned runs
past a diving Ellis Burks In
the major leagues at 54-107,34 ~
and
was·
removed
after facing
ga mes behind the AL East left-center field : With runners
1
champion Red Sox.
also on first and third In the ninth one batter In the eighth.
Boston tied the game 4-4 In the
"We can put last year's streak 1 • and a chance to win the game,
and last year's season behind us. Worthington had grounded out seventh when Jody Reed's single
up the middle scored Nick
meekly.
It's forgotten, as far as I 'm
concerned," said shortstop CS:I
"I hit a sinker," Worthington Esasky, who started the Inning
said.' "I was jlttery.l'm just glad- with a double, and chased starter
Rip ken Jr., who blasted a threerun homer In the sixth Inning to I had the opportunity to do It In Dave Sc!hmldt.
Elsewhere In the American
help Baltimore rally from a 3-1 the clutch."
·
League·on
Openlpg Day, Toronto
deficit. ' 'It' s .great to get an .
President George Bush, a first
edged
Kansas
City 4-3, Cleveland
OpenlngDaywlnbE!ca!lsethere's baseman and team captain for
2-1 and Oak·
nipped
Milwaukee
such a buildup, especially win- national power Yale In the late
land
sUpped
by
Seattle
3-2. .
nlng the way we dltl, coming
1940s, delivered the ceremonial
Blue
Jays
4,
Royals
S
(rom behind. There'salotofgood
first pitch, a hlgh:and-wlde toss

At Kansas City, -Mo., ·Fred
McGriff scored twice and Jimmy
Key beat Ka~tsas City on opening
day for the second straight year.
Key, who beat the Royals 5-3 In
the opener a year ago, allow('d
just six hits and struck out four In
six Innings. Duane Ward worked
three Innings for the save.
Indians 2, Brewers 1 •
At' Cleveland, Greg Swindell
aflowed five hits over 8 1-3
Innings and Oddlbe McDowell
doubled In two runs to pace
Cleveland.-.Swindell, 18-14 last
season, retired the first 12
batters before Rob Deer led of!
the fifth Inning with a single.
Swindell was replaced In the
ninth by Dnug Jones, who recorded the last two outs for the
save.

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Tuesday, April4, 1989
Pltgl 6

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JACKSON GETS VICTORY- Reds pl&amp;clllllgace Danny lackMa
continued hla mastery of the National Leque with a 6-4 Opea1D1 ·
Day victory over lite DodKers Monday In Claclnaall's Riverfront
Sladlwn. John Jtranco came out of the buUpen lo record his flrllt
save of the yea.;. (UPI)
' ·

Winfield tri'al is postponed
cuJn -

HOUSTON
Trial of a month of· rehabilitation and Is
suit filed against New York unable to travel.
"The 'trial will not Start on
Yankees outfielder Dave Winschedule
because of the back
field by his foJ;1l)er live-In glrlsurgery,"
said Ho11ston attorney
,frlend has been 1 postpoped be,
Earle
Lilly,
who represents Rencause of Winfield's recent back
fro. ·'The judge Indicated tbat he
,
surgery.
Sandra Renfro ~!aims Winfield .would not ·fon;e (Winfield) to go
Is the father of her 6-year-old to trial.
" I have not been. able to
daughter and that she is Winascertain the full facts regardlllg
field's common-law wife.
Trial had beeri scheduled to the surgery. Once~ am aware of
start Wednesday before state that , I will apply to court and ask
District Judge Allen Daggett. for a prompt resetting. The judge
But Winfield, who Is expected to will not allow an unreasonable
'testify, underwen.t back surgery · delay."
The trial will be rescileduled
for a herniated d\SC March 24 In
after Winfield receives
soon
Los Angeles. He "faS expected to
remain In Los Angeles for about a . medical clearance, Ully said.

TUESDAY
April 4 at 3 p.m. The topic for
MIDDLEPORT - XI Gamma discussion wlll be "Joys and
. Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Guilt." Refreshments will be
•
·
Sol'lll'lty, · wlll meet Tuesday at served,
By ·BOB HOEFLICH
streamline sys tn for such oper- , Bradbury Church of Christ, 7: 30
Now that's gOod news!
allons bellll
bllshed by tile
GALLIPOLIS - A Calling of
p.m.
Anderson's - -located In the Ohio Bureau of otor Vehicles.
Eagles, for all men In the Meigs,
There were, 16 such -offlcl!ll
former Elber·
POMEROY ~ Drew Webster Gallla, Mason area, w)lo were
eliminated In new program so Post 39 of the American Legion Eagle scouts, wUI be held Tues.feld Depart·
It's good that qlll' county o!flce
ment Store toea·
, will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday. Re- day, 7 p.m., In the back room of
did survive sln~e we do need the frl!llhments will be served.
lion - opened
Dale's Smo!'las~rd. In the ,
its doors for busservices on a ~ocal level. Sue
Silver Bridge Plaza. All former
Matson lVIII coqttn~ to serve as
lnl!ll&amp; over the
POMEROY - The Ladles Eagle scouts are welcome to
deputy
registrar.
weekend.
Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order attend.
All of the stock
of Eagles, 2171, will have a
· Help Is need by the Wilbur
.hasn't arrived as yet at the new
RACINE -A special Southern
meeting 8 p.m . Tuesday .
store which will feature furniture Ward famt)Y.
J!lnlOr High Boosters' meeting
Members are asked to bring a
The trailer ·
ldence of the
and appUances so the grand
will be lleld Tuesday, 7:30p.m .,
covered dish.
openlngwUI be staged a bltlatet. ' famUy In Wei n Meigs County
at the school. Election of of!lcers
In the meantime, I'm sure you're was destroyelS y fire Thursday
MIDDLEPORT - Past Ma- will be held. Parents of CutTent
welcome- to go In and browse night. No one as home at the trons of Evangeline Chapter No. · sixth grade students are weltime and tile f lly lost all of Us 172, Order of Eastern Star, will come to attend,
·
around.
The new business belongs to possession. . I:ere was no meet Tuesday 1 7:30 p.m. , at the
lnslll'ance.
·
Jim and Becky Anderson.
PORTLAND- Lebanon Townhome of VIrginia Buchanan.
Clothing lli n
by Mr. and Members are asked towearthelr ship Trustees
Incidentally, the Main St. display
meet Tuesday.
windows have some nice attrac· Mrs. Ward and their three sons.
6:
30
p.m.
,
at
the township
Easter bonnets.
Two of the !IIIIi~ wear size 12 slim
tlve touches do.n' t they?
building.
jeans, size 12 slllrts and·size folll'
'
MIDDLEPORTThe regular
·F ormer Meigs County resi- shoes..The thri son wears a size meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
POMEROY- A special meet·
8-10 jeans, 8-10 llhlrt and size one F&amp;AM, will be Tuesday, 7:30 lng of Pomeroy Lodge 164 will be
dents seem to be everyplace.
, Edie Sisson has a copy of a new shoes. Mr. W&amp;:rd wears 36-32 p.m., With w~~ In the fellowcrafl held Tuesday, 12 noon, i.t the
book, . Great ·American Jour· trousers, larg~ size shlris and degree. The Deputy Grand Mas· temple on Mulberry Ave.
neys ; published by the National s lze eight shoes while Mrs. Ward
ter will present a 70-year-pln to
wears s lze 12-;-13 jeans, large
Geographic Society.
WEDNESQAY
Rodney Downing. Plan~ will be
The book Is written by four blouses and a SfVen and one-half made for the ,annual Church
_POMEROY .~The regular
'
· .
·
authors and reflects the delights size s.hoes.
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge 164
Sunday for the lodge . .
The
family
Is
justklrtd
of
hither
, of travel -as It was In the 19th
will ~ held Wednesday, 7:30
Cetflury. One of the- authors, and yon at thePrl!senttlme, butlf
POMEROY - From now on, p.m., at the Middleport Temple.
Cynlhla Ramsey, cllllse the old you _cll)11~elp~ntact Mrs. Katbe Ladles Auxiliary of the · Refreshments will be served
footpaths and horse trails and thryri Mnchell t 142-2544.
··
Fraternal Order of Eagles, 2171, following the meeting.
this route took her thr&lt;lugh
will meet at 8 p.m. on Tuesdays.
. Up Rlii:lne way, the Southern Members are asked to bring a
Berea, Ky.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle. · Berea Is a popular spot for Junior IIlah l!oosters and the covered dish for pot luck.
port Uterary Club will meet on
craft persons 110 lncl\lded In her Commltlee for the Advancement
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home
part of the book are details of her of Career Ed6cation will join
POMEROY _The Alzhelmers of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
visit with former resident, Nell hands on Sull4iay, AprH 16, to
stage a Publlc !ham and turkey support group will meet at the Everett tfayes will review a
Colmer, and his wife, Mary
Overbrook Nursing, Home on biography .of George Eliot and
.
Elizabeth Colmer, who operate .a dinner.
studio-shop In the commu~tlty.
The dlimer win be served from _
'
~
At the time of the visit, Nell was ~h::?o~.m. to ~ p.m. at the htgh
weaving a tartan and Mrs.
Proceeds wlll go towards the
Colmef
worklpg on cornhusk
purchase
of fans for the junior
BJ Jolla C. Rice
potash.
dolls which are big sellers. Nell
high
school
buDding
and
for
County
Extension
Alent,
To achieve high forage yields
also
·and Mary, who are
staging
a
cai'njval
of
careers
In
Ap-lcal&amp;ure
and
maintain soil levels, produc·
professional musicians, enter·
Qctober.
.
ers must apply these two key
lalned the writer playing on their
Of course~onatlons for the
Fertilizing of Meadows ... You plant nutrient elements In this
double dqlclmer. Incidentally,
dinner a,re n ed and If you can probably will want to optimize approximate 1 to 4 ratiO. Pbosthere Is a large color photo o!
Mrs. Colmer with one of her help call Del s Wolfe at the hay and grass silage production phorus and potassium can be
:corphusk dolls lnothe publication. school, 949·2233, or at home In the during 1989. According to John · applied throughout much of the
evenings, 949-2836.
Underwood, Obln State Unlver· year, but spring and - early
-------~
slty district Extension agro~su_mmer appUcatlons enhance
The Meigs County Deputy
With the miracle of spring mist, forages are among the
egrowth and extend seasonal
:Motor Vehicle Registrar's Office
taking place .!Ill around you, you most responsive of all crops ·t
pl'oductlon.
.located at 1116 1'4ulberry Ave. KNOW
that
you
have
to
keep
·
fertnlzatlon.
The
element·
nliJ'l)-..
Corn Herblcl~es Can Be Appthat's the lOPmer Gibbs Groce~y
y'
.
~
gen
...
~IallY nM 1 1ary •to lied Early · ... Early preplant
smiling.
. ,building ...l 'did survive In the'
bOostyletaS'Iromgras~meadows
application o! herbicides Ia a
that contain less than 35 percent concept that has becomelncrea.a·
Q
f
legume. Nitrogen should be spilt· lngly popular In recent years.
appUed to grasses, with one.half Early preplan! can be defined as
broadcast In .March or early applying herbicide one to six
It was announced at the recent for the state o! Ohio.
April
and tbe remainder applied weeks prior to planting, when
The
group
'
will
be
having
meeting of the Job's Daughters
after
the first harvest. Rate wlH weeds have not emerged or are
sever11-l
moneyl
making
events
that Lori Redman has been
depend
on yoilr yield goal and very small. Onereasonforearly
named as delegate and . Greta Including the ~le of dish clotlls
amount
of
legumes In the stand. application Is to allow more time
Riffle has been named as alter- and a spaghetti!dlMer.
Legumes
fix sufficient nitro- to receive sufficient rainfall to
The spaghetJI dinner, hosted
nate lor the Miss Ohio Job's
gen
for
associated
grasses where move herbicide down Into the soil
Daughters Pageant on April 15, by the Evangeline Order of the
stands
have
3~
percent
more (activatiOn). The chance for
In Columbus. The honored queen Eastern Star, will Include spaghetti, cole slaw, garUc bread, pte, legume content. Each ton of receiving adequate rain may be
Is Greta Riffle.
Tile grouP would like to ex· coffee •lid tea. CGit of t)le Ol.llner legume grass or mixed grass- greater over a 4 week period
press their appreciation to the will be $3.150 for adults and 'Sl. 75 legume coptent. Each ton of ' prior to plahtlng, as_compared to
for children under l2. The diMer legume grass or mixed grass- the 10 days following a pre~ponsors.
· The McConnelsville Inspection wUI be at the Masonic Temple In legume forage harvested con- emergence application. Where
was AprH 1. This was also the Middleport on April 7 from 11 talns , about 14 pounds of phos- early preplan! herbicides adephalli and 50 to 60 poun~s of
·
teceptlon for Art Tracey who Ill a.m. to 6 p.m.
the Assistant Grand Guardian
•

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will

·Agent's Corner:

w•

Now is the ~e to see how your car .

weathered ·u1rough winter. . ·

·
'S Daughter_S name d 1egateS
•
Jb

~"""

l

!3eta Sigma Phi chapter
elects officers for :Y~a:r
' I .•

McDOWELL GETS WINNING HIT - The
Indians' Oddlbe McDowell (left) Is congratulated
by teammate Joe Carter after hltt1n1 a two-run

double In the tlllrd lnnlnr; of Monday's game
against the visiting Mllwank~ Brewers. 'fttat
was all the Tribe needed to noleh a 2--1 victory.
(UPI)
'
'

Rose cheered in '89 opener
CINCINNATIIUPI) - Clncln·
nat! Reds Manager Pete Rose,
the s ubject of a baseballcommls·
stone r's gambling Investigation
that could end his fabled career, .
received a 30-second standing
ovation Monday fronr most of a
sold-out crowd . of about _50,000
hometown fans at Opening Day .
·There were a. smattering of
boos for Rose when be was
Introduced before tl)e Cincinnati
Reds -Los Angeles Dodgers
game, but the great maJority
s\Ood and applauded. Many also
chanted, "Pete, Pete, Pete."
Rose, who ~ould be &amp;llSpended
for a year If he Is found to llave
bet on bueball or banned tram
baSeball for life If he bet on tile
Rldl. made no mention of the
Investigation In his brief pregame mn.rlt'l Ill fans.
"We're looking forward to an
~1tllll1989~~eason, " said Ro~~e.
"Come out and support us
IIC811M I tlllnk we're 101111 all

.....

"Pete's not perfect, but then·,
neither am I," said Wilson. "I
don't think he's guilty of what
they're saying.

"! don't think Pete would ever
do anything to hurt the game of
ba.se.ball. I'm going to stand by
him alld I think anybody .who
ever saw Pete Rose play very
much will also support him."
Many fans said they wlll
continue to support Rose while
the ln~dgatlon continues, but
won't be able to back him If the
probe finds him guilty of something serious.
"I hope he basn't done any'thing that woilld pt him IUS·
pended, but the verdict Isn't In
yet," "ld Calvin Hutchens, 61, of
Muncie, Ind., a- Reds season
ticket llolill!lr siDce 1976, "l'm
SUJIPCII'Illll blm riJIIt now, but 11
.they find he bet on b~~&amp;eball
pmee, . tileD I'll support . a
IUIPftlllon.

