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                  <text>. Page D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 14. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-G.IIipolla, Ohio Point P11111nt, W.Va.

Reagan travels west to c8mpaign, meet with de .Ia Madrid
B~

gan a convel!ient overnight rest "call together the presidents of •
NORM.UI D. SANDLER
LOS ANGELES (UP!)- Pres- · stop before a two-hour fll&amp;ht all the nati!lns In the Western
Saturday morning to the Mexi- Hemisphere on the drug crisis."
Ident Reagan traveled west Frican Pacific coast resort of
day to make his debut on the-1988
After four hours on the eround
Mazatlan for just over two hours in Mexico, Reagan will board Air
campaign circuit In California
ol talks with de Ia Madrid.
and for a meeting Saturday In
Force · One for a return to
The discussions they.hold at a California and a three-day stay
Mexico with President Miguel de
Ia Madrid.
·
hotel overlooking the blue waters at his mountaintop ranch north of
of the Pacific are expected to Santa Barbara.
With th.e start oftheweekend of
skirt areas 11f controversy that
campaigning be[ore the. New
Over the next six months,
have strained U.S.-relations 'In · Reagan's partisan ene~~s wlll
Hampshire primary, Reagan ,
the past, and instead, be marked be devoted to raising money for
who arrived at midday, was set
to open h.ls ·own election-year · by expressiOns of goodwlll.
Republican candidates at recepRep. Charles Rangel, D-N. Y., tions like the one at the Murdock
~ schedule . by. raising
chairman of the House Narcotics residence and steerl"'! clear of
money for the Callfornla RepubCommittee, said In a statement Intramural squabbles In the
lican Party, ·
FrJday he was concerned the primaries. .
AcCQmpanied by his wife,
-•
summit
would not address subNancy. Reagan arranged to
As VIce President George Bush
stantive Issues, such as drug · struggled for a comeback In New
spend less than an hour in the
trafficking_
hills of posh Bel Air, shaking
Hampshire after a damaging ·
Rangel is concerned it will be third-place showing In the Iowa
hands , and having hls picture
"playtime" between the United precinct caucuses, the White
taken with big-money GOP con·
States and Mexico at the summit, House once ·again declared Reatributors at the mansion of real
while one-third of the drugs ' gan to be neutral in the race for
estate m9gul David Murdock. ·
comil)g
into the United States the GOP nomination and reafEntree to the reception was
continue
to flow from Mexico, a firmed his Intention to remain so
$5,000 a person, The event,
House
source
said:
followed by a dinner the Reagans'
throughout the primary season.
''Both presidents must come to
planned to skip, was expected to
Reagan has ·said his ·s trict
gross$MO,OOO for the state GOP's grips. with the 1 reality of the neutrallty lrr primaries dates
voter reglstratlo!! and legislative impact of the polson on both sides back to his days as governor of
of the border." Rangel said.
camoatJ;::n activities.
Callfornia. Rather than stump
He urged that both leaders for specific candidates, his focus
The political duties gave Rea-

accusations from the Bush camp
until the Republlcan National
that White House chief of staff
Convention this summer will be
Howard Baker has given an
on maldq money for the party.
occasional behind-the-scenes
Deaptte their best efforts,
boost to senate GOP leader
however, Reagan and his aides
Robert Dole. his former colhave not been able tli avoid
league on Capitol Hill.
entanglement.In the topsy-turvy
The Bush campaign cried foul
politics of the campaign to
In December when Dole was
determine his successor. .
ln private, he Is reported to . allowed to share the spotlight
wJth Reagan at the White House
favor seeing Bush receive the
with Bush pot present - to
GOP nomination as a reward for
an·nounce a late. but expected
more than seven years of unfettered . polltical · loyal~ and ser- endorsement of the· superpower
treaty on Intermediate-range nuvice thrOU&amp;h thick and thin as a
clear missiles.
top cheerleader for the
For days. before that White
administration.
But just as Reagan has · been . House-arranged media , event,
Bush criticized Dole · for not
caught between hls publlc stand
and private leanings, the neutralIty he purports to represent has
been called into question by

"'

Dividends ... ·

.

Hand reattached in ·operation

Daily Number

987
Pick 4

Page4

8403

Super Loto

•

at

.,

Yol.38. No.194
Copyrighted 1988

.. .;

have saved lives although too few people are
complying with the mandatory law .
Rench predicted his bill will not get out of
committee unless there Is a strong letter-writing
campaign by Ohio citizens to their legislators.
Neither the House nor the Senate will be holding
voting sessions this week, but committee work
will proceed'.
·
Senate-passed legislation overhauling the
state's boxing law gets Its f~rst hearing In the
House this week. The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Thomas Carney. D-Girard, is scheduled to be
heard In the House State Gover11ment Committee
Wednesday afternoon.
.· It provides for greater medical supervision and
Is designed to prevent mismatches in the ring. It
also contains a 5 percent tax on brqadacstlng
rights for any boxing match In Ohio.
Although it does not regulate wrestling,
Carney's bill proposes a 5 percent tax . on

· HISTORY ESSAY WINNE!tS :.._ VIctor Van
Meter, Chester ·Elementary, and Joy O'Brien,
Syraeulie Elementary, seated, were the first
place wlnaers In the annual hiatory ell88y contest
spoliiOred by Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Dau&amp;hters of the American Revolution. Theme of
the euays was "Roads to Ratification." Other
. winners all receiving certificates were left to

'

~~

fli

Jim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile ·

"Inventory Reduction Sale"
NEW &amp; USED CARS &amp;·TRUCK$

t

f

BUY NOW - THE SELECTION IS
GREAT. MOST GM REBATES RE STILL IN
EFFECT - Q'UALIFIED BUYERS
PURCHASE WITH NO MOI,EY DOWN.
"NEVER KNOWLINGL Y UNDIISOLD"

Jlcos

446·3672

Ink Chavrolat-OI~••o~Ue
1616 EASTON AVE.

GAWPOLfS, OHIO

TIUCIS
446·2000

·
~ CHILDREN'S

* COATSAMD
* SNOWSUITS:

.

RECLINER (f'* .

SEliCT GROUP OF
IEIILINE IECUNEIS
ENTIRE STOCI - HURRY
AND
II POl IER SELECTION \
IOCI·O·LOUNGEIS

OFF

tee will deal with legislation giving a percentage
of Ohio's capital Improvements money to the arts.
The timetable calls for the bill to reach the Senate
· floor Fe b. 24 .
Sponsored by Sen. Stanley Aronoff. R• _
Cincinnati, the bill would designate a portion of
every state-funded capital Improvements project
for the purchase or maintenance of artworks.
Colleges and universities, which receive the bulk
of the capital Improvements money, are expected
to oppose the legislation .
Tpe state's $600 million two-year capital
improvements appropriation Is expected to be
Introduced by the Celeste adf11lnlstration in about
two weeks .
Legislation establishing casino gamb)lng In
Lorain will receive its second hearing Wednesday
afternoon In the house Economic Development
and Small Business Committee.

debate were sparked by the other there had been no subsidies.
GOFFSTOWN , N.H. (UP!) The top two Republican presiden- candidates. who are trying hard
Also mixing It up at the forum
tial candidates, treading care- ,to break Into the top ranks.
at St. Anselm's College was Rep.
fully two days before the N,ew
Former Delaware Gov. Pete Jack Kemp of New York, whose
Hampshire primary, shied away du Pont was probably the most drive for the White House defrom attacking each other Sun- aggressive of the candidates, pends on a good shoWing In New
day and used a critical debate to charging that he had pledged not Hampshire.
At one point, Kemp told the
showcase their differences with to Increase taxes, while 'Bush and
the Democrats.
·
Dole have not. He also criticlz'i'd vice president, "It's embarrassVIce President George Bush the two top candidates for saying ing for a Republican to say 'give
and Senate GOP leader Robert .'they would consider increasing · peace a chance."'
Evangelist Pat Robertson
Dole deflected several opportuni- expensive farm subsidies.
"C'mon Pete. you had lunch tried to point out his differences
ties to strike out at each other,
opting-Instead to iake a high road · today didn't you," shot back with the othe( candidates, espeapproaoh to the televised debate. Dole, ''Tha\&lt;"ame from.a farm)' ~ c-lally on. foreign affairs.
At one point, he said he was told
However, some of the !railing - Du Pont responded that It
candidates led an attack on the wouldn't have &lt;;ost as much If
Continued on page 5
front-runners, hoping to distinguish them~lves and save their
candidacies In the state's first-hithe-nation primary_
Bush, whQ once led In the state
but now Is IQCked in a tight
struggle with 'Dole. noted there
were differences between himself and the senator from Kan•as, but quickly stressed that
those dlfferepces would evapOrate .once the GOP chases a
presidential nominee.
."Anytime there's a"y controversy, someone wants to build on
that," said Bus!\\ . "What they
forget Is that In a primary you do
· tend to highlight differences."
"The common ground Is so
much greater than the Democrats' -It's like night and day,"
noted Bush.
· The vice president, referring to
a lively debate among the Democratic candidates Saturday
I)EBATE TAX ISSUE - Republican presidential candidate
night, noted, we "look like a
lWbert Dole, right, holds up a pledge notto raise tiUie&amp; presented to
Sunday school picnic compared
him by Pete Dupont to sign during Sunday's League of Women
to that."
Voters presldentlat ·debate at St. Anselm College, In Goffstown,
The few confrontations that
N.H. Dupont alleged that all the GOP candidates except Dole
took place In the first part of the
signed the pledge. (UPI)

..DAVIS, W.Va. (UP!) -Two
"They should hav~ shut the · "Those chemicals proably
explosions shredded a malntewhole thing down "Quattro said.. created the biggest blast," Quatnance shed filled with chemicals
The chief said out-of-staters tro said .. ."The boys didn't -even
used to produce fake snow at
refused to get out. of the way as know what hit 'em. I think the
Canaan Valley' Skl Resort, killing
his department was taxed to the !_!rst one got them. They didn't
three workers Inside and touch- . llrlllt with the tra~dy at the have .a chance."
. lng off a huge fire, but the skiing
state-owned resort and three
Andy Snyder, publicity dlrec·
never stopped.
traffic accidents the same day.
tor at Canaan, said h~ was · not
Just what prj!elpltated Sun"These people will just not get aware of an explosion, saying he
day's Initial blast. was not deteroff the road for you," he said. was two miles away at the time,
mined, althOU&amp;h an investigation
"'there's no way you can drive cross-country skil"'!.
was launched 'by the fire mar- them off. They're all out of state
"Tl!ls area Is bowl-shaped and
shal's office.
-VIrginia, Maryland, Washing- I surely would have heard any
'
The first explosion · came -ton. A siren doesn't mean any- explosion," he said, but added
thi"'! to these people or that others told him ,they heard one.
around 12:30 p.m. EST, and a
The beginner s slope was shut
second one thundered a short
youre trying to save lives and dci
time later in a mountain valley of
this and do that.
down about two hOurs while fire
Judge Gerald E. Radcliffe of
"They just absolu.tely will not crews battled the bl~~Ze, but other
tills north-central West VIrginia
the
Probate and Juvenile dlv·
get out of the way. We're not Skiers continued to enl6~. the ,
mecca for East Coast skiers,
tslons
of the Common Pleas
says Ernest Quattro, chief of a . trying to run anybody off, but . after~?Dn. A few of them . pan- .
of
Ross County announced
Court
volunteel' fire-fighting unit In
When you have a fire you have to lcked at first and ral;ed to the
his
candidacy
for the Democratic
Davis.
.
have the road."
'
parking lOt to make sure their
nomination
for
election as judge
One of •the victims had served
The Initial blast came In the vehlc~s were all right, then
for
the
Fourth
District Court of
·tn Qu\lttro's volunteer unit. ·
compressor room of the 150-by- returned to the slopes and trails.
,Appeals.
Undaunted skiers stayed on the 200-foot block building killing one lawman said.
The fourth judge to the District
Ronald L. Hanlon, 33, a v~lunteer , Snyder said the resort had not
trails and slopes, while others
•
Appellate
Cou~t will assume
fireman, Date w. Liller, 25, and determined why the ,t hree men
who found. the area congested
office
on
Feb.
10, 1989, ~overing
with crews from !Ieven fireRandy Lee Crowl 24 all of were In the structure.
fl&amp;htlng units griped about deDavis.
· '
'
"We have no Idea," he said. fourteen counties in the district.
Prior to hls present judicial
lays tn getting to the Iitts,
"Wedon'tevenknowiftheywere
coming Into work or going to service, Judge Radcliffe served
leave, or to get their lunch boxes, as 'a part-time judge for the
municipal court of Chillicothe.
or even on the clock," he said,
While
serving as the Law PlanSnyder said the bul.ldlq conGOn'STOWN, N.H. . (UPI) - Republleall prelldeatlal
i.
tained aome snow-mak!"'l com- .ning Officer for the Souther-n
ilaadldlde Pll&amp; Bollerllon --'d Saaclay lie bad learned from a
presSOl'll but there was no natural Ohio Council of Goverment,
IIQ.IIftle on tbe llQII&amp;e Forelp Relall- Comnilttee tbll&amp; ihe
Judge Radcliffe assisted in the
gaslnalde.
lovlet Unto~ bad plaoeclllltenneclla&amp;e-I'IIIP auelear mlulleeln
''Before we got up there, thll!gs devekopment of many law enCuba.
.
'
forcerilent programs under the
exploded," Quattro said.
Thuo11uaelll from tile former tel~aevupllatcamelna
''Then there wu a ~nd Omnibus Safe Street Act
Gtba&amp;e wllere he ud tile fov other m...- GOP W11Jte Bot!XRioalon. When we arrived, throUghout the district.
celt••derl dllollllbli
the laleiiwf'•te Nnelear
everything
was equlted in
His prior public appointments
..._
tru&amp;J, whloll _ . . elbidaate .......,. . . u.s. lllld
flames. It wu juat a matter of also included serving as an
s'.vw mhifl= rill I'Upl el
1.• milia, mCIItly
- putting It out and keep!Dt
assistant prosecuting attorney of
from eoing."
'
Ross County. While servtne as an
•• 1111
put, but It II
br VIce
Quattro said "It waa
elected school bciard ~ber to
Prn'Cnt On fL
..,loMite ~fi?IMderllobert
nate'.' that fllmH from 1uollne ChUllcothe Public Schools, the
Dill e1 •·
, wile llld
11•11111 111to New
tub at the· structure were not new Plckaway-Rosa Joint Voca~...... pr t't•llal
•:~.'I'll•'
lpltA!d "or It would have rlp&amp;M!d tlonal C41nter was established
•'la•lldm rtl• .........
..;~la.toWioaof
that thing clear out of the al!d bull~.
r
:0 cllla¥-Ks.. ,., aoouill, uve
Judp Radclltfe hu alsO been
.,.,.._~ ~
'
. . . . . . . . ,.. Cllllll, ......... fliJ I tC! ................
TJie olllef caDed Hallloll "a ,acttve In many roles •• a Judie
wt 11 ," ;llalss• aaltl
·IIOCJd boy 8nd a JOQd flrtfJabter.'' seekllli to Improve the delivery

Radcliffe, juvenile, probate judge
seeking 4th district appeals positio~

~s -­
~~

SPECIAL

rl&amp;ht, Sabrina Con10,- Letart, David .Fetty,
Cheater, both honororable mendon; Tyson Rose,
Cheater, and Anita ·Thomas, Riverview, second
place winners; !lhannon Staats and Mike
Mont1omeroy, both of Letart, and James Ewing, ·
Chester, lblrd place winners, and Margaret Rose,
DAR representative.

Three killed in West Virgini!J blast ·

Sltpt.

admissions -to professional wrestling, with the
, !JrOCeedS going to. the Boxing Commission.
Senators said the leVy would be no di(ferent than a
tax on theater or other entertainment.
The Senate Highways and Transportation
Committee will continue hearings Tuesday
afternoon on a proposed formula for distributing
the bond proceeds from Issue 2 approved last
November by Ohio .v oters. •
·
The House has passed its own formula, which
the senators will be considering this week. A total
of $120 million In bonds may be sold later this year,
with the proceeds going for local road, bridge and
sewe~ and water system replacement and repair.
The Senate Health, Human Services and Aging
Committee will continue to study legislation
providing treatme'n t and protection programs for
AIDS victims. A hearing on that blll Is scheduled
for Wednesday afternoon.
The following day, the Senate Finance Commit-

GOP frontrunners ambushed
du~ New Hampshire debate

1/2

--~~1'S

1 Section. 10 Po goo 26 Cento
A Multimodio lpc. Newopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Monday. February 16. 1988

By LEE LEONARD
UPI StatehoWJe Reporter
CO.LUMBUS - State legislators Will begin
consideration this week of legislation repeallng 1
Ohio's 21-month old law requiring ·the use of
·
seatbelts In motor vehicles:
The repeal movement is spearheaded by Rep .
Richard Rench, R-Milan. His bill wlil get its first
airing Wednesday afternoon · In the House
Highways and Publlc Safety Committee. '
Rench said deaths on Ohio's rural high&lt;fays
actually Increased during the . first year of
mandatory seatbelts, and Insurance rates continued to cllmb. ·
'
·
·
"While I certainly don't blame the ·Increase In
deaths on our highways on· the seatbelt law, I do
feel that we should give people the right to
choose ... " said Rench.
The Ohio Department of Highway Safety is
vigorously opposed to repe~l, saying the seatbelts

MANY ITEMS FOR .THE
LADIES REDUCED·TO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..

Ohio.consider$ repeal, ~f •mandatory seatbelts

unlikely prosecutors could ljave
won any cOnvictions becau!le
they lacked any substantia\
.
evidence.
· He pleaded guilty the following
week to another murder In the
Cincinnati area and, two month.s
later, pleaded guilty to kllliDg
nine patient~ while working as anorderly at Marymount Hospital
in London, Ky., in theearly1970s. •.
IIi ·Friday's Indictment, re-,
turned by a ' Hamilton County
~and jury, Harvey was charged
with three counts of murder and'
three counts of attempted
·murder.
Ney said Harvey 'admltted the
killings ' and attempted kllllngs
during an Interview Jan. 21 at
Lucasville prison.
"He told .us dates, times,
places and events, which we have
checked out," said Ney . "It
proved to be correct. He was
telling us the truth."
Besides the one torturing
death, Ney said Harvey poisoned
his victims with cyanide, arsenic
and rat poison.&lt; Most of the
victims in Harvey's earller confessions also had been poisoned.
He was sentenced to three
consec!ltive life .terms, makln&amp;
him ineligible for parole until he
Is at least 95 years old. .
· Harvey also worked 10years as
a morgue attendant at the
Veterans Administration Medical Center In Cincinnati, and the
FBI has · been Investigating his
activities there for several
months.

PRICE
BAHR C.LOTHIERS

•

enttne
•

Winter Clearance
Continues

Bulbs ·sprout due ·
to wann weather

Tonight, windy, cloudy. Low
20 to 25. Tuesday, sunny . High
in the mid 40s.

31-34-40-28-35-29

Serial·killer·indicted
for three more deaths

. Continued from D-1
the value of allllO shares would
CINCINNATI (UPl)
be the same as the 1()() shares Form~r hospital orderly Donald .
lnitally held. The pie Is simply
Harvey. who pleaded guilty last
beln'g divided 'Into eleven pieces year to murdering 34 people, was
rather than ten. 1f the company's Indicted Friday on charges of
per share cash dividend rate
killing three more patients- one
remains .the same, the stock- by torture - and trying to kill
holder has, in effect, been given
three others.
increased future dividend InHamilton County Prosecutor
come. However, If the dividend
ArthurNeysatdHarvey,whohas
rate is cut to adjust for the stock admitted kUling ·as many as 55
dividend or If the company does
people, already has confessed to
By PHIL JENKINS
not
pay
a
regular
cash
dividend
the
new charges.
has a strong pulse In his hand and
hospital In under two weeks,"
'
and has no intention of doing so,
hls fingertips are getting suffl·
The new .charges involve paBlack sald.
·
BffiMINGHAJ14, Ala. (UPI)- ctent oxygen."
tlents at the county-owned Drake
Thomas' left hand was !levered ' then the stockholder bas re'surgeons completed. a rare 22Hospital, a f!lcillty•for the termlThe effort to sa;ve the hand for several inches . above the wrist · celved absolutely nothing new. In
hour operation Friday to reatt- later attachment by keeping
nally lll. Twenty-one of the
last November when he fell 70 thls case, the directors of the
ach a construction worker's blood' flowing through it appar·should
explain
their
murders
to which he pleaded
company
feet from a girder at a construcsevered hand which had been ently was the first ilme the tion site in Birmingham.
action to the stockholders.
guilty last year were of Drake
. connected to blood vessels in the technique has been used in the
Much the same can be said
patients.
As he fell, the 31-year-old
man's abdomen for two months United States, authorities said.
Ney said In one case Harvey
construction worker made a about a "stockspllt" regardless
to keep the tissue alive.
told him he "tortured a Drake
Six surgical teams at the.UAB, desperate grab for a cable, which of how the stock Is divided- 2 for
· A spokesman at the University working In shifts, began attach- wrapped around his forearm and 1, 3 for 1. 3 for2orwhatever. For- patient todeath."Theprosecutor
of Alabama-Birmingham Hospi- ing bone, blood vessels, musCles, severed his left hl!nd.
example, if XYZ Company has
said Harvey told him he "took
tal said after the operation blood tendons and nerves ·Thursday at
2,000,000
shares
outstanding
and
plastic, placed It over the pa-'
· Because the cut was so ragged,
was circulating through the hand 8: 30 a. rn. They finished at about 7 doctors were unable to imme- the directors declare a 2 for 1 tient's face, removed it, let the
of Mike Thorrias. of Cleveland, a.m. Fr4day . ·
· diately reattach the hand. In- stock split, there would be patient gasp for breath, put It
.'
Ala.; but it would . be several
Thomas was in serious condi- stead, they attached It' to blood 4,000,000 shares or twice as many 'back, took It off, and kept doing It
weeks before doctors know If the tion in Intensive care. Black said. vessels In Thomas's abdomen to outstanding after the split. If the . until the patient died." ·
man will regain use of it.
Harvey was Initially indicted
"It was a long and tedious . keep blood circulating until they stock price happened to be $50 ·
"Things have gone okay to this operation. He'll probably sleep could . perform the delicate before, It would be $25 after. At
on a single murder charge
point," said hospital spokesman most of the morning and stay In surgery.
the same time_, the earnings per involving . a Drake patient In
1
Hank Black. "Th.e circulation In Intensive care a couple of day·s. . Black said the hand-saving share figure Is also halved. A Ap~ll. A television station, followthe hand has been restored. He Hopefully. he can leave the effort has been tried twice before stockholder oWning. ·100 shares 'lng Ups from hospital workers,
reported In June that many other
before the split would, of course,
In Yugoslavia - once with
own
200
shares
after.
butthe
total
suspicious
deaths at the hospital
su~cess, but there are no
be
the
same
(
slmllar
had
occurred
in the ward where ·
value
would
records of such surgery in the
to
holding
two
nlckles
Instead
of
Harvey
worked.
·United Slats.
In August, Harvey pleaded
one dime) . In otherwords, unless
Thomas, who also suffered a
to 24 counts of aggravated
the
dividend
ts
Increased,
the
gullty
broken pelvis and inter-nal Injurstockholder
receives
nothing
murder
In a plea bargain to avoid
ies In the fall, was released from
new when a company's stock Is
the death penalty. Ney said, In
the hospital on Dec. 30.
split.
answer
to protests from relatives
He returned home with his
There ts, however, a 'school of
of the victims. ·that it was
hand held to his abdomen by
thought
that·a'Jower
priced
stock
elastic bandages. He and his
becomes more "marketable'' or
Wife, Linda, were shown how to
more
attractive to the Investing
exercise the hand and fingers to
public. To a certain degree, there
keep them flexible until the
is some truth to this. For
surgery could be performed.
psychological reasons prlmarlly,
The operation was performed
some Investors prefer owning
by a team headed by orthopedic
stock In denominations of 100
surgeon Dr. Michael Miller and
called "odd lots." It Is a common
plastic surgeon Dr. Paul Sauer .
belief by many Investors that
Black said the surgeons hope
3,000
shares of .a $5 stock will
that Thomas will regain enough
In value more rapidly
appreciate
use of his hand to allow it to serve
than 1000 shares of a Si5 stock of
as a helper to his right hand.
50 shares of a $300 stock. While It
is true_that a·lower priced stock is
often more volatile, the company's earnings progress Is, by
far, a more Important Influence
on the future value of the stoek.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) In experienced Investors can
Several days of warm tempera be
misled by stock splits or. for
tures last month caused flow~r
that
matter, by low priced stO&lt;~ks-~ I
bulb.s to sprout, but Barbara
In general. A $20 stock Is not
Williams, horticulturist at Ohio
necessarily a better buy than a
State University says they bulbs
$3(1
stock. In fact, lhe higher
will be all right.
· .
priced
stock Is frequently the
" You cari't keep bulbs from
leading
company in the industry.
coming up, " Williams says.
(Mr.'
Evans
Is an Investment
"And It's·not premature for them
broker
for
The
Ohio Company In
to pe up In early February.
their
Galllpolia
office,)
Several types prod11ce leaves this
time of year ."
· Now that th\! bulbs are up, It's
time to leave them alone, Wllllams says, Don't cover them wltb
TEAR IT DOWN - New York State's lop court court has ordered
a mulch. Mulch blocks out
that 12 stories (above dotted line) be cut from thia unfinlahed
sunlight and traps moisture that
building altOS Easl961h Street In Manhattan. The court ruled that
causes rot.
.
·lh.e builder must tear down the lop dozen floors of the 31-story
..
Bulb
leaves
survive
extremely
apartment house becau!le they violate New York City's zoning
cold
temperatures.
though
some
regulations. UPI
of their Ups may die, she says.

Ohio Lottery

Olympic
results

o!ferlng outright support for the
treaty Immediately after the
Dec. 8-10 s11perpower summit in
Washington .
Earlier this week, Dole tried to
exploit his connection with Rea-·
gan by ballyhooing a letter Inwhich the president thanked him
for his support during last week's
c&lt;insideratlon of a proposed
$36.25 mlliJon In aid ·to theNlcaraguan Contra rebels.
In fact, the White House said
Reagan sent similar letters to all
Republicans who voted for the
ald request, which was killed In
the House, rendering moot a
subsequent Senate vote In favor
of the package.

*

~

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t
0/o
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OFF~

Another missile crisis?

•t-······6·••••;s.
• ••rH

-'

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more
tom-

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of judicial services. This Includes
serving as trustee and faculty
•' lecturere of lhe Ohio Judicial
College. as a member of the Ohio
Judicial Conference Executive
Corr\!lllttee and upon the Ohio
Supreme Courl Rules Advisory
Committee·.
·The Ohio Senate, the Ohio
House of RepresentatJves. and
the Ohio Association of Juvenile
Court Judges have conferred
commendations upon Judge Rad·
cllffe for his judicial service and
the Supreme Court of Ohio has
bestowed ten consecutive annual
awards upon Judge R&lt;!dcllffe for
superior judicial service.
Judge Ra&lt;!cllffe Is a native of
Chillicothe, graduatiqg from
Chillicothe High, School, Ohio
University and the University of
.Cincinnati College of Law, and
resides at 5 Edgewood Court,
with his wife Edythe. Their two
daughters. Jerllynn and Pam,
are married ani! llve'ln Phlladelphla and each have two children.
Although the election laws
dictate that the office Is nonpartisan at the general election
in November, the nominations
·are made at party primaries.
Judge Radcliffe has served the
' Democratic party from precinct ·
committeeman to delegate to

*

three presidential conventions.
The nomination of the Ia te
President John F. Kennedy at
Lo" Angele' conve ntion in 1960
and arranging the visit of vice
president candidate Lyndon S .
Johnson to Chillicothe In the fall
of 1960 were highlights of his
service.
\

..
.,

�.

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

Richmond's -goal: Clear family's name

Paile-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middaport, Ohio
Monday.~

16, 1988 .

