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14-n.. D.ly Sa 1tinll

Wedn11 tlay.

Pomaroy-Midclaport, ·ohiO
'

·'

FebruiiY 10, _1 988

)

Ohio Lottery

Winter
Olympics
to begin
Page a·

Daily Number
. 112
Pick 4

9347

Occasional II!GW toai1ht.
Low between 20 and 25. Cloudy
Friday.

Superlouo
7·I 0.22-26-3342

Middleport, OH:•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; P~arl St.t'992·3471

•

ent1ne

I

..
Vol.38,

No.192

2 Sectlono. 18 Pogtoo

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Feb~uary 11, 1988

' Coeyriphted 1888

A. Multlm-

l~c.

26 Centa

Nowopapor

Shady Cove ·Road problem .said township's
SAlE DATES: February 7 thru February 13, 1981

Clilontlty righto r-.od. Nat I

panolblolo• . . . .phlaol

Of

.

platotlol ........ .

•

Holsum

Coupon Below
&amp; •10.00 Purchase
White or Pastels .

CRACKED WHEAT, RYE
OR WHITE BREAD

•An+h

Buy 1, Get 1· .FREE

Reiter

SPRING
WATER
In Gallons

CHARMIN·
~- - BATH TISSUE .

16 Oz. Loafs

3

,By NANCY YOAj::KAM .
Sentinel Newa SCalf
Reside~~ Is of Shady Cove Road
·!11 Salisbury Township attended
Wednesday's meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners to
ask for direction from the commlulol!ers and County Engineer
Philip Roberts In their search for
...·!lnai!Cial assistance to raise their
road out of flood level.
Ted and . Lorraine Saunders
·and Debbie Engle, ex11lalned to
the commissioners that flooding
·on their road, which borders
Leading Creek, Is a constant
problem throughout the fall,
winter and spring months. When
the road Is flooded, which Is
sometimes days and weeks at a

FOI

ttme, residents on the road must
make a dlfflcult hike around the
water In order to leave their
pi'operttes.
Aclul8wled1es Sltwlon
The commissioners acknowledged that the situation Is ··· bad"
and could possibly be dangerous
If anyone living on the road ever
needed emergency asslstal!ce.
However, the commisslol!ers
pointed out ttiat control of the
· road and any re11111rs or alteta·
tlol!s to tile road falls under the
jurisdiction of the Salisbury
Township Trustees, and not
under county jurisdiction.
The residents said they under·
stood this, but since they have
been told by the trustees that the

township. 'cannot afford to ·raise
the road. "That's why we've
come to you ," saJd Mrs. Saund·
ers. She said residents on the
road are-hoping the commission·
ers or Roberts might be able to
point them In the right direction
to find funding that might be
available for a project such as
theirs. "We're not asking for tar
or concrete," she said, "we just
want out of the water."" ·
She also thanked Roberts for
tak!ng It upon himself to visit the
road on Monday to review the
situation.
Coul!ty Umlted-Roberll .
Roberts pledged that the
county highWay department
would help the resl~ents "to the

$100

With

sugar

ICEBERG
HEAD LETTUCE

&amp; '10.00.Purchase ·
Granulated

THOROfARE
SUGAR·
5 Pound bag

Thursday memtng, after an evernlght snowfall ·~
. closed all MilWaukee public schools. Sl!owfall was
reported to have been 9.71nches overnight. (UPI)

CLEARS OVERNIGirr SNOWFALL - Milwaukee public sch!M'I , workerS cleared lhe
entl'IUice ways to WaaJdnllon Jllgh School early

-- , -

'

Meigs ·residents donate 99
pints of blood Wednesday

A total of 107 area ·residents
reported to an American Red
Cross Bloodmobile at the Metis
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy Wednesday to contribute 99
pints of blood to the county's
pickup truck , kUllngonemanand
blood program .
Injuring two others.
Thlrty-nllle donors gave blood
In appreciation for blood · re.In Wisconsin, a Greenfield
man was killed when his car ceived by a . relative or frlel!d.
rear-ended another· car, which
First time donors were Larry D.
had been .stopped on lnterstate97 Circle, Earl Ritchie, Shannon
In a trattlf jam created by Hlndy, Teresa Hoschar, Susie
Pierce, Barbara Lane, Dee
accidents blAmed on the storm.
A Continental Airlines MD·80 .Spencer and Eunice Nlehm.
jetliner carrying 75 passengers Gerald Anthony became a two
skidded off a runway and Into the gallon donor during the visit;
mud while landing Wednesday on Dorothy M. Sayre, a seven gallon
a snow-sUck runway at Chicago's donor; Lloyd Blackwood, an
O'Hare International Airport. eight gallon donor; Harlan A.
Authorities said the 6:47 p.m. Ballard, a 15 gallon donor, and
mishap closed the ru11way, but Carolyn Charles, a 17 gallon ·
that there were no Injuries. ·
donor.
Scattered delays· were reDr. James Witherell and Dr.
ported at O'Hare, where three or Wilma Mansfield were the at·
seven runways were closed for. tending physicians and nurses ·
snow removal.
, for tne visit were Lenora Lelf'
Illinois Department or Trans-' belt, Beulah Ward, Ferndora
portatlon officials said the even· Story, and Naomi Lo.ndon. Mak·
. lng commute for Chicago area lng up the clerical staff were
motorists took about twice as Mary Nease, · Wanda Fetty,
long as usual. ·
Peggy Harris, Ed Cozart -and
"The expressways are slick, Brian Reed. R.S.V.P. workers
. slippery and hazardous," State . were Marlon EQersbach, Jack
Police Sgt. Donald Thompson
.said Wednesday evening. "lt you
' don't need to be or. the expressways, stay off or,them."
I

Midwest hit by· winter stortn

GROUND

7-UP

BEEF ·

A&amp;W

5 Lb. or More
1

09

Plus Deposit

Per Lb.

Assorted Varieties

RC

COLA

.8-16 Ounce Boltles.

and that by Friday morning,
. By United Presall!tematlonal
snow will probably stretch "all
A powerful storm that caused
the way through New England
'an aii'Jilane to skid off a runway
and
Into Maille."
and contributed to at least two
As
of Wednesday evenll\ll' 8
traffic deaths barreled ·across
Inches
of snow had fallen In
the Midwest today, unfurling a
Milwaukee,
7 Inches In Moline,
heayy carpet of snow as It rolled
Ill.,
al!d
6
Inches
In Kansas City,
toward the mld·Atlal!tlc Coast.
Mo.
Mote than ·half a foot of snow
Early today weathermen mea·
had fallen In parts of the Midwest
sured s11ow falling In northern
by late Wednesday, and National
1lllnols at just Ul!der an lpch an
.Weather Service forecaster Pete
hour, slicing' vlslblllty to less
R~ynolds said more was on the
than a half· mite In some parts. A
way today.
total
of at least 4 Inches fell
"We're talking around 4 to 8
and the NWS had
Wednesday,
more Inches In northern llllnols
expected
up
to
6 more ll!ches Ill
and 6 to 9 Inches In northern
the
Chicago
area
by daybreak
Indiana," Reynolds said.
today.
1
· The storm spread snow from
ChiCago
public
schools
were
Arkansas and Missouri across .
open today but school bus service
Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiwas canceled, and students were
ana, Michigan and Into Ohio.
being asked to report to school an
"It will move toward the
later than their regularly
hour
Middle Atlantic states" tonight,
scheduled
starting.times.
Reynolds said. Wll!ter storm
Authorities
said the snowwatches were posted for parts of
storm,
making
roads danger·
VIrginia, Macyland, Delaware,
ously
slick,
was
a factor In at
and the mountains of North
least
two
deaths
Wednesday.
Carolll!l.
Durlq
the
morning
I'Uib·hour
on
· Forecaster Lyle AleX811der
Chicago's
Calumet
Expressway,
predicted the storm would swipe
a semi-trailer colllded with a
Penl!sylval!la and . New Jersey,

:Stone
enters
.

IIIID 011

·sLAB BACON

'

guil~y
'

1

'I

t

..

·erowm.

•

.f

..

..................~ ~~~~..............~..........................~............~..........~ ~~~~................
---' ~· _.:~~~~~~~~----~
. .... ... ~
_

plea; senteneed

One man was senlel!cecl on a
Geratd, lnveat11ator · for tlie
charae of aaravated a11ault jlrosecutor, Ia wlllcb Stone was
and IDOther man waived extradi- acculed of attemptlna to ram a
tion to nortda wben they ap- Middleport Pulice c:ndler with
'
peared Wedlleldll)' ID Metas . 1111 veblcle. Officers were punu.
·" County Cornmoll Pleat Court 1111 Stolle Ol'llblllly on a traffic
..rore Judae CllariM H. KDJaht.
. Doaald £_ (i')ol!!!te) . . . . 22,
KDIPt acceptlld St-·•
of Mlddiepart. elltenld • plea at IUIItY plea uti Nllleidd the
llllltY to agravaflld . . .ult Mlddlepo11 lllllll to a deftlllt1i
6etoi'e Judp KDIIJit, Oft a bW of term' olllx m011t1111D prllon, to
IJifonnatloll PI'IDil'wd IIIII ll1ed · oommettce 0111'eb. 17.
11Y tile af:ftcie ll ll(etp County
'Steve R. McGrath, 25,. alto of
PrOIICIIttq Atlomly Fred W.
Mlddl
appeared ..rore
Jlldae •
t 011 a warrant from
. Tile clllrie aplllft StCIII wu ' 1111 ata• Florida abarlllll blm
tile 1'11111t qt u IDQtlat 01 N- wltll faiiVt to appear CID a .
Y11r'1 ~Y, accor41111 to Paul chirp of reliiUDI ~· wltb
\'

orren.e.
·J.,._

Per Lb.

.

Deliveries will not be affected former hours of 8: 30 to 11: 30 a.m .
Meigs Countlans will be expe·
Langsville 1- new window
rlenclng changes - minor ones , at the Pomeroy and Middleport
Post
Offices
or
at
other
post
hours,
8: 30 to 10:30 a .m. Instead
actually - at their respective
offices
In
the
c.
o
unty
as
a
result
of
offormer
hours of 8:30 toll a .m.
post omces beglllnlng next week
the changes.
Portland - miw window hours
as a result of the national
·program to reduce U. S. Postal
Here are the changes for the of 8: 15 to 9:45a.m. Instead, of old
Service expenditures by 1.25 other post offl~es, all taking hours of 8:30 to 11 a .m.
Syracuse- 9 to 11 a .m . are the
place on Saturday, Feb. 20:
billion dollars.
Patrons of the Pomeroy and
Racine - new window hours, 9 new window hours, rather than
a.m. to 11 a .m., Instead or the . the old hours of 8: 30 to 11: 30 a.m.
Middleport Post Offices will be
experiencing changes on Thurs·
former Saturday morning hours
Tuppers Plains - 9: 30 to 11: 30
a.m .. tnstead of the former hours
days whlle-chal!ges at othe.r post of 8 to 11.
offlcfi!S In ,.the county
wUI
,•--.....--be on
. Chester- l!ew window hours,'8 of 8 !!-Ill to ~2 n09n.
.
.,
"j
Reedsville- 8: 45 to 10:45 a.m.
10
a.m.
Instead
of
8
a.m.
!o
12
to
Saturdays.
·•
'
.
'
replacing the old hours of 8: 45 to
At the Middleport Post Office · noon.
effective next Thursday, Feb.18,
Long Bottom - 7:15 to 10: 15 11:15 a.m .
All post offices will be closed on
the window service will be a.m. window hours, Instead of
discontinued at 12: 30 p.m. while two hours on Saturday mornings Monday · In observance of Presiat the Pomeroy Post Office, and two hours on Saturday dents' Day but the normal
holiday schedule will be
window service will be dlscon· afternoons.
.
Rutland - new window hours observed.
· tln~d at 1 P:m .
are 9 to 11 a .m. Instead of the

COupon Below

•

rolling," said Jo11es . He said If
ODNR can't help financially,
then maybe they will know
another agency which can.
Favor Sunestlon
.
The resldel!ts were In favor of
Jones' suggestion and Roberts
agreed to contact ODNR Immediately. He also agreed to contact
the U.S. Corps of Engineers to
determine If any responslbllty
for the flooding lies with them.
The Salisbury ,trustees will ' also
be contacted about the meeting
with ODNR since they are
ultimately responsible for whatever Is done to the road.
Later In the meeting, during a
discussion with members of the
Continued on page 16

'

Per..Head

Fresh ~

milling stopped, water runoff has
brought sedlrnenttrom the mllles
Into the creek, thus fllllllg up the
creek. "There Is just as much
water but the creek Is not as
deep," said County Highway
Superintendent Ted Warner.
Since the floodlllg problem
may be mille· related, Commlsstoner Richard Jones suggested
that residents allow the county
engllleer to coriiact the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mining Reclama·
tlon, to schedule a .meeting to
discuss the flooding problem and
to determine If the raising of the
road might qualify for ODNR
assistance.
"This will at least start the ball

List new post office hours
for ~enrices in Meigs County

4 Roll Package

Fresh Crisp
California

fullest extent" but pointed out
that the county Is legally limited
In working on the road, since It Is
under township jurlsdlctton.
Roberts and Commissioner
Richard Jones also pointed out
that there are locattons on a
couple of county roads where
flooding Is a common occurrance
and families are sometimes
trapped for days .
.
The group discussed the prob!ems ~aused by the constant
flooding and all agreed that past
strip mining of many areas along
Leading Creek might be the
cause of flooding problems, not
only on Shady Cove Road but on
other roads which border the
creek. Over the years since strip

.
5

••

violence, a third· deeree felony
under Florida law.
The cbareea resulted from an
l!ICident whlcb occurred lut fall
II! Lake City, Columbia Couuty,
Florida, 111d Gerard reported
tbat Florida authorities llldl·
catlld the wlllled to bave
McGntb l'etlll'lled to them to
face tile cbar... ·
1\ofcGratb qreed to VOIUD~IIy
return to Florida llld lliDid a.
written walwr (If atradltloll. He

IbiD ntunlld to thlt ......
CuntyJall toawaJUIIell'l'lvalof
otncen tiom ll'lorlc1a. wblch
lllould

oeeur

wltllla 10 days.

and Joan Sorden, VIrginia Buch·
anan, Dorothy Long, Lula Hampton , Emma Clatworthy, Esther
Harden. Gertrude Roblllson, William al!d Joyce Hoback, VIrginia
Oller, F1orence Richards , Philomena Follrod, Evelyn Gilmore
and Gerald WUdermuth. The
canteen was served by the
auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
Donors from the various·communities Included :
Pomerey ~ Debra D. Mora,
Doranne Boyd, Lenora
McKnight, Kelly R. Ginther,
Raymond F. Jewell, Thomas
Hart, Lloyd Blackwood, Tracy L.
O'dell, Pamela J. Miller, Jeffrey
D. Holter, Raybon R. Wallace,
Brenda L. ·Morris, Mary Ann
VanMeter, Sylvia G. Neece,
Jeane. E. Braun, Loretta A.
Brown, Mary E. O'Brien, Janet
K. Peavley, Dan E . Follrod,
Cyndl D. K111g, David M. King,
i\tidrey C, Kinzel, Deborah L.
Grueser, Bonnie Friend, Walter
R. Couch, Lawre11ce D. Leonard,
Don B. Cullums, VIrgil K, Win·
don, Oiana Conde, Harold W.
Brinker, Penny L. Brinker, Gerald Rought, Fonna K. CUilums.
Mary A. Sorden, Donald R.

Smith, Paul F. Marr, Gloria K.
Kloes , Janet M. Ambrose, Mar·
sha L. Barnhart, Patricia J.
Barton, Howard P. Logan, Bryan
S. Shank, Carolyn A. Charles,
Adell L. White, John S. Foster,
John F . Snyder, W!Uiam W.
Radford.
Middleport - George Harris,
Jr.. Jean Ann Durst, Carin
Taylor, Shannon Hlndy. Kathryn
D. Johnson. Charles F . Johnson,
Carrie M. Roush, Sarah J.
Fowler, Julia Qualls, Patricia M.
Hlndy, Lisa R. Ashley,. Patricia
F . Kitchen, Gloria J. ·Peavley,
Judith K. Hunter, Gerald L. ·
Anthony, Timothy E. Smith,
Dorothy McCloud, Maurlsha A.
Nelson.
• Racine- Charles F . Wagner,
Vlrglllla Bland, Larry Circle,
Diana L. Smith, A. Marie Bush·,
Charles W. Bush, William H.
Hoback, Dorothy M. Sayre, Nola
C. Young, Barbara Lane, Susie
Pierce, Dee Spencer, Johnanna
Shuler, Dawna R. Grueser, Kim·
·
berly J. Follrod.
BldweU -Robin A. Payne.
Reedsville - John C. Rice.
Tbe Plains - Barbara R .
Conley.
· (Contlllued on· page 16)

Senate

Wrongful death suit filed

app~ves

A ,7M,OII8 wreqful death aetiCID bu been fUed Ia Melp
Couaty Common Pleu Court by Delorn .Jeu LCID1, Pomeroy,

gun bill

Loap&amp;r:etb, ef Laapvllle• ..
Ropr P.,._ LoaJ, ap II, died Ia a.Jal718. 1981 one-vehiCle
IICClldlldln wllleb loba l.ooaptnltllwu tile driver aad Loq wu
a pee1 apr. Tile aocldell&amp; &amp;loll place • Roate Ita Ia Selplo
Tow lip, Tile velllcle wu owae• 117 Keaae&amp;b IAIIPhdl.
Tile plallllltlff c.....,_ 111M .Joba Loapbetb wu 1111der tbe
bdlaeaae of aleoltolat lie &amp;Ia. of die aocl'; a&amp;, aad ill&amp;&amp; lie wu
dJttlq aeJIIIeiiiJ _. a&amp; a ldP l'llle el llfeM. Tile phMft
elalml&amp;lul&amp;loec IliA I'*"*'WUdriWTcDeJIIIedr,heloa&amp;
iCOii&amp;nl of 1111 v8lole ftlell na off Ill nll4l lo collide wl&amp;lt a

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Arming ·
'huhters al!d competitive shoot•
ers with tbe ammunition they sa)(
tbey need !O eajoy tbelr sports,
the state senate has approved a
bW to effectively pre-empt hand·
lflllllllulland other local and·eun

or4lnucea.

'J'he lePJatlon, sponsored by
Sea. Robert Ney, R·BarllelviUe,
wu ...lid 21·9 W1!11nnday and
DOW. 10111 to the R0111e, where
Speaker VCli'Ul · G. Riffe Jr.,
D-Ntw BoltOn, Wal DOD·
1:9mmittalabollt 1tar.111re there•
Coatlll~ on pap 18

admlalllratrlxoftbew~ofBoprParkerLong,a,aiU&amp;Iolm

W. Loaph'eCII llld Keliaetll L;

eaiYert...............
ph'""'"

'

Tile
IITIL cllarpalllat Ka1 e&amp;b Lo11Je&amp;nltb wu '
nldlaaa&amp; In •b lla11111 wldcla a. 1111-..
A ilal llr 11117 II 1'8!1 tid Ia die • '1 Ir, u wall u tbe
DIII~IG08DMTtiai•rt ......... fer a- ol fila dlllll 1'1 ~~
ftiURAIIIJex)llltlhll l101pa . . , . _ .......
ud lor 1M mealal
111 11111....0, " " ITII

.....

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••u•

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•

Ohio

Comment
Engineer disputes.·rmdings

Ill Court street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED To-THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
·

~

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.

~~- ..............-.-............. d
~v

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•.==.

·.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publls"er

BOB HOEFLICH
General Muacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

'

A MEMBER o!The Urtited Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoc iation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

·1

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should bP less than 300 warda
··. long. All lett£&gt;rs are subject lo edltlng and must bestgned With name1 a~dr~ss lnci
·:. tel ephone nUmber. No unsigned ·leltt!rs will be published. -Letters should be In
go od tas le, addres sing issues , not perSonalities.
'
·

'

.

Had the blll conta"tned the reforms I, as one Irate taxpayer, wanted,
there .would be no ·need, now or In the future, t!l simplify the
Instructions further.
But I was going to write about the 15th anniversary of a Texas
publication, not tax reform . I don 't know how I got sidetracked,
except that Is easy to do at this time of year.
'The cover of the Austin magazine pictures Texans stanqtng
shoulder to shoulder. In my time, there weren't enough of us to stand
that way.
It also says the 15th anniversary celebrates ''the ties that bind." I
have found over the years that all ties tend to bind a bjt.
A blurb quotes a Texas Monthyly editor to the effect that in the
western part of the state, where I grew up, driving distances are
measured "in time, not miles. "
· Thus, he wrote, "a person ls considered centrally located lf the
nearest maills a two·hour drive.
We didn't have malls In the old days. I'm told the closest one now Is
only 17 miles, or about 15 minutes, away, However,lt never occurred
to us Merkelites to consider whether our home. town was centrally
located.
t want to state categorically that we mfi!asured driving distances In
miles , not time. Thus, if we had to drive 90 miles for a can or bottle of
beer, so be it
I lived in the center of what was then a prohibition belt but I never
heard anyone tell a real !!State agent, who mlghth_ave a ~r·drlnklng
client. that the nearest roadhouse was any closer.
We may not have been rich but we were jlonest.
If that makes you feel any better while fllling out your simplified
1040 tax return , you're welcome,

Letters to the editor
Has great deal of concern
Dear Editor :
, I have a real concern. I'm so
afraid someday, someone is
going to be coming out of the
Kroger parking lot and aacl·
aently go in the river.
· Couldn' t there be at least about
~feet of gu~rdrall put up there?

You know we shouldn't walt until
the horse gets out to close the
gate.
Whoever Is responsible, please
see about doing this!
Thank you,
. KalhryJ! Mora
. Pomeroy, Ohio

·"After all these years, his friends down at the FBI still honor him
putting fresh garbage on his grave."

Tt•••tting our scliools around
Politicians often like "to ta.Ik teachers nor lack of revenue
most about .problems they lnflu· explains why student achieve·
ence, leJi~t_._~ naturally· tlie ment In the United States,
current crhtf•·or presidential especially In math and science,
candidates lias been chatting lags (jehlnd· that in many deve'
Incessantly about quality educa· loped nations.
We already devote- a greater
tlon, as If the federal government
could turn our schools around.
- share of our wealth to education
Vice President George Bush than most European countries
twice voiced a desire to discuss and Japan. And there Is no dire
education during his celebrated shortage of compet.ent, devoted
dust·up with Dan Rather. Bush teachers. To the extent our
has even allowed as how he'd like schools fall, It Is fqr reasons not
to he known as t!le "education easily addressed by national,
candidate."
-- ·--pOttcy.
This folly Is shared by most of
his colleagues, too . .
To understand why, consider
Why folly? Because the federal the dozens of schools described
government simply can't do by the U.s. Department of
much to Improve our elementary Educat'ton ' tn the booklet,
and secondary schools. It can "Schools That Work, Educating
funnel more money to them, of Disadvantaged Children." These
course, which In some districts schools ,v ary somewhat In ap·
might help attract bette.r preach, but all seem to share
teachers or repair broken-down several characteristics: strong
buildings. Yet neither lousy principals; fair but firm disci·

pllne; high expectations for
students regardless of back·
ground; and an a.billty to stoke
the ln.vol vemenl .of even poor
parents In their ~hlldren's
education. ,
This thesis ls hardly unique.
The scholar James Coleman has
made a similar case In attempt·
lng to explain why the achieve·
ment gap between minorities and
whites expands the longer they
stay In public school, but shrinks
the longer they're In parochial
schOol. Apparently parochial
schools succeed because they
expect more of their students,
refuse. to Indulge unPuly kids,
. assign more homework and
create a sense of community In
which parents" play an active
part.
- That last factor shouldn't be
underestimated. A report by the
National Committee for Citizens
In Education summarizes scores

'

-

•

-of studies establishing a link i
between achievement and paren· i
tal lntel"!!sl. How ean ,tbe federal 1
government possibly nurture vi·
tal family attiudes? It can't. But
local schools and citizen groups :
can- If they try.
There really lsn 't any mystery •
about the components pf a good ;
school. This nation boasts many
such schools already, private •
and public, which could provide a . ••
ready example for the even more
numerous Instances. of . educa· · •
tiona! mediocrity scattered
across the land.
Yet while the tools exist to
Improve our schools, they're
obs.cured by· calls for more aid
from Washington. We don't need
·an education candidate for president. We need parents and ,
principals and' school board
members who will join together
. to build !lrst·rateschools with the
materials already at hand.

Back · to 'The Jungle' . -.:. .:._____R_ob_e_rt_~_al~ter_s

LOS ANGELES (NEA) - Big
trucks rumble through the
streets. Abandoned Industrial
equipment rusts In rubble·
strewn vacant lots. On warm
days, the odor of animal slaugh·
terlng, rendering and processing
·Is Inescapable.
That's a portrait of Vernon, a
community 3'n miles southeast
of downtown Los Angeles that
appears to ·have nothing In
common with the city's sparkling
glass and chrome central business district.
There Is, however, a connec·
tion: vernon, the West's largest
meat·packlng center, produces
the beef for those who live or
work not only downtown but also
In Hollywood, Beverly Hills and
Clluntless other, less glamorous
communi ties.
The purity of the beef •. pork, .
veal and chicken consumed
throughout the country Is sup·
'
By United Press lnternatlo.n al
posed to be assured by Inspection
:Today is Thursday, Feb. 11, the 42nd day of 19ll8 with 324 to follow.
administered by the U. S. Depart"The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
ment of Agriculture- but USDA
:The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
employees say that protection ,
·The evening stars are 'i'enus and Jupiter.
.
. has been severely compromised
Those borri on this date are under theslgnofAquarlus. They Include
during President Reagan's
Ehglishman William Talbot, a developer of pl!otoi,l"aphy, In 1800;·
tenure.
Inventor Thomas Edison In 1847; King Farouk, EIIYP! s last monarch,
''The files have been getting
In 1920· actress Kim Stanley In 1925 (age 63); actor Burt Reynolds ln
meaner, the roaches fatter and
.1936 (~ge 52), and Brazll!an musician Sergio Mendes In 1941 (47).
the rats bolder" at processing
plants, says a USDA Inspector
On this date In history:
from Long Beach, C&amp;llf. "My
In 1858, French peasant girl Bernadette Sourblrous said the Virgin
advice to the public Ia not to eat
Mary appeared to her at Lourdes.
meat," says a former USDA
ln 1937, General Motors Corp. alll"eed to recognize the United Auto
Inspector from Rosemead, Calif.
Workers Union as the bargaining agent for GM workers .
A fonner USDA poultry ll'ader
In 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister
from MtiiOU11 tel11 of beiDa
Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin ended a week·long
preuured to certify "Grade A"
wartime conference at Yalta.
chickens with "sol'ell, acabl,
In 1965, U.S. and South Vietnamese planes made the first bombing
broken bonet. el!J)Oied fielb,
raids on North VIetnam.
brea1t blllters, pua, fecal mat·
In 1970, Japan became the fourth nation to put a liateiHie In space,
ter, tumor• and arease."
following the Soviet Union, United Stales and France.
Tbe meat packlq compalllea
In ~987, Corazon Aquino was sworn In for a slx·year presidential
In Vernon bave been tbe subject
term under a 11;fW PJ!Wpplne constitution. 1
~
of acanclaliiD earll,tr yean. Now

Today in history

•''
Vincent Carroll ;

they are again being probed by
' the Government Accountability
Project, a Washington, D, C.,
public Interest organization that
specializes In ' Identifying and
protecting the whlstle·blowers
among employees of the federal
government.
In the mld-19ti0s, USDA tnspec·
tors working with GAP provided
testimony and evldencee that
packing plant executives exerted
Improper pressure - ranging
from proffered bribes to physical
Intimidation - to approve
tainted meat In violation of
federal standards.
Five of the worst plants In
Vernon and elsewhere In the Los
Angeles area were closed and
others were placed on probation.
But serious problems at many
oth,er facilities were Ignored, and
most of · the USDA's whistleblowers were harassed by their
own superiors for being too
honest.
The Reagan administration
has pressed. for widespread adop·
tlon of "total quaUty control," a
concept whose narne obscures Its
Intent to shift much of the
responsibility lor lpspectton
from government to Industry.
During Reagan's tenure;
USDA e~~tployees bave warned of
allegedly detertorathlg Inspection standards not only In Callfor·
nla but also In New York, New
Jersey, Arkanlaa, Oklahoma,
Mluourl and elsewhere.
In tile wont of tbe planta, the
food deat!Ded for human con·
aumptton Ia contaminated not
only by fecal matter from tbe
animals~ procelled but also
by' Jre&amp;ll!, hair, ruat and paint.

by salmonella bacteria - butGAP says 90 percent Is a more
reliable figure.
The problems aren't new.
Novelist Upton Sinclair's 1906
book, "The Jungle," shocked the
nation by describing the dreadful
practices In Chicago. meat ·
packing plants Including the
slaughter of dead, diseased and
crippled cattle.
In subsequent years, presl·
dents generally have understood
the need to shield the public from

-

those hazards - but Reagan
entered office with almost no
confidence In government to f
perform any task · and with
unshakeable faith In private .
Industry to regulate Itself.
"Under the Reagan admlnls·
tratlon," says GAP EX!!CUti~e l
Director Louts Clark, "till! USDA ~
Is slowly and quietly abandoning ;
Its statutory responslbltty ·to •.
protect the public from the,risks
of contaminated meat."

-'

Berry's World

ltublball rat tap (wkh nnt.,late vote.