.

•'TIIII \l'llole lnvellllptlon lias
mademewonder.abouttbepme
tiiOie appJaudlq Rolle
ln..the •fiidl.., Jim Willon, 67, · of bUeball. · U tile allegations
otdndllllltt. w11o wore • brtrht .-galnat Pete are correct. then
rfd. nwnn11 a • a, to hJI wllal about otller peoplet; In the
game?
16th atrallllt Opellll'l Dey·

"'*-

f

• Officers were elected at the . candle In honor of Mrs. A.R.
'r ecent meeting of XI Gamma Mu Knight for the •G race Episcopal
11orortty held at the home of A.R. Church and a ~moria! for her at
Founders Day on April 30 at the
Knight.
: New officers Include Kay Ad· Blennerhas~et Hotel In
Parkersburg. )
~ins, president; ·Kay Lopn,
vice-president; Janet Peavley,
Members ~urged to get Fair
recording secretary; NieseI Ge· ads · together : for th~ next
rard, corresponding secretary; ' meeting.
i
Carolyn Grueser, treasurer; and
p!;!': ~oc 'r:sat t:h~a~f,':,
S8ndy Iannarelli, city council.
.
'
~
II was reported that several over Easter. - 1
memberl attended the St. PaThe culllll'ai.rogram was by
trick's Day dance sponsored by · Gayle Roush 'f o spoke on cake
the Ohio Eta Phi.
decorating. ~
.
The next m ting Is set for
Other mailers discussed Included the purchase of an advent Tuesday at 7: p.m .

It was reported that the club
woujd serve the Blood Mobile 411
October at the recent theetint of
t)le Rocksprings Better Healtl!
Club lleld at the home of Trealll
.
f\bbott.
The meeting wu opened
the Lord' a Pra,er and pledge

wt!·

filtelA!C-~
-w-..=
.•

111enar. DWotlonlwere11Yu.

Nancy Morrll who read ~·Enter·
1111 Marc:h,.. '"l'raal81tlim,.. lDd

il I

NOW BY

21' EAST MAIN

POMEROY

882·1187

:'My Delernla.''
• Dnrothy Jetllt!ra repOrted aetiCI1111 ret well carda to· Ro~

THIS SPICW

=·

TAX TIP OF
~lD

i

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a.m.

quately prt'vent the emergence
of early germinating weeds In
no-till systems, the need for a
burndown herbicide Is elhnl·
nated. Some advantages of early
preplan!: (1) May provide more
thne to receive needed rainfall,
compared to appUcatlOn at the·
thne o! planting; (2) Spreads
workload In the spring. Herb!·
clde can be applied In liquid
fertilizer or Impregnated on dry
fertnlzer, further reducing the
number of trips over the field;.
(3) Mayelhnlnate tbeneedfora
burndown herbicide In no-tnl,
where perennial weeds,.re not a
problem; (4) May re&lt;Juce the
potential for herbicide
carryover.
Some disadvantages ot early
preplan!: (1) Herbicides may not
last long enough to provideadequate control later In . the
season; (2) Soli may be toowetln
the early spring to allow appllca:
tlon. SoU will be more readily
compacted at thla thne of the
year.
Next week I will talk about
some strategies.
Gardening ... Restless gardeners, your time has come! AprH 1

Is the date to start planting peas,
lettuce, radishes, and other early
vegetables In Ohio.
But don't let your enthusiasm
ruin the garden. Although you
can begin preparinll the garden
for planting, don't work soli
that's too wet. SoU that's plowed
or spaded wben It's too wet forms
hard clumps that last through the
sum111er. Clumps In clay soDs
can last for years .
How do you tell is the sollls·too
wet? Use a spade to tum over a
soli slice about 6 Inches deep.
Pick up a handful of the son and
squeeze II. Release and the soU
should crumble_. 11 It's tightly
stuck together, It's too wet to
work. Walt untO the soli dries
before spading or plowing. Try
the test again to be sure . .
Vegetables grow best In soU
that's fertile and well-drained. So
when you spade the g8fden, you
may want to add compost,
composted cow manure, or peat
moss to Improve the soU. Soli
with a high sand or clay content
needs more of these materials.
They should be mixed Into the top
six Inches of son.

. ""..._,_,.,..
,........
.
.....
...
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................. ...

. . . . . . ,0. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,,

.... .,.. •• •M r tfa ... .,...,

....... flr ....Aim'

.... ...... .,.,., ........ , ..... 1111

. . . . . . LA.

......... v••

• Yptl FEEL YOI( HAVE . . . PAY. . 100
MICII FOI YOUI PIISt&amp;IIONS, .VIIS A
.CAll. WI Wll QUOD YOI Pllaa

II PilON

.~

SlOP
.......

~,OliO

6111AS! •••
I

acres.
2. Moore Unl-drlll (no-WidrUI)
- $25 minhnum plus $5/acre for
all over 5 acres. Three will be a
$2/ acre charge for the second
pass over the field. ,
·
You will need to furnish your
. own tractor (60 Horsepower or
more for tile Moore Unl-drlll),
and you do tbe planting.
Keep In mlrtd that first time
"n&amp;tlllers" may use our MOj)re
drHI tree for up to five acrl!ll!
If your lnter:led and I hope
many of you
, contact our
Mei~_SWCD Office for schedulIng an'll/or questions at 992-6647.

· llndltury, Minonwllt, lutt.d, Syrac. ., •IIIII

11&amp;1

••t.
I "

$40 plus $8/acre tor all over 5

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prucription Prices
•Quality Prescription Drugs
•Ful Unt of Gtntrin Available
•-.ost .Insurance Carrt.s Acapttd
Free Dlllwery tolllddlepoff, Po•o,.y,

~

Bearbl.

'

YOU IUIIIfiiiUL

isliunD TAll PlY lUIS?

take part In the )marathon for St.
JlldeS Holllltal. "
.
A donation waa made t&amp; the
Senior Otlzens (1ehter.
The progra111 consisted of
Information on 111ew treatments
for yeut l~!ons, eye _dropa,
protecttar yo~lf from drugs,
acblllllep.
II!J'MIIIq.
A contest ., · conducted by
Mrs. .iefrers wltll prlzM gollll to
Leonora Le:llb'it and Louise

.

_
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Evangeline Order of the Eastern Star
·The will be having a spagettl ·dinner
HARRISIONVILLE
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on oil April 7 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
State Route 684 wlll have a at the Masonic Temple In Mlddlespecial missiOnary meeting at " I!Ort. Cost will be $3.50 for adults
7: 30 p.m. on Wednesday . and $1.75 for children under 12.
Speaker will be Dnn DeLong. The
Rev. David Ferrell Invites the
SATURDAY
public.
POMEROY Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their first
. THURSDAY
dance of the year on Saturday
POMEROY . - Xi Gamma !rom 8 to 11 p.th. at the Royal Oak ·
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Park. Come and enjoy an evenSorority, will hold a spring tea at
Ing of fun and fellowship.
the home of Vicki Ault, 7 p.m.
Thursday. Members are to meet
SALISBURY - The Salisbury
on the upper Pomeroy parking P .T.O. -will have an aluminum
lot at 6:45 to go to the Ault home.
can recycling day on Aprll8from
10
to 2 p.m. at the Sal,isb!lry •
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline· Elementary School. Money
Chapter 172, Order oft be Eastern raised will be used to purchase
Star will meet Thursday at 7: 30 new playground equipment.
p.m. Past matrons and past
patrons will be honored. Past
Scleace lair
matrons are to wear past ma·
POMEROY - Tbe Riverview
Irons !lress. Initiatory work will
Elementary School will hold a
be exemplified. Officers are to
science fair Monday .
wear chapter dresses.
An open house will be held tbat
evening frqm 6: 30 to 8: 30 p.m. In
RUTLAND ..;. The Rutland
conjunction with the PTO meetTownship Trustees will meet
Ing at 7 p.m.
Thursday at 6: 30 p.m. at the

At the Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are Our Business!

·- .

Tbe Aprn
tng will be held
at
tile
home
of
Helen
Blacl!lton. .
Ra~. WfY S.lley, ~
lletty Willi.
Pllyllla Slllnnerj will have the
'1'llaslk )'011 IIOin lftre read . CU1111St&amp;DdMn1AbbottwUIIIave
from . . . . . Colllllll, Pbyllll tile pi'Oifllm. ·!
Qpeacer for Md1e Brown, Lou .
Otben present at tile meet!Dg
Smith · alld Betty Collide for w.-. Violet ~II, Apes Dixon, .
Cllrlatnw trl)'i .
Naacy Gruaa,r, and Ann
It wu alao ftpOI'ted that Mra. Grueser wu\
Jefferl and Michel Leifheit wUI

WU APPEAl IN THE DAILY
81111L 01
APmL 24, 1919. ·
AD DIAIUIIIS
lAY, APIIL 17, 1919
A$1 fO IIIAN 01 DAVI.·
.

EAST MEIGS - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet In
regular session, Wednesday, 7:30 .
p.m. at the Reedsville fire
station.

copy of your soil test before This Is the only thne In pas lure
Scheduling for free use.)
management In whlcb overgraz.
When using no-till your soil test • lng Is encouraged. Grazing close
should consist of two samples:
at thll thne wlll assist In
one from the top 2" lo cbeck soli suppressing -the existing
pH, and the other 6-8" down _to vegetation:
check pltoaphorous and potas2. Then apply your chemical
sium levels.
burn-down agent. This will en. 2. Apply lime and fer!Uizer as sure that existing vegetation Is
per soli !HI results.
either suppressed or killed, elhn3. Apply Chemk:all -all no-till lnatlng the new seedlings compeseedlngs must use some sort of tition. A chemical bum down Is
chemical burndown to either kUI extremely Important to ensure a
or suppress the eldlllng vegeta· successful new no-till planting.
liOn. All chemleab must be
Our rates this year for our
applied-at tile proper rate accord- equipment are:
Ing to the label.
1. No-till Allis Chalmers 2 row
In addition II y~ are.renovat- com planter - mlnhnum charge
lng pasture thJ'Olllh no-1111 methods you will need to
1. Grazethepastureveryclose.

The Meigs Son and Water
Conservation District (SWCD) Is
offering first time "no-tlllers"
the Q!)portunlty to plant 5 acres of
crops ,u sing our No-till Moore
drUI absolutely free of charge! It
Ia our way of encouraging you to
try one of our best tools In erosion
control.
Our technician will schedule
the drHI for yolll' use, deliver !be
drUI to yolll' !le!d, and ensure that
·proper no-till planting requlreIMDIB are followed.
These requirements are as
follows:
~
1. SoH test for each field to be
set!ded prior to p~ntlng. Soli test
Instructions and forma are avail·
able from the Cooperative Exten·
&amp;loll Se~vlce, (We must see a

:Rock Springs Better H~lth ·
Club conducts recent meeting

triCtors Pollcy... piCUpd
protection lor SRIIII to
nMCIIum·lizt artiun
contr~etors. ·'Simple.
convenient and very
aflordlblt.

MIDDLEPOJl.T Regular
meting of Pomeroy Lodge 164,
FllrAM W!l(lnesday, 7:30 p.m at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Work In the Fellowcraft degree
· with refreshmenls to follow .

Meigs SWCD offers help to new no-tillers

',,

lfs the SeriH Onl Con-

.

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

M e(.IJ,lOW
. J . landS respo nd tO fierttttZtng
~ /" •

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l

roll call Will be an example of
women In a man's world.

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Spring into Action!

'

Community Calendar

1-bat's gooC(ne~s!

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The Daily Sentinel

l

Heat of the bend

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In Monday's American League
action, II was: Toronto4, Kansas
City 3; Cleveland 2, Milwaukee 1;
Oakland 3, Seattle 2; and Baltimore 5, Boston 4 In lllnnings.
Meta 8, Cardinals 4 ·
At New York, Darryl Strawberry went 3 for 3 and Dwight
Gooden collected his third OpenIng Day victory to lead the ·
defending National League East' ·
· cllamplqns. Strawberry, who had
two home runs on Opening Day
last year, had two doubles, two
steals and scored twice. Don
Aase earned the save for the ·
Mets. Loser. Joe Magrane allowed seven runs and nine hits In
just 3 2-3 Innings.
Glaata S, Padres 3
At San Diego, Kevin Mitchell
homered and drove In four runs,
Including two In the decisive
seventh Inning, to ralfy San
Francisco. Candy Maldonado
doubled In another run as the
Giants scored tfiree thnes' ln the
seventh off loser Eric Show. Rick
Reusc.hel went six Innings for the
win, allowing three runs and six
hits, and MUte LaCoss pitched
the final two Innings for the save.

•

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.

