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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

THIS
MEIGS
GIRLS BASimALL ·
Completed S..son With A

SOUTHEIN

EASTERN

. GIRLS BASmtAU

GIRU BASmalLl

Completed Season With A

15-6 RICoi'd

6-15

BOYS BASKETBALL

. Daily Number

473

Page 5

Pick 4

· fiiiDAY, fD. 26 ,
Dlwlslon IV Stctionols
At Mlip H. S.

R~eord

BOYS BASIE11AlL

FEBRUARY 24

Ohio Lottery ·

Olympic
results

1275

ws.lyll'l' CrHk

•

fEIRUARY 23

Divisional II $ectional
At Rio Grandt
vs. Jackson

Diwisian IY *'*-Is
At Meigs H. S.
vs. •""" crHk

FEIRUARY 26

. FEIRUAIY 23
Division IV S.Ctianals
At Mligs ·H.S.
·vs. Cr...SYillt .
FEIRUAIY 25
S.Ctlanal Semi-Finals
At Meigs H. S.

S.ctianal Finals
At Mligs

SICtional Finals
· at Rio Grandt

e

BOYS BASKETBAlL

• · FEIRUARY 27

Vol.38. No.200

at y

.

(
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#2 HEMLOCK MILLER

and work in Europe;;·
He said the tact!cal ·battlefleld
nuclear weapons w!ll "stay
where they are , until we can
achieve a better balance of
convenl!onal forces on the
continent."
.
Reagan said thE' United States
" remains steadfastly committed
to the NATO strategy of fle;&lt;:!ble
response, and we in the United
States will do our part to ensure
that NATO maintains all the
modern forces , both conventiona! and nuclear. needed to
uphold that strategy.''.

Hemlock Miller

RACINE SOUTHERN

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

Feb. 26, 6:30 p.m.
VINTON NORTH GALLIA

vs.

...

HILLSBORO LOWER WINNER
March 2, 8:15 p.m.

#1 CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK
'

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

Feb. 26. 8:15 p.m.'

vs.

LUCASVILLE VALLEY
UPPER WINNER
Mar,ch 2, 6:30 p.m.

REEDSVILLE EASTERN

.

.

CROOKSVILLE

p.m.

•

REEDSVILLE EASTERN

'

hb. 25, 7:00. p.m. ·
#2 VINTON NORTH GALLIA

·INSTAU.MENT LQANS

CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK

992-3007:;,

Feb. 27, 7;00 p.m.

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Feb. 23, 8:15 p.m.

TO OH 10 UN IVER$1TY
March 4, 6:30 p.m.

STORE CHANGES HANDS - After successfully oper~tlng Brown's Fire and Salety Equip·
ment store 111 Rutland for the past U yean,
'owaer, BID Browa, at left, has sold his business.
New owner, Gary Snouffer, allefl, says he. wiD
continue provldlag the same good service which
Brown has provided over tbe years. The store has

vs.

CHESAPEAKE WINN.ER

;

#1 RACINE SO.UTHERN

Bomb injures

Bors Di~islon II Sectional TournaMent. at Rio Gran•• College

*

'

Wed., Feb. 24, 6:30 p.m.

feilturing · .
Grpt. Hamburgers.

#1 GALLIPOLIS 12-4

*

• •&lt;

.

Fri., Feb. 26, 7:00 p.m.
•

Dinihg • C,arrv OUt •
Drive,Jhru
SIIO.-Tbl:ri. 8A.M .·10P.M. ·
Fri. 8a Sa•. 8 A.M.-12 P.M:
•

W 'ltness
"

'

Croissant* Stuffed Baked'
Potatoes * Taco Salads
. * Salad Bar ,
. Real'lce. Cream.

~

.

JACKSON 3-15

:. · *Roast Beet on a

.·*

'

been renamed Brown's and Snouffer's Fire and
Safety Equlpmeat;ud has been moved to a new
location at 172 North Second Ave., Middleport.
Open dally, the store deals mainly In the sale,
service and testing of fire edlagulshers, and
other fire and safety Items. For lnlonnatlon, call
the store at 99~7075.
•
·

PORTSMOUTH\ - A radio- · in critical condition in Grant .
controlled bomb destroyed a car Medical ·Center In Columbus,
Monday, at 9:40a.m., on S.R. 73 · where he was flown by helicopIn Scioto County, injuring a West ter. He was scheduled for
Portsmouth man on his way Jo surgery Monday, at 8 p.m., !or
federal court to · sign a plea mull! pie trauma. At midnight, an
agreement to cooperate with a aide decl!ned to comment on
drug investigation, according to whether his surgery had been
Scioto County Sheriff John Hull.
corilpleted .
James J . Brown, 43, was listed
Jennifer Reed, 19, of West

#2 MEIGS 7-7

A GliAl PLACE
FOR .REAICFAU .·.·.
LUNCH ·. &amp;.DINNER

Wed., Feb. 24, 8:15 p.m.
VINTON COUNTY !-13

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) _ A
decl!ne in orders for planes and
motor vehicles helped push down
new orders for 111anufactured
durable goods 2.8 percent in
January, the biggest decl!ne In
one year, the Commerce Depart·
ment said Tuesday.
Analysts wete no I alarmed by'. '.

the downturn, which followed a
healthy 4.1 percent increase In
orders fordurables in December.
Excluding defense orders, durable goods orders were down 2.1
percent, matching a decl!ne in
August and the steepest since a
6.9 percent downturn in January
of last yea~.
.

Academic banquet set
March 31 at Southern

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Portsmouth, the driver of the late
model Chevrolet , received emergency room treatment and was
l!sted In good condition Monday
evening at Scioto Memorial
Hospital.
,
Hull said the car's passenger
seat was blown from the car
when explosives planted beneath
the passenger seat were detonated when the car was traveling

Wyss added.
The Japuary downturn, however, was the sharpest since
orders fel! 8 percent in January
1987, according to the department's Census Bureau .
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
Orders . for transportation
equipment last month fell $3.8
blll!on or 12.4 percent to $27.~
b!ll!on, reflecting .a decline in
aircraft and motor vehicles as
wei! as parts in both categories.
Orders for primary metals also
lei!, down . $1.9 b!ll!on or 15.5
percent to $10.2 b!lllon, offsetting
a 10.5 percent increase in De- ·
cember, the department said.
New orders for electrical rnach!nery· rose $1.1 billion or 5.5
percent' to $20.8 b!lllon in the
fourth increase in five months.
Orders for non-electrical rnachlnery also increased, up $1.1
b!lllon or 5.8 percent to $20.3
b11l!on. nearly matching a 6.3
percent upturn In December.
New orders lor delense capital
a09ds leU !or the sixth time in
seven months, down $1.1 billion
or 12.1 percentto $7.9 billion.
Shipments of manufactured
ioodl last month declined 3.3
percent or $3.7 billion to $109.3
billion. Unf!lled orders far durable IOQdl Increased 0.8 percent
or 13 biUloil to $392.7 bllllan, the
•rtment said. · .
'
-~

Secretary of State George
Shultz w!ll report to Reagan
Wednesday morning on his talk~
in Moscow w!tli Gorbachev and .
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard:
Shevardnadze on a range of
subjects from breaking the stalemate in the Geneva negotiations on the Stra teg!c Arms
Reduction Treaty (START) to a
timetable for a pullout of Soviet
troops irt Afghanistan and the
status of Soviet Jews.
After somewhat less than 24
hours in Wash!ngton, Shultz will
head for the Middle East with a
proposal to end the strife in the
Israel!-occup!ed territories call!ng for a swap of land for peace.

afford," Hoffman continued.
"Both senior citizens apartment complexes in Meigs County
are full at this time )'{lth the one
In M!ddleporrliavlrig at lasfl4 on
a waiting l!st. I feel this Is a much
needed project not only for Mid·
dleport but for Meigs County.
"It would appear that federal
funds are available for such a
project here and a local individual is willing lo construct and ·
· operate such an apartment complex, which would be a 45 unit
complex and cost approximately·
$1.5 mll!on.
"In order to convince FHA off!c!als of the need for such a project, an Interest must be shown In
the project by the community.
"Anyone who may be Interested in renting one of these
apartments Is asked to !!II out a
. survey. F1111ng out the form does
not put you under any obl!gation
at this time but is only being used
to show that ther e Is community
Interest in the project, " the
mayor concluded.
The survey appears on page 10
today.

Durable Goods

'

New factory orders
Seasonally adjusted in
billions of dollars
$120
118
116

·.

114
112
110

108
106
104
102
100

98
~

94

J FMAMJJASONDJ .
1987
'88
UPI Graphic ·
NEW ORDERS DOWN- New arden for maaufacturH 4urallle
good&amp; feD 1.8 percent Ill

,.......,,tile 1111\t!::- Ia- )'eat,

aecordJna te tile Commeree Depattment

!

I

radical captors in Lebanon.
Reagan was expected to echo
remarks 'by Fitzwater that the
hostage question be off l!mlts In
the current presidential political
campaign. "I think it's very ·
dangerous to make terrorism a
political issue," Fllzwater told
reporters, " especially when
you're talking about. specific
episodes."

FHA considering new
complex for elderly

Reagan said, ''Our goal is not a
nuclear-free, or a tank-free, or an
army-free Europe, but a warfree Europe."
The president said he w!ll press
ahead w!lh his Strategic Defense
Middleport Mayor Fred HoffInitiative, known as "Star Wars" man announced during Monday
s~ce defense, adding, " It would night's councU meeting The Farmbe a (alai mistake not to pursue ers Hon:~e Administration has
this program. .. . . .
., .. - under consideration. the consttuc"Even before it becomes 'leak tlon of an elderly housing apart proof,' strategic · defense will ment complex to be located on
strengthen deterrence," he Page St. adjacent to the new oursadded. ''It can make anyone who !ng home now under construction.
might think about dlsabl!ng the
The apartments would have
West with a' first strike think subs!d!zed rental program for
again, because it will undermine eligible senior citizens and res!Sov!et confidence in the military dents of the apartments would
success of an attack."
also have access to the nursing
Reagan also warned Euro- home fac!l!ties for meals andrepeans to be wary of the new creatlonal activities if they so deSoviet policy of Glasnost in view sired.
of "the reality of pol! tical rep res "I met recently at the proslon in 'the Soviet Union." .
posed site with FHA officials and
The president also was to do local !ndlv!dua!s who would be
some homework to prepare for responsible for the construction
.
and operation of such a fac!l!ty if
approved," Hof!Jnan said.
"The project would be Ideal for
that area since the fac111t!.es of
the nursing home would be made
e.as f on the roadway miar the Car I available to apartment residents
D. Perkins Bridge, just west of and the subsidized rental proPortsmouth.
gram would make It ppsslble for
The c~r has been impounded many of our · senlqr citizens to
by the Bureau of Alcohol, To- live comfortably In 'this area,
bacco and Firearms. The FBI which they could not otherwise
and the State Highway Patrol
assisted the Bureau and the
Scioto County Sheriff's Department in the investigation.

enroute to court

Orders · for durabie goods,
which are big-ticket items designed to last for at least three
years, totaled $112.2 b!ll!on compared with $115,5 bUI!on in
DecemHer.
Within the capital goods cale·
gor!es, new orders · for nondef,ense capital goods !~creased
$0.5 billion or 1.6 percent to $34.4
bUllon. That exceeded the December high of $33.8 b1lllon. A
downturn in non-defense aircraft
and parts WiiS more than offset
by increases in several machln·
ery categories. including office
The first district academic Beash, Brenda Ryndall, .Fred and computing equipment.
banq)Jet ,to honor high ranking Penderwood, Henry Lewis and
"I would not take a negative
scholastic students of the entire Verona Jones. The resignation of . view of th~ report," said Nordistrict was approved lor March Roberta Maidens as director of ·. man Robertson, chief economist
31 ~hen the Southern Local
the annual variety show was
of Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. "II
School District Board of Educa- accepted. • The observance of continues to show strength in the
tion met; · in regular session Right to Read Week in the · key capital spend in&amp; sectors."
·Monday night.
·
.
dlltrlct was iet for March 7-11.
Spending for new equipment,
Some 55 students of the district
headded,rema!nsonamoderate
The Racine Home National
wll! be honored at the event and Bank was na~r~ed to serve as the
growth track.
speaker wil! be Rep. Jolyn district's depository throu1h
"There Is aotblne to Indicate in
Boster.
:
1990. Plans were made for .board this report that the economy, or
The board hired Charles Ch~n­ member&amp; to attellcl the spring
the lndllltrlsl part ol the econ·
cey, former Me!ga lfleh School confereqce of the Oblo SchOQI
omy, 11 .flldlnl Into an early
football coach, to 1erve as ·B oatdl Alsoclatlon to be held in
recession)!' Rob_e!11on said.
coordinator ol the dlltrlct's foot· Athens on·March 15:
David WY•• oU&gt;ata Rnourcea
ball protrram tor the next season.
All board members, Charles
Inc., an economic forecsatlq
Dr. Douglu Hunt will 1erve as Pylea, Dennie Evans, Charles
firm In Lexlqton, Msal., acreec1
the athletic physician.
Norris, Gary Wilford and Scott
that IIOn-defenae capital apend·
It was afll'IN!d to bave a reserve Wolfe, were preaent for the
1111 wu "moat encow-irrtnl" Jn.
pll' llllttball team thla year and meettne 110111 with building January.
,.
the coachlni polltlon-....ll be principals, Supt. Bobby Ord and
"That m - lnveatment waa
PCJited. Added to the subltl tute Treasurer Denny HID.
up after a ltrolli Deeernber,"
· teacllera lilt were Franklin

992-2057

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.

his first news conference In four
months Wednesday evening. He
Is studying briefing books the
size of telephone boqks and may
have a rehearsal in the White
House lheater with aides playing
reporters · and tossing touchy
questions at him .
White House spokesman Marl!n Fitzwater said Monday that
Reagan w!ll open the 8 p.m . EST
nationally televised news conference ·in the East Room with a
formal statement, expected to
spotlight his budget proposals
and a bid to hold up spending on
what he bel!eves are wasteful
'projects.
But the !nte.rnatlonal front was
expected to dominate the ques '
tton!ng with reporters probing
his plans to bring peace to the
Middle East and prospects of a
negotiated settlement In
Nicaragua. ·
The question of the administration's handling of the hostage
problem was also expected with
the kidnapping of Marine Lt. CoL
W!ll!am Higgins, adding to the
l!st of Americans In the hands of

New, durable goods orders down 2.8 percent

Winner to O.U. Convo
District Play vs.
Shawnee State Winner
Fri., Mar.
p.m.
. 4 - 6:30
'

698 W. Main St,..t. Pomeroy

•

"We Americans w111 do our
part in keeping the A!Uance
strong," Reagan promised. " Our
troops wi!l stay in Europe as a
guarantee that our destiny . is
coupled with yours. We w!ll keep
our forces .' including the strategic nuclear umbre!la, strong
and up to date."
. "NATO's strategy for peace
has always been simple prevent aggression before 11
starts," Reagan said. "Be strong
enough; be determined · enough
so that no adversary would think
even for a moment that war
might pay;"
The quick journey to confer
with NATO leaders was a prelude
to a fourth summit meeting in
Moscow with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, probably in late
May. The pres!den~ was hoping
that he and Gorbachev would be
able to follow up their signing of
' an INF agreement in Washington
in December with a new Strategic Arms Reducl!on Treaty
(START) . ·
.
"The Atlantic All!ance is the
core of America's foreign pol!cy
and of Amertca'sown security/'
he said. "If our fellow democracies are not secure, we-cannot be

secure."

BOYS DIVISION IV BASKETBALL
Feb. 23. 6:30

1 Sect"ion. 1 0 Pagel
25 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per

.

'

By HELEN TH
an attack on u~. "
UPI White House
Declaring that the new arms
WASHINGTON (
agreement, eliminating super!dent Reagan top
'l'er land-based nuclear mls·
Amerka will keep 1
s! s with a range of 300 to 3,400
Europe and maintain
nuclear m!!es, "is a victory for NATO" ·
umbrella "strong and u to date" and recognizing it has caused
in the defense of the Atlanl!c some worry aqout Soviet mU- ·
All!ance.
itary advantages, .the president
In an address, broadcast on said:
Worldnet and the Voice of Amer"The appro1&lt;lmately 4,000 1\Ulea as a prelude to a summit clear weapons that w!ll remain In
meeting tn Brussels, Belgium, Europe are a strong Unk between
next week with NATO heads of ·the p1llars of NATO- as are the
state, Reagan told his European more than 300,000 .American
audience: "An attack on you is servicemen and women who !lye

GIRLS DIVISION IV 8ASKETBALL
Feb. 18, 7:00 p.m.

enttne

President Reagan ·pledges· defense of Europe

s.Ctional Finals
Af Mligs H. S.

Basketball Tournament
at Meigs ·High Sehoo·l

•

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Febru-ary 23, 1988

cogvrlehteci 1988 .

FEIRUARY 27

Dl~islon · 1~

Clear tonight. Low near 15.
Partly cloudy Wednesday.
Highs between 25 and 30.

,t_r

• (VPI)

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Tuesday, .February 23. 1988
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Comment

Page 2-The Daily h'ltinel
Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio
. Tuut'ey, February 23, 1988

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

UPI ratings

The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court Street

..

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TBB MBIGS.MASON AREA

~~

B~ rT"'.,.,,._~~c:::~.....
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ROBI!RT L. WJNGE'IT
Publlsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
A.sslstaal Publlsber/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General M1111ager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

.The candidates_for secretary ·of .s tate
WASIDNGTON- It.the next
president of the Unit~ States Is a
Republican, the secretary, of
state Is likely to be either former
Labor Secretary William arock
or Treasury Secretary James
Saker.
·
&amp;th are political moderates
who would rankle the ultra right.
And neither would allow renegade cowboys to run away with
our foreign policy.
While the country concentrates
on predicting who the next
president will be, we asked our

sources In the Republican Party
and In the campaign camps of
Sen. Robert Dole and VIce
President George aush whom
their secretary of state would
.likely 1\e.
The position Is generally consider~ the high-profile plum In the
Cabinet.
The state post carries with It
the pomp a!'ld circumstance of
dealing wjth foreign leaders, the
management of el1\bass!es
abroad and a large bureaucracy
at home, and the power and

LE'I'TERS OF OPINION are wei rome. Tbey should b e less than 300 words

l q. All letters are subject toedJtlng and must be signed with name; address and

•

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· But the realcarnage may be rese~ved for March 8. If one candidate
In each party emerges from that day with most of the delegates, It
could be lights out lor everybody else. At the le;~st, Super Tuesday
probably will r~uce the field to no more than three viable candidates
In each party.
That's not exactly what the Inventors of Super Tuesday had In
mind. The Idea of a single day early In the campaign year when
Southern states would have an opportunity to make an Impact on the
presidential nomination was promo!~ mainly by a group of Dixie
Democrats.
They felt thath!ghly publicized early tests In places like Iowa and
New Hampshire and Massachusetts were leaving the party saddled
with liberal-wing nominees who might look good in the North but were
polson below the Mason-Dixon line.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI~ -The Chinese restaurants I patronize still
list the dish as "Peking Duck" although any day now I expect to drop
In for maybe a half-dozen egg r.olls and find myself in a Sino eating
place that specializes In "Belj !ng Duck. "
I mean, when maps start changing, can menus be far behind?
The maps of Asia already have been redrawn to accommodate new
place names, of which the switch In nomenclature of the Chinese
capital may be the most dramatic.
Whether you call It Peking or Beijing, It's still the same old city.
Ahd now I notice the Soviet Union Is renaming certain mun!c!pal!t!es.
AJa!n.
·
.
·
·Many of us went through a period In which cities that bore the
names of Russian czars were renam~ to honor Soviet founders and
dictators. (St. Petersburg, which became Leningrad, comes to

.
·,

Then came World War II and " de·Stallnlzat!on."
Stal!ngrad, where the Red Army l!naliy prevailed over Hitler's
Invaders, establ!ah!ng a home·fleld advantage that Las Vegas
recognizes to this day. magically vanish~. as did a host of museums
nam~ for the victorious Soviet leader.
:Now I notice there's no more Brezhnev. Does this mean the world
nfust endure another "ant!" campaign with "de-Brezhnev!zatlon" as
the new communist goal?
,
,
I sincerely hope not, !I lor no other reason than for the sake of the
world's cartographers.
Yet, there appears no aoubt that top Communist Party bosses have
converted the city of Brezhnev back to Naborzhnlye Chelny. And that
Isn't all.
The name Brezhnev also has been dropped from a district In
Moscow and a square In Leningrad (ah, there) , which have reverted
td their old names, Cherymushky district and !V'anogravdeskata
square.
.
Top Communist Party basses apparently don 'I care what goes on In
a city as long as the rest of the world pronounces the name properly. I
do wtsh, however, they would do something about Chernobyl. That
"yl" has got to go.
· ·
'
Forget the fact that the Pentagon refers to the Persian Gulf as the
Arabian Gulf. The problem began long before that five-sided building
got Into the act.
.(;eographlc name.thang!ng ·has been propo~ at least since we
have had history. Perhaps we forget that aurklna Faso In Africa was ·
Olice called Upper Volta? Or when Batswana was known as
Bechuanaland?
See If you can guess what Sri Lanka formerly was call~. Very well,
I'll tell you. It was an Island In the Indian Ocean known as Ceylon.
~ remember when there .was a move afoot to rename the entire
Indian Ocean, calling that body of water the Indonesian Ocean.
..ortunately for cartographers .. they, were s~ll going tQ~all It an
CIC!i!&amp;D.

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Reagan has other options. It Is
said that the War Powers Act
curtails a president's military
power. But It states, as a matter
of law, that the president has 90

•..

prohlbi~ .

- In 1986, DEA made an
arbitrary exception to that class!l!catlon, ruling that artificial
marijuana could be d!strut~
under controlled circumstances
for medical use. Natural marijuana, however, remained
bann~ . along with herlon and
LSD.
Tlult disturbs Laurence 0.
McKinney, president of the Can·
nabls Corporation of America In·

. -----··- --.......·-·~---··- ·· ...~ _.,.,..,..

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Cambridge, Mass. An eighth·
generation Harvard University
graduate and ·an authority on
'marijuana, McKinney says his
·nrm Is prepared to produce
natural, pharmaceutical-grade
marijuana lor m~lcal purposes
at a cost far below that of the
synthesized product - but has
been stymied by DEA
regulations.
The government's hostility to·
ward mar!j uana dates back to
the heyday ol Harry J. Ansl!nger,
who was the second-ranking
official In charge of enforcing
Proli!blt!on In the late 1920s and
early 1930s.
After the ban on liquor was
lifted, Ansllnger became the first
commissioner of the Treasury
Department's newly creal~ Bureau of Narcotics. In that post, he
wag~ a relentless cainpalgn
against drugs In general and
marijuana transform~ Its users
Into "fiends." After serving
more than 30 years as the
country's anti-drug czar, Anslinger retired In, the early 1960s but his legacy remains In the
form of wholly unscientific pre)u·
dices about drugs.
Although the U.S. Department
or Health, Education and Wei·
fare conclud~ In 1975 that
marlguana's "most promising
therapeutic IIPPllcatlons" In·
cluded use "as an antiemetic (an
agent to suppress nausea and
vomlllng~ for cancer patients
receiving chemotherapy," DEA
waited more than a decade
before designating synthesized
marijuana as a legitimate drug
for that purpose.
Other aliments whoae condl·
t!ons might be ameliorated by

Un!med's artificial. version- If
DEA will lift Its long-standing
prohibition.
That may soon happen. With
little fanfare, DEA . has held
hearings In New Orleans, San
Francisco and.Wasblngton, D.C.,
on the m~lcal value of natural
·
marijuana.
Within the next few months,
the agency could proclaim the
"killer w~" of earlier years to
be a valuable m~!cal substance.

~

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Transaetions

Lqu lim II, tJUca 41
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Auu... IM,TippO&amp;JBelltelll

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~oston nips Knicks.

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.