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) - Embattled driver Tim
Richmond 'said Saturday NAS·
CAR has singled him out because
he has "long hair and a beard"
and alleged' the stock car sane·
tionlng body has taken steps
explicitly to keep him oft the race
track.
Richmond, 32, or Ashland,
Ohio, capped a week of sometim~ bizarre developments by
holding a ne*s conference at a
Daytona .Beach hotel accompan·
led , by his attorney,' Barry
Slotnick of New York. The
flamboyant and now controver·
sial 'driver was first suspended,
then reinstated byNASCARafter
failing, then passing, drug tests

Anderson and

Blocks. special ·forces conunand._--=va_nA_;_:tta~
I

111 Court Sire~
Pomeroy, Oblo
DIJ;VOTED TO THE INTEI}ESTS OF THE MEIGS.&amp;W!ON AREA

~~
~v

......................... ......_c::i.o=o

..

,

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
:?tlT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

·Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEM!lER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press'
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
[,E'M'ERS OF OPINION are welmme. They should~ less than 000 words
long. All letters are subj ect toedltlng and must be signed with name. address and
telephone number . No unslped leiters wUI be published. Letters sbould be In
good taste, addressing IssueS, not persooal.llles.

........ -

I .

Gillmor·Qtakes. career
move toward Congress

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
·COLUMBuS, Ohio (li PI)- A funny thing happened to Ohio Senate
President Paul Glllrnor on his way toward the governor's office. The
road went straight, and the Republican from Port Clinton took a
detour In the dlrectlon of Washington.
Glllrnor, 49, a popular leaderand a veteran of 22 years In the Senate,
: declared last week he will run for Congress, seeking the seat now held
: by the retiring Rep. Delbert Latta, a fixture In the House for 30years.
• · .Glllmor's move upset some people around the Statehouse, and
:· altered the dynamics of Republican polltlcs as the party heads
-toward a crucial electlon In 1990.
: The senator warmed up for the governor's office In 1986 when he
-finished a strong second to former Gov. James Rhodes In the
:Republican primary. Many thought If Glllmor, and not Rhodes, had
been the party's nominee, Gov. Richard Celeste could have been
beaten.
, At any rate, Gillmor certainly established himself as a favorite for
the GOP nomlnatlon In 1990, along with Hamilton County
Commissioner Robert A. Taft II, Rhodes's running mate In 1986, and
.Cleveland Mayor George VolnO)!!Ch, If he loses to Sen. Howard
·Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo, this year.
,
Glllmor cpuld have run for governor from a protected posltlon. He
,would have been in the middle of a four-year Senate term. And the
·Democrats look vulnerable In 1990, what with Celeste'-s constant
dilflculties .
But a career choice was made, Glllmor said he has coveted a seat In
Congress for years, but Latta .was always In the way . It's not every
year that a congressional district opens up, and If Glllmorwlns In this
.heavily Republican district , the job can be his as long as Latta had it.
There's the little matter of dislodging Latta'1s son, Robert, In the
Republican primary, Or perhaps the con~ssman himself will
_suddenly unretire, miffed at Glllmor's ~!tempt to block his
-hand-me-down strategy.
: One would think that if GIIJmor had to fight! or his next job, he"Would
make It governor, for which he has prepared and for which he could
run from ncover." .

'

Gllimor, a laywer whose family owns a huge trucking concern,
eertainly doesn' t need the S75,000·plus comgensatlon of a
co'ngressman, and it will be 10 years before anybody knows he's there,
Maybe he would rather be a legislator than an administrator. Maybe,
as some suspect, his wife, Karen, prevalled upon him that the
Washington socia 1 scene is the place to be.
; ' In making the move, Gillmor takes himself out of the track for
: governor. His spotln the field ma y be filled by Columbus Mayor Dana
- RI~art or·Rep. Bob McEwen.
·. Perhaps more important, Gillmor Is abandoning the Senate just
when Republicans need to maintain their 18-15 majority to keep·the
·Only base they have in state government and set the stage for 1990.
~ · Democrats have a good chance of taking over the Senate this year,
- and although Glllmor insists he 'll help· run the Senate Republican
: campaigns, the burden will fall on .Senate President Pro Tempore
Stanley Arotlotf of Cincinnati.
,
'
Gillmor's absence next year also Is likely to touch off an internal
· .squabble- win or lose- within the Senate Republican caucus.
. ·. Glllmor, one of. the few senators trusted by everyone, has held a
:feisty caucus togeth er and when he leaves, there are several wild
; Indians ready to challenge Aronoff's leadership.

WASBINGTON - 1'he U.S. rles, the Reagan administration
armed forces are reared up for has been deliberately thwartlng
all-out war, but the only action a credible plan that has the
they are likely to see Is what the bipartisan support of Congress.
Since 1986, Congress has
Pentagon calls 1special opera·
lions ot "low·lntenslty conflict" passed two laws · on Special
- the kind of thing that happens Operations and Low Intensity
In the Persian Gulf; Lebanon and Conflicts (SO/ LIC). Because of
bureaucratic foot dragging and
Grenada.
The special operl!tions forces ' secret opposition by Reagan
that fight those mini-battles appointees, Congress may have
should be trained well, lead well to pass a third blll to do what It
and unfettered by . bureaucratic shouldn't have to do - create a
hassle. But the biggest battle that rlith military service for special
.
American servicemen have operations.
Congress ·has mandated three
fought tor the past two years has
been In the halls of the Pentagon things; the creation of a special
and White House. That has been assistant to the preslclent on
the battle to create a decent SO/LIC; a new mllltary com·
leadership structure tor spet:lal inand under a four·star general
to ci&gt;ver special operations In all
operations forces.
services; and .the new
military
Because of lnter·servlce rival·

position or assistant secretary of
defense tor SO/ LIC.
Most Americans assume thjlt
when Congre!!S passes a law,
bureaucrats dutifully carry It
out. Wrong.
·
The SOL/ LIC law has ~orne
stuck In "malicious lmplementa· .
tlon" : the appearance that olfl·
clals are carrying out a program
while they are r~ally bogging !tin
quicksand.
Many experts have openly
speculated that If the program
had been Implemented earlier,
the Iran/contra mess might have
been prevented.
First, the administration put a
Navy admiral In the new job or
SO/LIC special assistant .to the
president. His expertise-Is In the
nuclear Navy, notspeelalforces.
•
·

.---.._a.._,__

1

L .

D

h

I

.

,;I've been working six years on this masterpiece and what do you do?"

•

Instead of a staff, be waapven an
Air Force colonel with no IP'Cial
operatlons experience either. So
the top brass managed to bury
the SO/LIC assignment with men
more Interested In other duties.
Secol!d, when tbe Pentagon
created the new command as
required by law, they took an old
C(/mmand - the Readiness Com·
mand that was always a back·
water In military circles, dusted
It ott and renamed It the U.S.
Command for Special Opera·
lions. It Is headquartered In
Tampa, Fla.
Why Tampa? One pro·speclal
~orces general said that "Tampa
was as far south as the Defense
Department could ·go without
placlngthecommandoverseas."
Finally, the job of assistant
secretary of defense lor SO/LIC
remains unfilled, despite a pool
of able candidates. Tbe Pentagon
first picked an Air Force general
whose name was later removed
from consideration. Our sources
say that the man had no real
special operations experience,
had missed the Korean War and
saw only 10 months In Vietnam.
The next candidate was a
Justice Department official ,
Kenneth Bergquist,. a friend · of
Attorney General Edwin Meese.
Bergquist had vigorously . op·
posed the SO/LIC legislation. He
knew the business of special
operations only through the re··
serves and correspondence
courses. Opposition to Bergquist
on the HUI ws exceptional. A few
members or Congress who op·
posed the nomination, such as
Sen. John Kerry, D·Mass., had
their own agendas; Bergquist
allegedly had asked Justlc De·
partment staffers to dig liP some
dirt on the senator - an allega·
lion that Bergquist later denied
under oath.

1

CHICAGO (UPI) - t&lt;n arl)ltra·
tor Sunday ruled In favor of the
Chicago .Cubs In their salary
dispute with National League
Most Valuable Player Andre
· Dawson, who . will earn $1.85
million for the 1988 season
Instead of the $2 million he
wanted.
Stephen Goldberg, a Northw·
estern University law professor,
announced his decision two days
after hearing four h!lurs of
testimony from both sides In the
salary arbitration battle.
Dawson, who accepted a relatlvely low contract of $500,000 to
play for the Cubs In 1987, sought a
$2·mllllon multl·year contract .
CELEBRATES VICTORY- Stock car drlver ·Bobby Allison Is
after hitting 49 home runs and
covered with beer In the winner's circle after driving his Buick to
driving In 137 runs last season.
I · win the Daytana 1100 Sunday. (UPI)
The one · year · contract
awarded by the arbitrator Still
makes Dawson the highest·pald
member of the Cubs. Pitcher
Rick Sutcliffe earns approxl·
mately $1.8 million.
If be had won his case, Dawson
would have broken the previous
For the second consecutive for a 71.4 percent 'shooting arbitration award of $1.975 mil·
year a talented group of basket· · average. Strong on rebounding, lion given to New York Yankees
ball players form the Southeast' . he has swept .the boards for 98 first baseman Don Mattingly.
ern Ohio Area will board a jet In · offensive caroms and 148 on the
"We're glad the process Is
New Y'ork lor a tllght to the 'defensive glass. Bartrum Is over," Cubs Vice President Don
Epropea:n Continent to partlcl· credited' for 29 assists, 15 blocks
pate In contests under th~ auspl· and 19 steals.
ces of the International Sports
Bissell, senior center,ls also an
Exchange. As last year, the outstanding player for the t.Ja·
young athletes will be under the rauders. Brent has an overall
The maroon squad from the
supervision of Mike Meeks, head shooting average of 43.5 In field
Meigs Junior High School fin·
coach of the Alexander Spartans. . goals as he canned 68 of 156. He !shed the 1987-88 basketball sea·
The trip scheduled to leave- has had an outstanding year son with a perfect13·0 record and
April 1st will depart from the from the charity stripe hlttlng on won the Alexander girl's tourna·
United States for the continent 53 of 68 attempts for a 77.9 ment at New Marshfield.
and return ten days later. Euro· average (again just through the
After gaining a first ropnd bye,
pean contacts of the ISE are · Logan contest) .
· the Marauderettes met VInton
finalizing competition at In·
. Brent has snagged 48 offensive County In tlie tourney opener.
ilsbsuck &amp;1\d Salzburg,
Ql · rebounds and 84 defensive re·
Placing three player,s In double
·Alllltrta's moat beautiful cities. bounds am! his ass\sUotal stands figures, Meigs easily defeat~
In addition' to those places, the at 29. He has· blocked 14 of the the Lady Vikings 58 to 41. Kim
plans call for stops In West opponents shots and has pilfered Hannlag ted the way with 18
Germany, Switzerland, Llchten· the ball15 times. On the Inside, points followed by Trlcla Baer
stein and Italy with travel Blsselils one of the most physical with 16 and Reva Mulllen's 14.
through the world famous Alps players in the TVC and can be Also scoring for Meigs were
and a visit to the castle of the counted on to score either on the Chrissy Weaver with 6and Verna
"Mad" King Ludwig.
field goal attempt or a foul call or Compston and Mary Cremeans
The competltlon Is sanctloned both.
wl.th 2 each. .
by the Ohio High School Athletic
The cost of the journey for each
In the championship contest,
Association with only one restrlc· player will be 1695 dollars for all Meigs hooked up with Albany, a
lion. Seniors who plan to partie!· expenses, except personal pur· team who !wince had threatened
pate In spring sports are limited chases. Addltlonal monies will be to ruin the Maroon's hoi)es of a
to two International games. No needed for this "once In a perfect season. This game was no
' sprin·g · sports ... no limitation. llfetlme" opPOrtunity. Ther~ are exception as the Red Devils put
Only senlprs are eligible for the somf! projects being planned to .together . a torrid display of
help the two Meigs players to defense holding the high scoring
spring trip.
Meigs' J.R. Kitchen was se· raise the necessary funds lor Meigs offense to their lowest
lected .b y Meeks for the 1987 their trip. A teen dance will be point output of the season.But the
sojourn. ''this season he has held at the Pomeroy VIllage Hall Maroon defense also proved to be
Invited Michael Bartrum and on Saturday night (Feb 20th) by tough and the Marauderettes
Brent Bissell to participate In the the group called the Concerned brought home the first plaCe
games. ·
·
Citizens for Better Education. AU trophy with a 31·24 win.
Bartrum, a senior forward for profits from thl~ activity will be
Trailing 15 to 19 With 1: 30 left In
the Marauders has led lhe team donated to defray expenses for the third period, Klm Hanning hit
this season wit~ a 23.6 point per ' Bartrum and Bissell.
a 12 footer from the ·baseline and
game scoring average (all fig·
Individual sponsors and bus!· at the :29 second mark, Mary
ures • quoted are through the ness places who may wish to Cremeans ripped down an offen·
LOgan contest). He has a total of cOntribute to this fund may do so slve rebound and put It back up
331 points through 14 games and, by contacting Mike at 992-5634 or and In for a 19·19 tie. '
'
as of the Logan game, still had Brent at 667·3372 or rhay call Mr.
' In the last period, the Meigs
six regular ·season contest and ' Fenton Taylor at Meigs High defense, sparked by the aggres- •
tournament play remaining.
School to pledge support. Those slve play_of Verna Compston and
Mike has a 44.3 percent aver· who contribute can be assured It Mary Cremeans held the Albany
age from the field (126of284) and will be appreciated by both squad to only one field goal and
has canned 70 of 98 free throws athletes.

SEO cagers to tour
Europe later .this ·year

We tend to be&lt;)ome so preoccu· Ism.
.
leave the past 20years wholly un- tare the other. Lewis Is understanpled with the blur of daUy events"There Is something to this. noticed:
dably conlldent that, under liberal
what Bush said to Rather, what's Democratic states, obliged to
"There were excesses and leadership, America would win
happening lnNlcaragl,ll\,... that we respond to the will of their electo· flaws In developing the res·
the contest.
.
have no ttrne to notewhatourpolil- rate, did temper capitalism so as tralnts society Imposed on cap!- '
How blind our liberals are to
lcal opponents are thtoklng about to provide for social needs, labor tallsm. The rise of the right cor· the great Impulses that underlie
longer·range matters, even on rights, a modicum (sic) of wei- resPOnded to a felt need to cor· what President •Reagan, In .his
those rare occasions when they . fare. Not the free market alone, reel them.''
State of the Union speech, rlptly ,
·
'
deign to tell \Is,
.
but that capacity lor reform and , Thus she accounts for such ttl- called "the glo)lal deriiQcratlc re;
· So I was particularly grateful adjustment, propelled them so ,convenlently formidable modern
volutlon'.'! Does anyon.;&gt; serl·
the other !lay when Flora Lewis stunningly far ahead of commun· political phenomena as Reagan,
ously suppose that the Nlcara· .·
devoted most of one of her col· ism's results.''
Thatcher, Kohl, Takeshita and guan freedom fighters are dying
umns to certain comments made
for the right to food stamps?
In other words, OK, we leftists Chlrac, and glid~s past sttch wei·
recently at some wospecl!led II· were spectacularly wrong when farist disasters as liberalism's That Jonas Slvlmbl's guerrillas
beral sloree she attended. Lewis Is we predicted the demise of capital· inadvertent destruction of. the
In the Angolan bush are battl)ng
well situated to pick ap this sort or Ism. But, paradoxically, we ac- black family In America.
to establish a minimum wage?
chitchat, being a widely traveled tually deserve the credit for its
That
Afghanistan's mujaheddln
But not to worry: There Is a
New York Times columnist. Ea- survival. For It was the hard left- golden opportunity for liberal·
would ,settle for the promise of a
vesdrop with me, then; as a select communism - that "provoked" Ism directly ahead:
secure old age? Every one of
group of New York liberals seeks, changes In capitalism, which the
these rebel forces, and others
"Anew, or rather revived, com·
over port (I'm sure the men have soft left - liberalism - then petition between communists and
like them elsewhere, are resl~l·
given up cigars), to rn.;ke sense of worked to bring about, "temper- the West on social and economic
lng communism because they re·
the past few decades and. the Ing" c~pltalism with the labor · .terms would be good for every·
cognize It for the obscene Insult
forseeable future:
rights a .''modicum" of welfare, body. And the West can be confito human nature that It Is, They
"Communist officials now con· etc. (which capitalism natually dent, as long as It preserves the
understand precisely why Pres!·
cede that they underestimated would never have lnstltuted with· will and abUity to attend to' the
dent Reagan called It "the focus
capitalism's 'resilience.' They out such external pressure.) Here needs of Its own people."
of evil in the modern world.''
argue; however, that they are we .are being treated to a sophls·
As long as Ignorance has a cer·
In short, we sbould let the heroic
dealing with a different kind of tlcated reprise of the old canard struggle between the free , world
lain rude strength, the liberals
capitalism because of changes that FOR "saved" free enterpi'lse. and the slave deteriorate Into a
will survive. But they will never
provoked by the Bolshevik re·
But Lewis generously does not contest over which can out-weiagain prevail.
volutlon and the rise of social-

two

A Democratic Cabinet ---,---G_eo__::r~=-e_M_ce_·ove~r_n

.rfoday in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday. Feb. 15, the 46th day of 1986 with 321) to follow .
• This Is Presidents Day.
• The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
: The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars ·are Venus and Jupiter.
' Those born on this dale are under the sign of Aquarius. They include ,
italian astronomer and physicist Gallleo Galllel In 1564; jeweler
Charles Tiffany In 1812; feminist pioneer Susan B. Anthony In 1820;
political leader and diplomatist Elihu Root In 1845; philosopher and
·mathematician Alfred North Whitehead In 1861; songwriter Harold
Arlen in 1905; actors Joh'n Barrymore In 1882, Cesar Romero In 1907
~age S1), Harvey Korman In 1927 (age 61) and Claire Bloom In 1931
' (age 57); John B. Anderson, the 1980 Independent candidate for
president, In 1922 (age 66); and actress Jane Seymour and singer
Melissa Manchester In 1951 (both age 37) ,
.' On this date In history:
: .In 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine exploded In Havana harbor,
::kllllng-260 cte":men and leading to a U.S. declaration of war against
.Spain.
,
• In 1933, President-elect Franklin Roosevelt narrowly escaped
assassins tlon In Miami when a fanatic fired several bullets at him,
fatally wounding Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak lnste.ad.
•.. In 1942, the British , bastion of Singapore surrendered to the
. ,
,.
Japanese army In World War II.
: .In 1982, the oiJ.drllllng r~g Ocean Ranger capsized and sank Jn a
storm ott Newfoundland. All 84 people aboard were lost.

•

v
'

businessman and attorney, to
develop a modern and rational
U.S. transportation system.
Secretary of labor: John
Joyce, president of the bricklay·
ers' union, would be effective In
relating labor's concerns to Congress and the public.
Secretary of Interior: Former
Wisconsin Sen. Gaylord Nelson
- one of the natlon's most
respected environmentalists would bring experience, Insight

' I

and Inspiration to the post.
Secretary of housing and urban
development: Mayor Andrew
Young of Atlaata .or Mayor
Richard Arrington of Blr·
mlngham would both be superb
choices.
Secretary of energy: Callfor·
nla Rep. Fortney Stark Is a m~an
of vision and courage who would
dlstjngulsh himself as chief of the
nation's energy resources and
policies.

Berry s World ·

c
r

•

.ROCK SPRINGS - Rebound· , Shelly Stobart, of Meigs , led all
lng and a tough Meigs defense 1~ scorers as she garnered 19 tallies
the Marauderettes of Coach and Missy Woods finished close
Roger Foster to a 83-48 win ove~ behind In double figures adding
the visiting Lady Tornadoes at 17 polpts tor the'winners. Stobart
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium plcki!d up 11 of the Marauder's
before a parents night turnout rebount!s and Woods was ereSaturday.
dlted.with ten.
The contest started with each
Tammy Wright led the Meigs
team trading goals and was tied five In assists with four and had
at four all with two minutes two steals. Jody Taylor contrlbhavlng elapsed. From that point, uted to the effort with three
the taller Meigs squad sleadlly usllts and a steal and Stobart
pulled away from !he game, but had two assl,ts.
out·manned, Southern five anct
Meigs committed 21 turnovers
led by five (17·12) after the flrs,t to the Tornadoes 13 and were
eight minutes Ql play.
use-.d 22 personal fouls comDurlngthenextthreequarters, pated to 17 for the upriver
the hosts used a pressure defense visitors'.
and the rebouac!lq 11arne to
Southern had •n overall 31
stymie the Southern attack. The • percent average from the floor
Meigs crew out·rebounded the (18 of 59) and hit 11 of 24 tree
Tornadoes 57 to 20 durlna the throwsfor45percent.Meltsdlila
contest and their defeue forced Uttle better percentase Wile
the vtaltors to ahoot the 12 to 18 ~ the floor gettlna ~ of 72 .to
toot sbota, aliPwlq tbet1l lew drQJ..(kJlercenl) and canned 13
opportunltiatoPtclollr.Meap· of lffroir! ·the toulllne tor a 59
wblle, Meigl wa• able to get the pereeat average.
ball to the open player 011 the
Box ICOI'tl:
. - . IJIIICIIa•al tilt &amp;lhll tor aa
~ - . Greathoule
ell)' buket. . .
. J.-1¥1 liiD '7-0-3-1?; T. Bleile

=

TOI'llldo tonvanl Ceyalll HID
. lell till aoaar.nt$111 bptb
\

media. Follrs Uke that. "

S3.2S

CROW'S FAMILY REST AURAN'I

PH. 992-5432

cllpert· . J:
t W0-2. .
.
IIIII 111"' ' . . . Wtadl '7#17;
·
Stoll'ai't&amp;N-11; l'r)-a.o.G-41; Jody

llld "

jl!tlll$ 1t
Caroml oft tile gllll.

'·

1.0.!'-8; !VIDI 2-(1.5.8; Winebl'tll!tlr MO* JOIIIIIIOII 3-0-0-6;

'

Taylor 1·0·1:j;i Beth Ewing 3·0.0·
6; Carr 1'().()·2: Smith ].().5-7;
Jennifer Taylor '0·0-H; Wagner
1·0-ll·2; Wright 0·0-0; Meter 0.0·0;
Rouse 0.0.0; Nelson 0-0.tJ.
Score by quarters:
Southern .................. 12 23 35 48
Meigs ...................... 17 33 51 63
In the first game of the
evening, the Marauderette . JV
team rolled over their Southern
counterpartas by a 42 to 17,score.
The Tomalloes were unable to
chalk up a score In the first
quarter of play and.found them·
selves down by ~at the halftime
Intermission.
Meigs thtew up tleht, press·
1ng defellll! forcing the visitors to
turn the ball over without aetllna
aaooclshot.
·
Scorilll for the viiiUJII Toma·
does wu Trlcla Wolfe with five
points, Wendy Wolfe and Ingels
with 4 each and P91 ..-1 Van
Meter each plckitl up two.

a

Kelly Smith took ~

hGnon

with 12 lor till Marauder~.
Teammatu JeUifer Taylor
added 1&amp;, Krlllla 1taa1w Dilled

8, MillY· NeiM ··l as SballtiOII
N - . H 8 llil4 ' aad Kim
EwiJil, Amy~ lltd .........
Kina hit tor two aplln.

.

POMEROY OH.

flaturing Jlenttlcky Fried Chicken •

three foul shots. Trlcla Baer, who
had a game high 15, hit for 8
points and Mary Cremeans
chipped In with 4 In that final,
· crucial period to account lor the
whining margin.
Scoring for Meigs besides Baer
(15) and Cremeans (6) were
Reva Mullen 5, Kim Hanning 4
and Chrissy Weaver one.
·
Previously, .In tbe season fl· ,
nate, thl! little .Marauderettes
played Southern . In a make·up
game on the Middleport hard·
wood and wrapped up .their
undefeated season with a- 45-24
victory.
For Meigs, Kl m Hanning
pumped In 17 points to lead all
scorers. Trlcla Baer added 10,
Reva Mullen 8, Mary Cremeans8
and Tara Gerlach 2.
For Southern 'i Duhl had 11
points ·including two thtee poln·
ters.-th.e last a thirty footer to pull
the visitors to within six at the
half . .
MEIGS MAROON RECORD
Meigs 51 .......... ........ Aibany44
Meigs .Sl. ... Federal Hocking 14
Meigs 48 ....... Vinton County 17
Meigs 45 ................. Eastern. 16
Meigs 59 .......... .: ... Southern 14
Meigs 37 .............. Gallipolis 33
Meigs 48 .......... ........ Albany 45
Meigs 59 .................... Athens 7
Meigs 40 .... Federal Hocking 19
Meigs 42 .............. Gallipolis 34
Meigs 58 ....... Vinton County 41
Meigs 31. ................. Albany 24
Meigs 45 ............... Southern 24
The Maroon offense averaged
47.2 points per game and the
defense gave up an average of
25.5 per contest.

Meigs girls post ·Q348 v~tory

·.