Tuaulay. Aprl4,_1889

Reds nip Dodgers in opener
-Los Angeles starter Tim
By JEFF SHAIN
reception t would get," Rose
Belcher
lasted only 2 1-3lnnlngs,
UPl Sports Writer
said. "T-he fans were great. I was
Cincinna ti fans welcomed ~ouched. As lor the game, we just s urrenderlng six hIts and six
runs , four of them earned.
Ma nager Pete Rose back Mon- i'ode O'NelU's bat. "·
Belcher's throwing error In the
day from a troubled spring, and
O'Neill had said before Sunsecond Inning . helped the Reds
PauW'Nelll rewarded them with day's final exhibition game In his
a t hree- run homer that proved hometown of Columbus, Ohio, score three times. O'Neill
prophellc.
that he 'hoped to do well In doubled and scored· on JeU
Reed's single. Ron Oester
O'Neill went 4 for 4, adding a Columbus, "but I'd prefer to hit a
walked and Reed scored from
double and ' two singles to hls three-run homer. Monday In
second when Belcher !lelded
three-run blas t, powering t~ Clnclnna tL"
Jackson's bunt and threw wlll:lly
Reds to a 6:.4 Opening Day vlcto~
The right fielder went hitless In
to third, with Oester taking third
over the · world champion Los Columbus but was a terror
on the error. Barry Larkin
Angeles Dodgers.
· against the Dodgers.
·
produced a sacrifice fly to score
Rose, the subject of a gambling ' "After all, today Is when It
Oester
and give· the Reds a 3-2
Investigation that could lead to counts," O'Neill sa.ld. · " Everyblead. '
his ban from the game, received ody has great days somethne
Cincinnati stretched Its lead to
a 30-second standing ovation during the season. I was lucky
6-2 In the third Inning when Kal
from most of a sold-out River- enough to h11ve one on Opening
Daniels walked. Todd Benzinger
front Stadium crowd of 55,385, Day . It's exciting to get out there
singled and O'Neill followed with
the second -largest regularand really get _going on Opening
hls three-run homer to right.
season turnout In · Cincinnati Day . That really mai(es It speThree Cincinnati errors In the
history.
cial. I'll remember this day·for a
first staked Los Angeles to a 2-0
Rose could be suspended for a
iOD!l time." .
lead. Kirk Gibson drove home
year If he Is found to have bet on
Reds starter Danny Jackson Willie Randolph with a single aild
baseball or banned for life If he
went the first five Innings for thf:! later scored on a throwing error
bet l!tl-the Reds.- There were a
victory, giving up four hits and by catcher Reed;
smattering of boos for Rose when
Elsewhere In the National
he was Introduced, . but the · four runs, two of them earned.
Rob Dibble pitched two Innings of League on Opening Day, the New
· majority stood and applauded.
one-hit ball and John Franco was · York Mets clubbed St. Louis 8-4
Many also chanted. "Pete, Pete,
perfect over the final two Innings and San Francisco topped San
Pete."
\....
for
the save.
Diego S-3.
''I was wonlierlng what kind of

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6 The

Ohio

April4, 1989

No resolution
•
•
Solidarity, communr,st unwns

Public Notica

ANKARA, TUrkey (UPI) - · "unusual Interest': In the recent blterfere In •'matters that are the
Turkey announced the recal( of ban on the Islamic headdresses exclusive concern of the Turkish
Its ambassador from Iran In an and charged ),' the state- state, " he said.
escalation of a rift that began . controlled Iranlaq radio" and
The move came alter Prime
with Tehran criticizing a ban on Iranian oftllllals with "Issuing Minister Turgut Ozal's ruling
Islamic headdresses by female '--pro\.'ocatlve and Inflammatory" Motherland · P11rty suffered a
students at Turkish universities. stat~ments against Turkey .
humiliating defeat In nationwide
Foreign MiniStry UndersecreLast month, deputies In the municipal polls last week, and
tary Nuzhet Kandemlr told a Mallis, or Iranian parliament, critics said the voters were
news conterence that Turkish Issued a statement expressing dissatisfied with his weak stand
Ambassador to Tehran Orner displeasure with Turkey's ban against Iran.
.
Akbel was being recalled for and asking the Tehran governOzal threw out seven Islamic
consultations, citing Iranian In: men! to adjust Its relations with fundamentalists from his Caterference In Turkey's Internal Ankara accordingly. , ·
binet Friday In a move seen to be
affairs.
''No country's government, his first step toward reforms
There was no Immediate reac-- parliament or press )lave the within his government.
tlon from Tehran to the an- right to pass judgment on
In the bombings , one explosion
nouncement, but Iran's official another country's t"eglme, cher' In Ankara destroyed a parked
_Islamic RepubliC News Agency Ished values, government and . car belonging to a British Ern·
carried reports of !he Turkish sovereign declslonp," Kandemlr bassy oft!Cial, and a second-blast
decision In dispatches from said.
·
rocked the garage of the British
from SWAPO guerrillas on Sunday durlnro heavy
WEAPONS DISPlAY - Namibian pollee
Ankara.
Kandemlr
told
reporters
the
Council
and a nearby exhibition
display weapons on Monday alledgedly captured
fighting between South Altjcan backed forces and ·
The
Turkish
announcement
decision
to
recall
Akbel
arose
hall.
lnsJII'gents In northern Namibia. (Reurers)
came after numerous bomb from remarks attributed to Iran·
There were po casualties, but
explosions rocked British·targets !an Ambassador to Turkey Ma· pollee said the bombs caused
In Ankara and Turkish company nuchehr. Mottaklln an Interview considerable damage.
offices In Istanbul late Sunday.
last week with the Turkish
Kandemlr said pollee were
There were no casualties and newspaper Hurrlyet. Mottakl Investigating the bombings, but
authorities declined to Unk the was quoted as saying "under could not determine If they were
blasts In Ankara wit)) Iran's Instructions of ltle ~ Majlls " Iran connected with the Feb. 14 death
death threat against Briton Sal· would "have to re~lew" Its ties threat Issued against Rushdle by
loosing " murder squads" on his Illegally crossed the border to set • man Rushdle, whose novel, ''The with Turkey over the ban on t11e Iranian spiritual leader Ayatol.. OSHAKATI,Namlbla (UP! ) Satanic Verses," ,raised protests Islamic headdress.&gt;
up bases in Namibia for political
lah Ruhollah Khomelnl, and
South Africa &lt;;barged that a men and called South African
among Moslems who said It was
Kandemli' said t;!ottakl's re· subsequent breali In diplomatic
SWAPO guerrilla plan to lnfll· accounts ol the fighting "fig- purposes and It has misfired.
of Pr e.t o r la' s
"The whole picture Is now blasphemous . . A Tur)dsh leftist marks constituted a "grave ties between Iran and Britain.
ti·ate Namibia during a U.N.· ment s
imagination
."
clear
to us. The plan was to group claimed responsibility for vI o I a tl on of jll pI om a II c . Three other explosions In Ismonitored transition to lnde·
Gen
.
Ha
ns
Dreyer,
"
northern
setting the blasts In Istanbul.
practice."
.I
Infiltrate
to establish these bases
tanbul appeared to have no
pendence had backfired, and
pollee
commissioner,
Monday
Turkey
has
repeated1y
''The
ambassador
could
not
quickly
and
.then
claim
they
had
connection
with those In Ankara .
said 141 rebels andd 21 border
put
the
death
toll
In
three
days
of
charged
over
the
past
month
that
have
acted
on
his
own
Initiative,
always
been
there
...
giving
the
The Istanbul blasts wrecked
pollee died In three days or
fighting a t 162, including 141 Impression of a s trong force that Iran was Interfering In Its Inter· without. Instructions !~om his the offices of Industrial companlighting.
Ies, Sabancu, Eska and Enka ,
. Authorities said South African- guerrillas a nd 21 pollee. The could penetrate to liberate large nal affairs after a constitutional government," Kandemlr said.
court In Ankara upheld a ban on "We have (therefore) recalled and anonym~us c'a llers told Tur·
backed security forces clashed worst d ay of fighting was Sun- a reas of Namibia ," Botha said.
the Islamic headdress worn by our ambassador tb Ankara for klsh newpapers the underground
As the situatiOn deteriorated,
(or a third day Monda:~~~ with day, whe n 97 gue rr illas and 15
U.N. Secre tary General Javier female students In Turkish consultations."
urban terrorist group Dev Sol, or
SWAPO fighters as U.N. o~ial s · pollee died .
In Washington Monday, the Perez de Cuellar asked the universities.
Turkey would "Jjever condone Revolutionary Left , took
tried to end the bloodshed and the
Kandemlr said lran had shown efforts" by anotlJer state to responsibility.
United States said the gue r r illas State Department blamed the Security Council president, Sofighting
on
SWAPO
and
called
for
viet
Ambassador
Aleksandr
Beof the South West AfriCa People' s
'Organization appeared in vioia- an end to th e ft ghting to salvage longogov, to hold private consu·
the threatened peace settlment.
lations with member nations
tlln of International accords.
Monday
afternoon.
"All
Information
available
to
South African Foreign MinisDreyer
us
indicates
tha
t
a
major
Infiltrasa id pollee were track·
ter Roelo! "Pik" Botha deln·g
.
four
groups of SWAPO
tion
of
northern
Namibia
by
manded that the U.N. Security
Council condemn the South Wes t · milita ry fo rces of ... SWAPO Is guerrillas that were among as
Africa People' s Organization for occurring, " State Depa rtme nt many as 1,200 guerrillas who
the lncu rslons II} to Namibia from spokeswom.n Marg aret Tut- have moved Into Namibia since
Angola a nd said the guerrillas' wiler said. "This is in direct Saturd ay when the U.N. TransiPORT-AU-PRINCE, Hall! deporred Monday, possibly to the but government sources said
tion
Group
began
operations
to
viola
tion
of
the
U.N.
Security
bid to establish bases In the
!UPI) - The capital remained neighboring DomUtlcan RepubMonday all five had been reImplement
t
he
peace
plan
leadCouncil
Resolution
435
and
the
territory had "mis fired."
tense Tuesday after rebellious lic, but Leopard troops blocked
leased. The hosiage6 ·also In·
But SWAPO guerrilla leader related Angola-Namibian ac- Ing to Independence for Africa' s troops threatened bomb attacks the road leading to' the airport.
eluded two brothers of Avril and
las t colony.
.
A statement putportedly preSam -Nujoma de nied hi s m e n had cords of Dec. 22. 1988."
to press for the release of a Jailed
a brother of Saint I:ouls. The
Chief
Inspector
Derek
Brune
E
xplaining
the
presence
of
his
crossed into Namibia from An·
colonel who led an abortive coup pared by Leopard soldiers and sources said Saint Louis was
read on a local radio station wounded during _the coup
gala and blamed U.N. Special troops In Namibia , Nujoma said·, told a briefing In Oshakatl that _ attempt.
.
Representative In Namibia " SWAPO forces were gather ing pollee expected to push al)
. Independent radio station An· warned If Rebu was not releasl!d attempt.
Martti Ahtisaarl for failing to them selves, expecting to be · SWAPO Intruders back above the cllles reported Monday that four by 5 p .m. Monday, his supporrers
About 9 a.m. Monday, a group
have his peacekeeping troops tn confined to bases, by U.N. 16th parallel by the end of the rebel soldiers were kUied and would mount born~ attacks . In a
of armed Leopards · ~!zed the
military components, but they week. He said all SWAPO units many others wounded·during the separate radio annj&gt;uncement, 20 state-run National Television of
place to halt the bloodshed.
Speaking at a confere nce on did not expect to be attacked by were heading south and that none aftern0011 In a clash between Leopards later demanded Re- Halt! and told all station emhad. yet turned back. In each · loyal presidential guards and bu's release andAt rll'sexlle, bul ployees' to go home, employees
Namibia In Harare, Zimbabwe, South African troops ."
But
Botha
said
In
Capetown,
battle. " they have stood and members of the rebeiUous Leo- made no threats.
Nujoma accused South Afr iCa or
said. Two hours later, troops
Soutp Afr ica, that "SWAPO has fought," he said.
There were n reports of loyal to Avril stormed the buDd·
pard Bat tal ton on the on!y road to
bombings late ~onday, but lng, but the rebels apparently
the airport.
The station said a presidential shooting broke ou il~ear the Mats had fled minutes before, governguard tank shot at a truckload of Gate Inrernatlonal Airport and In ment sources said. The rebels
rebels In a bid to end the the suburb of Delmas, where a made no broadcasts, ~nd the
300 civilians television station remained off
·· blockade, but the report could not mob of about ·1
enjoyed since the days of the
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UP! ) erected barricades and burned the air Monday evening.
· Addressing a news conference be confirmed.
·
.
NATO Sec retar y -G e n er al Rolnan Empire ."
to mark the 40th anniversary,
Military officers led by Cot. old tires to keep government
Woerner said that In the future, CDU General Secretary Heiner Hlmler Rebu, head of the elite troops out, wltnes,~s said.
Maltfred Woerner, marking the
.:organization's 40th anniversary, NATO would become "more and
Wltneuea said ; some of the ·
Geissler said he bel1eved "the Leopard Battalion, remained In
NOW OPEN FOR
said Tuesday the alliance has not more an Instrument of change," time Is ripe to give the Nobel, custody after trying Sunday to shooting may have , been Leo·
SPRING SEASON
only ensured peace In Europe for but would continue to function as
Peace Prize to a defense 2._rganl· seize control of the government pards firing In the air. The shots
Complete Line of Vegetable
four decades but remains "the "the fundament of global stabil- za tlon which through ltsd.,rml· of military leader L1 . Gen.
stopped after abopt two hours. •
• Bedding ·PI•m•. Azaleea
backbone and lighthouse of man- Ity a nd a Iorin of Insurance policy nation to defend freedom. demo- Prosper Avril.
The Ministry C1f Infonnatton
• Fruit Traea, Geraniums,
kind's future In freedom and against the risks of turmo U. cracy and human rights has
AvrU was seized by the rebels
Ul'lled calm and a~ "sectors of
Hanging
Baalletl, Shrubbefy
crisis
and
war
."
natiOn, especial the news -mePeace.' '
crea ted the political precondl· as he returned from a partyear!y
andTr-.
The
main
lesson
of
the
past
40
"Without this alliance, there
bllshtng or
tlons for 40 years· of peace In Sunday and was beiJW taken to dia, to avoid
OPIII IU. Y t All tO 5 I'll
will be neither stability nor years was t he need to mainta in EurOpe.' '
the Port-au·Prlnce airport to be broadcasting rumors without
.
...UYI 115
·peaceful change," Woerner said, secure and effective Wes tern
verl1ylng them to avoid ptinlc In
Geissler said the fact that ilo • expelled frclm the couatry when
addressing a sperlal session of defenses. Woerner said.
the ~lvlllan population."
war· had broken out In Europe his presidential guard rescued
llullllaQI's G....nhouse
"We have spent 40 years ·since the ,fol'maUon of NATO "1$ him, sources aald.
the North Atlantic Council.
Five hostaJes, Including Inte99:1-5776
rior Minister Acedlus Saint Louts
The Nortlj Atlanlic Treaty was . convincing the East that political not the result of paclfls~ concepts
Ana!y1ts believe the coup was
. SYIACUSI, OliO
alld Avril's daug ter, were Clip-•s lened In Washlngtorr April 4, Intimidation doesn't work. •Let us but the result of the peace- mounted by oppo-ta Or a
not give a stressed Soviet leader- formtna character oftheaecurlty government creclcdowD'oa hll)llured Sunday by eopard troops ,
!HI.
.
ship
the
Impression
tha
t,
becau
se
Heads of state and government
and · defense policy of the rree level drq traffick«*. Tbat
of the 16' member states are we have dropped our guard, It West, whlcb Ill balled on deter· craelcdown, the ren1t or
expected to attend a summit mltht yet work.
prelllll'e, appeared nll!tedtothe
renee and defense."
"Whatever leadership Is In
Jlleellna Ill B{uiM!is May 29-30 to
dllmlaaal
of follr coltiMII laat
In a letter ·he HDt
power In the Soviet Union and
~ a efobal concept tor
walk.
the Nobel Prize
AvrU appueatly tried to
fllture defelltt needs and arms whatever Its Intentions, we will
Oslo, the
need a credible defense posture
ttallten
control or tbe military
control.
·
urged the comn11ttee.
I
. .
1l
"With olD' Atlantic alUance that allows no chance for
Monda¥,
by i.!IWIII Pollee Chief
1990 peece prlle
biiDI 40 )'HI'S old today, .we military adventurism," he said. military alllmlc!e,
Jeorge~ VllelD1011tundll"'olt!CI
12
poatla al'lll)' hadquartera. Val·
ID Bonn, a leader member of hal been aucceuful
ellebrate tlat Clllly an blltltutlon,
Weat German Chancellor He!·
teellJ8
eln
·
b)' IO"MrDCol.
llllt - : . . . . . . .
lflart.
.
tltln,
11111.t, Kohl's ChriStian Demotlljl -.rk!d
IIJ'bll i
t NATO baa &lt;$11flc tflllon said Monday he had In
meat1. . . .- .
,
t•t·2·
IACIIII, OliO
lonplt "'
. llolp'cel clcllll ' to ,tile mUitary
.. 21iit
t perllld of ~mmended NATO for a Nobel
,
W!AI1J~CARO - VIlA - GOLDEN IUCitEYE
ceiiCUl'ltt· . '
said Rebu wu to have been
. ,_.
Europe hu Peace Prize.
•
'

who heve been centfted u

MBE by Stott Equol Em·
ptoyment Opportunity Co·

ordlnator , in

received et the: •

DIVI&amp;ION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT Of
NATURAL RESOURCES
1866 founttln Sq.,.ro
Second floGr
Coiumbuo. Ohio 43224
until TuHdoy, Moy 2, 1989

at 11 :00 e.m. 1nd opened

thereofler for fumlohlng tho

material• 1nd 'p erforming

tho tebor for the txocutlon
and conatruction of:

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WANTED

tionalty miereprMents hlmi
ootf u owning, controlling.
operlting. or peniciplting in

Contractora raquirl"g u ·

olltanco In 11curing bieN
from certified MBE eubcon·

tion of State "'loutto #124
and #7 on Sute Routt #7.
Copieo ofthe ptono, """cificationa and propoNI forma

will bo forworded from the
Division of Roclomatlon,
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sources. upon receipt of a
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sourcea. Theae may also be
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vetopment Olviolon by colr
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free on 1-(8001 282·10BII.
Approwd for publlcotion
In The Dolly Sentinel; Pomeroy, Ohio on April 4 ond
11. 1989.