By FREDERICK.WATERMAN
' UPI 8porta Wrl&amp;er
.
In the last minute of a close
game; the ·Boston Celt!cs' stra·
tegy is as pr~!ctable as a Larry
Bird free throw.
·
The NBA 's defending freethrow champion hit a pair of foul
shots wltb 39 seconds remaining
Monday night, putting Boston
ahead to stay In a 95-93 victory
against the New Yor- Knlcks.
"He's the crunch-time man,"
Celt!cs Coach K. C. Jones said of
Bird, who .finish~ with a gamehigh 36 points. "Y:ou want to put
the ball In tbe hands of the man
who can do it. ..
Boston open~ an 88m lead on
two Robert Parish free throws
with 4: 23 left. The Knlcks responded with a 14-3 surge, tying
th!! score on Sidney Green's short
jumper with 52 seconds to play.
At this point, Boston called
timeout and "d!agrariuned a .

...... \1.8. PrG

.

play to get Larry the ball," said
teammate Danny Alnge. :·And
Larry got the foul ."
Penn!s Johnson, who finish~
wit~ 19 ·Jl(ilnts, added two free
· throws 23 seconds later to put
Boston In front95-91. New York's
Kenny Walkerna!ledashotat the
buzzer !or the final margin.
Jones, whose team went 4-4
during a just-concludell road
trip, said the Celtlcs were "sluggish In both mlhd and body"
against New York.
The loss at the Hartford Civic
Center, where the CelUcs play
three gmaes each season, was
New York's 18th consecutive
road loss. This year, the Knlcks
are · 1·23 away from Madison
Square Garden.
· "We can't get over the hump
and nan It down," said Gerald
Wlklns, who paced New York
with 2~ points.' 'They fought back
and we fought back, but they
were just able to close the door on

· us."

SVAC s~:andings

'.

TEAM
W L' · P
OP
Southern ...........17 3 1716 124!1
Oak Hill ........... 17 3 1378 1212
Hannan Trace ..16 4 1531 13.15
North GaUia ..... 10 10 1292 1477
Kyger Creek..... 8 12 1.246 1227
Eastern .. .... .. .. .. 7 12 1301. 1422
Symmes Valley 5 16 1266 159t
Southwestern,.. . 2 18 1131 1459

Mooda)''lleuraameat

''

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~-· tZ't~

"Bee, AI, wfiM you Mid you wwe going to ·
MVII /unci! with a HEADHUNTER, I
thouQht... "

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

Tanaan

Traee
South-tern at

H.S., 7 p.m.

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Patriot

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1.'lnlnni8J'• .... m •••

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~fteedlvllle . . . .
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va.

players', Rose says

"I have never taken a player
brings north to start th e National
League season April4 against the north I didn't want to take," sa id
Rose, " and remember, Murray
St. Louis Cardinals .
Rpse, beginning his fourth !till rCook J Is on a on.e -year contract. .
,
seas&lt;;m as the Cinclnna ti skipper , He wants to win , too.
''The Soto thing is not my
said he would head north with his
"24 best play.ers," Indicating department," R.ose said of the
Mario Soto's $I.2 million a year 31-year-old righthander, bosalary and the acquisition of Jose thered by arm miseries the past
R!jo for slugger Dave Parker three years but working under a
would not be a factor in his guarani~ contract. "I hope we
w!ll never trade a player just
decision.
because of his salary .
Rose
said
he
doubted
he
would
ne inen's basketball team at
"I don't know how Murray
be
pressured
by
new
General
Rio Grande College/Community
Cook·
feels, but I can't Imagine
Manager
Murray
Cook
to
take
College has join~ an exclusive
him
telling
me we're tak!n(\ this
either
of
those
players
north
If
club :... It's one of four college
player
because
of a trade or that
they
didn
't
deserve
to
make
the
teams to post 200 or more wins
player
because
of a salary. If ·
.
sq
uad.
during the 1980s.
1'he Redmen won their 200th
game on Feb. 11 against MidOhio Conference opponent
Walsh. The win d!slodg~ Walsh
from first place In the conference
and gave Rio Grande the top
spot.
.
Since then, the R~men de·
. feat~ Dyke and 01\jo bomfn!. can, losing to Qedarv!lle on
· Satutday In their final season
game to put the overall record
under Coach John Lawhorn at
202-67. Only three. other schools
have broken tM 2()().v!ctory
mark this season: North Carol·
Ina, Fort Hays (Kan.~ and St .
Thomas Aquinas of New York.
Lawhorn, who assumed con·
trol of the Redmen In 1980, has
seen his program twice take sole
championship of the MOC and
District 22. The Redmen have
travel~ to Kansa~ City, Mo., In
,
1985 . and 1987 as the dlstr!et
representatives to the N AlA
Nationals.
This season, Rio Grande will
share the MOC championship
with Walsh. The teams each
complled•recotds of 11·3 .
Looking back, Lawhorn attr!b·
uted the team's success to "good
players and the fact th·e campus
has been able to attract top
student-a thletes .
"Over the years our fac!l!t!es
have Improved," he continued.
"We have areputat!onforhavlng
a good faculty and we've worked
extremely hard at recruiting.':
Lawhorn said the elements of
all o( his past ~hamp!onsh!p
teams can be found Iii this year's
R~men squad, which Is 25:7
· entering 11\e. district playoffs on
MAKING A FACE ..: CinCinnati Reds' manager Pete Rose,
March 3.
•
center,.
makes a lac·e al spring training practice Monday wit~
"One of the Important things
batting
coaches
Tony Perez, left, and Lee May, right. The Reds
about our program thb year has
aad
catchers
worked out Monday, and I he rest of the team
pitchers
been the chemistry between the
will
report
later
this
week.
(UPI)
players," Lawhorn said. "We
have had good players who are
quality students and who have
gotten their degrees. And most
linportantly, they enjoy playing
CHESAPEAKE - Senior Dal· . overtime, the Vikings outscored
l;lasketball."
las
Tibbs scored 25 points to lead \he Flyers 8-4 to secure the win.
At the beginning of the 1987·88
Sy_
mmes
Valley to a 65-61 over·
Tibbs had offensive help from
season, Lawhorn was listed as
time
win
over
Ironton
St.
Joe
In
senior
Joe White and junior Tony
one of the NAIA's w!n!(lngest
the
Division
IV
tournament
op.
Schneider,
who scored 12 points
coaches and the Redmen were
ener
Monday
night
at
Ghesa·
each. The Flyers' David Johnson
named to the top 'wlnn!,ng teams
peake High School.
led all scorers with 26 points.
list, based on their performance
The Vikings w!ll face Green
over the past live seasons .
The Flyers, down 43'36 at the W~nesday at 8:45 p.J:I!., follow·
Lawhorn, a 1962 Rio Grande
end of the third quuter, out- !ng the Hannan Trace graduate, came back to his alma
scored the VIkings 22-14 In the Southwestern game, which Is 7
mater after 18 years of coaching
and teaching In Ohio high schools . fourth·quarter to tie the match at .p.m. Both games w!ll be played
57 . at the end of regulation. In at Chesapeake High School. .
-Belfast (1962·64~, East Clinton
(1964·69), Circleville · (1969·75~
and Warren Western Reserve
(1975·80~. His overall high school
record was 273·99.
During those years of· prep
school ·coach!ng, Lawhorn deve·
loped a sense about the ab!l!t!es
of his players. This sense has
served hlin and his staff well lis
they have add~ numerous recruiting trips to the hectic
regular season sch~ule.
Such recruiting trips nett~
Rio Grande the services of Old
Washington Buckeye Trail's
Mike Smith, an Ohio Class A
Player of the Year who com·
pleted a successful career with
the Redmen· In 1987. Smith
recotd~ more than 2,000 points
and won Ail-American status at
Rio Grande. Jimmy Kearns, a
state-ranked player from Upper
Scioto Valley High School In
McGuffey, sign~ with the Red·
men In 1985 and Is .now the, team's
third highest scorer behind se. niors Ron R!tl!nger and Ray
Singleton.&lt;
·
-One ·ot the reasons promising
players have turned down offers
from larger schools to play with
· the Redmen, Lawhorn said, Is
that Rio Grande, with a total
enrollment approaching 1, 700,
appeals to them.
"Kids know they can become
only number at other schools."
Lawhorn said. "That · won't
happen at Rio Grande. Academl·
cally and on the court, they will
receive more attention."
PLAN'r CITY . Fla. 11JPI1Cincinnati Red s Manager Pete
Rose said Monday neither a
player's salary nor the need to
ju~lily a trade would have an
Impact on which 24 ·players he

·Rio wins
200 tilts

Kevin McHale scored 14 points,
Parish, who returned after missIng three games with a back
Injury, had 13 and Alnge chipped
In 11, The Celtic starters ac·
coun~ !or all but 2 of tlie team's
total points.
In other games, each won by
the home team, Denver topped
WubiDJton 1()()..87, 'Houston
downed PhUadelphla 119-106,
· Dallll edpd Phoenix 114-107 ani!
1
1 Golden Stare held off San Anto1 ,
nio, 123-111.
IIOUIIoit 111

a

Symmes Valley 65, Ironton St.
' Joe 61
Ph"anlelpllla 111
Tueodq'• &amp;otnnlamMCI
At Houton, Sleepy Floyd
Crookavtlle va. Reedsville Eaat· · scored 20 polnll to lead seven
· ern at Meigs H.S., 8:30 p.m.
Routon plqen In double fiJ·
Kypr Creek VI. Raclne8ovtbe.tn ·VIM u U.lfoekela won for the
at Melli H.S., 8: 15 p.m. .
nlnlb time In u ~· The
SOuth Weblter VI. Oak HID at 7111ra, 10111'1 .In fiW lit their last
Roak HID H.S., 8: 15 p.l'll.
dX ...,_a~ J,llltfalllll on the

.,

~best

.Symmes Valley cagers lop St. Joe

.

~:.:.'

ALL GAMES

• •

......
......
n••

NATIONAL B.U&amp;B'I'B.u.L AMOC.

1111

'

days to use Amerlc.a 's m!ilta.r y secret bank accounts, IIOihlng
might In his capacity as !l!egal - just .a sk Americans to
commander-!n-ch!el. Reagan help liberty survive In this
could Invade Nicaragua. That hemisphere.
would be politically unpopularHe could ask friendly govern·
unless · It was successful, like ments to help the contras Grenada. (If the American mU- maybe the sultan of Brunei or the
!tafy ciluldn't handle Nlcara~Ua king of Saudi Arab\a. , ~an
In 89 days, taxpayers rlilght couldn't promise any quid 'pro
properly demand refunds. ~ AI· · quos, but It's still nice to have a:
ternativety, Reagan could block· friend In the White House, even If
ade Nicaragua or mine Its It's only for a year.
harbors on the grounds of keepHe could break relations with
Ing out more Soviet arms ..Could N!caragila, recognize !be conthe already tottering ec~momy of tras and perhaps send some
a rnaritimestatesurv!ve·a 90-day quick emergency aid to the new
blockade?
friendly contra government.
All that may be too extreme. If
Using Immigration · laws he
Reagan loses, remember that could welcome all the contras to
this time there will not only be no the Unit~ States and keep them
appropriation for the contras but as an active, well-train~ force
also no Boland Amendment to hous~ at a U.S. military lnstalla·
curb the president's powers. tion, ready to go back to N!cara- . •
Under a circumstance of ·no- gua If the Sandlnlstas don't
bill/ no-Boland, what could the democratize.
president do?
There Is a lesson here for
He could endorse a blue ribbon members of Congress who may
private committee to publicly think that 'l l will bealloverlfthey
raise private funds for the "just say no." It probably won't
contras. He could then go to be. It could just be another new
television and ask Americans to beginning In a tragic w11r.
help out. No Oliver North, no

marijuana Include glaucoma,
asthma, epilepsy, hypertension,
anorexia and multiple.sclerosis.
The only company th'at produces the product domestically Is
Unlined, Inc., of Somerv!l!e, N.J .
Its synthetic version of the active
Ingredient In marijuana (delta-9
tetralzydrocannab!nol or THC~ Is
called Marino!.
McKinney says he can produce
natural THC at about hall the
retail cost of $7 charged for

NBA mulls

..

Healing power of killer weed · By Robert ·Walters
BOSTON (NE A~ -Alter half a
century of terrorizing citizens
with lurid accounts of "reefer
madness" and "killer weed," the
federal government may soon
sanction marijuana usage for
m~lcal purposes.
Although occasional use of
marijuana Is not likely to cause
serious long-term medica! problems, most health professionals
agree that regular use over a
prolonged period Is not just a
" harmless high."
But the lew pOtentially serious
side effects do not justify the
bizarre treatment the !~era!
government has given marijuana as a carefully controlled
m~!cal substance prescrl~ by
physicians. Consider, for example, these Incongruities:
-A f~erallaw , theControll~
Substances Act, empowers the
Drug Enforcement Agency to
restrict the ava!laq!l!ty or drugs
likely to be a bus~ . Acting under
that authority, DEA has placed
cocaine on "Sch~ule II," allow'lng physicians to prescr!ve It lor
specific medical purposes under
·strict CO!llrols.
But marijuana Is conf!n~ to
"Sch~ule I," which means It has
no recogn!~ m~lcal value and
all distribution Is strictly

••••••

1111

Duck-in-chief._--,-_______~B_en_~_a_tt_en_b_er::::....g
wither; Daniel Ortega would
gradually reverse democratic
reforms. · The democratic re·
forms . The democratic governments of El Salvador and Guatemala would be threaten~ by
Sand!n!sta arms and subversion
- and those governments mjght
be taken· over by either r~ht·
wing generals or Marxists. In the
U.S. election, the Republicans
would claim that communist
chaos In Central America was
caus~ by Democrats In Congress. That would be a harmful,
and correct, charge.
There Is a problem with all
that. The communists wh\, the
Reagan doesn't like communists.
Moreover, Clare Boothe Luce
said every president Is remem·
bered by one sentence. Under
such c.!rcomstances Re~tgan's
line In history would be ''He''s the
president who lost Central Amer·
lea to the communists."

,.,......... 11. . . ~ u
MrDcwiW1'7, . . . . . tl
Famtiii&amp;M 'Jl, *pdare U
. ,
. ~.... Le. . . . . . II, OatH MIIJI

Ull ·

•

Brock Is also a former senator •
and Etepubllcan Party chairman.
He Is cr~lt~ as a major player
In rebuilding the party and
broadening Its appeal during his
1977·1980 stint as chairman of the
Republican National Committee.
He Is a canny, candid pOlitician,
now ; adroitly running the Dole ,.
campaign.

Ronald Reagan was eloquent
and correct In his State of the
Union plea for aid to the contra
freedom fighters In Nicaragua.
But suppose the Congress, unper·
suaded, votes down his request?
There will be much cl1.1ck!ng
about .. how this proves that
Reagan Is a lame duck. Well,
maybe so. But It might be wise to
remember that Reagan w!ll still
be president, "duck-in-chief'! as
It were, lor a nother full year. And
In our system , even lame pres!·
dents have great power If they
choose to use it.
Now, administration sources
say they have done no contingency planning for a "no" vote.
They say they are not defeatists,
that they are going to win the
contest. Indeed, they might.
But It doesn 't take more than a
few phone calls to foreign policy,
legal and political experts to
figure out some of the options
Reagan might consider If he
loses the vote. Here are a few ,
ranging from cynical, to ex·
treme, to unlikely, to plausible .
Reagan could do nothing. The
main force of the contras would

.......

-IV
Cle . . IM.edll: tT, Cle Ha&amp;llawaJ

Ill t

•

Brock has paid his dues. He
serv~ as Reagan's labor secretary from 1985 to late last year,
when he resign~ to become
· Dole's campaign manager. Be·
fore that, he was the president's
Cab!net-rankf!tt special trade representative for foUr years. In
that capacity, he · developed a
reputation for hard-no~ deliberations with the Japanese, tire·
lessly trying to open their
markets to U.S. exports.
•

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Now we're going to find out If Super Tuesday Is
going to be the political equivalent of the boat built In the basement.
On March 8, 21 states, Including a dozen In Southern and b9rder
states, will hold primaries and caucuses that will select 63 percent of
the delegates n~ed to win the Democratic presidential nomination
and 70 percent of the number needed to clinch the GOP nomination.
That, lnd~. will be s Super Tuesday .
The Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary culled the
thundering herd of 13 Republican and Democratic presidential
aspirants and some smaller tests in the next couple of weeks may
k!'lock off one or more of the weakest survivors.

mind.~

•

.......
m

llfMeT---.11, v••.....,..l l.

Ducks on the beijing?

•

o.,.

v.a an .te.. .aa. Mr Elm.~
. . . . . . . . . . New... Fallll

......

Both men are American blueb.loods, though qe!ther flaunts it. •
William Emerson Brock III Is :
from a wealthy Tennessee
candy-manufacturing family.
James Addison Baker Ill comes
from a long line of prestigious
Texas lawyers.

Will Super
Tuesday float?

So they organized a regional primary to give the South a louder
voice In the nomination process. Some say they also had In mind a
vehicle to win the Democratic nomination for former Gov. Charles 1
Robb of Virginia or Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia. Neither of those
worthies chose to run for president , so the Southern candidate
became Sen. Albert Gore, who all but Ignored Iowa and New
Hampshire In favor of early ca mpaigning In the Sout(l.
So now the Demnocrats have a governor from Massachusetts and a
congressman from Missouri as front -runners. Gore has yet to
demonstrate he can win primary or caucus votes anywhere and some
observers think the big winner In the South may turn out to be Jesse
Jackson, a native of South Carol!ria who almost certainly was not the
candidate the Southern Democratic leaders had In mind when they
.cooked up Super Tuesday.
Furthermore, even if Super Tuesday does produce a Democratic
candidate acceptable to the founders of the Southern regional
primary, they still may have problems with party leaders !rom
places like Illinois, New York. Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Jersey and
California, whow!ll not be happy to find their states all but written out.
of the nominating process. It Is possible that they will retaliate when
the Democrats undertake their quadrennial tinkering job on \he party
delegate selection rules for 1992.
The legendary fellow who built his boat In the basement got so
ambitious and did such a good job that he ended up with a vessel too
large to get out of the cellar. The folks who built Super Tuesday may
wish on March 8 that they had done ·the same.

,.

L

R~ N . C .

IE'lephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters shoUld be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalltles.

..

I

181 •

I

•••

Elm~ :U
LttlkwiUc .o\ll ..lll•IIJ, AkrC'o\-..Mr)· 3~
M.l...,.nf.ld raMI•I a . .\II....,. .u
!'WIIIII Ranc• M, S,Wien t ' •ll!i II
WI ...... $1, Ml•niiUdp 53
IMI. . .Wid t~aniiMI 5Z. All~ ....
Louhi\'IU. Aq .. ~ 11. Allr ( 'o \~ nlry :u

•

administration. Both let It be
·known to Reagan that they would
rather have been secretary of
state If George Shultz had ever
resigned.
·
Neither Is widely· versed In
foreign affairs, except In InlernaIlona! economics. Both are cons!·
der~ moderate Republicans
who, If they had the post, would
be swimming upstream against
conservatives led by Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
heayywelght Sen. Jessle.Helms,

DlvW.aiU
\ 'al nr t\I:•IMII a Atr

(\I )Ill

By lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta·
prestige of being the dean of
Am~rlca's foreign policy .
A~cord!ng to our sources, If
Bob Dole becomes president, he
will probably pick Bill Brock as
his secretary of state. If Bush
wins, Jim Baker Is likely to
become his foreign policy cz11r.
The two men are surprisingly
similar. BOth have served as ·
Cabinet officers In the Reagan

Reds will open · with

Scoreboard ...

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3 _

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toad. 'Wil'ltlld., Olw'lel Bark·

rr

81111 151Wbonmds.

, . DaMY liclll.yll

:&amp;1 polntl Qd Alea
bit
Ia

!oi'

taurtb

lORN IAWBOBN
cr.
.. aollqe wlna)

they let me opera te on e ighl
cylinders, I'll take ail the blame
II we doni win."
So to is the only pitcher yet to .
report to the Reds' new (acUity at ;
Pla nt City. located about20m!les ·
east of Tampa, where Cincinnati :
had trained every year since 1931 :
except for three years during :
World War II.
Soto was to have p!tc~ :
Sunday In his native Dominican
Republic and schedul~ to arrive .
In the Reds' camp today.
Both third baseman Buddy ·
Bell and centerf!elder Eric Davis :
worked out for the first time
Monday. But rlghtttelder Tracy .
Jones, who arrived complaining .
of . a. flu -like !liness, did not
participate.
Bell, who took batting practice,
showed no signs of the arthros·
cop!c surgery perform~ on his
right knee Jan. 5.
The R~s sign~ two players
Monday, Pitcher Rob Lopez and
catcher Joe Oliver, both of whom
spent the 1987 season at Vermont
of the Class AA Eastern League.
They" agreed to terms on oneyear contracts.
Lopez, a righthander, was 13·4
with a 2.40 earn~ run average at
Vermont and !~ the league In
ERA and complete games with
10. During a short stint at AAA
Nashvll!e !ate In the season, he
was 0-2 with a 4.50 ERA In seven
appearances..
Oliver hit .305 and drove In 60 .
runs in 66 games at Vermont. He
missed the final two months of ·
the season after Injuring a finger:
on his throwing hand.

The Daily Sentinel
(V8P814fi.NI)
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ROCK SPRINGS - Although figure average, steadies the EHS
not reflecting the likes of "Peter line-up, while senior Allen Tripp
Cottontail" moat area high hard-hits the boards.
school teams will begin hopping
Most likely senior Mark Griffin
down the tournamel!t trail this will be out of the line-up to take
evenll!g, just as Division IV away some of EHS's speed
playoff teams will be doing this . adv:antage. Griffin Is also a solid
evenll!g begiJUjtng at 6:15 p.m. In scorer, however, he may be
Meigs High; s Larry R . Morrison replaced by either junior Chris
Gymnasium.
.Lance, who has come on strong of
Meeting 111 the openll!g game late, or Jeff Johnson.
will be the local Eastern Eagles,
In the nightcap, Southern
now 8-12, against the Crooksville · hopes to shake Its thoughts of two
Ceramlcs,3-17, while the defend- consecutive poor showll!gs and
ll!g champion Southern Torna- also set aside the memories of
does, top-seeded at 17-3, will face near defeat by Kyger Creek Just
the Kyger Creek Bobcats In the three W!!t!ks ago. After leading by
nightcap at 8: 15.
as much as 9 points In the tlnal
One can wager that all teams round, KC dropped a 53-51
will Indeed be "hopping" come decision to SHS as Shawn Diddle
tournament time, because the drove home' the game winning
second seasop may come to an rebound at the buzzer.
abrupt should one's team lumber ·
Southern Is offensively potent
Into battle without serious and the regions . top offensive
thoughts. There are no second squad, ranked 11th In the state,
chances. The slates are wiped
and claiming Its 11th SVAC
perfectly clean, and every team championship In the past 123
seems to be equally competitive years . .
when Inspired by the season's
golden finale.
The Tornadoes of Coach Howle ,
Although Its record may be Caldwell usually depend on
somewhat deceiving, the Crooks- grtndlrig opponents. away In the
ville Ceramics are dangerously early going as evidenced by first
potent as they have competed quarter scoring slats of 406-289
year-long against opponents of pts. Second through fourth period
Class 'AA' and " AAA" status, slats Southern has outscored Its
playing only one Division IV foes 422-286,426-330, and 4:;2-340.
team this season according to
Unbelelveably, SHS has aver·
Coach Dennis Eichinger's scout- aged over 50 percent from the
ll!g report.
field connecting on 542-1014
The Ceramics dawn a young, jumpers, has hit 41 percent of Its
but aggressive team that has three pointers(117·281), and has
only two seniors. Three juniors, hit a cool283-432 from the line for
two sophomores al!d one fresh- 65 percent.
·
man round out the roster.
SHS has five men In double
This year's edition features a figure ·averages after twenty
typical . Crooksville team of games, led l!Y Dave Amburgey .
tough,physlcal, and aggressive with an 18.8 average (376 pts.),
character. They are defending Jeff Caldwell with 16.7 (334),
Sectional champions of one year Kenny Turley wlt' h
ago.
14.1 (282),Shannon Riffle with
The Ceramics are a well 10.2 (204) ,and Dave McMillin 10.7
disciplined team both offensively 1182) .Filffle owns the best overall
and defensively, running -a patt- percentage of 56.2 percent.
erned offensive set that antlcl·
With an equally competitive
pates defensive mismatches· line-up Dave Amburgey and Jeff
.Their strategies are geared to Caldwell take turns aI running
pullll!g the defense out front, then the offense, while Shannon Rittle
looking for the back door.
utilizes his strong talents from
Offensively, C-ville Is a slow the swing guard.Kenny Turley
down type team, but If opportun- grabbed a total of 250 total
Ity arises they will last break.
rebounds, flaunted by 170.defenThe Ceramics show multiple slve caroms.
defensive alignments with a
Dave McMIIIln was second In
baste defense being a 'well- rebounds with 124, also combincoached' man-to-man . They also Ing with Turley for staunch
show a 1-3-1 zone and a variety of Inside power .
combination defenses , Including
With Its fast tempo Southern
a triangle and two.
relies greatly on Its bench to
Sometimes pressing, Crooks· provide fresh troups at all times .
ville looks to generate a lot of Shawn Cunningham has contribpressure and Initiate Its - fast uted steadily. with Shawn Diddle
break.
a sometime starter . Chris Stout,
Probable starters are 6'2,190 vastly Improving his game. pro·
pound junior Aaron Taylor, whO vldes another shooting guard,
Is a good ball handler, very sound while Scott McPhail,Mike Amosat his position as a top rebounder • ,Shane Simpson, and Brent
and key scorer.Next Is 6'2,190 Shuler form an Invine lble
pound Junior sidekick, Chad reinforcement.
Wood, who Is strong on both
sOuthern claimed a convincing
boards and good left handed· 77-45 win at Kyger Creek,but
shooter.
faced a much tougher club In
Sophomore Pt. guard Dom Racine. ·
Musick does It all at 5-9,165.
Noted mostly for Its multiple
Running the offense be Is capable defenses, KC started In a "man",
of effectively hitting the 3-pt. then switched to an effective 1-3.1
jumper.Senlor Lonny Jarrett Is zone alignment that stunned the
noted as the team's best shooter. · Tornadoes. The KC bombshell
Six footer's Ryan Wade and a.lso took away the SHS fast
Mark Dalrymple, round out the break.
list of probables.
Last time out KC's 1·4 stack
Eastern. noted this year as one offense also stunned the defense·
of the area's top offensive teams, · less Tornadoes as Chad Leach,
averaging near 70 per game, and big men Mike Bradbury and
depends on a quick pace and full top-scorer,6-5 Bill Loveday ate
court pressure. Eastern, how- the Tornadoes alive Inside.
ever, Is equally effective with a
Coach Howle Caldwell has
slow down game, capable of taken measures to avoid a repeat
getting a good shot from the and gestures his Tornadoes will
play their type of ballgame .
patterned offense.
EHS also Is reliable from both
Referring to his club's last two
inside and out with 6'2, 160 pound outings Caldwell Indicated his
Mike Martin as the Inside an- club was 'mentally tired' after a
chor. Martin lscomlngoffagreat grinding finale and !ley contest
24-pt. effort. Running the offense with Hannan Trace.The veteran.
Is guard Tony Hendrix, a three- mentor also made no bones about
pt. scoring threat, and quick his team having . ' no excuses·
·.With a weekend's rest Tornado
passer.
Senior Steve Horner. a consist· fans can look for a violent
, · ent offensive threat with a double Tornado rampage tonight.