.... . . . . . . reot. . . . . piltt . .ttn);

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8eeu.. tea : lh Westerville Norfl II;
lt. Ill. . . . . . 5I; IS. Fallfleld It; lt.
M..U... Pe,.., II: II. COI..-.buBrook·
ll&amp;vea II ; It, Tolt4o St. JoM'a S; 17.
To .... Ubbey 1; 18. HamDIH I; 11.
Cllld..UI LaSaUt I; a . {lit~ Akroa
CeatraJ.&amp;.wer and ColumiMIJ u•en. 1
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t. M...tkW MU.bar (Jt•IJ

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41
Se~ lea: II. Bellefo•h• J81 12.
, Ma.. . . . 14; II. Claclnutl f'o~at
rarll IJ; U. Call\brldp It; II. M;a..nee
1: 11. llkl Dread en 1'rl-v..ae,, lll'ecllswna. ud C.nkln South. 5 u~h: It. (tie)
O.cl..,l Oree...U., Rolflfonl •• Bar
Ytllap, J MCIL
DhiM&amp;oll Ill
1. Havhrd W~e Trace fall (ll-fl)

...

I. HamUIOD ~lin (Ill ( 17.f)
S. Cohanb.a Academ)' 1II-G)

2S7

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t . sprt.. field cat:taollc ( 1) (18-f)

184

I . W~ltl'lburJ (I) (If-D)

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I. Bloom·(arrolllll-0)
1. P')'mtJuninc Valley (II OIP.Dl

114

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8. Apple Crk Wayn edale (J) ( 16-,0)
II
II.Oberlla ( 13-3)
&amp;0
Seee.l &amp;en: 11. lucrr.. Wy•fonl 38;
U. ••ron U; IS. (tie) Fr...UerLoealand
Fredai\'!W.wn, H eaeh: 15. Ja1M8&amp;oW.
Greeaevltw . II: II. (Uti , I.AGra.are
lle)'Mne and Chal"ln F.U11, 8 eMrll; Ill.
C.tl&amp; 1: II. Wttl Union 1: to. Gl . .terTI'Imble 4. .
Dlvt111011 IV
I . ColwniMI1 Welu'k ('n) ( I:J-1!)

"'

r. Indian \lalk)' &amp;uth (f, ) ( JH)
:1. Fort Loramie (t) (IJ.t)
f. BeawrEII.Iltlrn ( I)(II-G)
I . M...l.,ld St. Pl!f.Pr'fl (iS.S)

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

New .Ieney at DelNM, alJIIII
CaiP., a&amp; P•IUtlpllla, ailht
Sl.
a&amp; Ollcap, at.W

r.•

lo*•at1:41m......,al&amp;ht

CoUege

IIOOI'tl8
WellaHdq'• eo&amp;re

.........nan••

By UaW Preu at&amp;ena&amp;IGMI
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. ,....., n. Oacw&amp;a a. n

Alh•U. Pe .. St. (Be..._..d, 81
UePnJ'., Cue
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W••r•

...

8• MIIIPI'III Rldp&gt; (II (1'2·1)
Kalida (15-1)

•liMn

The Dilily

1

N-'TIONAL BMKETBALL ASSOC .
Wethtelld~'"

ltt!aull!l
N~• oler.e)' M, O.ka1o 81
Detroit 18, New Vork 1'1
Clf'w,ldlll Ul, W.-blnttoa IH
Bollton IJI, s .. Al:'lonlo u•
Utab 13, Dallu •
LA Dlppen Ill, ........ II

· . n.,..., .• o.....

Pll,.....,..la, 1:11 p.m.

LA Lalltra a1 Dtnwr, I: It p.m.

...._atatGoWeon8t_.e,
It: • p..,.
,8acnmea&amp;o It: It p.m.
1

H•..eo• at Seallk, II:. p.m.
Frl4ay'111Gunn
New .lerae)' at ClnelaDd, •llhl
-'&amp;laMa a1 Dth•ll, •IIJIIt

..U.bama II, MlaeiMippl 81. til

cond class postage- paid at

a

110a1o11 at Dalal, •llllt

LA t.alloera~ Saal\alo«&lt;lo, niA;hl

Clllcap at Mllwallkee, al1hl
lndi ... at Plleenlx, alaN

~- Rfo')e&lt;,.. r,. A~ ro t.omoe O......htll"'
HQI ~W. F01 ~~~ £"'"

786 N. SECOND. MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

..

AND

'

.. "
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'

.

I'

•.•,·:

,2'
•

.' . ..
-

the ' bilJIOII cbtckelll tbat Ita
lnspectorl · apProvit IDr marbt·
tnr every year are CCIIIIamlnated
I

COllECTWJN

Pom~oy.

Member : United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Associ at ton and rhe
Ohio Newspaper Assoc
. tat ton. National
AdvertiSing Representative, Branham

.. MY LOVE WILL
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103497

.,.llooooo,ootJ . ..._All...,.,---r-- .._,. (_,

POSTMASTER: Send addreos chanJl'!S

Akroa U, Wrl•llrt ... 81
A.lbloa II, .\liM 11
i\aPIIa• at. Nortll Par\ 77 (OTI
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Baldw..WallaeeTI,Mo..tUaiM11
Ball 81. n. 1111Meft1 Mlelllpn 11
Bftllll&amp;' Greft ~ Ml . .l • (OT)

c.,..I.,WIMIIIerU
c::e.tralllldllpa In, Clllc:aiO 81. 71
(elllral I&amp;. 111. Ga.o• 88 (OT)
aewlullllst.IS. 'Ya. eo~•,.
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#4SI6

1917
Auto .• AM·FM Stereo, Cauette.
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"We've Got The Keys To A .Beller Deal"

STOP IN. 01 CALL 992·2174

Prep srores
Boys Ohio Hlsll SchOOl Bukethal.l

Br Ualt.ed Preas .. 6tr•tlonal
Wetlllelllay. Feb. II '

••.,. n.

Co p&amp;ey "
Mttlu Hipland II , Nortea 5S

SMITII·NELSON MOTOIS

STETSON AFTER SHAVE

992-2174
500 EAST IIlii ·

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EVERY GIRL WILL WANT ONEI

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....

Decorated For Valentine's Day

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.•••. •.

~

A BIG SELECTION FOR YOUR VALENTINE!

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VALENTINE HEARTS

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CHOCOLATES

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Plan tournament
Southern High School will have
an Independent basketball tour·
nament Saturday and ' Sunday,
featuring ' area teams such as
Wellston and Ravenswood,
W.Va., to name a few, according
to athletic dir!!ctor Howle
Caldwell.
The tournament will begin at 11
a.m. and run untllS p.m. on both
days. Admission '. is $1.50 for.
adults and $.75 for children.
The tournament will also he
held on Feb. 20 and 21, at the
same times as previously listed.

t::~~;~
IJJlW'
~

New Jork, New York 10017.

N.C . .UT II, Wlfl!l*e.SIIeln 81. 51
Navy ts. WIW. 6 Mat)' II (0T)
Old DomiiiiO• 81, Wt*N ~llhtcky'JI
v_.etbiKtt. Te__.en
Vlrclala Rt. ll,. Bowie 81. 11
Vhslllla 81.. 11. .u•. ·Br•Mu '73
WHI. Ullert)' II, Gluvllle 15
Ml...etl

llarlu fll. C..eord .. 1Wie. 1 11.
Marqaet" II, Ca...... '71

·p

·New&amp;Ea'per Sa1es, 733 Third Avenue,

Grorw.. 11, Flortdatl
KnhacirQ' ~ "'bu,.·d
Lonpoad 11. Allude Ch'rliiiM M
Lo . . . . . . . "1'1, ........... 17
Mar)'luli'JI,ae-•
· Memplda.8l. 111, So ...tl'll MJas. n

H'tillelbft'ltl, OI.IMtteln 71
II, Mrt.. 11
DIIMII WeeiepD 81, DePauw 7t
ln•.-sE I!, Raaowr 1'!
Jon tl, 0111" 81 . 71
Kaa.maaao '71, OltwtM
K..._. '21, Ok.. hema 81: .'P

All STORES
OPEN 1 DA.YS AWEEK!

Ohio.

w. v.......
n
.
E. le••Q 11, a. Carellaa St . 11

~pe

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIQNS.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.. Po·
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 157ti9, Ph, 992·2\~ Se-

w.

NBA results

outing, maintained a 274·237
margin over runnerup Hamhton
Badin In Division Ill . The Raid·
ers also led 20·5 In first place
votes .
Columbus Academy, Spring·
field Catholic, Wheelersburg and
Bloom-Carroll remained In third,
fourth, fifth and sixth again this
week, with Pymatunlng Valley
advancing one· place lntil
seventh.

. (USPSII·HO·

Furm. . 11, D&amp;acltl•

II.Oitawa HIIIM (14-2)
,
11
Se\'!Oad 'len: II. Delpii011St . .Joh•'• 52!
tl. Rad~ SOudtem 11; l,S. CoavO)'
Creahiew II; 14. · SA. HeiU')' II; 15.
S..ad,llde 10: 11. r\ntwerp A; . 17. Ule)
Holl;at• and BUckeye ~entral, 7 eac•; 19.
SuiJarererkGanway -t; 20. Berlin Hiland

The Daily Sentinel

Dunbar, an 83·77 winner over to North Canton GlenOak Friday
Dayton Patterson Tuesday night night, 65-62, the Generals' first
for a 16-l reconl, led unbeaten loss of the year.
(16·0) Lorain Admiral 'King 334Rounding out the list In Div292 In the big school balloting.
Ision I were Toledo Macomber In
The Wolverines also had a 29-4 sixth, Euclid In seve nth, Cleve·
edge In first place votes .
land St . Joseph In eighth and
Canton McKinley, 16-1, reBarberton and Mt. Vernon In a tie
mained In the No.3 spot \VIth 271 for ·nlnth, both newcomers to tills
points, followed again by Woos- week's top ten
' ter Ill fourth and Cincinnati .
Wayne Trace, a 68·54 winner
Woodward In fifth. Woosier lost over Llncolnvtew ln Its latest

A Dlvlllon of Molllmedla, lac.

.....

Co•ord 141, Salem a (OTI

I~

COLUMBUS, Ohio . (UPI) Youngstown Liberty clalmj!d the
top spot In thiS wee~s United
Press International Ohio· High
School Board of Coaches Division
II boys basketball ratings, mak- ·
tng Portsmouth's stay at the top a
short one.
The Trojans (17·1), despite
weekend wins over Ironton and
. Cincinnati Moeller, ·surrendered
the No. 1 rating to unbeaten
Liberty, a 44-37 victor over
Brookfield Friday night. Portsmouth had just tak~n over first
,plac~ from Willard last week.
I,,berty, 16•0, held a 275-263
point margin over Portsmouth
this week and led In first pt&amp;ce
voles 16-11. A week ago, It was
· Portsmouth 266-265 and 12-11.
Steubenville (1H) advanced
from fourth to third wtth 200
points, while Willard slipped tQ
· fourth with 191 after Its loss to
. Lexl!lll"ton. .
Rounding out the II list were
Warren Champion ' lh fifth, fol-.
lowed by Thornville Sheridan,
Bexley, Leavittsburg . LaBrae,
Mansfield Malabar and Lexlng·
ton, making Its first appearance
In the top ten.
The other three leaders remained entrenched In their No.1
. positions - Dayton Dunbar In
Division I, Haviland Wayne
Trace In Division llla.nd Colum·
bus Wehrle In Division IV.

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

. St..aiOII 11, Wilkes tt
st. Qltlmt Ill, Americu lnt'l 11
SJae•• 14. Plta.b•'lh 11
TelhJk II, Yllluo• 81
'l're.... St .... ~eraey at, 8t. 81
WayHabU'I Rl. Wtllnll-*r D
Wniera CoaaedlcU 'n, NYU 14

IM

US
1(17

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CW rMa IM, ·II~rcy n
Deliaware ......... c.u. n
DotrU .. i:AU. IN, NY Teeh •
Drew M, I'JtalletlrUwft II
·GelltiH I&amp;. D, Olwep81. 71
Growt' L'II)""TT, WMII. 61ell. 71
Haml&amp;oa n, UUea U
........t11,a.e~te~eer•
H•. .aU.U.N. . IitiPand71
.lulllala 1&amp;. Yoltl 14
Lata,eUe 12,
It
Ulll&amp;f'l 71. a.ckatll 'It
.
I.Mk Rave• II, Slippery Hoek R
M:aMUiaawtne-.Mere•MMarlatU:
Nl!tf Rawa M. New Ram,...lre Coli. '23
NeW PrJ&amp;a &amp;&amp;. 81, Up. .a11
·
Nol l ...tlllllleTech 1.., NVPoi)'T~hU
"NY Mu1tbnt H..Vu...- 17
Norwich 'U . Bltldm~ II
Plii·Bndlord II, Oe•\'a II
.PUt-JGIIM&amp;owD 14, 81 .' VlnceM ti

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llroMipii,Waperlll
. , .... •· llentlnlck 18
~llfo'*f:a (Pa.1 71, .. dlua (Pa.) II
C.r•lle-Jielloii1S, .Joha car,.ll '71
C&amp;IUeiM fit. 1., Ia . .IOMpll'a 11
Vlarlo• Ill, BII.Mro t5
Cluil M. S.lolk 14

.-\merku
Blctanllllll Q
RdlliUJ fit, Tllielll
Bl.tleW II, hlrmoat 'M
CharteMenll,
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1. PUIIbYI'( Franklin Monroe (IIHI)

h~

r..w., .. o..- ·

NY . laiaadera at Wllld . .oa, alfllt '·

II. .IWII&amp;ea a. II, C.r0u4 8t. II
lhamfteN II, 111'\'tlll Teelll'2

· 8. Leavl&amp;t.burr LaBru ( 1&amp;-21

--~Ill

•.u..a at N. . Jel'lltJ, '2: 41 ,.m.

· QllebeclMIAaAaplet,lt:llp.ni.
l!'AimHIM at ¥urctaUil, 11:-., ;.m.

...............i • •

1. TIMtnlvllle StM!rkl .. (11·1)

·t Bexa.er {UU)

............. aa....

Ill

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!.PortunHih(~l)(17-1)

NATION..U.IIOCUY LEAGUE
WNIIelll.,'• Damn
No..,.._-=~ (..tiHIUr bnall)

.... _....at NY ....en, 1:SI P·•·

l.'h.... Mawmber(lt-!)
1'. Butl .. (IJ..t)
11. one~... St . .Jo.eph &lt;tl-4 1
t. (Ue) larbert.a (Il-l~

S. S&amp;ellbNwllle (Il-l,
.t. 'Villard (J) (IS.t)
I, Walft• O.amplon (lf.l)
18"1

NHL results

114
..

71

.

,

... -

USDA ·admltatbatS'7p81~tof

~

Tlllla·

•Ill..

'

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -About tills time of year, back In the dark
ages, a Texas publication once ran a series called "deep In the hurt of .
taxes."
I no longer recal,l t\le exact dates but I guarantee It was more than 15
years ago. What brings It to mind now Is the 15.th anniversary edition
ohhe Texas Monthly, ~ magazine whose "collector's Issue" was
published under the caption ''Deep In The Hearts Of Texas."
The reason ! ·refer to the earlier period as the "dark ages" Is not so
much a salute to fading memory as bec.ause that was before the time I
started paying Income taxes .
·
Even back then, I !eel sure, the _Internal Revenue Service was
· putting out annual " simplified'' Instructions, as It has religiously
done since.
·
I
.
We taxp~yers are particularly ln nee&lt;! of simplified Instructions
this year owing to congressional passage, at presidential urging, of a
"reform' ' bill. '
·
I'm not suggesting the legislation finally enacted was what
President Reagan clearly had In mind. But he did sign It Into law,

DeawratP•~,•IIW

COLVMBUS. Ot1to (UPIJ -

'•'

preliminary findings early last ~
.year, the National Aeronautics •.'
and Spa,::e Administration wrote )
a three-page analysis of his work ,;
that ended by saying, "NASA .
finds no 'evidence In any of your ·,
analyses that could change the ·,
original sequence of events or the
cause of the accident."
But the controverstaf eng!· •.
neer 's work has recent.Iy prompted a Pentagon Intelligence offl·
clal to try to get l;lm an audience
at NASA.
AbuTaha differs from the
commission Investigators on !leV·
eral points: .
,
.
.:..Portions of the shuttle's )
failed rocket booster were never j
found . . AbuTaha thinks that Is ;
because pieces began falling Into .
the ocean before the major
explosion. The commission con·
eluded the booster broke up In the
.- major explosion. AbuTaha be·
lleves the missing parts lie within
three miles of the shore of Cape
Canaveral In unsearched waters.
-The shuttle's jerky ascent
was ~ response to the continuous I,
leak, according to AbuTahli.. The '
commission credited the erratic .
path to the navigation and
control system as It reach~ to
the wind, But AbuTaha notes tha1
debris from the explosion fell in
almost straight lines through the
wind.
·
-A home video taken of tbe
filght by an observer In nearby
~ew Smyrna .Beach reveals an
unusual plume of smoke spouting
from the shuttle 40 seconds after
the launch - another sign that
the flames had burned a growing
hole In the booster, AbuTaha
says. NASA and the commission
officials argile the plumes are t
normal.
-Dialogue In the Challenger ;
cockpit hints that the astronauts •
recognized a problem as early as : .
15 seconds Into the fight. AbuT·· :
aha contends the commlsslon did •
not use the cockpit recording In 1
reachll)g their conclusions.

.-.a.aLAOlllflrt.•.,..

•eek't U•led ,........&amp;eru&amp;lil.al ot~ID
lelll!ll Btar\11 •• c.ac•· bo,a

Ande~on and VanAtta ;

Simplified taxation
where it hurts

d~~~

Boys nlings

'•
'

WASHINOTUN - Two years pages generated by the Rogers contends that the steadU;y grow·
ago today, tbe space shuttle Commission, which Investigated tng leak.of fire·was ob$Cured by
Challenger exploded on natiolljl,1 the accident, His copy of the the lighting . and the shuttle's
· television. Since then, the 73 accident report Is dog-eared, external tank, so the commission
seconds of fatal flight .h ave never paper:cllpped and tattooed with · did not confirm the "first evl·
leftthe microscope.
dence of Jlame" unltl 58.7 se·
his notes.
The report of a pre~ldentlal · AbuTaha contends the Rogers conds Into the flight.
commission was Issued In June Commission Investigators took
AbuTaha claims his
1986, ~ but It dld not end the the wrong tack wben they con· · continuous·leak theory helps ex·
scrutiny, especially for a persist· eluded that tiny O·rlngs caused plain other anomalies, Including
ent VlrJinla engineering consul· the fatal explosion. He believes a the Inability of recovery teams to
!ant who stm 11rgues that errors . pre-existing crack near the aft find missing shuttle pieces of the
have been sewn Into the fabric of joint of the right solid rocket Florida coast.
- the official record.
His findings have been he·
booster led ~ tbe disaster.
AIIAbuTaha Is a self-employed
By filtering away the glare of raided by some aerospace offl·
consulant who has worked In sunlight and rocket exhaust from clals and dismissed by others.
aerospace, satellite, c0 mputer his home vtdeo_rec&lt;?rdlng, AbuT- David Acheson of the Rodgers
and video engineering for 20 aha saw fire striking the right Commission called AbuTah&lt;~ ''lnyears, Unlike . most armchair wing and main en'l!nes . of the ~nlo\IS," but his ',theories "not
Challenger troubleshooters, he. Challenger secon~ after It was very persuasive.''
has studied more than 3,000 launched Into the Fib)'ida sky. He
After reviewing AbuTal!a's

.

Trojans fall from ·top spot in ~I poll

Page 2-The Daily Senlinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thuraday, February 11. 1988

...

The Daily Sentinel

'

Rant A ovla
To 1teh lth

Jlle 0•• Yoa Love
Oil Vtlejflna'e ·~•¥·

'·

-

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Tlu'ldlly. F.brulry 1 1. 1 888

11. 1881.

Ohio

DAY .
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JEANS ··

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MADE IN THE SHADE &amp; AOD WASH ..................$31 9t
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DRESS PANTS ~ SKIRTS - BLOUSES
CHIC

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FRIDAY and SATURDAY!!

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This coupon good lor $1 .00 OFF any
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111. IIJ9.DO 3 pc. Mt, Maplt or Ook ..... Now 1177.00
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ACCESSORIES .

-CLIP AND SAVE-

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SUNS£T ILUES INK SOAKED DENIM ...................J 3499
CltiC AC.ID WASH DART JEANS..........................~.$3799
. BELTED
. BAG. WAIST JEANS ........... S3499
DARK DENIM
LEVI • SUGAR COAT 505-501 ............................ $3 7~9
~

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.,

�Sentinel

The

.·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

11.1988
Th~. February 11. 1988 '

ADS sure tu

(;-raham nets 31 ; Ohio Upiversity wins ·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7-,

Hannan Trace, Southern -to clash in key SVAC contest ·

fOI SALE IY .· fA.BS BANI AND
SAYINGS CO
1980 CJ JHp, to be offertd by public
I
f'"'Lruary 13, .1918

By GENE CADDES
·
Akron scored 10 Ul)answered
remained In a St. Louis hotel Heidelberg downed Otterbein '
UPI Sports Writer
· points late in the game and held
durtnc the game.
95-75, Ohio Northern edged WitAs Paul "Snoopy" Graham . on lor an 88-81 win over Wright
The Oblo Athletic Conference tenberg .49-47, Musklngum
goes, so go the Ohio University State. TheZipslO-pointrunbroke race Ia In for a wild finish; with slipped past Marietta 73-n and
•
a 68-68 tie and te Raiders never
only a half game separating the Baldwin-Wallace beat Mount Un·
Bobcats.
Graham. OU's 6-foot-7 junior gotcloserthan4polntstherestof
topthreeteams-Heldelbergat lon77-70.
GI!Ktion on·
at
forward who has gone through the way.
11-3 and Musklngum .and Ohio
In the North Coast Athletic
Shawn Roberts had 19 points Northern at 10-3.
Conference, Ohio Wesleyan (9-1)
ci.lll. at
both th~ highs and lows during
his 3-year collegiate career, was , and &amp;:ott Paterson 17ledAkron,
Heldelberghasonlytwoleague and Allegheny (8-1) both won.
on a de11nlte high WedneSday now 15-6, while Joe Jackson with games remaining, at Mount Wesleyan downed Denison 94-67 .
.
night.
·
22 points and ·Matt Horstman Union Saturday night and at and tbe Gators took Ca!!El ReF
I f
1-1 1 Sc tt S.._k
Suspended the final six games with 19 paced Wright State, now home against Wittenberg next ilerve 90-57. In !he other game,
OF tnOre n OFmafiVII COn GC
0
•.-•
of last season by coach Billy 12-8.
Wednesday.
.
Kenyon blasted Oberlin 102·85.
-992·3293.
Hahn for a Jack of effort both In
Cincinnati, playing without
Musklngum plays at Capital on
In other games Wednesday L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
theclassroomandonthebasket- head Coach Tony Yates, whose Saturday and then hosts Mount night, Ohio State lost at Iowa ·
ball court and a slow starter this office received a telephoned Union and Ohio Northern, which
92-75, Capital downed Wooster ~~=====~==:::::::o~:;-::-:~:•r~
year, Graham has his act back threat on his life wbileenrouteto also plays Marietta at home and 80-53, Tiffin edged Urbana 78-77
together.
the game, lo~ to St- Louis 80-73.
at winless Otterbein,
and Central State beat Gannon
' "Graham Is a good player,"
The loss was., the seventh In a
In Wednesday night's games,
(Pa) . 103-881n overtime.
said · Kent State coach Jim row on the road for Cincinnati,
-~.fcOonald after a 31-polnt 10which was led by Roger McCien)'ebound performance by Gra- dan's 26 points and Cedric
'ham helped beat his Golden Glover's 21.
·
Flashes 71-68, ·'He Is very clever
The call was. made to Yates'
and smart inside. He beats you." office In Cincinnati an\lthe caller
The Oli win catapulted the said the threat would be carried
Bobcats over Kent State Into out In St. Louis .
.1hlrd place In the Mid-American
Yates, who had received a
-Conference behind league- similar threat during the 1983-84
.
.
leading Eastern Michigan and season after a Joss to Kentucky,
SINCE 11/3/86
~cond place Central Michigan.
- Eastern, an 81-66 winner over
.
6 apeed, air cond ., AM-FM Stereo.
·
XK·f
Toledo Wednesday night, still
Very Cleanl
'
leads the conference wlthh a 9-1
record. ·central, which won over
·•We\·e Got The Keys To A Beller Deal"
.Chicago State, 87-75, In a nonADnmtiiiO IIOTICf
conference game, Is 7-2 and the
Due to o printing eryor on 3 in
'Bobcats are now:5-4.
our Februory t 2 Washington· a
: Kent, which trailed 31-24at the
Birthday Sale circular our FREE
nalf after falling behind 19-4 at
Gift will! I)Ufdlase ol t 4~ gold
~he midway point of the flrsthalf,
have re.l "'with o minimum
go.t to within a point several
JUChase of 19.99 or more, limit
one per customer ... We ore aorry
times In the second half ·but
for any illcorwenlence thia may
POMEROY, OHIO
couldn't get over the hump.
500 EAst JUIM
· cause.
"We didn't deserve to win,"
•
said McDonald. ''We played hard
when we saw we were In It, but we
can't afford not to play early In
the game."
Jim Mangapora led Kent, now
9-12 and 5-5, with 25 points.
In other MAC games Wednesday night, Ball State beat Western Michigan 77-67 and Bowling
Green escaped the league cellar
with an overtime 65-59 win at
Miami.
.
- At Toledo, Eastern Michigan's
·,
Grant Long scored 25 points and
grabbed· 12 rebounds In the
Hurons' victory over Toledo.
; The game was tied 36-36 at
tlalflime, but Eastern began the
second half with a 14-4 run and
the closest the Rockets - ever
came again was 55-49 with 11
minutes to play . Jeff Haar led
Toledo with 18.
. At Oxford, Bowling Green's
Joe Gregory and Lamon Pippin
Each hit four free throws In
Tandy
overtime to lilt the Falcons to
STA-2280 by RealistiC"'
'1000
PFS Software
their win over Miami.
A tip-in by the Redsklns' Jim
Color Monitor
P.aul In the closing seconds of
'
regulation sent the game Into
1
L_
.
oVertime tied at 55-55. Anthony
:Robinson and Karlton Clayborne
399.95
1
96
I 11 I
• IBM'" PC·Compatible
lraded baskets before Pippin and
LowAollll'ef-·
'
Tendy 1000 TX
·G regory went to the llne.
wilts per channel, minimum
Reg.
With Stereo Expander lor "live" sound quality!
• CM·5 Color Monitor
Steve Marlene! le&lt;j the Falcons
miiltnto
8·ohms from 20·20,000 Hz,
Digital-synthesized tuner whh six FM/six AM
Separate
• Pensonal DelkMateN 2
with 21 and Pippin had 19.
whh
no
more than 0.02'111 THD
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.
·
'
tamont Hanna had 16 for Miami,
Items 1896.95 • PFS:Professlonal File
And Write Software ·
now all alone in last place at 2-8.
Compact Disc Player Cut 27'111
AM/FM Stereo Cassette
. TMIBM
Cleveland State beat Virginia
Low As HI Per Month• PFS/TM Software Publishing.
SCR-30 by Realistic
CD-2300 by Realistic
Commonwealth 83-76 will) Ken
Desktop
McFadden scoring 27 points and
Calculator
Eric Mudd 22. The Vikings, up
·35-32 at the half, pulled out to a
EC-2010 by Raclio Shlick
•liil- ••rr-j-.- ~
66-50 lead in the second half but
saw VC pull to within 75-72 with
-r: 28 to play .

10:00

Pomeroy-Middlepo!'f, Ohio

By GEOFF OSBORNE
OVP STAFF WRITER

W. Hayman Gymnasium In Ra- Rankin and Petro as forwards
cine to tie them lor the league
and Rick Swain at center, and
lead. By Virtue of the Tornadoes'
Mark Jenkins and Richard Stitt
Can Chris Petro · continue to 76-74 road win over Oak Hill, the In the backcourt. Against them
have the hot hand that he has had Tornadoes have given· the Wild- the Tornadoes will field seniors
In the past few games? Will Jeff cats the opportunity to take the
Jeff Caldwell and Shannon Riffle
Caldwell be able· to shoot his ,conterence title.
as guards, senior Dave Am burtrademark three-point shot
Howle Caldwell's Tornadoes
gey and junior Dave McMillan as
against an aggressive Wildcat will have revenge on their minds, ' forwards and senior Kenny 'l)lrdefense? These and other ques- remembering that the Wildcats
ley at the post.
tlons will be answered In the have beaten them In their last
Hannan Trace has won Its last
Hannan Trace-Southern game
three meetings, ln~ludlng ·an
six games,lncludlng tour conferthe headliner on Friday night'~ · 85-77 decision In Mercerville on -ence contests. Southern has won
SVAC marquee.
. December 18, 1987, and las't
Its last nine, Including six league
Mike Jenkins' Wildcats will be
season's meeting In Racine.
matches. ·
·
hungry, since the Wildcats must
The Wlldca:ts are likely to send
Symmes VaDey-Kyger Creek
!)eattheTornadoeslntheCharles out an all-senior cast, with Scott ·
Terry Saunders' Vikings have

105 Union Avenue,

Po1111eroy, Ohio.

only tasted victory once In 1988, a
58-40 win over Southwestern on
January 12. Since then the
Norsemen have lost six In a row,
Including four loop games. In
light of their 59-58 heartbreak
loss at home to North GaiUa last
Friday night, they will be Itching
to repeat their previous success
against Scott Stemple's Bobcats.
KCHS fell to them 76-651n Willow
Wood on December 18 - seven
day,s after the Vlkes lost a
one-point declsto·n to North GalIta In Vinton.
Symme&amp; Valley and Kyger
Creek will be looking to avoid

their lOth conference Joss In -13 three-point ace Keith Burnette league games this season.
· Inside and outside. The lnsld~
Oak HIU-Nortb GaUia
game could turn Into a standoff,
The Oaks, hanging on by their as Pirate juniors Rusty Denney
fingernails to stay In the SVAC and Don Mays will try to get 6-8
title chase, aren't as likely to be junior Jedd Rawltns in foul ·
as forgiving an opponent ol trouble and on the bench.
missed one-and-one opportunlSeuthwestern-Eulern
ties, opportunities that have
The Highlanders, havln&amp;.
turned recent North Ga111a dropped their last five games,
games Into last-minute nail- will try to end that streak by
biters:
.
e~actlng revenge on an Eastern
The Oaks should rely on their squad that .h as lost its last six
outside shooting game, starring games. The Eagles, 4-8 In the
seniors Eric Faye and Brian league, ha:'e only won once since
Howell, to beat the Pirates, and New Year s Day , an 89-85 verdict
that
can shut down over Symmes Valley on Jan. 8.