'Try using a couple of quick 1/n«&lt; bashing the

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

Junior high girls results

f

As a candidate f9r the Demo- Allee Rlvlln , an economist and
cratic presidential nomination In former staff director of the
1968, former Sen. Eugene Congressional Budget Office,
McCarthy released the names of would be well equipped for the
those he would appoint to the world of the Treasury.
Cabinet lf he became president; ·
Attorney general: Rep. Wll·
At the time, this wanegarded as llam Gray of Pennsylvania has
rather eccentric. ·
the qualities of mind, heart and
But the ·Idea of announcing spirit to be a great atlorney
one's Cabinet In advance has general. .
considerable merit. It gives
Ambassador to the United
voters an Indication of the kind of Natlons: If the United Nations Is
leadership a potentlal president to achieve the vital role u should
would bring to the country, and It play In world affairs, the United
adds a note of Interest to the States should have a ·strong,
campaign.
lnfluentlill ambassador In New
It might be helpful to the York. I recommend former Pres·
current contenders to repeat !dent Jimmy Carter.
McCarthy's Idea of 20 years ago.
Secretary or. education: If the
Unlike In Britain, the· American . Rev. Jesse Jackson does not
political system does not provide succeed In his bid for the White
a "shadow cablnet"ln opposition House, he would be my choice to
to the government. Thus Is Is Inspire and lead a greater
especially wise lor Democrats to national effort for educatlon.
think early about the next Demo·
Secretary of health and human
cratlc Cabinet.
services: Former Rep. Martha
In that spirit, I would like to Keys or Kansas,.. who served on
suggest some names for consld· the Ways and Means Committee,
eratlon should the next president would be an effective
be a Democrat.
spokesperson,
Secretary of state: Rep. Lee
Secretary of agriculture: The
Hamilton of Indiana, who co· agricultural problem Is a compll·
chaired the congresslonallnves· cated one that Is closely tied to
ligation of Iran-contra scandals, the global economy. A man who
Is a man of absolute personal throughly understands these In·
ln'tegrlty and thoroughly terrelatlonshlps Is bwayne An·
grounded In International dreas, president of Archer·
affairs.
Daniels· Midland · Co. and a
Secretary of defese: Former longtime student of agriculture.
Iowa Sen. John Culver Is the kind
Secretary of commerce:
ot tough·mlnded, clear·headed Henry Klmelman, the highly
person needed to ride herd on the successful finance director of my
vast Defen~e Department. Paul 1972 presidential campaign, and
Warnke, a Washington attorney · a formerVirpn Islands minister
with considerable experience In of commerce, would be lmaglna·
defense and arms ' control mat· live and forceful. ·
ters, also would be an admirable
Secretary of transportation: I
defense secretat)'.
would trust Miles Rubin, a public
Secretary of the treasury: spirited, talented washlngton '

taken two days apart.
..
NASCAR schedule.
attempt to race actually, and get
NA:SC~. however, refuses to
"I bad hair and a beard," said a license and attempt to clear UP.
clear Rlcbmond to drive until he Richmond, wearing wire-framed the rumors that have sprung up
hands over medical records from sunglasses , flowing hair and a In the last year," he said. " MX
his stay last year at the Cleve·
trimmed beard . "I tell it !Ike ills . No. 1 goal Is to clear my famll~
land Clinic, where be was admit·
"My biggest (complaint) has name. My No . 2 goal Is to clear .
ted with a severe case of been safety. That's not the norm. my own name. "
pn.eumonla. Richmond said he I bucked the system, supposedly .
Slotnick, who represented sub·
would never tum over, those 1 ,don't feel that I've done way vigilante Bernhard Goetz,
recordS -It has become a matter anything to hurt the sport.' •
said It Is likely the matter wil\
of "principle", he said - bu'b ,
end up In court, and said the
planned to give NASCAR a letter
NASCAR announced Th11rsday Incident has ''defamed and dei
Saturday saying-he was healthy
Rlc)lmond tested positive for gradedlmy client." · .
.
:·
and fully recovered.
high dosages of the decongestant
''The . release of lnforma Uon
Dr. Ron Hinebaugh, .the track Sudafed and Ibuprofen, the ac· that Tim had failed the urine test
physician at Daytona Interna·
tlve Ingredient In the pain killer and had Illegal drugs In his
tiona! Speedway, did not clear Advll. Richmond, who said · he system was untrue," Slotnick
Richmond Saturday, so he did
took normal amounts of the said. "!The cold medicine) Is a.
not drive In Sunday's Daytona
drugs to fight a chronic sinus far cry frot:n t~e prohibited,
500, the premier event on the condition and a cold, said NAS- narcotic drugs as alleged In the
CAR VlcePresldentforCompetl- media. The pain and suffering
tlon Les Richter told him he had and damage to his family an~
tested jlositlve for al'(lphetam· himself has been Immeasurable.
lnes and opiates, and never For some reason, which we are
Grenesko said. • 'The most lmpor·
Informed him otherwise.
not aware or, there has· been an
tant thing Is that Andre Dawson
He said the original drug test attempt to keep him out of thl~
will play rlghttle~ for us In 1988. · came .at his suggestion In an (race)."
. ,
We're glad this Is behind us, and effort : to clear his name. In
Richmond has denied ever
we' can · prepare · for the 1988 missing all but eight races last using Illegal drugs , but said . he
baseballseason."
year, rumors circulated about antlclpated there would be a.n
"Whatever the numbers, It
Richmond's condition, and sto· effort to keep him out of NASseems Inappropriate to me for
rles of drug troubles were com· CAR. He did not have a ride for
Andre Dawson to have a one-year
mon. Slotnick said Richmond the 1988 season, despite winning
contract," said Dawson's agent,
anticipated trouble with NAS· seven races In 1986 and two last
Dick Moss, who said he would
CAR and took a drug test before year.
·
talk length of contract arid other
coming to Daytona that was
"I basically , very -simply did
details with Grenesko In the next
negative.
not, do not apd never will trust
couple of weeks.
.
The suspension kept Richmond NASCAR, " Richmond said. "The
Dawson joined the Cubs last
out of the Busch Clash last power within Is too large for little
. March· as a free agent from
Sunday.
'
Tim Richmond or whoever to
Montreal and agreed to the
"I came here to race. to deal with at this point."
. $500,000, one.year contract with
Incentives. Alter Dawson's MVP·
season, however; . he and Moss
were seeking a $10-mllllon, four·
year pact with the Cubs.
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
Chicago, taking the line of most
YOU CAN EAT
other major·league clubs, refused to offer Dawson more than
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
FOR JUST
a two-year deal. As a result,
I
Dining
Room
Only
I
Dawson exercised his option to
Served with whipped-potatoes. chicken gravy, col,e
go to ai'bllratlon.
slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry, no substoThe CUbs were able to cite
tutes except beverage with additional price.
figures showing that few, It any,
major·league players , receive a
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL~
400:percent Increase ov~r their
Initial salary through the arbltra·
tion process.

.Dawson loses ·salary dispute

Out-welfaring ·c ommUDISm _.;._.___..:.:.W-=il=lia::.:.:m.:...R::.:;us::.:·.:.:.:he:.:_r
•

The Daily S8ntinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AT ELBERFELDS

The Daily Sentinel .
CUSPS lfl·. . )
A DMIIlon ol M .. bnedla. Inc.

'

'

Published every afternoon,

Mondo~~y

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po-

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'llteDally !lontlnet onal, &amp;or 12 mOIIIb
bull. Credit ~I be .... carrt• Ndl

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Mondly.

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NU'ION.U liAIIOftALL - ·
New 'Vert •• 0......1•

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. , . . . . . , . . . Cilll

:..!v·.,-;:.-=:~.
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...............

. CALGARY, Alberta (uPI) -A
day of tragedy ended on a final
note of adness for Dan Jan sen
when he crashed Into a wall and
wu eliminated from the 500meter speedskating event Sunday only hours after learning his
slater had died of leukemia.
As the world sprint champion,
Jansen was considered one of the
stronge!lt medal hopes on a weak
United States contingent entered
In the Winter Olympics. He also
had a special personal reasonJor
doing well, dedicating his efforts
to the 27-year-old sister he left
behind In a West Allis, Wis.,
hospital.
.
The sister, Jane Beres, died
Sunday morning, shortly after
Jansen spoke to her on the phone,
and when his turn came to skate .
seven hours later, he could stay
on his feet barely 10 seconds.
"I had always planned. on
skating because that Is what
Jane would have wanted me to
do," said Jansen, 22.
'
Skating In the second pair of
the competition, the 6-foot, 185pounder appeared. deeply un. nerved by the events of the day.
He was called for a false start on
his first attempt off the line. On
his second attempt he tripped
over Jtls skates, fell to the Ice and
slid backwards Into the retaining
wall.
Jansen, In realization of what
had happened to him, held both
11ands·straight up, then bent over
and covered his face before he
was consoled by teammates ,
friends and his fiancee, Canadian
speedskater Natalie Grenier.
. "I wasn't gripping the ice real
well," Jansen said. "I could feel

. . . . . _"11&amp; M I f'"n.MU

C.llln..., ... IMtllt.

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N.w .lent)' 1., .......... ••

, .. a.... ..........

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M

LA Lalltn IlL . . . . ..
. . . . . Ill, hrtluiiD

.

"......., . . . . . . . . .

~

Nc...._, .. .._,..... n
N~ll..ltliiiiMaiA*t•
............ "-rwall• ......

Dt.wr tl1; ll&amp;alt.

.,.,.... ue. u. a..,. ••

N_._ ..,...

lh.-IQ'10aDWS

MJtwaMtt at Wlllll...... I p.m • .

·.

Oak lliuMr a •-• ........ &amp;I
Pte... lql 11. .,........ .
.... c.. Cia II. ..
'hall 4t

P·•·

4!.,
.................................
•

AU•• M Q ·i cap. 1:11
Sa(rame• at Clne:IUII. t :• p.m.

...........u- ...........

New olene,. 11: Newl'crk, 7:• p.m.
PI, ...,,,.. at Dtlntt, '1':Jt , .m.

"-'• v.a-. F...,...l1.... 114tl~
IJIO.•O.

Golilustate- MSu AlllNie,l: • p.111.
DaUu I&amp; 5eatle, I J.m .
Pol'tl.ull ill Uta'- 1: • p.m.
• • • at n.u, t: II p.m.

Vol II

~~.

Wtrtlallllll• Ckr t1', 'biN II

,..._,'sGa.n

Sacrarnt ... at AUa.ta...,..
.~ rwtl~ ·~

Ntw Ytrll al llllllua, atclilll.

GoNeaSialeata. ...a,aliM

81· f n i11•ol

'".,.~,..,;.,,.,j

'*'

.,,.

.......

.

TIPWedr.' l
Ohlo Collep a-ketball Sc::hethl~
lilollllay
Xav~r at Ddroll .
SW Ml~l Sl a&amp; ClenlaiMI 81
florida III.Wrwatlotlal at Mr•
Clncl .... l at Lo•¥ilte

Ne.U CaroN• tt. Vlfllllla U
\ljd ......
Not~

Dame lS, tlCIA M

,,..,

"-'tlo• .71, Orepa 8&amp;. IZ

.

_
, ., .. ,,'".·, t:.. lll'fll'
llitocll~lll"'f

R.o·•ufh

,.; ,

\'a_,...._ Su&amp; M•rray Sl
.
'l'ltNa;r, Feb II
CedarYIUe .at W...

..\k1'01117. Brooldyll,.
AUealwa;r •· Kea,.. 1'7
-'merlr:u 7'1. NC·WIIInlqtaaa
i\Minpi;IN U. 8eatle)' '11

Urb.-..atlllaiMe
Dlfh1.a Mt l'eriiCNI Naal't'll!

011111 Demlllku at ala Gralll!l•
Dybat ........
Wew.dll)', Febn

Bo.aoaU.II,No~Gte••n•

ara.ktalll, New Verlt ll . 7t

~kMII . . IUdlnll
lklfalo St. tiS, 8rO(!IIpiN'I Sl. M
C.Y.elll., SUNY·Pun!._. 7ol

C*lo Sl at IIUnaU.
BowlhiK Gl'f'u at Wntern Mldt

EuW'rn MJdl aiKe• Slaa•
U.kl ~nlw at Miami
Cll'\'l'lutl Sl .. TelltdO

Ca ...... U,VermaMU
Colomru 17, Browa u
CoraeiiM, Yllltt!
· Dow Mill Ill, S.udl&amp;mpiORII!I

Wri&amp;M Sl at .\lr.roa
C11pta.l al Baklwi•M'al'-ee
" 'ltlfnbHJI: .. Hdktttera:

Dl"erellll, Lal-,rdk' 4K
Duq_.lll' 71, St. Jo1tpll'1 (PL I 15
Elmira IJ. "'"ettallla sa. 'HI
.
F. DlcW . .n'U, 81. FrUel1 INYJ 14

Kea.,o11 aal Marilf'IIM
Mo•l Unloa al M11.11F.I11111,.n
Obkl N'orptem a1 OUtrtllf'ia

Fordham 11, St Petll!r'a . (:tOT)
Gaalioa II, BuH. 71
Georptown_71, S,ruaR tl

i\lePfony ,(fa) at Wo.cer
C~ow Kl!~w

at Ollllo Wet~III'Jan
Obtorlln al lkoniaun

GroW' DIJ ~. Til~ ..

FIIIIIIA)' at DI'ILa••
Hiram al Greft' Cit)' (Pa) '

lartf•nl ':It, New llam•l~ 71

Hanardll;, ,.._8011 SI

nUI"!''IIIa,, rrh 111

l ... w.. Sl, O.""a U
le•71. M......&amp;u 7t Hli'J
Mlllka 7t, Hobart 'II
·••• Carroll tl, WMII. A .ltll. 14
Lat. Sallfo lS. FalrtiiPid n
LeW.. M, Hd~tn 7t

SQutfl L'•rall• al Ct~~oeiU.U
!tll. ,Jo_.pt. U.. J at Albland
Dll)'lon lll Notrlf' Damt'
FrWAJ, Fll'b II
No !!:aunt'S M'IWduiHI
Saturday, Fl!'b!fl
Nol1hw~ll'rnllt Ottto Slatt
Kul Sl •I Tollf'do
Miami at Ct'lllral Mllt'h
Wf'Mrrn Mlcl1 at Ofrola Vnlw
Evlln""'lk- ai -X•vl•r
Youn~aown St It TtM Tr.t'h
Dayton ~oi .Loyok lUI)
Clewel•wd Sl al 1'ad ..raiMJ ll•• l
Cbtra~ stat Allroa
Marl.. lla Ill Baldwln-" 'allac•
Mount Union a&amp; t:apltal
Ohio W~y»n at Q.,ldrlhe,.
Ohla Nonhern u Mu!Wh~Jum
Olk'rhrln »I M'lt.,..nhrrs
Ohf'rlln lit Alk&gt;a:tw.y
Dt~ IM"ttn

p,..,.,

lleomfteN 8$, M, 8(. ...._ H
Nerwkll IM, Bl.tee II
Temjh 1!. G. • • •....• 17

This week's games

"

c..u,.,".

'-•1.-o•fl&gt;tll Rr•.wll•

LA Cllpptt"i I&amp; lA Wilen. •tcM

•

l.o)'ela (Mill.) 7t, Waper U

-Marllll•. t...,llludM
Mrr 111. s.nonr.u. 81 1101'1
MIMif'bln'JW, Ba!e~~ 81
Navytl, Eul Cartll• 81 120T)
Ntw Haven M, Lowell '111
New .Jel'M.'y Tedl72, St ina~ Ttch 51
New Yart&amp; Ttc:h tt. M~t~y 11
Norwich N, Thomu Coli. 82
Syaclr. 7t IUIII·' • Coli. 17
Pna 11, Dartmo.th II
Peni. St. 11, M••('hll"srttsl3
Pltt!iburxh 1\1, Vllllno- 75
Pllt·BradfOf'd to. st. Vlnclf'nt U
Plaulburall1t, OnmntM St . 73 !20TI
Rrr ,., l\lfn&gt;d u
Kltodf' blaad 83, St . BonaYntuno 7ll
Robrrt Morrt... iii, st . Frand• ( PL J &amp;3
a.~&amp;.,.Carn41f'n lt, Mon&amp;clalr St. 53
S!k:l't'd H#art 15, KP#IW' St. H
Salem St. tl, w~ttlpld St.n
SliP• H . NI&amp;«IU'II 7&amp;, •

11J C»...,.

M'UU!il-l•r lll Kl'n)·tnll
Jl'-PU Ft Waynr a&amp; ,\...,hllllld
ll..tllon al M'llmlna:ton
Rio Gr~UMIIf' aat Crdarrilk&gt;
Polnl PIIU'k t'Pal •I M•lollll'
,\oft Vri'IIIOn Nll71lrf'M' ld Urbana
Ohio Dornlaklln at Tiffin
Dt&gt;flllm:l' at Wll.IM
W"" t Pal »I Hlnm
.luhn f»rroll at Thk-1/Pa'
Sclnd&amp;,y , Frh :U
"' ri~thl. Sl \1!10 Crnlr.al Sl t IJD Art•ut

Sllpptry ...._... Ill. F.cflatioro M
So.~,. .Conn. lJ, N. Hamp. Call. St

Sl . .lolla'lll KH, Provlditnc• 11
Sl . .lo•pb'!!o IMif'). lit. UMllnP·P.I. 91
Wf'51Hn Ct. 83, ~1· PoiJtl'dWik 55
Wf'l:lmlna&amp;er 71, Point Park ..

Wllllam11 tl, 'r.l'ts 81

Pol)' 71, Salw lk&gt;JI• 51
W\Jf'{'ll!lller Sf. 13, Framlna-lwn SC. 90
M'Oft'l'\ll~r

Ohio scores

"-htb~tma

feh . U

Ohio ...:t 7M. M' bo~ ·om;ln .~1
Bo~· llna; Grl'+'n II&amp;. Th••do 70
l'••ntr.t.l ~lch 110, Kt'nl M t5
\\1osk•rn Mich 74 . "I ami il
Ohio l:niYI'\.1, IIIII St 6l
\'lfJ;Inia T Pt'h 115, l.'lnl'inlllll.li Ill
Ea.-...-rn

m i6, flr\'Pblnd Sl
a . na,.~.on 56

,S

71

~b.rql.ll'tk

Xa\'IPr tt ,

Lo~1~la

tChiUIUIII3

1\k mn !'17. Brooklyn 70,

,,ulitln Pl'll) !U , \'o\llllplo.-n Sl W
fhlt'lllt'O Sl ~ · WriJht SIIIJ
\\ilk•rlt .. ra;111. Baklwln-"'ll.llat·•· To
Multin11:11m 71 . ( '~tpttal M ~~11
,\ tt t;nton 11!. Hrlclt-llwfl 15
Ohio XorthPrn ICJ, :\hrlt'tlill Ill
,\JI•· ~~:hPn)' t Pa) 6!. Kl'nyon 67
\\'oolllll'r jtl, ('a!ll' ~tNPn·p 67
Ohio WI"Sit&gt;yan Hill, Oberlin !WI
K•·nhM· ky "' t'!l-k'y~tn MI. .-\11hland 81
Bf'fhiUiy t"'\'a) 18. Hlntm f1
.John Carroll91, M' &amp; .1 (Pilo) Sol
O•diU'\IIIk' H . M'llmin.-un ~7
Maloftl"1'14, Bluffton ItO
l)(•fhiiK'l' ~8. Mt \ '.-r"on 711
Findlay !M , Ollllo Domlnkan -:o
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Mrmp11111 St. 17. &amp;Mth Carollaall
:'1/f-Ouuiolk' Itt, Old Domlllioa Ml
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!IOOI'ttl Carolina St . Ill , Loul•vllk&gt; 118
Rll'laond ft, Gt&gt;OI'I'l" MUOII i1
Soulh ?tlabama M8. South Florkh1 18
TPIHI ,· M&amp;rtiD 58, Mlsst881ppl Ctll . M
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lrklnwalrr 82, Ea!&gt;..,ra Ml'nnoNtt&gt; 7l
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Cbrllltophpr Nlf'wport ':11. Grt'enllhftro 72
Clt»df!l N. Vl~hlia Military U
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Florida Sl . Kl, So.tllrm Min. lS
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n•Uay M, Ohio Domlnkan 10
GrHnril~ 711. Prlntlpla 7ii
Haaowr '71, Mallt'hnkr 81
Hllllll_., ft. Mlt-11111111" Tt&gt;t•h 11
lndlaaa St. 13, 'hila tl~ I tOT I
India• Trl'h Ul, Oaldand City 117
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1111. . . St. !C. Drakl' ':14
Dllnoitl foil . M, ftmell Coli. 97
Ill. M'.-k-Jan M, Elmhunf Ill
KalamazOo lit, Mrt.an 13
Kanllllll R, Iowa st . 1:l
Kno1 tt, Monmouth to
~hlonlf' N, Bluffton 50'
~hiia11 7t, Grart IS
Marien 12. GoMra 11

Marqwttt 'l'l. 0.)'141D 5I
Mlclllpa •· lldiU17t

MIIHW• 'n. NerVI CeM,.I

JANSEN SLIPS - Speedskater Dan Jansen ol West
Allis, Wis., puts his hands to
his head alter slipping on the
Ice and hitting the wall in the
Olympic 500-meter event Sunday. (UPI)
.

Rio to host

Panther five
With the longest winning
streak going in the Mld·Ohlo
Conference at 7 games, MOC
leader Rio Grande Is going after
an eighth win Tuesday when jt
hosts Ohio Dominican's Panth·
ers in McDonald's Night at Lyne
Center.
Game time will be7: 30p.m. for
the Red men's final home game of
the season . Overall , Rio Grande
has had an unbroken string of 10
wins since Jan.19 when they first
played ODC.
The Panthers are 4-20 and 0-10
entering the contest, having
!allen 94-70 to Findlay on Saturday . They had hosted Rio Grande
on Jan. 19. losing 104-65 to a
somewhat revamped Redmen
lineup following Rio Grande's
loss to Walsh three nights earlier.
ODC Coach Lou Sartori , is
expected to start Brian Harvey
16-2, senior) and Craig Denney
16·3, sophomore ) as forwards,
. with Randy Tucker (5-10, junior)
and Dave Branscom (6·1. sopho·
more) at guard positions. Darrell
Watson. a 6·5 senior from New
York, will probably repeat at
center.
·
Rio Grande, now No. 2 behind
Defiance in NAJA District 22,
probably rely on its lineup from
the last few games : Ron Rittinger 16-6, senior) and Ray Singleton (6-3, senior) as forwards,
with Anthony Raymore (5-11.
junior) and Jim Kearns (6·1,
junlor) as guards .
Center slot will probably be
filled by John Lambcke (6·5,
sophomore) . Rob Jackson ,
whom Lambcke replaced earlier
In the season due to Jackson's
Injury, Is expected to see some
action . Jackson dressed again
with Cincinnati Bible )ast Tuesday and helped contribute to the
Redmen 's startllng 70-69 defeat
of conference leader Walsh on
Thursday.

will

•

this was a problem In the
warmups . .I felt I could not push
as hard as I wanted."
Team captain Erik Henriksen
said, "As soon as he fell, my
heart sank. ' 'I'm just not used to
seeing so many things go wrong
In such a short time....
•
Jens-Uwe Mey of ·East Germany won the !500 meters In a
world reco.i'd time of 3G.4~ seconds, beating Jan Ykema of the
Netherlands (36. 76) and Aklra
Kurolwa of Japan (36.77).
The sad situation of the U.S.
team was compOunded when
Nick Thometz, ol Minnetonka,
Minn., whose world record time
of 36: 55 was bettered by .Mey,
skated In the pair following
Jansen and could do no better
than eighth In 37.16.
"After the news thls morning,
It was hard on myself and Nick Is .
one of my beat friends," Jansen
sald. "We wanted to go out and do
our best."
The other gold meljals for the
day, the first of 46 to be awarded
In the next two weeks, were won
by VIda Ventsene, a 26-year-old .
student from the Soviet Union, ln
the women's 10-kilometer cross
country ski race and Matti
Nykanen of Finland In · the
70-meter ski jump.
·
Winds of up to 98 mph at the top
of the ski slope·forced postpone.ment of the men's downhill race.
The race .. one of the glamour
events of the Olympics, was
rescheduled for Monday morn·
lng, conditions permitting.
Jansen will have another
chance at a medal In the 1,000
meters Thursday . He decided to

Rio Grande women
edge Cougars, 77;.74
.

MOUNT VERNON- A 3-polnt
field goal by Rlo Grande small
forward Lea Ann Mullins in the
closing minutes here Saturday
put the .Redwomen ahead of
Mid-Ohio Conference leader
Mount Vernon Nazarene for a
77-74 victory.
Mullins, who established a new
school record in points scored by
a RIQ Grande forward last week
with 37 points over Malone, led
all scorers. In tl1e MVNC game
with a total of 27 points.
Smarting from ·a 74-66 loss to
the Lady Cougars on Jan. 26 at
Lyne Center that dislodged Rio
Grande from contention for first
place In the MOC, the Redwomen
entered the contest In a competitive mood. Paul Swanson's club
gave the visitors a fight, with
both sides posting similar marks
on field goals in the first half each had 15 of 33 for 45 .percent.
The Redwomen did better on free
throws, sinking of 5 of 7 for 71.4
percent, while MVNC netted only
1 of 3 a !tempts for 33 ~rcen t.
The Lady Cougars, supported
by the work of starters Jandl
Ferrell and Erin Sharrock, held
the lead at the half, 43-41 .
Tile game remained on even
terms during the second half
until Mullins' effort in the latter

McDonald's hosts
booster night
Three area McDonaid'srestaurants ~Ill sponsor the final
Booster Night with the Rio
Grande Redmen on Tuesday
when they host Ohio Dominican's
Panthers . .
Tickets for. the game, set for
7:30 p.m., are available, free of
charge, at the · McDonald's in
Gallipolis, Jackson and
Henderson.
Present for the game will be
McDonald's representatives Ro·
nald McDonald and Mac Tonight . .
Cards en tl tllng the holders to free
hamburgers at the restaurants
will be passed out. In addition,
there will be a drawing for 15
prizes .
At }1altlime, a dribbling contest
is scheduled.

part gave Rio Grande a winning
edge. The Redwomen capitalized
on the I2 turnovers committed by
MVNC while holding their own
losses to 7, while the Lady
Cougars were able to block 6 Rio
Grande silots, compared to 1
MVNC shot the Redwomen kept
down.
,
·
· Also scoring highly for the
Redwomen were senior cocaptain Renee Hailey with 16
points and 7 rebounds, and Holly
1-!astlngs apd Beth Coil, who each
recorded: i5 points. Hastings
scored 20 rebounds and· Coli
added 6 assists to her record.
Angela Packar&lt;!, a 5-8 sophomore forward from Baltimore,
Ohio who rejoined the team's
ranks recently following eye
surgery, also supplied 20 rebounds to the· Redwoinen's
cause.
Ferrell was the top scorer for
the Lady Cougars with 25 points
and Sharroc-k had · 12. Nicole
Bosworth had 17 Points and 9
rebounds. Mia Dallas 'recorded 7
rebounds, while Sbarl Robertson
and Amy Featheringham added
6 rebounds each.
The .wfn puts the Redwomen's
overall record at 17-8 and 7-3 in
the MOC, while· MVNC goes to
17·3 and 8·2. Rio Grande travels
next to Wilmington on Thursday.
RIO GRANDE (77) - Holly
Hastings, 6·3·1·15; Lea Ann Mullins, 712)·7-2;27; Renee Halley,
7-2-4-16: Beth Col\, 5(1)-4-0-15;
Angela Packard, 1·2+4. TOTALS 28(3).18-13-77.
MOUNT VERNON NAZARENE (74) - Mia Dallas,
2-0-3-4: Samantha Sadowski, 1-03·2: Erin Sharrock, 4·4·3-12;
Shar'l Robertson, 4-0-3-8; Amy
Featherlngham, 3·0·0-6; Jarldl
Ferrell, 12-1-3-25; Nicole Bosworth, 7-3-4-17. TOTALS 33·8-1974.

*·

MUTUAL FUNDS?

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Pill rUH:alwnft .. NB Dllllol• AI
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Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of WildlifE\
will be holding a Dlstrjct IV pubUc fish and game hearing on -- '
Sunday at 1·p,m: at the Recreation,CenteronStateSt.ln Athens.
To be discussed In the hea~lng will ~ proposals for Ohio's
1988-89 fish and wildlife laws. A key element of a proposal will be .
a two-deer limit per hunter lor certain counties In the state,
Including Meigs. Anyone wishing to attenCI the public hearing Is
welcome, Anyone with questions about the hearing, or with
Input to be presented at the hearing, may call Meigs County
Game Protector Keith Wood at 985-4400."Bad weather date lor
. the hearing ls Wednesday, Feb.~;:
,

Team 5, Blue Stre-ak Cab ............71
27
Team 6, 7-33 Ca':'l' Out.. ........ .....63
(I
Team 3, Shammy s Carry.()ut .....50
!Y
Team 2.. .....................................•9
!115
Team 1.. ..... .... .. ... ..... ......... .........39
6Cii
Team 4.............. ....... :........... ...... 31
10
TEAM· HIGH SERIES: Team No. 2, 9111,
Team No. 5, Blue STreak Cab; 955; Tel\m
No.6, 7·33 Carry-Out. 7112.
t•.
TEAM IUGH GAME: Team 2, 363;
Team 5, Blue Streak Cab, 323.
1
IND. HIGH SERIES: Tim Pot..-- 351:
Heath Shoemaker 322; Jamie Barrett 282;
Candy Hen•Iey 324: Rachaol Hawley 251;
Aimee Kloes 166,
IND. HIGH GAME: Heath Sh~oker
129: Jamie Barrett 1.27; !lyon Hawley and
Tim Peterson 121: Candy Hensley l28,10i,
95.
WEICK OF U.NUABY •• 1118
37

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'i COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) . c

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Something to

look forward

to in February
Pay for your order
between Feb, 22· 27.. and
Save 6% during Pi6neer Days.
Save a fu II 6% on e\'ery
PIONEER® bran~ .P.roduct
you pay for Juring Pioneer
Days. Plus, iake home a
free ~ift with qualifying
purchase.
P ~EEA

bl' i tld ~IOdU(;l $ ~Ill WIG S~breet IO

lhll U11rms .11'10 COIICII IOnS 01 UNI WI'IIC: h aft
~1 1 to t 1ne IBII!Iif!G IIIC talC IIOCul'lltlll s
Pl(lflcen~ a ~l.llnllllamfl "~lftDC'f1 10ltflhly
~ar1e1 o es

· Rei)•SIIIIIIO lrademar~
l~le • naho.n_al.

ot

•
PI.:Jnllfll

Ho·8ftll

Inc Des Moo[i• s IOW;,t. U SA

DAVE DlnZ
PQM~ROY

1614) 988·3831

.Eric Albrecht of the Columbus
.pispatch was judlled Ohio photo- ·
gapher ofthe year this weekend
jn the 1988 Ohio News Photographers Association's annual
still photography contest.
' Curt Chandler.of the Cleveland
Plain Dealer came In second
Saturday and· Dale Omori of the
Cinclnnatl Post third.
· TheOhloStateLanternwon the
Ohio Understan~lng Award for
. two publications on charities at
; work,
The Cincinnati Post won first
. placeforphotousagelnnewspap: ers with more than 50,000clrculalion, and the Troy Dally News
; was first for photo usage In
newspapers wltb less than 50,000
•:circulation.
.
, " One hundred nine Ohio news
1 photographers representing 32 ·
news organizations statewide
''submitted ' entries In 16
l calegortl!ll.
, The firat•place Coon Scholar·
' ship waa awarded to Ty Green' leel Of Wr~ht State University,
seco!ld to Brad Phllln of Bowling
Green State Ulllverslty and third
to Dora! Chenoweth Ill of Ohio
State University.
: Karen Schlely of Kent State
, University was awarded the first
1
.-$1,000 Fullerton Scholarship.
· This Is the first year that both
, ,color ahd black . and white .PIC· lutes were Judged In the same
:'crass, .
.
Awards by category·
·:: COON SCHOLARSHIP: 1. Ty
: Greenlees, Wright State Unlver• slty. 2. Brad Phlllln, Bowling .
·.Green Stale University. 3. Dora!
: Chenoweth III, Ohio State
·university.
:· EDITORIAL ILLUSTRA·
: TION: 1. Chris Russell, Wll·
Ioughby News Herald. 2. Jeff
:,Hinckley, Columbus Dlspatch ~ 3.
~ Jim Witmer, Troy Dally News.
:. FASHION: _1.. Marlbetb Jo' erlght, Willoughby News Herald.
· 2 Jeff Hinckley Columbus Dis
'' ·
'
'
;,patch: 3 " Craig Orosz, Loral_!l
,,Journal.
•' FEATURE: 1. Curt Chandler,
: Cleveland Plain Dealer. 2. Mark
''Medvedlk, Lorain Journal. 3.
, Michael Kealing, Cincinnati
'Enquirer.
•' FEATURE PICTURE
· 'STORY: 1. Robin Witek, Akron
} 13eacoll Journal. 2. Marty Medr: vedlk; Lorain Journal. 3. Philip
~ Dwyer, 'f ,fansfleldNewsJournal.
;,;_ FOOD ILLUSTRATION: ' 1.
t' Bruce Crippen, Cincinnati Po~!.
'a. Lawrence Lambert, Cincinnati
;• •P ost. 3. Mary Clrcelll, Columllus

•

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Nortlle,. ....
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Oil Ia N.rlltf'n 11., 11..-wtla M

Oil toll ••• 8&amp;1111, u

·-"' ..