· Ohio Outdoors

Worst time of the year
for. outdoors enthusiasts
By JERRY PICKRELL
Ouldoor Writers
AssoclaUon of America
Dlslrlbuted by UPI
This Is a miserable time of the
year. There's no sense In trying
to pretend It's anything else. By
the end of the month, even the
last of the hunting seasons will be
over tor the. year. Grouse season
ends when February does.
Actualiy, there Is one other
hunting season to come yet this
spring. Turkey season usually
starts In AprU or May, but It's
still too early to start scouting for
• a good turkey spilt.
Fishll!g's kind of slow right
• now, too. Thelcelrimostplacesis
too thin to be safe tor Ice lllhlng
built's certainly thick enough to
• make cutinglmpoufble.

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TouJ•Jtament trail
gets ·underway in
area this, evening
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The Dilly Sl!llinlll

~ """"'-"''&gt;~~;-...:&gt;'

wms; Bartrurn sets season scoring rec(lrd with 23
;
ROCK SPRINGS - Brent Metgs five owned a three point throw tries for the Meigs five and lng percentage from the charity
• Blilsell walkecl ott with the game 16-13 advantage. Duflng the what could have been a two point stripe In the last few games to 77
scoring honors getting 23 points second stanza. tbe score was lead for the ylsltors at that point percent as they canned 14 of 18
on the illgbt and Mike Bartrum knotted at 17 at.the 6: 50 mark and resulted ln a four point spread for · ti-les. Meigs outrebounded the
. . set a new Marauder single again at 21 with 5: 17 showing on the locals.
VIkings 45 to 37 with Bartrum
.• seuon scoring mar(( tallying 19 the clock and li appeared that It
That PlaY seemed to take the gFa bblng 12 to lead the .way .
' for a total of. 459 on the year, might be a repeat of the earlier wind ou' of the VIking sails and
VInton County managed to hit
• exceedll!g the previous record of meeting when the . Marauders give new life to the struggling only 16 of 66 from the floor for 24
: • Rick Wise by four.
escaped with a tlltee point win at Marauders as they built on the percent and had 14 of 21 fall from
,
Five seniors started for the McArthur.
lead thr oughout the remainder of the tree throw line for a . 66
• Marauders In · their final home
VInton County had the oppor- the game and were never again percent ratio. Scott Maynard and
; · 'appearance at Larry R. Morrl·
tunity to tie the score. or even seriously t~atened by \he vis- Atlam Conway shared rebound'.·son Gymnasium. Those.five, Bill take the lead, with 1: 42 left In the Itors. During the third frame the Ing honors with 9 each.
.
! '·.Brothers, Brent Bissen,
Mike . first half as the Marauders were Vlkes could muster only six
Each·
team
had
16
fouls
called
.
~- .Bartrum, ~oey Snyder and Chris
hit with a technical . as they points ·as the Marauders con- against them and the Marauders
-; ·S!nlth, along with John Sisson disputed a foul called against trolled the boards allowing VIn- committed 20 turnovers to 14 for
:- :and Brian Durst gave the parents
them. Adam Conway shot the one ton County only ()De shot each the visiting Vlkes.
:. night gathering a good show and
and one assessed for the Infrac- time downcourt. In that eight
Meigs c Josed their season at 13
;. ;closed their career In good
tion and Brian Owings stepped to minute span, Meigs racked up 22 and 7 and will now face the
• · .fashion as they vanquished the the line for the two shots on the . of their own.
Jackson Ironmen In tournament
:• :v~nton Colll\tY VIkings 70-46.
''T" which would have tied the
TM MaraUders shot a 36 play Wednesday at 6:30 p. m . at
": • Tile game got off to a rather game. ·He missed both and on the percent average In the field goal Rio Grande.
:- .s!QW start and at the close of the
ensuing lnbounds pass, Bissell department hitting on 26, of 71
Box score:
:. ' first elgtit minutes of play the was fouled. Brent sank both free attempts and upped their shootMF:IGS - Brothers 3-0-2-8;
'

With only a three point lead
going ln.to the th ird period. the
Meigs defense prevailed and the
Marauders were able to hit for
thirteen points while holding
their · opponents scoreless
through six minutes of play . That
dominance continued into the
· fourth frame and It wasn't until
the two minute mark that th e
Vikings had their f\I'st points .of
the second half.
Leading the Meigs team In
scoring was Cary Betzlngwilh 12
followed by big Doug Stewart
who canned 9. Behind him came
Jay Humphreys wjth 8, Eddie
Crooks . accounted for 6, Chris
Stewart 3 and Scott Barton and
Randy Hawley added 2 each , ·
Rob Lindsey was high point
man for the Vikings with 7
followed by ·mu Davis who had
five.
·

)Jonnie Blair claims · second U. S. gold medal
'

Eastern High School Eagles

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Southern High School To~does

HIP AcrJON - Mlcbl1aa Slate's Todd Wolfe, rllhl, l(lves
Mlcblpa'a Olea Rice a lllp whUe drl\lla« under Ills basket durlal
lbe fin&amp; half ollllonday nllbt'a BI1Ten conteatln Ann Arbor, Mich.
The Wolverines downed tile Spartaas 77-67. (UPI)

Xavier captures cage title; Cards win
By United Press lnternallonal
Xavier captured the Midwestern Collegiate Conference cham·
pionshlp Monday night and Otterbein ...,on Its first game of the
season'.ln the first round of.the.
Ohio Athletic Conference
tournament.
Derek Strong_ scored his 16
points In the first half to stake
Xavier to a 45-29 halftime lead
and Byron Larkin and Stan
Kimbrough topped the Musketeers with 20 points each as
Xavier downed St. Louis 93-70 to
earn the MCC crown.
The win was a school record
nine In a row for Xavier, the 16th
in the last 17 games and 24th In a
row at home.
Xavier Is now 20-3 overall and
8-1 In the MCC.
"It's an excellent win. It will be
a good springboard Into · the
tournament," said Xavier coach
Pete Gillen.
The MCC tournament opens
March 10 In Indianapolis.

Otterbein, which had lost 25 Grove City at John CarrolL
games' this season to tie the
The first round of the North
NCAA Division Ill record with Coast Athletic Conference tourthree other schools, won Its first nament will be played ·tonight.
game of the year, 75-65 over . Case Is at Allegheny, Denison at
Baldwin-Wallace, In the first Oberlin and K!!ilyon at Wooster.
round of the OAC tournament.
At Berea, Matt Batross scored
Otterbein takes Its 1·25 record 10 points In the closing minute,
Into Wednesday night's quarterand eight free throws In the last
finals against OAC regular· 45 seconds, for Ottebeln. Batross
season champion Ohio Northern finished with 20 points, second to
which had the first-round bye.
teljmmate Chad Reynolds' 22.
Clarkson (N.Y.) College had
Baldwin-Wallace, which led
also lost 25 consecutive games In 34-22 at the half, lost three
one season and Mary Washington starters to fouls late In the game.
(Va.) and La Verne (Calif.) also Terry Iianna scored 20 points
lost 25 games In a single season. before fouling out.
Cleveland State defeated
At Cleveland, Ken McFadden
Illinois-Chicago 89-69 and Middle
Tennessee downed Youngstown
State 78-581n o.ther Monday night
games.
Tonight's schedule has Memphis State at Cincinnati, DeCROSS LANES, W.VA.
fiance at Cedarville, Malone at Greater Beckley Christian
Ohio Dominican, Dyke at Mount School got 27 points from N.
Vernon Mazarene, Urbana at Schoolcraft en route to defeating
Findlay, Thiel at Hiram and Ohio Valley Christian School In
junior varsity tournament action
Monday night.
The Defenders were led by
It was the second time this freshmen Dax Hill (25 points)
season the 6-foot-8 · senior for- and Greg Wray (19 points).
ward was selected for the honor.
Beckley watched Its firSt. Mudd had 55 points and 34 quarter advantage (13·6) evaporebounds In three games last rate to a 26-24 lead at halftime.
week. He led Cleveland State to a Beckley, In surviving a 40-40 tie
75-53 AMCU win over Southest at the end of the third quarter ,
Missouri State last Monday with scored 17 In the fourth quarter to
13 points and 14 rebounds.
record Its three-point win.
In addition, Mudd had21 points
The Defenders . will take on
and six rebounds In an 85-76 Cross Lanes Christian 'School
non-conference loss to Toledo Tuesday, at 6 p.m.
Wednesday and scored 21 points
and pulled down 14 rebounds In a
an 80-66 conference win Saturday
at Valparaiso,

OVCS JVs 'Jose to
Greater Beckley

.
Name playel'tW)f·week for Ohio teams
.

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Marietta senior Kevin Darby, who
led the Pioneers to a split In their
two games last week, has been
selected theOhloAthleticConference player of the week.
Darby, a 6-foot-2 forward from
Youngstown, Ohio, scored 47
points. grabbed 18 rebounds and
had 8 assists In the two games.
Darby scored 18 points In an
89-74 loss to Kenyon ·on Wednes·
day and 29 In an 81-79 overtime
win at Baldwin-Wallace on
Saturday.

One bright spot In all of this are
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)' - Tolethe smallish pieces of open water
do's
Chad Keller, who led. the
that can be seen around Inlets
·and outfalls of wa.terways. Usu- · Rockets to , a pair of wins last
ally, these tennis court size week, has been selected the
openings Indicate .warmer water Mid -American Conference
player of the week.
entering a frozen lake or pond.
Keller, a 6-foot-6 sophomore
Warm w.ater draivs small fish
from
Van Buren, Ohio, scored 30
and they attract larger ones.
points
and grabbed 15 rebounds
The action won't be fast and
In
wins
over Cleveland State and
heavy, but there's,a good chance
Kent
State.
that you could pick up a crappJe
He had 13 points and 9 rebounds
or a smallmouth bass In places
In
the 85-76 victory over Clevelike this. Look for open water
areas along the north shore of land Slate on Wednesday and 17
points and 6 rebounds In a 62·60
your favorite lake.
· The sun hanging· low In the win over Kent State on saturday.
southern sky sends Its most
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) direct rays Into that part of the
Eric
Mudd of Cleveland State on
lake. This, too, warms the water,
Monday
was named the Assocla·
attracts !he fish .and makes a
good ~t to try for a hit right tlon of Mid-Continent Universities' player of the week.
noW.

.,

Bissell 9-0·5-23; Smith 2-0-0-4;
Bartrum 3-3-4-19; Snyder 0-0-0-0;
Sisson 0-0-1-1; Nelgler 0·1-0-3;
Burdette 1-0-2-4; Durst 2-0-0-4;
Baker 1-0-0-2; Powell 0-0-0-0;
Barton 1-0-0-2. I
VCHS:Speakman 1-0-0-2; Grlf·
flth 6-0-4-16; Maynard 1-0-0-2;
Collins 3-0·1-7; Palmer 3-0-0-6;
Conway 1-0-6-8; Hale 1-0-0·2 :
Gandee 0-0-3-3.
Score by quarters:
Melgs .... .. ... :....... ;.... l6 39 61 70
VCHS ...................... 13 31 37 46
Alter finding the going rough in
the last three games, the Ma·
rauder JV squad closed their
season w.l th a bang as they sank
the Vikings by a 42-24 score. As In
the varsity game, the visitors
stayed In contention for two
periods until the Little Marauders settled down and took control
In the second half of play .

scored 22 pOints to lead
Cleveland State to Its
Association of J!oiid-Continent
Unlversltles-8 wln. Steve
Malloy added 11 paints and
WIUiam Stanley chipped In with
10 to help the VIkings remain
tied for the AMCU-8 lead with
Southwest Missouri, both 10-2
records.
At Murfreesboro, Tenn ., Leslie,
Gregory and Randy ·Henry'
scored 19 points each to lead ,
Middle Tennessee to Its Ohio·,
Valley Conference win over
Youngstown State. Ttm Jackson"
led YSU with 15 points.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utllllles Commlsslon of Ohkl 'has set
for public helrina Case
No. 88-01-EL-EFC, til
review the fuel procurement practices and
POlicies of the Olio PGwer
Company,' the operation
of Its Electric Fuel Com- .

ponent, and related mat-

ters. This hearing ii
scheduled to !Jegln at
1:30 p.m. on~ 21,
1988 at City Council

Chambels 218 CIMIRI
Avanue, S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702.
All Interested . parties
will be giwn an opporllltily 10 be heald. ftrlher
may be
oblalned by conlaclitg
the CQmmission.
,

Information

MUTUAL FUNDS?

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MIA DISIIIIUTOIS
c-.-s.~~~

, ..... CW,.I

POWELL'S

IIOGR'S
FOODUND
FIUTH'S
PUASRS

PillA HUT
For Your ·

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Conh •clio• to the

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9.25°/ooN IRA's

•

Bradley ace ~ets
63 in 122-107 win
By LISA HARRIS
UPI Sports Wrller
Detroit's. Archie Tullos established a school record' for points
•'
In a game Monday night, yet was
clearly overshadowed.
, ' Because while Tullos was
scoring 49 points, Bradley's
. ,Hersey Hawkins was hitting for
• 63. to' break by 1 the Missouri
Valley Conference • record of
' Os~ar Robl!rtson and lead co-No .
18 Bradley to a 122-107 non-league
,
• triumph.
Robertson, while playing for
Cincinnati, scored 62 points In a
game Feb. 8, 1960.
;•Jt was a game that was
enjoyable to watch and enjoyable
to play," said Hawkins, the
nation's leac!lng scorer. "The
players love to play In games like
these. .\Ye usually think a lot
about defense, but tonight It got
to the point where everybody
said: 'The heiiiYith defense, let's
go out and score some points.·
"I · had a lot of layups. a lot
more layups than I usually have.
I knew that when I was scoring a
lot of points and when the team
was saying give me the ball,
that's when I knew I was close to
rd . .. '
'
areco
1
Asked what that tecord means
to him, Hawkins said!
"ldon'tknow yet. Maybe when
the season Is ove~ and I sit back
and think a bout my college
career, then maybe I can enJoy
' . -what I have accomplished."

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Hawkins. a senior guard, hlt 21
of 28 shots from the floor, 18 of 20
trom the free-throw line, three
·3-polnt goals and hauled down 11
rebo.unds In breaking the Callhan
Hall record for most points In a
game. The previous high had
been 47 by Detroit's Terry
Duerod set In 1978.
Bradley, 20-4 overall, held a
63-Sllead at halftime.
Tullos had been through a
similar experlenc~ as a junlgr
last season, when he topped 30
points tor the flrs.t time, In a
game against Bu tier when Its
star, Darrln Fitzgerald, scored
54.
"You want to win every game
but sometimes you can give all
you can and not win," Tullos
said. "I try to give my all but
some of the things you ,can't
control."
"Such as Hersey?" Tullos was
asked.
"That's true," Tullos said.
"Hersey's a great, great player.
It was just a pleasure to play with
him. He played li superb game
' and I learned some things from
him tonight. You probably won't
see too many games where two
players score 50 or more points. I
think that's what the people (a
season-high 4,021) came to see.
They came to see Hersey put It up
and they came to see me put It
Up.' '
In other games, Seton Hall
upset No. 8 Pittsburgh 89· 72,

.

:;: Release rosters for tilt ·
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SIICI11/S/16

Plan ,For Retirement Today
11.18% Avera11 Since 197$ -

CALGARY, Alberta (UPI) Bonnie Blair, a skater with a
heart as big as Middle America,
bas restored Olympic pride to the
li.S. speedskating team at the
Winter Games after a week of
heartbreak and disappointment.
Blair, a 24-year-old from
Champaign, lll) became only the
second gold medal w.lnner for the
United Stales at the Games by
winning the women's 500-meter
event Monday night In world
record time over East Germany's Christa Rot~enbullier
and .Karin Kania.
. With Rothenburger having already set a world record of 39.12
seconds In the one-lap sprint,
Blair took the Ice under great
pressure.
'
. A week of falls and setbacks
had left the American men's
team with only one medal In five
races. U.S . hopeful Dan Jansen
fell In both his races last week,
his composure shaken by the
death of his sister one day Into the
Games. Only Eric Flaim's sliver
medal In · the 1,500 .meters prevented the men from being
blanked.
It was up to the women to talse
the team's spirits. Blair was
. more than worthy of the task. She
rocketed around the Olympic
Oval in 39.10, claiming the world
record and adding an American
gold to theoneplckedupby Brian
BOitano In figure skating two
nlg)lts earlier.
"I did It on guts;' 'Blair said, "I
did a (practice) lap this week
that I knew was good enough to
win and that's what I kept
thinking about.
"I knew I was capable of 11. I
knew what I wascapableofdolng
and I was hOping to be able to do
it."

About 20 family members were
present to watch Blair's victory,
and among the millions of
Americans viewing on television
were hundreds of friends and
supporters gathered at Doyle's
Tavern In Champaign. The
Champaign pollee department
adopted Blair several years ago
and has held fund-raisers to help
with her expenses .
It was only the fourth medal
overall for the United States. The
Soviet Union has :.von 18 and East
Germany 14. The Soviets have
seven golds and the East Ger·
mans six .
Joining Blair as gold medalists
Monday were Sigrid Wolf of
Austria , who won the women's
super-giant slalom and made her
country the most dominant
Olympic alpine skiing nation In
20 years: the Swedish men's
40-kllometer cross-country relay
team; and the two-man bubsled
driven by Ya'nls Klpurs of the
Soviet Union.
In Ice dancing, three-time
world champions Natalia Bestemlanova and Andre Bukln of the
Soirlet Union had the lead enter·
lng · tonight's final !fee-skate ·
competition. Soviets Marina
Kllmova and Sergei Ponomarenko were second and Canada's
Tracy Wilson and Robert McCall
were third.
•
. The 90-meter ski jumping,
originally set for last Saturday,
was postponed and was resche·
duled for today. But winds have
plagued the event for a week and
it Is not cerlaln If the competition
will ever take place. The exasperated chairman of the ski
jumping jury criticized those
who placed the site of the event
on a barren hill at the outskirts of
Calgary, unshielded from the
prairie winds.
"I feared this (rom the day I
saw. this site t.wo years ago," said
Torbjorn Yggeseth of Norway. "I
proposed windscreens and floodlights (for night jumping when
the wln,ds are ' calmer). I never
.
got an answer. I don't know who
rejected it.
"All the skiers wake up In the
morning thlf!klng tl!ere's an
·Olympic competition today and

..
land, Sweden and Canada beginnlng play for the gold Wednes·
day. Canada will meet the
Soviets, Czechoslovakia will play
Sweden and Finland will face
West Germany.
.

tl!en they go home at night~ It's
mental cruelty."
The medal round of the OJym.
pic hockey tournament was set
with the Soviet Union, west
s;ermany, Czechoslovakia, Fin-

Rutgers defeated St. BonavenSETS WORLD MARK'- Bonnie Blair of Champaign, III., looks
.ture 87-72, Kansas State topped
up at the seoreboard as sbe crosses the finish line Monday to set a
· Northern li.Unols 88-67, Notre
world's record and win the gold medal for the U.S. In the women's
Dame beat Creighton 66-54, No .
1100-meter
speedskatlng event In the Winter Olympics , In Calgary,
10 Michigan downed Michigan
Alberta.
(UPI/REUTER)
State 77-67, VIllanova topped
Drexel 90-73 and Northeast Loul-'
slana beat Southern Mississippi
95-87.
At East Rutherford, N.J·.,
senior Mark Bryant scored a
career-high 32 points and
grabbed 16 rebounds to power
Seton Hall. Bryant sparked an
NEW YORK (UPI) - The Young, which received the other
18·2 burst that carried the PITemple
Owls, th~ks to ·a crusjl- first-place vote. remained sevrates, 18-10 overall and 6-71n the
lng
victory
over North Carolina enth. Nevada -Las Vegas moved
Big East, to an 82-68 lead. Seton
In
Chapel
Hill,
today solidified thre~ .spots to eighth while the
Hall held the Panthers, 19-4 and
·cLEVELAND !UPI) - Ozzle
their claim as the nation's No. 1 Tar Heels fell four spots to No.9.
first In the league at 9-3, to one Newsome, who has caught more
After No. 10 Michigan, it was :
team In the United Press Interna·
field goal In the final 7:17.
passes than any tight end In the
Ilona! weekly coJiege basketball No. 11 Syracuse, No. 12 Ken At Piscataway, N.J., freshman history of the NFL, says he will
tucky, No. 13 Iowa, No. 14
ratings.
Tom Savage scored 21 of his 33 return for an 11th season with the
The Owls collected 37 first- · Bradley and No. 15 Loyolapoints In U1e second half, spark- Cleveland Brow.ns.
place votes and 622 points from Marymount. The final five was
ll!g Rutgers. Savage sank 16 of 19
Newsome, who has 575 catches
the 42-member UPI Board of comprised of No. 16 Georgia
foul shots and grabbed 11 re- Including at least one In each of
Cqaches
to hold down the top spot Tech, No. 17 Missouri, No. 18
bounds for the Scarlet Knights, his la~t 127 reglilar season
for
the
third
consecutive week. North Carolina State, No. 19
5-19 overall and 2-13 In the games, said prior to the Browns'
Last week, the Owls earned 29 Vanderbilt and No. 20 Wyoming.
Atlantic 10. St. Bonaventure Is loss to Denver In the AFC
Georgetown dropped out of the
first-place votes and 609 points .
12-12 and 6-9.
Championship that he was not
ratings
while Georgia Tech reOn Sunday. Temple faced Its
At Manhattan, Kan., Mitch sure If he would retire.
most difficult test of the season entered the Top 20.
Richmond scored 26 points, In•'My plans are to be In training
The ratings are based on 15
and
routed then-No. 5 North
cludil!g 9 straight, to lead Kansas camp when·lt opens," Newsome
points
for first place, 14 for
Carolina
83-66
behind
a
19-0
run
to
State over Norther!! DUnols, said Monday . · '' Why? Three
'second,
etc.
start
the
second
half.
which suffered Its eighth consec- reasons.
Purdue
gained'
three
first·
utive road loss.
· •'First, I'm a lot healthier now
At South Bend, Ind., David thaniwasatthlsllmeayearago, . place votes and advanced one
Rivers scored 13 points despite when 1 was still gettll!g over spot Into second with 563 points.
going 2 for 11 from the field to lift those ankle and shoulder Arizona slipped from second to
third. earniDg 563 points. Oklathe Figlltlng Irish. Rivers sank 9 Injuries ·
.
of 11 foul shots, helpll!g Notre
"Second, I still want to play homa, secured one first-place
Dametoa24o!34performanceat and 1 still love the game," he vote and was fourth with 485
the free-throw line. Creighton said. "And third, I've got that points, while Duke moved one
went to the line only four times, thirst for the Super Bowl. I think spot Into fifth with 449 points.
"It's hard to say an~body
·converting three, as Notre Dame, the third time can be.the charm."
deserves
No. 1," said Tar Heels
committed Just eight fouls.
Cleveland has lost to Denver In
Dean
Smith after his club
Coach
AtAnnArbor,Mich.,GienRice the last two AFC Championship
, lost at .home to a non-conference
scored 33j,olntsand cappeda10-0 games.
second-halt run with a-layup to
"lfeel we're the team to beatln team for only the fifth time In 22
power Mlchlian, 22·4 OV!1rall and the AFC," New.ome said. "The years. "But based on this game,
. 11·2 In the B18 Ten.
character we showed In the I'm certainly votil!g them ( TemWhen you need us, we'll be
At Phlladelphta:, Doug West ' second half (comll!g back from ple) No. 1."
there ... with prompt, conPittsburgh, which defeated Big
struck tor 16 of his 18 points In the · an 18-polnt deficit to tie the game
cemed insurance service, We
first half and Tom Grell also before losing) proved to me we East rival Georgetown over the
aiWIY1 try to be friends you ..
weekend, was sixth and Brigham
I!COI't!d 18 to lift VWanova. West . can make It back.
can depend on. Call us today. '
shot 6 of 7 frOm the floor In the
first 20 minutes, lncludiDg 2 of 3
from 3-polnt ten1tory, to belp the
Wlldcall, 18-9, · to a 17-polnt
advantaae.
At Monroe, Ul., Kevin Toms
scorec! U' polnw and Nortbeut
MORE SPRING SUITS BY DEVON AND
Lolli*lana allot a~ebool·record
214 EAST MAIN
NIKKI NOW IN STOCK.
pereent trom lbe Door. Tile
.
"'U,R ~RICE- MOST REASONABLE'
~dlanuhot '1!1 percent' ~ the
field Ill the IIICOIId balf, 21 of 21.
111111J . . . . tin fiL f ~~....,Set. f LIL•1 p.&amp;

Browns will have
Newsome lith year

Temple remains first
after win over Heels

Wlllll SALI CONTINUES ON OUR
SDimOI OF IRON sum.