'

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...
Continued from page 6

c

KER

B

Tanctv® 1000 TX With
and

· Tx:

Purdue,
-owa cop .
Big Ten
~riumphs
By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
· Purdue survived a scare to
!naintaina stronghold on the Big
&lt;fen race, Syracuse beat Pittsburgh to muddle the Big East
p-I cture and Temple all but
gilaranteed Its grasp on the
nation's No. l ranking for
another week.
Meanwhile, Ci ncinnati Coach
Tony Yates decided against
participating in his team's game
Wednesday night because of
threats on his life that were
apparently racially motivated.
A university spokesman said a
, secretary in the Cincinnati at hletic department received a
phone call Tuesday In which a
male caller made several racist
references to Yates - who Is
black ~and threats on his life.
, The secretary told university
pilllce the caller Indicated he
would carry out the threats In St.
Louts, where Clnc!Jinati played
and lost, 80-73. By Wednesday
afternoon. Yates declde4 he
would not attend the game, and
..Uslstant Coach Kell Turner
g]Jided the team.
At Iowa City, Iowa, ' B.J.
Armstrong deUvered 26 (lotnts,
:Jeff Moe added 20 and Ed Horton
19 to help Iowa, 17-6 overall and
7-3 in the Big Ten, offset . a
career-high 29 by junior Jay
Surson of Ohio State, 12-8 and 5-5.
; At East Lansing, Mich., No. 2
Purdue opened with the first 9
points, but needed 1M pair of
Jflchtgan State mistakes In the
Continued on page 1

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: ThreeareaMcDonald'srestaul(ants will . sponsor the rtnal
Booster Night with the Rio
Crande Redmen ,on Tuesday,
F.eb. 16, when the Redmen host
Ohio Dominican's Panthers.
: Game time Is 7:30p.m. at Lyne
&lt;;entet .'Tick~s for the game are
available. tree of charge, from
McDonald's In Gallipolis, Jack- ·
!llln
Henderson.
,
• Present for the ·aame will be
McDonald's representatives Rol\llld McDonald and Mac Tonleh t.
Carda entttlllll the holders to tree
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vtlll be pulled out. In addition,
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final seconds to hold on for a 72-70
victory over the Spartans. .
W
I k t
ll 1t t
' .. e .were uc y 0 pu ou at
Jhe end," Purdue Coach Gene
Keady said. "We thought this
could happen; as a matter of
tact, lhecoacblng staff predicted
it. We thought we'd get, ahead
early and bave to tight like he)) to
J!alig on." ·
• Michigan State's Carlton Valentine fumbled the ball out of
)lound$ With 15 seconds left.
Then, after a Todd Mitchell miss
at the line, Ed Wright drove the
lane and rushed an off-balanced,
one-banded shot that barely hit
the rim with seven seconds to go.
: Purdue Improved to 20-2 over'
\ill and 9-1 In the Bte Ten, 1 1-2
· JaJ'I!C!I a~_d,: ~ . Mlc~llan and
two In l'i'Ont of Iowa. Pul'due,
..hlch·bas lhere&amp;tofthewee.koff,
plays' at Iowa Monday night.
Michigan State fen to8-12and 3-7.
: At Pittsburgh, Sherman Dou&amp;las scored 12 of his 16 points In
the rtna16: 22 to spark Syracuse to
an 84-75 victory that kept the
panthers from pulling awi!Y In
the Ble East standings.
: Tbe Panthers, 6-2 In the league
and 16-3 overall, lead by percentage points over the Orangemen,
7-3 and 18-5, and VIllanova, 8-3, In
tbe conferenCe.
At Philadelt;lhla, freshman
Mark Macon scored a season. high ·31 points and Howie Evans
recorded a school-record 20 assists · while committing just 1
turnover to help top-ranked Temple defeat VIllanova 98-86 and
Improve tll 19·1.
,
The Owls seem alrnost certain
to maintain , the No. 1 position,
with their next game not coming
,.until Sunday and against George
'Washington -on Temple's home
court.
1 . Evans, who played shooting
1
pard his first three years with
;remple, topped the school singlegame assist mark of 17 by Rick
Reed In 1978.

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•

Februlry' 11,

,_.

Redmen, CavalieJ:s .
rank ·high in statistics
reboUnds. S!nileton k:Ored 12
This week's Mid-Ohio Conferpoints, 11 rebounda and 2 ualsta
ence ranklngs· of players have
placed members of the Rio and Raymore adde!119 points, 4
Grande and Walsh men's teams rebounda and 4 uslsta to turn
highlY In overall season perfor- ·back a strong CDC offense led by
Jeff Taylor and ~had Hudaon.
mance, .a factor that will come
Taylor
had 13-polnts and Hudson
Into. play tcinlght when the .
posted
12 against the Redmen,
Redmen host the Cavaliers ln"'i
who
ied
41-35 at the !~alt.
7:30p.m. game that may decide
leadership of the MOC.
Statistically, Rio Grande and
Rio Grande's Ron Rlttlnger
CBC
played almost even: the
placed first in scorlng'wlth a total
Redmen were 604. percent on
or 591 points (21.9 per game) .
field aoals (32 of 53) whUe the
Teammate Ray Singleton also
Golden Eaglea posted 59.5 perina~ the list with 417 points (16
per game) and guard Jim Kearns . cent (22 of 37). Tile Redmen sank
was also listed with a total of 360 12 of 17 tree throw attempts for
70.6 percent, and CDC netted 12 Of
points, or 13.3 per game.
,16
for 75 percent.
Walsh forward B.D. Buda was
listed wl~ 410 pillnts (16 per
The wln 1 puts t!le
at
· game), as was guard Jeff .Young
' 22-6 overall and 9-2 In the
with 330 (14.3 pel' ~tame).
conference, while .Walsh Is 10-21n
RlttiJ!Ier alsO made· the lists 'the MOC and 18-7 following last
for rebounding (203, 7.5 per Saturday's 96-49 defeat of Ohio
game) , field goal percenU!g~ (61 Dominican. Earlier, Bucla supplpercent on 256 of 419 attempts)
lted 18 points and center Eric
and free throw jlercentage (78 of Manley recorded 15 rebounds
1112 tries for 76.5 percent). Sinagainst in Its 77-70 defeat of
WHERE 1988 WINTER OLYMPICS BEGIN - The Cqary
Saddledome during the Winter OlympiClCI, wblch w1II 11art
gleton
was
also
listed
for
reUrbana on Feb. 2.
.
Saddledome hlghllpls tbe Cqary, Alberta, skyline at twiUgbt.
Saturday. (UPI)
bounding
(147,
5.7
per
game)
and
,
Events such .,.. hockey .and figure skating will be held at the
field goal percentage (175 of 305
Walsh, which has not held the
for 57.4 percent). Guard Anthony conference title since Its 34-1
Raymore was listed for his field season . In 1983-84, also ~ not·,
goal percentage (143 of 258 for wonagameatLy!leCenterslnce55.4 percent) and assists (1U,j.1 1983, ~hen the &lt;;:avallers d~
peated(y is asked to define his N.Y., the first American medal Nelson, comjletlng In .his third per game). Kearns was also the Redmen 61-47. A . Walab
CALGARY, Alberta (UPI) With the Winter Games only sport, a combination of cross- in the history of the sport. He Olympics, "Josh Is •as good as
three days away, a young mail country skiing and rifle shooting. scored an eighth-place finish In a anybody here. He's as good as
who could become America's The latest opportunity gave World Cup 10 K event, also an any Russian or any East Ger- was on the list for high 3-polnt the Redmen triumph, they must ·
next sporting hero eloquently Thompson a chance to expound American best.
man. Biathlon Is perhaps the fleldgoalpetcentage(42of89!or win one of .their next two
on the camaraderie among
portrayed the Olympic Ideal.
"That silver was a big push-on most unpredictable of the sports 47.2 percent) .
conference games to take first
"How many people In the Olympic athletes.
the back," Thompson said. "It's here, and It just has to be his
Walsh's Young placed highly place.
,
"We try to ease people's fears something that enables me to go day."
United States can put a rifle on
on tree throw percentage (48of60
Following tonight's game,
their back, hug a Russian, shake of rifles," said Thompson, who Into the Olympics knowing I'm
tor 80 percent).
Walsh meets Cedarville on Tuestheir hand and say 'How are you celebrates his 26th birthday Feb. one of the top guys, Instead of
Followlng several days of
Tbe Redmen will be coming off day. Rio Grande caps offa beetle
doing, have a good race?' And 18, two days before the start of . feeling like the little kid who's single-digit temperatures, there a 79-71 victory over Cincinnati week of play Friday at 4 p.m.
the biathlon. "This is all just a alway,s slugging and slugging was a warming trend to near 32 Bible on Tuesday that saw against Dyke at the Richfield
they say the same thing back."
game,
and .we're handling the and slugging and can't . quite degrees Wednesday, with even Rlttlnger supply 30 points and 6 Coliseum, ' ' , , .:"
The remarks came Wednesday
guns
In
a safe way. We can go break ln. I'.ve already done it. I
from Josh Thompson of Gunniwarmer temperatures predicted .---'---'--------------_..--'--~­
son, Colo. He Is a practitioner of around with guns on our backs don't have anything to prove. I for
Thursday . 'J'he forecast for
biathlon, an event whose devo- and put our arms around the just have 'to keep doing II.
the opening ceremonies Saturtees In the United States can be Russians."
"Europeans have always day was for temperatures I~ the
The XV Winter Olympics begin known they were at the top of the high 20s.
counted In .the hundreds. He Is the
best biathlete produced in his Saturday and, with the medal sport, and we've known they
country and the first American outlook for the United States as were at the top, and that's the
The opening ceremonies are
given even an outside shot at an cold as the weather has been the way it was. We kind of accepted it scheduled for 3 p.m. EST Saturlast few days, Thompson Is when we showed up on Page 2 (of day at McMahon Stadium on the
Olympic medal.
Part of the problem of being receiving ever more attention. the results), but things are University of Calgary campus,
the first prominent biathlete is He won a silver medal in the 20 changing now and we have and will last about 1 ~hours. The
having to explain yourseH at kilometers a't the 1987 World higher expectations."
forecast Is for temperatures In
every turn, and Thompson re- Championships at Lake Placid,
According I'! 39-year-old Lyle the high 20s.