RECOMMENDED:
Tim L. Diorlnger,
Chief, Dlvlolon of

RnourcM

Nature! Rooourcoo, 1856

Fountain Square, Builclng
H. Second Floor, Columbus,

Ohio 43224. !Phone: (814)
265-10&amp;8).
Esch bid mull bt occom·
ponied by a IIID GUARANTY, rriooting the require-

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tl&gt;o Ohio Revlaed Cod6.

Contf'lctora are advised

that in accordance wtth the
provision• of the January
27. 1972 executive order by
the Governor of Ohio. and
amended execUtive order

Middlaport, Ohio
•

992-LSOL
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Salt•

ginning; r•erving the coal
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underlying tho ebove de--

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cutrlx of the ntatl of ~~~
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Mel(lo County. Ohio 4&amp;741 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probote Judge
Lane K. Nanelrood. Clerk
(3) 28; t41 4. 1 1. 3tc

84·9. Februery 1 6. 1884,
equal employment oppor·

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lng dote Nov. 28, 1943, recorded In Volume 161. Pogo
178, Qeod Recorda Mel go
County Recorder' a Office.
Sold percol woo opprolood
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' Torma of Solo: Coah

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REG

with Section 1613.18 end

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Bldo ere ieoled ond- ad-

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loet: TM purN It downtown
Murp..,L
oft....,.. '-

2-89. Rewlfct. Col 814-4411
7421 or 814-211•1307.

- --..

•VINYL SIDING
~ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
• INSULATION

LOIT
.............
30'-45.1118 ..

011 loppRidgo••f-ole

rift• 8:00PM.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

7

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

t11,040.-t5t.Z30 yolr. Now
Coli 11 FILE ERIIOR

hiring.

llllngs.,.:iiiHit wtthlmowll dl;e
M . . Clld and Wieur • • ....., n-.Md. The IUC·
C.ltrl IPF
at .,..It N dltll
on.-. ~~~- lftd h••
in Midi

c..,

MtiUtlillfl. EJICIIIent Wlge Md

blnalftt ...,ec..,.. S.d,.,meto
Dolly Sliltlnel P.O. 8&lt;* 7HA

-01'·Olllo.

AVON - AI •-- Colt Marltyn
w.30'-.2-2945. . .

•-n

AVON II
Bhlrl.,. lpe. ..
30 '-1711 1421.

Yard Sale

.---· --Giillipoliii___,------

"Frae Eotimet11"

PH. 949-2a01
or lu. 9119-2a6o

&amp;Vicinity

NO SUNDAY

949-2969

Slriclly E

110 Wnt 11a1rt.

t,....

tam••

5·4180

FABRIC SHOP

RELATIONS

Faclo&lt;Y Cltoltt

davs•fter the actual date of

the opening thereof.

45769
ext111sion 213

11 Help Wanted

Wa can repair and r•·
ratliators tllld
hlattr cores. We can
aile acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

·-lyl'l'd.... 101Ma-

r.-Jr Gas

Thuraclol'. Alri I 'ir-om t:00-

ewe

1

Tanks.

4:00, SR 141.

hold .................

992-2196

----·--PO·me-rov·--··· ----·

M lddleport,

THE BEST

now offering
nursing opportunities ln...
*Medical-Surgical Areas
•critical Care
. •supervlli•
·· .·

•l!lft•

c.,_ Llldct.

:

Sick Child Dey CtN and F i t - Cant«
If you..,. a .-w aract.,... or an WliNIIMIGid R.N .. laoldna far an ,
opportunhy to advance cllnlcaRy and proflall-lly.. :

I

'

H._

Contact

Anne W. Daniele, R. N•.- Dhetor of Nursing Service•
Madlaal
Galtlpolle. OH. 4U31

~YOU

&lt;0 - ~ .. •I ~···-· ~'P •

c.nt.;l

814/448-11311

WOU Wl'tB 'I'HE BEST ...

YOU KEEP GE'H'ING aE'l"tEB
•

0

-g.

i====;;::::===========~l·Adtln.
ftmlllo
-· -

$35:::
UGITIAUIIII

IILL SUCI
992-2269

BISSELL

IUILIJI$_

CUSTOM 111.1
HOMES &amp; UllGES

"At 111111.11 ......u

P1L t4t·II01
or~t4t·IIH

Day or
NO SUNDAY
\

Will boll¥•• In "" ho-. Rio
ClrMide .... Colt 1114-2411
Will do bolry olttlngln mv home.
good hbnw 1nd flft'IH¥
lnvk'anment . Cell 11C.448-

v..,

,.

•~o
'jlld ....
~rnitult,

Nlmbunemant

Hoapltll aponaoracl aontlnulna aduaatlon credha

t8 w,nted to Do

1448-

8t Vicinity

CHERRY

A variety Of nttlnga: 8, 10 and 12 hour
available
·
lndivldualllad Orientation Prog{im
·
You can receive one of the baR allary and benefit p~ekagaa
·
IIVIIIablaln the -a,.. '
Genar~lon

.......PfPliasanf·•··

OAK, LOCUST.

1

0

April :lrd I Sth.
....... Pom•ay Element..,.
lchool. 10e.m.
'

Call AI 742·2328

FIREWOOD

Schools
lnat.r uction

Y•d lolo.

3·7·'89·1 mo.

We are

.

- ...

DRIVEWAYS &amp; RC.

'!"'IIII' n. IYIICII•

16

10-.

Oor- ..... 4 Mid 5.11oin
or -._ 341 Rutl"'d St ..
Middl.,ort. Sonny Hudson

'

.CU&amp;l'OM IOTCH!NI. IATHII
et:XTINIM! RIMOD!UtiG
.VIN-YL IIDIN8. 10~0
...lltAL IUIUIINQI
HOUIING a ltlf. 'IIOJICJI
S/NC£ JPH.

Holzer
Medical
CenJer

-•lor old...

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN IUSINEII
CO LLEOI!. 128 Jootaooo Pike.
Clll44114317. .... No.tlllt1-

8t Vicinity

LIMESTONE
HAULED

because

,

one mile PMt

...., tolvelnl

•..... Colll14-448-3147.

Centen.-y, Promdrw11. hou ...

Middleport

ARE ALREADY HERE

Sltuatione
Wantad

Dr. Moll., Tu-., • w.d. Aprl
3rd. ....... lth.
.

PAT HILL FOlD

i·

THE BEST
UKE TO WORK HERE

"Sprl• M•J••••II•• Arrlvl•t"

• ,&lt;t:' IO U

A111\IJUrH:ements

MASTEIS TUXmO RENTAL
DIY CLEANING SIIVKE
SCISSOIS SHAIPINED
USED SEWING MACHIIIIS
A1TIIA110NS
SINGER AND WillE
SEWING MACHINIS
SINGER INmlNG
MACIINES

Leesa Murphey

)
•

Help Wanted

43224. No bidder mey w~h­
draw hia bid within""'"' (80)

·M&amp;If' DIPAITMINT STOlE

~· ·

11

CertHI.:f Llce1ed

6:30P.M.
12 Goufll

••·12 NOooi ...
1

.,

,;... ','DOC" VAUGHN

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Immediate openin&amp; for 111rt time rqlstered
nurse to work in ICU/CCU. Sll•ry commensurata with exptrienca: Exctllent fr111p benefits.
Send resume to:
Rhondl

are also applicable.

Rep~~lrt

Balha• lulldlng

ED NURSE

SAT• I

St:rv11:e:;

it fer you.

NIASE Cert.l fi . . M1ch.,le

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

County, Ohio
(3) 28: (41 4 . 1 1, 3tc

. cable to this bid. Wage rat•

estebliahed In

Dom•lc Vehidll ·
A/ C Service I
A:H ~ar 6 Minor

SHOOT

Jomn Soutoby,

f nqiln VI ill' nI

FREE ESTIMATES
take the pain out of
polntl111. Let •• do

Most Forel;n •nd

992-527

Ril81 ntaU c.nnot be aold
for lou then two- thirds of
the appral•ed velue.

11 Help Wanted

tunity conditions are appli-

SYRAC:USf. 01110

We Haul and
Spread
Limestone
Dirt, Sand 8t
Coal Delivered
1,000 Gal. Water
Service

-oo•
filter ditcl&gt; or teach·
lng
eet forth
ditch ••

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVI(E

ALLEN'S
HAULING

IC1'1bad property, togother
wtth the right to mina ume.
SubjM:t to en auernent for

We Buy Aluminum

. Cane. Gla11. Bra~a.
Cop~ •nd More
MON.-FRI.: 9 am·6 J1!11

Blacll ub milled pupploo It 1 ¥•-

7

uld Loio 33 ond 34,
Dolo: Morch 29, 1988 north 211 clog. 09 min. e•t
200 foot to tho point of be·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtOUCIARY
On March23, 1989,1nthe
Melgo ""County Prbbtte
Court, Co•• No. 2111 &amp;8,
Mltdred 'Froemon, Route 1,
Box 103, L.angovAto. Ohio
411741. wu eppolnlld

UPAIR

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATORS"'""'
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERStATE
BATTERIES
LAWN &amp; GARDEN
SUPPLIES

thence with the line bet-

s,.

l ·l·tfrl

Complete Small
E · ·
ngme Service
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS
•
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLE S
R '
ETC.

MOIRIS
EQUIPMENt

of 27.33 foot.

14tlo &amp; . .

PIMt ,.__, W. Va.

( .~~;::::::.::.:;:::,:~~~
11

DAVE'S ENGI.,E
~

f4) 4, 11, 2tc

Public Notice

U&lt; #005- 1:I

319 So. 2nd Ava.

lhown on uid

NOW OPEl FOI
IUSIIISS .

o..ll1o• '"""
•6s.oo
Galrro

1·28·'18-tfn

th.noe with the line bel·

·

be made. Ad"'tlonol infor·

of

and 34, n

2 H.O. FR.E£ lritbcau_pontnd
pooebao of llin. H.C. Pocklit. U11K I coupon Jill' custOIM' )Ill bii!JI SISSIOft.
wo flY •so.oo '• Gamo

992-6282

Dote: March 29, 1889
APPROVED: woon Loti 32 ond 33 south
Jo•ph J . Sommer, 17 deg. 33 min. wnt
· Dirl!ador 199.77 fMt; thence oouth
Department of Natural 83dog. 51 mln.eut261eot;

bidders and no refunds will

Department

..,•.

SIN.U.1:4S P.M.

CARTER'S
PlUMBING
&amp; 'HEATING

·mop; thent!e with the ~tid
tine of Lincoln Rood, north
13 dag. l1 min. weat27.117
fott: th.,co continuing wHh
Aid rood Uno curving to the
left In • Wllttrlv direction
dlotenco

specificationa become the

matfon,

CWI

224 E. MAIN ST.
112·9878
TIIUIS. U. 6145 P.M.

r:==:::=:=:::::=~:.

with • r•diue of 1 &amp;0 feet, a

Redamlltion

property of the proopectlve
mation may be obtained
from the Oivis~n of Reel•

rNI 11t11te. ahu•teln tha Vii-

togo of ofPornoroy.
the
County
Melgo ondInBtote
ofOhloond-gmorepor·
tl..,lorty d•crlbtd 01 fol·
1-a: Bolng known end de·
ol.,ottdonomopofUncoln
Hiolglrto modo by lkeoco It
Corpor Aogilter'td ClvM En·
gin-o. of Huntltfgton. w.
Vo. doted Oct. 17, 1842, o
copyoheldmopw•lltodin
thoOfficeoft""Ro""rdll!of
Molfll County. Ohio. on tho
17dovofooc.
1842.3,ondrecorded In Plot look
Peg•
43 ond 44 of Lot No. 33 bo·
lng more portlcutorly de·
acriiJed •• follow.. to-wit:
· Btglnnlngoto pointli11ho
oouth line of Uncotn II curd ot
tho corner bttwoon Loto 33

PUBUC
RECYCUNG .