DAVIS-QUICKEL

a

AGENCY INC.

_... _

Nortbealt Lolllllau made aa of
55 attempts tor tile .,ne for 8 .1
' pereeat, ......... the lftool
mark
..1 1111ut Gnmbllq
In 19112-&amp;\

or.,

POMEROY
992·6687

-

51011

OliO

�•

-The -Daily Sentinel:

'

Tuudly. February 23. 188&amp;

-·

.·' Page-S
.

.

!.

-~~~~-=-~·-;-;;;··:corner
:~==~------------~------------------~..--------~----------------------~--~~~----~~------~-----------~--~----~~--~11----~·
_fommtmity
Sorority meeting held -~
.·~

._.;..·· -

'·

~..-1

.~He's:

in t~e top ten...

BJ C11A8LENE HOEFLICH

- Sever~! IPrlni activities were

planned at the recent meeting of
tbe Preceptor Beta Betil Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbl Sorority,
held at Grace Episcopal Parish
House
•
March 24 was announced as the
date · for the Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association spring
style show to be held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School. It
was voted to support the upcom·
lng Cancer Society's daffodil sale
Iii March. and onAprl113 to have
a tea where the Order of tbe Rose
. Will be conferred on Betty
Ohlinger and Lllllan MQOre.
Founder's Day was announced
for April 28 to be held at the
Sportsman In Athens.

just as one who frequents the
course, asked that we extend a
pu~llc thanks to all those people
who worked so hard toward
making membership operatlorl a
reality.

Melp Auctlol)eer Dan Smith
made his mark at the recen.t West
VIrginia Auctioneer Convention
at Charleston, W.Va. by placing
In . the top 10 In the annua.l
. auctioneering contest. About 60
competed.
As one of the top 10, Dan wlll
now go to the ·Lewisburg State
Fair In late August to compete
for the title of·champion auctioneer. Smith and his wife, Donna
Jean, went to the weekend
convention and Dan took pari In
the auction of miscellaneous
Items confiscated over the pas t
. year by the state.
·

Lenten services are being held
each Thursday and wjll continue
through March 24, 7: 30 p.m. at
different churches each evening.
The services are sponsored by
the. Meigs County Mlnsterlal
.Association using as the theme
"The Love Road to Calvary.
This week the services will be
at St . Paul Lutheran Church on
the theme "Love Is Not Jealous
or Boastful."

Birdie Mae Hysell, Box 33,
Rutland, Is another Meigs resident who will be marking up her
16th birthday In 64 years having
, been born In Leap Year, Feb. 29,
· 1924.
: Mrs. Hysell has worked at the
~RuUand Department Store for 35
years.

For all those children who are
fascinated with dinosaurs, have
we got good news for you!
Dlnamatlon, a very ~peclal
exhibit for children of ·all ages,
will be at the Cincinnati Museum
of Natural History, March 20 to
June 9.
The swinging, swishing, rumbling prehistoric reptiles,
created by the Dlnamatlon International Corporation, prQmlses
an e xciting exper.lence. Some of
the eight creatures represen~
In the special exhibit are half-size
while the smaller species are
full-size to closely simulate their
real-life appearance as It was
when they roamed the earth
some 65 million years ago.
In addition a dinosaur show
will be presented In the Cincinnati Planetarium. Various theorIes surrounding the mysterious
demise of the prehistoric creatures will be examined using
special effects against a background of panaramic vistas and
starry skies.
School group visits are encouraged and there are special rates.
Admission, otherwise Is $5 for
adults and $3 for children under
12. Besides the weekday hours, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., there are evening
hours on ~rlday and Saturdays
and Sunday afternoon hours.

,.

Carl Weese, longtime member
llf the Asbury United Methodist
j:hurch, Syracuse, will be honored for his dedication and
faithfulness to the church at a
potluck dinner to be held followIng church Sunday.
Weese has held many offices of
the church, been a teacher for
years, and as one member put It,
" was always there to do whatever needed to be done. "
, At the church It's part of their
"flowers for the living" program. Nice!
While membership purchase
and operation of the Jay Mar Golf
Course was under consideration
for several months, It seems that
lhlngs didn' t work out and
everything Is as It was since II
was given. by Jay Hall to the
county. Bill Childs has operated
the course for eight or so years,
~d ·presumably will continue to
do so.
Anyways, Penny Compton,

paDS'~.

It is · 100 percent safe. All you
have to do is take one pill with a
gl1115 of waler before each meal. It
breaks the fat into particles while
you sleep. The news story says it is a
major medical breakthrough with
worldwide parent pending.
These pills sound like exactly
what I've been looking for. They
cost $3S for llll plus $3 for
handlina, which is expensive for
me but worth it if they work. What
ca~ you tell me about this discov·
ery?- EXCITED MICHIGANDER
DEAR EX.: What you read .
wasn 'I a news story but an adver·
W;ement. If this pill worked you
would be reading about it in the
headlines of every newspaper in the
country.
In my opinion, such ad&lt; should
noi be pennitted. How these charla·
tanS get away with this stuff is
beyond me.
. If you want to lose weight ~ou
will bave to change your eatmg
habits and exercise like everyone

ebe.
.
Dear Ana Landers: I am m
~ but in good health. I hope you

mr

are able lo put my mind at ease in
regard to a subject that' I have been
worried about for a long time.
When a person dies and is
cremated, is the casket burned also?
My sister, who was quile well·to-do,
passed away a few years ago and
her husband bought a magnificent
casket with silver handles. She
asked to. be cremated. Was that
casket also burned? If so, what
happened to the silver handles?'
I have heard that the undertakers
often switch caskets before crema·
tion. Is this so? Please respond so I
can stop worrying. - A FLORID!·
AN
DEAR FLORIDIAN: A spokes·
person for Eugene J. Carroll (third·
generation mortician in Chicaso)
said the casket purchased is the
same doe used for cremation. There
is no changing of caske!S before it is
plac:OO in the chamber. No handles
are removed, regardless of their
value.
After cremation at 2.000 degrees,
the metallic fragments are removed
and discarded. All ashes, that of the
body and casket, with the frag·
ments removed, are returned to the
family.
Dear Ann Llnders: I hll\le been
reading with inlerest the letters
from women who left their very
young children in day-care cenlers
while they pu r.;ued high-powered
career.; in business and indw.try.
My daughter was another one who
was sure she could "have it all."
"Eleanor" was always an IICIIdem·
ic star and a super-achiever. She
had a wonderful husband and two

Calendar
Gard en Club meets Tuesday.
7: 30 p.m., home of Barbara
Allen. Plant auction.

TUESDAY
RACINE - American Association of. University Women,
Middleport -Pomero y Ar ea
Branch, will meet Tuesday at
7: 30 p.m. at the Racine United
Methodist Church. "Commun·
lty" will be the them e of the
meeting.

MIDDLEPORT '-- A special
meeting of Mlddlepart Masonic
Lodge will be held Tuesday, 7; 30
p.m., for practice In the MM
degree. All members who helped
with the Fellowcraft team are
asked to attend. The regular
lodge meeting wlll be held at 7: 30
p.m . on March 1. Inspection will
be on March 4, with dinner at 6: 30
p.m. , followed by a meeting at
7:30.

RACINE- OAI;&gt;SE Chapter 17
will meet 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday
evening at the Meigs Junior High
·School.
CHESHIRE - Rev. Sam Clay
will be at Old Bethel Church on
Story'l Run Road, north · of
Otesblre railroad tracks, Tues·
clay, 7:30p.m.

WEDNDDAY
RACINE - The parent meet·
lng ot the Everybody C&lt;!Pnta
Prograni will be held at Southern
High School at '1 p.m. on Wednesday evening.

CHESHIRE
Cheshire
. 0ape11r OES meets Tuesday,
7:30p.m., yumlc Hall.

me&gt; GRANDE -

.()pen Gate

,,

FOREST RliN ..,- Wildwood
Garden Club wlll ·meet Wednes·
0

=~~

\

eastern convention °~
,
Sigma Phi ~o be held on une 24 • ,
25 and 26at Annapolis, Md. Eight .
memberswplan to atten~he . gu
· est ,
Karen erry was
speaker and talked on how to :
trace your· family ancestors. A •
report was given on the soup and :
sandwich supper at the home of I
Donna Jones, and the trip to Ohio :
linlverslty to see "Carousel" •
with a dinner at La~s - Attendl,ng \·
the meeting were Ann Rupe, 1
Joan Corder, -Clarice Krilutter, ,
Maida Mora, Roberta O'-B rien, ;
Velma Rue, Rose Sisson, Unlan , .
Moore. Donna Jones, Teresa :
Swatzel, Reva Vaughan, Shirley ;
Beegle, Betty Ohlnger, Rul!y I
Baer, and Jane Walton. · '
1

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
M~NPAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED
SUNDAY.
POLICIES
,
•Ada out1lde M•ID•· Clatlla or Pt.. aon count let must be pre·
paid.
•ReceNe 1 .150 di1count for eds paid in advance. .
· •free edl - Givt~IIWIV lnd f7ound 1d1 und., 16 word1 will be
run 3 d.ys 1t na char...
•Price of ad for all capltllllettera iS double price of ad cost.•
•7 point line ty"pe onty uud.
•Sentinel it not ,..ponslble for errors after fll'tlt day . (Check
for erron first diY ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00 p.rJI.
dey attar pubUCMion to make correC1ion.
•AdstMt must be paid in ad..,anct are:
' .
Card of. Tha~k• .. ·' Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Y•d Saln

· • A clanititd lldvertiltrnent pl1ced in The Oally Seritlnel c...
c.Pt - clatlified dieplav, Bualneu Cord and tee-' noticeal
will alao appe• in tht Pt . PINunt Regiater and the O.lti·
poll• Daily Tribune, reaching over 18,000 hotne~ .

I

Valentine party held by group ,·

CREATING ALBERT - Kim Krautter of Pomeroy created
Albert the 1 tar of tile upcomln1 eblldrea'a opera ptoduellon at
Ohio Unlvenlly of "Albert and Tlberlua", flntln clay, tbea In a
plastic mold, before It was finally cast Ia llber&amp;IB88 for llae
production.

'

COPY DEADLINEMONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY ~APER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY P&lt;\PER
SUNDAY PAPER

Children's opera being staged
Albert, the horse, Is the star of
the upcoming Athens Commun·
lty Music School's ch)ldren's
opera, "Albert and Tlberlus"
which will be presented Marc,h 6
at 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. ln' Recltal:
Hall of Ohio IJniverslty's School
of Music.
The opera, whl_c h Is being
coordin'a ted by Marilyn Remonko, director of Athens Community Music School, and her

Ann
Landers
._

...

_,

ANNIANDEU.
. . . . .,

7

7

. . .

~-a

affiliate, Marsha Reilly, wlll be
perform~ by children, but there
will be a lot of community
Involvement by adults.
Among the adults ~!ping Is
Kim Krautter , daughter of Karl
and Clarice. Krautter, Pomeroy,
a senior art sludent.
She sculpted the Image of
Albert out of clay, then took a
nine piece plaster'mold from the
clay Image. Using that plaster
mold, William Reeves, OU Industrial technology professor, wlll
then cast the Image in fiberglass .
Krautter volunteered her time
and talent til• create Albert. It
took her a week.
Tickets for the performances
are on sale at the Fine Arts
Ticket Office In Kantner Hall.

TOPS chapter
•
meet1ng
conducted

children. But her career came first.
She traveled a great deal and
worked crazy hours, leaving the
children with incompetent help.
Within 12 year.; her marr. was
a shambl~ and her children were
in therapy. Today she has a big job
and lots.of money, .but no marriage
and she is tryil18 · to establish a
relationship with her children. The
worst part is that she is full of guilt
and far from happy. Keep repeating
the message. Ann . It's good one. TEARS IN OHIO
DEAR OHIO: Looks like your
overachieving daughter put her
talents and energy into the job
downtown at the expense of her
family. Thanks for supporting IllY
position. My head is bloodied but
unbowed.

This year's best losers were
honore d at th.e Tuesday night
meeting of TOPS OH 1456 of
Rutland . held at the Rutland
American Legion hall.
In the honored group were
Judy Snowden, Terri Smith.
Karen Grlmrii, Sherr! Darst,
Linda Bailey, Sharon Thacker,
Eva McKinney, · and Shirley
Turner. It was noted that Terri .
Smith won the hOliday contest.
Terri Hockman, A Mary Kay
beauty consultant, gave a demonstration on makeup using
Sandy Sergent as her model. She
answered questions from the
group.
Meetings are he ld every Tuesday from 6 to 7 p.m. at the legion
hall. Information may be obtained by calling 742-2647.

Planning a wedding? What 's
right• What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will relieve
your anxiLty. To l"'f!aiw a ropy, send
$2.50 plus a No. 10, self-addresstd,
stamped envelope (39 cents po.r~)
to Ann Landns, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061/.(}56].

PTO conducts
recent meeting

A tape entitled "Everybody
Counts" dealing with under- ·
standing people with handicaps
was shown at the recent meeting
of the Syracuse PTO heid at the
school.
James Lawrence, ptlncl!&gt;'l.
following the showing of the film ,
day, 7:30 p.m. , at the home of asked for parent volunteers to
Marcia Arnold.
work with the ·students doing
--exe'r cises simulating handlcaiJs
THURSDAY
In the classroom. There would be
RUTLAND - A special mls- a training program for parents
sionary meeting will be held prior to taking It Into the
· Thursday, 7:.30 p.m •• at' Hysell ·• classroom.
Run Holiness Church. Mark and
It.was ~ported that the bicycle
Crystal Becker will speak about rack purchased fortbeschoolhas
their work on a South Dakota arrived. An all·sports 1 banquet
will be held at the ~hool In
Indlan'Reservation.
March honorlnll athletes, cheer·
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- . leaders and parens.
Estimates for new protec!lve
port Baseball Association will be
holding an organizational meet- mats for the ends of the gymnalq Thursday evenlnl, 6:30p.m., sium will be cheeked. Two
at the Middleport VIllage Hall. · 1ho11111nd candy bars will be sold
All llltetwietl parents are urled by the atudeats In Marcb before
Easter. A nomlnat(JII CDmmlttee
to attend.
was selected, and room colnt waa
POMEROY - Roller! Hudson, won by the alxth III'Dde. It wu
mwlonary from Peru, will be noted that the school baa col· ·
speaking at the Pomeroy Church lected 9,100 soup label certlfl.
of the Nazarene on Thursday at 7- cates to be redeemed for school
p.m. Rev, Thomas G. McClung · materials. Memory boob are ,
beln(l$old for S3 each.
Invites the pubUc.

t

A valentine party was held for
the children of the Primary Adam Shank, Justin Robson, •
Department In the. fellowship Mlchene French, D. J., Claudine,
han of the Middleport First Tina and David Riggs, am~ I
Baptist Church.
Sherry Seddon
,
Games were played with prizes
Aduls at the party were Jerry
going to the winners. There was a Pullins, Carolyrr Davis, · Peggy
fish pond and refreshments of hot Lewis, Julie and Manning Kl_oes,
dogs, chips, cupcakes, and -koo- ·the Rev. James Seddon, Suzy
lald were served.
Heck, Wanda Shank, Jarenna,.
A ttendlng 'w ere P~nny , Ellen · Robson , Jeff and Carolyil&gt;
and Cindy Lewis, Hony and Snowden, Cathy Riggs .
'
Joshua Broderl~k, Danny,
June Kloes had charge of the ·
. Timmy and Matthew Lewis, · party and she was assisted. by'
Michael Wllla'ms , ·Amber several of the children of the
Snowden, Jeremy and Jennifer department.
Heck, Trey Robson, Amber and

The theme of the workshop Is
geared towards landowners who
would like to realize Income from
the wildlife qn their farms
through a hunting rights leasing
program.
Southeastern· Ohio Is prime
hunting area for many hunters. A
recent study by the National

_,

be hold eet,. fan:•• ....... Co.• 21, Witt

Sooond. " " " --' Olelo. to
...... ...., the fulloWtng ....

887 VCR Topeo lwlll not
be oolel •pemelyl
11180 CINr ea- .
3.VCR Mochlneo
1- 13' Color TV
2 4•1 lighted oigno
The Farme111 Bank and

SavlniJIO Company. POrno·
roy, Ohio, reurveo tho right
to bid eet thla ule, ond to
whhdrew the above col·
atoral prioO" to oalo. Furtllar,
The Farmer• Bonk end Sav-

inga Cofnpt~ny rnerves the
right to reject any or ell bldt
tubneittoul.

Further. tht tbove' 'colla·

teral will be aold in the con~

dillon h It In whh no ••·
pra-d or implied w1rr1n·

tletJIIvan.
121 21. 22, 23. 24. 4tc
Public Notice

...oo
... oo
na.oo

Plans for a recipe auction to be for rememberances during her
held at the March 1 meeting were hospltallzalon: Kathy Johnson,
made when the XI Gamma Mu noted that Bob Spencer, husband
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pbl of member, Dee Spencer, has,
Sorority met recently at the had by-pass surgery at the
Charleston Area Medical Center
home of Evelyn Knight.
Members were reminded that ' and is now recuperating. Mrs.
they are to take a sample of the Knight thanked the group for the 1
prepared recipe. along with five many kindnesses extended to ,
copies of .It , to the meeting. her.
·
~
·The ways and means commit· •
Anyone not participating will be
tee had a white elephant sale with ;
fined $10.
Carolyn
Grueser as t)le :
Janet Peavley, vice president,
.
•
conducted the meeting with a auctioneer.
Refreshments were served by ~
communication being rea,d from
Sheila Harris thanking the group Mrs. Harris and Mrs . Johnson. ~

2

·l
•

literary Club meeting conductdd ;
"The Fiery Cross: The Ku lng organizational and propo- ,
Klux Klan In America" by Wyn ganda _skills, she said, continung 1
Craig Wade was reviewed by .that Its actions have made It one • .
Mrs. Carl Horky at the recent of the most feared groups In our .
meellrig of the Middleport Liter- country. or the book, she said 1
ary Club held at her home.
that Its portrayal of the hatred of
She noted that the Klan began Catholics, Jews, Negros makes It
as a social club organized by six a shocking story whlc~ should be I
bored young men In Pulaski, told.
·
·
Tenn., and reviewed Its declines
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, pres I- l
and resurgences over the years. dent. welcomed the members ;
Mrs. Horky noted that few and a guest, Mrs. Gay Perrin. !
groups In our history are as For roll call members respondedj
fascinating or mysterious as the to positive signs .toward racial
KKK. Their story Is one of equality. Candy and pop corn
violence; Intrigue, political ma· were served at the meeting.
nlpulatlons, absurdity, fasclnat-

t
l

In L!)vlng Memory of
JACl( KING SR. who
-ilt to be wl1h J•
lUI, Aug. 23, 1987.
I 188 your picture
thare on the wall,
That' a when thataars
begin to fall.
ever
No one will
know how
my
heart achea;
Day after dey it continues to break.
Through each night I
alWaya pray.
Oh, Lord, pla..e take
this pain away.
I know He hears me
w,h en I pray;
Jesus is with me both
night and day:
Hil Spirit forever
1ee1 me through,
Til the day I'll be with
you .
Always loved and
never forgotten,
Your Wife, Joan Kl

•• , .00

t33.00

Rocelptt ............... 3S6.93
Total Other Financing
Source• (Uoeo) .:.... 3BI.93
Dllb.

&amp; Other

u.....: ............. 6,898.73
Fund Coah Bllonce
Jon. 1. 87 ......... 8,734.70
Fund Cooh Bllonce
Doc. 31' "S7 .... 18,434.43

NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNOIIOPERATINO RECEIPTS:
·~- ............. .....178.71
TOTAL
..
RECEIPTS ............ 171.71
8uppiN:6•1
Moterlolo .............. 237.99
· Totol Dloburumonto ....... .......... 237,99
Totol Roctipto Over/ IUn·

Lost and Found

__ .._.. ....... atton

llloiltCou....,
ArooC..II4

Meaon Co., WV

lll_ldd_

fl

171-PI. M

143 ......_
141--Lotort , ...

112-N_H_

---~~-·

742-R-d
117-Coo"'llo

Public Notice

MARCUM
CONtiACtiNCi
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
,
SEPTIC SYSTEMS I
BACK HOE WORK

.............. b.
.....141

1.-M COII'IUC101S .
Refer.,.,..
,,_,.tfft

12-·-·-14---,. .

1M

•1--'171- "-loO.,...

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES
New&amp;Uied
SALIS.SDVICI·SUPPUES
loyel &amp; SCIITypawrilon
loyal I MAX Cakulaten
leyal &amp; Max Cash latisttn

Grace, Danna, Anglla
and Kay at

BEAGlE: MISSING
since late afternoon
Sunday, Feb. 14. .
last in Shady Co11
port. Family pet.
ltward oHertd.
· Call 992

Public Notice

!nilollce11hlndmadelintns.
rec:t.:r,
blllychlltofdralltll,
new -::,.,itlms,
• - dlllll, pon:ll chair,
a dllhfs,

paddld

IDJ chest.

hllltjllr, rup, bed, swtl(llr1 ~ -~*U. Chrillmls decora1
misctllaneous men'11WIIIiltn's cloiMI.