Redmen

.Winter Olympic Garnes

•

Saturday

~~~ran~n~~.!:~rl!· ~;~~ ~iWZ:~~~;:o~~~~;:~~~~::

By The Bend

-- ..
Beat of the bend

Rio's indoor track team
takes ·part in two sessions
'

Marcy Copley placed seventh
Results of the Rio Grande
indoor. track ream's first two In the shotput contest with a
meets are gratifying to Coach distance of 31 feet, 4'h Inches.
Bob Willey, who feels the pro- Dixon also finished the 55-yard
gram's performance is improv- high hurdles with a time of 8.2
ing by "leaps and bounds."
seconds and flnishedthe300-yard
_ The team competed against 10 run In 45 seconds. Tammy
schools at Otterbein College In Edwards ran the 50-yard run in
Westerville last Friday and 12 6.7 seconds and completed the
collegiate teams .at Indiana Uni- 300-yard run in 44.8 .seconds.
versity in · Bloomington on
Themen'steamsflnishedninth
of 12 teams In the 2-mlle relay at
Saturday.
the Indiana Invitational. The
"It was a great experience for
team of Vic Austin, Mark Cline,
us to compete against some great
Brian Lugenbeel and Curt Herschools," Willey said. "The thing
ron came with a time of 8: 11.6.
you have to realize Is that the
Placing
first was Mississippi
times we ran were faster than
State at 7:42.65.
those we had last year. I was
Rio Grande was fifth In Section
excited to see them compete as
II of the mile relay. Its time was
well as they did."
3: 33.
" Everyone competed · well,"
Veteran Rio Grande runner .
Willey commented. "It was a
Tim Warnock placed first overall
In the 2-mlle run at Otterbein. His
great experience for us, being
time was 10:03.16. Teammate our first pair of meets, and we've
only been on the track here twice
Tony , Fatica placed seventh in
the competition with a time of
this season.''
,
The men 's and women's teams
10: 30.48 and Rusty Edens was
travel to West VIrginia Univereighth at 10: 36.4.
sity on Saturday for the Hardee's
In other men 's compel! lion
performances, Troy Cochran Track Classic.
made the 600-yard run In 1: 20.6
and posted a time of 2: 32.161n the
1,000-yard run; Bob Fritz finIshed the mile run In 4: 51; and
Steve Bogart completed the
50-yard run In 6.03 seconds and
the J&lt;Xt-yard run In 36.26 seconds.
Travis Rambo threw the sholput
for a distance of 37 feet, 10~
Inches.
111 S.Cillll St,. '"""''
Kim Janey won the long jumP
YOII
IJIDIPIJIDEN1'
In the women's division with a
AGIJIIS Sllv.IJIG
height of 16 feet, 7~ Inches. The
blgh Juinp was won by Amy
MIIGSCOUm
Dixon with a height of 4 ~eel, 10
•.
t SINCE 1161
6
Inches.
''

In

for Marshall wen::
Jlresbmen
I. Roche Croye, 6-0, 175, WR,
Wheelersburg (Ohio)
2. Mike Lucas, 6-3, 240, offensive line, Crown City, Ohio,
Fairland High.
.
3. Ahmed Witten, 6-0, I 70, wide
receiver, Charleston Stonewall
Jackson.
4. John Humphreys, 6-3, 225,
Sissonville.
S.- Mike Bartrum, 6-4, 220, QB·
'TE, Meigs County (OIIlo). ·
. ~- Frank Featner, 6-3, 225,
tackle, Mingo, Ohio.
7. PJ. Wood, 6-1, 235, Bellaire,
Ohio.
8. Byron Litton, (Hi, 220, defensive line, Pallcersburg South.
9. John Soccoccia, 6-1, 195, QB,
Steubenville (Ohio) Central
_
10. Orlando Hatchett, 5-11, 180,
TB, Canton (0.) Western Reserve.
II. Bob Lane, 6-3, 215,
linebacker, Pittsburgh Plum High

INSURANCE

' (.

16. Eric Wllbms, 6-4, 200, m,

Louisville (Ky.) Trinity High.,
17. Derek Grier, 6-1, 170, defen·
sive beck, Allanta Harper Higlt.
18. Ricardo Clark, 5-11, 175,
WR, Tignall (Ga.) Washington
·
Wilks High.
19. R8ndall Piwnan, 5-11, 167,
Couondale
(Fla.)
tailback,
Graceville High.
20. Regina! Pitunan, 5-11, 167,
tailback, CouoJ:ldale (Fla.), lwin

brother of Rand811.
·
21. Dom Anzevino, .6-1, 185,
defensive back, Struthers (Ohio)

'.
High School.
JuniorCollegeTraosrers
23' Brian Bartolomei, 5-8 160,
TVC STANDINGS
kicker, Stockton, Calif. San Joaquin.
BOYS DIVISION
Delta Community College.
(As of Feb 5)
24. Steve Duran, 6-1, 170, wide
TEAM
w L w L . Feiv~.De~aceca (Calif.), San
Trlmble ..................12 2 14 3
OIIQIIl~.
6-l 235 "~"'
Belpre .. ,................. 11 3 · 12 6
25. nan """'"•
•
• "'I'•
Wellston ................. 10 3 13 4
end:U;S~, San~~ui~ . fJ
Alexander .............. 9 5 8 10
. ii S
San'J '!' en·
Meigs ..... ................ 3 4 7 6
stv2 ~3
5
7
Mlller .................... . 5 8 5 11
de~ ·. ~ S . 'li ld Oh' '
Nels-York; .............. 4 10 4 13 · ·Ell e = Com pnn!' e C 10•
Vinton .................... 3 10 3 13
s
~·
muntty
o11ege
Fed-Hock ............... 1 '13 2 14 (Iowa).
Gmts DIVI8110N
28. John Masterson, 6-3, 250,
(As of Feb 2)
defensive line, White Plains, N.Y.,
TEAM
w L w L Westchester Community College
Fed-Hock ............ 13 0 15 1 (N.Y.)
.
Alexander .. ......... 11 2 . 15 2
College Transfers
Nels-York .... ....... . 9 · 3
9 8
29. Jeff Fruit, 5-10, 230, defenVInton ............. :.. 8 5 10 7 sive line, Charleston, W.Va., NorMeigs .................. 4 3 10 5 folk State. ,
.
Miller :......... ... .. ... 6 7
9 8
30. Tom Robes, 6-2, 260, defenTrimble ............... 3 11 4 14 sive line, Pitubmxb, Nol1b
Wellston ........ .. .. .. 1 12 1 15 Carolina State, not efigible until
Belpre ................. 1 13 1 16 1989.
..----~--------....:..';;.
' ----,..------

DOWiiNG CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

_____

..__.......

School.
.
12, Chris Rack9w, 6-2, 247, offensive .,line, Pittsburgh Woodland
HtUs.
13. Jay Jacksoit, ~I, 235, defen:
sive line, Tallahassee (Fla.) Lincoln
High.
I
14. Terry Vliek, 6-3, 185, WR,
Jacksonville (Fla.) Bolls High
School.
'
15. Gleg Grooth!lis, 64, 225,
TE, Venice, Fla.

TVC standings

. By BOB HOEFLICH
All sold out!
That's the word from Southern
High School Principal James
Adams who reports that there
'will be no tickets sold at the door
for Friday night'- game between
Southern and H~nnan Trace. On
Wednesday motnlng, 600 tickets
went on sale at'the Southern High
School office- and they went out
-right now.

from 9 a .m. to ~ p.m., at Baker
Center.
· ·
It's not a case of all work,
however, at the park. ·T here are a
number of employee activities
stsged during the summer.

What an appropriate day for an
anniversary! Mildred ·and Gerald Shuster will mark their 56th
wedding anniversary on Sunday
- that's Valentine's Day - at
their hom~ on Lincoln Heights in
Meigs High School students Pomeroy. Active and In good
who want to order a copy of the . health, the Shusters are really Ol)
1988 Marauder Yearbook are · the move every minute,l\ seems
now· under a deadline arid that - they're JIOW looking at four .
deadline Is 3:15p.m. Monday. No
Interesting trips they'd like to
orders will be taken after that lake this year,
time. Cost Is $18, an additional $2
for the name engraved oil the
If St. Patrick's Day Is your
book and $1 extra for a plastic time to shine, maybe you'll want
cover.
to take In a dance to be held at the
new Middleport American Legion building. Bob Gilmore Is
And - · the annual . Lenten heading the activity and will be
breakfast has been set for 7:45 filling In the details. The dance, .
a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 17, at by the way, Is a benefit for
Trinity Church In Pomeroy.
muscular dystrophy.
-

.

It your last name starts wl_th C
Kenda Donohue, daughter of
or D, you are to purchase your Raymond and Dolores Donohue,
new license plates this month at . Pomeroy, hl!s been named to the
the license bureau, 186 Mulberry dean's list at Moun' Vernon
Ave. In Pomeroy . Do want to Nazarene Colle~e where she Is a
mention to you, however, lhatthe sophomore English major. At
bureau office will be closed least a 3.5 grade point average Is
Monday for the observance of required for listing. Kenda is a
Presidents' Day as will offices of Meigs High graduate.
the Meigs County Courtl!ouse.
A.R. Knight, well-known in the
The Porneroy Emergency trl-county area as a blggie In the
SQuad has elected officers for automobile business over the
.this year and they are Rick years, will mark a birthday
Blaettnar, , chief; Jay Eva"s. anniversary at his home on
captain; Chris Shank, lieutenant, Lincoln Hill Road in Pomeroy. A.
,and Dave Harris, secretary· · R. keeps plenty busy with all
treasurer.
· sorts of projects.
If you've ever thought you
-would like to work at an amusement park- this Is your chance.
. . Representatives from the
·Cedar Point amusement theme
. park will hold 'Interviews for the

s~~~llijGobs in Athens on

~

and Thursday, Feb.
Interviews will

A word to the wise. Sunday is
St. 'Valentine's Day . Now you can
forget It you want, but let me
warn you that about the only
thing you could do worse ·Is to
forget the wedding anniversary.
·Forget both and the "rQyal we"
will see you In court. Do keep

I

STUDENT PARTICIPANT- Mike King, a Meigs High ScJtool
OccupatloJI!Il Work Experience Student; Is pictured at his post at
the Mlddleprl Dairy Queen Brazier with owner-maa111er, Chuck
Kitchen. Students In tbe program are observing Vocational
Education Week.

OWE helping students learn
Stuaents of the Occupational
Work Experience Class .at Meigs
High SchOQI, a part of the
vocational education program,
are observing Vocational Education Week, Feb. 7-13.
The work experience program
consists of two areas of learningone involving classroom activities and studies while tlie other
Involves on the job training.
Students attend classes at the
high school in the mornings and
work on' jobs In the afternoons.
Teacher for the program, which
Is open to student~ from Eastern,

Southern and Meigs High
. Schools, 'is Ron Logan.
· Employers . for the 1987-88
school year in the program are:
H. D. Brown, D.D.S.; McClure's
Dairy Isle, Sears; Dairy ·Queen
BraZier; L. &amp; M,. Video; Bob
Evans Farms; Smith-Nelson Motors; Pleasers Restaurant;
Fisher Big Wheel; Tiger Fitness
Club; Dairy Dellte; D.J.'s TradIng Post, Pizza Hut; Morris
Equipment; Leading Creek Water District; Dalton's Logging;
Village Pharmacy, and Chapman Shoes .

,,
be 'held at Dale's
Smorgasbord, starling at 6:30
p.m.

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge at Chester will hold a
regular meeting Thursday at
7,; 30 p.m. at the lodge hall.
BuUdlngrenovatlon plans Will be
p~;esented to the membership.
Refreshments will be served,

1985 MERCURY

LYNX ·
18S881, 2 !looll,
front
driw, 4 cyf. eng.,
lllnS., standard tllllll., P.S.,
•radio, SIIIIO'Iapl, nldlllltl11,budklt ...

POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange will meet at 7:30 p.m.
1'bursday night at the hall.
POMEROY- A Clergy Appre-

glass

POMEROY - Return"-Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daugijters
of the American Revolution, wUI
SATURDAY
meet Friday at 7: p.m . at the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
~~
FRIDAY
Meigs Museum. American His- Township Trustees will meet In
POMEROY - A_square dance tory month will be observed with special session Saturday, 10
will be held Friday, from 8 to 11 essay winners to be present. a.m., to discuss Insurance and
p.m ., at the Senior Citizens · Hostesses will be Mrs. Robert cable television.
·
Center In Pomeroy~ Music will be Ashley, Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mrs.
by True Country. Caller will be J{arold Hager,, Patty Parker,
SUNDAY
Red Call. Admjsslon $1.50. ·Bring Mrs. Lawrence Smith, and Mrs. . POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
snacks. Everyonewelcome.
James Werry.
·
i• Stan .Walters and children,
.....
~-Brandy and Jason, of Heath,
GALLIPOLIS . Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - Pastor Davl~ Ohio, will be singing at the
Flame Chapter will tneet 6: 30 Adams of Columbus will be guest Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
p.m. ~n Friday at Dale's Smor- speaker at Friday's GaUipolls on Sunday morning at the 9:30
gasbord. Pastor David Adams of Flame Fellowship meeting. The service. Everyone welcome.
Columbus will speak. President ·
•
" · ·

___

Connolly birthday

8-10 BLAZER

ffl811, 4 wheal drWe, 6 cyl. eng.,
ai'cond., auto. trans., P•.s. P.B., tib
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tres, bucket s~
SALE PRICE

$ga·ts.

s·•·-

CRims ':rm24

Chester United Methodist
Women conduct ·meeting

..

···~

Meigs' Bartram selects Mars'hall ·
one

Tlnnday, February 11. 1988
Page-9

No more.tickets...

,24 and 25.

of
HUNTINOTON, W.Va. (UPI)- other college transfers,
Speed men:hants and defensive whom will not be eligible until the
linemen were high on the shopping 1989 campaign.
"We wanted s1dll players that
Jist this year, arid it appears that
Marshall coach Gemge Chaump can run," Chaump said.
looked in all the right places in
"Several or our recruits were
timed at 4.4, 4.5 and 4.6. We
rounding up 29 signees.
In addition, the 30th rec!Jrits needed s1dll positions - wide
soon is--.expected to join the others receiver, tailbacks, tight ends who signedbinding letters-of-intent and we have a good group."
on Wednesday, the first day to do so
The third-year Marshall coach
under college rules:
said he also scouted the bushes for
The Thundering Herd needed · some players to "shore up our
some new parts for its offensive- defensive line, and I think we have
minded team 'which rolled to the some quality players in those
finals of the NCAA 1-AA last positions."
season.
"I would say that this is a suc'Chaump apparently got plenty of cessful recruiting class," he said.
speed to keep the Herd moving at
A Marshall spokesman says the
its torrid offensive pace, once a school also expects 10 sign Brent
new campaign begins.
WeUs, a 6-foot, 200-pound fullback
In the aop were 21 freshmen, ofWinfield. ·
six junior coU~ge transfers and two
Signing letters to play football

The Daily Sentinel

185861, 2 door, Red whell drive, 6 c:yt.
fac:tary lirc:ond., P.S. P.B., P.W., P. ICilt,
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. SALE PIICE ..

WINNER- Gene llaJiey, Middleport, Ia piCtund reee1Y111 a
lS.Incb color remo&amp;e control lelevlaloa Ill a prbe In a lund rai.Hr of .·
tile Middleport Elemeatary School P.T.O, wltb P.T.O. Premdeat
D - JIJirWoa maldng the prc!Mata&amp;IMI. ll&amp;adeJIU raakln&amp; 81 tOp
. ~ellen ID tile promotion were .Jellllle Bowenoa, ttrM; lUnda
Bepolda Cllld Cbarla Burce, 1ecoad, Cllld Rlc)Q&gt; Roever, tblrd.

Jeremy Michael Connolly celebrated his fourth. birthday recently with a party at the home of
hts parents.
Attending were his patents and
brother, Michael, Sheila - and
Christopher Connolly; paternal
grandparents, Ted and Marge
Connolly, Arlene and Jason
Parker, Tuppers Plains; Debby,
Misty and Travis Lyons, Erma
Jean and Darlene Connolly,
Steve, Laurie, Stephanie and
Christy Barber, Sherr!, Brandy,
and Tiffany ·Bissell, Debby and
Corey Young, and Brenda King,
Reedsville.
He also received gifts and
cards from his greatgrandmother, Lola Griffin, his
gran"mother, Beulah Schultz, ·
Tuppers Plains; .and maternal
grandparents, Mayford and
Wilma Harris, Long Bottom, and

Poverty and . what the United poverty grew by one third,
·Methodists are doing aboulll was according to the program leader
the theme of the program pres- , with the growth becoming visible
ented by K.a thryn Mora and at soup kitchens, food. pantries,
Betty Newell at the recent and other ernergency facilities'
meetln~t of the Chester United
operated by churches and volunMethodisl Church.
tary groups .
_
"Fruits of the Spirit'·' was the: '•- Canada's National Health Protheme of the program with gram was discussed and Ii was
scripture readings from Gal. 5, noted that under that program noverses 22 and 23, and Gal. 3, 12 to one is denied health services : . ·
15. The group sang "Open My Any person can go to a hospital
Eyes that I May See" with Helen and get free service. Mrs. Mora
Wolf as pianist. The program read a list ot services offered by
pertained to hunger in America the Meigs County Health
and the role of the. United Department.
Methodist Women In alleviating
Singing of "Stepping In the
lt.
Light" closed the program.
Marilyn Spencer presided at
Through the World and Na·tiona! Program Divlsons, United the business. metipg with 14 sick
Methodist Women support and shutln calls being reported.
hundreds of missionaries In Officers reports were given and
places around the world. It was It was noted that last year the
noted that In 1986, the Women's group gave $900 for missions.
Division appropriated $4,800,000
The Lenten breakfast will be
to the Worl,d and National Pro- held on Feb. 17 at 7:45a.m. ~~
gram Dlvlsons.
Trinity Church. Reservations
Between 1979 and 1983, the are to be in Ibis week.
number
of ~mericau.s ·living
.
. in ..

Cheese and flour·distribution
planned for Meigs wuntians
-The Meigs County COoperative
Parish will be dlstrlliUtlng
Cheese and Flour to eligible
persons holding yellow cards, on
Tuesday, Feb. 23, from approximately 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
following locations:
.
Meigs County Fairgrounds,
Tuppers Plains Fire Station,
Racine American Legion;' Pageville Town Hall.
. .

Food Commodities may be
picked up by others for Senior
Citizens, the Sick, Handicapped,
or those who work, if those
persons send their Food Commodity Card and a signed note
granting permission for another
person to pick up their Items.
Feb. 17 Is the deadline for
processing new cards for this
distribution.

Reedsville UMW group ·
conducts recent meeting (
A total of 105 shutln calls were
reported at the recent meeting of
the Reedsville ·United Methodist
Women hosted by Mrs. Mamie
Buckley.
A white elephant sale was held
at the meeting and -the group
voted to buy some needed supplies for the church.
.
Barba~a Masters had the opening prayer. Devotions were given
by Marlene Putman and Sandy
West using _the topic, "Love.''
Mrs. Putman had a reading,
"God's Love" using John 3, 16,
with Mrs. West · reading several
other scriptures on love. Sue
Douglas read I Peter, Carol
Kanawalsky .had a reading, and

Flame meets
Mary Folmer was 'guest
speaker a~ the Tuesday night
meeting of the Long Bottom
Chapter of Flame Fellowship
held at the MI. Olive Community
Church.
.
Mrs. Folmer, president or the
Gallipolis Chapter of Flame, was
joined by her daughters for
several songs. She used Psalm 23
for her topic.
Suzanne Bush Is president of
the Long Bottom Chapter and
Invites the public to attend the
next meeting which will be held
on March 1.

the pro_g ram closed with prayer
by Vivian Humphrey .
· Cards were signed for several
friends and the prayer and
self-denial offering was taken.
Refreshments were served to
Nancy Buckley, Nell Wilson,
Barbara Henderson , E:mma
Durst, Carol Kanawalsky, guests, Pat Martin, Barbara Masters, Dolly Reed , Tammy
Cowdery, Verna Rose, Robin
Putman, Sandy Cowdery, Judy
Elkins, Marlene Putman , Sandy
West and Denise, VIvian Humphrey, Sue Douglas and Lillian
Pickens.
Mrs. Martin won the door
prize. Next meeting will be the
· second Thursday in March with
Mrs. Masters and Mrs . Ruth
Gra le as hostesses .

~~
FLORIST

Meiga County' s Oldeat Florist

352 E. Mcin St~ '-oy, Oh.

JEREMY~- CONNOLLY.

Erma Connolly, Reedsville; AlIce, Dave, Debby and Ben Sharp, ·
Belpre; Nita, Rick, John and
Jason White, Texas ,

Bike-a-thon being planned
Phebe Roberts of Racine has docton and hospitals au over the
been named coordinator for the world. Thanks to St. Jude HospiSt. Jude Children's Reaearch tal, children wbo have l~mla,
Hospl!al Blke-a-thon In Racine, it Hodgkin's disease, sickle-cell
. was announced today by the anemia, and other chlid-ldUing
•hospital.
.
dlseues now have a be~r
St. Jude Chlldren's-Research .chance to ilve.
-&amp; spital was founded IJ¥ enter- . ,. The Blke-a-'rbon proeram th'- ·
talnerDannyThomu. Thelntltu· year 11 ' dedicated to Srtan
tlon opened Its doon to the pubUc McColliiiW. A native ot Loulll·
Ia 1962 to combat catutraopbtc au, Brian wu dlapoled with
dlseasee which dllctchlldren.Jt leukemia In October,191N. Since
Ia , non-aectarlaa, no !I· ' that time, bebaacometoSt.Juch!
lllaCrlmlllatory, and provldel to- every 11x -Ira tor treatmeat
tal medical care to over 4,200 111111 ewry 12 -t. for a boat
. patlenll.
lll8l'IW' telt ud lpblal tap to
At. St. Jude, ICientlsts and malre 1111'8 IIIII C8IICII' atayi Ill
. pllyllelana are worldq llde lly remlllloa. Wbea at borne, BrlaD
llde le8ldDf not only a better reee1ve1 oral meclleaUon cJaUy.
. Rlllnl of Ueatmeat, !Nt allo the Brlu Is I llvlq !!Xam~Jle of the
ClAD, II, CUNI, and prevllltl,oD.al . PJIOJIIUI ud . . . . of tlte
Qlwe~ ldllm. Allbllaaa ~. patient oare, aDd tdu·
lllilll IIIOIIIIIIUOII ....... at tlie atlqral pqtallll of Utll - b w.-1 _. allartd ,._ wltlt aatkmti'Jirea~•1~ bolpftal•.

1911 CHIVIOLD CIIAnON
4 door H..chb1ek. 4 cyl .• auto., •lr.

Sharp•. Front wh11l drlv•. Affordable.
__,

---

.

..We've Gel The ICey. To
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.

--··

PH. 992-2644
MOften ltnitaced - Neve•
DupliCGted"
r

�-

'

'•

Tht.nday, February 1 l. 1 f)88 ·

..
Paa•

10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

day In the Lucas county Recrea· · A winter J.!Iaht hike and star "From Arcadia to Barblzon: A
tOn Center in Maumee.
gaze will be beld Friday night In Journey In French Landscape
AutoSbow-'88showaoffersnew- the Eaale Creek State Nature Painting" through March 14.
cars, trucks, vans and rnotorcy- Preserve In Portage County.
-In the Chisholm Halle Cos·
cles at Veterans Memorial Hall
The Zlnzlnnatl Wanderers tume Wing gallery of the Western
l.n Columbus through Sunday.
sponsor the Cincinnati Yolks· Reserve Historical Society In
The Columbus Travel, Sports marchse Saturday.
Cleveland : "The Garment Gar·
and Vacation, show at the Otrlo
cross-country ,kUng, with In- nlsh't," a display of about 100
State Fairgrounds runs through structlous, Is offered Saturday In objects . dressmakers used to
Sunday.
the to\vpa th region of the Cuya- decorate clothing through May
The G and L Antique-Flea hoga Valley NaUol)al Recreation 29.
I·,
Market will be held Saturday and Area and Sunday In the VIrginia
-At the Akr!ln . Art Museum:
.t~ .
'
Sunday on tbe Allen County Kendall region.
''Ties That Bind: Folk Art In
The Spring Swing Into Flowers Fairgrounds In Lima.
. A winter hike begins at 1 p.m . • Contemporary American Cui·
Is a rainbow parade of flowering
An Automotive Swap Meet wlll . Saturday at the Wahkeena Na· ture," through March 27.
spring bulbs that opens Saturday
be 'held Sunday on the Medina .lure Preserve In Fairfield
-At the Center of Science and
at the Franklin Park Conserva·
County Fairgrounds In Medina.
County.
Industry, Columbus: Gold Extory and Garden Center In
Circus Royale will give two
Special Exblblta
hibit through May 1.
columbus. This runs through
performances Friday at Mer·
-At the Ohio State University
-At Lawnfleld, the Mentor
March 29.
shon Auditorium In Columbus.
Gallery of Fine Art In Columbus:
hOme of President Garfield :
Sunday's Chocolate Fantasy . The Mentor High School -PTA "PollceState,"worksofSueCox, "Inter Folia Fructus: The Fruit
Fair at the Ohio Center In Circus Is a three-ring clrus Brltlsh·born· artist who ad· Between th~? Leaves," iraclng
Columbus offers a sampling of· Saturday through Monday In the dresses today's Issues, thr9ugh the career of Garfield, through
chocolate products.
Mentor High School In Lake Feb. 17; "Visual Images of the Feb. 28. ·
·
"Elegance In Ice" Is an Ice County.
· ,
Appalachian · Culture through
-At the · Taft · Museum In
carving contest at the Embassy
An Ohio Grape-Wine Short Friday; " "The Postcard Pro· Cincinnati: . "Nicholas Long·
Suites Hotel in Columbus.
Course will be held Feb. l5-17 the ject: Celebrating Our Heroines", worth - Cincinnati's First Pa·
A couple of places get Into the Kings Island Inn.
through April 13.
tron of the Arts," tbroqgh March
swing of Mardi Gras.
A Black Family History Work·
-In Bricker Hall on the Ohio 20.
Fasching, or German Mardi shop will be held Saturday at the State University Campus: "In
-At the Cincinnati Art Mu·
Gras, Is a costume party with Western Reserve Historical So- Celebration of Black IDstory", a seum, Gallery One: "Duncanson ·
German food and refreshments ciety In Cleveland. Another display by Columbus artist and Longworth: The Artist and
Friday night In the German society-sponsored event Is Bruce Robinson, through Feb. 29. his Patron", a display of 19th
VIllage section of Columbus.
"Homes of Ohio Presidents" .
-At th~ Toledo· Museum of century bll!cl&lt;; artist Robert S.
Mardi Gras Dayton will be held Sunday at Lawnfleld In Mentor, Art: "ThlrtyYearsofNewGiass, buncanson and his Cincinnati
Feb. 16, Shrove Tuesday, In the home of President Garfield.
1957 to 1987, from the Corning patron Nicholas . Longworth,
Convention . Center In Dayton
For those who prefer the Museum of Glass" through Feb. through May 1.
with Cajun food , Jazz and Dixie· outdoors at this time ofthe year: 21; "Picasso Linoleum Cuts:
-At Denison University, Gran·
la!ld bands .
A winter camp(lilt will lie held Kramer · Collection," through ville: Kimberly Burleigh ~aint·
Ohio's activity calendar has Friday through Sun~ay at the March 6; "Picasso as an Illustra· ings and Cuna Indian Artifacts .
numerous things to do with your East Fork State Park southeast ltor: The Bareiss Collection of are on display in Burke Hall Art
sweetie this weekend.
of Amelia, Clermont County.
Modern Illustrated Books" Gallery through Feb. 22.
The Toledo Boat and Sports
A winter hike through the through May 29.
At the Cleveland Museum of
Show will be held Thursday Caesar Creek State Park east of
-At the Contemporary Arts Art: "Tomb Sculpture from
through Sunday at the Sports Waynesville Is guided slx·mlle Center In Cincinnati: "Jan Ancient China: The Quest for
Arena in Toledo.
hike through the park Saturday Gro_ver Photographs" and "Past Eternity" through Aprll10.
The Dayton Mall Home Show with bean soup and cornbread Imperfect: Eric Fischl, Laurie
On the theatrical schedule:
begins Saturday tn the Dayton served at the halfway point.
Simmons, . Vernon Fisher"
"The Best Little Whorehouse
Mall and runs through Feb. 21.
A Boxnestlng Bird Workshop through Feb. 27.
In Texas" plays at the Westgate
A House and Home Show wllt will be held Saturday at Quail
-At the Allen Memorial Art · Dinner Th~tatre In Toledo
be held Thursday through Sun- Hollow State Park In Stark Museum, Oberlin College:
through Feb. 28, except MonCounty.
days. Call 419·537-1881 tor
reservations.
.
"Painting Churches," at the
Toledo Repertoire Theatre
through Saturday. 4i9-243-9277.
"Much Ado About Nothing" at
By WU.UAM C. TROTT
that goes, "Jesse, we know what "A Full Life" was written In 1937
the
Cleveland Play House, Drury
United Press International
• you want to do ... can't you see - a low point for Fitzgerald,
Theatre,
Cleveland, through
COSBY OFFERS REWARD: we're all supporting you ... There whose wife. Zelda, was In a
Feb.
28.
216-795·7010.
Bill Cosby is helping finance a will be jobs, freedom and dig- mental Institution at the time.
At the E.J. Thomas Hall on the
reward In the case of a suburban nity." But Rawls says, "It ain't The story was originally rejected
University
of Akron Campus:
New York City black teenager about Jesse. It's about voter by Redbook and It was redlsco·
"An
Evening
of Tchalkovski" is
who was kidnapped and sexually registration, using Jesse as a vered some dozen years ago by
assaulted by six · white men. focal point. ' It's aoout getting James LW. West, a professor at the theme of the Akron Sym·
Cosby and Ed Lewis, who pub- . people off their duff. It just so Penn State, at the Princeton phony Orchestra's concert Saturlishes the black women's·maga· happens that Kenny and Leon library. "A Full Life" starts with day night; Mr. ·Jack Daniel's
zine Essence, are.Offering$25,000 rthe song-writing' team of Kenny an heiress j umplng out the 'sliver eornet Band, Feb. 16.
lor lnlormatton on the attackers Gamble and Leon Hull) wrote window of a New York skysof Tawana Brawley, 16, who was the song with Jesse in mind but craper· but she goes on to marry a
raped last November by the men the real thrust Is 'get out and French count and work as a
who wrote racists epithets on her vote."' "Run, Jesse, Run''hasan human cannonball In a circus.
body and left her for dead. "Let up-tempo, standard dtsco ·beat
GUMPSES: Writer Georges
Miss Brawley represent an ex- and it also features rhythm and · Slmenon turns 85 Friday but it
ample of what we are not going to blues singer Phyllis Hyman and promises to be a quiet birthday.
stand for as parents, as Ameri· gospel's the Rev. James Slmenon, creater of Inspector
cans, as human beings. It's not Cleveland.
Maigret, lives In Lausanne, Switabout race," Cosby said at a
FRANKIE GOES TO SPUTS- zerland, and has been tn poor
news conference in New York, VILLE: Singer Holly Johnson health for several ·years. Sl·
calling the attack "a terrible, won't be making the next trip men on says be wu actually born
terrible thing."
with Frankie ~oes to Hollywood. In Lllle, Belgium, on a Feb.13 but
RINGO ON TV?: Ringo Starr Britain's High Court Wednesday lils superstitious mother had
might end up starring in his own ~:ave Johnson ·permission to Feb. 12 entered on the birth
prime,time TV show. The New leave pis record company and .certificate ... Frank Zappa Is
York Dally News says the spilt from Frankie ·Goes to having bad hick In the Washing·
ex-Beatle js negOtiating with Don Hollywood, the pop group that ton, D.C., area. His tentatively
Johnson' s production company topped the U.S. charts a few scheduled March 23 concert at
to do a one-hour pilot that would years ago with the song ''Relax. •' George Mason University was
hopefully evolve into a regular The record company, Zang canceled because officials for the
NBC sitcom. Starr would play a TumbTuum, had asked the court arena said the school did not
rock star who has to shelve his to place an Injunction on Johnson want two midweek events on
· career and take care of his kids to keep him In the band. But the campus (INXS already was set to
after his wlfe .dies. The tentative court ruled that the terms of play that week). A promoter for
title is "Flip Side" and work on Johnson's contract with ZTT the show, however, had claimed
the pilot could begin as soon as were an unreasonable restraint there was pressure from Zappa's
this spring.
and turned down the injunction foes at the Parents Music ReNON-ENDORSEMENT: Lou plea.
source Center started by Tipper
Rawls is one of the featured
· FITZGERALD REDISCO- Gore - a charge school officials
performers on a song titled VERED: A long-lost short story deny. The Washington chapter of
" Ru,n, Jesse Run" but he swears by F. Scott Fitqerald - an the League of Women Voters
its not·a personal endorsement of absurdist tale about a human refused Zappa's request to set up
Jesse Jackson's presidential cannonball - will be published voter registration tables at his
campaign. Rawls sings a verse next week In the Princeton Tuesday night concert.
University Library Chronicle.
Ualted Preu Jaten•t!O!I•'
Flowers, candy and romance
are top priority Items .tbls week
as Ohl0811$ celebrate Valentine's
Day Sunday.
Flowers, Chocolate and Rom·
ance at the Krobn Conservatory
In tile Eden Park section of
Cincinnati Sunday Is an educa·
Ilona! display on chocolate production and.tours to the chocolate

a

MANAMA, Bahrain (tiP!) Iranian gunboats hit a fully laden
Norwepn tanker with .rocket·
propelled grenades and 4-lnch
cannon shells today In the southern Persian Gulf but the vessel
reached safe waters under Its
own power, shipping sources
said.
.
' No casualties were reported In
the attack Ol) the 140,277-ton
Happy Karl, which was filled
with oil '. from Kuwalt - ·a
supporter of Iraq In Its war with
Iran- and bound for Rotterdam.
The attack came in apparent
retaliation for Iraq's claimed
hits Tuesday night again-st two
· supertankers or large freighters
In Iranian service. There has
been no confirmation of the Iraqi
attacks.
. Iran and Iraq also claimed
today their Warplanes bombed
targets In their enemy's terri·
tory. Baghdad said Its fighters
destrQyed at least three Iranian
installations while Tehran said
Its warplanes bit troop conc~ntratlons on the central warfront
In 'Iraqi territory.
· The Happy Karl, the second

216-375-7570.
Violinist Miriam Fried per'
Pianist Andre Watts performs forms with the Toledo Synl pbony ·
with the Cleveland Orchestra Friday' and S.turday at the ·
Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Toledo Museum of Art (Peri&amp;'
Feb. 16 at Severance Hall in tyle). 419·241·1272.
"From Vienna With Love" Is
Cleveland, 216·231·7300.
"Burkle" Is performed In the. the theme for concerts Friday '
Thompson Sbelterhouse Theatre through Sunday by the Columbus •
at the Cincinnati Playhouse Symphony Orchestra at the Ohki
Thursday through Feb. 28. 513· · Theat·re. 614·224-3291.
The Ukrainian State Dance•
421-3888.'
"Cotton Patch Gospel" opens Company performs friday
Tl)ursday at Players Thealre In through Sunday at the state'
Columbus and plays weekends Theatre In In Cleveland, 216-241"
6000; and Feb; 15 and 16 at .
through March 6. 614-224-5528.
. The Dayton Ballet Winter Mershon Auditorium In Colum- '
Performance highlights the old bus, 614-292·2~
.
. ·
member" Is .
"Evenings t
and the new In the programs
Thursday through Sunday. Day- the theme or the Springfield
ton Ballet Founder Josephine Symphony Orchestra concert 1
Schwarz will 'be honored when Saturday night at Springfield
the ballet. performs her ~ork North High School..513·325·8100: . •
"Alice In Wonderland" .Js per-' ,
while the company performs Its
formed
Saturday and SUnday In•1
.2Pilth world premiers •'2,002 Easy
the Children's Theatre Series at •
Lessons." 513·222-3661. ·
'Ohio
The11tre at Playhouse·,
· The C!ncinnatt Ballet performs
Thursday through Saturday In Square Center in cleveland, -'
-,
Music Hallin Cincinnati. 513-621· 216·241·6000.
5219.
"Cinderella" Is presented Feb.
The Mantovani Orchestra per- 17 by the Hudson Vagabon~ ,
forms 'Thursday night In the Puppets at VIctory Theatre in
Civic Center In Lima, 419-228· Dayton. 513·228·7591.
1059, and Saturday night in the
Mummenschanz, the Swiss
Palace Theatre in Columbus, mime-mask theatre, is presented.
614·221·8457.
Feb. 18 at Mershon Auditorium Iii :
Columbus,
614-292-2354.
·
Seco~d
annual Valentine's
The Nylons (lerform Friday
Concert and Buffett Saturday
evening at. T.owne and ' Country . the Palace Theatre In Columbus. ·
.
Theatre In Norwalk With classic 614-469-0939.
and jazz music on guitars and
Robert Goulet s,tars In "South .'
reed Instruments by musicians Pacific" at the Palace Theatre hi ·
from Oberltn College. 419-668- Columbus Feb. 16 through Feb.
1641,
21. 614-469-0017.

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And see our fine line
of Valentine
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It

: FRESNO, Texas fUPI )- Fort
Bend County Justice of the Peace
R. George Molina is offering
couples,a sweetheart of a deal on
Valentine's Day - he will conduct wedding ceremonies for
free.
: Molina last year offered spe~lal $1 weddings for people
wanting to get married on
t'alentine's Day. He normally
charges $35 for the service.
"This is a free offer for the fine
people of Texas to come to Fort
Bend County to get married on
Valentine's Day," Moltna said. A
~elf- professed romantic, he said
l!e Is making the free weddhig
offer to garner publlctty for the
(!ounty and also to help the county
coffers because ltcenses cost $25.
State law requires that the
rpatrlage license must be ob·
talned 72 hours tn advance so
!leople need to have them by
~bout noon Thursday.
· Molina said his court workers
will donate their time on Sunday.
He asked that any Interested
couples call his office In advance.
• Couples who sign up to have
Molina marry them on Valen·
tlne's Day will have a chance to
Jtet a free dinner and a corsage,
he sa ld."' A drawing will be
cOnducted to choo.se 10 couples to·
receive the extras.
.J
Alao, couples who are married
lit Molina's court will receive a
photograph donated by a profes·
atonal photogrllphef! he said. .

..,.,.,~.,.

614-992-3533

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.;.health progra•s
...social security and other benefit Information
...tax assistance
... voluntMr opportunities

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Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1988.

...social activities
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.••special ivents

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992-2156
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The, ~aily- Sentinel .

.

interim government
The seven parties are · united
against the Soviet occupation but
seemingly little else. They are
divided along religious and Ideo·
logical lines and only recently
have they begun to· speak publicly with a single voice.
Hekmatyar, chief of the funda·
mentalist Hezb-I-Islaml, also declined to disclo~ details of the
government but said Cabinet
portfQIIOs would be apportioned
to the seven resistance groups,
Including commanders Inside
Afghanistan apd the millions of
Afghan refugees living In Pakls·
tan and Iran.
The leader of Afghanistan's
National Reconcllla.tlon High
Commission said 1 In Geneva
today that the various guerrilla
factions and the ruling party
must participate In creation of a
coallilon government after the
Soviet tl'liop withdrawal. "The
coalition will have a place for all
parties, tor all groups," Abdul
Rahtm Hates told a news confer·
ence. "Whoever supports the
national reconcllla lion program
are given· all chanc·es within \he
government."

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Sheikh Jaber al·Ahmed al·
Sabah, In unusual remarks Tuesday concerning the dangers ,
confronting Kuwait, ordered
commanders of the 12,000member Kuwaiti armed forces to
raise standards and Increase
efficiency.
Wedged between ·giants Iran
and Iraq, Kuwait Is the moderate
country whose security has been
most threatened by the war that
bas raged for more than seven
years. Kuwait Is about 50 miles
from the southern battlefront,
near Basra.