Fi$h and game hearing Sunday .

•

,....,.~~, , _._

Team 5, Blue Steak Cab •..•••. ....... &amp;1

.

•

YOVTB LBAGVJ:

Team 6, 7-33 Carry-Out... ...... ...... Tf
46
Team 2.............. ..... .. .... l .. .... .. ..... 55
65
Team 3, Shammy's Carry.Qut ..... 55
65
Team 1....... .......................... ...... 53
B't
Tpam 4....... .................... ..... ....... ~
80
TEAM HIGK SERIES: Team 1, 927:
TeamS. BlueStreakCab,1159; Teamf, 746.
TEAM HIGH GAME: Team I, 328, 315;
Team 5, Blue Streak Cab. 297.
IND. HIGH SERIES: Tim Peterson,
326; Heath Shoemaker, 291; Adam Bar·
rett, 295; ·Rachael Hawley, 296: Candy
Hensley, 278: Aimee Kloea, 168.
IND. HIGH GAME: Adam Bamtt, 122;
J~ey Barrett, ·119; Tim Potenon, llt;
~~chael Hawley,ll.j Candy,HenaJey.lOO,

Due to lodaY's holiday, trash collection r~utes In Racll\e will '
run on Tuesday and Wednesday.
..
·
.
.
.:
· ··

.

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Mi......., ..,....,. M. Mo..-hf~
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No rill Pll'llat, ('arfll.,. Cal. M

Ohto 81. 'l'l.

Trash collection days changed

IIATVJIDAY ·IKINJIIIE

a

No,._._,. 11

over e weekend; five Saturday and five Sunday.
MSaturday at 7:10a.m., Middleport to Story's Run 'Road for
Yrtle Fife to Holzer ·Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 8: 51•
a.m. transported Maude Gray to Camden-Clark Memerjal
Hospital; Racine at 9:14a.m. to R~svllle tor Warren Plckenl
~Camden Clark Memorial Hospital; Scipio Township Fire
partmentaU:24 p.m. to an autofireonRoute684· RuUandd
8:43 p.m. to Route I24 for Malcolm Ingram to Hob:er Medical.
.
·
.
Center, .
Sunday at 1:27 a.m., Pomeroy · to Mlzway Tavern for Bill
Powell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutlan.d at 7:10a.m. to .
County Road 1 for Nancy Chapman to HQizer Medical Center; .1
Syracuse at 11: I5 a.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Flossie Story to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:27
p.m. to U~lon St. for Mary Gibson to Holzer Medical Center·
Syracuse at 5: M p.m. to Minersville Hill tor Harland Alshli-e t~
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.

I - ~_ bow~~ ]

•

WE PAY

9.25°/ooi IRA's
SINCI 11/3116

Plan For Retire~:~~~nt Today
" 11.18% Average Since 1975

,

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INDIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
QUT OF STATE RmRNS
BU$1NESS - SMAll OR .LARGE
PARTNERSHIPS ,
CORPOUTIONS
OIL AND GAS

The Daily Sentiinei-Paga 6

·.

Me~hs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls

the

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

briefs--.. Snow drifts block highways second day·
EMS has 10 weekend calls

remain 1n Calaary . aDd
funeral for hJI aliter will be
delayed until be nturlll home.
A spokeiWOIIIIn for West Allll
Memorial Hospital In Wlleolllill
confirmed that Janan ·~· to
his sister by telephQne siiOrtly'
before she died. Jansen later
.talked with his family on the
phone·and decided to c~pete,
Beres, 3 mother of three, died
at 9:57 a.m. (10:57 a.m. EST).
Harry jansen, Beres' father,
flew home from Calaary Satur·
day night and was In the hospital
when she died, according to Ruth
Krause, a hospital supervisor. ,
Tbe u.S. speedlkater had been
speaking dally with bll sllter bY
telephone !rom the Games, and
he called her a last lime early
·Sunday morning. ·
·

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~, Area news

..

MIMtapalla f .C. 7S. .. wr IUU117
MJ..,....I!,

'Monday, February 16,.1988

Tragedy, sadness mark first
fUll day of Wblter Olympics

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

NBA reeuiiB

Febn*Y 16. 1988

'

By Ualted Preu laternatloaal

Blll)dlng snow In North Dakota
forced the closing of a 25-mlle
stretch of Highway 2 between
Crookston and Grand Forks
Sunday. By nightfall the storm
had subsided, but drifting s~ow
kept the road closed, said laurie
Brundln, a pollee dlsJllltcher In
East Grand Forks, Minn.
"It'll probably be closed until
morning when tliey can get the
snow plows o~t," Brundln said.

Snow fell along the Canadian
border today from Montana lo
New York, while blowing and
drl"lng snow In northern Minnesota and North Dakota blocked
roads for the second day In a row.
Winds up to 60 mph swept the ·
IWckles and northern Plains ·
Sunday, ~burning light snow Into
bl~rd. con"ditlcins that closed
: miles of hl&amp;hway and cut vlslbll-.
ity to zero In some ar~as. ·

Ohio not
suffer

e~flected

to

from crash

NATION~L WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·1&amp;-68

legislature might Identify,"
Walker said. ·
State lawmakers had hoped
additional money would be found ,
for the capital Improvements
legl~latlon, which will be made
public later this month, The
twil·year bill covers major state
construction projects, .most of
which are financed with bor·
rowed money. However, some
tax money Is Included for lmme·
dlate payments.
. The General Assembly added
$60 million In general fund taxes
to the capital budget that expires
June 30. No -general fund money,
however, was earmarked for
projects contained In the two·
year operating budget passed
last June. And revised estimates
do . not anticipate much new
money.
The new projection Indicates
only $22.6 million will be avalla·
ble July I for capital Improvements and other expenses. That
money would come from several
areas,lncludlng money leftfrom
the previous budget.
If the $22.6 million Is spent, the
Ohio General Fund would have a
June 30, 1989. balance of $55.2
million. That ivouid represent
only 0.06 . percent of .1989
appropriations.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Oct~r siQ!:k market crash
will have minimal to no Impact
pn &amp;tate revenues during the
' currenl ·blenntum, state officials
:.' said.
"" '-. Revised state budget projections lildlcate money tor capital
Improvements will be tight, the
Columbus Dispatch reported, but
officials said a downturn In the
economy may be delayed.
Ohio Budget Director L. Lee
Walker said any necessary revisions would amount to a finetuning of Ohio's $21.8 billion
two-year budget.
"We believe the timing of a
downturn In the economy Is most
likely to occur In the second half
of1989orearly I990," analyst San
Nemer said In a memo. The next
biennium begins July 1, 1989.
State budget officials said they
believe Ohio will collect $8.41
billion In taxes this year, $22
million more than expected.
They said they anticipate collectJog $8.8 billion during 1989, which
·1s $8.4 million len than pre·
. vlously projected.

Dispatch.
FULLERTON SCHOLARSHIP: Karen Schlely, Kent State
university.
.
GENERAL NEWS: 1. Philip
Dwyer, Mansfield News Journal2. Nancy Stbne, Cleveland Plain
Dealer . 3. Douglas Oster, Medina
"The bad· neVIs Is that we were
.County Gazette.
.
unable to Identify slgn'jficant
INDUS'I:RIAi:. ILLUSTRA- other resources for the capital
TION: 1. Jeff Hinckley, Co~um- . bill and other spending bills the
bus Dispatch. 2. Bob Dickerson,
·l.!i
Cincinnati Post. 3: Lynn Ischay,
Wlllougliby News Herald.
·
MAGAZINE USAGE: ·Columbus Dispatch "Capitol."
By Ualted Preu International
NEWS PICTURE STORY: 1.
At least four people were killed
Anna lisa Kraft, Cincinnati EnIn
!raffle accidents In Ohio this
qulrer. 2. Dick Swaim, Cincinnati
past
weekend, the State Highway
Enquirer. 3. Mark Dul\can, Asso- ·
Patrol
said today.
elated Press.
·
.•
Patrol said that was the
The
OHIO UNDERSTANDING
same
numer
as··kllled the· pre·
AWARD: Ohio State Lanter~.
vlous
weekend.
. PICTORIAL: 1. Patricia Fife,
The count showed one death
· Youngstown Vindicator. 2. Ed ·
·Suba Jr., Akron Beacon Journal. · Friday night, iwo Saturday and
nriP ~1lnf1AV
'
3. Date Omori, Clnclllnati 'Post.
' ··One of - the victims was a mail
PICTuRE . USAGE OVER lying Qn a road and struck by a
!50,000:, 1. Cincinnati Post.. 2. car.
Columbus Dispatch. 3. WllVIctims Included:
loughby News-Herald.
· Friday night
PICTURE USAGE UNDER
Youngstown: Alysia Johnson,
50.000: 1. Troy Dally News. 2. 2, Kent, killed In ·a two-car
Ohio University Post. 3. Sandusky Register.

..

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E!JSNOw· -RAIN ~SHOWERS
FRONTS: .fl Warm "
Cold
w' Sialic ft Occluded
Map shows minimum tetitperatures. At least SQ'!'. at any shaded ~na is~~
to reeeive precipitation indicated
·
·UPI

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~PRTRAITPERSONALITY:

GOp•• Continued from page 1

that the Soviets had placed SS-3
and SS-4 intermediate nuclear
missiles In Cuba and wondered
accident on Interstate 76 in why there was nothing done
Mahonlng County.
about that at the U.S.·Sovlet
Saturday
summit In December.
Coshocton: Melvin Smith, 51 ,
Under quesllonlng by inodera·
Coshocton, killed when his car tor Edwin Newman, Robertson
was hit by another on U.S. 36 east said he got the information from
of Coshocton.
someone on the Senate Foreign
Pori Olnton: W:llllam D. Ends· Relations Committee but did not
ley, 48, Defiance, killed when his. elaborate. The other candidates
van was Involved In a three· did not follow up .
vehicle accident on Ohio .53 in
Bush and Dole conflicted
Catawba Island In Ottawa 1 briefly over the recently signed
Co~nty.
INF Treaty, whlch they support,
.
Sunday
but the other candidates oppose.
Springfield: Terry B. Braden, Bush was the first to back the
25, Springfield, lying on a Clark !rea ty and Dole supported it
County road, killed when run later.
over by a car.
When Dole referred to his
support for the pact, Bush
questioned him about when he
decided to back it.
Plan bean dinner
"You were for It before you
An old-fashioned bean dinner read It," Dole told . Bush. "I
'
will be. held Saturday, from 11: 30 wanted to read lt first.'
Generally, however, Bush and
to 6:30 p.m,, .a t the Rutland
American · Legion Hall. $2 for Dole were cordIa I to each other ali-you-can-eat. Sandwiches and a sharp contrast to the campaign
pie extra. Everyone welcome.

-----Announcements. ----

Sorority to meet
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the borne
of · Evelyn Kll.l aht. A while
elephant sale will be held;
.

'

_Chester Council to meet
Chester Councll232, Daughters
of America, will meet at 7:30
Tuesday night at the bali. Practice wlli be held for the spring
rally.

One winner
in Super Lotto
•

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Satur·
day night's Super Lotto game
produced one tickets with the
numbers
28, 29, 31, 34, 35 and 40 .
Lenten breakfast Wednesday
is worth $6 million,
That
ticket
The annual Lenten breakfast
at Trinity Ch11rch, Pomeroy, y;li or $3011.000 a year, before taxes,
1
be held Wednesday at 7:45 a.m. 1 for 20 years.
In the church basement. Women · Ohio Lottery Commission offi·
· of area churches, along with the cials said 5,172,364 $1-tickets
were sold.
pastors, are lnvlied .tQ.~ttend.
The 129 tickets with five
num~rs are each worth $1,000
while the 6,337 tickets with four
numbers are each worth $94.
Lottery numbers
Wednesday 's game has a S3
million jackpot.
CLEVELAND. (UP!)- Satur·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number

Hospilfll news

987.

'

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Ticket sales totaled
$I,536,375.50, with a payoff due of
$I,017,400.
PICK-4
8403.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$247,941, with a payoff due of
$111,6I4.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$7,656. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$319.
Super Lotto
31, 34, "40, 28, 35, 29.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admls&amp;lon~ - None.
Saturday Discharges - Clara
Young.
Sunday Admissions - Edith
Spencer: Middleport; Ivory
Bush, Middleport; Kenneth Wjl·
son, Scottown; Flossie Story,
Pomeroy; Charles Payne, Middleport; Burl Blevins,
Langsville.
Sunday Discharges - Carrie
Osborne.

M.D. Inc.

~

HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 A.M.·8 P.M
SATURDAY 9 A.M.·IS P.M,
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

HOSPJTAL

1

. . . . . . .. T. . . Il

W h
eat er

South Central
Today, showers likely changIng to scattered flurries this
afternoon and turning colder. An
morning high of 45 to 50 with
temperatures falling Into tlie
upper 20s by late afternoon.
Winds becoming northwest at 15
to 25 mph. Chance of preclpltatlon 60 percent.
.
Tonight, mostly cloudy with
clearing towards morning. Low
20 to 25. Northwest winds 5 to 15
mph becoming west.
Tuesday, mostly sunny with
increasing clouds In the after·
noon. High In the mid 40s.
Extended Forecut
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of snow or rain
Wednesday. FalrThursdayanda
chance of snow Friday. Highs 35
to· 45 Wednesday and In the 30s
Thursday and Friday. Lows
mostly I5 to 25.

Hospital

OUR JOB is to help you make and
save money.
.

IAIL A•. IEIUR Ill, CPA
IEIUI IUSIIESS SERVICES
H&amp;l aOCI LOCA'IIOII

a.-111..._ ... .
a.la....•• 01111....... ..

PO ?FMY, 01110 .,769
,, ,., ttt-7171

............. Nt............8t. Q

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new~

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges February 12: Jessica Adkins, Mrs. William
Beckner and son, Kathy Bond,
David Canter, William Caplinger, Paul Chevalier, William
Cleland, Delmar Cobb, Leoma
Damron, Dorothy Davis, Flora
Davis, Grace Goodnlte, Glen
Grate, Heather Han; Cl;larlotte
Hanning, Mrs. Gary Hysell' and
daughter, Treasle McMillion,
Nadine McMurray, VIrginia
Moore, Jason North, Jos~ua
Ray, Phillip Rose, William Sexton and Linda Sibley.
Births February 12: Mr. and
Mrs. Randall Green, daughter,
Gallipolis.
Blrlha February IS: Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Duncan, son, Clllton,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Odell,
son, · Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Riffle, son, Point Pleasant, ·

611 Un 11A1f1 SIMI

r.-.n

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before the Iowa caucuses when
they engaged In a bitter verbal
battle.
"I think we've got five of us
who are all pretty good candldates .... and are friends," said
Dole.
"We're going to be together
after this," noted Bush. "There's
no question In my mind about
that." 1
"I think there are some real
· differences," Bush added, noting
that they were overcome by tlie
\les(re to "beat the Democrats."

Super Lotto ticket sales totaled r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;W;.;V;a.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
$5,172,362.

Fl ..,.. ... "· • ...,. ·- ..

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WEATHER MAP -Snow will filii over northern New Enslaad,
upstate New York and Mlchlsan, with rain and onow mixed over
southern New England. Rain wUI chance to snow acrosalbe lower
Great Lakes reston, and over western aectlons of the Ohio Valley.
Rain wiD I all from the real of the Ohio Valley acrosa the middle
Atlantic Coast stales. Showers and lhundenlonns will reacb from
Alabama .and eastera Tennessee 8CI'OIB the aoathern Allaatlc
Ceut states, Ralnabowera wUI be scattered along the northern
Pacific Coul and over the nortem Plateau, wltb saowsbowen
over the norlhern Rockies and acrosa nortbem Montana and North
Dakota. Winds will he strong and gusty over the aorlhern hall of
the R!Jckles and across southern Texu.

Four killed on Ohio roads

1. Dale Omori, Cincinnati Post. 2.
Jock . Flstlck, Mansfield News Plan seminar
Journal. 3. Nancy Stone, ClevePomeroy Church ot Christ wiU
land Plaln Dealer.
be holding a C.A.R.E. Seminar
PHOTOGRAPHER OF TH:E ..onFeb.18-19from7to9p.m.each
YEAR: I. Eric Albrecht, l!:olum-· . night. ·
bus Dispatch. 2. Curt Chandler,
Hoyt Allen, evangelist for the
Cleveland Plain Dealer. 3. Dale KYOWVA and minister of the
Omori, -Cincinnati Post.
Jackson Church of Christ, will
SPORTS ACTION: 1. Richard Conduct the seminar which will
Conway. Cleveland Plain Dealer. deal with four baslc 'klnds of calls
.2. Kevin Reeves: Sun. Newspap- - comforting, admonishing, re·
ers. 3. Mark Duncan, Associated vivlng and evangelistic. Hoyt
Press.
·
will tell seminar participants
SPORTS FEATURE: I. Bob how to be an effective witness
Dickerson, Cincinnati Post. 2. imd vital spiritual force.
Brian Tombaugh, Lorain JourTherewlllbea15mlnutebreak
mil. 3. AI Behrman, Associated between the sessions and snacks
PrSePssO.RTS PICTU·RE
. STORY~. 1. will be provided.
For more Information, call the
.E ric Albrecht. Columbus Dis- church office at 992·2926.
'p atch. 2. Skip Peter.son, Dayton
,_,
Dally News. 3. Curt .._handler, Special singers featured
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Wayne, of
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Canton,
will be featured singers
SPOT NEWS OVER 50,000: I.
at
the
Flatwoods
United Metho-.
Greg Mahany, Associated Press.
2. Bill Waugh, Dayton Dally dlst Church on Sunday at 2 p.m.
News. 3. Curt Chandler, Cleve- Wayne, called Mr. Country Gospel, can be heard weekly Jn·
land Plain Dealer.
WEMM on Friday ever.;ngs.
SPOT NEWS UNDERr 50,000:
1. Michael Vollmar-Grone, Sid- Churchmembers Invite ~veryone
ney DI!IIY News. 2. Gregory to attend. The church Is located
Shaver,t,1arletta;l,m es.3.Larcy on F1atwoods Road, one mile
Burgess, Lorain aournal.. : ·
· .from Five Points and Route 7.
TEAM ENTRY: Marietta
PTOtomeel
Tlm.es.
,
Salisbury PTO will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday. Representatives from
Parents . For Education will
speak. A fathers,' night program
will be . presented. Everyone
welcome .

••

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"It's gotten a lot better, but lts
Snow fell early today from
still drifting."
Montana to eastern New York,
High winds and snow raked ·and also fell over the Olympic
southeastern ·Wyoming early and Cascade mountains . of
Sunday, cutting visibilities near Washington.
zero at times. Parts of interstate
Rain and thundershowers
80 near Cheyenne, Wyo., were · stretched from Louisiana across
closed for several hours by poor parts ot Mississippi, Tennessee,
visibility.
Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky and
Blizzard warnings In eftect Indiana Into lower Michigan.
Sunday In North Dakota•, South
· Freezing rain and sleet fell
Dakota and Minnesota were acrou partt of Iowa, southern
canceled today.
Wisconsin and lower Michigan.

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of
Ill one of 29
HONORED - Karen
Musklnpni CoDe1e jlitillln to be
In the !188 edition of
Who's Who among Students In American Unlvenltle.. Criteria for
Inclusion In the tumual directory InclUde academic l!(lhlevemeat,
service to the community, leadership In extra curricular aellvllles
and potea!l&amp;l lor conllnued success. Slle Ia the dau1hter of Mrs.
Elizabeth Hemsley, 707•College Rilad, Syracu!l(l.
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Not-so-perfea family?
Here,s a book for you

Grueser birthday ol;&gt;served
Kelly and Tara Grueser,
daughter of Danny and Debbie
Grueser, were recently surprised with a party In celebration
of their birthdays at the home of
·their grandmother, Renee Stone.
On J an. 30. Kelley was 11. and
on Feb. 2 Tara was nine. Mrs.
. Grueser provided cake and lee

,.

cream with their grandmother
serving candy, nuts and punch to
famlly and friends. Attending
besides those named were Da·
nieiie Grueset, Diana and Whitney Karr, Doris Grueser, Ed and
Becky Baer, Cynthia Cotterill,
Krista Sargent, and Jessica
Ca pehart.

Community Calendar
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village
Co uncil will meet· in recessed
· session Monday, 7 p.m., at the
Shrine Park Building.

Fire Department Auxiliary wlll
mee t Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
the !!rehouse. Anyone wishing to
join the auxiliary is welcome.

LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Community Association
is sp&lt;insorlng a Ladles' Recreation Night on Monday, from 6:30
.: · to 9:30 p.m .. atthe LongBottom
Community Building. Ali ladles
are invited.

TUPPERS PLAINS -Orange
Township Trustees will hold a
special meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m ., to discuss Insurance and
cable television. The meeting
will be held at the home of
Dorothy · Ca laway, township
c lerk.

TUESDAY
CARPENTE R Columbia
\
Township Board of Trustees
.· · m eeting at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
fire station.

..

POMEROY - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Sorority will meet at
upper par king lot at 6:15 p.m.
Tuesday before going to the
Down under Res taurant in
Ga llipolis.
MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeti ng of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, at 7 p.m. Tuesday fo r
practice in the master masons
deg ree. All of fi ce rs · and
members who have taken part in
·; ·. the fellowcralt team a're.asked to
·: : at tend. Lodge inspection will be
March 4 with dinner to be served
at 6:30 .p.m.
POMEROY - The Fraternal
Order of Eagles Ladies Auxiliary
will hold nominations for vicepresident at the regular meeting
on T uesday at 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
'the Middleport Presbyterian
Church will meet Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Bible study, led by Mrs. William
:.. Morris, will be on the second
' .. chapter of Concern Magazine.
Mrs. Don Lowery will be in
· .. ·charge of devotions .
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland

Special singing
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Wayne, of Canton, wlll be
fea tured singers at the Flatwoods United Methodist Church
on Sunday, Feb. 21, at 2 p.m.
Wayne has been called Mr.
Count[Y Gospel and is heard
weekly on Friday evenings on
Radio Station WEMM.
The church Is located on
Flatwoods Road, one mile from
Five Points and Route 7.

Missionary service
RUTLAND - A special mis·
sionary service wlll be he ld
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at the
Hysell Run Hollness Church,
located off Route 124 on Hysell
Run Road, near Rutland. Mark
and Crystal Becker will speak
about their work on a South
Da kota Indian Reservation.

TOPS meets
Penny Gilesple was announ~ed
as the valentine queen forTOPS
570 at Tuesday night's meeting of
the club held in the Coonhunters
building on -the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Sylvia Neece was the Jimuary
queen, Nancy Gillespie was the
best loser of the week with Kathy
McDaniel as runner-up. Lennie
Belle Aleshire won the •fruit
basket.
.'

Ann
Landers

lecturer, writer and mother of

seven young adults, holds a doctor·
ate from the University of Chicago.
She writes· in a no-nonsense way
about families and how to make
them work. She points out tliat
American family life chlinsed 'more ·
beN;een '1955 and 1985 than in any
30.year period since Colonial days.
1 can attest to· the validity of that .
statement because I ~n to write
my column in 1955 and I have seen
the changes that the author writes
about.
Here is a sample of Durkin's
advire. This excerpt deal~ with
stepparenting:
· "A stepfamiiy is not a · natutal
family. It takes time to form bonds.
Your stepchildren might sti!l be '
reCovering from the effects· of the '
divorre. ·Be prepared for disruptive
behavior. If your spouse is the
noncustOdial parent, make your
stepchild~ · feel that your home is
theirs, too. If possible, set aside . a
room for them when t~ey ;visit.
.. Work out discipline guidelines
with your spouse. Let the children
know that you both agree on those
guidelines and stick to them. If you
have children of your own, go to a
blended family workshop before
you marry. If possible, bring the
children from both families with
you.
"You don't have to love your

The annual meeting and school
Karth, past grand. matron; Howof Instruction for District 25
ard Shull, . past grand patron,
Association of Chapters, Order of
along with the other grand
the Eastern Star, was held at tlfe
officers of the Grand Chapter of
Middleport ,Masonic Temple re- Ohio. Presented from the district'
cently with Harrlsonvllle Chap- were Martha Porter, deputy
ter 255.• O.E.S. as host chapter.
grand matron; Kathleen Mingus
There were 199 persons present
a,nd Emma Polen, grand repreat the afternoon meeting and 276
sentatives to Delaware andd
at the evening meeting. Betty
Nova Scotia.
Bishop, president, conducted the
New officers were Installed
afternoon meeting. Honored gu- · and Included Luann Adkins,
ests presented at the afternoon
president; Margaret McNabb,
meeting were Arlene Johnson,
vice president; Ann Price, secreworthy grand matron, and
tary, and Kathy . Johnson,
James Dale, worthy grand pa- treasurer.
tron, Grand Chapter of Ohio.
The evening school of tnstrucAlso presented were Marjorie

jobs for members of the congregation. They wll ·go bowling on
Feb. 'J:l.
Delores Frank, Madeline Pain·
ter and Carolyn NicholSon are
preparing a skit lor the motherdaughter banquet. ·
A photo album ls being prepared by Carolyn Nicholson to be
given to Scott and Renee Stewart, the new pastor or the
church · and his wife. Each
member of the con~ation Is
asked to submit a picture for the
album.
. Gerry Ugh!foot had devotions.
Next meeting will be March 14 at
7 p.m . with refreshments to he
ilef¥ed. Others attending · were

. -- People--------------:-------.
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By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United PreaoiDiei'IUIUoaal
HANK'S HOME: Hank WIWama lr. dec!~ed he· needs bls
.privacy mor~ than the town of Paris, Tenn., needs a sign
announcing that he lives there. The city fathers had- been
discussing putting up such a sign but the country singer recently
wrote them to ask tbat they reconsider. "I think that I! Hank
'doesn't want the signs up, then we ought to abide by his wishes,"·
said Mayor Alldy Hooper. "He felt the signs would Jive him too
much publicity." An earlier attempt to erect signs In Hank Jr .'8
honor met with minor oppo~ltlon from some of the loeais, who

tlon was under the direction of
the Grand .officers. Those pres·
ented at that, session were the
past grand matron and past
grand patron, five deputy ~and
matrons, six grand representatives, 17 worthy matrons and 14
worthy patrons from District 25,
and several visiting worthy matrons and patrons from other
districts.
An attendance award was
presented to the worthy matron
and worthy patron of Hai-rlson·
ville chapter, Bernice and Dana
Hoffman. Refreshments were
5&lt;0rvect In the dining rooin fl)ilowing the meeting.