BINGO
POIIEIOY -IAGLIS

bu•ln••

M proyidld for in_1 Sectio•

mile aouth oWhe int•r•c·

NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrt.,. of en Order of

AI provided In SeCtion
PI- out
Court
of Mtigo
Seloll...cl
o' the
Com-~ ,l~===~===i
123.1111 of tho Ohio Re- mon
County,
Ohio,
In
tho
0011 of
~~~- Codt.ond Admlniotra·
tlw Rule 123:2-18:02 of CltiHno Notlontl Bonk of
the 0-rtment of Admln- Point Pl-ant. Pliolntlff.
DEAD 01 AUVE
lltrotlve Strvlcee, the CON· 1111-'•11 Cor! D. Huglrto ond
TRACTOR oholl molco Ivory ·.·Evelyn Hughel. ot 11.. Do·
•Waahera •DIY••
tffon to enoure t~ot cert~ fondenta. upon • ludamont
R
F
fled minority
aub- therotn Nndored, being
No. 87-CV·lllln ltld
• angaa • 11111zera
controctora and moterloi- Cnt
•Rafrlgeratora
men porticlpote In the con-- Court, t wttt offer for ltlo, ot
the
front
door
of
the
Court
"Must
1e lopoir..lo"
troct. The total voluo of tub- Houll In Pomoroy, Melgo
contrlctl 'oworded to ond
KEN'S APPUANCE
moteriola end oervlcoo pur- County, Ohio, on the 28th
SEIYICE .
chaed from minority buol· doyo!Aprl, 11BI,ilt10:00
n11- aholl be ot tout It'! o'otooll ·A.M. the ·folt-lng .
percent of the 10111 v0tue of ~~~ ond teriem1nto, to915-t561
the contriiCt. wherever pa 1J
Tht following dactibtd ·. We -Service
~l'l~~
libte. Any poroon who lnton·

and specifications prepared

th11 proJect u determined
by the Dlvllion of Roctamotion II $367.334.00.
A pro-bid meeting wNt be
held on Wodntodoy .. Aprlt
19, 1989 at 11:00 o.m. 'h

.

... •' .. .,,.,.. .....,.... &lt;t:- .., . , .

the State.

Conference Room of 1856 . tractor• end ouppttora me¥
(Building HJ of Tho Foumoln l:Ontoct tho St.te Equet EmSquare off!COI of Tho Ohio ploym..,t Coordlnotor 1&gt;f
Department of Neturel lie· colting 111 4) 418·8380 ot

·NATO marks four decades

.. ....

torneto _propoula oa moy
promote the beet Intern! of

o minority buoin&lt;iaa ontor'·
prloe fOr tho purpoM of obi
telnlng contn~a. .,bcon.
trocto. or ony oth• benelito
under thil MCtion lhelt be
guilty of theft by docop~lon

so_urcN.. The ettimete for

Public N atk:e

br.,.. auc::h comblnetkJn al·

HOOVER-PEACOCK
RECLAMATION PROJECT
. MEIGS COUNTY."OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG·Sb·11
• in occordoncowlth the pion•
s i.o n of Reclamation. Columbua. Ohio. Bids will be
opened in the Secon~ Floor

Troops press f~r rele0$_e·
of jailed Hatia~ coup leader

"•

Th&lt;i Dltictor of Noturol
R11ourc• - • , _ tho right
to rojeol ony or ell bldo, orto
oco. . tho bid which em·

by the Deportment of No- 2113.02 of the Rw ..... .
turot R•ourc•. tho Dlvl- Code.

.

- W. .'S SIOITS AID JIWILIY
..,;s lOYAL 81.UI COLOGNE
IACI OF 'IYOI .................. PIICEII

accordence

with Section l 23.1111 1•1
(2) of tho O.R.C. (Am. Sub.
H.B. &amp;84) . Only bldo r..
colvod from MBE'o who oro
certified p;lor to the bid
oponinp time end date wMt
be accepted.
·
Seated propoulo witt be

U.S., .South Africa say guerrilla
&gt;infil~ration plan breaking' accords

•

'

Public Notice

NOTtCl TO BIDDERS
Bidding on lhio projeot II
rootrlcted to Minority llual' n"'!l Entorpr- (MBE'I)

Turkey recalls ~nvoy to Iran

u.

Paae·- 7 ·

PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY .Jb(u FRIDAY a A.IL to .5 P.M.
a A.il ilntil NOON SATURDAY

I

·=s

Daily

, TO

·,
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) -A the Communist Party and Inde- tempt to· br!i&amp;k the round-table
crucial meeting of the govern- pendent groups In the East Bl~. , and thwart a·chance to save the
country."
'
ment, Solidarity and the commu.
Several
hundred
strikes
over
ntst unions broke up ear!y
The failure to conclude , the
Tuesday without resolution after bargaining at the session meant wage hikes occurred In Poland In
the official unions rejected as a possible postponement of Wed- the last few months, despite calls
Insufficient a deal !Inking wages nesday's scheduled signing oft he by Walesa for moderation while
I
to future price hikes.
historic agree_m ent and threat - the historic talks among all
The meeting of Solidarity ens the agreement Itself unless segments of society were under
leader Lech Walesa, Interior the official Federation of Com· way:
Solidarity and tbe government
Secretary Czeslaw Klszc:zak and munlst Unions, or OPZZ,
have held round· table talks for .
official union representatives changes Its position.
broke up about 3 a.m., jeopardizA statement by the official nine weeks and are scheduled to
Ing a final agreement that would news agency PAP said the sign :m agreement Wl!dnesday.
\
• . wind up nine weeks of round· meeting broke up because •'The In the final stage ol the negotiatable talks on political and •executive council · of the OPZZ tions, the government proposed
economic refonns In Poland.
(Federation of Communist Un- the -establishment of an office of
''The situation IS quite dra- lcfns) did not.approve the Indexa- president with substantial powmatic," Walesa told reporters tion of wages compensating the ers. SoUdarlty demands that the
powers be reduced, contend-Ing
after the 10-hour meeting. "We price hikes by-80 percent."
that
as proposed they· are
have not completed the talks. "
Solidarity and the government
~
But Walesa also said the talks ·llgreed to wage Increases fixed at dictatorial.
The
banned
union
-has
been
would resume later Tuesday and 80 percent of price 111kes. OPZZIt
will
be
legalized
along
assured
he added, "There Is a chance to the unions that took over from
save Ihe round table."
Solldai'lty ilfter mjlrttal ll!w and with Rural Solidarity and the
Monday 's meeting, the seventh are now lighting fbr their su_rvl· Independent Students' Union In .
between Walesa and Klszc:zak, ·val - wanted 100 percent com- exchange for Its su11port of
was expected to be the last and pensation, saying the Solidarity· parliamentary elections in June
was meant to Iron out final government deal ~auld wind up that will be less than fully
Democratic. Only one new house
details of an agreement that · "sparking social u11rest."
would provide the first powerA separate statement by SoUd· of Parliament, the Senate, will
sharing arrangement between arlty accused OPZZ of an "at- haVe totally free elections.

~!"~::!::

Ohio

Classified

•

u.s.

-

APril4. 1989

a.

e.-oo.
llldl
17
··
loti olaood

l'lhur, ....

I.

1411.

�Paga

The Daily Sentinel

8-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY -

Bllllneu

21

Opportunity

'

·-Colll14-441-1140.
rOnto. Top,...ttOO.
2-oupw

~

,..,_ -

1'

w/•c1r-ln-p-~

r

•m.
1 w/ pld 1111•121.
1 ••. old. Coll14--1131.

........ llrowii ....... n10. • - Dh•• .,o,

-

____

lng

neo. ..1......

71

3311·

................. ... top, . . . ..

......._ •eo. Col 114-

I

Building~...

lloak. brl&amp; ......... ~
_._ Int. . otc. Cloirdo,.,., Rio Clr•~ 0. Col 11424&amp;-sm,

i.d

ldo..._

Concroto
•or cWhNryl M•onall
~4 Gill
Ill Blodl Co., 123'h Plna ..
Golllpolo, Ohio. Coli 114-4412783.'

Pets for Sale

66

Groom Md lupply lhop-Pol

Grooming. AU brH• ... All
otyloo. lomo Nt Food ·Doolw.
.MioWobb Ph. 114-441-0231.

Cauntv. Ch-* l'wp.
Good io~lof( 1 - . . 1 bod• room hou" with 2 or 3·
bocl-- pooolblo. 011 ~~-'f.
rMd. .-y ec_. ,to Rt. •
Alklng e111. 0110. lorlouo lnQulr1• only. Phontll1,.. 117-1704
oft• 5:00 p.m.

DJ810f'Wtnd

. Muot _., e v•• old trl-...,ol
Clooo to _ , . 3 - - 2
boll'o- 1131 oq. ft. No
ble off• ,..,, ... c.ll '"m lhl• ~ -.
et4-112-IB74 .. 114-742- 43

••i&gt;.,.

1

Antlquet

11

Fann Equlp.,_t

T o - - Pard- ljlo1101. - Aloo Hoy11/bolo.
Col -114-!17.2704.

.--•-or.
. . _. 4-

w-

- d ..dl'tno.Oollf:'. Col
114-441-4421. 81442U
Dr 114-441-2328.

54 Misc. Merchendlse

'81 Chnettli, 4 apeed,
teeo.oo. Pflono JD+I7&amp;4e40.

Apertment
for Rent

Caii814-MZ.223Z.

c......,

Mobllo Homo Porto.
11auto 33, North of ""m•oy.

...... _,.., .,..., .....c.•-

.,._.2-7478.

ForleeH

ct-

ldt-

Dawntown 1 lilt, • · n~tr
• de

For LO•o: Aportmont. nowlr·
·a-nd
c~M:Dr••· 2nd flOor. cor.,..
• Plno. o.n...- Ono-

month. Col 114-44&amp;-4248.
4411-4421... 44&amp;-232&amp;.

I.UOn • fin8rldng IIVIII.W&amp; C.l
Z4 hn. 1-100-:M&amp;-0141.

Mlw

pr-

OopooR .,d

••• a.rplll. ..,,....,
A C. P•kln~ No polo. ·

DopDIII. Coli 114-441-0131 .

n_.

. villa. tiOOO. Mily kiMP on lot.

SHADY LAWN APT. 721
Slcond Aw. Furnllhod ollldond• ltertlnQ • •1715 I mo.
~.--.
eon
41107
1-802.
114-

114-742-3031

or s:ra·

..

1178 F8trmont 14x70, 10x31
1ddltlon. epprOK . 1 ecre lot. 3
-oom. don. wood roonr. d
"ectrlc. 20x30 OU1buRIIn$1o c•·
...... · bl ..... op drlv. .oy.
Crob c - Rd. 022.000. F~m.
304-171-:1044..

61 HOUitihol!l Goods

SWAIN
.
/IUCTION A RJRNITUA£ 82
I 17 omo. Coll3114-17.5104 Ollvolt.. Oollp. ..
r.tEW· I pc. wood •oup- e311t.
• ,...,... 1711-7731.
,living room- e111-eUt.
Apert:Pnlllt IVelllbla. HUD ec- Bunk- with boclcln~ 42U.
F&amp;M aile mtnr. . • toUndltlon
ooplld. Coli 304-175-110..
sUrt Ina- *91, Reclln ' "
~
Fwnllt.d 2.1 or 4 roam1 •
both. Cl-. No polL Rof.• dop. USED- -.dr--DD&lt;n
roquhd. Colt 114-44&amp;-1119.
--Ooolca.-... ••
2 SR ....t.. now pluoh ........
nMr.lnl. uiiRI• porllolly pold.

-.. ....

Quldl Sole: 1e73 1 .. 70 floll•
wood. 1 'h bot hi. 2 .. 3
bedroom. 41.000. Allo lot lor
ront. 304-782-2330.
1183 Triumph 141&lt;811. 2 bod-

bel--·--·

roonw, 1 ~ bwUw. cent,.l llr, II
•ICtrla. w•tw-dryer. wet•
•often•. on ..ned lot tupper
Ohio Rt. 11. lx10 wood birn
· ltOf'IO• bldg. und•pennlng.

Nlcoly furnllhld •moll hou•.
Elllc:lonCI' op~ - 1 m... Mobllo

..w.. 01 . . . . . . adult• Dhly. Nf.
holM

.avelllbfe lmmldl8telv. ·30..._
1711-2047 .. 114-387: 7120.

Colll14-441-03311.

1.71 Dodge
opd.,

m•"••uftt- ••n.w. 1 blue, 1
whlto, oliO 34w-311. Coli oftr 4
pm, 814-441-3810.

Shop wMhout 110ln~ln~
tho AnMey -

-

cluCIII dtlllv__. to your

Fumlohld offi-CI'- 107 So1981 mobH• home- 14J;70. Jv cond. o.nlpol•. •110. Sh••
bedroom. priced to ..., 304bMh. Clll441-44111fl•7PM.
1711-1541 .
fuf~lahld lfll·' 1 BR. 243 GOOD , !,!SED APPUANCES
J-on Plko. 4221 1 mo. - - · dry-. ,.,...,_ _
35 Lote • Acreage
Utllftloo Plld. CoM 44&amp;- 4411 r•na•· 8keoa• Applltnctt,
~ Rlv.- Rd. loooldo Stono·
oftw7PM.
'·
114-441-7388.
O.J . White ~d. · 2 woadad Moclorn 1otfloor 1 IR. fllrnoll\ell
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
building krtL ApprDil. :i ..,. opt, A 2 IR . 111 floor unflr,.,
.,.., Rof. • dop Col '·
ooch. Cal 114-241-11115 oftw nlohld
114-441-1079.
Sot• .,d chain p,_ from
1:30PM.
4318 to 1995. Tobl• •110 ond
E,.,.
nloo.
quill.
2
1•111
bodup
to t121. Hldo-o-loodo UIO
CIMrY'- Subd.· 7 ml• oouth
roomt, •qulpp•d kitchen, to • • · Rtcln. . •221 to
' of Golllpolil. An uridrrround lamdry
llr. oonvanl.., 4175. Lompo 421 to et21.
utliNI•. R-rlctod. Col 114- loeldon. raom.
No pen. C.II814-4Q.. Dlnltt• t1D9 ~d up to tQ5.
44&amp;-34811.
1117.
WOadiiiHw-lch*•4ZI5to
_
_ _ _ _ _ __:_·_
e111. Oook etOO up to 4171.
9'h ICI'OI In Ohio Townolllp. 11 ' Unfllrn. Apt. 32ZTh~dA ... I'io · H'*"• e400 .,d up. Bunk
acr•ln Ohkt Tawrwhlp. APP!'~
Poria. CoD 114-44&amp;-37U or . oomplalo w·mllltr3
In Perry TowMhlp. w.
4211Mduptoe31S.IIby_. on IMd contrtct. Cll 2BI-1to1
. eno. --Otbox opr~n 111
814-448-240..
.
F...., Apt. - t to Lll..ry fill ·Dr twin 411, ftrm e11, ond
ROI. roq'ld. 481. Ou- 4210 • up.
BullclnJ$otfor•l•on 1&amp;0. ne. porlclr!p Afor.A.C.
King t310. 4 dr_,.. chllt •••·
N.G.H. ., M,IOO. Coil 814- 114-441-0331.1 ptnon. e.ll Oun
cobln,.. I, I A 10 . , ,
38.8711 .
laby milt- • • a 141.
Bod frlm• UO. e30 • King
leiUtlful honw
cornlr tot· . Nloo 1 --"''*hod oport· frlme 110. Good Ml-=tlon of
mtnt tn Aldne. •271 • mo.
Ett. Subd-1 rril•
bolow Qolllpolo. Pollillll fl· ' Uti....... . _ Dooooll.- bedroom tultee. m•ll CllbH1tl&amp;
Coli 114-IIZ. h - - 4"' ltld up to Nl.
non... ~ Coli 114-441-8117
7104-"• 1:30PM .
'
I "PM.
10 O.V• ..... - Cllh with
cnc:lt. 3 Ml• OUt
....... 10 ..... nD&lt;th"' 31. 14 Farrw~t. 2t.*oorftunllrt*hed I
•• flkl. ap., 8wn to 1om
·D•r-a•
ap1rt~nt. 1200 •
milo off 110.
County
Mon. llwu 811. Ph. 814-448- •· 30-10 _.._ Col 814- month. StCJill • rflf. No pit&amp; 0322.
•100
NC.
dip.
flef«WIW
311-8082 rrr 114-44&amp;-1110.
qulrod. Clift 114-441-3017.
OneiCI'•IotonFIMwoo*Rolld.
12xl0 - ·· . .port. DUibuRd2 """'oom . , . . , _
~r.:.d:.•e':4-f:-,'!&amp;~87Aoklng tr•lh
c•~M~•. tppll8rloa • • •d
plakupa pn~~~~~ld1d Mllnl•
,_.aa tr.llvlng doH to lhopT.... lot for,... lnMidolop«t.
plng. b.,ko ',..d -olo. .FD&lt;
cAII14- . .2-7813.
'
mo,. -rmllion DOlt 304-IIZ.
Llrtl IDt In R•ccoon CIWk. 3711. E.O.H.
Hook-UIMI tar ttna RV'1 Of '
•lllln. laM l'lmp to
C. I
114-·2-ZIII.
"

c-. -"·

Floh T~t~k. 2413 Jocluoon A...