During a visit to Kuwait last
month Carlucci relterate,ct Amer·
lean support for Kuwait s secur·
ity and Indicated the United
States would aid the emirate If
attacked by Iran.
. The Kuwaiti call came as the
UAE, playing host to senior
Egyptian miUtary officers, said
it was considering Introducing
military cqnscrlptlon . Egypt Is .
keen to develop Its military ties
with the oil-rich gulf states since
a number of Arab .natlons re·
sumed ties with Cairo last year·

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.:.:. Afghan rebel leaders, buoyed
·by a proposed ,Soviet troop
withdrawal. have' agreed on the
s!lape of an Interim government
Utat would exclude communists,
and offered amnesty to officials
of the Soviet-backed regime In
Kabul.
· A spokesman of the U.S.·
6acked alliance of seven resist·
~tnce groups, which receives the
ll!!lk of Washington's covert aid
(o the guerrillas, said rebel
tliaders approved the basic form
and principles for an Interim
.lfghan goverment during an
eight-hour meeting Wednesday.
: ;He said the Interim govern·
inent, which would exclude communist participation, was In line
Wttb the rebel leaders' earlier ·
pledge to forin a "broad-based"
!fOvernment.
·.;I'he spokesman did npt elabo·
r~te further, bl!t one of the seven
party leaders, Gulbuddln Hek·
matyar' .told a news conference
Wednesday night that their
llfeakthrough on a formula to
choose the leaders of the Interim
t1ictme ended a "difficult': phal!e
'!~ the\r negotiations.

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.··:' ISLAMABAD,
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Pakistan fUPI)

A special Section
Corning Febr·uary·19, 1988

I

1

U\fghan"rebels agree .

SUPPORT THE SENIOR
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Membership entitles you to receive the six
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A&amp;

JERUSALEM IUPl) - An sponded, "In the middle of
:Israeli prosecutor leaped to his summing up, I would appreciate
:reet three times today to object tQ it 'll you would not interfere. You
:defense arguments at the trial of do not have the right to say
;-accused Nazi war criminal John anytlilng."
,:oernjanjuk, but .the court told · Shaked bas prosecuted Dem·
:',him to all and be quiet.
janjuk along with Israel's chief
Proaecutor Michael Sh!lked J,ll'li5ecutor, Yoll{lh · Blattman,
..pppe:ared alternately agitated wbo d'ld not. attend •today's
'and amused during the third day session. The state en&lt;led Its case
:Of defense summations at the last week after seven days · of
!nearly year-long trial, taking the summations.
·im11sual move to try to object to
Sheftel continued arguing at
:Israeli attorney Yoram Sheftel's ' length that Israeli Investigators
·une of argument. '
made critical errors when they
·: "Over the past days I've shown -showed a series of pictures to
:testralnt," said Shaked. "But survivors of the Treblinka death
what Is being presented here camp where Demjanjuk is ac~eems like a different case."
cused of being a sadistic guard,
~ Chief Judge Dov Levin re·

1988 Tax

Sweetheart
special
.
I

Iran said the patrol crafts
bought from Stockholm's Boghammar company would be used
to catch smugglers. It was later
discovered that some of the
vessels, powered \&gt;Y two 300·
horsepower Volvo Penta englnes, had been refurbished,
armed by Revolutionary Guards
and use&lt;f In attacks on shipping.
On the warfront, Iraqi Pres!· ,
dent Saddani Hussein Wednes· .
day exempted troni military
service all Iraqis who had served
more than 10 years In the army,
Including a two-year warfront
stretch, a defense ministry newspaper said.
The move apparently was•
motivated by reports Iran would
delay Its expected offensive
against the southern Iraqi port of
Basra because of a lack of funds
and a shortue of volunteers.
In Kuwait, however, the le~tder
or the moderate gulf state most
·threatened by 'the Iran-Iraq wa~
urged his armed forces to Increase Its ·readiness and des=·
crlbed the situation confronting
Kuwait as "extremely delicate."

Secretary Clriaco De Mila
costly procedure of running the months that Gorla offered his the communists and other oppo·
country on provisional resignation:
sltlon parties voted against Go1 f 11 ed ·th t dltl
~.s~~n owa d~lsl~" ~~ appropriations.
Goria Is a former Treasury ria's government.
~beJ:er to alee t Goria's reslgBecause of this, observers said minister who at age 44 became
"Because of the divergent
nation ~md askeJ'hlm to maintain
Cosslg;~. mlglit try to .form an the republic's youngest prime oplnlqns within the coalition, the .
entuntllthe "emergency" government' of minister.
·
government cannot continue
a care~aker ~vernm
·
short duration with the specific . Both the Christian Democrats, with the program entrusted to It
c~~s s ~e~tators ruled out · task of getting the budget the dominant party In Italy since and, In consequence, I will band
e co
t b would ask through Parliament
·
World War II, and the Socialists my resignation Immediately to
g:ri ~~s~~~~ up ehls shattered
The situation was ~ompllcated made small gains In June 14·15 the president of the republic,"
ll~on which he did last by clear hints from the Socialist elections.
.
.Gorla told the Chamber of
coa
'
Gorla res! ed Party that It will make a bid to
Go ria told the Chamber of Deputies.
November when
tin Ll~ral recover the premiership 11 sur- Deputies, the lower bouse of
Socialist Gianni De Mlchells , a
~ atysp!lt with the Y
rendered In March 1987..
parliament, his government had former labor minister, called the
ar ·
crl Is called tor
Goria 's center-left coalition of been undermined by a "lack 9f crisis "unprecedented" because
~~lsu~:~ t~~gen~ action be- Christian Democrats, Socialists, responsibility" among members It did not deal with policy Issues .
pa 0 the colla se left Ita!
Social Democrats, Republicans of Its five coalillon parties.
The Socialists, who are members
cause
P r 1988. Untfl and Liberals lasted 195 days, or
The , Christian Democratic of the coalition, have contended '
without a budget fo tblllsare llttlemorethanslxmonths from leaderdecldedtori!slgnatabrlef the snipers are members of
th~ ~In:~: ~~d :.1:ment the Its swearing In July 29. It m'arked Cabinet meeting after "snipers" antl·Goria factions within the
sa e Y. n~ must· resort t~ the the second time In Jess than three from within the coalition parties Christian Democratic Party. .
governme
. helped to defeat a budget appro·
Goria .has been on shaky
priatlon for the Finance Ministry ground since suffering a series of
In a secret ballot.
.. defeats last week in secret
·a Cl
Between50and80membersof ballotsonpubllchealthandother
the ·coalition
as well as artlcles of the 1988 finance bill.
.
·.
a case of mistaken Identification
"Ivan the Terrible."
The defense claims the photo and that he wa~ a prisoner of war
PUBLIC NOTICE
ldelitlfk:atlon spreads were so in Chelm, Poland, at the time he
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
biased against Demjanjuk that was allegedly In Treblinka.
the testimonies of eight Halo·
Defense lawyers succeeded
Pursuant to the Company's March 18. 1981. the Com· · ·
C;lpacity and Energy Emer- pany · hereby apprises the
caust survivors should be ex· Thursday In entering Into the
eluded from the trial. Five of the record a U.S. court's ruling
gency Control Program public of the state of alec·
approved by the Public Utili· tric supply in 11s service
survivors Identified Demjanjuk reinstating American citizenship
area.
as "Ivan" durtng tMtrial, Three to a Chicago lmmlgrJinl who was
I,·. ties. Commission
.
' I of Ohio on
~
· ,
·
. -others d,ed before the trial began accused of Nazi war crimes, and
ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
Identified by 11 Holocaust survi·
oni~~~Ii1~~:'Z·never taped the vors as commltlng World War II
mately 23 percent of capacity.
:The Company's electric
interviews when survivors were atrocities.
Margins of at least this level are .
power supply facilities shOwn picture spreads and asked
Evidence Ia ter showed the
including power generating expected to be available
to Identify men from Trebllnka, man was not a member of the
throughout the year and into
plants. major transmission
and never subjected Demjanjuk Gestapo and spent the war on a
the peak load period of next
facilities and i'nterconnec·
winter (1988-1989).
,
tions with neighboring electric
German
farm
as
a
laborer.
to a·Uve police lineup.
Generating.«apacity
margins
utility
systems
are
adequate
Shaked stood to object for the
One . spread oJ photographs
to provide reliable electric ser- are required in order lo {fleet
shown to some ijolocaust survl· third time as defense lawyers
vice
to hs customers. Currently, · unexpected increases in system
vors contained only five photos, handed the U.S. Appeals Court
excluding
temporary power load, to provide for an effective
with' Demjanjuk as the sole ruling to the court. He said the
sales to other utility systems, program of preventive maintethree judges. hearing the case
falr·halred, t!tlck-necked man nance of generating facilities
genarati~i!y margins of
exclud!ld
the evidence from the
characteristics Trebllnka survl·
and to allow for random shut·
the American Electric Power
vors attributed to "Ivan." Israeli trial and should not admit It
(AEP) System, of which Ohio downs and loading cunailments of generating units.
Power is a part, are approxi.Jaw requires victims be shown a during closing arguments.
"I suggest, sir, that you sit
minimum of eight photos in
down and Mr. Sheftel continue
police picture spread.
ELECTRIC ENERGY.SUPPLY
Demjanjuk, 67, Is accused with his summations," the chief
Approximately 87% of the believes that hs coal supunder Israel's genocide law of judge said. The prosecutor took
AEP System·s power gener· plies are adequate to enable
using a ~hlp, sword and steel bar his seat.
ating capacity is coal-tired, it to meel the anticipated
to shove thousands of Jews and
The defense's closing argu·
9% Is nuclear and the electric energy requirements
other prisoners Into the gas ments, which are expected to
remainder is oil· Of gas-fired, or of its customers during the
hy~roelectric . The Company
year.
chambers at the camp, In Nazi· ·continue through· next week, are
occupied Poland: He is also
final will
phase
of the trial.
The r-;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tribunal
deliberate
a verdict
accued of firing the engines that the
spewed deadly fumes Into the for at least a month.
Only one other man has been
chambers where 850,000, people
perished over 13 months In 1942 tried and executed under lsrae.l 's
genocide Law In the nearly
and 1943. ,
If convicted, Demjanjuk could 40.year history of the state. He
was Adolf Eichmann, the masbe hanged.
Demjanjuk, · a retired Ohio termind of the Nazi plot to
autoworker who was stripped of exterminate the Jews, who was ·
his U.S. citizenship and sent to convicted In 1961 and hanged a
Israel for trial In 1986, says his IS\ year later.

.'' '
.. e. ense o.•gues I srae.t· m.a d e
D

I

su.pplement

be,anpreylqongulfsblpplngln "infUcting heavy losses." The
March 1984.
radio, In a broadcut monitored
.In Bagbdad, the Iraqi high lnAtheus,Greece, said all planes
command announced Its war· returned safely to base.
planet ~arly today attacked
An Iranian navy frigate shelled.
three targets deep In Irantan a _ Llberlan-reglstered tanker
territory, destroytq them be- laden with S.udl crude Wednes·
fore returnlnJ nfely to base.
day, hours after Iraq claimed Its
The corrununlque Aid Iraqi warplanes attacked two vessels
fighters succeeded In ptercjng serving the coastal terminals of
Iranian air 'defenses, which are . Iran.·.
said to Include U.S.·made Hawk
The fr!gate, IH!IIeved responsl·
missiles, to bomb a plant for ble for· dozens of attacks on
electronic equipment In Iran's merchant vessels In the southern
Shlraz area, and a resevolr and · gulf, sprayed the tanker with a
an oil-processing plant In Iran's hall of machine-gun and 'hell
Imam Hassan region.
fire, Igniting a fire a~d tearing a .
MIUtary experts saki Iraq's hole In her No. 3 tank.
last claimed raid II!Side Iranian
In Stockholm, ·a Swedish Forterritory was Jan. 8, when etgn Ministry spokeswoman said
Baghdad said Its planes bombed U.S. Defense SecretarY Frank
an Iranian oil refinery at Tabrlz. Carlucci has asked Sweden In a
Iraq n!cen.tly attacked Iran's letter to stop exports of Swedish
main .oil ,loading . te~nal at fast patrol boats to Iran·because
Kharg Island, setting a tanker on they were being used to attack
fire. At least one seaman died In i\llf shipping.
·
.
the raid.
·
It was uncle3· wby the Amerl·
Tehran radio did not comment can request w ·!'llade now. The
on thl!' Iraqi attacka, but said Swedish comp tJy responsible
tranlanjetsatll:lOa.m.bombed forthesalesfulfllllida$10mlllion
Iraqi troop concentrations In Iranian order In 1983 and has not
Amara, on the central warfront, sold Its craft to Tehran since.

1 w1 h
ty 1 d
F 1
· ROME (UPI) - President- consu t t par
ea ers r ·
Francesco Cosslga ·today began daytoflndacandldatewhocould
t~lks toward a way out of a . piece together a majority
ld Ch 1511 ·
.polltl.c al crisis ~romp ted ~Y coalition.
PrlmeMinlsterGl.ovanniGorla s
Gorla, a 44-year-o
r an ·
decision to submit the reslgnlj· Democrat, resigned late Wednes·
lion o~ Italy's 47th postwar day after several defeats In the
government.
lower Chamber on the govern·
~osslga, 59, who must select ment's Finance and B~dget ~lllsi
the . next prime minister'
The defeatsa!m~ p ma~i' ~
the hands of ria s own
r ·
launched the talks at 11 a.m. with
separate meetings with former • tlan Democrat Party . Its
presidents Giuseppe SlY'agat,
members joined the com"lunlst·
!ilovannl Leone and Sandra led opposltio~ In voting against
rertlnl In their role as elder . ,the flve-par.ty coalition gover~
statesmen.
ment, Italy s 47 th since Wor
; Later he is to meet Senate War II. .
President Giovanni Spadollnl
Politlcalcommentatorsattrlband Nilde Iottl, the Communist
uted the revolt among Christian
party president of the Chamber
Democrats to · a power platy
qf Deputies. He was expected to
pitting the left wing against par Y

MIDDLEPORT FLOWER SHOP

MIDDLEPORT FLOWER

vlct!m of 'Iranian shelling In 24
hours, limped through the Strait
of Hormuz and Into the Gulf of
Oman shortly after dawn after
Iranian gunboats let loose a
stre-m of rocket-propelled gre·
nadesand4·1nchcannonshellsat
the vessel.
The attack Ignited a fife In the
tanker's engine room and crew
quarters but It was put out
quickly by the crew and a tug that ·
rushed to the stricken vessel's
assistance, the sources said. The
ship was 20 miles off the coast of
the United Arab Emirates' port
of Dubai when lt was hit. ·
''There were no Injuries," '
Terje Askvig, a spokesman for
the vessel's owners, the Norman
International, said In Oslo.
"There was a fire on the
starboard side. It was put out
after a couple of hours. The boat
continued . (using Its) own
engines."
.
Today's_ attack brought to 35
the number of strikes on mer· chant ships cia lined by Iran and
·rraq since Jan. 1, among the
worst Periods of attacks on
vessels since the warring nations

Cossiga · b egins· seeking way out of ·p olitical crisis in Italy -

at :

- ·PeOple in the news--_- - -

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Iran, Iraq bomb each, other; Norwegian tanker in safe_w~ters

Thursday; FebrUary 11. 1'9 88

Bowers, candy, romance for Valentine's Day
it:r SANDRA L. LATJMER

Pomeroy-t.iickleport, Ohio

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Pegs 12-The D8ily Sentinel

Thnday, February 11. , 988

Pomeroy Mldl'spoi;t. Ohio

•

6

TV news pilot who stopped_a fugitive feels littl~ ~heroism
trying to aet away In Laurlentf'a Into the cab, killing the auspect. saki !luetlloni were raised In the·
·truck, so he swooped down aDd
Deaplte pralle Q1 his actions by news media and by some lndlvld·
authorities,
Sliva said he does not uals that Sllv11 may have been;
hovered ovei: the pickup as It .
flying unsafely.
· ·
feel
like
a
hero.
pulled Into a slloppln&amp;' center.
"After
lnvestlgatlni
the
IIICI·
"I feel at a loss, emotionally
The trucll stopped and Silva
dent,
we
believe
there
does
not
landed In front of it. The robber empty, because two IJ!!OPle were
appear
to
have
been
a
violation
of
pointed hiJ gun at Sllva'.s kiUed and I observed at close
any
federal
regulations,"
the
chopper.
range both of the deaths,." he
"I tboug~t be was &amp;olng to said. "I have no reservations FAA said In a statement.
I( suva l!ad been round gull ty of
shoot Mike," Stair said. But a about the decision I f!lade.
pPIIce cruiser rammed the truck, Everybody wants to make m~ a violating f'lgbt safety rules , the
hero. There's nothing I feel penalties could have rang~
dra1l(lng the robber's attention.
·. \from a reprimand to susllflnslon
Pollee ehlef Arlstedes Zavaras nerolc about."
said officers saw Hutchinson
KCNC ran an edited version of of his llcel)se.
·Authorities Wednesday . said
pointing his gun at Laurlentl's the Incident on Its newscast and
Hutchinson,
who carried no lden.head. Four officers fired from
the tape was broadcast nation·.
tiflcatlon,
was
bofllln Arlington,
the back of the trueI!. One officer ally by NBC.
Va.
He
was
Identified
throueh a11
opened the driver's door 11,nd
Zavaras said Silva, 37, was "In
FBI
fingerprint
check.
pulled out ,the .elderly man ·and
the right 'place at the right time.
Pollee said bls criminal record
another oU!cer fired his shotgun . He really, really as sis ted us In
began In Texasatage20, when he
this situation."
Silva said he thought com- was convicted of kidnapping,
plaints were filed with the FAA. truck theft and auto theft. He was
against him and that they came sentenced to 25 years In prison,:
from compe'llng stations, but but escaped tro.m a prison near;.
news directors at KUSA·TV and . Angelton. He was placed' In the·
KMGH·TV saki they knew of no maximum-security Texas State
Prison at Palestine, but escaped;
complaints.
the attack.
her adallants because of racial .
FAA--spokesman Bob Shelton last July .
"We want to make some people bias.
wake up and come forward,"
Some local residents have
Cosby said. "The physical and branded the teenager, a )llgh
mental anplsh suffered by Ta· , school cheerleader and athlete, a
wana Is Immeasurable.
. .
liar.
·
"Let Mls&amp;,.Brawley represent
A frustrated Attorney General
an example of what we are not
Robert Abrams Issued a stategoing to stand for as parents, as.. ment praising Cosby and Lewis
Americans, as human beings, for posting the reward, but ·he
It's not about race," Cosby told a
criticized Maddox for refusing to
news conferem&amp; In New York, ' let Brawley coojiera.te. ·
·
calling the att81Ck 1'a terrible, · Abrams said her cooperation
terrible thing."
was "critical" and accused Mad·
No one has been charged in the
dox of jeopardizing the outcome
JILL
attack, and Bra)Vley's lawyers,
of the Investigation, which Is
who also represented the victims
being conducted by Assistant
of the Howard Beach racial Attorney General John Ryan.
assault In New York City, have
The governor appoln ted
advised her not to cooperate with Abrams after two local prosecu·
authorities , on grounds they tors disqualified themselves, cit·
would not aggressively s~k ·out ing unspecified conflicts of
Interests.
Season after season, Nurse Mates stand for
But Maddox and feUow activist
superb
coinfort, quality and value. And·
·
attorney C. Vernon Mason con·
America's number one professional shoe leads
tlnue to advise Brawley not to
the fashion parade, too, with fabulous new
cooperate ,because · AbralJis, a
· styling. Try a pair today - they're priced as
IIbera) Democrat who they say
would have been acceptable for
mcely as they look.
·
·
the job, has delegated the day-to·
"In the lives of every parent,
day management of the case to
there are moments of oversight Ryan , who they charge has no
experience prosecuting racially
... This Is ,Just one moment that
turned tragic," pollee Sgt.
·motivated crimes.
Robert Browning said. "The
Tawana's mother, Glenda
mother turned her back to do
Brawley, and stepfather Ralph
the laundry while her child
King, attended Cosby and Le·
slipped unnoticed Into the po&lt;il
wls's news conference but de992-5627
MIDDLIPOil
not 15 feet away,"
clined to speak to reporters.

DENVER, ( UPI) - The pilot ment Tuesday when the statlori strictly there as an observation
. who roared his TV news bellcop- told them to start' cov~rlng a platforml ' Silva said. But when
.: ter down In front of a,robber who pollee chaae .Involving an armed he saw W\llls killed, the VIetnam·
veteran and former pollee ofllcer
: had killed a policeman sa)d
robher.
·
· despite the commendations he
Pollee said Phillip L. Hutchui- got mad.
"I said, 'Jim, this (expletive)
recelved for his role In stopping son, 24, had robbed the Rio ·
the fUJ!tlve, there was " nothing I
Grande Opera tin&amp; Credit Union Is mine, and If I have to, I'm
feel heroic about."
office and fled In a Chevrolet going to crash this helicopter Into
him."
On Wednesday, a da~ after Blazer.
Hutchinson · cra$hed fou r
Mike Silva, flew above the streets
Detective Robert Wallis, 51,
; of north Denver while a KCNC· heard the chase over the radio blocks Ia ter, and Silva buzzed the
' TV camerinan taped the dra- a!ld tried to stop Hutchinson by gunman as he r;~n Into an
matlc chase unfolding below, blocking the road. Wallis jumped apartment complex. The robber
• pPllce praised the pilot and the out of his car and was hit by the stopped and shot at the hellcop·
Federal Aviation Administration escaped convict's Blazer, throw· ter, but missed. At a mobile borne
cleared him In a preliminary lng him 100 feet throUgh the air.
park, the robber grabbed John
investigation of any safety
Clattering above In a Jet Bell Laurlentl, 73, and ordered him to
· violations.
Ranger, Silva foliQwed the action drlvfi.
Silva said be was afraid pollee
Silva and cameraman Jim as Stair Ia~ .the entire episode.
: Stair were on another assign- • "Until that point, I was just did not know the robber was

~• Lawyer

.TO PLACE A~ AD CALL 992--2156

By JONATHAN FERZJGER

:

ALBANY, N.Y. (UP!)- Gov.
Marlo Cuomo wants to meet the
u lawyer for a black teenager to
encourage her to. COOperate with
a special pros~cutor appointed to
find six white men she says
kld01apped, raped and lett her for
dead.
The lawyer, Alton Maddox,
who was scheduled to meet
Cuomo today , has refused to let
the girl cooperate with the
·special state prosecutor appointed by Cuomo, saying the
g overnor "has repeatedly failed
·us .. . because his actions do not
match his words."
Tawana Brawley, 16; of Wap·
plngers Falls, about 50 miles
north of New York Cl ty, told
investigators she was kidnapped

Nov . 24 by six white men, one of
whom showed her a badge and
said he was a. policeman, then
was repeatedly raped.
.
Four days later she was lound
In . a plastic bag, curled In the
her hair
fetal position chopped, "KKK" and "nigger"
scrawled on ber'chest In charcoal
and feces smeared across her
body,
'"The governor's objective is to
see that the attorney general is
given every opportunity to en·
sure that justice Is served ," said
Francis Sheehan, Cuomo's
SpPkesman.
Wednesday, comedian Bill
Cosby and Ed Lewis, who publishes the black women's maga. zlne Essence, offered $25,000 for
Information leading to arrests In

in a backyard shed · beside the
algae·clouded pool.
When Lopez realized her son
was missing, she called her
landlady and looked around the
house. aild under beds. She then
alerted pollee, and a fire depart·
ment rescue team pulled the boy
from the deep end of the pool.

United Press lnlernatlonal
A baby rescued after 20 minutes In an Icy creek foughtforllfe
today al a Pittsburgh hos.pltal,
while a California toddler began
breathing on his own for the first
time since he fell in his family 's
swimming poo114 days ago.
Thirteen·month-old Eric
McCourt was brought uncon-·
clous and critically Ill to Child·
reo's Hospital In Pittsburgh
Wednesday, and officials said
today his condition has not
changed.
The baby fell through the
broken window of ' his parents'
wrecked car Into the creek and
was swept through a dra in pipe
into a 31-degree pool of water.
When he was rescued 20 minutes
later, Eric was "turning blue,"
. said Carla McKee, who stopped
her car and helped save the boy,
The boy was riding In . his
fath er 's ·lap in the front passenger seat of his parents' car
when the automobile, driven by
the child's mother,careened oft a
snow-covered rural road in Armstrong County, 45 miles northeast
of Pittsburgh.
" He fell out into the creek and
was washed through a drainage
pipe onto the other side of the
road. He was found some time
later in a pool of water," state
police dispatcher Bonnie Dill
said.
McKee sa.jd that when Eric
was pulled out, "he was soaking
wet. I took my Jacket off because no one else had a jacket
on- and I wrapped it around the
baby. We started giving It CPR
The baby didn 't do anything. It
was in shock."
"They couldn't lind him at
first," McKee said. "I thought,
'My God, what do you mean you
couldn 't find him?"'
· When Eric was found, McKee
said, "His lips were cyanotic
blue, like they were tur~ting blue.
. A little baby like that ... i'm glad I
could help that little baby. I hope
he makes it."
The child' s parents - I?onald
McCourt, 22, and Penni Gutherie,
lS, both of Kittanning, Pa. were bruised but not seriously
hurt.
In San Jose, Calif., 2-year-old
Herbert Lopez, who spent 20
minutes submerged In his family's swimming pool Jan. 28, went
off life support and began breathing on his own.
·
But doctors said the boy still Is
comatose and remains In critical
·. but stable condition. He also
shows signs of brain damage,
San Jose Hospital spokesman
Christl Welter said.
: Doctors said It still Is "too
early to tell the boy's eventual
oQtcome," Welter said.
·
Herbert's heart bad stopped
wbe11 he was brourht to the
hospital. Doctors 'used shock
treatment and heart mes11ge to
revive him, then placed him on
life-support equipment.
The · district attorney 's office
said It wlll not file ne&amp;Jiience
charges aralnat the boy's
mother, Estella Lopez, who told
pPIIce that her son was playing
behind her while she did laundry

&gt;

. paid.
.
•flecefve 1.10 dtscount for 1d1 p1fa-1n ac~v... ce. .
•F,..ed•- 0,1~ 1nd Found 1d1 under 16wordlwill bt
run 3 d8YI 11 no charge.
*Prioe of '8d tor all aaptlal lmers ia double price of ad aost

I

Wl~ntar

Clearance
Continue•

MANY ITEMS FOR THE
LADIES REDUCED
. TO

COPY DEADLINEMONDAY PAPER
TUE&amp;QAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
T.HURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
" SUNDAY PAPER

-DUPOIJ, OHIO

. ........

'

l

.

.

I

1·---r-."""*

,

.

_c.,._

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

11~
TV • C11
17-M
...........

11-Wantllll To Da

Devices

Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; S.rvi••
c:J Hearin1 Eval111tions For All Ages

I

I

IQ .... ltwMI

....

Ill

6

I I

~

:z:

(614) 44&amp;-7619 or (6141992·2104
417 Seconc! AYellue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Dhio 45631
. or at
.Veterans Memorial Hos1pit~l
Mulberry tills, Pomeroy,

z

6

•

BINGO

DENNY CONGO
WILl HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410.
liMESTONE'
GRAVEl • SAND
TOP SOil
FILL DII~T .

'·

•

/

APPOINTMENT OF

•

FIDUCIARY

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SIIYICE
U. $. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662 ·3821

Authoriztll John

Dttre,

Niw Holland, lush Hog

·

Farm Equiplft011t

o.....

h•l••••'
Parh &amp;

hr•

Strwle~ .

H-'861fc

F
Locust, Oak, Cherry

$3500,

.Per Pickup Load
Delivered'
\,

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269
..

17-Mu_ _ _..

. l t - 1 ' • - or Troodo

J&amp;L
INSULATION

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

'HEATING &amp; . '
COOUNG,
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
~REE

PAT Hill FORD

.ESTIMATES

992-2196
Milldleport, Ohio

.PH. 992·2772
2·5,'11 1110.

. 1·13. tfC

6

Public

Lano

Aoben E. Suck,
Probolo Judge
K. Nesael•ood, Cieri&lt;

1'214, 11, 18, 3tc '

wANT ADS bring
Vacation Moiley

I

.

1hot on So1unlay. FabrUIIry
1~. 1888. 01 10:00 •. in ...

I'Gmoro¥, OH .

\
,

•

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE It hereby glwn

eroy. Ohio. to .oolt for ...h
1ht folt-lng ooHotetol:
1880 CJ7 JEEP
JOMI3AC701D13

45789, woo oppolntod Ex•

•

Notice

lho Molgt Coun!y Probole

cullix of 1he tho eotote of
Ruth .A . B•mi1Z, diiC&lt;IIMCI,
lote of 403 Wott Mlin, Pom·

Re-acquaint yourself
with the stylists Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Grace, Donna, Angela
and Kay ot

CART.ERtS
PLUMBING
&amp;-HEATING

.

Tho

Form.,.

Bonk ond

S.vlng Com1111ny. Pomeroy,

Ohio_,.. the light to bid
ot 1hlt oole, Millo wlthdr1ht ...... callo-.1 lliiGr to
oote. Fu-. The Formere
Bonk 011d lllvine• Corn"""'
......... 1t. right 10 rtloct
ony or •ll .bldl •ubml1tecl.

Funher. 1he obave colt•·
tarel will be oold In the candillon It 11 lft with no ••·

p..- or tmplloct

Wlrfln·

tlotglv...
12)10, 11, 12. 31c

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE .

- Addona 1nd remodeling
- Roofing and' gutter work
- COncrete work
-Plumbing and electric;:al
wo ..

·tFree, Estimetell

- 2-5·'88 I mo.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
P-ay, Ohio
·

Nt,o Location:
161 North Socand
Mid•eport, Ohit 45 7

SALES &amp; SERVICE

C•rrv Fishing Supplln
Pay Your Phone ·
and Cable BIH1 Here
IIISINESS ,liON!.
(614) 992·t550
H!IDINCI PHON!

or 949-2801

ND SUNDAYCALLS

Ph. 16141143-5486

NO. SUNDAY CALLS

GUN SHOOT

An 11!111 nr.1: 111 en ls

EVERY
SAT. 'NIGHT
6:30P.M.

...

.factory. Choke
10·7-lfn

Roger f'tysell
Garage
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••lulon
.PH. 992·5682.
or 992-7121

WANTED

DEAD 01 ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
oRanges •Fraezers
•Refrigeratora ,
"Will loy or Haul Away"

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We

M.!!.~~

Service

J&amp;L BLOWN
.' INSULA'-ON

~

..

Attwltion Seniure. Get your
plctu,.., for your announce·
..menu eMty. C..U now end. gat
your pictura. 114-949-3080 or

114-949·2803 .
MARINES :' We' re looking lor a
few good mlln. For more information. ctll Sergeant Mike Abell
at 304·420·8018 collect.
Notice: pa:reon th1t took our 4
month old, black 1nd brown
Chow·Chow from blue trailer
behind Hanford Blr. · ~eaa•
return no qutltionl. little wlrt
miue1hefpet.

4

ALUMINUM SIDING

•lnauletlon
•Storm Door•
•Storm Windows
•R.ecement Window•
•New Roofing
J

Fm

·

JAMES IIESEE

PM. 992·2772

2-5· .•• 1 lt10.

6

··susrRAcr rHOs£ 1111NGs·

EmUn~

Fr11 firewood for the cutting of a
~ree in Galllpolll. Ctll614·4&lt;t87321.
Famale German Shepherd-mix.
2 v-ars old. Spede. Good with
kldo. Colll,. ·218-1286 .

2 six month old tabby femele
kittens and one black . and gold
femal• kitten. Cell 814-843-

8445 .
Male part Germen $hepherd. to
ood ho'm eln courttry, call aft•r
,oo pm. 30.·171· 15880.

l

6

6 Lost and Found
Lott: dog In

Middl~rt

a,...
llack and gray mala Norweg;.n
.Eilhound. Coli 81•·882·1713.

CHESTU, OH.•

GATHERING DUSt ·
~1\DD'· DOLLARS

OPEN

Church,

Private

Partie• Mon .• Tues..
Thurs .. Sat: • Sun.

985-3929
or 985-9996

cat. Oiatlnctlvely merbd. Whtte

MliCUM I
CONTIACnNG
1
CHESTER, OHIO
I
oHOME IUILDINO
1
oROOM ADDITIONS
.
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
..1 ••
REMODELINW&lt;.
REPAIRS' · •
SEPTIC SYSTEMS.
IACKHDl-RK

_..., ........
915······

Refwencll
1 1 · S.tfn
· - " COII1UC101S
'

6

tip on talt. Not wuring coUar.
Lalt aeen on Bun.mut and
Mulbony Avo. Very llrnld. II
'""· plreuecall814·992·3727 ·

or 11•·182·3082.

LOST: I fnonth old female dog·
SA. 181. Mllige Co.- near
Snowville. Sol., Feb. I. Modlum
lon. IIIIJtO&lt;! brod. Maytoe
Injured. tf IMn call Carol·
liWH-8217 o-1 PM.

ol•.

Found1 pondonl with plctv- of
2 children in lt. Found In Health
Dopt . ....lng lot. Call81•· 192·

1121.

I

:::=:~::WEW::.:WIIII: 10111 1nd

Emplov menl
Services

11

Hell&gt; Wanted

Sell Avon . Get your own Avon at
a diacount. Call 614-446·3368 .

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS .
6

Now Hiring. Your erea. 113,660

to 169,480. Immediate Ope"lngo . Coll1 -316·733-8063 bt.
F-2768.
.
Enthuaiaatic &amp; outgoing person
to 111i1t with marketing and
11laa projaeta and oth., office
dutiM. Sand raaume to: Bo• Cia
13B c/ o Gallipolla Deity Tribune,
825 Third Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohlb
46831.

DIRECTOR OF NURSES
S..tclng R N with IJI.CIIIent man·
agement, leladenhip, &amp; nul'ling,
akltl1 to over.H nursing department of 1 1(t0 . bed INF I ICF
ftellity. Bachelor degr" With ·
ona or mora .,.. . of experitnce
desired. E.w:c•llent Hlerv &amp; bl·
ntfH: package. Send r11ume or
appty in person at Scenic Hill
Nurwlng C•nt.r-538 Buckrldge
Rd. , Giillipotia, Ohio 46131 .
ATTENTION AN 'S
Looking for challenging. nward·
lng potltion 7' Scenic Hlllt Nura·
lng Center offers competitive
w..... tuh:lon re· lmburHment,
paid holideya. vae~~tton , flexible
achedullng , retirement plan',
haahh inauranee with drug eard,
dantlll. and viaion end the
opportunity ior advancement.
Send r81ume or apply In peraon
at 638 Buckrldga Ad.,. Gallipolis,
Ohio \6!J31 .
HELP WANTED

Local company now hiring fM
full·time empklymtnt. No,a.w:pe·
rience nec.... ry. Evening work.
light lifting involved. t1 200 1
mo. Profit aharing • other
benefits. For peraonal interview
call81o&amp; -448-8,46. Thun ., f ,i.,
A~ .

w•'nted to 11'111· in with
wtdow tix daya a Mek. Light '
houtework . S.tary. Call 114.

4... 1023.
OoV'arnment Joba . t1 6 ,040'-

tl9.230 VI'•·. Now Hlril'lg, Your
Arta. 105· 887·8000 Ext. A:
9801 tor eurrent Fadaral lilt.

LPN's and IN's

75 lED ICFISNF lONG·TEIM
·· CMWACIUTY
Looking for 1 fill good nu,... to join

2328.

Ladr

8 · · Public Sale
Auction

11 Halp Wanted

\I

Standing timbei. Call614-742-

• ,.,on .. after 9:30

6

a.

1\

Buying daily gold, silver coin•.
rings. jewelry, aterling ware. old ·
coins. large cuJJency . . Top pri·
ttl. Ed Burkett Blrber Shop:
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614·

Giveaway

LDit: btack 1nd white. long hair

y

~423 .

882-3471.

homo. CoiiiU·oUII-2957.

VINYL&amp;

PMIIY Conan!, R.N., D.O.N.

•

Pilla . Fruth

1 mole 81od Dog.' 1 yeor old,
White with black apota to good

--r:'11tlllu

'

Control your Weight • Take

Would like to buy junk carl,
wrecked carl end motorcyclei.
Call 814·3'9-2160 or 379·

" Naw Sh. . D!et Plan" and

committed to providing qualitY c1re.
It you feel you
.~ment to
GIN
-.. •m work.~~~-- 0. or·waiN:

Point Pleelant
671-1121

Standing timber. Call 61 4 · 3792768·Ciaude Proffitt.

E · Vep Water
PharmaCy.

11 Gauge Shotguns Only

Wanted To Buy

3 ' Announcements

T 0 give aWI'f tO elder\y ptr10n or
couple for a good hom•• very
small Vork Terrier, femalit,
spaded. 2 yrt. old·. Call 814.UB-2957. ,

~·

l · ll ·lfn

9

Basham Building

our dlldloatld 1t1ff who are

Mason
77$o5514

1· 26·'88-1 mo .

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

6· 17-tfc

lmm MOVHS to VHS TAPE
w .. con•ort thas,• old

•

THE DEADLINE FC)R 1987 TAX YEAR CONTRIBU110NS IS APRIL 15, 1988

Long lott-. OH. 45 743

1614) 992-

IJ . . ,....Wt:U.·i",l.·SAT .
7 :30-10:00
Call for Birthday,

Have IIOUble saving? Ask us a~J9ul direct deposit lrom your Peoples Bank ~ aecounl! The
100118r Yllll IRA slarll wort.mg, ,_ sooner you can IIOPI
'

Day or Night

10-9-lfn

" '

'

PH. 949-2860

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

We

HOOit Molin om to ..sy
VHS,
.
CAll AMY CARTEl
· "' IOI'S EIICTIOHKS
446.6939 ... 446-7390

New H-•s Built

"Free Estimates"

HOMO BELT

Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio

•o

IACIIIE, OHIO

4·1' 'oti·IC

WANT ADS
ARE
WITH

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

RACINE
GUN CLUB

BISSEU
SIDING Co. ·

Royal ,&amp; S&lt;M Typewriters
loyal &amp; MAll Calculators
Royal &amp; Max Cash Registers

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860

992-27.25 - "

WALK·INS WELCOME

GUN SHOOT
EVERY ·
. SUNDAY
1:00 _P.M.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION '

SALES-SERVICE
SUPPLIES

"At Rtasoriablt Prices"

169 N. 21111 Au.
ljjiddleport, Oh.io

'

3'19 So.lnd Ave.
··Middleport, Ohio
.'

Niw &amp; Used·

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

KAY'S .
· BEAUTY SALON

992-6282

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

BISSELL
BUILDERS

'

1·28·'88-tfn

'ulttlc. oote wHI be htld 01
1011 Union A,.,,., Pom·

~ Avenue,

averag~

·---..._,.,,..•v•__ ..,,_

E••-

.14-MIN. ......
\.. • ....... •· FJ'III

'

oroy, Ohio 41789.

Under the new laX law, lhe
family Is still eligible.Ill declJclevery do.ar conlr!bulad from uf
current Income lax.Up .lo $2,000 per wage earner, per year, H)'OIK lamly Income is $40,000 or less
($25,000 Wlingle). Regar(jless of your Income, you pay no laxes on lhtt lntamt you eam until you
act~y u" lhe funds.
·

-lo

u-ca. TV •

--~~-·..
117-coolw

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

Court, C8M No. 25710, Ber·
. nice C.rpemor. 283 Mul-

contributions lo an lRA.can mean lo you al retirement

!1 1r 1111 t

r

. 11-Mou--•

I

742-.. _ d

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

' On Jonuorv 28. 1988, In

•
II you wanl to retire on more lhan social securil)i,lhe c11ar1 above shows how much monlhly

., ' t

"-•

Business Services

NOTICE OF

'

..

111-con.oo1 E..l p . .,.~. M-rHolrloo

11-I.. DDII AlftiiNCIIIH

..--chiP•
241~

'7
711--~-·A7 - - Rt111olr

11 ......... .

M-Co.. WV

llilolgoC•ntv
-Codol14

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00A.M . SATURDAY
- 2,00 P.M . MONDAY
- 2,00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2100 ~. M . WEDNESDAY
- 2100 P.M. THURSDAY
- 2100 P.M . FRIDAY

Public Notice