'

J
'

•
'

i

fell he had a reputation as a carouaer and heavy drlnk.e r that
wasn't an appropriate role mot~elfor the town's chlldren.
YALIE HAS NO RBGBETS: ledle ll'aeter hu nary a qualm
about slowing ber actina career 10111 enough to put In four years
at )'ale. "The blgJest momellt In my life cam"wbenl was in my
cap and gown and looked Into the crowd t,p find my mother,"
Foster, 25, says: "It was worth It au to !fee the 1011~ of pride on
Mom'sface." Foster'• eciiDJ C81'11!1' II up and rulllliiiJ aptnher Ia tea I movie is the recently released "Five Comers" - and
. she says Yllie made her a better actreasevl!nthOUI!h&amp;henever
took ·a n acting class there.
·

~

Paula . Pickens, BeckY ' Am·
be~ger, El tzabeth Smith, Cherie
Williamson, Suzie W!U, Nancy
Morris, VIcki Smttl), Sherry
Smith, Frances Hysell, and Be·
thany Amberger.
Officers tor the year are Jan
Koehler, Becky . Amber«er,
Madeline Painter, Jacll!e ··~eed.
Suzie Will, Cherie W!Wam&amp;On
and Vicki Smith.

r--:::---------..:--,.....j

'N: ;:,c:::..Eit Nonnally

Beat of all, "you can continue to cai
all of your finooritc foods and you don't
hiM to chlnge your normal eating
habits. )bu will stan Ioong lit from .
the -ery first day, until you IIChieYc the
~ weiJht and figure; you desire."

There haa never been anything like
it before. It is a tolal!y' new major
medical breakthrvugh mweight loss
(worldwide patent pending).
.
Flwltea , . Out ollJody .
The new pill is appropriately called
the "filt-lfiiiiJICI" pill bei:a~~~e it breaks
into thousands of ~ICII. each actirig like a tiny lfllllliCI, ''llllw:1ilc" and
tripping 111111)' times itlliJc idl
.clcs. '!'hen, all that lqppcd cmis
naturally "flushed" riaht out of your
body becau11e it cannot be d~ .
Within 2 days you will notice a
cliange in the color of ~ stooi as
the fat particles are being eliminated.

..,. Do AU llle Mblt"
Al:conling to the doctors, the fat·
. magnet
do all the work wbile you
quickly
fat with no stamtion diet
menus to follow, no calorie counting,
no exen:isil!l, and no huiiJCr pangs.
It ·ii IOO'lli uti:. You simply take the
piUs with a glass of water bei&gt;re meals.
The fat-maanet pills have just been
oftercd to the American publiC and are
IMCpinJ the COUJJ!ry With
aalea and reports of dfiJnalic
weiahJ lola.lt'slhc "luy way" to lose
weiahl b- people who enjoy eatina.
Now ANiltlllltt to Public
·lf)Qtlnotld tolole 20. SO. ·DI pounds
or more, )'011 can onler your supply
of ~ hiahJy ~111'telsful &amp;tIIIIIJIII pilb
available from the
dotia'a
lllllttll.clurer by

f!

=

ttu.ll

1-tll.::· ~-.':'· ...~~

101111
101111

•- •

•

n1.•

--

. ·, . -·..

a::.=~­

....
....•.

til ..

-

.., ..

-·

Allllllll II I. 1: II II: ll Is

Cl.,.ijied ,.,.,

=-~·

Basham lulldlng

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

eow• 1A.

::tr!:':r.

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

. ~IRE D.EPT.

/oltavU.r tele:prtone .............

',,

=:-=

~

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

z

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213

-

6:30P.M.
12 G•ge Shotgum
Public Notice

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Seeted propoA!o will be
rocelvod bv tho VHtogs ,of
Middlaport, Molgo County,
Ohio In tho office of t11o
. Mayor. Vlltoo• Hall. Middleport. Ohi9, unti12:30 P.M..
·' February 25, 1988. and
lhfn publicly opened end

for tMI per cont of hlo bid.
poyobte to tho Director.
llcldoro muot epply, on tho
proper forma. for quellflco·

tlon at leaa ten days prior to
the dota oet lor o-lng bldo

In -ordanC. with Chaplor
5526 Ohto lioviMCI Code.
Plan• and .,.Cittc.tlons

1.10 por hour.

3.10 per hour.

ful~tlme

are on file in the Ooportme~t

eluding fu ..tlme hourly l'ltl
omploYeM. ollatl be entltlocl
during ucll yeor oltlr the
lim.,.., to two weoko voco·
tton, exctucllilg legal holl·
dayo. pey. El"ptoywith.tttt..n or moNyeeraof

ranooir

core

and·reand

heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Mechonle, 1.01 .Mr hour. ...-.Ice ahatl be entitled to
tine weoko v-tlon fico of the Olotrlct Deputy Owr1.,...urvlce,ti.11per poyucllyeer.
WASTEWATER
Director.
hour.
, ·
SEC. VI!: Eec~ ornployee
TREATME~T PlANT
The Director reHMil the Lau than 1 yeer urvlce. of the VHiage Mltitlocl to vo·
lAGOON IMPROVEMENTS
992-2196
right to rejact anv and til
3.10 per hour. ·
cation ohllt -the vooatlon
•"
'GENERAL Middleport,
Ohio
bldo. .
·
Reotlef Dtlpetcher; 4.42 per tlmalnyeerofentltlementor.
•.
CONTRACT NO. 14G
1·13,
tfc
Warren J. Stnlth,
, , ELECTRICAL WORK hou!.
oheH IMi petd for •11'1 unuucl
Director
Swlmmtn.11 lnotNctor. 4.00 portion of v-tlon at thelo
,.,_ CONTRACT NO. 14E
per hour.
_.,atng w- l'ltl ot die
The propoled work in (2) 8. 15. 2tc
Cuotoclion, 100.00 per tlma of peyment. If ot the
Contract No. 1 40 includea
MEIGS ·OFFICE
month.
end of •11'1 .,.., ony •ch om1 improvement• to the erdlt·
Public Notice
Of&amp;e ol Community D!MII· ployee hal eccrued ony un•.
.: ing ¥Wittewater treetment
MACHINES
-t:
uucl vocotton time, tile
fecility. In general, work
NOTICE
OF
E - Secretery. 11.80 Clerk·T-•- ohol .....e
conaiatt of lite preparation
New &amp; Used
APPOINTMENT OF
por hour.
peyment to tile omploy• for
work. Improvement&amp; to the
FIDUCIARY
SALES·SEIYICE
SEC. tl: Thot -mariti, IUIIh unuiiCI tlma within
, • outlet etructurea, and dilin·
February 1. 1988, in cterlcll
end/
or
-••ping
thirty
cloysl301
oltlr
thefaction oyltom Including o thoOnMolgo
SUPPUES
Proboto --~Hplng hourly om- of the vecatlon.,... upon N·
chlorine .building. with ell Court, CooeCounty
·
Royall
SCM rypowrilon
No. 28 7811, Er- ployHo be employed ot i queot from the offectld om·
appurtenant work .
Scheele. 41.1S21ot malmum of 311 houro per ployee. Vocation time oholl
· Roytrll MAl Colclllotors
f'
The estimated · conetruc· nootino
Avenue W .• BrMenton. 'Flo...,.. &amp; Mouo (atlo . . . ,...
,, " tion Coat for · Contract No. rida.
·
except
for
on
e.....-moen
Noh
12
month
period
34205, woo appointed 14G io a1 1 2.000.
thet allaH triM. Said fottowtngtheflmfultyeorof
HOMEI BELT
Executrix
of tho oltete of o....,..ncy
of txtro houro to emploYment.
·
Tho propooed work in Lore Goy Lutillon.
,
.....
Lett-, OH. 45743
docuMCI,
1
be
app...,.d
by
the
mayor.
SEC.
Yilt.
Thot
1
group
Contract No. 14E conaiata Iota of 780 High Street. MidPh. 16141143-5416
• -t
of the neceaurv electrical dleport, Ohio 411780.
SEC. Ill: Thor following eN hoopltll end medlcel lnour·
1-26-'11·1 me.
.-:&lt; · wor:k at the waateweter
liiNIIy
cleciored
Hlogat
ho~
•
pion
b
e
lor
all
Raben E. Buck,
ldeya for tll!t employ- of full-time • ......_. of the
,, , treatment ~ant deiCribed in
Probate Judge the V1tlage of Mldclioport: VHiage of Mldcllepon who
,. Conttect No. 14G above.
Lone
K.
t\leoiiillraad.
The eatlmoted conltruc- 121 a. 15. 22. 3tc Cleric
N- YHr'l Day: M-.lot - · In woltlug to pertlc·
Do;: , . . . . _ _ Doy; lpete In llio ume, - diet
!~ tiOn coat for Contract No.
Laillor . Dey; TIMrnk..lvlng tho ' _.,rum t!r~NfoN be
,, • 14E lo •2o.ooo.
Public Notice
Doy; the dey oftlr Thonkl- . pekl by the Vlltoga up to the
, . Copiel of Orawingo. Spec·
giving; ChriltRIII Doy; Em· omount of the premium
ific.tioM end Contt'IICt docuptoyee'o birthday; vmnn·o quoted for the preHnt con·
..t
ments I'NIY be obtlinld oreK·
NOTICE OF
HEAnNG &amp;
Doy. '
tract.
ominod at the office of Floyd
APPOINTMENT OF ·
IV:
Thot
Aid
10lorio1
SEC.
IX:
Thot
el
full·tlme
II!C.
Browne A11ociatn; Inc.•
FIDUCIARY
COOi.ING
be In et1wt on end - r employe• dlllrlno to perConoulting Engl.-a · Pton·
On Jonuory 2B, 191!8, In wHI
Mooch
1,
1
118.
tlci,.U
In
the
pion
oholl
file
•FURNACES
nera, 181 SoUth Mein Street. the Melgo County Probeti
HC. V: loch fult·tlme on oteCtlon with the Clerk
, , Merion, Ohto 43302 or at Court, c... No. 26781.
•AIR CONDtnONERS
' tha office of the Mayor, 237 JomH R. Stout of 41 940 S. _,..,.. of t1w YtHage ohell within ten dayol 10) oltlr the
•HEAT PUMPS
' Roce St., Middleport, Dhlo. R. 7, Boa 34, Tu-1 be eutl- to lick ...,., tn elhictlw dillte of tlllo ordl·
the
_.nt
o
f
and-·
ne,_.
:'
A thirty-!Mo 1138.00) P!oino. Ohio 45783 end fou,m 1114) daye per month, · SEC. X. Thllt 11lorled om·
FREE E,STIMATES
depoorlt lnon·rofundlblo) witl Cherloo Glen Stout of
end iiliollt ill entitled to ec· p t - who do not elect to
• . be required for """" lilt of 49780 s . R. 248,Lono lot992-2772
crue lOki lick ..... up too~ ponlclpote, be peld on olltro
Drilwii&gt;Do. Specillcriono lnd tom. Ohjo 45743. - • op2-5.-111 mo.
hundred twenty 11201 doye. t70.00 per month In odell·
••· from
COiabaet
document~
tho _
_ _ 1lken polnted Co·EIIOCutoro of the
tlon to the - n t Aiory
ochedule, end til- om· Check• ohollbe modi PIIY· eltlte
doce.oMd.
Jete of N.
Route
1.
of vorcl•
stout.~~~~~~~~~~S
p i - pold on on hourly
" • able to the Village of Middle, 49615 S. R. 248, Long Sot· .
boola who do not otect to
pan, Ohio.
tom. Ohio 45743.
pertlclpete In the lnouronce
Attention of the Bidder Ia
Raben E. luck.
pion
ill pold on addltlorial40
directed to the special
- t o Judge
cent&amp;
per hour. Any om·
conatruction reguleUona in,
Lone K. N-lrood, Cleric
ployee
may ot onytlme - t
eluded heroin relative to-- 12) 8. 15. 22, 3tc
to wlthd,.w from the pion,
clol --~~ lor pro·
and In euah an event auc:h
cur-nt of Leillor, tile ope·
Public Notice
election for wlthd,._loloolt
clol iotformltioftli,.., In the
llliewiN. be fllecl 1r1 wrltjno
I .M. .
lnformt1tlon to lldclor. to the
tile Clerk. ~ Any em·
Speclel llequlnNMntl for
NOTICE OF
POMEROY, OK.
ployae w h o - not to per·
roteo. the houro ol omAPPOINTMENT 01
tlclpate In the pion mroy file •
992-2258
ploymanuuocertelned end
FIDUCIARY
.
aobeeQuent ilectlon to per·
dotlrmln.. by t~e . Do!portOn Fobnrtory I, 1181, In
NEW
UmNG
~ Nice 2 story
tlclpote,
end. If occeptlbte
moht of l~dultrlel Roiotlono tile Melgo Co~nty Proflate
to tile lnouronca _ . . . ,
home in waHrin1 dislance ID
end proviilod for in the I-• Coun. Caoe No. 21,747,
Mtylhina! 3 bedrooms, 3 ar
on • nori·rotld belle, then
of tho Stlto of Ohio.
Douglu W. Uttle. 211-213
10.8-tfc
prqe. aU elec., sitting iJn a ouch ernploYH niloy become
Propoult mult be oub· Eolt -nd S~ IOJO
o portlclpent In the pion.
nice lot ASKING $35,900.00.
mitted ' on the Propoool 1811, Pomeroy. Ohio 411718
Llcllwloe, ony employee who
Forma contained In the Con· Wll ..,pointed Executor of
Public Notice
ponlclpotel tn tllo pion onoy
' -· tract documonto. Tho Pro- tile ntotl· of Joy E. Btl....
ST. RT. 338 - River front
on • - to withdrew
" poul muot be occornponled deceolltl, Iota of 33711
Jli1II*IY with a nice c.abin:Has file
from the pion, In which
byobld gU.rentyeorequllod Urne Rood, lox'12IA,
1.1111 ilasellin. 2 bedrooms, event hlo WIIOII or 11lory. u
• ,. 1 by Section 163.54 of tho
Rutiond, Ohlc! 41771.
Slllpon:h with a river Wiw.
tho .... mroy be. lholl be od1.., Ohio Rt1Yioed Code. Tho bid
Robert 1!. Buck,
fruit
cellar, BPIJIIll(. 42'x30'
lultld
" provided In IIIlo peguorointy shall be olt~er In
l..eno K. Nr~~-J~~~
roph.
.
,
metal
buik!ini
$27,900.00
.
\ ;.t the form of 1 Bid Guaranty 12) 15 22
3tc
EC. XI: All ord1111in-ln
, . 8ond for tho full omount of
' · '
conflict
with thlo ordl1110nco
CALIFORIIIA CONTEMPO!.. . the bid or I Conlflod Choctc. I ---,·P=-u"'b"'l:-:--t.c....,.N'"o-t'·c_e
"e _ _
c..hier'• Check, or Letter of
RARY- On over 5 acres'in
IE~ . XI!: Thet olt full·tlme
CNdit, purouont to Chopter
the country. 3-4 bedrtJOms,
hourly poroonnat ohon be
130!1 of tho Ohi" Rovlood
ORDINANCE
2 ·baths, over 1300 sq. fl.,
pold on eddlttonel til,..
!... ; c·bde. in a,; amaunt eqUII to
NO. 1111·88
stusage buildint. elec. B.B.
corotl 13 centl) per hour for
f · .. ·ten Perc,e nt of the .bid. In the An Ortllnence to -bUoh
ucll yeer of conoecutlve full
heat. Garden lll'ea. MUCH
event one of the letter three
VHiage Jobe and Wa..
time-· w1t11 tho VHiage
MORE. $39,900.00.
..., forrria of bid guarenty Ia .ub,
Retll. end -bU-0 .
of Mtclelloport and thot ell
tt. ~ mltted, then 1 Contract Per- legol holldeyo. YIIOOtlon orid
full·tlme
11!ary pertoMO!
5 POINTS AREA -Three•,• forma nee ;Bond equal to the
lick teevo .
1._11
be
peid
oddltlonol
amount of the Contract
one acre home s~es. Elec. &amp; ala clolioro an
h It . ortlelned ·by the
lti.OOI
plr
mult be provided ot the time Council of the Vllloge ,of
water milable. Good locamonth for - h v- of con·
.t
of entering the Contract .
Mlcldloport 11 fott-:
'tion lor your new home. . . . . - full-time oervlce to
.. ·
Successful bidder mutt be
$5,900.00 ea.
·
t.
Th.t
the
following
the
, ,, on Equal Employment Op- _ _.. t a _ y
SEC . . XIII: Thet vlliooo
portunity Employer, which adoDted tor employna of
MIDDLEPORT - · Nice gar- council oholl -mine
prohibita dlocrlmlnotlon bo- tile \lttioge of Mldt(letlort.
age apartment in town, 3 whtoh ornp"'- ere ctuolCIUM of qce, crMd, color, Chief of PoNca. 11100.00
flecl eo full·tlme emplo , ....
bedrtJOms,lull basement air
t~~..,. nattonal origin. MX, age ..
pormontll ..
IEC. XIV: Thlo Onllnonce
hondlcop. polltlceloftlliotlon A-nt Chief of Pollee.
c:ooditloned and all on a iilooll
Ulloa efiMt orod be In
1 ' or beliefs. The Vltlogs of
level lot .close to shopping. force !rom and altlf March
t.30
por ho...
1 , Middleport io on Equol Em- R110uler Patrolmen:
ONLY,$21,900.00.
.
1, 1888.
. r '" plo.vment ·Opportunity Em· Over 1 YHr of 11rvlce, 1.11
Palled the 8th day of Fe, ployer.
,
·
per hour.
HYSEll.
lUll
Nice
ranch
~~T~1881.
The Owner reserves the Lou then 1 .,.., oor•ice.
home with paeous ......
_. I
Jan P. luck, Clerk
........
~1
right to reject eny or 111 prCJ:
1.17 por hour.
Dewwy M. Horton,
huae
rtJO!ll,
living
ruom
i • poaala •nd to w•lv• •nv In· Pen time potrolmon,
Preokllnt
of Council
with,
3 bedrooms.
.L formellties or irregul•ritles
per hour. ·
VHiage of Micl:floport, Oh.
in the, propoula received.
plus
a
trailer
hook-up,
all
on
Pan tlnll petrolmon (proba11
1.
Vlttege of
20 acres. $49,900.00.
tlonaryl 4.h per hour.
loa 40110, Nltal MI , 4ti20.:
Middleport. Ohto Periling M- Peroon liMo
412e:
Fred HoHman. Moyor
Mluea
Sizes
12
4GOO.
Print - . .• .Wd ....
MIDDLEPORT - Nicely rethan 1 - · urvlcel. 3.311
12) 8. 15. 22. 3tc
por hour.
to 20. Thle on•plece
Zip, liD, Plttetii - - .
modeled 1II story home on 1
Periling M - Porion 1._
dreu hu a tWo--place
quiet street in town. Fenced
1
,...
115 •icel.·~.311 per
look. Pl~ment of the
Public Notice
in beck yard, storage buildbOVt cree11111 a lllenclerlzin&amp;. 3 bedrooms, many other
S ~':.":'l!mpl..,_:
-~·
lng'look
at the waist.
o- 1 .,... urvtce.l. 1. por nice lutures. $19,900.00.
NOTICE TO
hour.
CONTRACTORS
Each pattern $3.25 plus
Loll then 1
-~
LETART - Like new inside
STATE OF OHIO
75e
postage1handlirg.
.. ,
3.80
per
hour.
&amp; outl Completely remoDEPARTMENT OF
IN
V&amp;
MI rts~denlsadd Slits Ia• )
Pool and Perk · DINotor,
TRANSPORTAnON
deled home on 1 larp lot
110.00 par montll.
loroelto:
Columbuo, Ohto
Excellent
candition.
Garap,
fl'•
LJhlulrde. 3.00 ,.. hour.
, , fdll Mall
January 28. 1888
new rool, new sidin&amp;. 4 bedAddi1.011Drf , a
ConttoctSAciiMty lnd ......
ruams, liJ'IIIIace. Much The Daly Sealiwl
tee..- ~r. 7e.OO · More!
11.
t.ept Copy No. 81-141
$27,500.00.
porwwll.
' '
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
'I.
J~,
Sber.d propouto wilt be s.c-.v 10 Mayor, 110.00
11 Help Wanted
POIIEIIO't- - 3 bedrm.
~·
N........ M the offtoe of the
l!atre
CllriNI
Help.ll,87
por
lrliler
just
oul
ol
town!
•' Olrector of tl\e Ohio Oepert·
hour.
meDl of T,.nopo-. Col·
Woltlbumt!, I car praae,
pmbu~to, until 10:00 A. Cllrk. Cemeteat ,,...._,
tqtiiJP.Id kilchln, A/C unit,
148.00 J!Cii' montll.
~
, ,., M.. ·
luond...t nme.
fei1t:iil
ylrd. Also ~~~~rkllJop
Vol.._,
I'INin111,
10.00
v,, w,dn•doy, F....,..,., 24,
In
MAKE OFFER
~.
• 1118. fer imprO..IIImlfttaln:
FUllTIII POSITION FOR MIISIEIEI't
$15,uuo,uo.
'" Hooking, Molgs, Mo-. Counoll. 21.00 ,_ llllltiAI
MEDICAL LAIOIATOIY RCHNICIAN ON
1141.
'
.: Mo!pll. Noblti - W.lhao.oo IUTlMD - 3 bdrm. home
•r . lngton Counttee, Ohio, on " "ant
IOTAlltG SHim
~~ vorloua - a N I -ron..
"' 1M Qlty of M~rlatlllllld the
Jr ,

reed aloud for

of Trenaport1tion and th8 af.

Ca-y:

PAT HILL FORD

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

Grengt Hell. 2 PM, For further

Aetliter Feb. 24, fllirgrounds,

lnttructions for cl...- StMing
M.,. 9.

PH.

CHESTER, OH•.
OPEN
WED.·FRI. -SAT .
7 :30. 10:00
Call for Birthday,
· Chu~ch, Private
Parties Mon. , Tues.,
Thurs., Sat. &amp; Sun.

"•• ·
- lullt
"Free
Eotimeteo"

PH. 949·2860
or 949·2801

985-3929
or 985-9996

NO SUNDAY CALLS,

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

FIREWOOD
LQ(ust, Oak, Cherry

$3500

Per Pickup load
Delivered
Bill SLACK

1:00 P.M.

614-992-2269
Evenings

•.. -,_ted.

t.t.,

10-9-tln

SALES &amp; SlUICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GliYSVR.LE, OHIO
614-662-3121

F•r• ~~··~·~~•

Now Locoliorn
161 North Second
Mieloleport; Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Aorthorizotl Jalwe Doore,
Now Holltrntl, ...,.. Hog
form lquiprnont
Doalor

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hete
IUSINISS PHO,.

·

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

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

.. MIIIIIL I'll•• Jlaa,. .. Ni• btl : s ; a z l I I All
,, ~·
-

"'
.... .....
,.

•11' ''TM,...•Ifor_...tto..
·•• of IIIII-. 111111 .. 11 R1
' fertl! "' .... lllddlnll
.......
~
.
. btlli lllddlr ..... ill ...
10 ~ flit Willi 111111111 •
·~(!

. .,

tiii:H .. .... .,

lllt:llli ••

·• ...................
liiM=--11flv
~ =·c:.:~:r.-r:
II}

•=
......

. .lr•lftdapandant warlcar, with
c~p ..lltlll In II .... of clinlall

YOUNG'S ·

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodeling

· Re.·acquaint yourself
with the stylists Mory, Naomi, Jane,
and Kay

ot

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON1

(Free Estimates)

t69 N. 2nd An.
Middleport, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.................
.............
. ... ,.
I

ltWIIIIIIIIII

Pultlllf . . . Ur6t

.

in 6 Points·

2 Rtd HeHer C.tvea. approx700
lba, l11t ...., on t.ow.r 9 MHe
.,.., , ..,, Farm. Cell 304,1755950.

Public Sala
&amp; Aucti.o n

w.a.m.,-.,·a Auction Servic•
avail•le 1t 'fOUr convenience
and loc1tiont. Marlin Wed•
meyer Auctioneer, 614,245·
5162.

9 · Wanted To Buy
We PI¥ caah for late model clean

u.-ct cart.

_,,m Mink Ch.v.-Oidt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon .

8t4-448-3672
..xl MWer uNd cars. Smith
Buldi-Pontiac, 1811 Ealtern
Ave., Oellipolis. CIA 114,448·
2282.
Compa.N houHholda of furni ture • antiquee. Aleo wood &amp;
coel hNtert. Swein's Furniture
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Olive,

114-441-3159.
WM'It to buy: UNCI fumttuf'e and

Would lilce to buy junk c~rs ,
wrecked cart 1nd motoreyciH.

Want to buy standing timber &amp;
pine. Pay TOP DOLLAR . !S acret
or more. EKeHent references.
Call Larry Striddllnd Logging.
814-682·7823.

992-2725

992·6215 or 992 •7314

Buying dalty gold. silver coins,
rlnga. jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins, large C::\mlncy. Top pri,
ces. Ed Burkitt Bub... Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 814,
992-3478 .
Standing timber: Call 114,742,
2328.

WALK·INS WU.COME

Pomeroy,

2·5.'88 I mo.

lllill liiVIIII'II I

St 1vILI 1 ~,
1

BISSELL
BUILDERS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtasonoblo Prices"

PH. 9.4 9-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

11 Help Wanted

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
..nau18tlon

t72,100. Now Hiring, bcellent

•Rep~cement~ndo~

•Now Roofing
FRII ISTIMATES

'JUlES UESEE
PH. 992·2772

2-5--'111 ••.

b. 124, Po-oy Ohio

6·17-tfc
I

comAmiGI

CHimR, OHIO I
•HOMI iiuiiDINII
•ROOM ADDITIONS I
oKITCHENI • lATHS
•ROOFING'
IIEIIOMUNII.
IIII'AIRI
lt!PTIC IYITIMI •
lACK HOI WORK

_..,
........
...

1

''

~

Rllfwa Ill

CIIIS

H4:ttR

Qovemmltnt Jobs a11,400 •'

Bonolltl. con 504-1148-7822
E111. J-313.

•Storm Doora
•Storm Window•

a...

lot'

MOYIS to VIIS TAI'l
Ul _,.,, lhott

ohl

" - l!eviH ovor to ooty
YHS.
.

uu AMY cum

or IOI'S ELECTIOIIICS

446·691'1 ... 446·1390

·WANTED

DEAD 01 AUYE

uc••• , ............."IS
'

Be~le

Grace, Donna, Angela

-Roofing and guner work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and itlectrical
·WOri&lt;

•Rengel •Freezere

1

FOUND: Small black. mixed
breed. female 'dog . w..rlng
bt'own flM collar. Rl . 1$0 area.
C.oll 614·••&amp;-7392 .

Stlindlng timber. Call 814-379c
27&amp;8-Ciaude Proffitt.

•Waahere •Dryera

E:.....

and Found

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

·t.. aratory.:,

Phzu

~ost

Call 114-379-2180 or 379·
2423.

...,_....

lilt1f/=.~

6

992-6282

l-28."88·tfn

'*••

-

304-875-6598.

.antiquu. Will buy entire hous•
hold fumllhlng. Marttn Wede,._, 814-246-5162.

,,

VItti~ of C................