Point PI-~ 304-175-2081
10]11!ootup t14.11ond1Dgol

64 Hay • Grlin

co7'!""• ·~128.

CondRionod
• - '-· - ·
wot. Coii14-441-4M4.

.,ll8rilt.

m..,_ toblo • . chllirl. bod

'.1111 Srqq lr•·~

fr.m•. d•lc. Clll ., ... ~

tr

3224.

liVi.,,lill.~

,..,..

..........

__ ......

..,n .,d olfollo
304-17&amp;-tiOe.

Docolb -

-

73

Vena• 4W.D .

1t73 Ylotllooll! .._.. . . ' '
- • · 2311. ooll -"• 1:00 : '
PM. 304-17&amp;-1111.
·' •

~

:

'

BASEMENT
''
WATI!IIPROOFING
~:
UniDftdiiiDMI lfllm. ....,. t
Looll , . , _ _ fwadalii&amp;IIL s
....

~.

71 Auto'• For S.le

W.wp;ocfOno

IWIIPERwod-....

m-

dtllw..,.·

:,

,..... , . . , .... "65 "•· , . '.
up •d
Dlvll: V-..um .; ·
Cl...
qne hett mle up' ~~
Rd. 1:o11 114-

.r.

- .. c-

441-11214.

dry-·,..,._ ,~:.

Cerpentry work

hour, ,.,. .....

b¥

lng. .. ectrlcll. ,.. a ' ·~· aom- ••
til••
Col 114-441-7121.
'
':---~--..:...:.:.- ~

.,.....-.ern.

loptloT•k--410.011·

·-g

Ohio 1·100- •
~

1

•

.

11

I

•

or Oallile 1ool ,.*INn.. 'I
--•oomi&gt;IO!Mo.,.odlty. ·
Aoc.y

I DIDN'T .THIN!&lt; ANYBCD\"
BUT MEl !&lt;NeW THAT.

A HUNDREOA"-'D

I '.

TWSt..VTY-NINE
19-AZ.IL,L.ION •

RON'I -APPliANCE II!IIVICE. '·:
.
. . Doll
-·
0!. lrld
Hot 1'
llaiftt,
w•hera.
.rry.,.
-

304-171-2311.

.._... __ ..

.... 30!1--:1425.
MolleTPtllmlnl CCM11Jit1¥
LOt uo DOlor_, world. lnt.-toeon ICon 304-17117217. Rt. 1 ... 10 A, Point
v.. 21-.

r--.
..- . w.

82

''

-, ,
•

'\:

'.'.'

Plumbing_

•H-.dng

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

;.
,.
,.

-- .........

• Ref9ratlon

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

,.

Well

Nort~

Eall

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass

INT

s•
Pass

t+-

.,

Opening lead: • ;

L.------- --,----...J

·- •
ruff and' a slulltor your contract. ~'i; ''.
nally, if diamonds are 3-3, It's best to ·
lead low from dummy and put In the .:
10, hoping that you will be able to
guess the situation when West returns
a diamond, Every declarer must make
his owri decision, and the defenders do :
best by fatsecarding.

•JocolJr"'
•re

J.mer Jocoby'•-..
Bridle" •nd •
•JK&lt;byotr
(rrrirr.. "'"' bil fo~r.~
Ure ,.,. tmrlld JltCflby)
now ...tt•ble .r,
- ....... BoUr .,. ptrb/JIIt&lt;d by PlY"" Boob.·
({)lilt. NEWSI¥.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .

c.nt a.-·

direction
12 Ditch
14 Large
amount
11 High
hill
11 And yet
(var.)
17 Genesis
craft
18 - League

.'

state

(abbr.)
DOWN
1 .- luego
(good-bye)
1 Oscar
reel;.pplel;b1ntnlstlc
3
u

-.

!Je

4 (Selleck

10 Appliance 27 Strong
13 Singer Lena
point .
I River
11 Iceberg
28 Wonder
croeaer
part
80 Box (Fr.)
5 Had •
21 In debt
82 Flax cloth
·"·~k
21 By
88 Malayan,
7 Warning liS Climb
for one
to the
U Home of
88 Siamese,
optimistic
the Round
e.g,
8 Delight
Table
81 Gym need
Rim)

..
'.

h--t--t-+-

··=d(Fr.)
30 Opposite
of stem
81 Palm leaf
MPermlt
II Great lakes hr-+-+-

''

....'

. ··•

SIFamlly
member
37 Evoke

'.
.. ·..

4o-l!:g-ehaped

.' ''

cargo

:.

'

. 39Hep~ ·
P~ur

Roo.i-lol or oornmarolol wlr&gt;

lltiwro .. o l - • · Rldwtour

BIRNICE
BEDEOSOL

~.

ronn

WIF!It ··

· - · - 30!1-171-1711.

.

'

..

11 Gambling

.....

10o - - loi&gt;lna~~.ear-.
000.00.

'.

+KJIOB63
.KJ
t A'IO &gt;
+A 10

I I Grammar

;;=:;;;:;:;:::;::==
:'
84 Electrical
~i

------

SOUTH

IIUmx

LAND 0' 'OSH!NU
YONDER COMES
TH' PARSON15

'.
CAIITER'I PW. .ING
.,
AND HEATING
"
Cor. FourthMdPfn•
I,
Oil-Ohio
'•
Phono 114-441-31•"' 8144.1-4477

tunv

a:rpe

10 ~ .
. (1688-1744)
II Actor Sean
ll'l'ull
follOwer
IS Fefl\lnlne

;~

·
,,
:.

+t

41 Tete-a- 43 Ernie Ford's

19 ~Legaleeelon

-..-...., .........,__,.
,.,...
...-

• Q942

+J7&gt;4

WI'OUIII!t?"

I

"'""' . . . ...' OWYJCe, .304111-3102

74

tK 7 .

+QB62

5 Diminish
9Hurt
10 ~ovellst

I
I

1~14 ~ 'lof'Rir Van.

...... *IVo,wrto. AC,
_ .... 13.000 .... · - ... ~ 114-HZ.74D3.

By Jalilea Jeetlby

· 1 "What
- God

I

fto C.. RON WAIIJI ENTI!R· :

liON'S Tol ..lalon le...,lco.
...... .. InIICA.
- ·Coli
·
G!.
lonllh.
304-1'78-2311 Of 114-44124.14.

.10843

by fHOMAS JOSEPH
.· ACROSS
4l Code word

,t he job or

Fitly Tr.O Trlmrrin. . . _ • ;'
- · - C o l 30+171-1311. -.!!'-

-··-'"· -. ,.,

"»4-171-2117 or 171-

'

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

Ntlng- .,d lolo on Ror· .
lorm IIOed. 304-171-1211

2117.

''TffE FINAL ~INSe" ?'

•'·

(:.11

EAST

CROSSWORD ·.

•

IO

MlkniiM.

WEST

+92
.Q7652

--

,,

Improvements

It all
depends

i:

"TttE! G~IAT fL.OOI&gt;"
pof$N 'T st'ONI&gt; OM I NOU$
'fNOUGtf--. HOW
/AfOOT &lt;ALLAN&lt;; IT

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

......... 4
- · ......... bad. 111.000
... .., ""• eme. eo• B142. .SZJt.
'

,.,.~-.

cr•.

-

.'

~----~--------- I
81
Horne
·
'
1

4-4-lt

+K9 3

You are So•th, playing six spades.
Cover the East-West cards and picture
the opening lead of tbe beart five. You
play low from dummy and win East's
10 with your jack. You play two
l'DUIIds of spades ending In dummy,
East tbrowlng a heart. Nell you play
A·K and ruff a club, West playing the
queen. Then you play the heart king to
dummy's ace, West following with the
deuce. II is now lime to play diamonds. What is your plan? There is no
ri&amp;bt answer, since the correct play is
detennined by the diamond distribution.
Suppose West has four diamonds. If
so, yqu sbould play low from dummy
and put in your 10, hoping to drop an
honor from the East hand next. (You
preaume tbat West would have led lhe
diiiiiOIId king If be had beld K-Q.)
What if four diamonds are in East's
hand? Now it becomes correct to lead
the diamond jack from dummy. U
East covers with an honor, win the
ace, return to dummy with a trump
and lead another diamond. Even if you
go up with the 10 and West wins the
king, aa-bere, West nuoy have no more
··' gi
dismonda and
_ __be_f OrL._ to ve ~~ .a

1171 2Ift ,........ 2
......... _ _ _ ...h _

PR.EI.

llw•
· ton Ford
210
.U,ZIIO.OD.
PhoneJ 3114111-3471.

MUiicel
lqstrument•

lndtvidU.I gull:• 1. .- . beg~n,...., ltrlou•
lruic•llo 114-441-0117.
Joff
-·ool~
- · 114L mltiiii..,_JII.
4411-1077.

1.71CitwyCtoZOfl.- , _
on alno. ...100. 304-171·

r•

H-.. . . .

"""DrY .....

1•• Moldl I 2000. Lootlod.
COli 114-. . . 2122 ., 114112-1143 evenln11 eft•r
8:00p.m.

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

......

'

'II ton. 4
Rwe truolc.

11• CMwy 1·10 · - · F...
....... k... 110.Noeotlolllo. 114-HZ.UZO.

•r.t:*

"'*'-·

'

NORTH

+AQH
.A9
tJ88 3

111423kP--.IIII "
................... · - Call14- ,, '
241-1113.
' '' '

Ia- . . . . . . . . . . ;

•il•

•ft•

a2.200. Coii14-..,...0201.

. . . . . . . . . . . . lftd ......

-p,

1H41'ordP-1101 ......... Col
114-211-1113.

..lt...,.

.,... _.lrod.

BRIDGE

Rogeral•••m•nt ,.

•cr•

c,..,_.

:ir c o - . _•. -

I

,...

67

roclln•.

''•·
''

1·114-237-0411...., or night. ,.

'""""" .... 30+17&amp;-1011.

fWrlg.• 1lr concl .• couct. • • • ·
Slmmono oprlngo •

HIWor - Class -'- Quilt - .Legacy - CLOTHES
Alter rll.ding an article abO~t women living longer than ·
men, my grandma had an explanation. "Someone has to
stSy behind to pick up lhe CLOTHES."

.,

I

·t•

....
me.

Reduo. ..... •d flit with
GoBooo "-ouiM •d E-Vop
"Wotw Plif'Tat Fruth Ph..._.

Homn
llo Cempera

tr....

1•1•1'rrrd - ..... 41MJ, I cyL,
AII-PM-tope. CoM 114-441IZID.

N E W · - - · Ul.
-lcbooto eta • up. 18tool •
- toel. Coli 114-441-3119.
County ADPIItnce. Inc. Good
UMd IPPihit'* .nd TV •••·
Op• lAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sll. 814-441-1111. •127 :!rd.
A... GolllpoNt. OH.

Motor~

SCfiAM.LETS ANSWERS

21 fl. .....
1111 ~~
Norn!lll. etllll.- - o d , ·
CoR 114-281-1311.
':

. . . . woloup. 4 CI'L. 4
Coli 114-ZII1410.

CIIII14-441-M79.

~-lelollnoofuoodlornllwo.

..,,

r...,

ltld-.

.......... - · ., liS. Eorly
bird 1Didll on II pool&amp; Huge
11o3f'pooi.H- -fonoo.
flit• • w~n.my. INtallaUon •
fln-g _ ...... Coli 24 liB:
1-1110-3U-DI41.

2

'
t11.11. 'o
30 17
t+ •

...... -lan. Col 114-44128Utft•lpm.

WHITE'S METAl DETECI'ORS
RanAI•on. 1210S.OOndA~~~e .•
Oolllpollo, Ohio. 114-4414331.
'

, _ . ,. . Nquhd. *221. ,...

r..,lger81or.

49 LETTERS
PRINT NUMSEREO
IN SQUARES

·1111
~ 21' ..._. • · ·'
E. . .noonlltlonwlth•tra 1 •
ez.- Col 114-441-0D...
I

1 t • Ford.,.,.,. ""'• _.. 4
ICing- Coll14-441--l.

For .... • ConoM• end Pl81tlc
- l c IW\ko. AI okoo. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES • .Jodl·
..... Ohio. 1-100-137-8521.

IQ

a sl'lop advertised:"lf we don't
have it, you -·· - it!"

Comple!e the ch,ckle qu oted
-J..
-..I--..1--.I--..1--J
by filling· in lhe missing words
L
· you develop from step No. 3 be low.

:.:.,.: ::~;··= :::; i!:,.

lJu~• for Sele

72

I~Het .

SWIMMING POOLS· .,188
1.-ly bird lpociol on .......
Huth 18x311t. - '·Hughfence. iltt•. • w.,..~ty . lnati!J.

.....m. ttowe •

I

....
.
. .-7217. · - etiOO. 114- •' .'

·Mobllly
.........
Coli
Ro....
oolloct.
1-114-

·

H E Z 1 NT
~---fl7;-::,lie::,1=..:.;1...:..,~--1

'
1t71 - · MotD&lt; Hot~~•
•
• • l Ali oondltiol\ - - '·
Par ... er ttMI tor COIWiiwlon : :
...... 71.000 .... """ .. v... 114-1.Z.310..
304-17&amp;-71147.
''

.,....,. mollie liD- lot WhMic:ti. . MW or ulld . . 3
1Dr-.11mln.from0ollpall.

Sign in window of small

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

lilt:

PootuN for ,..., Rio G1111do
. . .. •adlburn Rellty. Call
114-...... 0008.

T•e TownhouH •.m,.hl:s- 2
BRo.. 1 'h bot hi, CA.. d..
hw.hw.................. ....
pOlio. pooL plor•ound.
w
.....
- · • t ...h .........
8UrtlnJ 01 121t,... mo. Col
., 4-317-7810.

1871 FlomlniiD 12xll. 3 Loc.t_,
H.,.llan-

c--c-e

IUndov 1 to lp.m. 114-lt2·

ohop .,d ....,.._, 114-4482181. ~ .O.H.

Tw9 12xl0 1172- ... 210..
19118-41.410.. 2 BR oloctrlc.
g•both ••• ntw. Nelw Carpet
Coiii14-441-Q178.
,

NM-

2821.

Pike from *183 1 mo. Wllk to

9340.

"·"'-

Fot R.m: Llrof one-a.,.......
,_. of buldlng on oor'* of

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES' AT JACKION ESTATU. 538 Jocluoon

-/uood. Single
otoalt.
FlnonclngA... IIrlo. F""diCity
Mobllo Ho-. Coli 114-441-

79
1 e • -.... ~ ...........
.,u:....... ....,4,000ml•.
.. _
30+171-1114 -"• I

' 1110UnoolnCorot~w,..l.......

44

Ovant-edl ... • ........

t;,~d -

71 AUtO'• For sali

46 $p- for Rent

1 1 24 E. Main Strlllll. Pom•oy.
Houro: M.T.W tOo.~ to lp.m.. '

r

in-

.

5

front •d ....-

M l'ordtriotar.-hDs plow,
10, ....,
taeo. I '71 M-1 II, ........ fl. Rnll .... - · 4.,... 1170 w
d - olllm.olota.C..wall-. • • • "J'aun• . . .t,.,2.
t1,100.
round bol•.
- - · • ~ - - 304-171-2114.
RnCol •
114-211-HZJ.
1111: 1112
472 Hoy bind. 711., 2 ... 1172 01o1o
P'op-up .-per.
·
-· 20 .... Coli 114-371- ~+171-1117 oR• 1:00 p.m.
2122.
'84 Cwoon Y·l. low , ._ _
4106 :IIIOJohn-e· - ... 1 - "' ......... 30f-171-1211.
lo-. -hDO. HD11. HDI1,
- · AC-D4DCot..TD
20
1m. HIAotlriiiO" WY. JO+ 1e71
Corio.
-·
z good 2...........
731-?llt;lllildii-- 11.11111........ 3114-171-1110.
Sokol;
eo .. • - ...
'811 TO¥Oto llloo. IUIO.
63
70.000 .......... - · 304Llvet10ck
171-1112-

'"'ct

11uw .,: Soli. Rlvorlno Amlqtr-.

. FORTI-IE
KNUCKLEIIEAD

......._ I',ODR w
v
~.!:========;::========~ IDY111RI!I
- · a. doing

'

I

••

1 1 I' ! town boasted: "II you need It,
1
L.=====l=~
~ have it." Across{he street

-·la~Cir
111M liul put
Wll 1
.... · - .. . , ._ 114- ,,
742-2117.
'I' '

3 Aero

19MSI&lt;yllno141&lt;70. 3BR .. 1'-\
both. - t i l l lot. Ellllll ....
fln.,olng A,.lllrlo. Coli F,.,dl
City lrok•og• 11 4-44&amp;-tMO.

rGOinl.

.PM.

63

I

·I CAt.t.EP

..,.,a....., ...
Ch•u~-···

both

-;;;;:::;;;:::::::;:::;;::::=
Farrne for Rent. .

,2810.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

tc.nnll

,.,..
ldtt-.
...... Colt 814-441-3144oR• 7

Udl, 2 IR, Rlf, • ·Dtp.
Roq'ld . 4121/mo. Oor- .: Col 1.14-.....· 771'"'
143-2144.

2BRmollllohomo.lldwoll••'
Coli 114-381-8212 do¥o. .. ·
114-281-14to ...,lngo.

c.n.,

......,. ..,dSI..,..IftdHim•
ChoW ltud ....

t I' . •
1--..;P;,......:E,_N::..,;T_:,I.-I- !

'

........ 400 .... bla«* - ·
Col 114--1147.

66 Build,i ng Supplle1

Molgo

.~ 1 I

.... '
-• -·•«• tz- eve

Than.. ,.ure•ry. 304-17&amp;4041.
J

8

....,;.C1...::U:,..;E::...,:.E...::D:..-..~1 !

........ .,.... Col 814-37121120 .. 304-171-1718.
'

Not Mit . . . . .. . . . . Pin&amp;

1)JE8.. APRIL 4
IVINIHG

Auto Parts
• AcceiiDrlel

-_
......
.
.
.
.
..-:.-·l-----r..

RainbOw Vecuum a.. •. ruN
IIIIo nM wlh _......._
• 118.00 011h or ,.,.. .,..
rltlgool Phono 304-171-4411.

1 loodroom opt. tOr ,..., U21
month. d......, ,.qulrod. 814tiiZ-1111.

8

•

,...,Itt

7-.

Fully fur'*hool ,.-...... AI
.... ~... pold - · ........... .