$187,697
$281,535
$375,394

__........

111-- • Motoro lor tole

11-Hol!o-

11-llu l . ......

'lha,.thladedlcltlon 111d

1f2·PRICE
ClO i ...
~

,

'

$50 A MONTH.

'

i

.00

Clauified pages cover the
following telephone e:~t:hanges...

t:tY·• d Sales

'

'

$78,411
$117,616
$156,822

-

n-TNaloolo&lt;aolo

10-1-tfc

BEGINNING
AT AGE 25

m .oo

tl1.00

»-v.,.••-·•
74 Mutaupal•

·will allo appear in tha Pi. Pl. .unt Reol..er and th•Galll.polil Dally Trlb~me~ 1'81Chift0 owr 18.000 hornet.

HOW TO
.R ETIRE ON

$50
$75
·$100

.a1.oo

Re... INfO" ooneeoutive rune , broil:• updlyawllblatl.-ged
for IIIOh' ~Y H MPnt:e ~1 ,
~

• A clutHied. advartiHment placed In Tha Daily Sentintl ( p ."
~- cl••-'fled ditpl", l~lln... Card and legal noticn)

It'

Hospital news

'·

1., Mtinorlam

.J .

Amount In IRA Age 65 ,
Assuming An Average Yield Of 8.25%

117.GD
UO.GD
.1 • . GD

• 6

....

MONTHlY BEGINNING
INVESTMENT ATAGE35

•e..oo
... oo
.,• .00
na.oo

6

heritagt house
The Shoe Place

ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!) - A Cleveland Mafia underboss An·
U.S. Attorney Involved In the gelo A. " Big Ange" Lonardo ,
conviction of three New York described as the highest ranking
City Mafia leaders says the M11fla member to eyer become
Mafia can be eliminated as a an Informant, with aiding In the
major problem In th~ u.S. within
New York City convictions.
a decade.
" He gave a live Insight Into
" If we continue to do what how the Mafia operates and how
we're doing for five or 10 more the .national commission and the
years, if the Italian government New York commission operate,"
continues to do what li's doing, 1 Giuliani said.
don 't think .the Mafia will be a
The focus now should be on
major problem a decade from criminal groups competing , the
now," said Rudolph C, Gu!llani, ·succeed (he Mafia, he saki.
U.S. attorney for the Southern
When Lopez realized her son
District of New York.
was
missing, she called her
Giuliani. who prei&gt;ared the
and looked around the
landlady
· case against New York City
under beds. She then
house
and
Mafia bosse~ Anthony " Fat
alerted
pollee,
and a fire depart·
Tony" Salerno, Carmine Per·
sico, and Anthony "Tony Ducks" ment r.escue team pulled the boy
Corallo, spoke atAshland College from the deep end of the jlool.
" In the lives of every parent,
Wedne~day.
there
are moments of oversight
Federal authorities in Clev~­
.
..
This
Is just one moment that
land have said they have ar·
tragic,"
police Sgt. Roturned
rested the last of the Cleveland
bert
Browning
said.
"The mother
Mafia members, but Giuliani
turned
her
back
to
do
the laundry
said the Mafia Is still a problem
while
her
child
slipped
unnoticed
In New York City.
- ''The Mafia Is in a substantial Into the pool not 15 feet a( ay."
amount of trouble In New York,"
Giuliani said. ''It is not destroyed. It Isn't .over . It's stlll
Veterans Memorial
there. It still exercises political
Wednesday Admissions
. Helen Jeffers, Pomeroy; Henry
power.
"It still exerclese economic Turner, Middleport; James
power. It 's much less of a player Bentz Sr., Racine; FloydMcClel·
in the heroin business because lan, Pomeroy; Grace Holter,
most of their dealers were sent to Racine ; Gertrude Bass ,
jail for a long Ume and most of Pomeroy .
their property was seized," he
Wednesday Discharges said. "But It's stlll a force to be Cindy Stalens, Iris Baker, Geral·
reckoned with."
·
dine . Scott, Edna Lee, Goldie
Giuliani credited former Roberts, John Meeks.

.WOi'l Ill 21·• WOIIDI

...00
. ti.OO
t13.00

.4:00

1 MONTH

t'

'7 polnllino'ty.. ..... ......
.
.
' $entinel Ia ~~ r,H pOftllble for arran after flqt day. CCheck
for et"rort ffftt dly ad rune in paper) . Call befo,. 2 :00p.m.
d.., after pubNcation to make correction.
• Adt that mutt be paid in advance are:
Card of Thanks
Happy Adt

N=

6

0· 11 WOIIDI 1 • ·•

rl

a Shoe-in!

Mafia convicting U.S.
says mob can be eliminated
6

10AYI
DAYI
IOAYI
10DAYI

• "Ill outsld1 Maigl, 0.1111 or MHOn caunta. mult be pre-

Nurse Mates® are

~escued baby fights for his life
'
while another.breath~s on his own
By SHEILA MULLAN

RATES

MONDA¥ thr11 FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
· ' 8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POUCIES .

of racial . attacked teenager ~fuses
·~ cooperation with · governor appointed .p rosecutor·

I

.•

-----loto-.. __
-9

Wanted To Buy

- - C I I w.·CIIdltnc.

114-441·1171

·.

EkCellent wegilll. 1or apara time '
111embly · work; tllctronlcl. '
• -· Olllon. Info 1·S04-1141 · ,
OOJ1 ht. 3021: Open 7 doyo.

AN niltlded for ,.urelng rehablll·
tatlon unit. RICIUirtt caring

Individual \wflo'l nursing prac-

tioo 1o v - towonl rootorine
rwkltnc. to 1M lton'tl .,_vfron; , ,
Mlr'lt aa muoft .. poulbtti.

Conteat N•noy Y11nMet1r

D.O .N. A-IOOio '""""'"~

N.~ """"""'•r.o.r.
tloo• c:.n.
..... ~~z.eeoe.

----Ciwll-

"" •II.Mt • ... D1·Y. .;
n.-.CoiiMUM1 ·111..
. . . .1 f w.t. , . fer lnia.
t411r.

�, -·r

.,
'

P.g1 14--The Deity Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

11

.. . "'=
. ...
=il
l.oOIII

i

I

~

.......

J ltG e

. "' c••,.c•...,.
IAtl. , ............

Vf,

MIL

.... .

~

c....

54 Mlac.

A-1 aiM.

v-. -

~

· c.u ._,711-

Coto1

EAJIIN I!XC!LLINT IIIONIY In

I•

PART·nM! J0811 Join 1110
Army N.otlonol 0 ...... 304·171·
39110 or 1 - 1100-14~·3111 .

to

l

''WANTED" Ro-.lllo mkldte ltOI' woman, who ....U •
homo, hew
llv•own
- room
olderiy
Would
and 11M11

tro-. AI
·- llr
· Coblo.
Aloo-oncy
racNM,
Md cable.
MalOn,
w.v .. Coli 104-773-1111 .
lpOM lor -

~73.

12

Situations
Wanted

Older lody to

~tw-In.

Light

houte· ketplng . Room and
boonl . Coil 11 ~4-441 -UII .
S.nior

dtllrtft. Room •rid bOerd

· ""
- -lody.
· R-n•bl•.
Call "'114Spoclol.""'

••~-aa73.
Insurance
13

"H it turns out you're right
and the government's wrong,
you'll get a refund. H the
government's right and ;
you're
wrong
you'll· go to
·
.
J

Lldill would like to do hou..,:
,cleaning. Caii814-2•B-IS18:?.

W•ted to do hot.IMC~ing in
Galltpolit aree on regular baalt;.
'Haw Nference1. C•ll '8 ,4-441-

'8889.

Wll do ftldlrllend stl.. lncome
Tu:n; typing. booking. and
Notary Mrvice. M.-garM P.,k.,

814-H2-2214.
Will b1byllt In my home located
.behind Ord1nce School. Hour~~

'

· For Laaaa

- --------

For Rent or t.e. .: w....OUH -

31&amp;11 h . Electric hMI. _.., •

rMUoom. 2412 Jett.lon Ave.;

Olllooar8_1_s:10a31
lt. 2411Jo'*-Avo.304-1712114 ., 171-t741.

r~,·lclidiiiiiSI'

61 Hounhold Goods
~~;:;;::~;;::::;:;~;:~=r~i=i~i1~if.;;;;;;=~1
42 Mobile Homes
- -- - - - - , - - - for

Mobile Homaa
for Sale 1

Rant ·

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olivo II .. O.Mipollo.
NEW- 0 pc.tlfOUp- Ull.
LMng room Ntft. •189· t&amp;89.
lunk- with btdd!ng- •1 89.

1173· 1:bll F . -. 3 8A .,

gas furuce whh centNI llir,
wether-dryer. aft kltchM ap-

und..,.....
porch•. CIIH

111'-· dlnono ..,,
ntng. bkK:k •

•

74

1971 Kant • . 10&amp;31. Good
ca.ndltlan. Priced 'to tell.
FRENCH CITY BIIOKERAOE·
Coi1114---1340.
PRICE REDUCED : 1117
14•72·Fontuy II· OLX:. loth,
-rTV. VCR . R - 02000.
FRENCH CITY MOilLE
HDM!I- C.ll 114-441-I:Mtl.
PRICE REDUCED: 1117 lun·
nyllroM 14&amp;10. 2 IR .. 1~ bath.
utUity room. e12,100. FRENCH
CITY MOilLE HOMEI· Col
114-441·1340.
.

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

tum!Mid. Large
~t. AC. *221amo. plu11eaurtty
.,..., . . , _, Coli 114-

.,.rtlntl' "·dn111 o, btdroom
USED- lodo,

tuit••· *111- *219 . Dukl.

441·081&amp;.

wulter. • oompl.t• line
of UNci fumltuN!.
·
NEW· WM1am boots· UO.
Workbaota *18 • up. (StHI •
- - 1· CoiiiU- 441 ' 3119 ·

Mldll_., Dhlo. Rllloronco
ond loourity - I l l ,..ulrod.
304-112·3267 or all4· 7731024.

44

Appll.,co.

County

v-•

t-::;::~~;;~~~;,l-;;=:;;;;;;;;::=~1
54

. Ap1rt,nent
for Rant

Sot. 114·441·1UI. 127 3rd.
A ft -111 u OH
""· - po L
·
GOOD USED APPUANCES

I-·

w -. ..,_, -

.....,•.

2 BR. opU.
- o nSkege• Appliance•.
ot&gt;t&gt;f. luml-. WMh•Dr;or . rangee.
Upper RM:r Rd. beside Stone

Mile, Marchandlla

83

Llve1tock
_:__ .;.__-.-...:...._ _ _

foctory d. . . . Col 312-2349147.
Hoopltol bod ond hoopltalloungo
choir f - troy. Ulul
.
Call 114-1112-1431 or
114-112-7711.

Ml•oc1-W.....-o.e12por
bundla.FOB.
Conto!'\lng
1~
ton.
Dlilo ·
P-··
- Co.
Pomoruy, Ohio. 1114-182-1411 .

Two new metched we.tt..r.d

postltlmpo, Uood NCR-8

Hp.rtment cuh reg"'-r. 1t0n
fi•tu .... Col 114-812-3207.

Uving room _
1018. 2 welwt chalrt.
good condltioft. Coli Joo
Struble 11•-912-3424.

v...,

lc66

Cto~t

Building Supplie1

Building Materills
Block, briek, MWII' piPft, wln-

dow1, lintels, ..c . Cl•ude Win-

Coname bk)cka all tlza1 yard or
dollvary. Mooon •nd. O.lllpollo
Blodl Co.. 123~ Plno St ..

O.lllpollo, Ohio CoN 114·441·
~783.

stereo' component ..,.._. tor
..le.ln vary aood condttlon. C. I
114-192-12)3- 1:00 p.m.

-p

lop. eeao. Col1114-211·1~22 .

Reg.

for -- Ul. largo
ha-.

Fl-

lood. All

Dol-. CoM 114-742-2418.

U Heul truck• . 1nd ,,.... for

..... 304-171-742~.

IIURPLUS DENIM. Corhon.
R-1 Clathlng. N - Mw!r
- • eu.oo. - . now
worll oloth6ng.lloota•ll winter It
riUOfelhle priaM., Sam Som•
nnlltl' o, Old 111. 21'Junmlon
lndep•ndanae Ro.... fatt R•
wnswOod. Fri, a... Sun; LIOon8:00 pm. 304-273-811&amp;.
Dak

R. .ltiiod Quartor H._ A!lrll
1114, ............ - . ......

n-.
c.1 304-8714:30p.m. All&lt; ""

2717 -

Woodman.

Approlllnt!lt•ly 17 aeram lc
moldo al lor UOO.OO. C.H

304-17S. 7110.

.

hog.- . Y&lt;ifl·wt.J&amp;Oibo.

1-.g--UIIO. lfloto. Ono
.... old. Cod .. 4-211-11101.

I - : 3 Roulolli•od Apo-

loou. CoR 114·446·4018.

vz.

·Boatl and
Motors for Sale

Reaia-.d fUll ·blood Umou1in

bull, 2~ yn old, 304-418· 1112
oft• 1:00pm.
Hay

&amp; G

• (0:30)

•
ram

·•

i

Cheora
Ill CZl M' A"S"H
7:05 ())' Andy G~ff11h
7:30 II (2) . (I) Hollywood
&amp;qua rae
II(I)Judgo
iiDl Wheal of Fortulljl t:;1
IIJI cro..llre
11 1121 il2l Jeopardy! t;1
lUI Iamey Miller
II CZJ WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 ()) Sanlord end Son
8:00 (J) Hell Town ·eeveriy Hills
Marries Hell Town
II (2) 9J The Co aby ·Show
Theo and Clair plot 10 keep
. Cliff !rom repairing a leaky
pi~, himself. t:;!
. (I) t1J (I) Tho Charmlnga
Eric begins to. fantasize
about another woman. t;1
(f) The Wee! of lhe
lmaglnellon Experience the
grandeur of 1he western
landscape.
iiDl Ill 1121 Tour of DUlY When
a new·captaln takes
command, Bravo Company is
overrun by enemy. 1;1
!Ill Tliovtllon Tile race to .
invent talevlslon created

A•·

lnbimally lnop- •• • guam-..
- - C.ll 114-446-0111. w.

.~

llilony .

boloo. con 114-211-3334 ,
Jo-.Ohlo.
Smell ~ hiles. •10 eecK.

77

Auto Repair

Import Auea lervlae..
Rlploy. WMt Vlrglnlo. - -

Jim'•

t.;

. (.

71

.eat•

or

""*'•

eult••·

;oc~x4X8

intense international rivalries.

8l!!l

PrlmoNewo
.
MOVIE' Thurtderbolt and
UghHoot {RI(1 :55) . .
Ill(!) MOVIE: Forced
Venge811CI {RI (1 :30)
8:05 ()) MOVIE: Ban Hur (NR)

=

..,.,lon.

8:30

(f) crJI ~yeleryl
•
~
iiDl 1111121 Simon and Simon

Rick a'nd A.J. figh1 wi1h a
bounty hunter

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I eAWA FILWCNTYL.AST
N~ABOLlT .DE L.OUI6, 1HE

OW HEAWWEIEiHT a-tAMPION.

I

HES THE aLJY Wl-0 ICTI RED
WHEN HE: H6"'RD I W#.; 601NC:i ID
eE A PRIZEFIGHTER,

\~

FuNNY. .. THEY DIDN'T
6AY ANYTHING'-

ABa.JT THAT.

.

I

e

(!) The Brain Examines how

vision and mobility affect our
perception of ll1e world.

(1 :00) D
iiDl •1121 Knoll Landing

Suspicion about Charles
Scott's motives clouds
• Abby's wedding plans . t:;l'
crJI Newa
IIJI Evening Newe
II (!) Benny Hill
10:30 (J) GNII American OUidoora

,.
,.

(0:30)

Volcee • Vlllono Follow
con1roversl81 poe1 Ezra
P.o und in his search for a
poetic voica. 1;1
lUI No•
o
• (!) Hog1n'e Horot1o
11:00 (J) Remington Sloe" Corn
Fed Steele

• a&gt; Cll e &lt;ll 1111 •o
9J Nowe
1!1 COl~ llelkltbllll
(f) Sign

IIJI Monlfllno

... __

".....

-~~~~~~-- t.lll14-

..........

.. .,20'

Now...,.,..lltllloom•w
.....
Col tor _ _ _

,.....
~- Down-

City ,.,.. lupply, 114-441-

- -- -

.. -

~

(I) Chllrl

w~·=:''
pold.

tow• loeMion.

-

· Po..

.

114-441-0711.

• '

1\1

•

uUitUill
wal·

••"on

I HGIIII. C.ll

2. .1 .
"Thle game show 11 juat like
· chalra,
except we hive live kleptomaniacs
.and oiiry four thlnga to 11111."

WMI

to

bW, Y.....

'-e!

pootlll, . . 1114-171-1110. .

-·

,m-.
,.,.,
.... ........ . . . .

~-llaail

• .,. .. Cellt14-.........

lrl-·. .

.AK10 7 6

+K984

By James JacoiJy

SOUTH

Why do you suppose that South bid
three no-trump rather !ban tbree
hearts? The answer lies in the bidding
m e thods used by North-South. After
!be two-diamond overcall by West,
North would have made a negative
double, e ven with a strong hand, if he
had held four hea r ts. Since North's
three-club bid did show strength while
denying any heart le ngth, South sim"
ply too,k advantage of his probable diamond stopper to bid the no-trump
ga me.
·
'I' he contrac t was iffy, but the ke y to
d eclarer's success lay in putting press ure on West, WhO had to.o many high
c a rds for his own good. Decla rer won
the opening lead with the queen of diamonds and immediately led the 10 of
clubs and le t it r ide. That he ld the
trick. Declarer cas bed the a ce of
s pades and the king of he arts and
played a second heart to dummy's ace.
West took a while before discarding a
club. So declarer cashed another heart.
in dummy. More anguish from West,
who finally shed a diamond . Declarer
played back to his other high spade
and then exited with a diamond. West

.K 6 5 2
• Q3 2

'

+AK106 2

+to

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

West

2.

Pass

North

East

Soulh

3+
P...

Pass
Pass
Pass

3 NT

Opening ·lead:

t+

+7

could cash the A-K-10 of diamonds and
the high spade, but the n had to lelMI
away from· !be K-9 of clubs . That was
a well-deserve d nine t ricks for South,
who had read the ca rds and his oppQnent well.

James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on .
Bridge • and "Jacoby on Card Games"
(written with his f ather, the late Oswald Jacoby) are now available a.l
bookstores. Both are published by
Pharos Books.

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Intrigue
6 Animal's
stomach

1 Hire, as
an actor·
2 Novelist,
James-·
3 Unclothed
4 Black ·

lOGuam
seaport
11 Furious

13European
fmch
14 Lithe
111 Course
implement
16 Thrice,
to a
pharmacist
18 Eosin, e.g.
19 Arsonist,
for

one
21 Appetizing
24 Olive
genus
28 £nhance
29 Devoutness
30Chinese

II

Diogenes
6 Mild cigar .
7 Tractor- 23 Otto trailer

-011 .

.:=

~· .

Jallllllenny

--Night

8 Athirst
9 Clllllling
12 Billy Williams
17 Ron -

.&gt;'

Bismarck

feathe r

35 Pitcher
.36 Silly ,
38 Faction
swnmer
39 Potter's
27 Scot. port
need
19 Valley- 29 Pit
40 Proceed
20 Din
31 In good 42 "Maple
21 Perched
shape '
· Leaf -"
22 "Much .- 33 Tureen
44 Actress
about..."
aqjunct
Rita

25 Tennis
tenn
26 Somme

society
31 Jodie
or
Preston
32 Small type ·
34 Young
sheep
37 Belgian
commune
38 Scatter
seed

41 Tony,
for
one ·

43 Pointed ·
arch
45 Stately
46Burdened
47 Frenzy

.a correct

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'ITS-Here's how to work It:

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

wlfh

apostrciphea, the length and fonnation of the words ate all
hints. Each day the code letters are diHerent.
CRYPTOQUOTB .
2·11

NA

ENVE

H 'K

FWTDL

1ft fumkure
I II ...
~-,
104· 171 -4 14 fo r· free _. :•

34 -:-'- and

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

(J)'NQuj

tlllll (I) IIIOVII: Giunlll Din INA I
(1:5'1)
.

,1:10

cuckoo
Item for

.

,2:001111mt
IIIII Allin
•........ 1;1

•

'.

:·,

.9

emTul

I

:. :

EAST
+a n
.JI087 3
198
+6 3 2

WEST
+QH

Tightening
the screws

Luck

...,.,..., u....._,..
·:
22-. Tlteloool
·,
m
Cell ' •

" " " " " "·

cas

Night

·
.
-·....
--·71:
''
_,,._ 87

tl~;=--&amp;.
~·7000.

+ JS 4
+ A. Q J75

® M1gnum, P.l. Liltle Bh of

: .:

UpholatiiY

.

• (J) Nlgltlllne 1;1
iiDl Megnum, P.l.
,
!Ill Jameo McNeil Whis~er:
His E1chlngs ·
IIJISporla Tonight
• 111 'Night HHt'
La..

* ,

"" ....

.

• (!) Love Connecflon
11:30• (2) 9J Tonight Show

-..r.: - -

-

.

crJ1

J..:;-=.::••:.::..:-=:::_·-=--:=

~:..,!~·.:.::
a.- ......

over the

cus1od1 ol a crook,
11J1 Larry King Llvel ,
9:30 8 (2) i121 Nigh! Court A
hltman plans to fulfill his
contract at Christina 's pa(ty.
10:00 (2) Slrllght T...
(2) aJ)i:.A. Law Van
Owen Is chosen by an
underworld leader to taka on
a case.

7

rm~;\o.:

James Jacoby

1111 A Different World
Dwayne tries to get a
Valen~ne· s Day date via the

1J5 Cologe Baoketball

--to-Uno.,_ • ~~~-.

Z-U-88

e (2)

II (J) MOVIE: 'Star Tl'lk
II: The Wralh of Khan' ABC
Thuradlr Nigh! Movie iPGI
(2:33) t;1
9:00 (J) 700 ClUb
II (2) 1111 ChHra Frasier
gets cold fee1 concerning h is
~com1ng mamage to Lilith.

d.....

-

NORTH
+9 3
.AQ 4

airwaves.

a.

I1-==:::=======-f=======:;;;;;.~

BRIDGE

(J)

N••

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

LyC1lum - .Ghost - Ubra ~. N/C11/y - ·TEN YEARS
Why Ish that the only glasses which break are crysta l, but
the gas station freebies last TEN YEARS?
·

(3:32)

e.2-...
ll

I ~SI~2;·:Z:SI~8;.:::::;::;:;::

'

I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWEU

a

extr::s. Cal 114-441·70n.

MlMd hey or 1tf11tt1 - aquare
bolos. Mlaod hoy · lorgo round

UNSC RAMBLE LETTE RS TO
GE T ANSWER

8:35 ()) Carol Bumlll
7:00 (2) Remington Steele Steele
AwayW11h Me
11 (2) PM Mogoalne
(J) College Balketb1H
(I) Enl-lnmonl Tonight
(I) People'• Court
(f) crJI MacNeil/ Lehrer
No•Hour (I :.00)
i!D) Newe
i1J1 Monayllnl
Ill 1121 1111 Wheal of Fortune

,.

tuv junic tnnemlallon,.
1173 z 28 eo.......

.n. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
·
•' ,~ IN THE SE SQUARES

e (!)Too Clole for Comfort
.

•

Complete the chuckle QUOied
by filling in the missing words

.
_
L-lC--L-.L-1---'-.....J you de.,.elop from step No . 3 below·.

il)llnalde Politico '88
lUI WKRP In ClnclnneU

Auto Parts
• Acca11oria1

U•ed •,rabultt transmlllfonl.

•

illiBoclyE~

,,

Ie

NERVID
f--,-1:.:_::,1;:-6:..:,1.:..-.::;1...:.,1"'7-1

(I) II (() ABC Ne,.. Q -'"
(f) Nlghlly Buoinoee Report

1171 . 21 HP Evlnruclo boot
mot:or to tflde for a 12 or 14 ft. ·
V-Bcmom aluminum bolt &amp; •

76

a

1111 II 1121 C8S Newe

HP, Force outboard motor. Uaed
1'h: aumm1r1. E~.· oond.,

esooo. C.lll14-742-30ao.

.1111 NBC NlghUy N1w1

1J5

, .

Sign s een in the window of a
L......L- -L.- -1.- -1.- .1 " newly opened dentist's office:
. -- - - -- -- -,"You 've Lost That Lovin g -."

Boanlw11&lt; BIHI&gt;all'e
. Super Bowl of Sporte Trivia

1188 loyUnor Coprl, 18 h .• 125

lu-ng hogs, coil 304·171·
4308.

114

8:~ • (2)

troller. C.H 114-388-1718.

'

FOR BALE: Crooobrad Bool
Coltltl. PriCI(I to oolll C.ll
114-441-4012. Evonlngo only.

R

. AFLAT

~~-·..;.:....:,.1.::....;.1:.-;·lr:li--1 .

8:05 ()) Allee

1 U2 KX210, eiOO.OO. C.ll
304-171·4112.

76

now.

F l - dolhorod, otadiod,
UI.OO. M-County, - It, Ohio a other areu within
rMeDn, our dilcMetton, 304111-3441.

BUILDING SUPPUES
SAVE 10% to 71%

Molol. 114-448-7318.

,37*•

Cll lfOI Ill 1121

lUI Fa"'- Ill LHe
Ill CZJ Happy Daye

lng' In Honda .PIIrll anci .-vice
1-Wif« bOerd 7 / 11x~ ' JC8' ·
Coill14·441-8111.
·, olnco
1178. Pilon• (3041 37~U.SI,
lh4'd'-U.91
.
·
-lcllulble. any ag~. hn• ret-en1857. Nine to five.
Apto. CoU 304-171· 7731 or
2-T-111
yellow
plno
oldlng
Miud
,...,
or
oHolo
In
oquonl
LAYNE'S
F\'RNITURE
en. 3()4..175-2784.
171-1104.
~x4 ' x9 '· 113 . 95 each.
bll•. Mbed h-r In large round
KMMon hoolor, uorclto
New lrlllll" Ht up on • ._ 6n
boloo. Coli 114· 211·3334.
Sofa• •rwt chllin priced from
3 -'llllll4'x8' laUin plywoodhlka.
IMna
room
eulte.
phone
79 Motors Homaa
Cam.l Florida. C.ll 114-441· Ntw compltttly furniahtd
Jockoon,·Ohlo.
304-171-flll.
1partm...-t • mollll• home In
1395· ::e:.-,:hl:jl~3•;g ·~~,.&amp;.,:;:"· uw cedir bo•rd•
Flll&lt;illCidl
1•71
&amp; Campers
1
~ '
city. Multi only. Porldng. Coli up ta
· _ •- ·
~ ~,. 12" K72" 2 tor 19 Do
til&gt; till. Recliners 1~21 to ·; 5• No 2 8 .. ·pruce bim ' tldlnn
ROiilgnol lids 11101. blndlngo.
1983 Schultz. '1 4x70 on 1.1
114-441·0331.
•37&amp;. Umpa U8 to n 25.
• · • •
··•
Novdco boots 1101Ail. polu;
[ I d II.' jill I Llll 1111
acrat wtth 21 fl .x 30 fl . IIIIP·
Dinette~ *109 and up 10 *495. v-growd-38C lin, ft.
e171.Q9 10101. W-liurn 1
Shown by appaintm.nt only. 2 lA. .-pi Stove • ttfrlg. Wood ...... w-1 cM1r1 U81 to
I
Colonial
buded
m11sonlta
l1p
Business
21
11 tt ~ trailer, llaeps • . •
Coiii14-74Z-2177.
lumloltod. No• Go Mort. Call '791. Dook •too ,. 10 e371. olcllng- t23 sq .. 20 • oq. lull otrfnv · - • gultor e110.00.
304-871· 2412.
114·44f-70ZI.
:::-:,-,....,,--,::--::.-,;-~
·
·
e400.oo. coli 304-nl-1111 ,
Opportunity
1
Hutch• '400 •nd up; Bunk
~•· •1ltq.
1 ' 00 pm. ·
7-7/ 18•4• 8 preflnllhed
Auto'1
For
Sale
·
.
·
1914 14•70 Shuhz troller. J I-B-EA_u_n_FU-L--,.A.,-PA.,..,.-RTM::-:=EN:-:T=S:-7:AT becfl compllle w-mattreeMt
McO.nltia Cultcem Butcherln~o
~room , 2 b..h. e...n.nt
*215end upto*381. 8lbybedt '"tor tlmond lidlng-~13. 96
condition.
114-141-3001.
IUDOET
PRICII
AT
JACKI doyo • · tii!Ufllltortng
I NOTICE I .
•no. Mllttr.... orboxaprlngs nc ·
.
1 - t1 0.00 ond " - e8.001. 1113 Chavy. Cllatlon. Am radio.
SON ESTATEI. 131 Jockoon fUll
or twin 118. firm t71, 1 nd
8-Matonite rock
brick
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH14e
lb
cue
•nd
wnp.
304-182- outo. trano .. PI, ,8, 11,000
Plitt from t183 • mo. Walk to
'88. Queen , ... U215, King unflniahed paneling :I4X4x8- 3224.
ING CO. recommend• th1t you 1982 Mention. 14x70, 3 bed·
mlloo.etiiO. Conbo-otiN
room,
2
full
batht,
metal
buUd·
lhott
end
inovi•.
114-44&amp;*310. 4 dt~~Wer chest U8. Gun 16.911 lith.
dO butin... with J*)ple you
O.lllpolla
Daily T-no or lor
ing,
ctntral
air,
porch
tnd
2118.
E.
O.H.
a•blnllb 1 'un. oa1 or electric
9 -Aiitlbe ftorals en~ lac• panelk'now, end NOT to 1end money
- - ... 114-4Af.
t37 . Blty 1111111,..111 lng "Ax4x8-t7.H end 18.11 Part.a:le lighted sign • •2n. .....
through the meil untH you hw• awningt, vinyl underpinning. Nlco 2 BA. 4 'II millS from ,.
F,.. dollvary a '-'"· Ollor 2342.
81
Home
Set up on ~ted lot in Mldcll...
invwtig1tld the Offering.
•4&amp;. Bed fflm• •zo.
All wood paneling axplra Fib., 11. Phone w.ve.
port. c.n 814~982• 1831 after 01lllpolit. Stove. Nfria. • w1ter
Improvement•
e30 • King
•&amp;o. Good
•
•
·
- Ohio 1-100- 11n · eo-. lrodl. 111.000 .
furnllhed . No peu.. •2:1&amp; • .,.o. Mllat:kHI
00
af bedroom
oak •nd pine 1nd ~lreh- •1 ~· 9 15 1-800-142·2434
513-3413.
8: ·
Col 114-441-1038.
rniiOo,
..
V-1.
t1200.
Coli
meiiiiCiblnets headbolrdlt30 ta na .lle~ch.
.
22 Money to Loan
' 114-44f-1111-Doy, 441-1244
New 1188 Country Villi,
'
1 1 · Bitl: room Pinal•-.. glued
.
•nd
up
to
•aa.
tile
1nd
~mooth
paHem*1.91
BAIEM~NT
•'
New
delun
2
Br.,
equipped
14x72. 111 lltc:trlc •. Mt up on
-~~••••••••••••
to·•12.11
WATIRPIIOOJINO
1
riverfront lot. 114-812· 3348 kitchen, low uttlltiM. EXceltent
10
DIIYt
ume
at
Cllh
with
,
1871 l'anlloO Orondprllt. 2 ilf.,
Unoo~81..,...... ..,.an:·.
A CAIIH LOA.N TO .10.0001 ·•fter lp.m.
No ..-.. O.p. • rtf.
pp o!Md credle. 3 Mil• out 12-Whill 48 .. •22" h1th room
1
66
Pau
for
Sale
outo...10. Colll14·441·1111
.... ....... ..,...... tumllhail.·
NO CREDIT OR EMPLOYMENT
roqulrod. ~•II 114-441·12110. , Bullville Ad. Open 8em to lpm wnlt"- with mart:le top
(8)
or441-1244.
Frao .......... CoN oollool"
NEEDED FOR NEW PRO - Kirkwood, 12x61, llh~hen
Mon.
thru B•i. Ph. 11•·441· gradN-1118.95.
1-114-237-0411, day or nigh\ ;
ORAMI (7131 812-8408, 24 tumilhld. new Se•• 21,
14 Locuat St.- Fumllhed, up13-Chln.l
•nd
rurble
round
and
0322
Acoonl LXI. I opd ..
Rogeral•••ment
Groom ond Supply Shop-PM 1HO HOURS.
llaln. 3 room1. No children.
t)tu 1lr cond, eac cond. 304·
owl vanity bowta- whtt. 1nd
Grooming. AI~ breed1 . .. AII AC. tun root. 30,000 miJ&amp;s.
Utlllll• paid. t210 o· mo .. t71
871-7277 0&lt;171-8131 .
color-•18.95.
VW~o~hO~pr~oo~fl~~~·~~~·--~~-Valley Furniture
-::
.. lj
dttJ. Coli 814-441-1340, or New and
otyloo. lo"" Pot FOOd Doolor. no.100. eo• 114-441·2121.
1~-Color commode•-•49 .95.
uted furniture 1nd
SWEEPER
end
MWing
mad:lne'
Julio
wPh.
114-448-0231
.
Profa•sional
441-1170.
23
1974 · FrHdom mobile home,
aPpllcancae. Call 114· 446 · White commodel-139.81.
1872 Chw. :W. tor: truck. •ipd.
Npalr. pli11, •nd IUppllee. Pick
12xll. a·bedroom•, ellel.aric,
11... Colo; pedi1UI ln•torlatServices
7672.
Hour• 1~ 1 .
DrotOnwynd Cottory Konno! . GoOd cond . Call 114-218- . . •nd delivery, Davte VICUum •
und............ U .IOO.OO. 304· 11 Court lt.- 2 ledroam. 2
..9 .91. 2"" uoo.
Cleaner, on• h•lf mila up-1
I;FA Hlmolayon, Porolon and 1174.
betht. kHch.,. fumiehad. w / w
18-Whlle 1tael b1th tub•·
J • S FURNITURE
Ooorg•
c..- Rd. Coli 114..,.,,.• 3215 a mo. piueutlltitl.
Slam..
kittens.
AKC
Chow
159.95 each, 2 for •100· color
IFol'lftllly P1r10n's Fumitural
Furniture refinishing end repelr.
441-0294.
pupp~.. .
Call 114-448,3844 1171Mo-C.rio. 1874Chwy
No JMta. depoeft &amp; r.t.
178.91Nch.
1411
Ealtern
Aw.
pick-up. Call . 114-441 - 3~43
oltor 7PM.
quality work 1nd ,.oon1ble 33
Farms for Sale
231 Flfft Ave.- 1 S.droom.
17-Whirlpool tubs-flbergl1u,
room aulta ~m t179 &amp;
olbirl PM.
ratll, frM ntlmM ... 3M· t71SF &amp; F Carpentry. Carpentry end ~:
kllehen fumilhtd. river vt.w, ·Uving
complete
plumbint1186.
reg.
up. Bedroom e~itn 1488.81 •
plumbing work. Rea1on•bla ,
7$9.1 .
AKC Rog. D.obormon puppl... 4
'175 • mo. plut utlltl•. Sl~;~gle up.
e131&amp;.
·
·
Complete mlcrowsvelltlnd•
1983 Doda• Colt. 2 dr.; duol price. C.ll114-381·1713.
.
or couple. DIIPOitl &amp; ref. No
18-1
pc.
fiberg
....
tub.
lhOW•
. . -. rod • ruot. etoo · lhlfllir. 71,000 mlloo. e1110.
t39.91 • up.
30 Krl fll'm : Mo1dy tillable.
_,
Coill14-210-1714.
or
Come in 1nd ri'lllt the new era •111.915 aach, white
Rio Grande. Pond, .,_,., - - Coli 614-441-4128.
c.s 114-371-2721.
Con- Sopllc Tonka· 1000 ·
c::olor.
•
Owners.
He&lt;il Estolr.
liJOod home. C1ll 014-241gol .• 1100 ,o~. and Jot Aorotlon •
Rog. blooll molo - l n . -.
Nl;e 1 IR. apt. nHr HMC .
11-Bright
and
lntiQut
br1111
and
9182.
Ploylul
II
1
kkltl.
1
yr
old. 1811 MollbuSW. 71,000mMn. · - · Foctory trol- ...... .,
Stove. refrio, • drepes. Call
Wlnity
end
tub
&amp;
chrome'
Uatd refrigeretqrs·whltt, II·
.... . , _, uaoo. eo11 114- lhop. RON EVANS ENTER- :
.7&amp;. Coll814-441-8874 .. o441-4430.
114-448-4782.
mond copper~ llkeniW. Corbin lhower fiLicet. Stvt 10%.
.
PRIIES, Jo.._, Ohio. 114- &lt;1
20-2
gal.
bUCkl't
off
whhe
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Snyder Fumlture, 915&amp; Second
281~15130 .
'
·•
3 room N•rbnem: with icraened 6Ave
AKC
R
o
t
loiHit
Hiitind
31 Homes for Sale
1elltur.d Will pelnt- 14.91, r-..
..
Gllljpoli•.
&amp;1•
-••e
pupa. Rora 1'0¥ pupo, UOO. 1111 Canll• Rl. Cl..n inakle
porc::h. totll electric:. 4181h
e9.B&amp;.
·
1171
.
Rogular trl-. - , t1 110. C. II • ouL 20,000 ,.._, outo .. PS, RON'S Televlelon Service . ·'
Second Awe. UOO pe1 month
21 · 1 gel. eluminum fiberlld root
4 BR ., fir\IPI.ce •.fuH bll.ment. 3
Commerciel property and hOUM I)IUI security dlposit. Adults
PI, AC, AM·F~·CoU, tilt. Z.O Hou10 Clill on ftCA, Guaar.
114-117-1718.
coetlnt-*20.915.
mi. so. of G•llipoli1. 129,900.
18000 ITU 1ir conditioner,
loti -G111ipoll1 Farry. Cell 304- only. No pots. c.n 814-441luollllloctlll onglno. e1100. CoH GE. 1-ollng In Zonllh. C.ll' '
brick
I
sq.
f1
.
22-K-lulil
white
Cllt D•ys-8 14-448-1816. 1ft1r
excel. cond., •121. Firm. Seart
871-0108 . .
304-1,1-2398 or 614·448- ;
2211 or 114-441-2111 .
AKC B•N&amp;ft pup. T~-cqkn, hes 114-311-aZ40.
&amp;:oo- 448-1244.
Kenmore d,.,.r, good eond.,. cen.-•1 .150.
-rmod. AI otud· AKC 1172 Mollbu Chwy, 310, outo., 24~42 lot• for ..,.,. 1h mile north of Modem One IR. 1p.-tment. C. II 1\00, Firm. C1ll ,81.4-_441- 23-Epro•Y coafeid IIMI clout
a....n end AIC.C Sheltte. Call
and door llhatvlng. Seve
to
3 BR .. 1YJ blth, form1l DR . brick
8348.
Eurek• on At. 7 . Rural ~ter
114-117-1917.
2 - - Badon. Coil oltor 4 Fetty Tr• Trlmml~~- otump
75%.
fireplece. Bilwel deck. Brick end •vellftl•. 10 ft. wide. 238 ft . 814- 448-~390.
PM-114-441-7717.
- 1 . Coil 304-17 -1331 .
·
24-Wood,
1luminum
end
vinyl
· fflme ranch loc1ted 11 end of long-o ..h. C.ll 614-211· 1510
1I cubic ft. doubl1door refriger5
Fumithed
•pertment131
4th.
AKC
r
a
g
!
.
Poldnoded
window1.
(BowJJ
,
(BiyeJ,
quiet drive. One plu1 •ere. 1fterl PM.
Ave., 2 ' BA. UOO a mo. Water ltor. Cill 814~ 848· 30815 .
IC•.. ment), (DOI.iblehung). pupo. t171.00 - · 304-•71- 1177 luloll Rotol. Bocly·llood Rotary or ~· tool drlllng.
Qllrden 1pace. City 1choole.
paid. Coll614-441-441hhor7
4130 or 171' U78.
oltopo. Motor - · ropolring. Molt well• compl.e:ed IIJN diY.
Save •• wholuale and below,
Hell pump-centr::l air. Outdoor
PICKENS
USED
FURNITURE
Collolnir I PM-114-448-4289. Pump NIM lnd earvia11. 304PM.
215-V. Temp:arect thermal pane.
ttor•oe , .,.,.. Cell a 1•-.w~led1.
l1mp1,
tlbltl,
88&amp;-3802
Rr:nldls
couc:hl, chH'a. dlnnetts, mi1c. 01... p1ntls. 132ll71· '28.811,
9&amp;&amp;7.
67
1 BR . apt. with etove a
.
Mu1lc1l
1111
Ch
...
Coprlco.
2
·
·
i3h71
·
U&amp;
.
001.147&amp;78
·
HaH mile out Jericho Road,
autometlc wtth built in DIUI•· IUtrkl Trw •nd Uwn hrvtce. ·
•lfrta•ator. No pats. nee a 8:00-8:00
lnatrumantl
Sub-Terr1nium hOm• with 1 ~ 'lz
Sundays 1 2:00· 145.00J. Full CIM lot•·•&amp;.OO
17,000 oc:tuol miiM. C.ll 814- lawn c ..... l•ndscaplng, INmp 1'
mo.
e100
dop.
C.ll
814-441pr.pc.
1
....
1:00, 304-875-1460.
1 cre1 . loCited 1ppro• . 5 m•l ..
441-~10 .
removal , 304-671-2842 or '
3117.
21-21 " Ocotgon th..,.,•lluded
from Rio Gr1nde. 'Countv weter. 41
Homes for Rent
171-2903.
Mu1t 1~1 . 120,000. Good inNew
lllectrlc Holpolnt dryer for gllu wlndowe- ~89 . 95, 2 for
Guttlr Letll0n1ll lndhlduel In- 1117 Old1. Cutl...1 Supreme.
.128.00.
.
vettment propenv. C.ll 814- Nicliy turnl1hed · am 1M hou11. Furni1htd apartment. All u1ilftl11 1111, 304·171· 2130.
struction. lrunlclrdl't Mu. . Coli 304-773-111&amp; or 773- ' TrNI trimming •nd removal,
paid. Adult• only. C. II ~14-441·
27-72'.' Walnut ltlrttr ktlchen379-2752.
·Adultl only . Ref. required. No 9623.
odd .tob•. tr" mm.t:... 304- '•
lncludlng (Z-11"wolll.
(1 - 114-441·0817 or coil Jeff 1111 .
W.m.loy -ructor, 814·441·pets. Colll14-441·0331.
171·3312 . .
,•
2 aR . hom• with flrepl•ee- th
64
Misc. Merchandiaa . 72"bosol. 11 -72" pc. topl- 8077.
1111 OoH. D-. IIOndwd. 4 ·
·'
Furnished epartment- Nice loa.
'111.91.
aero lot nllr town. will ••II for Urge 2-3 IR . houtl. Plenty of tlon
1llutilld" fuml1htd .
28~2 gal. pail K-Lux white
~
t23, 500. Owner will fin.nce dorep. Hendereon arn. C.ll MuttIn dty,
•
lntornotlonol I ~ drum 101 Aunt good, •MY to mllintain. 82
Plumbing
hiWI ref. &amp; dap. Call
mornr· t4.85.
t21.500. Co11814-448-7881 .
Ast~ng
price
•8110.
Coil
114e1110.oo.
eon
304-171·4112.
814-448-7021.
. 114-441-4119.
Calllhlft'l Used Tire Shop. Over 29-Pine louvered Interior shut&amp; Heating
HI-&lt;1311.
1,000dree,IIRea ·1 2,13.14, 15, tere. Below Wholetalt prl-=-.
Cottege in Flo~d1for Slit. 2 BA, Very nice, 2. poallible 3 BR . Gracloul lfvlng. 1 1nd 2 btd·
"
11. 11.1. I mil• out Rt. 218. 30~ 1 pe. p1le lemon color
1 blth, p1rtly fu rnleh.t. Lot houM In Middleport. OW, GO,
Rod
Hot borgolnol Ofllfl clool. .'
room
epartmantt
1t
Village
Coiii14-211·1ZI1
.
commodM. NG··UII .II. now
: 1111 :;llp,'ll'
80•120. Locttion-2 block• from AC. full b...ment. ExceU.nt
coro. bo ..., pltlnM ·d. SurCARTER'S PLUMBING
M1nor end Alvenlda Aptrt·
.121.81 .
btl&lt;:h &amp; 2 block• from bay. location. Call 114·441·8201
...... Your Aru. luyet~~ Guide.
AND HEATING
In
Middleport.
From
ments
SWIMMING POOLS · e119
31 ~Interior prehung doors. fln\ ! I .I I iII ~
Asking UI.OOQ. C1ll evening••. a'tter &amp;:30 PM.
111101-117-1000 Eat. 8-IIH.
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pint
:.
*211.
lnctudlng
utlllt l•. C.ll
NIIW
ttft
DWir 1887 Mod4!1
llhed
and
unflnilhtd.
Cltolce
1,8131 967-8944.
O.lllpoHt. Ohio
-.
814·992-7717. EOH .
Poole. Huth 11•24 ft. awlm olus-e29.85 - ·
·
1110 Chevy Cllatloti. 2 cliior, Phone 114-441· 3888 or 11'- 1••
Hou• for 1111 or r.nt ~ 1400 ....
,,.., 4 ft . dHP- lncludll deck, 32~ Ext•lor ltNIIneulded panel
2 BR . House In Eureka. Vinyl h .- 3 lA., Z fuR botho. utility 2 bedroom lplrtment on uneotn
.
.-. :1
•
.... ·wllool d~ . • 3.000 44.1 -4477
fence,.,......
•
w•mnty.
lndllla·
prohung door1 - '71.81
•nd
l idlng. C•lll14-261· 1813.
room, t•mily room. 2••28 Oil'·
61 Farm Equipment
- -- eaoo. eou I14HIM. Pom-. Call 114-HZ· tlon • financinG awllble. Cal •aa.9a .....
H 2 - -.
ege. llvtl Jot. At. 3&amp;-Aodney 1138 or 114-112-3488.
24 hn.: 1-1100-341-0141. ,
33 AtiiVPM of door and window
2 bedroom, 2 blthl, 2 c• .,... C.lll1 4-441-2111 .tt... a
trim.
Fli:lthed
and
unt~nW~ed.
gll'lge. level lot on Rt. 33.
CR088 • IONS
1IIO Dodge Horlaon. AutO, AC.
Conage efficiancy, total electBidwell C.th fled .Store now Pl..llc •nd wood-t1 .00 to
Swimming pool, ...elite. CION PM.
U.l. 31 W.,., Joaliaan, Ohio. - - drlvo. QIMI ohopo.
ric.
Ntriglflltar,
l'love,
nlca.
rtldy
for
epr.lng.
In
ttock
an
13.oo
pr.pe.
114-ZBI-14111 :
·
eaoo. Colll14-112-1141.
10 Maig• ·High . C•ll 11,·992· AvalllbM M1rch 11t.· • eR. HUD approved. 2211 Mt. Yer·
tot..oao REppll•. el fertlllur,
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Mo- Forgu-. - H 32&amp;4.
houH, full buement . *100 dep. non Ave .• Pt. PINMnt. 114·
fencing. ...,..... llld. w1tar •
Wtlltton. Ohto
Iu111Hot8_l_Ovar 1114 . ,...,_ Horizon. 2.2
Nf. required. *300 a · mo. 192-1818.
drain pipe. C.M for lltat price•· 114-314-3141
Government Homu . From &amp;
Grei'tctvlew Hg... ere~ . c.n .
114-311-BIIe.
......
"""""·114-H2-3711.
Lllul-1t1 00 (U ·R•p•ir) deUnquent tlx 814-448-3111 .. 251-1448.
•40oomplobi
UHd oni!OIII.8l'hono
2 bedroom fumllhed 1pertment.
Rudy mix concr... 8nd II! 1Qdlp;MM. Llrollt eel•cekM In
pr~ptrtln end repo '1. For cur114-HZ-8434 or 304- 81g 3 lA : f•m hOrMI built on ~ncretttupplles. ClllueVMiey I .E. ONo.
11M ~ lmpefl. Shatp.
rent lith c:all 1 ·800- 3151-~117 3 bedroom. 2 full bath .. l.rge Call
your 101. f11.991 ond up. Col Brook Comonl ond luppllol.
""" --21 3
ht. 191156 . ~110 open r#tftlngl. liYing room. dining 'oom and 18~· 2111 .
1-114-811-7311 .
304-773-1234.
131 MF d - , _, "'""''
=::..;_:::.:.::..;_~_:.--:::::;:- · IC­ kitchen.· Atao IIUndry room, 2
Auttic cedar home with 0111: c• garega, central .. ,, Eanarn Nln 2 bediDOm 1pt. In Mlddl•
pert.
n
81
par
month.
Do2 - MF " -·
03710.
1170. .CHilo
uoo.oo. 1111
floors. two-wiY fireplac:•. Pella School Dl11rict .. Reflnncla ,..
no
- . c~~ev
and ret..-.nce riCIUired. O.y
n Oovld
- a t .,_,
t. buollhotl, U3110.
•• . n e10.oo. 304-171Colon lal wlndowa, custom quirod. c.n 114-247-4141.
11
114-H2-2311 , W-1114woodwork. ttudy, 3000 ptu11Q.
wiN llnoftoo. Cal 114- I-;;"":_
· - - - - - =--:- Dili1rd Wl!iar ......; Pools,
812-21101.
211·1122.
'10 Mona. ~ ..,.. .. .10.00 . . Citterns,
ft . approx. 8 wooded KrM In 2 bedroOm houM. Nk:e. Fulty
WMit. Delha:y Any. ~
Sutton Twp. Countryelda. Ap- . c.,et.t. oooc1 loc..Uon. Call APARTMENTS . ..-o """'-.
tlmo.
Coli
114-441-7404-Nil
110
eo
..
t
,
_
.
'
W
IIio
.:.304~'
1
7;;;.:•..:·2~4;.;a
7.
:----'7
1
.,oi...S ot n 12,000. loll lor 114-HZ-1818.
lundey cilia.
1 tj
"""-· ,._ ..........nd O.lllpo177.000- C.III14·141·2UO.
·
"""' with 3 lionom I'
• ...___.
~
llo. 114-4Af-8221 .
·
· -..CoH
- 114·211·1122.
••• 11.......... 11711-la,
- .......... J•Jw... . _ _ . _... .
Two room cotlllge fumilhed.
037110.
UOO.OO, 304-I7I-4IIU.
Hornaforllll. G•illpoli1Fenv. 4 udllliel pe6d. •115.00 WMk.
2 btdroom lumllod API- r.tond
PGOit. cllternt, well. Ph. 11 C: •
bedroolftt, tour Cit' ~~~"~'· Single I*IOn. Cal 304-171241-1281.
'
'71
Orand
SIOOFord--NHbolor,
PI
~
. 038,100.00. 304-171-1114.
3100 or 171·1101.
· '
--"·
·
w.
v
•..
304-la2-3217 or 104-771·
rali&amp;IOIIimodoiNH- runo(IIICMI.
'
·-·
1024.
·~
-~~~- · -· 0.... w11 !Oindow•.
1110.00. 104-171- R•RWotorhMoo.H- ·
HouH for Hilt. cioN tO~. 1 2 'Nica 2 bedroom home, 3~
cll1ers. wella, JNIOII filled. ,.,. t
· Col 114-211·1822.
lltli 1' . I II·
Kfft land, 3 NclrooEM, central 171-1111 .
htM end 16r, houM treU« and 1·•.:..:.:..__:__ __ _ __ _
Jam• 1oyo w - ..eo•
304.1715·1370.
•'
oatr... '4I.OOO.OO « A - Morell 1 - .........."'......... cllpolh.
Jolin
130
·
cccllilltlon• • 2100.....
104-- a~acna....
a-toffar.~·I71-72JI .
nice o'-t 2 'atdootu ~
304-112·1 -Peul Rupe. Jr. w...... •• .~ .
No•• - - -... 1100.
h
;tMt, _.... wud~u,_,
Coii,•·-U.O-Ip.m. '71 ~ Dido. .. Pools, cilleJnl. ...... C.l .,... I I
no Pill, •100.00 diPOIIt,
4tll-3171 .
·~
32 Mobile Home•
w ?#r;a. ...¥111M ur 1
111.00. C.l ,,._..._2111.
e210.00 . monl'!,. 304· 112-·
for Sale
••
3202 .. ·~2-218~- ·
I hotM tr•Uor, HO unci.
W11tar10n' a Wet., H8uUnt. "
rteaan•le retts, . .,......... ""
•1.2110.00. 011 104-171·1171. 72 Truokl for Sale
2,000 g8tlon dellwwv. , I N. .
42 Mobile Home•
411 Fumlahad Room•
for Rant
82 Wanted to •uy
tR7 R - I. I .... .. 2118.
~
_.
AM.fiMCJI.I.DOO ...... toN
hook-up. ww carpM. newly
pMnt.cl, decl:. A..-cy. Inc.

a

l!ll RNd[ng Rainbow Q

FIGURE SHAPING TABLE&amp;

oo-

Su ha~le

(J) Sporlalook
(f) TBA

1HI Hondo Robel. eaoo. 1183 .
Ko-17110 LTD; 1300 mil...
e1000. C.SI14-74Z-3010. '

7.

IOro. Rio Orondo, 0 . Coiii14•Inc. Good 12
_ 4_1_·_&amp;_12_1_._ _,_ _ __

UMd appllMcee 1nd TV Mit.
Ope;~ lAM to tPM. Mon tt:ru

II C2l Cll

QJJN-

1113
480
EIICOI.
cond. eon 114-241-1212.
.

Colll14-441-3077.

low to form four simple WOI'd!.l

lor Framing

80 h . rod-Iron f - 311n~h.
Ak comtM' neof. 2 hp•• ZO
a.

wringM"

2 bedroom mobile home In

e:OO (J) Crazy Uko 1 Fox

MotQrcyclaa

-~~~·

· AQtliUrant equipment tor Hie.

Rearrange le He rs o f
0 fou
r scra mbled wor'ds

lUI Showlfz Today

Amlrioan

:::"".!;~"i;=:,•=
Ff9uro lhoplng TobiN. Buy

_ _:.::..:.;_:..__;:;__;; Edli• d ~. CLAY I . ' OLlAN

EVENING

'83 Ford...,, '71 CutluoltoW -. 304-·18-1130.

• .cftoi&lt;.lald-u p - bod.

Collolt•4PM ·814-441· .

WOlD

THURS., FEB. 11 •

•

1878 Chevy Conver.,. Ven. ,
Good· condition. 49?1. 114- 11
247-4212-

1111.

Early

•