4 month old mhc.ed breed puppy,
pleyful, good with children,

TOP CASH paid for ' 83 model

.v•

•1 ·lltlt Ylillw• In llaalh.,

Puppiel to giv..wey. Pert Pil
oncl port Sh-d, Vf!!V nleo
coloring . FW. miiH end one
fonllle. Already -oct. 4 wh.
old. c.tll14-192-7020.

1128/ tln

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Trt•••l••l••
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

''!

Fomllo. CaH 814·388-8896.

16141 992-7154

1· 3-16 tit

,,,"" ....«.------

p_.._,

Puppy, fMY be part Labfedor.

RESIDENCE PHONE

.,.

.....

neck. Well tflined. C.ll 11.._
379-21111-

We Carry Fishing Supplies

16141 "2·6550

· P1rt1 &amp; Serwl~•

All thott,

bolller~ hound .

FtM

honey brown with whiW under

B

Roger Hysell
Garage ,

LAIORATORY TECHNICIAN

frM puppi.. ~ Cd 014,4-t&amp;,
784• .

Call614·992-6810.

BOGGS

vAt-.

·-net

Te• down 32x2.t. okl Urn for
lumbor. Colllt4-441-3083.

Flatwoodt ' ' "· Lort Sunday.

RACINE, OHIO

1125/'87/1 mo. d.

Giveawey

Lo11: ftmele

RACINE
GUN CLUB

DENNY'CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAN[)
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

-

mo.

1 -27-'88-1

3-11-ttn

J&amp;L

INSULATION

SICATE-A-WAY

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

..

w-

w.nt ta mM•• quitttoP in • dl'f 1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1

·'

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

4

M.- tiNder. 15.48 per omployH of tho )lltlago, In·

hour.
Weter &amp; s-oge Dept..
Extro Help:
Owr1 yeer umc., ti. 1I per
hour.
Lau tllon 1 yeer urvtce.

AttlfltiOn Stniorl. Get your
sMcturta for yGQr announC8·
men11 Nrty, C.ll I:\OW 8nd get
your . pict~,., 114,141·3010 or
114-1149-2803.

oU04-420·1018 coM~ .

Public Notice
SEC. VI: Each

Availebae , Fruth Ph•macr.

MARINES: We're lookirt9 for 1
f.w good men. FOJ more lnfor,
m11tion. cell . .rgeent Mike Abell

:z; (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

fadory Cholot

•,,
1.

3 Announcement•

· .. ' Television
Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Se~1ic~
" Hearint Evaluations For All Ages

RACINE

&amp;:Ei:!:.i£:.

--

::-:::;:-==----..........

'

· Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to
lQse Weight ,.

The DaHy Sentinei- Page- 7

'GUN .SHOOT

·una

MIIAII

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

Lydia Council conducts rlzeeiing

'

Ohio ·

RHuce 11fe • fatt with Oole..
captu ... &amp; 1!-VIp "Witer pllla" .

t -11

stepchildren but yc)u must 1espect
then!. Don't expert instant apprec\·
ation for your stepparenting ef·
forts. It might be years, if ever,
before they appreciate what you've
BeandiDner
done for them.
"Do~'t make the ~ of • RUTLAND r-An old-fashioned
bean dinner Will be served at the
forcing your spouse to choose Rutland American Legion Hall
berween you and the children. In on Saturday, Feb. 20, from 11: 30
most caSes you will lose."
· a.m. to 6:30p.m. Cost will be $2 ,
The title of this excellent paper· for all·you-can-eat. Sandwiches
back is "Making Your Family and pte wUI be extra.
Work." If your bookstore doesn't
have it, send a checl!- or money
orl!er for $8 (II$ includes postage
and handling) to Thomas More
Press, U3 W. Elje St., Chicaao, IL
60610. It may be the best investment
you bave ever made.
Pfaiming a wedding? What 's
right? What's wrong? "111~ ,-Inn
Landers Guide'for Brides" will"reline
you~ anxiety. To rtalve a i:opy, .send
Sl:SO plus a No. 10, self-addressed,
stamped envelope (39 renrs jlo&amp;togP)
New "ret M g.,.,. Diet Pill
roAnn Landm, P.O. Box 11562, ChiGuarlnltlel
*-' Wslgl!l Loll
cago, Ill. 6061 UJ562.
•
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)ANN, lAiflERS•
An
IIIIIIZing .-weight IO&amp;S pill called
e 1988, los A,..lts Times Syndicott tnd
"fat-rnaJnet"
has recently been
C11ators Syndicate
dcYCiopedandpcrfecledbytwoprom·
ii!Citclodlln. ~ wot'l!l timous holpital
in Los Anfeles thai reportedly
''gUBn!lfeOI' that you will easily lose
fill by simply taking their lesiCd and

.OES school of instruction held

Plans for a prayer breakfast
for the men of the church on
March 5 were made at the recent
meeting of the Lydia Council of
the Bradford Church of Christ.
Madeline Painter presided at
the meeting with officers' reports being given. It was noted
that Jackie Reed Is In charge of
the mother-daughter banquet
money.
Plans were made for a visitation program with each member
to visit at least one shutln each
month taking along a small gift.
Arrangements were made to
wash the windows In the new
parsonage on Marcb 1. On March
5.• the young people wll) have p
church servant day , doing odd

UOSll SWINt

, pOMEROY - There Is an old
saying that there are three thln1s
each person can never escape:
birth death, and taxes. The
yearly tax task often creates
problems because you often fall
to have the right forms and again
this year the OVAL Bookmobiles
are providing these essentials to
service users.
The vehicles have been stocked
with 1987 Federal and Ohio tax
return blanks and explanatory
booklets. The staff also have
access to reproduclbl~, form
mallter, so thaI If there Is a
particular Individual form you
need to complete your return
they llJ'e able to provide a copy to
Bookmobile users.
The Bookmobile start at!! not
trained tax consultants, and can
provide no Information to lndl·
vlduals on wbat may·or may not .
be deducted. Falling short of that
they can provide service use~
with the forms they need for the
annual ritual.
No Bookmobile run, Monday,
Feb. 15, due to Washington's
B!rlhday.
·
Wednesday - ReedsviiJe
(Reed's Store), 5:00·5:30 ;
Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's),
6:35-7:35.
The following stop has .b een
eliminated In 1988: Meigs
County, Carpenter.
OVAL Bookmobile crews have
' been providing users at these
sites with alternative "next cl&lt;is·
est" service locations since the
middle of Novembj!r. In many
Instances the users drove several
miles to the stop, and ~th the
new schedule they wUJ merely
change the direction and time
they travel to the Bookmobile.

a

TARA GRUESER

---~ ~--

fetlrueiY 115, 1111

\ TO P\A(( Alf M t.W. ..J.tiS.
MONDAY ttw" ,_,, I lA te S P.M.
I A.M. lllnil N001111 U.n8.1r

Bookmobile route

Is it .· funny or.is it sick?

DEAR READERS: If your life is
glorious, your children absolutely
terrific, your marriage idyllic, your
brothers and sisters models of
perfection, and your ex-spouses are
ljellerous. considerate and helpful,
yo.u can skip the column today;
I'm going to tell you about a
book that was written for people
whose marriages could use some
repair, whose children are somewhere between difficult and impossible, who have relatives that ·are a
pain in the neck and -whose ex·hus·
band or ex·wife is irresponsible,
mean-spirited or just plain nutty.
Some of the topics covered are:
How To Be a Creative Fighter
learning To Celebrate and Laugh
as a Family
Triangling- Pareqts Who Side
With a Child Against the Other
Spouse
Manipulation of Family Metn·
bers
·
When To .~k Outside Help
Infidelity
Divorre and Separated Parenting
Working Mothers
Grandparents Are Til love ·
·Constructive Ways To Settle &lt;;hii·
dren ·s Fights
Young Adults -- Here Today and
Back Home Tomorrow
The Golden Y~rs? Your Services
Are No longer Requited
The author, Mary G. Durkin,

_...,....,

Business Services

'

By .Jetf Hilleary
resurrected as the unstoppable film which Is mixed With chUls
As I begin tills column, allow
cyborg cop who sets out to make and laughs.
me to ask a very simple question:
his city safe. But, predictably ,
Marc Price, who plays the role
,·, ·. Do you know the meaning of the
there Is a slight problem.
of Skippy ·on Family Ties and Is
' term "Black Humour"?
an accomplished standup come• • · Let .me give you an example.
You see, since he was once dian, turns In a great perforYou see a man In a Three Stooges
human lie has had a past life and mance in the film which tells the
movie get hit on the head with a
he keeps seeing Images from lt story of an outcast In a high
mallet and you laugh.
and hls last few minutes of life school who is tormented by his
Blacll humor Is anything that
and then he sets QUI to find the classmates. As a result of the
normally would appall us but
men who made a target out of tormenting he wan.ts to retreat to
Instead 'draws a chuckle from us • him and Rebocop becomes one of his world where hls hero Samml
.: ;, If not outright hilarity..
· the most entertaining science Curr, a rock star in the style of
· Robocop (Orion, R, 103 minfiction movies I have seen since Ozzy Osborne, Is his only ~olace.
. utes ) Is a good example of thls II)
my first encounter with the
But after his Idol is ·killed In a
.: : that the gory scenes are buffered
wonderful world of George Lucas fire he.gets a gift from a local DJ.
• • by scenes of comedy. Starring and Star Wars. There Is a great Tills gift Is an unreleased recOrd
Peter Weller, this deals with a
deal of unnecessary swearing by Samml which is the .Jast
.:\tworld not far from our11wn Where and some violence but some record that he had ever made:
· a pollee force· that Is run by
excellent acting from Ronny Cox and, as the traditions of horror as
,:
ajor corporatlon·ls on the edge who plays the sometimes disgust- put down by H. P. Lovecraft and
" - of striking because of a cop klller ing hospital director of St. W. W. Jacobs would have It,
After a very bloody finish to his Elsewhere.
serves to put our hero in touch
life as police officer. Alex
Trick or Treat (Lorlmar, RJ98 . with the spirit Of Samml and then
• Murphy, Weller undergoes a minutes ) Is an example of what a things begin to happen. Some
cybernetic operation In the t_rled horror movie an be if humor is nudity and swearing are Included
a nd true tradition of The Six judlclousy used to the best effect b~t otherwise, It Is still a very
Million Dollar Man and he Is and that Is what occurs In this good movie.

--

Monday. FebrUary 16, 1988

I

KELLY GRUESER

Monclly~

The Daily Sent~nel

'

_..

•Refrigerators
"WI ... wlleeiiA..y"

1111'S APPUANCI
'•VICE

1

s"'HI:-:P-::A-::Eo:PA-:-1-::-R--Hiring 17,30 ytiar old high
.chool grade for Immediate
openlnga. Will provtde trllinlng,
PlY and ben.ttu In following
.... : • 0.1 turlllna • Power
plana • Mechentc.l ~ ...,._ullm
• Electricel. Po.h:lons require out
Of atate Nlocetlon end ·eome
travet. Ciill ,.rsonnel at 1· 800,
282· 1384. Mondoy-Tburodoy 9

AM -2PM.

Sell Awn. O.t your own Avon at
diecount. Call614-441-3318.

1

Easy Wottcl Excelltnt Peyl AI·
•mble produata at home. Cell
tor information . 312 ·741 ·8400
Ext. A·313.
Enthuslutlc &amp; outgolno peraop
to euitt with marDtlng and
Nl" project• and other office
duties. Send rqume to : Box Cle
1 31 c/ o Oalllpolil Dalty Tribune,
125 Th~d Ave .. OoHipoilo. Ohio
45131 .
•
Anyone Interested in getting a
bind together playln\ country ·
and rodlo pte... 01111 14,11154231 .

AVON · All •-·

CaM Mlrilyo

w.... 304-812-2841.

Awon IH 1re11, Shirley ''""'·

304·1711- 1421.

-looftJint.

Loool ph~ilt to r..tlo blltlne.

IP""''"*'''· pt~tl.nt 1oh•
dutn. ··peNn~. but
not "I 111M\',
~
or-.Mhro-.y,-lox

,.2 -

of Point .......
fl Cl I , 100 .....,_ aL, ltalrrt:
PIJu nt. W. Ya. liMO.

MIIT-nME JO..I Joko tho
•
1J10 or t·IGD 141-lltl.

~""''Niiiiii ... . . _. J04.171,

-.....
..,,..,
.....
--:.--·
-----....
'WAN liD"' Rl.lll ...ll .lflld-

=m·wiir
--..,........ _._ ...
IIIII . . .,._

II:

"

�'

·--··- - -

.' -

Pege-8-The Deily Sentinel

100 IIM.lNFIICF
tectNty. ladul:a ~ whll

of..,.

J:

more ,...
lenol
drMired. ExcrlrM _..., • MOM Of

nefhp·+• ...............

ATTENnON RN.'&amp;
Lookinglo&lt;-ina. - r d·

I

r
. o...

'
-o·

I

I

0·

ing potltion1 Scenfe MIMI Nuraing Cenw ott.n COft'opiiPIIlive
wag•, tuition ~W-imlaun.ment.

COUNTIIY MOBILE Homo Perk..
Routo 33. Nomo of Po"*"Y·

-o' -

I

Oth. .. Info. 1· t504J

~

.

AN'S : Earn •21 .000 plut, with
over 20 p.~id dryr off t n v-r:

"Harold

Adva-cll't lntun~nce pa~ . Tuition Nimburaement rnd many
other benrfitl. Be Plrt of the
highly lkilled t . .m at Pinec:rett
Care Ctntrr. Crll 514-"1·

• ·If

~~,-~ '... "'*-·-

was so wonderfully supportive
the divorce that I decided to m•rrv

ttlroQgh
him agam.
. •

31

Avoiiobo tor immodil1o ompioy·

m..,t. Send rHUme to; lox Cia
136 c/oGtlllpolitDtifyTribune,
825 Third Ave., Otllipollt. Ohio
415831 .

41

Home• for Sale

Ruetic oed• home wtttt oilk

flo&lt;n. two·wey ftrtpl-. ..,..
Colonial windowe, cuetom
woadwork.ltUdy. 3000 plueaq,
ft . ...,_. a woadlll..,...,.
Sutton Twp. Country.lde, ,._.
, . . _ ot 11.12.000. 111 tar
f77,000 . Col e•&lt;~--·2130.

QET PAID lor reading bookll
1 100.00 per title. Write: PASE·
33l, 161 s. Llncolnwey, N.
Aurora. IL 10542.
'
Qovernment Jobs. •18,040·
t l59, 230 yttr. Now Hiring. Your
Afee. 80!-887·8000 Ext. R9105 for curT..,t Federal Iiiii.

4 Mdroom, flnp•·=·, full finilhecl ........ z ca- .,......
hot wew hHt end wood burner.
0t1 I liwoodld acres at Tuppera
Plaina, Ohio. C1ll IU--117-

UOI·oftor 1 :00pm.

7 roofn houM. 1}-i beth,. 4 BR ..
garage, on Orawa Hill, 770 Alh
St.• Mkldleport. Call 114·982·

Situ•tions
Wanted

5714.

-· · .... --•·•¥
1

:,': :=~·.::zu:,~

=:
'

Ttanlftrrad. 11 &amp;-tt:t-II0 1.
H
to
1 G •~it ~ 4
ome , .. ., a...,.... ,.....,,.,
bedrooma, four 011' oeraoe.

Have room in prtv.te home for 2
elderly tadiel. TttOM not wishing
to be in nu,.ing horne. Bed fast
will be consideNCI. Will have
good etre. Call anytime. 114-

o38.1500.oo. 304-ii75·11B4.

388·8193.
Senior citizen . Room and board
fw one lady. Specilil care in my
home. Reuoneble. Cell 814-

992·8873.

Insurance

Home• for Rent

42

Mobile Homaa
for Rent

2 e.-.• water. NWage turnislled.
Beautiful rtver view. No city
tlxn. Fost11r'e Mobile Home

Pork. eon 114-448·1802.

2 IR., utllh:leeP.Ict-exc,ptelect·
ric. fvrnished/untumllhld. Sec.
Up. required. Convenient locadon. Coli 114·441·4711 or
F...,iahed 12JIIO, 2 lA ., mobile
home. Good location. 2 mil11 .
from town. e2oo • mo . t100
d111. c.ne14-446-2390.
2 BR houM with Ito..,. •
relria.,.tOf. '225 mo. depoait
requir.d.
VInton, OH Call 814311·1121 .

l-:----------'--- 2 bedroom mobile home In

Mlddi_.,, Ohio. A01...,.co
on4 ....,~,., dopooi1 roqulrod.
304·882· 3217 or 304· 773·
5024.

2 story, femity room, batement.
garage. In 40'•· 304-875-3030
or 175-3431 .

2 bedroom pa~lty furnlthld
tpt, Keintuga. Ohio, references
required, 304·175· 1118 or
614-441·4197.

· 1\otobile Homes
for Sale

44

Apartment
for Rent

Cell us for your mobile homo

insurance : Miller Insurance,
304-882 - 21 '6 - Also : auto.
home, life. hHith.

18

197·3 · 12xll F.-om. 3 BR .,
gat fumaoa with eentrtl air,
wa1her-dryer. all , kitchen , ap·
pliane.t. dinette eet, Yneterpln·
nlng. block a porchft. Call

Wanted to Do

814-317·0883.

118&amp; Ovorlond Pork·14d4. 2
BR., totll u•· Price reduced.

Wanted to do houte&lt;:INning in
Gallipolis eree on regular ball•.
Ha"'e r..eronces. Cat\ 614-441-

FRENCH CITY BROKERAGE •
114·448·1340.

8889.

Will

do

1976 Kent • 1 0Jt38. Good
candlllon . Priced to 1111.

housecleening. Call

FRENCH CITY IROKERAGE-

614·448·36&amp;8.

Celll14·441-9340.

Want to .do weekly cleaning in

PRICE REDUCED ' 1187
14x72-flntllly II- DLX .. B.tth,
colo• TV, VCR . Aoducod UOOO.
FRENCH CITY MOBILE
HOMES· Coli 114-448·9340.

your home. Experienced. C.n

tupply good referencn. Call

614·268· 1713.
Mother of 4 year old &amp; ~by will
babysit in my home. Weekd-vs a
after .chool. Clo1e to AddiiVille
.oeem . 614-387-n&amp;e etter5pm.

PRICE REDUCED: 1987 Sun·
11h bath.
utility room. '12,500. FRENCH

nybfoolc 14Jtl0. 2

1~ ..

CITY MOBILE HOMES· Coli
114·441·1340.

Will do Federal and State Income
Tne1: typilig. booking. tnd

Notary aervice. Mtrg..-et·Parktr

14x70, 2 BR .• excel. cond .. nNr
EuNka on Rt. 7. 2 BR . at
Me"*'VIIIa, mint cond. Call
114-448- 1211 or 218-1420.

614·992·2284.

F1nanml

1983 Schultl. 14•70 on 1.1

.crw• with 21 ft .x 30ft. a•aa•Shown by tppointmenl onty.

21

Co11814·742·2577.

Business
Opportunity

1984 14Jt70 Shult:J trsn.... 3
bedroom, 2 bath. Excelent
condition. 114-949-3ooe.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

New 19BB Country Villt,
14.x72. all electric, let up on
riverfront lot. 814-992-3348
after &amp;p.m.

lNG CO . recommends thet you
do busineu with people you
know. and NOT to 1end money
through the m1il until you htwl
invel1igated the offering.

1 974 Freedom mobile home,

12x66. 3 bedroomt, 1lleltetric,
lnslant Credit - No credit c h~tek, underpennlng, •4.100.00. 304no interett charge. Everyone 882·2888.
eligtble. Application: Rush •
11111•~ addrea1ed , ttamped enve- 4

--;;:=:;;:::::=:;::::;;=.=
33

loped 1o: Oiler. Rt. 2 8•• 228
Vinton. Ohio 46886.

22

Farms for Sale

jO acre farm : Mo111y dllable.
Near Rio Grande. Pond, barns,
good home. Call 614-241-

Money to Loan

9678.

CASH LOAN TO $10.0001
NO CREDITOR EMPLOYMENT
NEEDED FOR NEW PRO·

A

GRAM! 1713) 662-6408, 24
HOURS.

23

8t

Lots

Acreage

Commercitl property tnd houM
toti-Gtllipolit Ferry. Cell 304-

Professional
Services

675 ·8108 .
2 Iota for Nl• 111 mile north of

Eurlkt on Rt. 7 . Rur11 water
availeble. 80 ft. wide. 238 ft .
quality work and reasontble long-etch . Cell 114·211·1110
ratn. free estimetes, 304· 676- efter I PM.
7991 .
1 acre lend. 3 mil• from town.
Hard rOMt reMiy for mobile home
Real Estate
or good building lite. C.ll
Fu mdure reflnithing and repair,

814·448·1451,

31

41

Homes for Rent

Nicely fumlahltd smtll houae.
AduHt onlv. Aef. required. No
pell. Call 11 ..........1 · 0338.

3 8R ., 1 v, bath, formal DR . brick
tirepltce. Bitwel deck. Bridlend
fr1me ranch located tt end of
quiet drive. One plus tete.
Gtrden tpace. City lichool•.
Heet pump-central eir. Outctoor
ttorage .,••. Cell 814-448 ·

Very nie., 2. po..tbte 3 IR.
hauM in Mic:klleport. OW, 00,
AC, fuU belemMK. Excellent

8157.

locotion. Coil 114·448·1208
of1orl:30 PM.

Contge in Florida far Sele. 2 lA.
1 bath, partly furnished. Lot
80x120 . Loettion· 2 blocb from
beach &amp; 2 block• from bey.
AtkinU •29,000. C.ll tvenlng•.

Awllable Merch 1et.· 4 lA .
houM. full baMment. •too dep.
• r.t. -.ulred. •300 1 mo.
Qrendvlt¥1 Hgts. . . .. Call

1813)187·1844.

114-448·3111 .. 2... 1441.

3 BA . ·house in Crown Clty·M•In
Street. •21.000. C•lll14·441·

Fumilhild: 3 room cottage In

GoiiiPC!Iit. Adulu. C'-1. No

-· w...,

1511 or 448·1522.

•

Ave. Gtllipolia, OH.

1·800·642 · 2434 ·
553· 34113.

Sot. 814-448·1899. ·827 3id.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Upper River Rd. bHide Stone
Crest Mokel. 614-'48-7398.

Pib from t183 a mo. W1lk to
lhop and moviet. 114-f 46-

.

l

Nics 2 SR. 4 Y.a mil" from
Galllpolie. Stove. rafrlt. &amp; weter
furnished. No pete. t211• mo.

826 . ~.

Sof11 end chair• priced from
t3H to t991. T1blea t&amp;O 1nd
up to t1 2&amp;. Hld•-• · beds t390
to t596. Recliners t226 to
8376. lart'IPI $28 IO t126 .
OiMtt11 t109 tnd up to t496.
Wood table w-e chain t286 to
•7915. DMk t100 up to $376.
Hutebee t400 and up. Bunk
badt completl w-milttre11ea
•2Biand uptot315. Babybecll
t110. "11attre1•11 or box tpring•
full or twin tea. firm •78, and
t88. Queen lett 1226, King
1310. 4 drtwerchut t69 . Gun
Cl!lbinela I gun. Gte or electric
range 1376. Btby mattret181
t35 • t46. Bed lrames t20.
130 &amp; .King frame t60. Good
selection of bedroom luit.-.,'
metal c.binett. heedbotrda 130
and up to '16.

304·676·5466,

Coli 114·441·8038.
Nitw deluq 2 Br., equipped
kitchen. low utilitl•. Excellent
location. No .,.u. O.p. • ref.
required. C1t1 814-448· 1250.
11 Court St.· 2 lledroom, 2

b1th1, kitchen furnished. w/ w
c.pet. •321a mo. plua utilities.
No petl, depoait • ret.
231 Flm: Ave. · 1 Bedroom,
kitch.., furnished, river view,
• 17&amp; • mo. ptu1 utilitln. Single
or couple. Oepoait • rtf. No
pou. Coli 814·448· 4928.
Nice 1 BR . tpt. netr HMC.

drep11. Ctll

Modem One BR. apar1ment. CaU

814·441-0390.
1'-----'-----Fum .. hed apenment. All utllitltl
p,id. Adultsonty. C.lll14-448-

U11d refrigereton-whlte, al ·
mond II capper- like new . Corbin
&amp; Snyder Furniture, 916 Second
Ave .. GelliPo11•. · 114-441·
1171 .

Building Supplies_
BUILDING SUPPUES
SAVE 60% to 76%

1-Wafer .bolrd 7 118JI4' x8'·
t6.9B, 3.b4'x8'· t8 .96.
2-T-111 yellow pin• siding
"-x4'x9'·S 13.96 eech.
3· 1.4x4 'x8' lauan plywood·
e6.95 each.
4-Aough aaw cedar boerdt
IAJ112"x:72"·2 for t9.00.
6·Nq. 2 -8 ''•pruce btrn siding
v-groved·39C lin. ft.
&amp;-Colonial be.cted m11onite lap
aiding- *23 sq., 20
sq. full
llft•·•18 IQ.
7-·7 / 18x4x8 prefinilhed atete
gr1y or •lmond lidlng-113.96
each.
8-Ma.onite roG• or brick
unfinithed paneling 1A~~:4x;815.95 e10h. •
9-AUtlbe flor111 end lace panel·
ing Vtx4JC.8-t7.95 •nd
t8.9&amp;
...h.

10-VJ x4x8 All wood - penelfnlil
oak and pine and birch· t115.91
to t18.e&amp; . .h.
11·8tth room Ptn.tlng. glued
tile end emootll Ptttem· •1.11
to t12 .96
12-Whrte 48"x22" blth roam
vtnitift with marble top
(I)

grtdet-t169.96.
13-Cilina and marble round and
ovei v1ntty bowl•- white end
color-$19.9&amp;.
14-Color commodea - t49.91 ~
White c:ommodt•· •39.96.

16-Color pedlattl lav1tor111~
$69.8&amp;, 2 far t100. ·
16 -White s)eel bath tubat59.95 each, 2 for t1 00- color
179.96 aeeh.
17-WhlrlpoC:I tubt·fiberglll•.
complete plumbing-tl95, reo.

Treiler underpinning, excellent
condition, t100 . G.E. almond
refrig ., 1lmost new-good cond.
Call 814-388-97'4 after 5 PM .

01396.

'

18-1 pc. filfergltll tub &amp; ahow·
ar1 t169.91 each. whhe
or

Queen aile hide·t·bed. Excellent
condition. •3oo, Call &amp;14-992-

color.
19·Bright end antique breu end
chrome v1riity and t\lb
&amp;
thower f•ueet. Save &amp;0%.
20-2 gal. bucket - off white
textured wall ptlnt- •4.9&amp;, reg.
09.95.
21 -6 gal . aluminum flbered roof
coating-t20.9&amp;.
22-K·lux white brick 5 sq. ft .
ctn.-t1 .50.
23-EproJty coaled ateel cloaet
a~d door sheh1lng. Save
to
76%.
.
24-.Wood, aluminum and "'lnyt

7487.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
detks, lamps, ttbl11.
eoucht, chairs, dlnnetts, misc.
Htlf mill out Jericho Road.
8 ;00 -8 ;00 · Sund•y• 12:00 Bed1,

a,oo, 304· 875-14&amp;0.
New electric Hotpolnt dryer for

oolo. 304-871·2130.

53

.

Antiques

9523.

clad wirtdow•. (Bows), (Btya),

Brooltlide Apartments: 1 BR .

•p•rtments with large kitchen
1nd laundry room whh Wllherdr.,.r hookup, All electric. Ctll

614·441·1132.
Fumi1h.t apt. - 1 Sr. t231•mo.
UtHh*r:id. 920 4th. A¥t. Call
441·44 I tftlt' 7 PM.
Nice 2 lA tpt. Water; gerbaga
peid. Stow &amp; refrig, furnished.

Gr.tcioul living. 1 lnd 2 bed·
room apertment1 at Vlllege
Manor and Riverlide Aplrtmenta In Middleport. From
t2115. including utilltl• . Cill

114-992.n87. EOH .