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114-44............ 1110.

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Paga 10-The Daily Seminal

,.

Tunclay, April4, 1989

· _____.. Local ~s briefs... -........, Nation's heartland hit. by tor:nadoes, (loods
Continued from page 1
water to the four elementarles will be temporarily shu ! off
Wednesday to enable the water company to make changes In Its
lines.

Squads have 7 Mond(ry- rolls
Melgs County E;mergency Medical Services reports seven
calls on Monday; Middleport at 1: 20 a .m. to Sycamore St. for . ·
Lisa Manley· to Veterans Memorial Hospital; later to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 9 a.m. to Broadway St. for Darrell
Dugan who was dead on arrival; Pomeroy at 11:31a.m . to Rock .
Springs Road for Mary Mereplth to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; later to St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at 11:46a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Lloyd Smith Jr. to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport ·a t 1~ :06 p.m. to . DyesvUle Road for Dennis
Woodgerd to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Middleport was
assisted by Columbia Township Rescue 1204; Rutland at 2' 19
p.m. · to Meigs Mjne No. 1 for Charles Chamber~ to Holzer
Medl~al Center; Pomeroy at 3:04p.m. to Rock Springs Road for
William John Kennedy to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MOOnWatCh p Ianned Thur8d·ay
On Thursday, the u.s. ·Naval
Observatory and NASA are condueling a · Moonwatch expertment. The object of the expertment Is to determine how soon.
after the moon Is new that It can
be seen:
Time to look for the moon Is
from sunset to 30 to -45 minutes '
after sunset. Thursday's sunset
In Meigs Countywllloccurat7:57
p.m., Eastern Daylight Time.
· A&lt;;cordlng to Meigs County
Engineer Philip M. Roberts, an
amatuer as tronomer,look for the
moon where the twilight glow Is
brightest. The sky must be clear
and the observer should have a
flat horizon. Binoculars will also
help. Look straight above the

place where the sun •sets tci· find
the moon. As the sky darkens,
youmlghtbeabletoseethemoon
with your eye alone, Roberts
says.
The U.S. Naval Obs~rvatory
wishes to hear from you even If
you do not see the moon. A short
report must Include your name,
observing location and whether
or not you saw themoon,headds.
Reports may be phoned to
Roberts on Friday morning between 9 and 11 a.m. at 992-2911,
who will forward the reports to
the U.S. Naval Observatory, or,
If you wish, you may sena reports
directly to: Moonwatch, Nautl·
cal Almanac Office, U.S. Naval
· Observatory, Washington , D.C ..
20392. ,

By United Pren laleraaiiDnal
Severe thunderstorms
marched across the nation's
heartland Tuesday after spread·
lng floods that swept a baby from
Its mother's grasp In Indiana and
hurling tornadoes In Arkilnsas,
Texas, Indiana and Dllnols.
The thunderstorms developed
ahead of a cold front In lhe
central part of the country and
were moving through the Ohio,
Tennessee and lower Mississippi
valleys. They extended from
western Kentucky to norlhweast·
ern Texas.
As much as . 4 Inches· of ,rain
soaked Indiana, Monday night
and streams were out o! their
banks early Tuesday across
soutllern and central Indiana, the
National Weather Service said.
A 16-month-old child was swept
from Its mother's arms Monday
night as she tried to the baby and
her tWo other cb,lldren away !rom
'her flooded car on Indiana 68 In
Gibson County In ~outhern Indlana , state pollee said.
Authorities looked for tile child

Ohio...

Continued

without success Monday night
and then had to postpone their
search untn early today becauae
Qf darkness. The family's name
and the sex of tile baby were not
disclosed by authorities.
Thunderstorms In Arkansas
spawned tornadoes near
Amagon, Mount Ida, JoQeSboro
and Ctystal Springs Monday
evening. In northeastern Texas,
a tornado touched dowwn
northwest of Grand Saline.
Hall measuring 3 % Inches
across pelted east of Quinlan,
Tel'as. Hall the size of golt balls
rained on the Texas communities
of Brashear, Beaver Dam, Sui·
phur Springs, New Boston and .
Maud. Winds gusted at 70 mph.
Funnel clouds and torrential .
rains blasted a large ·area of
Arkansas Monday, damaging
buildings, homes, vehicles and
power lines, authorities said.
' 'This was the most wides·
pread series of storms to hit the
state In one day since December
·t and 3, I982, when 64 of the
state's counties were under some

Bar'UP

o~···

League
roundup
•

Page .4
'·

Hospital news

lim=-·

· FRONTS: "
Warm
Mlp • ._. mfrWI!Um

IOrec:.Ne'•edlllllllan~t=

At IIMI 50'11oolany
,

-

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·
UPI

j

WEATHER ~AP- Dunn1 early Wednesday !nomllll', rain and
.. shower• are lo'ft!cast for parts of the PaciftJ Northweat, with
showers and thianderstonps In pans oltbe Ohl11 Valley, Ihe Gulf
Coast aad moat of the Allanite Coast sla&amp;ea. Rain and showers are
'po~~~~tble In pans of the northem lntermouataln re11on. Snow 18
poulble In the extreme northern Great Laketl• (UPI) ·

·'

'

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
By United Pre~~&amp; lniernallonal
Tonight: Variable cloudiness,
with a .low In the mid 40s. ·
Northwest wind 10 to 20 mph.
Chance'of rain Is 20 percent.
Wednesday: . Mostly cloudy,

•

Plan dinner

A ham and turkey dfMer,
sponsored b;f_theSouthernJul)lor
High Boosters and the Career
Education Commltlee, will be
held on Sunday at Southern High
School. Serving will begin· at
11:30 a.m. Evfrytne we)come.

'

with a chance of showers. Highs
Will be near 60. Chance of rain Is
40 percent.
,
Extended Forecast
Thunday lhrou1b Saturday
A chance of, fhowers or snow
flurries Thursday and Friday,
with lair, conditions Saturday.
Highs will hi: between 40 and 50,
with early morning lows In the
30s.

':
·

:·
·

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township TrUstees

will meet Thursday, 7 p .m., at the

township hall. The public Is .

welcome.

~

'r

6ENTS

·,

AGE.

'

I

continued from p.,e 1

· preclpltatlon had fallen ID Ohio,
just slightly below normal.
Rebecca Petty. a hydrologist
with the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, said storage
reservoirs throughout the state ,
are at near-normal levels, with
most or the rainy sprlq season
yet to come.
She also ~U~Id the groundwater
supplies were helped by the mild
winter - IInce the -lOU didn't
rre e, It allowed more rainfall
llld snowmelt thr911gb the
II'CJUIICl to the aq ulters.
'J1Ie rwervoln, lbe uld, would
reach IICJl'mal level• by the
1ummer. auiiDIIII&amp; normal rainfall between now IJICI tileD.
Tom Jama, a lpoileiiiiiUI for ·
tile Mulk~a~Jum wa~Cou·

I ----..............

•rvauey Dlltrtet Ill New
. Pblla·

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-~··--""""""

Stoi'JJlS

BEGINNING
ATAGE40

BEGINNING

$122,614
. •183,921 :
228

•49,816
•74,724

•17,801
•26,702

Increase your re~ment Income.

AT AGE 50

,

BOSTER NEW PUCO CHAIRMAN - Governor Richard F.
CeletJte (right) stands by as State Rep. Jolynn Boster
(D-Ga1Upoll8), the newly-appointed PUCO chairman, makes the
announcement In the statehouse In Columbus Wednesday ' ·
morning. She succeeded Thomas Chema. who stepped down
earlier this year. (lJPI~

Tuesday night, Boster said, "It
services."
Boster said she supports the Is truly an honor to be appointed
concept of "lifeline " telephone chairman of PUCO. I'm ver y ·
rates - minimum charges for very much looking forward to
elderly and low-Income residents working with Tom Chema and
- adding that such rates would ·my colleagues on the cornmis:
"absolutely" have an Impact on slon, as well as the representa·
lives of the co nsumers' and
southeastern Ohio.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Wll· utilities'. Interes t du ring this
,a legislator
the liam Spratley said he was lm· transition period.
" At the same time, I regret
94th house District In rural, pressed by Boster's credentials
southeastern Ohio, Jolynn is and her attitude toward lifeline greatly .) avlng to leave the
keenly aware of the PUCO's role telephone rates and planning for leglstatui'e. Having served In the
House for foul' terms, I have
In aiding rural development," . lower utility rates.
formed
personal !reindshlps and
"I
h11ve
a
positive
reaction,
"
said the governor.
good
working
relationships with
said
Spratley
.
"
From
what
I
. ' 'She·ls committed to maintain·
my
fellow
members.
understand
o!
her
background,
lng an open and public dialogue
"Although I will continue to act
through regional hearings and she has a very open approach. I
other public forums. She wants look forward to the commission as a local advocate for Soutlleas t
the commIssion to devote more o! being accessible to the consu- . Ohio, I will sorely miss serving as
Its energies to ensuring that all mers, because I remember when State Representative for Athens,
GaiUa and Meigs counties. "
Ohioans have access to regulated It wasn't always that'way." ·

sa!~s

kill two
p
e
.
I
peo

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.

,,

In addition. an I.RA. ofl'ers tax Incentives that :You can take advantage of right now. The Interest
you earn wt11 be tax·exempt unW-you uae the money. Many people are still eligible to deduct aJ1 or
part of their annual contribution from their current Income taxes.

Let us show you how to reach your reUrement goal with a Peoples.Bank I.RA. We make it easyl

-I

'

A
~asu~a ollloe Ill

'P LES

•

MASON

POINI' PLEASANI'.
675-1121

773-5514

P(lmeroy man injUred in wreck

NEW HAVEN..
882-2135

Tile , Gilllla·Metp · Poet of . -t he State ' HleJtway Patrol
lnvett!JIIted 1111DlU1!'8CCident at 2: 30a.m. Wl!jlnesday on SR.

MBMBBRP.D.LC. o·SUBSTANTIALPBNAL'IYIQRBARLYWITHDRAWAL
'

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__ ..........._..______
,

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7; o.4 mlil'tolltb elf Utile post 9.
Troopers

__...__...:..._________
'··

......

.:__~_.:;_

Wednesday after hurling lorna·
does and high winds In Georgia
that killed two people, damaged
a school and a nursing home and
knocked out power to 50,000
customers . •
The National Weather Service _
reported · the thunderstorms
developed ahead of a slow
moving cold front , extending
from the central Gulf Coast to
Georgia and South Carollna .
The weather service said tornadoes struck at least eight
Georgia counties 'l'uesday and
es tlmated that winds gu~ted to up to 100mph In the northern part of
the state.
Jeffrey Lee Grigsby, 25, Cum·
mlng, Ga. , was killed when winds
blew down a tree and crushed
him, Forsy¢ County Sherllf
Wesley Walraven said. The
WhlteCountysherlff'sofflcesald
Sue Arrowood, 27, Cleveland,
Ga.,.was kllled by a tree that fell

ser~lng

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Newa Staff
"I 'll till be
lng the public
s
serv
st
Will
Ohio
II
0!
Ju be a broader
•
constituency,"
Jolynn Boster
said Wednesday morning from
her office In Columbus.
Boster, of Gallipolis, was
ed"" 1
f the PUblic
''&lt;a
rman
nam
Utilities
Commission
of Ohio
Tuesday by Gov. Richard
Celeste.
A four-term Democratic State
Representative of Athens, Gallla
and Meigs counties, Boster will
take over the PUCO chairmanship ~prU IO, from Thomas
Chema, who Is leaving to return
to private law practice.
Her vision .- for PUCO goes
beyond thenexttlveyears-well
Into the 1990's and leadllli Into .

°

.

I -Deal news briefs-..... ::~!!r~ry~~~~~:):t~

Your Good_Neighbor
'•

old . life out of the
tile Ceun Ho- wu ~tulle au erdeal, bat ao .

wollder,l&amp; weiJhl ai!HI four &amp;oM aad Is approXtmatel)' tllnebes
wide and 10 1Del1111 l!tp. All door Jambe 111111 culap bad to be
removed aDd· a m~.U amoiUII ol the coaerete wall bad to be
chlleled awa; belore the lA~ would mlbrour,ll the de-ay •

•

........-......_". _"·~· ..... ~~.. -:':"::•~-...;:..,...,..,....,..,,'-_
....._,_.,.
.. ,,.
T

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Whal~er your ali. monthly contrtbuUOns to an Individual Rettre~nt Account will Slgnll'!Cintly

Euteru A~ iOolter• will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Vo'tdllerda)' In the

.''·

.

.

pa~un~t~~:m:ou~:::.ue:ar:~ Constituency larger now' Boster says

EllS "'ib.letic
hiP ~ebool caf81erta.

.

Staff and UPI reports
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!~
Jolynn Boster, a four-term state
representative !rom Gallipolis,
was appointed Tuesday as chairman of the Public UtUitles
Commission of Ohio, for a