J

OllER: ELOISE WIIITI

...

htltiiM J.D.
·
DAN SIIVI. AUCTIOIIEIL.

.

.
·--·..
···
....
.
=t . . . . .

KAY'S
IEAUTT SALON
169 N. 2nd An.

Mlddlaport, Ohie ·

992-2725

Dlob: &amp; Other

u... ................_8,899.73

Fund C"'h Balance.
Jan. 1, 'S7 ...... 11 ,328.37
Fund Cath Balance.
Dec. 31, '87 .... 17,984.82
R11erve for Encumbrancu

Doc. 31, '87 .. ... . 3.5B3.53
Dogooitory
8olonce .... ...... 17,098.02
lnvellmento .... ..... 2800.00
lmm MDVIII to VHS TAPE

HOme' Mowies

-i

oyer

to easy .

VHS. CALL'AMHAITER
or BOI'S ELECTRONICS
446-6939 • 446-7390

______.;___.....;__-t I

BISSELL
BUILDERS

P.M~ .

FILL DIRT

NO SUNDA'I CALlS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-3410

RACINE'

GUN CLUB
IACIIIIL OHIO

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

YOUNG'S

SERVICE

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

-

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons Md rempd,..ing
Roofing tnd guUer work
Concrete work
Plumbing an~ el~ctrlcal
1

work

t Free Estim1te1)

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•lntuletion
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wlndo.,.•
•Replacement WindoWJ
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMARS

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT HILL ·FORD

. JAMES KEESEE

992·62i5 or 992-7314

. 992-2196

PH. 992-2772

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Balance ........... 19,598.02
L"o Outstanding
Chacko .............. 1,831 .20
TOTAL
BALANCE ...... 17,964.82
I certify the preicedlng repert .to be co~ct end true,

A11 nnunc e111 e111 s
3 Announcements
Reduce tata S. fut with GoBeN
cilpsua. • E-Vap ••wu., pilt".
A'lllllibli · Fruth Phltmlacy.
Kupid's Nett and . Connection&amp;
Dating Service of Huntington
joina togalh.r lharing profllaa.
'For Information write: Kupld' a
Neat. P.O. Box 519. Ironton.
Ohio 46638.
MARIN~S : We're looking for t
f.w good men . For more informetion. call hrfe..,t Mlke·Abell
ot 304-420-60 a coloct.

2-5-'18 1 010.

4-Wto-ic

FIREWOOD

WANTED

Roger Hysell
Garage

locust, Oak, Cherry

s3500

DEAD 01 ALIVE
•W..hera •Dryer~
•Rangea •Freezers

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SLACK
614-992·2269 I

REPAIR
~lu Tr••••lulo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

WAll-INS WELCOME
2-5-"88 I mo.

•Refrigerator~
~ llpairoblt"

"Musl

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
11~2/18/tln

6·17-tfc

IUIOUGN'S CISTO
IPNOLSTIIY
lt. I, Coelwlll•

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

Servlnl Melp II .
Atbeu CouaUes

U. S. RT, 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

......
Elta

ftll

•VINVL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

614-662-3121 .

Autltoriattl Jllltit Dttri,
New Hilla~. lush lleg

lltw H - lullt
"Free Eatimatea"'

A LAIIGE lllECTION OF

Farm Equipment

FUIIICI
Pk*Up
Oalw•v
fREE 1111MATEI

Dttltr

PH. 949·2860

Fent E••l,.e•t

or 949-2801

, ..... &amp;

16141 667-6695

I-II·"ITIIo

............
,
..
IYIIY

SAT. •oHT .
6:30P.M..
facttn Cllelte

SIA

TIIPlE P
EXCAVAnNG
oOour . . . . .hotWork

.._........

HIAYIIG &amp;

Dump Truck

COOUNG

oJunltYiftiiWAIIT 10 - ncaD 01
... WS 01 'IIUCIS
-fllll tmUm-

· •FURNACES
•AlA CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

PH.

...._............

, ..,., ............
616-762-2617

'

.......

Dtvices

.CHUIII; OH.
OPEN

WED.·FRI.•8AT.
7~10-10:00:'

Call fer Birthday,

ClluNh, Prlvete
P•rti•Mari•• tu....
Thllftl., lat. • Sun.

Dlptadlbll llllrlna Aid Slles &amp; Servl~
lllarlt11 EVIIUIIions for All Aps

Malt dOg to gl..,aiWay. H1tf
le~~gle. halt D1c:hahund. 4 mos.
old. Cell Ot4-44t-3388.

81...t1 Hound to glw l'¥"av.
Mult be lllpt lntide. Call 614317-0581 .
3 begs Of clothini to gNeeway,
Clll 814·388-844~.
'LMge White Rabbit to give.Way .
Colllt4-448-7076.

m

.. (614)912·2104 ..

-....aox 1m·

1.\1111. OIIID 4!G1
.

o(lt

Vltlrlns -....orii!Ho~l

llllblny lflls, P0111roy,

Help Wanted

DIRECTOR OF NURSES

,

SMiling RN with excellent mlnagemens.J~~..,-.hip, a nurllng 1
aklllt.to .,....,... nursing depart.
ment of a 100 bed INFIICF
facHity . S.chllor deg,.. with
one or more
of exPM"Iertce
desired. Excellent Ml..-v • benefit package. Send retume or
.a pply In penon tt Scenic Hill
Nurt1i"9 Cenler-531 8uckridgt
Rd .. Gallipolis. Ohio 415631 . ·

.,..n

EXCAVATION
SUPERINTENDENT
Management ex,.ience tuPIIfvlsing men In tht exch'etioR
tradft. Knowledge of aim utility

.

ALARM TECHICIAN· . HurterFire. CCTV •l•rm .s ylttm. Locel
c:omp~my .
P1tt electrical or
telephone· eKperlenct helpful .
Good PlY . Good bentflta. com.
P.nv Vehide. Call 614-446·

9595.

Manegerial posit~on open .. Reai·
dl!lntitl couple needed. Prater
older couple. All houlinu &amp;.
eXJ~~Riet provided. For lppointment cell 814-«6·8692, after
5- 814-888-7748.
.

Bleck thort heirtd pup. 4 mot.

old. MOther Blut Heeler. House
broken: Good pet.' Call 614-

440-0884.
3 kihent. 2 main. 1 f~tmala. 7
montht old. Large mtlt cat.
white with derk spota, Femele
dog lookt like Old Yeller. 814986-3884 .

Lost and Found

Government Jobs. t18 .040•&amp;9,230 y. .r. Now hiring . Your
aree. 1-805-687-6000 Ext. R·,
9806 for current Federal list. ·
Wanted: mature lady to live in
and ctre for pre-achool child anf.
do light houMkeeping in ex-·
eh1nga for room and board..
nominal wage. Prefer non •moker. May have ont child.
Rtpiy to The Dally Sentinel. P .O .
BoJt 728 S. Pomeroy. Ohio

45789

Female Boxer, tan
colored. CoN 614· 246-6446.
FOUND:

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wedemeyer't Auction Servic.
e"liltbtt at your convenience
11nd locations. Marlin Wed•

mey" Auctioneer- 814-245-

Men and women, tired of broken
promlaet? Tired of just mtklng a
living71 can otter you 1 job with'
" " lreining. five day work
week, and en opportunity to
malta whet you ere rully worth.
Cell me now. Mr. Anthony 11
8t4·992-848B.
AVON • All trea1. Cell Marilyn
Weaver 304-882· 2641 ,
-

s.,.....

5t52.

Avon til areti, Shirley

9

FEDERAL STATE lo CIVIL SERVICE JOSS . "9 .140 10
tl9,891 . ye•r. now hiring cell

304-875-1429.

Wanted To Buy

We pay ceah lor l1te modet cltan
ueed c:••·
Jim Mink Chev.· Oldl lne.
Bill Gene Johnaon
814-44e-3672
TOP CASH poid kor '83 model
end newer wted c1rs. &amp;math
8ulck·Pontlec. 191 1 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipollt. Ctll 61•· «8·
2282.
'

Compl.ce houHholda of turni·
tu,. a antiques. Alto wood •
coel hutert. Swaln'a Furniture
&amp; AuCtion. Third a. OINt,
1114·440-3158 .

w... to buy ltlndlna timber •

pine. l'oy TOP DOLI.A:R . I..,..

or
mON. E....,. ••'*••oe•.
C•ll IM:Y ltrlcldon:l Lotgleeg.
114·812·7823.

Went to buy ...nd'"o Umber.

Colllt4-371-2711,

......,.w_

luyt'\:t"v
utngo.
,IIOid. lllwr colno,
old
-·· --.y. Top prt.
-2nd. -'""ld ·
- ·MlelellOh.II:Gp.
I 14892·3471.

8ten:llng dmbor. C•III14-74Z·
232
'"

Job line 1-518· 459·3111 . ext
'F2284 for Into 24 hl'tl.
Paint and body m1n, mutt
furnish own toolt. apply ln
perso~. Pt. Pltellnt Auto s.r..-:
3rd S. Viend, Pt. PINMnt, WV.,
304-176-Sitl.

12

Situations
Wanted

Have roOm for petsol'l in private.
home for thos• who wiah not tO
be in nurting home. Retsoneblt.

C•il614-266· 0609.

Need tingle person to thare
upent8t in large houae in city.
Coli 81 4 -440-0484.
•
SeniOf citizen. Room 1nd board
for one ledy. Spec:llt care in my
homt. Reasonable. C'ell 814·
192.&amp;873.
Wtll do house WOfk in Pomeroy
aree. H•"• refer.,cea. Cell &amp;14892·7836.

Proteuktnel mtdicll•nci elderly
warll wentH. Female with
I ,._. tx~ce Cering tor
oldoHy on:1 modlcelly dlublod
pe: plt Wlntt tO wort; tvenblg1
fnlm e,oo pm. IO tz ,OOpm. Cell
114-742-221.8 pm ..

a.-

llet•enaes evaiiHII.

' 'OO

Vecancy. loerd room or tot!M
kor · et4·11Z-7204

or It 4-IIZ· 3t53.
~;::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::=

1'.3

loaurance

••

~
30•-en.zua. Aloo: auto.
Cell uo lor youur -

ln1ur1nce: Millar lniYrln·c t."'

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Liclnlld Clinical AudlolllliSt
1614\~"19

11

3358.

C~RTER'S

'18·tfn

'•

Fob. 18, 1988
Wando L. Eblin, Cleill
41000 U:urol Cliff Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789
Ph. a14-992-2272
12) 23, 1tc
·

Get a free cologne · S~l Avon.
Make big buckt. Call 614-446~

Giveaway

Would like to buy Junk cert,
wrecked cerw end motDfCycl•.
Coli 814-379-2110 or 37112423.
'

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

to the boot ol my k""'"!J· ·
edge:

4

Want to buy: UMd furniture ..,d
entiqun. Will buy Intire hou. .
hold fumlahlng. Mtrtln Wede....... 114-246-0152.

992-6282 .

'·

Mtjor credit c•dsl Ragerdleu
of credit hiato.ry. Atao. new
credit card. No one refused I For
information call 1· 31 6 -7336062 Ellt. M2768.

NO SUNDAY CAlLS
l-11-lln

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

oWII Do HouUitiJ With

Public Notice

instillation •• well .. mau
excevation cut and fill opera~
tiont. 6 yeer Exptritnct re.qUired. Pay Negotiable with
experience. Send resumetoP.O .
8oK C'- 138 G111ipolla Deily
Tribune. 825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio 46831 .

Doy or Night

10-8-tfc

RADIATOR

· INSULATION

,.~c-...··~~="'
'71
a
HCMMI

let us '""'' those old

"At Rta1onablt 'Prices"

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

, .

77--~~--

Total Treuury

'

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

J&amp;L

..

. ,._~,.,..·-~

Public Notice

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
.JUST CALL!

GUN SHOOT

n-v-•.wo•o

·,14 Mae:; I

~--

Public

GUN SHOOT
· EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00

72-TNollolotlolo

I I ' Ill I ' I

Public Notice

a

' Table 1: c~alrs. couch, roclilrs, cedlr chest, color TV,Iots ol

71--·-a•

'

Rolilyll"l I Rouphollleri"l
Roold.,llel &amp;
Commwdal Fumltu,.
Automotive I Merino •

-~oHOUIEHOI.D"

.

47-w-•R.,.

Rd. area, Middlt·

a

C.lll

I

773-llf.....

- 1:11-lutlllo
-~-~

_,

11-llo:llo, TV I Cl lltlllllr
17- M i o - - .
11-W...... ToDa

I !1-lln

Re-acquaint yourself
with the stylists Mary, Naomi, Jane,

, , "AIITIQU£ 01 COLLECTOn IT£1$"
Large GraceS, Putman Bie-la Oall made i" German7, small &amp;
large flat trunks, child's wicker chair &amp;la~le, childs roll-tap
desk, comer chair, picture frames, cape &amp;~at from Middle. port band, miscellan&amp;GUS Pomeroy school ttems, old post·
cards &amp; ni'MS)IIper clippings, Classic comic boob, 101111
Seades mqaz~nes; tin d8J;orated Nabisco boxi\·Jots ol old
boob, miscaUaneo~s quilts, Well's &amp; Son Builder~ Piat11 ·
foAiddleport, Ohio, Glrmany, Hull, Roseville cut llitJss, amber ·
pinkdeprasion, bee llllliel, Hieseytypebear.F1esiiWare
' dishes Clmbridlt, Cranberry, Clrnival spaoiier &amp; bowl,
Eastlake orpn, large .~mbridp punclt bowl set. smaH hen
, on nest achicnn, dmma nfom sotte. lots ol 78 R.P.M. re•, cord&amp;. hllldmade blhv quilt,JIIt:.

Ilions.

·I

6

WATCif FOR SALE SIGN
. This is th' personal property of Eloise White
·,
'"' &amp; the late D1n White.
.

Pllll

'II'

41 _... _ _ ..,
42 ...... " - - .........
.

11-Het,- .

A-CoeltJIM

,.,,.uoy"
..••-e.....

16 141"143-5416
QUALI1Y PIIIIIT SHOP
(6141

to:oo
A.M.
Located in Pomeroy, l»llo It 10 Uncoln Tenace

milctl~s

21-Rooi~-.Wiotod

t - w-••"'

ClGUi/ied pages cover rhe
· following telephone exchanges. ,.

Ph.

Sat., February 27, 1988

,

21-l.otoiA-

.

~tnt

..... •n-..OIL 45743

PUBLIC AUCTION

OnOMIIIY

41-ll
..
41-l'or

1'-H-1'-I.oot_,_
7-Y.,.Iolo....,.lolll-col

D-·Cemlcoo

j

1:1.
ti-Wa laaiMtNatktn

4-0-0f

,.._.,.tO" oon.-utl"' run a. brokltl up dlya wll bl cf!M'OIId
for ,_,. •Y n IIP..tt ldt'.

NOMII 1111

&amp; Auction

from the least coin book. Mrs.
William Morris conducted the
Bible study on the Concern 1
Presbyterian magazine.
1
The · hostess' served sand· l ·
wiches, salad and coffee.
,

11 ........

1:1 ........ -.... .. , • •
:a-1'-lotlolo

1-AieMMinAh£1ta

Othw Source1/

6

In Memoriam

tiJ.Go
UI.OO

:11---··
.._..._... ··-·
.........,..._,..,,._
...._.......,
.................
_......_

2- ln Masury

· t7 .00
tiO.OO
tii.OO
tZI.OO
MO.OO

Business Servlces

RallrYII for anaLimbranaaa

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fltaol Vur Ending
0......... 31 , 1817
SALIHUIIV 'TOWNSHIP
County of MtiOt
"'Thlo It an unaudltoel
Flnoncle! Report"
SUMMARV OF CASH
BALANCES. RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
•

••·ao
...
ao

M .OO

dorl Dlob .... ...... .... 181 .281 lntoreot ............. :.... 746.72 CapiU:I Outlay ... ..... 593.91
GOVERNMENTAL
Supplieo and
Fund Ca8h Balance
All Other
FUNDSReyenue ......... ..... 2211.00 Material• .............. 237.99
RE(:EIPU :
· Jon. 1, '87 ........ 2,1191 .87
TOTAL DISBURSE·.
TOTAL
Tax... ..... .......... 24,728.76 Fund Caoh Balance
Doc. 31, '87 ...... 2,1130.39
MENTS .... ...... 71,093.24
RECEIPTS .... .. 77,346.76
lntorgovemmentol
TOTALS &amp;
Total Rocoiptl Over/ IUn·
DISBURSEMENTS:
Rocelpto ..... .. .. 81.848.29
dorJ Diob ... ,....... 6,2&amp;2.&amp;2
FUND BALANCE
General Oov~
lntoreot .................. 1169.01
f!!CEIPTS:
eminent ......... 27,886.81 Othllf Sourc11/
All Other .
Rovutnue ...... ....... .221.00 Ttx...... .. .......... 24.728.75 Public Solely ....... 2.180.po Recelptt ............... 38&amp;.93
lnt-.wwnmental
Hoolth ............... 39,739.8S Totlll Other Financing
TOTAL
Sourcea1Uoeoj ...... 385.93
Rocelpto ......... 61 .848.29 Human Sorviceo ....... 76.88
RECEIPTS .... ... 17, I 88.05 ·
DISBURSEMENTS:
Otneral Oovomment ........ .27,881.81
Public S81eety ....... 2,680.00
Health ............ .. .39, 731.88
Human Servlcea .......76.15
Copltal
Outley .................. 893.91
TOTAL DIBURSE·
MENTS ........ .. 70,866.28 I ____;,____________"'T______....__,;_______ ________________
Total Rec:oipto Oveer/ (Un· (o
1
...., Dlob.......... .. 8,313.80

o... 31. :a7 :..... 3,5B3.113

Chapter of sorority has meeting

Devotions on Ash Wednesday
and Lent were given by Mrs.
Donald Lowery at the recent
meeting of Group II of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
held at the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wanace.
·Mrs. Thomas Rue, cochairman, presided at the meet·
lng In the absence of Mrs. Paul
Haptonstan, chairman, tt1r1.
Reva Vaughan was a guest. Mrs.
Donald Lowery collllllcted the
least coin and read an article

I MONTH

Public Notice ·

PUBLIC NOTICE .
N011CE II heNby·g~wntt.t
on ,........,, Februutuy 21tle.
eet 10:00o.m., a public tilt will

Shooting Sports Foundation re{.
vealed that the number one
problem for hunters was gaining.
aecess to hunting areas. The_
number two problem was over-·,
crowded hunting areas. Both o~
the problems can be solved at
once through a lease hunting
operation. .
.
The March Uth seminar win
feature a video presentation on ·
"Managing for a Lease Hunting"
Operation." Details discussed
will cover: What Is a Hunting
Lease, What to Include, Types of
Jlunting Leases, How Much to
Charge, Legal Concerns and
Wildlife Management.
.
, If you h~ve. QlllftiOna o~. are
Interested In a fee-hunting operation, plan to attend the Bene
Valley seminar.

Group II from church meets

IDAYI
JDAYI
IOA\'1 .
.IODAVI

1-Cenlof-..

0-11 WOIIDI 11·21 .WOIIDI ZI· 21WOIIDI

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,QOA.M . SATURDAY
- 2 ,00 P.M . MONDAY
- 2 ,00 P.M. TUESDAY
·- 2'00 P..M . WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2'00 P.M , FRIDAY

Public Notice

Hunting seminar planned
"How to Bring Dollars to Your
Farm Through Fee-Hunting"
will be the subject or. a seminar
scheduled for Monday, March 14,
at 7 p.m. The session will be held
at the Eastern Ohio Resource
Development Center (EORDC)
In Belle Valley and Is sponsored
by, the Cooperative Extension
Service and Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation and Devel·
opment (RC&amp;D) Project.

AATES

I

'
'
Autumn Thomas, Carissa Ash, 1

Big job, big ·money, happy life?
Dear Ana l.aadm: I just read a
news story in our local paper about
a pill for people who hale to diet
and exercise and want to lose
weilht.
This miraculous pill was devel·
oped by two prominent doctors at a
world-famous hospital. It is sold
with a 11J8r&amp;ntee that you can eat
anything you want and as much as
you want. No calorie counting or
exercise. Also there are no hunger

Also announced was the

lteemo,tlfe.hooiUt.

11

Help W1nt1d ·

18 Wanted to Do

--•

�..

Page-8-The Daly Sentinel
18

=p

Wal)tacl to

11

F'fMI't

3 po. llvirl8 room ou110.
cootl. f171 . Call 5U·441·
239CI.
.,
•

for your .....,....

u• •

lnltd. Mt wp. leach
Ol*'lt• on ptQOrlima• euch aa 0
Ill, Lotuo 123..........
Writa 3 ond PltiiMak•. Cal
7U·3080.

21

Kenmo,. 1 yr. old ch-' treuer
22.7 ou. ft. E..... oond. Hmllv
· C.N-IP'M· I14·2111·

Professional
· Services

Furniture refinithing and rapelr,
quality work and reeson'eble
ratH, f ree eatimat••· 304·871·
7 991 .

Real

'----------.;.,-----------l

Esl~te

P'

33
31

Farms for Sala

34

SALE OR RENT: 3 BR.
house . with attached garag•
central air- NO PETS- Depolit &amp;
reference required. 39 Chili·
cothe Rd . Call 61 4·441·2683
9· 6 daily.
FOR

3 BR .• 1 112 beth, formal DR.
bfic::k fireplace. Bllevtl deck.
Brick end freme ranch located at
end of quiet di'ive. One plus acre. ·
G•rd•n ·apace. City tchoola.
Heat pump-cenlral air. Outdoor
storage ara1. Cell 61 4-C46·

Business
Buildi11gs

Loctted 4 milet north of Galllpolitlockaand dam an W.Va . .tela.
Bldg. 50x100. 1.000 aq ft on
.86 ICf"· alltfMie building 15 n
high. For Ie... or lilt. 304·875·
5332.

epertment. Privata
entrance. 1 room, ground fiOOf,
kilcihentttt a. Nth. Utilitln
pM:I. t171 1 mo. Cell 81 4·4417515.
.

35

1 SA . 1pwtment with ttova
refrig. No pett. Call e 1
3117.

Lots •

Acreage

2 BR . house with fireplace. 3 .
mil*' from Gallipolia. a1000
. ~ own , payments· $246 monthtv
iRcludas tax &amp; inturence. Total
price $22,400. Cell 814 -44&amp;7881 .

Commerci•l property nd houtt
lots-Gellipolis Farry. Call 304·
875-8908.

Ren t &lt;~ Is

41

Homes for Rent

Nicely furni~hed •mall houtt.
Adullt ~ty . Ref. r&amp;quiNd. No
pets. Cell814-441-0331.
3 SR. hou1e for rent or rent with
option to buy- on 141 . 1360 •
mo. Dep. &amp; ref. required. C.l
304-675-5S06-doya. 614·446·
9280 even. &amp; weettdaya.

Etficency

a

•·«•·

Gracioua ltvlng. 1 1nd 2 bed·

room •p.~rtment• 1t Vill8ge
Manor •nd Rlvertide Al»al1·
mentt In Mlddl'flort. From
t216. inctudlng utllltin. Call
814·992·1717. EOH.
CotUge efficiency, total electric, Nfrlgerator, ttove, nice.
HUD approved. 2215 Mt. Vernon Ave.• Pt. PhiiUnt. 614B92-5BBS.
Nice 2 bedroom 1pt, in Middleport. 118&amp; per month. Depoa1t
'end reference required. Day
814-992·2391, WHlondoiU992·2508.
1 ·bedroom epenmenta. Fur·
nilhed and unfumi1hed. 1200.1225. per month. UtlliliH furnlahed. Ctll.14~192-&amp;724 .

2 BR . houae on 13 1/ 3 acrea
with full beaement. 2 betht.
hardwood floors . Outbuildings,
new fence, pond &amp; pine Ireta.
Call 614-4•6-2107-deyl, 2455600· evan .
·

2 orl BR . home in city. Nopetl.
Raf. required . Cell 114-4411158.

2 bedroom, 2 betht, 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt.. 33.
S~ imm i ng pool, tetellte, cloae
to Mai~ • Hi~h . Cell 614· 992-

3 BR ., living roOm, kitchen &amp;
blth. 1226 rent, 1150 dep. Call
614-446-1354.

814·992·3711 E.O.H.