Conete efficiency, total elect·
ric. refrla•ttor, etow, ' nice.
HUD - -· 2218 M1. Vor·
nDn Aw., Pt. P111unt. 814-

H2·1118.
Ntce 2 bedroom apt. in Middl• ·
pan. t1BI por month . Dtposk

1nd ,.terenca required. Day

814·892·2381, Wookondt 114·
H2·2109.

Coli 114· 892-5724 .

Moore. 614-992-2&amp;26 .

54

,.... Ret•en- •

-wttr

1

F i - d for - · t:il. lorVO
~up lood . . AH ho-.
·~
. •--··
.,...w. c • 11114·.742-z-,

lop-.-·

Ook. roll
flo.
ming10n 170 ~-· 20
go. th01gUn, 111o . _. 0271
ooclo. CoN 114-141·2101 .
Newly ,..~-~obod.

=

,.._

-·

:':0~~-:,·::e:r.:

Ty-hor. t100. 114·112·
2311
U Haul trucke end trahn for
ron~

304-171-7421.

o• -DOd. eon 304·171·
2717 4,30p.m. AA for
Wooctm1n.
.

F • - - dol...,...., ..-....
o35.00. Moton c;aun1y. Cioll'*
lit, Ohio llo o - ..... wi1hin
rea10n. our diMNation. 304-

aa&amp;·3441.

·

Rouignol Skii 11101. llindlngo,
Novdico .booU 110'hl. poln;
o175.00 tDIOI. Woohbum I

ltrlng aoouitlc .,har tiO .OO.

66

Building Supplies

;;:::::;;::::::=::;::=·. 76

SWIMMING POOLS • o999
New l.tt over 1987 Model
Pool1. Hugh 15•24 ft. 1wlm
II'N , ' ft . dHp. Includes deck,
fence, filter &amp; Wlrrtnty. lnttallttion • financing tvellable. Call
24 hrs.: 1· 800-345-09.te ,
.

245·5121 .

ConCrete blockl•lllizu ·yanl or
dollvory. Mil-"""· Oollipollo
Block Co.. 1 231&gt; Plno S1 ..
GtiUpoNo, o~1o eon 114·448·

2783.

&amp;Acceeaoriea

rebuHt tranlinlllione.
Ueed ara lntamalty insl)teted
tnd c.-ry 3000 mil.. or 30 days
warr•nty, lw:hlahever occurs'
flrat). We can help wtth hard to ~
flnrcl trsnlfnluione. Ctll 114·

441·0181.

chant~~.

Colll14-441-9at.

plu~

Coli 814·317·0Bf•.

Brodley GT ld1 with turbo ecoape. C..tomed. New
tl-721 , fiOO. C.lll14· 441·
3125.

Pet• for S•le

s-"

t~op·Pwt

· Konno~.

CFA Hirnoloyon, -

Md

AKC:~

............
Coli·114-44a· 3144
·
-of1or7PM.
Ono - . n - . t.noio, 3 yro.
old end one Deohthund, ..,.••• 1
yoor old. Colll14-,.....1210.
~KC

-

Ba1M11 pup. Tri-color, hot
wamood. A1 otud, AKC

Bo_, ond AKC Sh-. Col
814-H7·5857.
Purebred male whitt German

K-

61

I1JI:,,ill11

L

Farm Equipment

phis, Your ...,...

au.,.. Guide.

1111105·117·1000 Ext. 8·1101.

mltot. tBOO. Col 114112·H4B.
.
.

---··-......

1·114·881·7311 .
F'
trewoo d•Lo rge Pick · up Ioad .
038 ~olivorod . Ail hordwood
Coil•614·441; 1437. ·
·

Weloton. O~io
814 .384. 3141

F • F Cti'JI0"1fY.

63

Ftltty TrH Trlmmin" stump
remowl. C•U 304·171· 1311. 1

r=;;;:::::::~;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;;;;:::::;~ Ho~ ~ •~~
ul•
1nd Tannet. . ' W8Hlen. C.et

114·44.. 4711.
Rot.

hog-. Yorii·W1. 3801bo.

2 bedroom fumtHd ept, ref 11nd
depoth, New H8"en, W. VI.,

84 H•v•

llo. 114-448·1221 .

GQ!n

304·1e2·3217 or 304·773·
1024.

end Lawn Service,
lewn a ... lendauplna. stump

Fumlahed Roomt

1000111. round bo1oo Mlad
olfolli """ ....... fZO.
Coo · Col 114-311·
1104.

Aoomo for Nnt. dov. MOlt
· Gollo- Ctll14441·1610. -•lawoot120

ot

ao~~~~~t~o~• ~ ....,.

CoAl!~......-

"How l!lllny times have I Uked you
lo wear that fox coat during
the hunting seaaon?l"

''

not

...

.. .

·10-

- · CeN 114·111-1114,

katu n. Ohio.

MY LJI.ICLE 1&lt;06ER6A't5 HE;
qaT A CAGE OF FOlSON
IVY L.A5TSI...JMMER.

.A CA&amp;EO!=
POISON
IVY':?

co-host 6 shopp1ng show
· with Stephanie. t:;1
1!11 Larry King l:lvel
9:30 (!) College Baeklltball
@l 11)1!21 Frank's Place
Shorty gets involved with a
southern belle, who moves In
with him.
10:00 &lt;D Straight Talk
(f] Alberta Hunter: My .
Caotle's Aockln' Trace the

•

I eHCUL.D THINK A SIX·
P,A.CK Wa..JLD BE /.\ORE
11-+At-.1 eNOUGH.

career of nol~d jazz singer

Alberta Hunler. from her
remarkable start in 1907
through her heyday in the
1920s and 1930s and her
comeback. C
rm; 11)1!21 W(e,guy When
Mel 's armaments deals go
sour, Vinnie sets up a

:;

.

•

narcotics deal.
l[lJ 18 News
1!11 Evening Newo
10:20 (!) MOVIE: He Knowe You're
AloneiAI (1 :34)
10:30 &lt;D Various
l[lJ Flyera In Search of a
Dream
(!) Hogan'o Heroeo
11:00()) Remington StHie Coffee,
Taa or Steele

~=::;;;::::;;;:::==::
~82
Plumbing
.j'•

11

Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAnNO .

AN'
GUESS

'·

WHO SAIRY
ELOPED OFF
WITH·· 1.

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Oolipolio.

O~io

Phone 114-4.41-3888 or 114·

441·44n

STAY TUNED II
WE'LL BE·RIGHT
BACK AFTER A
BRIEF PAUSE

e

D &lt;D Cll II Cll all 1111!21

&amp;

IIJ) New•
·
(f] Slgn ·Ofl

Electricel
Refrlger•tlon

ll1l Moneyllne
IHl Soap

wHio
·

e (!) Lovo Connection

Relidlll'ltiel or commercltl wlr- ....·
lng. New ...nee or rep~~lrs. ,
L.lcenMd tleatr&amp;ol•n. Elttmate
kN. llldoni&gt;ur Eloct~cll · 304.

171·1791.

11:30 D (J) IISl Bell Dt C111011
(!) SportoCenter (L)
(I) 8 (I) XV Olympic Winter

•

19n HoovyV.,.,Chovy. Good
-

.• 3ltld.. :JI0.2borNI.

t2111. Colli14-....._HII.
1110 _ _ ,.,. _ _

GlmH

85

1870 ltW. Colll14-f...4444.

1tt1 Chivy Luv, 4!14. dioool

Gener•l Hauling. · .•

t1000. Col ........
114-182·7403.

-·"--,wltll.....,.

1177 Chwy V.- ........ 301,

......--~
tiOOO. Col tt4-•l.

.

==1/t!

limo. Coli 814·441· 7404.No

73 Vena i '4 w.b.

tl. Y·l. AC,
AM·PII-Cooo. Col 114-1'71·

8

I

J• J

w... Serwtoa. Swimming

R •

" e.
W..., &amp;.rvloa. Home , •

t
=--.,..-· ,_ - ·,...
::

-

eCDTIII

'·

w-.eon ·•

12:00 ()) lume and Allen
(I) . . . . Qervey Cllebrtty
Sill Cllllk: From Deer

~:r

Paul Aupe. Jr. Wilt..- lervloe. ,
;:t.'i1cr,om··""'"·Ctlil14-

4

• I

~~IR)

PEANUTS

Wetteraon's Weier Haullnl ·'-

§L~·Q

·==

-I.OOOeble r.-. hnmediM. ...
..... diiMory, - . . 'If'

m'&amp;: -· .... con 304·171-

Jonlallt

lnvestlga18. a death that they
balliYe was murder.(A) (1 :OOi
®Magnum, P.l. Don'l Eat
1111 Snow In Haw1N, Pert 1

=~z-r-"S, wellt, Ph. 114· 11,

-..,.~~

.
·Hunw.ces 1.111

Sports

•Night
c Hunler and McCall

,,

••

ti.CIOCJ.CO.

7101 or 171-

1... -

Dltltlrd Water lervtoe: Pools, 1t
Ciatems, Welle. Delivery· Any. ~~

;:

Upholatery-

1114.

I

.

.......... Ur. ...........

,. . . . ,. :r.14
"'IU-171-4

~

"''!"~~22-. ,... .
I

ltllnaiW.

..... Col
tar lroo

JII•(R)

\ 12:331 ~ .!Ilk ....,
I

• (I) • Lllllltght wttl1

~:rs

·l=~lllcll .......
II'G) (I :53)

+Q6
trQI3
tlOU42
+AK5

James Jacoby

.

The bidding
guides the play

WEST

.I

I

EAST

+J 10 ~
trA1054
tQJ9
+873

-.t

+K132
A 7 53

By James Jacoby

+QJ1064

SOUTH
West's takeout double helped North,
+AS 74
whose band was difficult to describe
trKJ8762
after bls initial p~. By redoubling
tK
lint, then railing bearta, he showed
+12
sliptly more than 10 support points.
Vuloerable: North-South
South stretched when be invited game,
Dealer:
North
but the final contract was good. Unfortunately declarer did not take full ad· Welt
Nor,. Eul
vantage of the infonnation he had
p..,. p..,.
from the bidding.
Dbl.
Redbl. Pass
After winning dummy's ace of 2+
2tr
Pass
clubs, declarer played a low diamond. Pass
4tr
Pass
West took the ace and continued clubs. Pass
South won tbe king, ruffed a club and
Opening lead: + Q
then played a spade. West won the
kiD&amp; and played another spade, won by
dummy's queen. Declarer now played
the nine of hearts. East playedlow and . sumption IS correct, ut IS sa e or
South went right up with the _jack. his c~ntract if be simply leads the
Wben West showed out, It now became heart queen from dummy instead of
Impossible for South to avoid the loss leading the nine of hearts and putting
.L.
up bis jack. Although East can win the
t wo t rump tri"""·
oI Declarer
h
'th a d'1amond, d. eshould assume that West ear t ace and eXJ't w1.
does not bave more than four spades. clarer can r~f. ruff hiS lo.wspade With .
(With five cards Jn the suit, be would I the trump mne and play a .low heart
bave overcalled one spade.) If tbe as- ' from dummy to fmesse agamst the.lO·
spot m the East band.
.

lty THOMAS JOSEP~
ACROSS
5 Jalopy
1 Ebb
6 Not vert.
5 Make
7 Grafted
happy
10 Catkin
8
12 Musical
form
9
Unfeeling
15 Look at
II
16 .Hairdo pad 14
17 Before · 18
18 U.S.-bom
Japanese
20 Recess
19
23 Singer
20
Jerry
. 21
27 Permission

13

28-

22

geometry
Path
Tranquil
Skittish

29
30
31

•

24
25

(her.)
German
river
Used
a horse
Prosper
Assuage
Stephen
King
product
Tusk stuff
"-- of Me"
Grazing
ground
Preserve,
in a way
Pilsner kin
Author
Yutang

Yeaterdey's Answer

26 Dutch
commune
28 Ange l
30 Do
needlework
32 Abrasive
material
33 Part of
G .B .S.
34 Puncture

35- boy!
37 "Rule
Britan nia"
composer
38 Tableland
39 Rib
donor
41 Thrice

(Lat.)

42 Mom 's

ad·
monition

~-Na~

1

36 Pasture
sound

37 "1Camera"
'

40 QUicK
to anger
Kind of
ego?

43

44 Medieval
guild
Exhausted
46Gang

45

DOWN

1 "Funny-"
2 Chinese
port

3 Cross out
· 4 Means
justifier,
some say

DAILy CRYFI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:

2/15

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One Jetter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L1S, X' for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostroph~ 1 the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
.
CRYPTOQUOTES

· 2-U
N

TN

I N K

A' H

uxsc

HFWTQUNAF
FDNA
XI

FDKWSCH

LCFFCK

12:20 (J) Nllltl11111 Glolrlplllc

87

r---------------~
NORTH
I-Ii· II

BRIDGE

l[lJ ltomltirne Tills overview
on yard landscaping goes
rrom Initial design 10 finish.

------------------e· .,
lund., cells.·

"What do you concludltrom the lact that worker ants can
carry live timet their weight? " asked the laacher. A stu·
dant replltd! "They don't belong to a UNION. "

rm;~,P.t.

I

_...,.._
_
__
....... ...,.._
eoo w.

morrtll.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

-------------------- '•

1887 FGrd A. . . . I. I opd ..
AM·FM·Ctll. S,OOO · CoN
114-44a-2323- 4 PM.

IlDdy,

s - - - · t10-.
Colll14-441 .....

Tr. . '· trimming •nd remove!,
odd Jobs; tr.. eetima1-. 304·

84

71_,...... .... __

304-112·2111.

,.'

8t

TNckl for Sele

Colll04- ,......

.._ peld, Nfereno..nddepoah,

871·2103.

171-3312.

must convince Olck to

J .

,;
,.
•'

removel, 304·171-1142 or

FOf • • or tlke owr loan on .

1116Dodgo ........ . _ .....
oyL,
R.ooo.

1 - S t - . ~..:::::"· O~io.
2 bedroom tu
. ept, utll6-

Eyes on the Prize: ·.
Amerlca'o Civil Alghll Yeara
Mass demonstrations .
davaiop into a powerful tactic
in marches. t:;1
rm; lll1!21·Newhlrt Michael

•

lwrb Tr"

lr •finllonlv-•IIO.Ihota.One , picllup, ..... _ , 71.000

lyoaroldgoldlnt--.
..00. Coll14·. .2·1110..
.

/ill[!)

R!)t.rf or cable tool drifting. · l
Moltwt:llacompl•edeamediY. .,
Pump Iaiii end 1111"Vtce. 304- · ,
111·3802
'•

••too

· Pllco t7000.

c•,...1ry tnd

304-171·2311 or 114·441- "·
2484.
..

1188

olr. Alolno -

.,

RON ' S TelevleiDn Service. · •
Hou.. cda on RCA. Ouaur. ~.. \.
GE. 8pocltling In lon1111. Coli '

tully

Co11114·448-1188.

EEK

Con..- Sop1lc TMikl- 1000
gll ...1100 .... ond .... Aor- · ·Foe1DI\i 1nlnod ropoir .!
tloop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PIII8E8, Jockton, O~io . 114281·1130.
. !'

-no

Llve-ock
••

Suzan and Julia are asked to

join the exclusive Beaumonl
Driving Club.
8:00 ()) 700 Club
D (}) IISl MOVIE: 'The
Return of De-rado' NBC
Monday Night II lhe MOVies

plumblnt work. Reesonabl•
prtco. eon 114-~1·1713.

.__,.,...ktpt.hcol.

.... e-10. 4 opd. -

cell collet

Crwth Rd. Coli 114·
448·0214 . .

1tl1 T0'/D10 Colioo. Au1o .. 4
cyl., P8. Pl. oun-f, Ilk,
AM·FM · b - condi·
don. Coil 114-111·3111 or
114-182-7111. .

62

-td.

..........

Pl!11, •nd tuppliM. l'tok
~. Dwta Vacuum
Cleaner. an• helf mile up

Coli ........ 114-tt2·7403.

Want to buy, Yellow Locult
call 304-17&amp;-2130.

-'1:

up Mel

1110 PonliH ·aun~rd. Auto,
""" good, 114,000 mliot. tBOO.

72

·
, ;:

tJoa..-

1911 Oldtmpbile Cut1111. exc
.,.....,
hlcth """"'"·
oil.
114-31'7-7717.

com. Call forlateetquotn. Alwr
City Form S..pply, 114·441·
2111.

inner city kids form a ctless

team with heiJ!.Jrom a
leachar. (NRJ Gl
I!)) PrlmeNews
IHl MOVIE: Doc1or Detroit IRJ
(1 :30i
Ill CD MOVIE: Mask (PG131
. (2:00)
8:05 !l) MOVIE: Brainstorm (PGI
(1:46)
8:30 D (ll tm Valerie's Family
David may lose his job when
ha makes a data with his
boss ' girlfriend. C
1m! 81!21 Designing Women

ropl...

-01100.· Ctllloncty'o,
4 - · runt
good.
814·192·
74o3.
.

Now buying thell com or ••

..
.,.,... CAN COME OUT .NON
FOIJI,SI ITS nME 10 Pi:i:W!

-.;_...,-=----·
.
SWEEPER Mid Nwlng rroochlno

1181 M-ury Lyn., 4 -

new. t700. Cal' 114-381-

l1h&amp;d and un1inished . Choice
sizes-t29.115 etch.
32-Ex.terior ltHIInsuletld Pinel
prehung dOOfl·t79.88
end
t89.96 e~~eh .
33 All typtl of door and window
trim . Finished and unfintsta.d.
Ptutlc •nd wood· •1.00 to
•3.00 pr.pc.
.
PENN' S WAREHOUSE

ALLEY OOP

1·114-237·- doy .. nlgh1.
R o SJ 1 r • I e 1 e m a n t .
Wotlfllrooftng.

lor. Cell 114·112-1313 or I14H2·Z214.

1171 Chivy Mon10 Corio. good
""""· ....... 304·171·7201 ..
871-7&amp;14.

1128.86 .

BASEMENT
WATIRPfiOOFINQ ·

..,_en-

Kate &amp; Allie Sleazy
propositions prompt Kate IO
!ell oft a cllenl's husband. I;!
l[lJ Wonderworks A group of

1

----------- ...
lf.dtn~

g 1111!21

:

Auto Service, ·1

&lt;~

,,..

1987 Clmoro. T-1op, ou1G,

I HP Troy·bik 1ilor. Pl'lc1fcolly

Wantad to Buy

of TV news on such .stories
as Kennedy 's assassination.

I mprovementl

Unconditional

AM·FM Olllltle, buJDMdy co-

ti ...... Coli 114-211·H22.

8119.

Import

'•'

.... L.oa.l :ilua oee fumlahad. ,.

1110 Dodgo · AU1o, AC,
tBOO. CaH 114-182·81141. .

1188 Chov Ctvllor, 2 door;
37,000 mlloo, phono 304·171·
2748.

03750. Ctlll14·211-1122.

Jlm'1

-~~

CROSI.IONI
,
U.S. 38 Wilt, JockiDn. Ohio. 1918 Chwelle • PI, Mdo. trllna.,
114·211·1481.
Auno good. Col304-171· 3218.
Me1sey PerguiDn. New Holland,
Bueh Hog Sillll • Strvloe. Over .1179 ' XR 7 · - r y c.._.
B.E. Dhio .

Auto Repair

~,_~~~--~---··
B1
Home
• ~

Rod HD1 borgolnol Drug doolwt'.
ban, pten.e repo'd. 8ul-•

1HS .C h - 4 - . 4 ... ..
- ...... Pl. Pl. AM·FM ....io•
R o i l y - . - - · t3100.
Coli 114-M2·3218.

~'II I,,, ..

I .IIIII

n

tlnoe 1871. Pttono 1304i 372·
15817. Nine to ftw.
...

Shophord. 3 yooro old. v., · 1171 Chivy c - . 4 gon11o. tiO. Coli 114-141· '"""""""· UIO. Coli Soncty'o
2052.
·114-182·7403.
5 AKC ... iiiOrod Ptidnpuppl•. o17&amp;.oo - · 304171·4830 .. 178·2471.

Game•

(f] Telev slon Examine affect .

Rlploy, WOOl Virginio. Spocltli•· •

Grooming . All brHdi . . . AII
ltYIM. ltml Pet Food DN'-r . . 1810 Chevy Clwioft. 2 door • .
Julio WObb Ptt. 114-,.....0231. ' auto, front wheel drive. 413,000

D..uo.....,.,d c..,.,

houae. ~ ·
IIl II XV Olympic Wll!ler

f'Aftfie?

U110. Ctiii14-

Cli'l,

Groom ond

ANY GOO&amp;&gt;
~EWS .IN Tf:IE'

lng In Hond• para and eervtce ••

,

BBI·4385.

EVE~

.

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

1887 Olds. Cutlals Suprema.
Coli 304·773·11111 or n3.

(!) WKAP In Clnclnnetl
7:35 (1) Sanford end Son
8:00 ()) Father Murphy By tha
Bear that Bit Me
D &lt;D IISl ALF Willie must
rescue 1\LF lrom the SWAT
1aam at the Ochmonek's

V'Jti\' r5N'T THE-I?E

trensmia-

304·171· 4230.

31-lnterior prthunt dool'l, fin·

lig 3 8Ft . farm hom" built on
your lot, t1&amp;,995 end up. C1ll

in.-r.

,_ ....,_ • opoilor. oiiOO.

A~-

e

llona, cheno•over kttl tor OM
.-drivo 1G 350 Turbo, 2 whool
• 4 whHI drive, cUllom bultt
lock-up GM toriluet. G•r•n· •
tMd up to one J'lar. Cuh • carry ~· .
or inetiN. C.l 114-379-2220 or ,

v.. luellnjOC1od,

AC. CTUioo, 1111.

~-rel:tuilt

FRANK AND ERNEST

IHlhmeyMhr

''

IYdgel Tr•n•mils&amp;ont
Uood· S10rtinw . . . . . . . ..

Reedy mi• concrete and tl! t
1981 GoN. Di-. otondord. 4
concrete supplln. C.ll ua Valley
daor, fokllnt 1plh ...- Mete.
Brook Cement and 8uppKea,
304-n3·5234.
• Run• fOOd, -.y to melnUin.

&amp;8

._.

U•ld · •

1881 MilllbuiW.71,000miioo.
0- UIOO. Col 114448·4430.
·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Quelnt - Human - Poker - Warily - UN/0111 .

e

eo1 814-441·2121.

1111 Dodgo Colt. 2 dr., duol
lhlfter 71 000 tn1111 •1110
Coli 1i4.37l-2721. ·
·

H11 .

.-

:;,;::::::;::;:::;:::;:::::=:_
:
76 Auto Parts
.•

1181 HondaAacanliUCI. I apct,,
AC. eun root. 30,000' mil•.

311!i00 t:ordtrectorwlth NH b...,,
rtke, late mocW NH mowing
mtchlrro. U710. Owner- wiU

28·2 gal. pail · K-lux whhe
morter- •4.96,
29-Pine Louvered Interior ahutteu. Below Wllo... ale prices. ·
30-1 pc. pale ' lemon color
commodes. ,.g.-t-299 .95, now

Coli 814·268·8251 .

Block. brick, .-w• ptp., windows, lint.. a. 'etc. Claude Win·
tore. Ria Grande, 0. Ctll 114·

• ~

1878 25 HP Evtnrude bolt .-.~
motor to trade for • t 2 ar 14 ft ..........
V· Bottom lllumlnum boat a ~"
trtll•. Call 11~3·8·_8718.
::

1871 Porotloc G.-pm. 2 dr..
outa. oliO. Ctlll14·441·1811
.. 448·1244.

27-72" Walnut atarter kitchen·
including (2-18"wall),
(1 72"baM), (1 ·72" pc. topl -

0199.96.

Cslleh1n' s Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000tlrea, alz1112 , 13. 14, 16 ,
16, 16.&amp;. 8 mliu aut At. 218 .

Bui..,g Materiel•

Boata•nd
Motors for Sale

---------------~-··
-~

11 77 C.mero l.-.d). 11.000
....... V·l. t1200. Coli
114-441·111S·DIY. 448·1244
of!• I PM.

ltltp poalo-

APAATMENTI. mobl .. . hom•(
ttou.... Pt. PINMnUnd Gllllpo-

...... ..... Ctn1rol - · Col
114-448· 0711.

cond, coll304-871·1780.

2
~ ·

•1o.ooo.

e

CRIOOR, exc - '

1887 Honda

1183Chovy.Citttion. Am.-.
-· .. Pl. PI, 11,000
. -t1110. Conbo-otloo
GolllpoNo Dolly T-no or for
~ 1nfo""ationcalll1•·441·

s . . . - . with 210 VI onglno.

... ohf. Coll114·211--.

Plkf,
Coc*Jng
,.,....... Downw.....,,
"'"""""-·-

Auto'a For Slle

For porto-1178 Oldt. cutt...

304·171·2412.

11.,182·1711 E.O.H.

46

71

e-.. L. 11.000 noN•.
oqulppod. E•cll. concl.
ar take over peymenu.
CoM 304·871·20.1.

2 bedroom tpt. for f'tllrt , Stove
and refriger8tor ere fumi•lled.
Ct~td . Nice Mttlng. Cell

town loudOn. a..lore wei·

Nloe 2 bMroom IMMne. 304,
~
e7
.,.&amp;.,.·_11.,.t.,.•_
· _ _ _ _ __

..

1113 Hondo 200XL,
A·1 mochoniool. e...oltn1 con· . •
dhiDn. S~orp . Prlcod to toll. •
tiiO. Coli 814·141"2021 oftor
4p ·m ·

830 Ceae diMII trector. Wide
front wtth 3 bottom plow1,
· · - dltc, • I 11. buth hog.

t126.00.

M isc;. Merchandise

(I) D (I) ABC Newt ~
(I) Nightly au.lnelt Report
1m! 1111!21 CBS Newt
l[lJ Body Electric
I!]) lnelde Pol111ca '88
18 WKAP In Clnc,lnnetl
(!) Too CloH lor Comfort
8:36 (1) Leave ll to Be11ver
7:00 ()) Remington StHie Red
Hot Steele
u ·&lt;D PM Magazine
(!) SportiCenter (L)
(I) l!ntertllnmenl ToniGht
D Cll People'• Court
(I) l[lJ MocNell/ Lehrer
NeweHour (1 :00)
all Newt
ll1l M-ytlne
1111!21 IISl Wheel of Fortune
IH)Cheere
(!) M'A'S'H
7:05 !IJ Andy Griffith
7:30 D &lt;D (I) Holl,wood
SquerH
(!) College Baaketball
II) Cll Judge
rm; WhHI of Fortune t:;l
1!11 Croltllre
·
1111!21 IISl Jeopardy! t:;1

· '

LOw-· .

Mite . Merchandise

t46 .00J. Full c11e lota-t5.00
pr.pc. 1....
28·21 " Ocotgon thermtl'tnded
-gla" wlndOWI·t89.96, 2 tor

Wl•m•n Re81 ltuta. 441·

"-""
31144 •

54

""""· f1800. Coli 304·875·
1221.

134&gt;76 . • 36 . 00) . 147•78 ·

·~

Excel..