five -year term , starting AprlllO.
Boster, 37, a Democrat , will
. succeed Thomas Chema, the
chairman for the last five years,
who Is leaving to • return to
private law practice In Cleve·
land. Chema Is considering run·
nlng for state attorney general
next year.
·Boster, who was raised 1n
suburban Dayton and graduated
!rom Ohio State University, will
be the second woman to chair the
utility-regulating agency. Sally
· Bloomfield, a Columbus la wyer,
headed the commission In the
1970s.
"I am almost speechless, "
Bosler told a hastily-called news
conference In the governor's
ceremonial office at the Statehouse. " Lim ready to go."
Boster was chosen over James
Kennedy; Marsha Schermer,
director of the PUCO's legal
departmen t; and ·Robert
Tongren, an assis tant attorney
general assigned to the PUCO.
Thf lr names had . been recommended to Celeste two months
ago by a special· nominating
council.
.
Celeste said he took his time In
naming the chairman because he
wanted t.horough background
checks before he began Interviewing the prospects.
The governor skirted a question about whether he preferred
state Tax Commissioner Joanne
Limbach for the job .
Limbach, a popular figure In
the administration, applied for
the job but was not nominated
after news media reports specu·
Jated that she had a lock on the
appointment.
Celeste said he had "a sufflclent level of comfort" with
Boster. " I think the people of
Ohio will be extremely well
served by this appolnlment," he

By,United Press International

delphia, said all of the agency's
10 lakes and reservoll'IID central
and northeast Ohio weraeltber at
their summer levels or close to
·
them.

Boosen to meet

SPnng

&gt;

"

Amount In IRA At Aae 65
Assuming All Average Yield of 8.30%

.

"Becallll! of the drought, we
cut the nonnal drawdown (drain·
in&amp; to mike room for melting
snow alll\~ng rains~ In half on
all'but Q~ of the lakes this fall to
help with pplenllbment th~
year," Janlh said.

e

'

BEGINNING
. AGE30

A Multimedia Inc, NewiiPaper

ter ·. named .
PUCO chai•..ttan'

••

-RAIN -"m2J SIIDWEHS
"Cald . . Static . . Oc:ctl'xlect

Thursday , mostly cloudy,
high near 50. Chance of rain 40
percent.

Sections. 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednasday, April 6, 1989

•

· INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT
ACCOUNT

Water...

..

••

IRAS

r

.-

»
•

M0111ly cloudy, low In upper

30s'. Chance of rain 50 percent.

i

Vot.39.

!·.:;•JSNOW

"

$50 .
$75
$100

Pick4
7519

•••

tuie of soap. It Is an alkaline

.MONTHLY
INVESTMENT

600

l

· non-toxic colbrless liquid, he
said.
Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby advised that he had been
contacted by PPG about secilrchairman
of
committeeman
and
lng the area around the capsized
DaJTell Dugan
UMWA Local 1957.
barge and several off-duty offlc·
Dally stock·prices
Funeral services will be held
ers were handling the security at
(As oliO: SO a.m.)
Darrell L. Dugan, 49, of Raat the Racine ,United . Bryce and Mark Smtih
Thursday
the site.
cine, died Monday at his resiA PPG barge capsized In the
dence following an extended Methodist Church. The Rev. ol Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewl
Roger Grace will officiate and
same location about two years
. lllness.
He was emplOyed at the burial will be In the Letart Falls Am Electric Power . .. .......... 26% ago, It was reported by local
Cemetery. Military graveside AT&amp;T ...... .. , ................. ...... .3I% officials.
·
Southern Ohio Coal Co., Mine 3.
rites
will
be
conducted
by
the
Ashland
Oil
..........
.....
,
..
.......
40111
Born on Sept. 29, I939, he was
the son of the late Joseph Dugan Racine American Legion Post Bob Evans . .... ..... .. ..... :......... IS
602.
Charming Shoppes .'.. ; .... ,, .... IS
and Grace Beckman Dugan.
Veterans Memorial
Friends may call at the Ewing City Holding Co .. .. ... .... ........ I8
He Is survived by his wife,
Monday
admissions - ~eryl
Home
from
2
to
4
and
7to
Funeral
Federal Mogul... .......... ..... .. 52~
Shirley Hill Dugan, a daughter
Ferguson,
Cheshire; WIIUam
9
today
and
Wednesday.
The
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ........... 48
and son-In-law , Kim arid Larry
John
Kennedy,
Pomeroy. ·
will
be
taken
to
the
church
body
Heck's .............. ... .. ........ ...... \!,
Rnyder; two sons, Richard and
Monday
discharges
- Marie
one
hour
preceding
the
services.
Key Centurion ... ............ .. ... 13~
Kevin, and a daughter, Erica, all
Hayman.
Linda
Thomas,
Elza
Lands' End ..... .................... 29 ~
of RadnP.
Persons,
Norma
Goodwjn,
Helen
Also survl vlng are his motherLimited Inc ......... ............... 28~
In-law, Inez Hill, Racine; five Chester ROlle
Multimedia Inc_ .......... ........ 92~ Kennedy.
brothers, Lowell Bobb, Jr., Chll·
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ....... .153/.i Second meeting set
Chesler Rose, 83, of Canton, a
llcothe; Harold Dugan, Hebron;
The second parent volunteer
Lloyd Dugan, Rutland; Larry formerresldentofChesterTown· Shoney's Inc ........ ..... ... ... ..... 8%
Joe Dugan, Pomeroy, a'nd Dick ship, died Monday at the Ault- Wendy's Inti ...... .. .. .. .. ........ .. 6\i, · meetlrig for the Everybody
Worthington lnd ....... .. ...... .. 2J3A Counts program will be held at
Dugan, Racine; and three sis· man Hospital In Canton . . ·
ters, Sue Little, Mlddeport; Do·
Son of the late John and Dora (Lands' End sees first-quarter Southern High Schpol on Aprll10
at 7 p.m.
rothy Ger!han, Newark; and Bookman Rose, he was ,bo(n on net below year ar;o $.29/lltare ~
Shirley Follrod, Rutland, along Jan . 29, 1906 In Chester
with several aunts and uncles, · Township.
,
.•
He Is survived by his wife,
nieces and nephews. ·
Besides his parents, he was Isabelle; two sister,, Mrs. Dopreceded In death by his father- rotlly Willard, Jacksonville, 111.
in-law, Julian Hill, a brother, and Mrs, Bertha Dye, Auburn,
Bob, and his grandparents.
Calif.; and two brothers, Arthur
For seven years Dugan ·was Rose, Little Hocking, and John
coach for the Southern •Local Rose, Long Bottom.
High School footqall team. He"'
Besides his patents, .he was
was a member of the Racine preceded In death by one sister
United Methodist Church a vete· and one brother.
·
ran' of the U.. S. Army, and a
Funeralservlceswlllbeheldat
member of the Racine American 11 a :m. Thursday at the Karla
Legion Post 602., and affiliated and Sons Funeral Home In North
with . the Fraternal Order of ·canton. Friends may call at the
Eagles, Meigs Aerie 2171. Pome- funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. on
roy. He . served as a mine Wednesday.

will not be eligible for the the costs Involved and the need
Insurance days even If they do . for workers on jobs here In the
not enroll In the health ·plan.
village rather than waiting for
Also discussed by council was lenghty periods of time to dump
the possible temporary ellmlna· trash at West Columbia.
lion of trash pickup in the village.
Finally, It was announced that
As explained, when Meigs Coun- a liquor license transfer has been
ty's landfill was still in operation, approved through the State
.village crews averaged three or . Board of Llqour Control for
four trips a day to the county Arlwona Sue Walker, doing busifacility .
ness as the Rainbow Inn, Pomeroy, to Marjorie Snider, •also
Since the local landfill has been doing business as the Rainbow
closed, village workers have Inn, Pomeroy.
been takillg trash to West ColurriThe mayor's report of $2,1331n
bla, W. V4. However, workers are fines and fees collected during
unable to take more than one load the month of Marcil was
a day because of the long walt approved. ·
behind large semi-trucks which
Absent from Monday's meetregularly dump at West Ing were CoUIICIImen Bruce Reed
Columbia .
and Franklin Rizer. Present, In
Council decided to leave the addition to Mayor Richard
trash pickup situation as Is, at Seyler and Clerk-Treasurer Jane
least until May. At that lime, Walton, we~ Councilmen Larry
council may determine to halt Wehrung, Bill YOUIIII, Bryan
the service temporarUy, due to Shank and Betty Baronlck.

Pick3

l

. Continued. from page 1
,

Pomeroy_Council... continued fcqm page 1

Ohi~ Lottery

.Major

area near Oakdale, damaglne
kind of .dlsas ter declaration. "
houses, trailers and barns.
salcl Gary Talley of the Arkansas
The tornadoes descended from
Office of Emergency Service.
line of thunderclouds at about
a
At least two mObile homes and
IS
p.m. , said John Scheper,
3:
a "house were damaged at Pine
assistant
coordinator for the
Bluff, Ark., several businesses,
Emergency
Services . Disaster.
lpcludlng a Holiday Inn, were
Damage was reported In Oak·
damaged In Jonesboro. hill!
damage was report~!&lt;~ ..II! Hot d,le, Lively Grove and near
,
·
Spring County and powe!""and · Coulterville.
Clvll·Defense officials reported
com'fnunlcatlons lines were
15 to 20 homes were moderately
downed throughout tl!e. state by
damaged and about six trailer
the tornadoes and high winds.
homes were blown off their
In southern Illinois, storms
foundations . l"ower was knocked
spawned three tornadoes that
out throughout the area.
ripped through a I5-&amp;quare-mlle

•·

___
.
.
:
.
.
.
:
.
____
_
.

as a general service Industrial
chemlc'al with. a wide range of
end uses such as i.n the manufac-

--Area deaths--- .Stocks

•

fro~ page~

and was recently elected to the are both State Representative
Executive Committee of the Jolynn Boster and Senator Jan
De rri o or a t I c . N a tl on a I Michael Long.
•
Committee.
Dinner wlll ·be served at 6 p.m.
· Mary Hunter Is chairman of with the program to begin at 7
the dinner. Exepcted to be, _on_,....p.m. Tickets are $7 and may be
hand for the dinner meeting a'tMI' purchased from any committeeman or at the do,or.

.

~

.

IBid Jo1111 Guinther, 23, Pomeroy, lost control on a

cui'Yl!.HIItlal'weft~Off111e roacUtrlklngtbe guafd
. rall. Damage
Cod1inued 011 page 5
_.!)

II

- _ ____ -------·· -·-""""-.....

t\

"'-'

By LEI!: U:ONABb
VPII!Iatebu.- lteporter
COLUMBUS- Soclal~ervlces
advocates paraded before a
Senate Finance subcommittee
Tuesday to urge realllratton of
funds to aul8t the elderly, the
poor and children.
At the same time, represenl.a·

J.,

----

communication and transportalion In the state. It Is mos t famous ·
for decisions on utility rates and
has dev.eloped policy on the
transportation of hazardous
waste, which directly led to
legislation regulating its move·
rnent across the state.
As chairman, Bos ler will be
head of a commission with
approXImat ely 500 employees,
develop . Its budget and work
directly with the state admlnistratlon and legislature.
When her Representative pos ilion Is vacated, the House Democrats will vote on her replacement. While there Is no set
deadline. Boster Is hopeful the
choice will be made and her
replacemen t swor n In as she'
leaves for PUCO. •

SocUJ·l serv;~es· advocate·s·
plead J'or bu,~,..et
inc.reases
~
1

damage In Habersham County,
lnchidtq an elementary school
and nursing home In Baldwin.
"It tore tbe topa off the
· bulldln&amp;S and messed up some
sheds next to them," Deputy
David toudermllk said. "There
were no Injuries. ~Ithe students
, were gone, and ust a f~
C6ntlnued on pa e 5

•

the next century.
•'There's a challenge In the
utilities arena leading toward the
next century," Boster said In a
telephone Interview Wednesday.
People may not think Issues like
nuclear energy and hazardous
.waste affect their dally lives, but
·"those (Issues) have an Impact
on utilities rates and avallabll!ties, " Boster said._. .
The chairmanship o! PUCO
was attractive to Boster because
It still deals with public policy
and development, she said. It will
- like being a state representalive - have an Impact on the
dlrecllon the state Is moving, she
added.
The mission of the Public
Utilities Commlaslon of ·Ohlo 1$
the regulation of energy, tele-

••••

•

1

lives of the American Cancer of Ohio United Way, told the
Society held a press contereDce · Human Servtces sobcommnteee
to push fbr au Increase In !be tax that ller group cOmmends the.
on tobacco product1, clltelly Houae for mtortn.: ttl mnUon ·.snuff and chewing tobacco, year to the Title XX pi'Qgram
which It claims are rulniD&amp; tbe -that drew~ federal matcblilg
lives of young people who use flllida. Slle uked. that anotlter
$8.7 mll'liOII a year be l'eltOI'ed tO:
them.
Judith Bird, associate director • lllltll'e ~I) I fllU federali'IIJIC~ :

4,

..·

•

•

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