Very nice, recently remodeled,
new carpet. 2 bedroom· on
Lincoln Height1. 1225. with
di1count. Security dat~oait required. Call 614·992·6053.

122'0 . pfr: month. C•ll814·4481478.

. 3254.

=:.....-- - - - ·lcRustic cadar home with oek
floors. two-way fireplace, Pella
Co lonial window•. custom
woo dwork. study, 3000 plut 1q.
ft . approx. a wooded acre• in
Sutton Twp. Countryaide. Appraised at $112,000 .. Sell for
977,000. Call 614 · 9~9 - 2630 .
4 bedroom. fireplace. full fin·

ished basement, 2 car garage.
hot water heat ind wood burner.
On 5 wooded acre• at Tuppers
Plain•. Ohio. Call 614-6676206 After 6 :00pm .
Gov ' t S iezed Homet from
S1 .00. !U repair) Foreclosures

Small hou11, Jeffer.an Ave.
reference end depo1it. phone
304-675-1926.
Available March 111 New Haven,
nice dean 2 bedroom houae.
benment, garage, wo!)dbumer.
no peta, *100 .00 depo1it
12&amp;0 .00 month . 304 -882·
3202 or 882- 21~2 .
·
Nice 3 bedroom home. be. .
ment. gar•oe. 30•·876-3030 or
675 .3431 .

and Tax delinquent tlomet. For
current repo list Ctlllnrfundebla) Houae for rent' on Howard Ave ..
1-618-459·3546 Ext. H 1822. · Pt. Plata. 2 BRs. Call 304-875·
24 hou rs.
7346.
Priced to sell fait , owner moving
out o f state. 3 bedroom house
wit h 7 acres in L..urel Cliff. 42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Dishwasher. refrigerator, sto·ve,
washer,· 'd iyer included. Call
61 4-992-6310 after 6 :00pm.
2 BR., water, sewage furnished .
Home for sale. Gollipolia Ferry, 4 Beautiful river view. No city
bedrooms, four car garage, taxes. Foater'a Mobile Home
938,500.00 . 304·676·5684 .
Psrk. Cell 614·446· 1 11102.
House on Main Street . 2 bed rooms. ·beth. la rge livingroom.
diningroom, kitchen, one o utbui ldi ng, 304 -6 75 -1 116 or
675-681 8 .

2 8R .• utilltlespald-excepteleet-

ric::. furnithiKI / unlurnithed. Sec.
dep. required. Convenient loc•tion. Cell 81•· 4-t&amp;-4768 Of
446-8668.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 BR houso wkh stove &amp;
refrlgaretor. S226 mo. depolit
required. Vinton. OH Cell 11 • ·
388-8121 .

1970 12 x70 .3 BR .. 1 Ia 1h
baths. gas heat. Ext ra nice
thrlJugh out S6900 . Call 6U·

2 8A . mobile home fulty furnished. Eutern .._ve. Water end
t ewer paid. 1225. ~dult~ only .
No pet1. Reference• Ia Otposlt
required . Ce11 '114-441-3171.

32

446 - 0 1 75.

1 987 14 ~t?O Fairmon t. All
electric-heat pum p. Fu rn ished.
Call 614· 245-5294.

1Ox50

mobile home, 1969
Ma rlene . 2 SR . $ 1500. Call
61 4· 256-6248.
Ne w 1988 Co untry Ville .
14x72, all electric. 1et up on
riverfront lot . 614 - 992 - ~348
after 5p .m .
'
1964 1Ox SO Elcono Houae
Trailer with upando. New furnace. new hot water tank. fully
carpeted. furn ished. porch end
window awning 1. Excellent con·
dillon. After 6:00 614-9927102. 6 14-992-607 2 anytime.
1983 Schulu 14.SO mobile
nome. 2 bedroom. centr1l air.
Call 6 14-992-5 303 after 5:00
pm.
1976. 12x60 uas. A·1 shapa,
furniall ed except livingroom. Air
in kitchen. washer end drver.
Call6 14-949-2663 eftar fiva .

=~~:..:::.-==;::.:.:.:..c.' .lc-

1974 Holly Part.., 3 bedroom.
7011 14. E,q:ellent high arede
c erpeti11g, nice appliance•. new
t'IOI Wl ttr tanM . Gil heat
S8000. Coli 814-742·3033.
1986 two bedroo m mobile
home. 1 4x70, call 304-8963 68 2 after 5:00.
· 1987 Clayton mobile home,
14d0, completely furnished
with wa1her end dryer, ttlteover
payments. 304- 1578~2108.
1988 12xl6 Kirkwood. ~Od
cond. Kitchen fumlahed. _new
a-c. 2 porchn. underper\nlng &amp;
blocks. 304·875-1217.

33

Farms for Sale

"'"" 30 ,.,. f..,.: Moottf tillallla.
~-·
· . Near Rio o--•
~a. ·
-· ·
_....
ood hamo. Coli 114·241..
t 878 .

2 bedrOom apt. for rent. Stove
and retrta••tor •r• furniahld.
Carpe1ed. . Nice Htting. Cal

Nice epertmem In nice neighbor·
hood on·Third Ave. In Oelllpolil.

APARTMENTS. mobile homea.
houns. Pt. Pl.-anund Gallipolis. 614-4-tl-8221 .

2 bedroom turniNd apt, ref •nd
depotit, New H1ven, W. Va .•
304·882· 3287 .. 304-7735024.
Beech Slreet, Middlepon, Ohio,
2 bedroom turnithod •pt. utilities Paid, referenctt and flepotil.
304-882-2588.
Two and one bedroom fumiahed
epts, call 304·875·3990.
Apartment tor rent, one bed·
room, turnithed, VIIIY•clean. no ·

poto. phone 304-575·1386.

Room• for rent, d1y. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Cell 814·
448·9680. Rentealowesl120
month.
WeHiy, monthly rltet, utllhi"
paid. Cooking fecllltltl. Downtown location. Seniora welcome, Perk Central Hotel. C•ll
614·448·0756.

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy .
Rental trailers. Cell 814-9927479.
Space lor smell tr1iler1. All
hook-up1. Cable. Al1oefficlency
roomt, air end c::lble. Mason,
W.Va. Co11304-173·5851 .

Near Waterloo. 2 BR . S126 a
Aduhs. Garden spot. Rtf. &amp;
dep. Cell 1114-441-77154 or
643·2644.

Merc l1~ n rl i sP.

1'1'10.

2 Br. Mobile Home for rent on
prlvale lot. Adulu only. Ref. &amp;
~ep . No peu . Call 814-3877743.
bedroom mobile home tn
Middleport, Ohio . Reference
and Security depo1lt FtN~Uired .
304-882 -3267 or 304-773··
5024.

Apartment
for Rant

2 BR . apts. 8 clo1et1, kltchenappl. furnished, Weaher-Dryer
hook-up, ww c•rpet, newly
palnled,· deck . ReQency, Inc.
Apta. Cell 304-175 -1738 t.lr
876·5104.
New completely turniahed
apar1ment &amp; mobile home In
city. Adults only. Perking. Cell
814·448-0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 JackPike from 1183 a mo. Walk to
ahop 1nd moviel. e14-448·
21!188. E.O.H.
.
11 Court St.· 2 Bedroom, 2
b1th1. khchen fumilhed, w / w
c::arpet.l321le mo. plua utititlea.
No pfta, depoalt &amp; ret. Cell
514· 448· 4121.

61

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu and chairs priced from
1395 to 1191. TebiH t60 end
up to 1121. Hld•a-beda e390
to t&amp;l6. Rectiners 12215 to
1376. Limps 128 to f121S .
Dinelttt 1109 1nd up to e49S.
Wood table w-1 ch•• 1285 to
0791. Dook •100"" to 0375.
Hutchtl t400 and up. Bunk
beda complete w · mat1ret...
e291S end up to 1315. Btbybeda
t11 0. Mattr ..... or bo• .,..lnp
full or twin til. flrm t78. end
188. Queen Htl 1225. King
e3ao·. 4 drawer cheat •89. Gun
cebin.tt I gun . Ga1 or electric
r•nve U71. Baby rnaur... .
e3&amp; • e46. Bed tram• •20.
e30 • ICing frame 1~ . Oood
11IM;tlon of bedroom tuhlil,
metal cetMneta. hudboarde •30
end up to 118.

~

,

.

CAPTAIN EASY
Tllf COUt.ITRV OF Z UMIALIA
I. LOCATED RI6HT HERE

1187 4 whNior. · heal.
cond. Onty bMn rid• 3 ~im-.
Still und• service egre&amp;mM'It. ,....,,
Calll14·317·7134.
.
.,
1185 tc.eWIMkl T110811 2150 ·.'~·
three Mil'-· Ft.t lraolt ttre.. •l"l'
hetmat. boott. Cell 114-HZ- ~· 1:
1303 oftiJ s ,oo,
~,

..-~--.

IN AFRICA.

.

,.._, eleatrfc Hotpolnt dryer for
.... :104·171·2130.

,lrookakle Apartm.nta: 1 lA.
- - witt! 1.,. ""' laundry
,_
dryer
.........
A• -11-c. Cell
814. 448. 1132 .
' - - - - -- -- -

PICKENS UIED FURNITURE.
.......... 1. cheat{ dlnnette;
DDUOha, ot:llra, odd chalrl, , .
frieccuiOJI. ttowa, 6 mite.
304-1.7 e·1410.

Reg. UKC·Toy foK -ftrriera. 3
rn.lea. e110 e.ah. Firm. Call
814-3117·7110.

1183 Rablllt. 4 opel.. AM· FM,
dilllhno. 1179HondaXR250.
1975 Ko--1500. CaN 814·
258-1824.

181 Facta of LHe

Ill m Happy oa,,
8:05 &lt;IJ Allee
8:30 G ()) (!5J NBC Nlgltlly Newt

li\

lnalde lite PGA Tour .
(I) Ia IIl ABC News Q
(!) Nlflhlly Buelneea Report
Ill Ill 1121 CBS Newt
I]] Body Electric
Ollneldl Pollllcl '88
181 WKRP In Cincinnati
Cll Too CIOH lor Comfort
8:35 CD Carol Burnett
7:00 ()) Rlmlnglon Steele Steele
Knuc~les and Glass Jaws
D &lt;II PM Mlgazlne
·ID SpartiiCe,.r (L)
(I) Enl-lnmem Ton!ght
DIll People' a Court
(!) I]] MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
I]AJ Newo
01 Mone,llne
Ill liZ 1111 Wheel of Fortuna

11 ft. Flborgluo boat. 40 HP •
Johnaon. elactric ...,. motor .on ..._,
trelltr. t1200 or belt offlf'. Cal
814•448·1528,.
•.

-od.

-...

Rcheers
DCll M'A"S'H
. 1:05 CD Andy Grllllth
7i30 G ()) (i) HollyWood

.

eudvet

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

.·

.

------

Elementary children were
asked to list the four lhings they
.
.
.
.
.
.
would need lor survival. One
r----,.-----~ youngster listad : · water . air, fOOd

1 ·I I' 1. ·z
5

··~-.,.:.u....;R;....Q;,....;o....:.M;....:..u~~ and 17 I I~
L_-1.-.J.L--L.-.L._.J.L..J

I. I

-

e

-

. ..

Complete 1he chuckl e qUoted
by filling in the missing words

you deve lop fro m step No. 3 belOw.

llt Ill Judge

MEN'S SHIRTS

fANTAs:nc!

_#,

LET~

Buy A gvNcH

~~~DADDY!

MEEK
L()IU..LI ~..... UJHOJ

IJJlU.. 'TU.J K~ 1

IX) 'rQ..I

HAVINS

f&lt;I;A\-IZETHAT
TCOULD

~PERBAG6

In:&gt; DRA.FTY
IN HERE:.

SIJFFOCATE '

PUTa.ERMY
HeAD.'

THAT WAY~

physiological factors which
process of
memory. (1:00) Q
01 Moneyllne
affactt~

·----

.181 Soap
Ill Cll love ConnecHo.n
11:308(1) (!5J NBC Nawl Speclll
Decision '88: Election

coverage
(]) SportiiCenta• (L)
(i) Dill XV Olympic Wl,.r
Gamet
Ill Ill liZ CBS Nawa Spectlll
E~lon coverage
Ollporta Tonltlht
181 MIQilUm, P.T. wave
Goodbye
DCllTIIl

:·.·
..
.,

1:46. (IJ 1111

8alalr.-

1il7 Ch.... 4 clr.,
pelnt. No hilt. Teutcar. NMdl
uphal......, - · Cotl e14·44•·
7141.
1111 Mu....... - P M·I14·
-ootlor.CaH-4·
241oltl17.

ICrr--

1174 N-. 1114 L.,.... 1HI
Cl1atlon. 1112
110
Ltd. loll o r - Cal'1 14·211·
1270.
1HI Ch-•· UOOO. Ca~
114-251·1121 .

lila=. . ""I::.r:..,0.....,.

1171 Chryllw NlbiiOrt Ciullo.

-.

1111 CMwJCIIt ~ ton ~ up,

can't refuse.

....

-·

-.

, __ 18'-

.

- - - · 10 "' '""""

73

Vane •

4 W.O.

1112 Dodto ZIO RMI. C aoutuu&amp;ue. Tnlllr ......,, Cell
114 ... eJIIIIIp, ..... 0111

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

__.....,..,,.... ... ...•.

aar

• ...

CaM 114-241-Ar1.

tor

IOIIIferl.

1171Dod~M ........... v ...

~.... Cd - I I'M· 114-21111t41.

havtng d6Je vu... lt dOIIIII't help

me the eame place,
same time, wurl.ng thoea eame clotl!ell"

. 1117 DodM -

11M1

Vlft.

·c..- :r. ...... - -.._
...... Colt -

. Zll·ft141.

I I'M· 114-

1171 ..... - . - · - ·
AM-fM·C..O.
Loltt-lol - -Coli
- 114-"· "·

1171... - .. - ..... 11100.v1171CIIonl'l2 e10011. Col

IJ....IIO'I ·

UUII?

~
••
,,~

(J)

87

Upholetery

........,_u_,,..._
ma•••...
MDat:aar·• Ullho'u elf• •

In furnhuN
Cl!l
J04·171·4 14 lor 'tree
xllillatla.

-.. ~'
.,';
'·'•

'

Z.ZJ.II

+ta765
.QJ

A defensive
error

EAST

.KI07
.AK432

+3

....

.A865

•

Almost anyone could defend a band
.AQJHU
perfectly if be could look at all the
cards. BreakdoWDB on defense occur
+K 10
.10142
beca111e there is aome guesswork In·
volved. (A defender cannot see declar·
Vulnerable: Both
er'8 band or bis O'WII partner's.) What is
Dealer: West
Important Is that neither defender be
blindly influenced by what biJ partner
Nord: Eul
seems to tblnlt is the right direction
Pll8
Pass Pass
for the defense.
Pass Pll8
Sooth ·malle a good choice to sacri·
fice agallllt four hearts, sin&lt;;e East
Opening lead: • 9
would surely bave made 10 tricks slm· •
ply by taking the diamond finesse. The
sacrifice lookedjeven better after the clarer finessed and picked up trumps, ·
defeoders bad foolishly thro'WII a trick and his 10•9 of clubs were of coune
away. After the opening lead was
ruffed, declarer led a club. West went ~•\ should lead back a diamond af- ·
up with the king and shifted to a ter taking the club ace. He knows be
trump. (From biJ point of view, East will lose a trick by giving declarer ancOuld b\)ld A-lO·x-x In clubs, and It other flnesse "ln trumps. u West ba"
.WOuld be Important to eliminate dum· . .
b t · •· th def d'
my's rufflng power.) East wisely 1li'IDII1llg c1u nc.. , e
en .
~::ed the 10 of spades; declarer won bave not lost anything; Although &amp; .·
played a second club. East took can ruff a club loser m. dummy, E
the ice and led a second trump. That ~n now win his sr,ade kin,. But a tr
th f lisb 1a th
11 ed disappears need essly w1tb a trw
was e 00
P Y .· at . a ow return wbenever South has all gt
South to escape With nme tncks. De- clubs remaining.

I.

•
411 Manifest

DOWN

1 Ignoble
arrow ..."
2 Water jug
·10 Up
3 Mubarak
11 Desire
prede·
13Passover
cessor
meal
4 Slangy
14 Boxer's
, agreement
5 Game dog
milieu
Yesterday's ~swer
111 Historic
6 Meager
time
7 Not vert.
16 Kurosawa 8 Gourman24 Abhor
32 Playing
film
dize
2.5 Love, e.g.
marble
18 Mason's
9 Supportable 26 Achieve 36Hebrew
, tool
12 Named
by
lyre
19 Corrupt 17 "Knock on
trickery 37 Gave for
21 Subside
-Door"
27 Citrus
a while
22 Turhan - 20 Encourage
fruit
3923 Story
23 Chinese
29 Court
41
24' Postpone
~~~....,.,.....,!3!.,1 Record
27 Hauled
"'
28 Give off
29 Pale ·
30 1,000
.kilograms
31 Cuban
dance
33 Airport
abbr.
34 Word with
road
or wart
311 Sal or song
38Tav ·
pre'ceder
40 Work on a
blackboard
42 Charlie
Ch1111
portrayer
43 Admit ·
44 Uke a pin
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work It: 2123

!!:&lt;ru..nE:

Latlfllllna
· ~n &lt;RJ

'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,
apo~trophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hitlts. Each day the cOde letters are different.
.

cr:..er

2-Z8
RSU

LUDAAK

1:41D &lt;II ill Lltllllgltt wtih

'
I STAND
l-IEU LONi EHOU6tl,
SIII!'LL COMI OUT...
Wt(5E IF

DIVIcl wnw-.
• • 110¥11: ·L.m-lllcll:1
Cll Lltlllllvll (PO) (1:38)
-1:10 Ill MOYIE: The l'baiiiUtR of

,..E ........ .

RSMEV

DHCBR

XLMVSRUEMEV

z M w·w Au

DVU

RSU

YECNAUWVU

RSDR

: KCB'AA

C B R, V L, C N

M.R .

MO

IIIIW•II• (f:14)

-. I . ...,~ a-

llllallalalparla

Om•Rt•

(1)~1

'•

CRYPTOQUOTE

Dlll~IIICJu;

• MOYle: The CMmp (POi

...

I

:

U.l. Men'a Pro 8111 Tow •

From VIII, CO (R)

jo

'·

James Jacoby

Ill Nlalitlolll;l

.

'I

Dill N~lahtlt•tllnane Q
llll M111num P.l.
GJ)IIgnOfl

DCllRIIWIIIde
2:311 ()) JICit Benny

"•

'•

Notn'll

•• 2
.QJ107

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

IIJ NewaHigltl

;~.

D11mptruck heullng aervlce
Caal, IOrld, lflvot .....
1!)4-1711-3110.
•
.

BRIDGE

2:00 ()) luma ancl Allen
(]) lnlldllhl PGA Tour (R)
(I) Cltllra

-.... .

Nul Rupe. Jr. w..., Slforioe. ? :~
ltooll, dltema, ..a•. Catll14· • ~~
448-1111 .
.,
i{
Wettenon'a W•••r Heullng
",
rMaonable rlil&amp;a, lmmedt ...i
),
'
2.000 ...... ~.-.
~..... · ... 304·571· ·~ .
111.
.

Show
' Cll8 1:111

Nlflhl ChrisUna's lured biCk
into ~how biz by an offer she

.

' J &amp; J Water S.rvlce. Swimming
paola, olltama. w.Jla, Ptl . 11114~
1111 Dodeo llolt - olr* up, 241·12...
AT, N. N. AM·fM. mrrot-ta
f' a R W.ter Strvlce. Home
a........ -..71·1211 .
olstera, walll. Pool• filled. For·
'U CheuaDII:t Ilk* up truela, I
marty Jtm• Boya Wetert. ~l
304·171-8370. .
.
oyt, •471.00, i04-171·Z417.

=

Dllll 'Dill

....
-..

or

1121

(]) Ughter Slde of Sports

.

IQ4.81i~2285

fll (l) Hogan's Haraea
11:00(1) Remington Steere
Sensrtlve Steele
.. &lt;II (i) Ia IIl Ill •
(!) Sign 011
I]] The Brain Examines

·.

Cell ..., ..,.
171·12ltl.

(T)
I]] Tony Brown'• Joumal

1151 Newa

.,

-··

(!) Volcea a Vlelonl
Dramatizations of Crane's

e

c
WINTHRO'P
' IMTIREDOF

llJ) Frontline Probe
con1inuing struggles between
penitentiary Inmates and
guards. 1:;1
I!Dl DIIZ Jake and lite
Fotman Mccabe Is
· suspicious of a kidnapped
heiress's miraculous escape.
~ Larry King Uvel
10:00 ()) lllralghl Tatk

life In the Caribbean, New
York and Ohio. (NR) D
I!Dl 111 1121 cagney a C..Cey
Drug·related murder may be
1he work of Central American
Dealh Squads. Q
il]) @ Nawa
II) Evening Newo
Cll Benny Hill
10:20 CD MOVIE : 2010: TheY- .
Wa Make Cont!lct iPGI (1:56)
, 10:30 ())Celebrity Chela
(!) AII·Arnertcan Pulling
Sarleo From Indianapolis, IN

"

..

..

An ad agency copywriter greets a fellow copywriter by say·
ing: "Hil What s naw and IMPROVED?"
·
·

i

,,

··'

1111 Jeoparctyl Q
Bam1y MIUer
D Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 &lt;IJ Sanford ancl Son
8:00 ()).Crooobow The Prisoner
G ()) 1111 Matlock The
popular writer of en advice to
Ill~

®

murderad.
(i) lllll XV Olrntplc Wl,.r
Gam11Q
.
(!) I]] Nova The new drug
IL·2 may be .the long·sought
cancer breakthrough . Q
I!Dl Ill liZ 48 Houre
~ PrimeNewa
@ MOVIE: Death Wlah 3 (R)
(1 :30)
D (l) MOVIE: An Eye lor an
Eye (1:46)
8:05 &lt;IJ NBA lllakelball
8:311 ()) Branded The Ghos1 of
Murrieta
9:00 ()) 700 Clu6
D ()) 1111 'Noble HOUH, Part
3' NBC Movie ollhe Week

•Hh.

,,

I!Dl Wheel of Fortun1 Q
01 Craaallre

the lovelorn column Is

ALLEY OOP

SC.RAM-LETS ANSWERS
Plaque - Brava - Omega - Eyelid - IMPROVED

l!OUTH

(!) NHL Hockey

FRANK AND

-··
...
....

'

I!

C0 DE Y

By Jilmea Jacoby

Squ~ree

..

that you always -

~-r-M...::E~E~N..!y~~ · l'
. I I. II I' . .i

I

TV D
t1Ji ShowBiz 'Toda'

.'