I' I I" I

!If
®Belt of Bill Dence (A)

~~~;:=:;.~::;:::;;;~~~~~~~~~~-~~ 1981
Hond•
IX· 4wheeler.'• :::
Ulle new.
c.n200
114-441-2111.
....

40 ueed trector1 to chooM from
a complete line of new • ulld
equipm..,t. Ltrg• Mltctloft in

(Casement) , (Ooublehung).
S•velt wholusle ·~ below.
26-~ Tempered thermal pane.
Glut peneis . (32x78-129.91).

Antiqu11, buy or 1111. Riverine
Antique1, 1124 Eut Main St.,
Pomeroy. Hours : Mon., Tue 1 . ,
end Wed. 10;00a.m.-8 :00p.m .•
Sun . 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. By
ch1nce ar appointment. Run

vz.

1983 VerMha 410

•

MP L I B

• CD Happy Dar•

'

oond. CtH 114·248·1212.

L E R F YE

.8:05 (1) Allee
8:30
(J) IIJ) NBC NighUy Newt

_,

•

•

• &lt;D CIJ • Cll all e1121

•

llototorcycles

be-

low to form foor sirnple words.

GJ)Newe
(!) SportoLook
(f] Dr. Who Planet ol Fire
l[lJ Coloi'IOU!Idl
ll1l ShowBiz Tciday
18 Fecll of Life

- - - - - - - - - - - - ·•

1888 Co"'""'·rod W1111 Utnl

55

Valley furniture

·

304·876·8876.

Rem. 879 Msg 28 inch vent rib 3
Rem chokn 1276.00. Phone

90 Dar• ume 11 cas~ with
tpproved cr..th. 3 Mllet .o ut
BullVille Rd. Open lem to 5pm
Mon , thru Sat. Ph. 814-446 ~

Owners.

1·800·

4 long dre11u. etch worn once.
7·8 and 9· 10, t16 .00 to

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

(formally Ptrson'• Furntture)
1411.&amp;11ern AVII.
lMng room 1uites from •179 •
up. Btttroom tuitft t489.95 •
up. Completf mi~;rowaw 1tanda
f38.91 &amp; up.
Come In lind miHit the new

O~io

EIKtric hoapitll bed with mettrell. good 11 new, cell Ceth•
rlnt Newberry, 304.-882· 2881 .

Waaherl, dryers. refrlgertton, ·
rene•• · · Sktgga Applltncat.

J .. il FURNITURE

--· ·- -·

2 11 droom briall In town. No

....:...~---------·lc2 ttary, femily room, btll"*"-

3431 orl75·3030.

1 4C lb cut and wrap. 304·882·

Portable lighted •lgn - t219.
Free deliYiry &amp; tetter~. Offer
explrn Feb. 19. Phone W.V1.

.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMI!NTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 531 Jock-

814·448-4782.

lbett t10.00. ond h091 t8 .001,

Counry Applitnce. Inc. Good
uud appllancat tnd TV 1111.
Open lAM to 6PM. Mon thru

l14·448·0338.

Stove, rlfrig. •

McDaniel• Custom Butchering,
8 d•v- a week, eltuglltering

3224.

New end uaed fumtture 1nd
•ppllctncet . C•ll e 14·4146·
7672, Hours 9-5. ,

265B. E.O.H.

Pomeroy, O.hlo. 814-182-1481 .

soft toe). Ctll 814-441· 3119.

New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home In
City. Aduttt only. Parking. C.ll

175-1104.

Mlxod hord wood tlobo. 012 por
bundle. CQntllnlng epprox. 1~
ton. FOB. Ohio Palll't Co.

lumlohod. llof. •

dop. Colll14·441·21143 .

2 bedroom, 2 bettll. 2 a'ar
gtr~te. lev~ · lot Dn Rt. 33.
Swknmlng pool. Mteltt.. cioN
to Meiga High. Cell 114-H2·
3214.

1 llblo. Eo. con4. Prlcod righ1.
Coll814·441·1457.
.

LMng - " ' ........ t199·0699 .

___________.___ ,

ni~od .

'BR .. firepltce. full buement. 3
mJ. 10. of GaUipoli1. *29.100.
Call Day•·814-440 -1816, .after
6;00· 448· 12,4.

diiC driw. 3 joyetlck1. I gam"'

Olift
Oalllpoli1.
NEW-St
I .•pc.
wood group. t399 .

0322.

1 bedroom a,.rtm.ntl. Furnished end unfumlthed. t200.·
•225. per month. Utilttift fur·

RellidiS

Homes for Sale

gersg•. In 40'•· Call 304-178-

2 8ft apts,' I clo1N, kitchen·
appt fumilhed. w.her·Dryer
hook·up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. Regeney, Inc.
Ap10. CtH 304-87&amp;.n38 or

Ctlll14·448· 7021.

35

. ..SWAIN
.
o\UCTION llo FURNITURE 82

ot uood tumhuro.
NEW· Wtotem booll· uo.
Wofkltoats·. •18 Ia up. (Steel &amp;

Hou"fOf'tele. cloMtotown,12
acre• land. 3 bedrooms. centrM
heet end eir, houte tr811er and
other extru, 1415,000.00 or
bos1 offor, 304-1711· 7231.

32

M0¥1"11 Jolt: Sponi~ Woddlnt
gown. bob¥ ~omo. formOit . 3
doyo ""'r· Co11114·441-31,2.
Atarl aoo XL computer. tolo

· IYnk bed• with bedding- '199 .
Full size mattren • found•lon
2 bedrOom houM. Nie.. Fully 1tartlng199 . Reclinere
~~-sGr.' location. CaR lllrtlng· t99.
USED- Beds, drtiMrt, bedroom
aulte1. t '1 19- t299 . D11ks,
Wrillgll' wether. 1 complete line

448· 8158.

In Syrecuee, SoutMrn t.oc.1
School Dllltrict. New 011k ce~-... dl-• ----•
1• 1101

Ha-Jt room for .,.nan in Privata
home for thOM who with not to
be in nurting home. AeesoMbll.
Call 814-256-1509.

11ft. Aluminum bOIItbtlnd. Cad

-··

t-;:;:~~~~;;:;::;;;:;=17~~~~~~~~~,

·1~

o100. Colll14·441·7382.

Bet
of1· dMpfreeii:
ttationarv Bothgood
llveatock
tc
...
lhlpt. Calll14-441·2583.

74

.

mecro, convert film to VH&amp;.

61 Household Good•

7112. EOE.

13

movlo corner•. out•. •oom.

the

8:00 ()) Cr81y Uke 1 Fox Eya In
the Sky

'83 Ford vsn.'78 CutiUI St8tlon
Wogan, 304·481·1130.
. ,

Cannon 310XL Super B MM

O four
Fteorroni;Je letters of
scrambled words

EVENING

bod. f1200. 1871Chlvyi&gt;1Gn.
2 whool driw. o1 000. Coli
114·141·2801 .

800 WAn . porutM'

114·448·32.3 tt10r 5 PM . .

MON., FEB. 15

'•
1972 Ford V-8, auto., tteel flit '·

-otor. Col 114-448·3013.

FOR LEASE itrvo buoinbuildiov. 11105 Joftonon Blvd ..
304-178·1435.
.

•

1111 CU01omind Fard Von.
t1000. · - poy-off. Col 11... ;:
IU-1310.

M~Uipm.m fOr N lt..

Honda

~-mAT~ -mx::l'.l,

.

~47-4212 .

origlnol 110Uftor ~

For Lease

lll,f; ~ WIIE6L5 lml
Rtle... 1r'~ -rn6 F..,.,........

~D€:0~
1lE; ~¥11m~...

1171 Chevy Conversion Ylft,
Good oan4h1Dn. tl71. 11 4·

.

Figu.. Shapinw T -. luy
toctory d -. CoN 312·234·
9847.

2114 .. 171·9748.

1141·0091 Ext. 2187. 0 - 7
doyo. CALL NOWI

12

FIGURE SHAPII'IIi TAILEI
Oporoyourown ~~gu,.oolon­

rwtroom. 2.t12 Jefferaon Aw.;
Office or lmlllluain..-: 1 lx31
ft . 2415 Jad&amp;aon~ve . 304·171-

10••

Needttt
1ree. Mu11
ba reli41ble.
Meige Secretert

lpaoe fer tmell trtlten. All
'-k·upo. C.bio. Aioo otfloloncy
roomt. air lind cable. Muon,

For Rent or u ..: Wtrehouae ·
3kl1 ft. Electric h.... Wlter 6

4&amp;131 .

Crl~ .

3381. .

111 4·441·30n.

EXCELLENT WAGES ior
time ,.....,bly wo~ .. -=tron·
let ,

Rentel trliltws. Call 114-112·

t~o

MA~llE-9LT

Television
Viewing

in.

747• .

49

rcheduling , retirement plan.
hMhh intUt'IIRCI With df\lg Card.
dental, Md' vllion rnd the
opportunity for rdvrn~t.
Send ,...... or fiPitiY in ,.,._.,
II 538 Bucluidge Ad .. OoUipoiit,
O~io

IW't•MW power IIW. ~

~Cf
«l\\ETH 11-1'1.. '

1. .7 Ford looncD II, 4K4. Fully
.......... bell. cond. Co" 114311·1710.

clrcul., 11w. Call 814-....,.

W.Vo. Col 304-n:S.SII1 .

!Mid holidtVr. vacation. ftulble

I.JH ,l~Sre~.l.. :r J!$1'

.....

Y-. ·-·

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

MerchllndiN

..... ~. 32---- · Col 114-...... 1371.
~. Piok·up lood. 121 o .
lood. You htul. Coli 114-441·

Dowmown
- Eotott.
··Carol
·
-· A·1....
Roll
Coil 304·171·
1104.

•

opply In ot lc- Hll
.. Nurting c.t\ter· 131 luctuldga
Rd .. Oolllpollt. Ohio 4H31 .

Mlac.

-

~v. FebNary 1s. 1988

. ,. Ch't-114

Space for Rent

CommetcW building fOf 1. . ..

,-:=t==::::-1,

llllllto «MMffM _ , . . .....,.

. ......... I

48

LAFF-A-DAY

DIIIECTOII OF NUIIa!l

5Mkine RN with •a • ct man·
rgrrnent, I r d'r liMp, • ftUI'IIintl

16. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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TODAY.- ABRAHAM UNCOL!~

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February 16, 1988

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

l

THIS
EEK'S
8A ES

Ohio Lottery

dlympic
results

Oally Number

395
Pick 4
4120

Page4

•

BOYS BASKETIALL
Vo1.31, No.196

enttne

FEI. I S-East1m - Away
FEI. 16-Division II SeCtional
At Altxan... vs. Wellston
FEI. 11 1 Division II StctiOMI
Mtigs/Wtllston winner
vs. Galipolis

EASTERN
IOYS BASKETBALL
FEI. 16-Parkii'SIIurg (ath. - Away
FEI. 19-SymmtS Valley- Away
FEI. 20-f*'al Hocking -- Away

Pomeroy and Middleport VII·
!ages have pledged to work
together to solve problems which
are preventing the development
of property In lower Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Councilman Bruce
Reed reported at Monday night's
regular meeting of Pomeroy
VIllage Council that members of
both village councjls, both mayors, and others, met last Thursday in Middleport to discuss the
possible development of the
a,rea.
·
Development has been Impossible due to the lack of a sewage
line to the property.
Since Pomeroy's sewage line
goes only as far as the Pizza Hut
on West Main St., Middleport
wanted Pomeroy to annex the
property to them. However.
Instead of 1glvlng the property to
Middleport, Pomeroy wanted
Middleport to extend their sew·
age_Jine from the Sears Catalog
Store. which borders the property, and then Pomeroy would
pay Middleport a fee for 1he
sewage service.
The two villages seemed to be
deadlocked on the matter until
Thursday's meet\ng. The meetIng was Initiated by the attorney
· representlng''!Willlam Hapton:

GIRLS BASKETBALL

· FEI. IS ~Miigs - Home
FEB. 26~Divison IV Sectional
At Meigs vL Kyger Cretl!

SOUTHERN
BOYS BASKETBALL
FEI. 16-Ra¥tnswDIMI - Awav
FEI. 19-Southwllttrn -:- .Away

GIRLS BASKETBALL

BOYS SCHEDULE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE
BOYS BASKETBALL

.,,u
.
,.'
·• ·
,. ·
~;loat•
~' -'~

t;'&gt;-. '

fan. 26-Aiexander .........:.......... Home
Jan. 20-Pt. Pleasant................ Away
Feb. 2-Warren ·Locai ................ Away
feb. s_:WellstOn .....................~ ...Home

i·'

•

·Feb. 6-Logan .............................Home

Blower_

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

Fi:eeral

·· ·(; B;ome :... ,

9-Athens ............................ Home
12-Federai-Hocking .......... Home
13-Vinton Caunty............. Home
16-Federal Hocking ......... Away

Feb. 19-Miller ...........................Home
Feb. 20-Nelsonville· York ..........Home

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO'&lt;t''
614-992-5141
.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHQOL
19B7-88
. . BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 1-So~tllern ............................. Away

Dec. 1-East•n ................................ Hornt

Dec. 11-Hannan Trace .................. A.,ay
Dec. 15:.....Parkenburg Cath. (6:15J ... Away
Dec. 22-North Galia (6:001 ............ " Jan. 8-Symmes Valley ................:..HG.ni
Jan. 12-llyger Creti! .............'.........Home
Jan. I S-Oak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. 19-Federal Hocking ................ Home

Dec. 11-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Dec. II- Hannan Trace ................ Away ·
Dec. 22-lyger CrMk..................... Away
Dec. 29-lnllcll Valty So.... Convo. Cint.Ja:n. 2-Soutlllostwn ..................... Away

Jon. 22-,Southern ............:..............Home
Jan. 2'9-North Gallia .................... Away

Feb. 2-Miller ...............:.........~........ Away
Feb. S-Hannon Tro ........................ Home
Feb. 12 -Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.19-Sy!11meS Valley .........;........ Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away

M

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"ci:NtRAl .
TRUST
'

MEIGS' HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Jan. 12-Narth Gallia-.................. HDIIM
Jan. I 5-Symmes .Vallty ................. Home
Jon. 22-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-llyger Cr"k~ ..................... Home

Jan. 30-Miller ................................. Harne ~
FEb. S-Oak ·Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federal Hocking .....:.....)..... Away
Feb. 12-Haman Trau ................... Home
Feb It-Southwestern ................... Away

,., •

Jan. 2 S-Belpre .......................... Home
Jan. 28-Aiexander .................... Home

"YOUR FINANC·IAL
CENTER"

Jan. 30-Miller ...:.............~.........Home

97 N. 2ND STIEO

Feb. 11-Wellston ...................... Home

MIDDLEPO.IT

Feb. 13 -Southern ...................... Home
Feb. IS-Eastern ....................... Away

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.

' . . 992·6661 '

Feb. 4~Wellston ........................ Away
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking............. Home

INSTALLMENT LOALftS

992-3007
.-

•·

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 7-Southern .............................Home

COMPANf\·
1

/

.A GREAT PLAa
FOI BHAICfAST
LUNC!H
&amp;. D...NER .
'
·~·

F·eaturir\g ·

• Great Hamburlers
doast Beef on a
Croissant * Stuffed Baud·
Potatoes • Taco Salads
' ~'Sa.lad Baf
. '* Real lee C~am 1t

Dec. I 0-Hannon Trace ................:.. Home
, · Dec. 14-Miller ....:.. .......................... Home
Dec:. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19-Federal. Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-Narth Gallia ................ :... Away

Dec. 23-Meigs ................................HOllie
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11-llyger Crtt1r~ ................... Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................. Ho1111
Jan. 21-Southern ......................;... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallia ..................... Home
Feb. 1-SymmH Vallty ................. Home
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .................... ~way
Feb. 11-Southwtstern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking ............... Harne

. stall, owner of the property.
. According to Reed, both vii·
!ages . are "willing . to work
together" and the 'rna In goaBs to
satisfy the businesses which
have expressed Interest In local·
lng on the site. There remain
"some financial constraints,"
Reed said, and If those financial
problems can't bework!id out, "It
will be through no fault of either
village," he added. If the problems can be resolved, some
avenue of acUon by the two
villages should be decided on
within the next month, according
to Reed.
Included In Thursday's meetIng were Mayors Dick Seyler of
Pomeroy and Fred Hoffman of
Middleport; Pomeroy Council·
men Larry Wehrung, John Anderson and Reed; Middleport
Councilmen Dewey Horton, Jack
Satterfield, James Clatworthy
and Bob Gilmore; the develope~ .
· Dick Haycraft of Polnt Pleasant,
W.Va.; and Haptonstall, the
property owner.
In other matters at last night's
meeting, .Council took actions to
officially create the posiUon of .
street superintendent for the
· vlllag~ a.nd hired Jack Krautter
•
Continued on page 5

Jan. 1-SouthwiStern .....................H1111.

GIRLS SCHEDULE

THE

26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newtp~~p•

.CouncUs plan
joint effort to
solve problem

GIRLS IASKETIALL

FEI. 18-Division IV Sedional
At Meigs vs. Miller
FEB. 26.-Division IV Sldlonal
At Meigs-MIHer /Southern winner
vs. North Gallia

1 Section. 10 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 16, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Cloudy tonight. Low In
upper 208. Partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs ne~r 45.

•

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MEIGS

FEI. 16-F....alllocking - Away
FEI.I9-Mil.. - H0111t
.
FEI. 20-rw-villt·York - 1tom1

.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Dec. 7-EC.stern .................,............., Away
Dec. I 0-0.a k Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia :................... Away
Dec. 17 -Haman Trace ................... Home

American Alloys production underway
.

.

By Matt Robertson .
The first batch of metal alloy in
mort than two years. has been
powed from the furnaces of
American Alloys Inc., New Haven,

·" ,over !he weeke01t ,

Jan. 14-Symmes Vallty ................ Away
Jan. 20-GaHipolis - ....................... Away

Jan. 21-Eastwn. ............~................. Hontt
Jan •. 28-lyger Cfftk ..................;_ Away

Feb. ,1-Southwestern .~••
Home
feb. 4-0ak HiD ...........................-Horne
H ...............

.Feb. ·11-Honnan Trace.:..........~.. ~- Away

Feb.

13~ ................................. Away

.

The facility, fonnerly a Foote
.Mineral ferroa!Ioys plant, was
·bought by a gioup of investors and
employees and reopened in
January.
Wolk at the pl111t is progressing
accOnling to schedule, according to
American Alloys Treasurer Jim
Thomas.
·
"We opened it lip on Jan. 1 afler
a two-year shut down." Thomas
said. "Our plan callell for six weeks
of start-up mainlenBIIce work with
lli'O(b:lion by mid·Febrwiry in one
furnace," Thomas added.
'"I'Iie second furnace should stan

Dec:. 19-Aieancler .......................... Away ·

Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ........................ H.
Jan. 7-Southwntern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ..................... Nome

.

.

producing about mid-March." he
said. "The third furnace, which is '
being completely renovated, should ·
be in production~by June or July,"
he added.
. The alloy that poured out of the
furnace won't be setting around the
· facility very long. "We have orders
to ship everything we expect to be
making during the first two quaners
of the year," Thomas said.
As orders pick up and other furnaces are brough1 on ' line; mote
employees will be brought back to
work. ~·As of this date, we have 70
·. employees called back," .Thomas
· said. "By tlie first of March that
number should be about 100. By
mid-year, the number should reach
175," he added.
Not only 'is the start-up going
ahead on schedule, the finances ate
·on schedule too. "Our raw material

.

costs to date are consistent with our
business plan," he said, adding,
"We're not far enough along to say
we're making ,this product for what
we expected to, . but we're on target"
.
The plan! still makes ferroalloys,
but it will be making silica alloys
now too, Thomas said.
Ferroalloys and silica alloys are
raw materials for the foundry and
steel induslries, he said. "It's not a
consumer product. Our product becomes a raw material for these
other industties," he said.
"In the foundry industry, it's
used in the production of castings.
In the steel industry it's used as a
purifying agent for steel," Thomas

said.

.

·After the alloys are cast Into ingots, the ingots are crushed to fit
the needs of !he customer, he said.

Thomas expects American Alloys to ship more than 60,000 tons
of alloys to indusuies this year.
American Alloys means a lot to
!he Bend Area of Mason County.
but'it mean~ something to the rest
of the county too. "There is more to
opening a plant like this !han just
the local payroll, we put many
people in olher locations to work,"
Thomas said.
The annual.payroll of the fai:illty
will be about $3.5 million, Thomas
said.
In addition to the payroll,
American Alloys will purchase
more than 60,000 tons of coal from
WestVirginia and Kentucky mines,
he said. The ,coal, in addition to
about 140,000 tons of other raw
material, will be shipped 10 the
plant on rail.

Candidates waiting for New , llamp~hire resuJts
I~

,

. By MATTHEW C. QUINN

candidates or delivering the coup second-place finish on the DemoVPJ Poll&amp;lcja) Writer
de grace to the already wouniled. cratic side as badly as Simon, an·
CONCORD, N.H. (UPl) A: defeat of Bush by Dole, Illlnols senator' to keep his
Today's New Hampshire prim· depending on the magnitude, candidacy alive. But Gephardt
ary has the poten II alto shake up would deliver a serious biow to would be hard-pressed to rise
the presidential race, but when the vice president after last above the tag of regional candl·
the . dust settles It , may only week's trouncing In the Iowa date wllo won In Iowa with· a
prolong the agony.
caucuses by the l\enate Republi- message applicable only to that
Some weeding out · of the can leader from Kansas. Another neighboring farm state.
12-candldate field almost cer, third-place finish behind former
New Hampshire polls ·bode Ill
talnly wtll result from the flrst- television evangells1 Pat Robert· fo~ former Arizona Gov. Bruce
ln-thttnatlon primary election. son wOUld be the unklndest cut of Babbitt. a weak fifth-place fin·
That proeess began even before all for Bush -and would appear lsher In Iowa, · and former Colo. the voting ' with last week's Impossible to recover trom.
rado Sen. Gary Hart, whose
withdrawal of RepubllciiJI .Alex·
Buslt,already ha§ blown a huge reborn candidacy has falll!d to
ander Ralg.
win back disaffected voters.
leaf~ In New Hampshire polls In
But whether the "winnowing" the wake of his Iowa debacle. He
But any Democrat emerging
J01!11 beyond the back · benches surety wtll claim revltlllzallon If from New Hampshire must !(Ice
waa very much up In the air, at he wins bY even one vote, and the the South's native sons, civil
least 8ccordlng 10 the public lwo·man jousting with DOle will rights lellder Jesse Jackson and
opinion polli. That will depend on go on. 1 :
Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of TenneshOw ,mo~ than 200,000 voters
As DbJe campaign spokesllian see, hi the March 8 Super
decide the major cllfthanaera '- Paul Jaeobsen' put It, both Bush · Tuesday primaries concentrated
the Republican race between and Dole "have the ·resources In the South.
George Bush and Robert Dole and the stamina to duke It out"
It could well be that aside from
and the race for aecond place on for montha.
drlvlni rock-bottom flnllhers
•
the Democratic aide ~n
If the New Hampshire race from the race, nothiDJ fundaPaul Simon and Rlchar~ ~· UJI as claee as the polls mental wtll be decided In New
Gepbardt.
.
Indicate, the GOP will face the HamPJhlre.
EviiD It Dukakll wlDI by the 20
Should Nilw HaiiiPJIIIn vaten . prospec:t . of · a . deleaate-bypull a "avprlle" Ill plucklna dellt•te "'all of 1ttrlt1011like the perceatage pointe forecaat In
110111110118 out of tilt llattom' of lii'N battle t.etweea Ronald Rea· some .polla. ht will ltave to 10
eltha' pack to 1 top IPOI. that Pll and a-Id Ford. The South u aa llrbiO Nartheu·
woui4 demouttate uew the IDCIIIIIbent Ford finally clinched terner 8lld
his appeal
.
.
pont
Ole Or1nllle ltate to hll vletory on the floor of the beYondNew
Repu-llcaa Natlollal
It II . entirelY ~bit the
IIIIIICII et!MI!dlclel.
Dei!IQI!ftte w11l conit out lot
But 1f. flit . . . . of NC!ellt ' C.V..IIoal.
'
YHI'II!Oiill up, New Jilmpllllre
-CIQM Gephardt WOD the supli 'l)e•lv tta\11111 ~
wW·IIIIt Ia •z 1117 •lllllw* t.y Iowa e1UC11181, the Mluourl ~ tblll bdGf dltlr delttratea
CGIIflrmlar tile ,..,.....,. ol CCIIIIftiiiiiiO ,.doea
not. Deed a with a WUil Ill "f4111QD11"
' .

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candidates; Gephardt would
have won In Iowa, Dukakls ln
New Hampshire and Jackson or
Gore In the South. That would
raise the possibility of a brokered
July conv,entlon•ln.Atlanta unless
someone catches fire In the later
big primaries In Illinois, New
York, Pennsylvania and
California.
On the Republican side, Bush
campaign manager Lee Atwater
has claimed to have built a
"firewall" of Southern support
tha1 will . be there whlitever
happens In New Hampshire.

I

Weather

South Central Ohio
,
Becoming mostly sunny today,
with highs between 40 and· 45.
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a low
In the upper 20s. Partly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs near 45.
The probability of precipitation lad 20 percent this afternll!)n
and tOIIIght and near zero
Wednesday.
Winds wtll be from t))e south a1
10 to 20 mph this afternoon,
dlmlllllhing tp five to 15 mph .
tonliht.
Bxt.lded l'orecu&amp;
TIRIIIdq ...... ~Murda)'
Fair 1bundaJ, l\'ltll I C!hiiiCe
or raiD or IIIOW l'rtday and
llatvrday. Hfllll win ..... trom
35 to •~ day, wllll 0\/aridPt
loWIIID the Ill.

Claims more experience
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The Lucas County sheriff was .
challenged Monday for re-election by a security guard who
claims to have more law enforcement experience than the
Incumbent.
David Case said his background as a fonner patrolman and
. detective for eight years ae&lt;!ounts for more experience than
that of Democratic Sheriff James Telb.
Case, a Republican, Is acllng chili! of security for the Common
Pleas Court.
.
Telb attracted national attention In June, 1985, by his efforts
to uncover non-ellistent mass graves of witchcraft victims. The
-sheriff contented thai as many as 75 people were kiUed by cull
members and burled In a rural part of the county.
That statement drew Intense media coverage ranging from
the television networks to the National Enquirer, but no trace of
victims was uncovered afier several days of digging.
At a news conference, Case used the Incident and several
other highly publicized sheriffs department failures to lash out
at the Incumbent.

.Voters greeted
by warm weather
. CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -The
presidential candidates, helped
by unseasonably mild weather,
made a last ditch appeal today as
New Hampshire residents turned
out In large numbers to vote In
the nation's first primary.
· Most of the 12 Republican and
Democratic candldlltes used the
morning 10 mee1 voters ln. the
state's largest cities of Manchester, Nashua and Portsmouth hi a
race that will dash the dreams of
some ,contenders and dramall·
cally boost the hopes of others.
Meanwhile, a new CBS poll
released today shoWed Vice
·President George Bush had
opened up a 4 polntlead over Sen. ·
Robert Dole of Kansas - 34
percent to 110 percent.
The survey which was conducted Sundat and Monday and
hal), a margin of error of 4 points,
also showed Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakts still holding a
huge lead over his nearest
Democratlq rivals, who were
locked In a bitter struggle for
second. It had Dukakls wtth 38
percent, followed by Sen. Paul
Simon of Dllnolsat 16percentand
Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri at 13 percent
Dukakls, campalplna · today
outside a Nuhua factory, played
down the polls. "I just hope we do
well. We have lote of work to do.
This Isn't over," he said.
Asked about Simon•• claim
that be caa pull Clft an U#llt.
Duklldl ·Aid, '1 thlak aJIYtliiD8
can blppen. _The peaplt of New

..

Hampshire are very
Independent."
Campaigning at a polling place
at a Manchester elementary
school, Dole appeared relaxed
and joked with ~tudents. "If I
win, there's no more school," he
said.
. Dole described the GOP contest as "very close. We've been
behlnd In some polls, ahead In
some and even In others . The
bottom is nobody knows. But
we're looking good and feeling
good." ,

Rep. Jack Kemp of New York..
who needs a strong showing
today. to keep his Republican
·campaign alive, . downplayed
specula lion that hIs effort may be
near an end. "You're talking to a
quarterback," the former professional football play~r said.
"You're not talking to a
pessimist"
Scattered reports across New
Hampshire Indicated a heavy
turnout, as predicted .
In New Hampshire's largest
city, Manchester, City Clerk Leo
Bernier said some 400 voters had
cast l!allots by 7 a.m. In Ward 6,·
"It's heavy. They're (thtwards)
all like that. People are doing
·their thing," Bernier said.
Unlike late Jut week when a
major ~nter stonn rlpJjed
throqb the state, the weather
today was unt~eBIDnebly warm,
with :'1perJturea raaeblna 40
daiS I - by mJd.rnornllll - '1
deere• warmer tttaa tile aann
Colltlllued OD pap II

...

I

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