~~~------~--- .

0 .

Full.._ mattre. • foUndidor'!
teartino · til. Reclinen · I;;::;;::;;~~;;~~;,;:-

f!G4noy.

1:Z.IO, 2 lA. -

118t IIY-.t ,.... 14&amp;14 . 2
SR.. ,_1 . -. Prioo roducod.
FRENCH CITY BROKERAGE ·
814-441-8340.

Wanted to Do

49

i:LIJ
J·--:1."

114-317-0113.

18

awningl.

0

Fl-.od. Ploll-up load. Ul a
lood . You haul. Col 114-441-

Refr'eel•tor~

Trllllor

'~~;t;~' ·S© \\~}'\- l£ "EtfSs GAM I

j

"""""
mo .......
doole.
CoM 114-4441-12}4.
•

32

Call u1 fDr your mob'le hom•
ln1urance: Miller ln1ur1nce.
304-882-2141 . Alao: aueo.
ttome. life. hNith.

1171 Dodp Ram Cholttr·;12 000 mi .• M:to.. elr . ......
cond . Coli 114·241·1111 -

-

c.,.

tf you do not nMCI • home.

--- ~--- - ·
0

· Fonolly Priclo Moblltl Homo
...... O.llipollo Forry. 304-175-

CWtom :
I'Mdr. C!,! '

114---4113da¥L-01 •• •

304-137- ~100.

... :kl Ul mobile '""'" Iota for

Television
Viewing

W .O .

__........

OO:t ... ialoil.

a-!or-n Ill. Flrot dmo oflor.
•1 .20 olb. cue• wroppod. Col

-

4

rhe__D~ly sentinei- P&amp;ga 16

BORN LOSER

, . , . Cfty ........ ..... ..........

1M dn•n. 114-44e-

&lt;Chooooyour-.--111.
fad. No dnlp. .....
Rew bat ..,.ry tour MOfttM.

of .:cterty
-work and
parto-tfte · Light
WOf'Mn who le not In Wmilkl.

C.ll 304-171-1171 " ..._....
for mon iuhwiiwllol•. Da natull

-·

Van• •

''

~.~11.1988

1112 Dodgo 2JO R-.

~ C.l 814-441-H71.

'

· -CoM
- 1lftbly
1·111-411-1131
iloi· R - 1 ..t . I 2214,
241wto.

73

Tree • •t um, removal ,
flrtwood·t1 10 clump 1rue•
teed. Help VovoNn I a L $ W.
Don't

ct. W. Ya. 21110.

Truck• for S1la

11ll Dodgo 310. .........~_."
"""""'
II ton cob. ~
114-441-0327.

'M , . . . . .

ol....,.."
R....... 2 0 0 - l t.. -

--·-·"•n-u.