At9atered leqle puPt tor ..... R..S Hot t.glllnll Drug deal••'
•.
Shata,
with papara. Ctrl, boate. plann rePo'd. Sur·
. plut.. Your ArM. au.,..,.. Oukte. 76
Calll14·912-2712.
'
Auto Parts
(111011·817·1000 ht. S-8801.
,.
Concrete bloctca ell alzaa yard or 5 AKC rot!- Pald8t Acce11oriea
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
delivery.
M•aan
asnd.
Glllllpolil
Wllhen, dryera, rtkigeratora,
pupo. •110.00 oach, 304·875· 1110 Ch..., Cltotlon. 2 ~oor,
Block· Co.. 1231h Pine lt .. 4830 or 875·2478.
auto. front whtel drive. 43,000
rlnttt . Skagga Appliances,
Ohio C.ll 114-448·
onatnal mllao. •eoo. Coli 814- U•ed &amp; rebuilt tran•m•tiona. . ~·
Upper Rlnr Rd. betide Stone . Gtlllpolia,
2783.
.
992·5148 .
. Uaad 1re lnltrnllly ln.,.cted
Creat Mottl. 114-441-7398: ·
67
Musical
and carry 3000 miiH or 30 day•
BUILDING SUPPUES
1110 Dadgo Horizon, Auto, AC, wen1nty. !whichever OCI:UJI
Valtey Furniture
Instruments
·
SAVE 5011 to 75%
front wheel drtvt. GNat at.epe.
New end uud fumlture and
fl,.t). We can help with herd to
1·Wifer ·bolrd 7 / 16K4'x8'·
•eoo. Call 814·912·5841.
applicences . C1ll 814-,46·
find trenuninhlna, C11l 614·
t6
.95,
'Aax4'
•8'-t8.96.
71572. Houra 9-11.
Guitar Laaiontll Bru:
448-0818.
2-T-111 yellow pine tiding lndtvidual
nlcerdll Mualo 114-441-0887 Govemnwnt Hom• from •1 . (U
~x4'd'-t13.16 each.
repalrJ. Delfnq.,.nt tax property.
.
J .. S FURNITURE·
Tr•namilllona ·
3- 114x4'x8' Llluen plywood· · or Jeff Wemtley lnatructor 441" ~~--··can 1·801·887·
(Formally Ptrton't Furniture]
8077. Limited optnlngt
Uaed• Sttrling at til. ex88
.96
IICh.
.
.
1000 Ext. OH-8801 for cu"ant chengt. llao·rebuitt tranamia·
. 1411 e.aem Ave.
4-Aough uw eMir boards
repo Uat.
Living room sUite• from 1179 &amp;
8ions. chana•owr kitll tor OM
'Ax12"x72'' -2 for ti.OO.
up. Bedroom auitea t489 .9&amp; &amp;
OVILrdrive tu 3150 Turbo. 2 wheel
6-No.2-l"spruce
bem
aid·
i II ill Sll'lillll'
1171 Iuick LaSobre. V«v good a 4 whHI drive, CUII:DII'E built
up: Complete mic::roweve ttenda
ing
v·groved·
39C
lin.
ft.
oandltlon. High mileage. f1 800, lock-up GM torquee. Gu.r•n*39.95 • up.
•
6-Coloni .. buded m11on1U
/, 11'11':,1111 k
814·9811·3105.
Come .In and meet the new
teed up to ona.,.ar. C.tha urry
lllp
tiding*23
sq.,
20
aq
.
ful
Ownen.
or install. C.ll814·378·2220 or
·'
llfts-t1 a sq.
1911 Dadgo Daytona Turbo Z-1 304-8711-4230.
7
-7
/
18x4x8
prefinished
2 pc, living room suitea·starting
- · 34,000 miM. Blue ond
alate gray or 1lmond tidingaltwr. Tnnelereble euatom wtr· · Utad rebuilt rap-'recl tran·amiaat 1300. 6 pc. dining room
61 Far_m Equipment
813.96
IIKh.
r1nty. Loedld. Must ... to liont. Cell 114·441·3134.
aultn-aterting •• 1226. 7 pc.
8-M81onite
rock
or
brick
appreciate. EJICIIIent condiUon.
relining room auite - t3150.
1
.,i
unfiniJhed paneling 4x4x8CROSS. SONS
C1ll 814-742-2971 or 11•Reclinert'·ltlirting at I 1 &amp;6. New
;
t5..96 each.
·
U•.s. 31 W•t, Jecbon, Ohio. 742·2143. D. w-.
PhiiCo 25" color TV-e4&amp;0. 6 pc.
77 · Auto Repair
9-AIItibe flor ..s erid IKe 114·281·1451.
.
living room tuitet · 1400 .
&lt;I
paneling 'Ax4x8 ~ t7 . 96 and MeiMV flf'IUton, New Hon.td,
,(
19115 Etcort l Station Wagon. 15
Carpet-attrting at t4 • yd.
,•
t8.95
eeeh.
•
lulih Hog Seln • larvice; O"er
Kitchen &amp; bathroom vinyl
· 34,000 miiH, PS, PB, Jim't lmpon Auto Service,
1O-lhx4x8 All wood panel_ing 40 uHd trectora to chOOH trom -luwaa•
.;
reck, rear wt,_. and
linoleum· starting .. t4.99 a yd.
oak end pine and birch- t16.85 a compl.ta line of n.w &amp; uHd clatro11or. S14·941·2410.
Rlpl ... Wnt Virginia. Spoclollz· • 1
.
lhstelluion • financing
to t18 ,96 NCh.
equipment. Llrgaat Hlectlon In
lng In Hondt ptrtl and aervla.
t
aveU.ble.
11-Bath room paneling, S.E. Ohio. ·
•
1911 Ford Escort StaUon olnco 1978. Phano (3041 372Moltohlin Furniture
glazed 11.. 1nd smooth pattern·
·•
Wagon. No rutt, t1'8nl. and flnll 5857. Nino to fin.
403 4th. Avo. ·KMR
t8.91 to $12.915
410 Int. lrlctor w/ pk)wa. culll- *Mi ,recently OVII·hiiUied. 114·,...:
Gelllpollt, Ohio-814-448-7444.
1 2 -White 48 " 11122" bath veton. g,.der blade. rriowlng 141·2178.
Serv 11:1~~
room v1nitiea with merble top m1chine • baler. •4710. Call
(8) grada-$169.96.
114·281·6522.
1981 Chevette. 4 cyl., tuto, 4
1 3-Chil)a and marble round
door, P&amp;, P8, llr, E'!tw tiNa, ralty ·
63 . Antiques
and oval vanity bowl•- white and Heaton . 15400 rou:1d baler, whaolo. f35oo . eo• 814·H2,.
colcir-$19.96.
·
•1 .295. 198116ft. haavydul'/ 325B.
81
Home
14-Color commodet - stock trtiler, t2481. Call614Anliqutt, buy or Mil. Riverine
lmprov.e mantl
S49 .96 , White commodat· 285·1522.
1967 Muet1ng. 8 cyl, auto.
Antlquea, 1124 Eeat Mlin St.
138.811.
~·
41,000 miiM. Wroctced 1171
Pomlfl)y. Houri::- Mon., Tuea.:
11-C.olor pedia~! lavatoriea- Gravely tractor. Electric lllrt. 8 D - Ch0111ar. -uMt motor.
. ~
indWed.10:00a.m.-I:OOp,m.,
059.95. 2 for noo .
1pd. with rotary plow. culttvator Call 1114·182·7103.
BASEMENT
·
Sun. 1:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m . .By
18-Whitt atMI bath tuba· • oulky. Calll14-448-41~9.
WATERPROOFING
· lcch1nc::e or epi)Ointn'lent. Ruu
169.91 each, 2 for t100· color
19. . ·aulck ean..,ry. 4 door, Uncondltk&gt;nll lifetime guaran· · ~
Moora. 114-982·2526.
171.91 each':
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT· V-1·, low mileage : Well tee. Local ref..ncu fumlahad.
17 - Whlrlpool tubt ·
441·9117
e~~ulpped. extra otun. C.l 11 ..
Free •lmaen. Cell coftect:
tlberglau. complete. plumblng- 3 Pt. hitct!. tertlllzer .,nc~., 112·5213 or 114·112·1331.
1·114-137·-· clay ar-t.
64 Misc. M'erchandise *096, rOll. •1395.
with PTO 1haft. t1tlwhlletfley
·tc- Rogeral•••ment
1 1-1 pc. tiberglaat tub &amp; laot.
1177 C.diMac ledan De'VIfte. Wat•prooflug.
ahoM,. 1111.11
White or
ttoO. 114·742·2450. No Soo·
Mtaaey Fe,.uiOn 180 DIM&amp;!. day-Mill... .
SWEEPER and •wlnu mHhinli
\.
Ctllshen'a Uted nre Shop. Over color.
19-Bright and lntique bran · New, rubber on rwr. Allwt~ether
repair, pert a. and auppU•. Pick
1,000tlrea.liaea12, 13, 14.11.
and chrome v1nlty and tub •
eeb with heater, PS. tit wheel, 1111 Musttnt GT. low miluge.
up .-net delivery. D1vl1 V1cuum
18. 111 .15 . 8 mllea out Rt. 218.
ahower faucet. ·sava 50".
dual remote hydreuHc llr:... ... 500.00. 304·875·31134.
Cle1ner. one half mile up
Call 814·251·1251 .
20-2 Gil. bucket · ott whhe front weights. NMW Holand 273
Gl!lo...- ·Creek Rd. C1ll 114- ,,
textured. w•n p.~lnt- 14.95. reg. Heyllner. Hay ...., witt, auper . 1918 Chryirlor Now Port. good 441-0214.
SWIMI\IING POOLS ·- 0899
09.96.
IWHP IMckup. Call 614·949·
mech1n1c.a cond, eac wo,. C81',
New left over 1987•. Modtl
21 •5 gtl. aluminum fibered 2237.
U20.00. 304-171·4435 oftar Concrete Septic Ttnlta· 1000
Poole . ,Hugh 115x24 fl . swim
roof co•tinv-•20.H.
gal., 11500 gaL and Jet AeratiOn
1:00.
area, 4 ft. dHp. ~ncludal deck.
. 22-K··Lux white brh;:k 6 tq . ft. F•mall Super M for ..... Rebuilt
syatem. hctory trained rtP4lr_.
fence, filter a we nanty. Installactn.-11 .60.
engine in •a4, Good condition. 1982 Pontloc F,INbird. cha{COOI, lhop. RON EVAN8 ENTU:·-· ,,
tion &amp; financing available. Call
23-Eproxy coated steel Colll14·811·3995.
,,
Auto, AM·FM CHMtle, cruiae PAISE&amp;, Jtc::k•o~:~ , Ohio. 81424 hr1. : 1 -800-346· 0948 .
cloaet and door ahetVIng. S1v1 to
288·f930.
oontrot air cond. t4.1500.00 ..
'
75%.
lntlrnetioll•ll 1010 irlnder BiG. 3 BR .. f•m hom• built On
304·17e·2748.
24· Wood, aluminum 1nd mixer. New Holland 487 hat
Roottnv. remodall,ng, .tddltlona,
your lot. *16.996 end up. Cell
vinyl clad wl'ldowa. (Bowa), bind. Ferguaon IlK bar her reke. 1814 Fard Tampo, 49.000 electrlll. drywall, paihtlng, &amp;
1-814·886·7311 .
.
(Baya), (Casement), (Double· New Holland707 torap harvel· mila, tlrnHwi-.1-.
plumbing. Clll Gary 114-318hung) . SIVO It whol ...le and ter. 304-273-42115.
·
MEMBERSHIP tor Sela-lo Royal
new ndl••· tZ,IOO.oo. 304- 8842.
below.
Oak Reaort Club on Rt. 7 n1er
175·7431.
~6-~ Tempered th•rmal
RON'S Talevlalon Servltli.
Pomaroy: Security. privllegn,
pane. Gla.. panelo. i32•7e· ·6 2 Wantad to. l;luy
indoor pool, camping, fithlng,
1817 Fard Movarick. AC. Pa: . HouH calla on RCA. Quaur,
t 2 9 . e • I . I 3 4 • 1 8 · 1------:...____,_ PS, radio • topa playor, g&lt;!Od
GE. Spaclaling In Zanhh. Cal
social 1ctivities. other advtn·
••"
U5 .001.147•78-ti5.001. Full
tageal BIG SAVINGS beto.re
tlrH, •1.000.00. 304-451 - 304·518·2398 or 114·446·
CIH IOtl•ll5.00 pr.pc. 1. . ..
2454.
Msrch 1st. Cell Collact-814·
1918.
·,
28-21" Ocotgon thermal Now buying theU corn Of e•
281-1837 .
leaded alau wlndowt-189.915. com. Call forletllt quo••· River 1879 Plymouth Dulter, 78,000 Fetty TrH Trimming, atump
City Farm Supply, 814--.48· milt•, 1800.00. 114-317- ,.mov11. Clll304-171-1331.
2 for t 126.00.
,. ;;
2 handm•d• lifghana . Cell 448.
27-7.2" .Walnut atarhr 2995.
1757.
8146 Mondey thru Fridey bekitchen- inclUding f2· 11"WIIII.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
tween 8:00am • 4:30pm.
{1 -72" bue). {1 -72j' pc. lop)· Went to buy, Yellow loculi: '78 T-Biid: exc cond, llpttlck red Moat well a completed nme dirt.
'•
.199.95 . .
pootad, ca11304-871-2130. .
Pump uln and •ervtce. 304~
with white Interior, ' " to
Gu drier &amp; Fu{ coat tor aale.
28· 2 gal. Pllil K·Lux while
•IINdete or will t,.de for good 18e.3B02
Cell 814-4-'6·2108 or 448- morter·
t4 .. 95 .
8315.
: 't
truck,
I :00 call 304-175·.
63
Livestock
~9 - Pine Lou'e1!red interior
8ttrlc1 Tree end Llwn Senrica.
5221_.
ahutters.
Below
Wholetllt
lawn ctra. l•ndacapjng, attimp
Mixed h•d wood alaba. t12 per
.t
price1.
removal, 304-571-2842 or
bundle. Contllining epprox. 1 112
30·
1
pc::.
pale
lemon
color
57.. 2903.
72
Trucks
for
Sela
ton. FOB. Ohio Pellet Co.
commodea, rea.-•299.95, now HOI'HI tor ul• Standardbred
Pomeroy, Ohio. 114-992· 6481 .
and Tennn... Walkera. Cell
1129.915.
114-448-4758.
; 1987 Ford Ranger 8 . 8 tpd., Experlenced painter, txtellent
31-lnterior
prahung
doors,,
nferencn, quality work. lnt•
Oak, roll top dealt. •mall . Re - flnithed .00 unfinlthed. Choice
AM-FM·C.11. 8,000 mil... Call
'.;
rior. exterior. texturing, tboro
mington 870 Wingmeater, 20
114·44e.2323- 4 PM.
2
Han
Turkeya
•
2
.Qobbi••·
sizet·f29.95
MCh.
Hll,
be
..
menta,
frH
tttlmatll
ga. shotgun. like new. S275 ·
32· Exterior tteel insulatl'd •40 tor ell. Call814-381·8335 .
uctl. Cellll14-949-2801 .
'
1974 Ford pickup. 0~ cond. call 304·815·7413.
panel prehung doora-179.96
,.
t800.
Call
114-245·9284.
and 188.1&amp; each.
Maple coft" table. 150. 1'4five&amp;
•
33·AII .typn of door and 64 Hey • Grain
82 Plumbing
rockM, teo. very good condi1985 Ch.v. lltveracto-red •
window
trim.
Flniahed
1nd
un·
tion. Call Harry Surface, 614lifver. Duley. Llerlopper, crulle,
8t Heating
flnlshlld. Pllltlc and wood·
982· 3359.
11r. 4154 eng., running
•1 .00 ·to U.OO pr.pc.
800 ·beln ol conditioned hay. tilt,
boudt, R.._ hitch, TA br•k•
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Coli 814'441-4344.
Firewood for seit. S36 a load.
• nioro. 21,000 ..-. GC!Od ·' CARTER'S PLUMBING
Welltton,
Ohio
Will deltvtr. 114·8'4 3·541 0 .
614-384·3845
AND HEATING
Lertt rouftd baleaot hey for Hie. oond. can 114-258·1038.
·leCor. Fount. end Pine
•u a bale. C1ll 614-441·1186 1181 Toyota pick-up. Utility
For S1le: Htaoned hardwood.
.. 448·4038.
Oalllpolio, Ohio
HEAP No. 7047 reaittered.
t.d. camper top, Iechier rack.
Reidy mix concrete and all
Phone 814-441·3888 or 114Delivered or pick-up. Phone
'Calloftor
5:00
514·H2·3143.
448-4417
614·742-2426 .
. concrete auppliet. ·Call ua Valley 300 belea of miUd hay. t1.2&amp;
,.
Brook Cement 1nd Suppllea. •ech. 300b.... ofc~. •1 .10
1977
lnternltlonel
Tandem
304-173-1234.
1000 bal... conditioned mixed
- · Call 114-318-8483 or LDecl Star. 441 gu motor, 5
388·8850.
....•
84
Electrical
hay tor nle. Cell814-912-1313
tpMCI main trenamiHton, 4
or 114-949-2754.
apeed auKIILer; tranamiuiqn.
8t Refrigeration
66
Pets for Sela
Uve exalt. 14 ft. dump body.
Tl.lllSJIIII Llllllll
Mhted hey for .. Ia. 1200 lb.
1 - for hot mill work. Coli
"J,
round bal11. • 1 8 . Delivery po•·
114-912·2187.
Allidentlel or commarclal wir·
l
olbla. 614·898·8284.
lng. NeW tervlce or repeira .
!·
1817 NINin Truck. Ten, Bt11 E.
Ucenaed tl~tetricien . r Ettlmate , .,
FM·AM . -. 25,000 ..... free.
Ridenour Electrical, -304- . ·,
Call 114·H2-1137 or 814·
175·1,188.
..... 2511 . • 1000.
'
·ic. '. '
1 110 Chevrolet 1AI ton Dicit• Up.
86
General
Hauling
210 I oyl.. IIIRD, Pl. No Ntt.
lher!l. 13,000 mlloa. AM·FM
ro~lo. Call 814·1U· 31DI
•1'
,.,
eweNnp. " .
DitLerd Wat:• Service; Poole,
Cisterna, Walla. Delivery An,tlme. CAll 114-441-7404-No
l'lalurp boda Ch....,lot. Fard.
:' •
Sundly cella.
Dod~&amp;. llhort or long, no rult. ·

"I'm still

·

e

Supplies

bun--· atl......, duty.

Mpd.m One 8R. apartment: C. II
U4-44e-o380.

•
•

I]] Owl

•

chaln.--..2and. Brown In cob wtlh ftorel
- . . .. 1 .,.., otd. 0210 . oao.
114-H2-7431 .

NlooMt.
-· •M.
por
Coll814·742·3033.

T \tl R 0 G H

Androzenl Caves of
Androzani

THEY HAVE A RACIA~
POLICY IN THI~ COUNTRY
CA~LED "EXCLI.*ION."

be-

low to form four si mple 'words .

231

. (!) SpartsLook {T)
(!) Dr. Who: Cave• of

,..,
·"'

Ll¥ing room eutte. Couch. 2

5

FEBRUARY

1151Newa

I

' '
•••

10 Deya ume 11 cllh with
aPPfO .... or~ 3 MM. out
Bulevlh Rd. 0 ' tam lo lpm
Mon. thN I ' . Ph. 114·44t·
0322.
.

Nice 1 8ft apt . , nHr HMC.
ltOVII, refrlg. • drepu. Cell
814·448·4782.
1.:.._
_ _ _ __

-•hi&lt;·

.;

1913 Hondo XL 100 R. 1.Ca1.
oond. Cell 814·448-4473 attar
S_PM.

175·1717.

66 .Building

TU~S. ,

four scra mb led Words

8;00 ()) Crn, U~e a Fox
Someday My Prints Will
Come
G ()) (i) flllll Ill Ill liZ

,.

2

44

)

•

1182 Mart.,Y· fuH draa, betl
......
• - · eo• 814-379·
242S ottar 8 PM.

Duclta. goatl, •ntiqual oek table
ond pot bally ltovo. call 304·

Building Materiels
Block, brick. aewer plpea, windowt, llntela, etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grnde, 0 . C.ll 114·
245·6121.

MotorcyciH

••

Fl~d. top quality, M"'ned.
apllt, h•rdwood. d•llv.rad,
n5.oo"' too. 304·17e·5724.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
ulld lppll•ncea
and Mon
TV nta.
Open,
lAM to IPM.
thru
Sot. 814-448·1899. 627 3rd.
Avo. Golllpollo. OH.

· 74

It,.._,..,

75.000 btu netural gu floor
furnace. cell b&amp;twten 2:00 and
1:00 PM. 304-871·2481.

•

::=:

'::~:t~~, S@tt,":n~t-~r.trs~~
0 Rearrange letten ·of ,.,,

_...:.,::.:..:.,::;__::_:: £dliod br CLAY R. POLLAN _ ::..__ _ __

EVENING

0111111. 21 ·

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olivo St., O.Nipotlo .
NEW· I po. wood group- f399.
LMng room · t199-U99.
Bunk beds wtth bedding· l:t II.
Full sire mattrQI • foundttlOn
alerting- 198 . Recliners
otartlno· tl9.
USED· Bedt, drealfit, bedroom
aultet, 11 19· •299. Detkt,
wringer wether. a complete line
at: uMd fUrniture:.
NEW· w..tem b0ot1- UO.
Worlcboolt t18 • up. (Steel •
.aft toe). Call 614·446-3159.

... I'D AAVI&lt; 1D Till~ T~
A80UT ~AT 6J;f'Cn C11VIt¥:11T A

..

Now brick, 2 BR .. aquippod
kitchen, laundry room. Private
.,.-king. No pelt. Ret. • dep.
Calll14·441-1250.
··

9657.

50 ecras. nawar houta. county
watltf', electric &amp; phone hooked
up. Thompaon Rd. $36,000 or
belt offer. Call 614· 448-6980.

Apartment
for Rent

88 scm. 6 mil" aouth on 218·
3 BR. hquH. 4 yn. old. Tobacco
be... can &amp;14·258·1394.

4 BR ., 1ireplace, full baaement. 3
mi. ac . of Gallipolis. •29,900.
C11l Oava-614-44'8-11, 5, after
5,00· 446-1244.

l

· 44

Homes for Sala

Rent-Sale: Secluded country
hol'fle, good hunting. 8 mihtli
from locks· &amp; Dam. 129. 900.
Glenwood, W.Va. Call814· 446·
2914.

Pink
'-'tlth. llz:a I
to I. prom drnla, tiO.OO. Phone
. 304-812·27:34.

1·-··.

Television
Viewing

,

4 W.O.

The

Ohio

'17 l'ord Rongor, 1,000 uc oond, 11,000.00. IQ4.77J.
1121-4:00 prll.

clod•••·

I-

Vane •

'

1 . . Ford Cu....:JM VM.
Laadad. 21.100 m1111. eaa .
114•H2·7113..
•

Clvllolnt.

-1 • 3 yr. old Kenmore almond
.......... trtm.
cod .
110. 1 ottoc. brown. Controur
broncl racllnlna chair, back •1011
vlbratea • hNtlno padt. excel·
far arth~c penon . 1400.

n-.

"Be reasonable, Myrt! If I
kiss you when I go to work,
kiss you when I get home
and kiss you when I go to
bed, ·that's 1,095 KISSES A
YEAR!"

R-1

l1010tion lndo(oondonao llolll.
latt f'teua:• coli. Ftt.a.t.lun;;
noon·I :OO prro. 304-273-5115.

6 PM.

73

a... Meatrtc typewrtta. Eacel.
concl. •10. cau 114·448·8n3.
IU~PLUI DENIM, Carhart,

Matohlrl8 Whlflporrl _ , _ •
dryer. OC!Od conot. Call 814·
44e.2tel.

G.E. almond .Nfrig. llm&lt;&gt;ot
IIOO&lt;Ioond. U50. Coll614· 318l744afterl PM.

Dairy 811' and Rtsturent loctied
Gllllipolit Ferry, Cell 304· 1753968 or aher 6:00 304~ 175 4192.

Mlec. Merch~ndiM

11141.

._t
Calll14·441·4241 oftor

I NOTICE I
.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
INO CO . recomm.nde th,m· you
do buain... with ~le you
know, and NOT to tend monl'tl
through the m1_l, until VOll h....,e
lnves~lgated the oHtring.

14

lloavy work
boota.. ....., ..
r nrn•bh prloee. Pollllo,.. Ma
w.t~~Ma lmp;lalllid Snr'i".._.

a-.

Buwneaa
Oppcirtunity

23

HouMhold GOode

E-.

Heneona Camp...., C01a.tdng

s.,.....Lot ua "' "" tho rtght
W

Tu11clly, February 23, 1988

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Do

Tuu ~ay• .Febnav 23, 1988

'qUI

1:11 (I) lattel•.... lllf'llr

..
·.
.••.

-W .C LMO
WOK
Y......_,'t Ca#~ ONE OF 11fE GREAT

'DISADVANTAGES OF HURRY 18 TftATrl' TAOS SUCH
iA LONG 11MB. - G.K. CHESIER'IOH .
J

"'•
'

I

~

·--·------------------~----~--------=d

�•

"
1

o- The Deily Sentinel

Tuaaday, februai'V 23. •1988.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

Olympic ·
results

'

-Local news briefs---- Fie..ce winds remain in upper . Michigan~
EMs has three calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls Monday; Tuppers PlalnJi atlO: 25 a.m. to Owl Hollow Road
lor John Hayes to St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at12: 41 p.m. to
Carpenter HIU Road lor William Musser to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 12;58 p.m. to Route 338 for Harry H!ll to
Holzer Medical Center.