72

Marchancll"

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

DeaniUAA Pl. n

o r -. Mw.-.w. - fl·2 . . .
:e
PI

11 , 1988

Pomeroy- Midclapoet. Ohio

48 Spaoa for Rant

•

L H II 0

ENHJBK

TWGJ L

"

•·

�•
·-~

~(II

. Th&amp;ndly, FebruwY 11, 1888

16-The Deily Sentittel

-Local news briefs-- Heavy snowfall forecast for ·parts of Ohio
EMS has Jour calls Wednesday

By Uded Prea Jnteraatloul

A win.- storm warnin1 was In
effect totlay for western and
northern Ohio while a snow
advisory was. issued for the
southwestern, central and eastern parts of the state.
National Weather servtee forecasters said . heavy snow· was
expected to develop in west
central and northwest Ohio this
morning and spread eastward

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday; Middleport at 1:17 p.m . to Beech St. for Henry
Turner to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:29p.m. to
Golf Course Hill for F1oyd McClellan to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; ~acine at 4: 18 p.m . to Fifth st. for Lisa Johnson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:26 p.m, to Main St.
for Gertrude Bass to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Flooded... .contl.nuecl from page 1 .

Meigs J:ounty Soil . •nd Water map back to the printer to be
Conservation District, Jones
laminated. At the time the maps
asked Mike Duhl, district conser- were printed, Roberts ordered
vatlonlst for· the Soil Conserve- only enough' laminated copies to
Written by the National Rlfie
tlon Service, to check and see ltv give to local governmental agen- Association, the proposal authofunding though his agency might cles and offices . Cost of the rizes anyone to own, possess,
might be available to help raise laminat,ion will be $6 per map, transport ortransfer all firearms
Shady Cove Road . Duhl said he which will mean that the cost to and ammunition &gt;allowed by
would chej:k on the mattef right prtvate individuals for a !ami- federal and state law:
·
nated version will be $8:$10.
away.
The measure also provides
Accompanying Duhl to discuss
In other highway department: tbat, .except as required by state
with the commissioners a re- related' matters, . Roberts r e- law , no permit, llcens.e or tee Is
quest for an interdepartmental
ported that a new dump truck required to own, possess, transtransfer ohfunds, were Torn
was · delivered to the garage port or transfer firearms and
Theiss and Randy Cheveller, earlier in the week, and a request ammunition and that the state's
members of the Soil and Water. tor an Interdepartmental authority In this area is excluConservation District Board o~
transfer of funds for the highway s!ve, thus nullifying local
depar~ent was approved.
Supervisors.
ordinances.
In a related matter, the group
Finally, the commi~sioners
Supporters said the bill is
discussed pay raises for two
met briefly with Beverly Ondera, needed because of a hodge-podge
SWCD employees.
a service representative with of varying local ordinances that
' Approve Request
McNelly-Patrlck Associates, put an undue burden on hunters
The commissioners approved
Jackson, an Insurance consulting and competitive shooters who
the transfer request. which is to firm with which the county has a risk arrest by unknowingly car. be used for the salary increases , contract. Ondera stopped to rytng guns across various jurisintroduce herself to the commis· dictions on lhelr way to shooting
but Commissioner Jones asked
for the board of supervisors to
stoners and to other courthouse and hunting &lt;treas. ·
consider giving future raises in
personnel.
The Ohio Association of Chiefs
July at the same time other
•An executive session to discuss of Pollee and other opponents
county employees are given
a personnel matter with Michael sald the local ordlna·n ces are .
'raises, and in amounts that are in Swisher, director of the Meigs necessary because of weak state
line with the raises given other County Department of Human law under which violent crime is '
employees.
Services, and an .employee of proliferating.
Chevalier and Theiss said the
that agency, followed the regular · In floor arguments, Ney noted
board of supervisors would con- business.
the bill would provide for a
sider the suggestion, but ex·
consistent
gun law statewide
plalned that local SWCD raises
while
at
the
same time not
have always been given this time
dismantling ' any other existing
of year at the request of their
(cOntinued from page 1)
state law.
governing agency.
GaUipolts - t:umce N tenm,
"It won 't allow people to just
Duhl reporle(l on a new Meigs Emelyn S. Scarberry. ·
strap
on guns any time they walk
County project which is being
Syracuse - David ·F . Lawson,
down
the street," he said.
proposed for possible funding .. Tara D. Wolfe, Debra L.
But
Sen. Lee r. .
from Resource Conservation and Offen berger.
Development through the· BuckLong Bottom- Henry E. Bahr, Shaker Heights, cited
eye Hills-Hocking Valley Re- Earl Ritchie, trarlan E . Ballard.
gtonal Development District. If · Vanessa M. Sidwell, Laura L.
the project would be appr&amp;ved, It Hawley, Bruce Hawley, Kathy
would pay for a nature trail and McDaniel, Hazelee Riebel.
nature study center at Forked
Mason, W. Va. - · Teresa
Run State Park.
' Hoschar, Teresa L. Covert:
Duhl said the next project he
Rutland - Donnie R. Lauderwill work on will be a boat launch milt, Marta H. Blackwood, Wllat Forked Run.
llam A. Blackwood, John E .
Other Matters
Donahue, Jr., Mary E. Davidson,
In other matters, County Eng!- Donna M. Davidson, Dinah M.
neer Roberts reported tha t he is Stewart, Gregory M. Stewart.
sending copies of the new county
Langsville - Ellie E . Myers.

n

' the state.
across.
Forecaaters said heavy snow
waa expected to fall today north
of alinefromDaytontoMarlon to
Steubenville.
Four to six inches of snow was
likely northwest of a line from
Dayton to Cleveland by this
evening. 0 The remainder of nor·
theast Ohio was ex~te.d to get
about four inches of snow by
evening.

Two to ihree inches of snow
waa forecaat for tbe advisory
area, wh1cb inclUdes the clUes of
Cincinnati, Columbua and Zanes·
ville, forecasters said.
Utue or no accumulation of
snow waa expected today In the
southeastern part of the state,
where snow changing to rain was
in lbe forecast.
·
Snow Is eexpected t9. continue
acroas the state tontabt with
additional accumulation expeeled east of a tine frQm
ConUnued from page 1
Sandusky to Columbus.
A winter storm , watch Is In
tng most people agree that
effect for central and east central
law-abiding citizens should .be
Ohio tonight whUe the winter
allowed to own guns and also are
storm warning will continue for
in favor of gun contr&amp;l.
north · central and northeast
" It's a fact of life- and death
counties.
.
- that 60-70 Americans will get
A low pressure area developkilled by guns today," he said.
ing earty today in the Mississippi
Ney argui!d thatlocalgunlaws
Valley was responsible for the
don't, Work, tbat criminals Will • snow. The low was expected to !:K!
always find a way to get guns and
centered over southern Ohio by
put law-abiding citizens at a
this evening. The low is forecast
dlsadvantagewhentheyconfron~
to move northessn\'ard Into
them in their homes.
"But why 'ought we be in the
business of making it easier for
them?" countered Fisher.
•'We're telling some 44 munlclSollth Central Ohio
palitles in Ohio that have gun
Rain or snow developing today,
laws that Big Brother knows
with
little or no snow accumulawhat's best tor them_ A vote tof
tion
and
·highs near 40. Occaihts bill Is a vote against these
sional
snow
tonight, with a .low
men," Fisher added, motioning
betwee11
20
and 25. Cloudy
tow&lt;trd tllree unl(ormed police
Friday,'
with
scattered · snow
officers sl&lt;tndtng . In the back of
flurries
and
litghs'
hhhe mid 20s.
the chamber.
The
probability
. Of. precipitaSen. · Eugene Brans tool, Dtion
is
80
percent
today, 90
Utica, noted the bill appears to
percent tonight and 40 percent
violate constitutional provisions
Friday
:
pertaining to the, borne rule
Winds
will be from the east at
powers of municipalities, but
10
to
20
mph
today and from the
Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, Rnorthwest
at
10
to 20 mph tonight.
Hillsboro, pointed out that the
Extended.Foreeut
Constitution gives all Americans
Sa&amp;arday throu1h Moaday
the right to bear arms.
A
chance of snow each day,
The House passed, 90-9, and
with
highs ranging from 15 to 25
sent to the Senate a bill requiring
Satu!'day,
from 25 to 35 Sunday,
strict regulation, by the Public
and
In
the
30s
Monday. Overnight
Utilities Commission of Ohio, of
the transportation of hazardous lows will range from zero to 10
above zero early Saturday,. and
materials through Ohio lly high- in the teens Sunday and Monday
way or rail.
mornings.

Senate approves...

Meigs
• ...

Weather

Pennsylvania FridaY.
.
Snow Is likelY to continue over
northeast Oblo Friday as the·
storm conUnu8 to lntenalfy,
farecaatera said.
·
Temperatures tonight are expected to range from near 10 in·
the northwestern part of the state
to ihe low 20s in the southeaat. '
Higlfs tn the 20s a~ forecast for ·
Friday.
'The extended,forecast calls fat
a chance of snow Saturday
through Monday, with high·
temperatures ranging from 15 to
25 Saturday and from 25 to 35
Sunday. Hlru in the 30s are
forecast for Monday. Overnight'
tows will .range train zero to 10
above zero Saturday morning
and in the teens Sunday and
Monday mornings.

531
Pit!k 4

7273

•

0

•

Vol.38, No.113

Meeting tonlghl
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi· Sorority will
mee t tonight (Thursday ) at the
Grace Episcopal Church parish
bouse.

Administration
Middleport. ·

Building

' WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two
routine operations.. .. . There
Sovtet warships deUberately
were no U.S. InJuries in either
,bumped two t:J.S. Navy ships in
incident," the Pentagon stateinternational waters In the Black . ment said_.
.sea Friday, and the United
About 3 a.m. EST (11: 00 local
time). the Spruance class des~States will fils a protest, the
Pentagon said.
troyer Caron was struck on the
port or left side by a Mirka class
.. "Two minor collisions ocfrigate, the Pentagon said.
curred in the Black Sea Friday
Three minutes later, the
when two Soviet ships delibercr\llser Yorktown accompanying
ately bumped two U.S. Navy
ships, which ' were conducting
the Caron also was struck on the

port side b)r · a Krlvak .Class .passage;' even ·though they were
frigate, sustaining minor dam- , within the Soviet 12 mile territorage,-the statement said.
ialllmlt.
The U.S. ships were a pout 9 and
It .said tbe damage to the Soviet
11
miles away from the Crimean
vessels is not known, but is
coast,
the Pentagon statement
believed to be minor. "The
United States will protest these said.
The Pentagon said It planned a
Incidents to Soviet authorities,"
briefing at noon Friday on the
the statement said.
Black Sea Incidents.
It said the U.S. ships were
The report of the two incidents
"exercising their Internationally
recognized right of Innocent comes as Defense Secretary

'

I

DiMolution granted
'

A dissolution of milrrljlge has
been granted in Meigs County
C~mmon ..fJeas Court to Harold
E . Rose ailf! Betty K. Rose.

VISITING SENIORS -

$1000 ..

To wear purple-gold·
$0uthern Tornado basketball
tans are being asked to wear
purple and gold for Friday Meeting tuesday
night's games,J n Racine against
XI Gamma Epsilon Chapter of
- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Hannan Trace.
meet In the upper Pomeroy
Special meeting
parking lot on Tuesday at 6: 15
A special meeti ng of the Meigs p.m. to go to the Down Under
Local Board of Education has Restaurant.
been called for Friday at 4: 30
p.m. to consider ratification of Meeting canceled
the negotiated contract between
The spec!a.l meeting of Orange
the boa r d and the local Township Trustees which was
O.A.P.S.E. Chapter, and any sc heduled for Friday has been
other appropriate business. The canceled.
meeting will be held at the Meigs

I

Area deaths

Hazel McCallam

Mrs. Hazel McCallam, 95,
Minersville, died Th.ursday
morning in a Westwood, N. J .
hospital. She had been making
her h6me with a daughter, .Mrs.
Leonard (Mary) Martin•!n New
Jersey. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Harley Welker

charge of services. There are no
calling hours.

' (

with Melp County'• Se~r Citizens_ He Jlljned the
nearly 280 1111nlor cltlzena, staff memben, and

.. $1000.

CASH BACK

'

CASH BACK

RENAULT MEDALLION

ssoo.

ssoo.

I
CASH BACK .

Leland Kirby II
Leland L. Kirby,' 76, New
Haven, d!ed Wednesday, Feb. 10, .
1988 at his residence.
Born July 15, 1911, in New
Haven , he was a son of the late
George L. and Minnie R. Riggs

Kirby.

He was also preceded in death by
a granddaughter, Sandra Denise
Dingey; and four brothers, Herman
L., Charles L., Cecil L. and George

Hatley David We lker, 63, 1700
W. Silver Beach Road, Riviera
Beach, Fla., died Tuesday at the
Palm Beach Garden Medical Lester Kirby.
He was a fonner employee of the
Center following a short illness.
Mr. Welker was· born Aug. 3, . New Haven Porcelain Company.
He was retired from the West VIr1924 in Pomeroy, a son of the late
ginia Depar1ment of Highways
Darrell and Elva Saw Welker. He
where he was a tool repainnan. He
also .formerly lived in Mansfield
before moving to Florida 26 atltnded New Haven United
Methodist Church.
years ago. He was a veteran of
Surviving are his wife, Alice M.
World War II having served In
Kirby,
New Haven; two daushfen,
the u; S. Navy. He _was a
Leola
M. Dingey and Enna L.
construction worker.
Folmer,
bolh of New Haven; two
Surviving are a daughter, Jean
A. Wray of Belleville; two sons, brothm, Lenford R. Kirby, New
Haven, ~ Harold Kirby, Vienna;
Larry Welker, West Palm Beach,
Fla ., and Richard Welker, Mans- four grandchildren and foilr great·
'
field, and a. sister, Mrs. Marvel grandchildren.
Services
will
be
Saturday
it I
Davidson, Belleville, and three
p.m.
at
the
Foglaon1
Funeral
granddaughters, Sherry, Krlstie
Home with the Rev. Doyle Payne
and Ml1Ue Wray. s
Gravealde rites will be held at 3 .offidadna. Burial will follow in
Graham~.
saturday al the Carleton
Friends may call Friday from 2
Cemetery with tbe Rev._,WIWam
ro 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.1111;1t !he'funeral
Middleswarth offlc4allllf. The L--0
.
Ewlnl Ft~.neraal Home II In
""'""·.

'

'Manual
Transmission

Only

No Dealer ·Participation To Affect Consumer,Costs.

· COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Just a
"Every lawyer I talked to said
payroll and 15,000 employees in
·week after being Introduced, · It was clearly unconstitutional," Ohio. The company paid $25
legislation to defend Ohio com· Riffesaidofthebill, which would m!llion in 1986 taxes.
panies from hostile corporate have extended the state's taThe sports bill, · passed 84-8,
. takeovers zipped through the keover' law to certain foreign was prompted by the signing last
House Thursday and was sent to corporations licensed to do bust- year of Ohio State football player
-Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
ness in Ohio.
Crls Carter with a New York
- ·state represenlatives ThursThere's even·"some question•: agent to represent him in conday also passed and returned to as to the constitutionality of the tract negotiations with the 'Nathe Senate for concurrence in bill passed Thursday, said the . tiona! Football League.
amendments a b!ll by Sen. speakerThe National Collegiate AtEugene J_ Watts, R·Colurnbus, to
"I've questioned all along how hletic Association ruled that
regUlate sports agents_
far l¥e can go in this area," he Carter had taken money from the
The Sehate, shortly before added. "But this Is a unique agent , against NCAA rules, and
joll)lng' the House .In weekend situation liecause Campeau is not ' therefore was ineligible for his
adjournment, unanimously liCensed in Ohio. I'm not really final season at OSU.
The measure prohibits a sports
passed and sent to the House a sure how much good It's going to
~lll setting strict requirements
do."
agent from contracting with a
tor the disposal of Infectious
Campeau, described in debate student athlete unless a copy of
waste in Ohio.
as a "corporate raider," is the proposed contract Is filed
• The takeover bill, which House offering to acquire Federated for with the student's school.
.Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. ·S61 a share. Rep. William G. ,
Violation would be a first·
admitted is of quesuonable corr- Batchelder, R-Medlna, argued degree misdemeanor, and the
stltut!opallty, was approved 70- that stockholders ought to be attorney general could seek an
21. It lakes effect Immediately allowed to profit on any sucbdeal inJunction and civil penalty of up
upon belhg signed by the gover· if another pllrty is willing to pay to $10,90(1.
_
A "lonJ·Brm'.' provision gives
nor, who is expected to get It the rlg~t pri?C·.·
Friday . It expires July 1.
Supporters, however, coun, Ohio courts jurisdiction over a
. , The 'proposal, passed Tuesday tered that thousands of Jobs a,nd non-resident agent who contracts
by the Senate 25-5, Ia aimed· millions of dollars In taxes and With a student atblete at an Ohio
speelftcally at protect!nl Feder- charitable contrlbutl~s would school even If the signing \S done
a ted Department Stores Inc. of go down the drain It Campea4 out of state.
Ctnc!Mati from being acquired were successful and dismantled '· The infectious waste bill was
liytheCampeauCorp.ofCanada. thecompanytoattalnmaxlmum · described by Its sponsor, Sen.
, Supporters argued that If the pr&amp;fllllblllty, which It did in a Gary Suhadolnlk, R-Parma
Toronto company were allowed · · previous acq\llsltlon.
Heights, as "a health Issue, and a
Federated haa a $237 million safety issue for workers."
io buy up Federafed it would lll!ll
off portions of the company, r-------~--------------rnultlllf in !oat Jobs and reduced:
n.. D '
tax collections.
'1:'1'' .~
r~• •
n
• Wrlnen by Sen. Stanley J.
'
Aronoft, R:Cincl~tnaU, the bill
COLVMBVS - Slate Se-ater Jaa Mlcllael Loll&amp; (Dwould require a forelp bu~neea
Cll'llliYIIIa) today annoweed thM lie ~ appoblied to the
t~ file for alate Department of
Bnate S.bcommtuee COIOel'lllqtlle tUMrtllatioa of State IHue
· »evelopmellt approllal before
I fuDU.
'
·,
'
acqlllrlai&amp;D Oblo .b uiJiesl with·
- ''lam Pie... to k a member Gl IIIII Wllldq lllbtlominl&amp;lte
qut the approval of$be
to ettlltl a ranl .........tan
. . ,.. lea. !:J;.ItaltG.
.
'
Wille ~~~~ tiiM • .... ;::.·..
• ...
.. ..:....., :.~,
dJrectort,
: It 1110 requires tlledapartmeat
1111
w
...... ru111 eo IU\'11 a eom1111 • •a
.. wlerp 1111
with dll bill aDd au~
..
din the nate ateorllly JenM'II

Ln...

'

250

local poBIIcll leaders aad.candlclatea for a dinner
at tbe Center. Here he talks with Elizabeth Car·
penter of Porllaad, who 15 a •'regular'' at the Center.
~
·

· ·Anti-t8keover-· bill p~sed J&gt;y House;
'infeeiious waste measure described

r

p.m.

U.S- Repreaentatl\18

Clarence MIDer cune to town Tltunday to visit

$1000. $1000.

...

2 Soctiono, 16 Pogeo

2 5 Con to

A Multimedia Inc. New!lp•per

Frank Carlucci is preparing to
meet Soviet Defense Mi.n lster
Dmitrly ·Yazov in Bern, Switzer:
land, March 16-17 to dl$cuss
issues such as dangerous incidents between Soviet and U.S.
force~ .

The latest dangerous incident
occurred Jan. 10 when a Soviet
MIG-23 jet fighter twice buzzed a
·u.s. Navy patrol plane over
international waters in the Sea of

Japan. ·
At one time, the buzzi ng of
aircraft and the bumping of ships
was such a common practice that
the two nations form ed an
"Incidents at Sea" conference
providing a mechanism for mediating disputes.
This is the forum the United
States will probably use to file Its
protest.

Killer .stornt ·buries parts .·of
Midwest; New England next

in

'faking orders
The Eastern High Schoo! Sophomore Class began taking
orders Wednesday for a variety
of Items ranging !rpm nuts to
E;aster candy. Money from the
sales will go toward next year's
prom and other upcoming
events. The sale ends Feb. I 7.
For more information or to place
orders, call Elizabeth Bryant_at
985-3376, Amy Murphy at 667-6353
or Robin White at 696-1077.

.

Soviets deliberately bump ·two U.S. warships

-----Announcements.----To he closed
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient ~ervices will
be closed Monday in observance
of President's Day. Offices. will
reopen on Tuesday at 10 a.m.

Saturday.

enttne

Pomerov-:-:Middleport, Ohio, Friday. February 12, 1988

: Caprwlsllutcd ,981

Snow flurries ending today.
Lows aear 28. Cloudy tonight, .

••

at y

•

•

Am Electric Power __ .__ ...... .-28%
AT&amp;T .. .. .. ,_ ................... .- .. ._29~
Ashland Oil ....... ,_ ........ ,_,_., .57~
Bob Evans ............ -:·.. _._ ....... 15~
Charming Shoppes _, ........... 12~
City Holding Co ..... ~ .. -.. ........ 32 •
Federal MoJUL ............... .. 37%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ........ 56~ '
Heck's II)C• ......................... , 1~ ..
Key Centurion .................... 39~
Lands' End ....... -... -..... -....... 18~~
Limited Inc.......... _. _............ 17 '
Multlme81a Inc.................... 55
Rax Restaurants ......... _,_...... 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 8~
Shoney's Inc... ........ .... _.. ,_,,22%
Wendy's Inti................. _...... 6%·
Worthington Ind.... ............ .. 17~

Daily Number

.'

Stocks
Dall)' stock prlees
( Aa oflO: SO Lm.)
Bryce and Mlll'k Smith
of BllUit EIU. a Loewt

Ohio Lottery

Church
•
notices
Page ·6

bull-•·•

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• ~llloa

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aplnll•n•ed to subcomm,· ••ee

..

•

By PETER ROWE
United Press International
A killer storm that burled parts
of the Midwest under more than a
foot of snow and was blamed for
at least 17 deaths plowed Into the
Northeast today as New Englanders braced for what could be ·
the region's heaviest snowfall in
a decade.
· Winter storm watches and
warnings COVIjred a slice of the
eastern United States from the
Ohio Valley to New England.
Tbe brunt of the storm was
expected to sock northern Ver·
mont, New Hampshire and parts
ot f-lalne, which could see 1 to 2
f4!!l of snow throughout the day.
,Up to 18 Inches of snow was
possible in upstate New York by
Saturjlp.y· morning.
.
.. '"''h!B may .!(ecy well be one of
" the heaviest snowfalls of the·past
10 years" in Vermont, the National Weather Service said.
"You should take this threat
seriously.''
The snow was already causing
problems by the morning rush
hour. School closings were widespread across New England, and
Logan International .Airport in
Bos~on closed to incoming fl!ghts
for almost two hours beginning at
.. 8 a.m:
The .. New Hampshire Statehouse .canceled legislative heari!lgS until Monday.
The storm dropped up to 3
inches of snow per hour In New
York state, closing hundreds of
schools. Police agencies reported treacherous driving con·

0

dltlons with many cars off the
road or stalled on highways.
The New York Catskills had
received the most amount of
sno.w by 8 a.m. with Bloomingburg lrt Sullivan County report·
lng 12 inches .
.More than a foot of wet, heavy
snow also was reported In the
northwestern New Jersey towns
of Wharton and Sparta.
The storm wreaked havoc on
Midwestern roads and airports
Thursday and left a mass ot icy
air in its wake from the Dakotas
to Michigan as it rolled east,
blanketing the Ohio and Tennessee valleys today with all of New
Engl&lt;!nd, New York, eastern
Pennsylvania and northern Maryland" in its path, forecaster
Pete Reynolds sa ld.
Coastal sections from New
York e!ty and the major cities of
Philadelphia to Washington escaped any significant snowfall,
the weather service said.
The storm Thursday extended
from lower ,f Michigan · across
eastern Illinois, Indiana and
western Ohio Into Kentucky,
Tennessee and northern Alabama. It brought Illinois the
state's worst snowfall of the
season, dumping up to 14 Inches
in the Chicago area and closing
hundreds of schools and businesses statewide.
.
At least 17 people have died In
traffic accidents or while shovelIng sriow since the storm ripped
into the Midwest and•the Plains
- four each in Texas and
Missouri, three in Illinois, two .

each in Indiana and Kentucky,
· and one each in Wisconsin and
Kansas.
William " Bill" Fogarty Jr., a
longtime St. Louis Post·Dispatch
reporter, died of an apparent
heart attack· while cleaning snow
0
o!f his car· In, Belleville, 111.
Fogarty, who had retired from
the newspaper. once served as
Omaha, Neb., bureau manager
for United Press International.
Kenneth Landolt, 70, suffered a
fatal heart attack While 'shovel·
ing snow at his home In Highland,
Ill.

In Missouri, authorities said
Raymond A. Williams, 69, of St.
. Charles, a candidate in the
Republican primary for the
Missouri legislature, suffered a
fatal heart attack while shoveling snow Wednesd-ay.
· Midway Airport on Chicago's
South Side was shut down for a
short time Thursday morning so
crews could crear snow from the
runways.
Flight delays and cancellations plagued O'Hare International Airport. United Airlines
said about 150 of its 400 flights out
of O'Hare Thursday were can- ·
celed, and 40 percent of Incoming
flights were diverted or canceled. About half of American
Mrlines' flights into and out of
O'Hare were ·also canceled. Both
airlines reported delays up to two
hours.
Other snow totals Included 11
inches In Montpelier, Ohio; 9
Inches in Moline, Ill.; 8 inches in
Continued on page 12
·

Ohio valentine stories abound
Most ever:yone loves a good the cliff into the Little Miami ship. He didn't want to hurt her
love story filled' with romance, Rlverandwereneverseenaga!n. feelings, so he told her he
passion and tragedy, especially · The Frenchmen burled Rosalie · couldn't see her again because
if the story Is a true 011e. Todd overlooking the site where her · her tam!iy,didn't approve of him.
Ambs, of public Information and · husband died.
Ceely was furious and started
education of the Ohio DepartOne of the most famous love plotting to get rid of her family .
ment of Natural Resources, stories is that of Hollywood She soaked flypaper In water ,
found sever.allove stories.across legends .Humphrey Bogart and then poured the arsenic-laced
Ohio in state parks and nature Lauren Bacall. Their wedding 1\'ater over cottage cheese.
preserves .
took place ;1t Malabar Farn;t · Within three months, her entire
An unmarked grave at the State Park in Richland County.
family was dead .
head of the waterfall In John
Bogart and Bacl!ll were marThere was a lot of suspicion
. Bryan State Park, Greene rled In the grand foyer of the Big within the neighborhood about
County, provides the basis for a House May 21, 1945. Bogart the mysterious deaths at the
tale of lost love.
choose to have the wedding at the Rose House. Hugh, fearing that
At the tum of the 18th century, home of his long'·time friend he would be next if Ceely found
Ga!Upolis was settled by the Lollis Bromfield because he out the true story, left the area
"French 500" escaping the . wanted the ceremony to be · and was never heard from agatn.
French Revolution . . Unfortu• private, said Carmen Hall. tour · .Eventually, Ceely was tricked
nately, the group was made up of coordinator' at Malabar Farm. ·
Into confessing and spent the rest
aristocrats ' and artisans ill preA garden weddtitg was orlgi· of her life In a me ntal Institution.
pared to survive in the Ohio nally planned for the 19·year-old But many people say her spirit
wilderness, said Tim Snyder, bride and the45-year-old groom, ·came back to the Rose House
preserve manager;
but news of the event leaked out where she waits tor her true love
Among the settlers were a and.thouaandsofpeoplelined.the to return and marry her.
young couple named Telespar. house hoping to see the famous
From Catawba Island State
One day while Rosalie Telespar couple. Visitors to the Bil House Park tn Lake Erie comes the
and a young boy were picking can still see the foyer'as it w•s in legend of the "Tree of the
· berries, they were captured by 1945.
Bleeding Heart." Soon after
three Shawnee braves. The boy
Astoryofloveandmurdera!IO Actomah;ayounglndlanmalden
escaped and alerted the village.
took place at Malabar_ Near the married Rai·Go, he went away to \
Ll,lcki!y, an old trapper was In main entrance of the Bromfield battle. RaJ-Go was killed and his
town, and he quicklY organized a , home stands a white farm house. body was burled next to a big
rescue party. They trailed the ' Durtllfl the late 18001, it was maple tree ,located on the caIndians to their c~p at the head owned by the ~se fiimt!y, who tawba Cliffs.
·
. of the fal!J. ~salle was tied to a ran a grist mlll on Switzer Creek.
Actomah was disconsolate and
nearby tree.
The Roses bad two aons and a wanted to die too. Suicide was
'nle trapper caution~ the dauahter named Cee!y.
arainst her religion, but sacrifice .
settlers that they would have to
Overweight unattractive and was permllslble. She sacrificed
kill all ~Shawneesatonceor alowlnschoo~Cee!yonlyhadone heriii!Jf Bid had her heart put in
Rosette would he klllecl, 10 the clole friend, Hqb nem~q, who the crotch of the maple tree, 10
Frencllmllllilled up and fired on · lived
acroa the creek, abe and RaJ-Go could II'DW In
the trapper'a Order. They killed said T_. Calllwell, naturanat each other's love and abe could
two allll WOWided ime.
.
at Malabar ~arm. Ceety took pard 1111 grave.
The WOUJKied llldlu iliot tile.. their frlenclahlp the wroaa way
Itlslalllthatthetreewillnever
I1'IIIP!II' Cllroulll .dll heart aDil and beaan tellliiJ everyoDe that die
a . _ oae wtll
~ !Ill
to kill she IIIII Huab were F~lllf to be alway• NP~aoe 11. The OI'IJIUI
Ro..u..
lluaballd rnari1ed.
tree 10 . . . . ltaaGI, but ......
IIIJIIP.ICI*I tile
~but be WU
WheJI . Hqb heard that, he lePnd pnHftcta, 1 •
tiiCJ lite. AI 'hliii!Nir II'JPPIId decided 10 break aft the relatiOII- 111111 pllae.·
·
·

_,door

Ewk

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~= W11 ''110 Qlllllloll" .ft
Wu
UtvUoaaJ, aatd ~. .
J&gt;New 10111111.
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