Meigs court news
Columbia Gas of ObiO Inc. ,
Columbus, has flied an action In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Scipio Recycling
Co., Pomeroy. A judgment of
$16,446.11 has been requested In
the matter.
A money action has also been
filed by James Clifford, Pomroy,
against Royal Petroleum Prop·
.ertles Inc., Cleveland.
A default judgment of $1,37.4.47

I

has been granted In the case of
Central Trust Co. of Southeast·
ern Ohio against Daryl L.
Sawyers.
Actions dismissed Include
Shinn El ectrlc Co. against Greg
Garretson; Diamond Savings
and Loan Co. against Robert J .
Varian, et al; Linda G. Bing
against Guy E . Bing; . Bonnie
Proffitt and Gordon Proffitt .

Area deaths ·

.·1

Frederick Healy

John and VIrginia Talbott of
Barnesville; sisters, Gertrude
Roush of Columbus, Mrs. RIFrederick L. Healy, 81, o(2346
Sondora Dr., Grove City, died · chard (Margaret) Christy of
Sunday at Brown V.A. Hospital,
Columbus; and several nieces
Dayton.
and nephews.
A native of Meigs County, Mr.
He was preceded In death by a
Healy was born Jan. 28, 1907 in
sister , Mary Hood.
Pomeroy , a son of the late
Mass of Christian Burial will
Patrick L. and MaryGuthHealy.
be Thursday, 10 a.m., at Our
He was a retired U.S. Postal
Lady of Perpetual Help Church
worker, and a member of Our with the Rev. Father Romano
Lady of Perpetual Help Church Ciatola officiating. Friends may
in Grove City and the Drew call . at !'\choedlnger-Norris
Webster Post of the American Chapel, 3920 Broadway, Grove
Legion, Pomeroy .
City, on Wednesday from 2 to 4
Survivors Include his wife,
and 7 ·to 9. Rosary service will be
Louise Talbott Healy, also a 7:30p.m. Wednesday. Graveside
Meigs County native; brothers· service and Interment will be
in-law and sfsters-ln-law, George 1:30 Thursday at Gravel Hill
and Joann Johnson of Grove City, Cemetery in Cheshire.

Stocks some lower
in active trading
NEW YORK (UP!) - Stock
prices slipped slightly lower In
active early trading today as
mild profil·lak!ng stalled the
market 's recent advance.
The Dow Jones industrial average, which rose 25.70 Monday,
was down0.83to2039.46at10a.m.
·Advances were .level with
declines 526-526 among the 1,540
issues crossing the New York
Stock Exchange tape. Volume
was active - about 41.6~ million
shares during the first 30 minutes
of trading.
The Tokyo, Stock Exchange
continued its climb Tuesday. The
Nikkei average of 225 selected
issues, which rose 73.30 yen
Monday, jumped another 102.74
yen to close at 24,949.45 yen.
Trading was active.
In economic news today, the
·co mmerce De partment said new

Divorces sought
Filing for dissolutions of mar·
riage in Meigs County Common
Pleas Co urt are Greta Triplett,
Portla nd. a nd Larry Triplett,
Portla nd; Juanita Y. Reed, -Raci ne, a nd James L. Reed, Reeds·
ville; Rhonda Kay Koehler.
Middleport, and Kenneth D.
Koehler, Rutland.
Filing for divo rces are Eva
Ruth Bookman, Reedsville, from
Franc is A. Bookman, Coolville;'
Teresa Ann Lawrence, Long
Bottom . from Robert Joseph
Lawrence. Long Bottom; Laura
Ly nn RichJnond, Rutland , from
Donald Richmond, Rutland. A
restraining order has been issued
against Donald Richmond.
Gra nted divorces were Esther
Salser from Raymond Salser;
Ala n Keith Partlow from Mary
Ann Partlow; Dawn Gaye lle
Metz from Dennis Paul Metz Jr.
Dawn Metz was restored to her
former nam e Thomas.
Gra nted a dis solution were
Cy nthia K Mit'chell and Eric R.
Mitchell.

estimate o! the damage.
Rain reached from north Cen· the high winds shattered 90 huge dollar
Winds
of 25·35 mph and gusting ·
tral Kentucky across Ohio and plate-glass windows. No Injuries
to
45
mph
swept across the
were reported. At least 20 of the
northern New York state.
Midwest.
In
sou
th·central Wyom· .
Tempe~atu[es around the na· windows were col1)pletely ing 15 to 30 mph
winds whip~:
!Ion at2 ~.m. EST ranged !rom 6 destroyed.
up
snows
and
slashed
vislblllty · ;
degrees l&gt;elow zero at lnterna· · Gordon Jones, a spokesman tor
Winds
gusting
to
100
mph oft.
tlomil Fails, Minn., to 71 degrees Sears, said 90 windows · were
at both Homestead and Miami, either blown out or damaged. the coast ot Alaska forced two ~
The building has 16,000 windows, · fishing vessles aground, the I
Fla.
,
About one-half Inch of rain !ell he said. There was no immediate Coast Guard said Monday.
In Buffalo, N.Y., and In Cleveland, Ohio, during the 6 hours
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2-24-88:.,
ending at 1 a.m. EST. There were
no reports of . measurable snow·
fall during the same 6 hours.
Spawned by a Canadian low
pressure system, winds blew
through the Plains. and Great
Lakes Monday, closing highways
In the Western mountains and 40
smashing .90 windows In Chlca·
go's Sears Tower.
A blast of cold air that sent
temperatures plummeting In the
northern Plains trailed along
behind the winds t)lat deScended
from the . mountains along the
· Canadian border and rushed
quickly eastward.
"It 's across all of the Plains
states and It's moving from the ·
Rockies to the Atlantlc Coast,"
forecaster Pete Reynolds said.
The world's tallest building,
Meeting Thursday
llO·story Sears Tow.er,
Chicago's
The Ladies Fellowship of the
EI:JsNOW
RAIN
SHOWERS
:
Meigs County Churches of Christ suffered extensive damage when
wiil meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
.. . Static
Occluded .~·
at the Middleport Church of
Mac shC'NS m i ~irr:w .~ temoera:·Jres. At !east 50%. of any Sh:.'!:d~ a~a is rorecast ~
christ.
to recet 'le orectpi:a::q:"! inci.ca:90
UPI ..
'
.· Daily stock prices
To meet thursday
. WEATIIER FORECAST- Sno)Y showers will be scattered over ·'
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
upper
Michigan. Snow over northern New England wiD become
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
rain
across
central and southern New Eng lane!, exlendlng across
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
meet Thursday evening at the
eastern New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, the upper Ohio
Grace Episcopal Church parish
VaHey and the Tennessee Valley. Winds will be strong and gusty
Am Electric Power ............ .29%
house.
over
the northern haU of the Plains, the upper Mlsslulppl Valley,
AT&amp;T ............................... .. . 30
along the Great.Lakes and across northern New England.
Ashland Oil .......... ..... ........ .59%
Plan chicken dinner
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Rutland Fire Department will
Charming Shoppes .... .... ;...... 15
------Weather-~.---~:•
hold their annual turkey dinner ' City Holding Co ...... ........ ..... 34
on Thursday , March 3, at the
Extended Forecast
Federal Mogul.. ..................36\-S South Central Ohio
Rutland Elementary School.
Thursday through Saturday •
Goodyear
T&amp;R
.........
..
:
........
59
Rain
and
snow
likely
today,
Serving will start at 5 p.m .
A chance of snow Thursday , :
Heck's Inc ........................... 1Vs
with highs near 40. Mostly Clear
Advance tickets for $4 may be
with
a fair Friday and a chance of ·
Key
Centurion
......
......
........
40\-S
tonight, With a low near 15.
pu.r chased from any fireman.
snow
or rain Saturday. Highs will i
Lands' End ...... ...... , ,... ....... 19~
Partly cloudy Wednesday, with
be in the 20s Thursday, climbing ;
Limited Inc .... ...... .......... ....19% highs between 25 and 30.
Multimedia Inc . ................... 58
The probability of precipita- Into the 30s Friday and ranging ·
License issued
Rax Restaurants .......... ........ 3%
tion is 60 percent today and near from to 35 to 45 Saturday. ,
A marriage license has bee n
Overnight lows will range from .
Robbins-~ Myers ................. BY.
zero tonight and Wednesday.
issued In Meigs County Probate
Shoney·s Inc ............... :....... 23%
Winds will be from the northw- 10 · to 20 Thursday and Friday ·
Court to George Michael Jen·
Wendy's]ntl.
........
.............
..
6%
est
at 15 to 25m ph today and from mornings and In the 20s early · ·
kins, 38, and Debra Lynn Tho,18Y.
Worthington
Ind
....
......
,
......
the
west at 10 to 20 mph tonight. Saturday.
mas, 28, both of Pomeroy.
.--------,.-----------------------------------....,-----

orders for manufactured durable
goods fell2.8percentlnJanuary,
the biggest decline In one year.
Orders rose. 4.1 percent In
December.
Stocks closed sharply higher
Monday in moderately active
trad.tng.
The Dow rose 25.70 to close at
2040 ..29, less than 12 points below
Its highest level since the October
plunge - 2051:89 - set Jan. 7.
"A lot of people came In
(Monday) expecting some profittaking" after the late rally on
Friday, said Sid Dorr, vice
president at Robinson Humphrey Co. in Atlanta. "But
the market weathered any kind
of selling pressure."
He said the gains were orderly
and there was no sign of aggres·
slve programs.
''This Is not going to be a
market exploding out from here,
no one wants to see tbat," Dorr
said. "It Is behaving nicely. Let's
keep having lO- to 20·point gains
with some lnterday corrections.
This way we can extend the
range and keep moving It up 50
points at a time. What you want
now Is to build support at these
new levels" as the market
advances.
"Underneath the surface the
market has broadened out a
little, and we like the look of
that," said Ralph Acampora,
director of technical research at
Kidder, Peabody &amp; Co.
•'The market should meander
for a while and possibly trade off
a little bit," Acampora said.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Mary
Derenberger, Pomeroy; Karen
Hood, Syracuse; Mark Beegle,
Racine; Ruth Chiles, Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
Monday Dlscha_rges - Larry
Cummins, Flossie Story, Grace
Whaley, Leah William.

r------------------------------~
FHA HOUSING COMPLEX SURVEY
.I
Anyone who may be Interested In renting one of these ;lparl·
ments is asked to· fill out the following survey. Filling out the form
does not put you under any obligation at this time but is only being
used to show that there is a community interest In the project.
1. Would you be Interested in renting a
new subsidized rental unit on Page St.
adja~nt to the new nursing home?
2. Do you feel you would make occasional use of the nursing home facilities for meals and recreation?

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

NAME .. .............................................................................. ..

'

ADDRESS .... .'.... ................ :......................... .... :................... .

'

........ ,...................................
' ................................
.
'
..................................................... ········· .............. .

Page4

•

m

11

St~ks

CrJ

· . BLE PRINTS
EVERYDAY! ·

AI'? AV&amp;Uab(t In [IRA finnt .
Were 11 In Photo Procesalngr

PRICES GOOD .THRU
SUN., FEB. 28, 1988

BRING YOUR
FILM IN TODA VI

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO u•T
QUANTITIES. NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR TYPOGAANCAL OR
ILLU8TRAT10N ERRORS.

HUGGIES

147·0Z.

DIAPERS

eHEER

SUPER TRIM

ANACI
-----

--

100 COUNT

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

66 CT. SMA!j;
48 CT. MEDUJM
32 CT. LARGE

ANACIN
SALE PRICE
REG.
3.69
3.118

LESS REBATE

3.00

.

12 oz.

SINUTAB
SINUTAB II

Q-TIPS

ROUX

'

MAXIMUM
STRENGTH

170 CT.
COTION
SWABS

FANCI-FULL
RINSE

SURE &amp; NATURAL
MAXI SHIELDS
26 CT. SUPER
30 CT. REG. &amp; DEQD.

· 3\~REG.

9

3.48

7 OUNCE

,'V8_ybelline'

EDGE.
SHAVING

6.4 OUNCE

KISSING
KOOLERS

GEL

CLOSE-UP

LIP

GLOSS

TOOTHPASTE

1

69 .

OUR REG.
1.88

LOVING CARE

INTENSIVE
CARE
• LOTION

Nursing law · upgraded
COLUMBUS, Ohio (liPI) ...: A
, long.awaited revision of the
Nurse ' Practice Act, governing
Ohio's 160,000 nurses, will soon be
on Its way to the desk of Gov .
Richard Celeste.
The Ohio Senate adopted the
bill unanimously Tuesday, cap·
ping six years of work by '32
's eparate nursing organizations.
In other acilon, senators took a
step back from legislation abo!·
ishlng corporal punishment
· (spanking) Ill' schools, ·deciding
to give It further study In
committee·.· · .
.
Sent io the governor oil a 19·13
vote o! the Senate was a bill
regulating tl\e signing of college
athletes by professional ·sports
agents.
The nursing bill, drafted with
painstaking care IQ satisfy varIous elements of the health care
Industry, was returned to the
House for concurrence In Senate

OUR REG.

ue

Our Discount Prices Even Lower
WHITE RAIN

70UNCE

HAIR CARE PRODUCTS

RAVE HAIR SPRAY

1 29
a

EVERYDAY
LOWPIICII

PIIICI
IREAKER

99¢

IVIIIYDAY
LOW PIICit

30 COUNT BAGS

11 OUNCE CAN

PLEASE MAIL RESPONSES TO :
Mayor's Office
237 Racine St.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
.
or return completed survey form to the Middleport Mayor's 0!flee or Water Deparlment.
·
~

HALLS

BARBASOL

COUGH DROPS

amendments, which could come
today.
The bill was written In coopera·
tion with the Ohio Nurses Association, the Ohio State Medical
Association and the Ohio Hospl·
tal Association.
"This Is the culmination of
years of hard . work," said Sen.
Grace Drake, R-Solon, adding
that Ohio Is the last state In the
natlon to revise Its nursing law.
The bill gives the Ohio Nursing
Board new powers, Including the ··
power of summary S!lspenslon.
Tlte board may suspend a nurse's
license on the spot, prior to
hearings, If It finds evidence of a
clear and present danger to the
public from the nurse's continuIng practice.
The board also Is expanded by
adding three registered nurses ,
one licensed practical nurse and
one public member. Nurses still
will dominate the board.

The board would have the
power to suspend or revoke a
nurse's license pending appeal of
the conviction of a crime.
Drake said tl\e nursing bill Is
similar to 'One, enacted for the,
Ohio State Medical Board, In that
It allows the Nursing Board to
deal with nurses addicted to
drugs or alcohol.
She said 75 percent of the
complaints about nurses involve
dependency on alcohol or drugs .
The bill also requires nurses to
complete 24 hours of continuing
education every two years, and
Increases the fees from $32 to $50
for a nursing license and from $10
to $15 for rene~al every two
years.
It also places nurse·mldwlves
under the jurisdiction of the
Nursing Board for the first time.
Nurse·mldwives currently are
under the jurisdiction of the
Medical Board.

Aptos invites chamber to plant
dustry is set up 10 serve the large
companies," Dalko said. "We like
Apws has not decided if it wiD to get the large accounts, but. they
incinerale PCBs at a.. pmposed have the ability 10 treat materials
Mason County site, two company themselves. We deal with small
officials sai&lt;l Tuesday aflenioori. companies - one or two barrels
PCB.s. f()U!Id in oil residue of (of hazardous waste) a month, for
elcctrical transformers, have been elUIIIIole, an auto body .or a repair
linked 10 cancer.
.
shop '
"We will make that decision (on
tWo officials admitted there
PCB.s) w~ we. submit our pennit is a lengthy education process unappl~. said Andrew _Dalko, dergone in a COI_II~unity w~ere a
Plalmin&amp; and development director. hazardous waste mcmemtor IS conDaiko' JiD&lt;1 William Hawks, Aptos siclered arid IIIey, refuted published
~xecutive vice .P!.~i\!elll. ~~f£!1... l\),l_s;gl!lions t!'aphe.Y.. "'-'{~ coerced
lhl; MasOn- County Mea quuDbCr people ?r fad~ the techni~al stan·
of COf!!merce board of ~tors ~ m setl!JI&amp;. up the1r. CorTuesday on
proposed P!OJCCI at re:r-llle, ~·· mcmerator stauon.
the .cbamlle!' S regufar meeung. The
~I IS ~lutely, totally Un·
AJI!US officials .used both a lengthy · uue, Ha~ks sauL.
.
slide .JnSCDIBUOil, comments and
ApiUS, a Lakev1Ue, Min~.-based
q~ons, 10 assert ~~ they are company, ~ Ul_ken an opuon on a
brin~
cleanest hazardous · 200-acre sue JUSt south of t)le
WISie iiiC1IIeniiOr technology 10 Goodyear Polyester. plant 10 bwld
MasOn County. . ,
.
~hat 1t calls an en~uonmental serThe officials S81d Apws handles VJCC center. The center would cost
ignitable, corrosi~ and toxic WBS· $2S million 10 $30 million and wiU
tes. ·w~ do busm~ ~nd the · employ.about 150 ~le.
.
c~ntry, .Datko. S81d. W~ .~
~e jobs! according U! company
~oma lJus,!ness m )Vest ytrg1ma officials, will .n:«&lt;u,ue sldliel! labor
nghl now. AJI!US e'!'ploys tts own such as mach~. and eqwp~ent
v~cles and drivers m the transpor· o~tors. techmc1~, ~cm1SIS,
taUon of hazardous. wastes. he ad· engmcen, and admm1straUve supdec!.
.
. .
.
port. Most of the ~ployees will ~
..The nusconcepuon IS our m- hired locally, officials sm&lt;l. A sp1U
'

OOING J'OB LAYUP -

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Alft~JurP)o, wWI·llall,
lulde lor a layup u
Kftw (:Nik ..,...._ Alaa ~:r (H), and

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p&amp;Ua1 the 1Ju1ret fa Tuaillay a!pl'e Dl\'lliloniV
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iledloaaltournament~tame•MelpRipSchool.

Oa Sllhrday the Tornadoes ~U lace the wlnaer of
the North Gallla-CrooluoYllle 1ame, wblcb wiD be
played at Melp Rip Sc)bol!l Thal'iday, at 7 p.m.
.
,.
,.

"aCcepts Lemley.-'Sid···,.

The billofC.i.Lemiey, VInton;
on used well drtlllng and pu!IIDI
equipment was accepted when
M!ddlepoH VIUage Council met
In relfll)ar session Monday night.
· The bid . was accepted on the
recommendation of the Middleport Bol!lrd of. Public Affairs.
WIU!s ,\nth&lt;my, a member of that
board, met with council to
· dlacus&amp; the two bids ·received on
the eq11ipment. Anthony said that
· the l:.emley ,equipment Is In liooct
condition· and that Lemley will
work with the town employees In
famllar!zlng them on how to
operate the equlpment. Lemley's
bid for the-equipment was $10,000'
and will be paid !or !rom the
water system Improvement
fund.

Council discussed hospital~­
tlon Insurance· tor employees of
the town jlnd agreed to continue
with Blue Cross coverage f9r the
time being. Council President .
Dewey Horton reported that he Is .
attempting to meet with Pomeroy Councilman Bruc;e Reed to
discuss the Haptonstall property
In lower Pomeroy where a
business venture· Is being
planned. ' 1
Mayor Fred Hottman reported
that a grant application has been
made !or development of the
Crow property on the "T'' and
that Interest In the development
is "moving along". Mayor Hoffman also reported that he has
comp.leted a list pf property
owners In the area below Middle-

port planned for annexation and
will get togetl!er with Meigs
County Engineer Phil Roberts on
aspects of the annexation. The
mayor reported that · The
Farmers Home Administration
Is considering the construction of
an elderly housing apartment
complex which would be !~a ted
on Page Sl., adjacent to the new
nursing home now under con·
structlon. The apartment complex would have a subsidized
rental for eligible senior citizens
and occupants would have access
to the nursing home facilities for
meals and recreational aclivllles. A survey Is being held tO
determine the interest level on
such a housing complex.

FORT SMITH, Ark. ( UPI) The former leader of a white
supremacist group who Is a key
government witness In the trial
o!l4 associates told thecourtthat
a pawnshop owner was mur·
dered because he was "an evil
man, a Jew."
James Ellison, former leader
of the Covenant, the Sword and
the Arm o! the Lord, a religi0 usmilitary group In north Arkansas, alio told the court durin&amp; his
second day of testimony Tuesday
otan aborted plaMo assassinate
an FBI agent.
Under cross-examination he
denied defense assertions that he

racy and plotting to kill Knox and robberies and counterfeiting and
U.S. District Court Judge Frank- was to be ,carrlect out by bomblin Waters of Arkansas.
lng, destruction of utilities, poiluEllison testified Monday that . tlon of public water supplies, and
Waters and Knox were targets k!Uing o! federal officials and
because they were Involved In minorities.
·
the prosecution of people who
"Wayne Snell said he (pawnharbored fugitive tax protester shop owner) was an evil man, a
Gordon Kahl, wl)o was k!lled Iii a Jew, and he just needed to die,"
1983 shootout with authorities In Ellison said.
Smithville, Ark.
Between the time of the pawnSnell; 57, of Muse, Okla., Is ·a . shop shooting and the state
former Church of Christ minister trooper shooting, Ellison said
and was affiliated with the CSA. Snell and co-defendant Lambert
He was sentenced todeathfor the Miller, 47, of Spr!ngtleld, Mo.,
1983 slaying of a Texarkana ; came to him with a (!lagram of
pawnshop owner and Is serving a
the floor plan ot Knox's house. He
life sentence !or the 1984 shooting said they wanted to know how
mlg~tbelylngtoauthorltles!nan
death of an Arkansas state much explosives would be need
attempt to reduce his prison trooper..
.
·.to blow up the 11ouse .
term,
.
He Is one of the 10 men charged
EJ.llson said Snell and Miller
. ' Ellison testified that defendant · with seditious conspiracy and he . were going to carry out the plan
Richard W. Snell told him he had also Is charged with conspiracy
and that co-defendant David
McGuire asked If he could go
killed a pawnshop owner In to aS18allnate the federal off!.
Texarkanaduringarobbery,and ctals. Prosecutors have said the · along and participate In the
. he also said the planned aasassl· conspiracy was financed through
murder set tor Dec. 26.
natlonofFBlaaentJackKnoxof
· '
·
ArkansaS was aborted because of
a traffic accident. ·
Elllioa , Ia serving a federal
pri1on sentence for racketeering
and wea119n1 law vlolatl!)nl tha~
occurred willie be led the CSA.
He Ia conlldenrd iul unln4lcted
Students enrolled In Vocational study Include crop production,
co-couplrator.
Aarlculture
1 and II at Meigs
under· cross-examination by
livestock proclucUon, natural reHigh
Scbool
are a1110111students IOIII'Ca, .leader~lp FFA, baalc
Rlcllard Scutarl. who like t11ret
otbet defendant&amp; II ~ntlq acrou the nation wbo are oblerv- ·shop lktlll, IIDBU engine repair
blmeelf, Ellllon admitted Ill! 1111 NatiDIIal Future Farmers of and ~lcliQa.
.Tilt procram ·11 available to
would do aiii!OIIt anytblq tn pt America Week.
outofprilon.LitM,eo 1111 Mtlnl
frnllmetl, aapllamon and junior
David 1.1D1 ulltcl, "II tberl!
ltlllluta at Malp High lllld
dD to . . CIIII
r'Ulltr•euollldlll U.JII'Ciilam

. ·B:r Charles A. Mesoa

The

!00

'!he

.

response team and environmental
evaluation services are pan of the
proposed package.
Aptus IS a partnership between
National Electric, Inc., and Westinghouse Sj:leciality Services, Inc.
Dalko told the chamber the company faces a 12-18 mpnth permit
preparation process following by
another year of penn it examination.
In the inlerim, officials plan 10 conspuct a transportation center which.
wiU serve as a collection point for
hazaidous wastes.
~ The propc)sed incineraror ...:. 10
be slightly bigger !han the one used
in Kansas - will use technology
developed and used in Europe
during the past quarter Qf a century,
officials said. The rotary kiln incinera10r is lined with molten glass,
Hawks explained. "The incineraiOr
itself is only two cham~. One is
the rotary kiln and the other is an .
afterburner. Destruction takes place
in the llfterbumer then ihe rest (of
the incinerator ~paratus) is the
clean-up chamber.
Apws officials said they plan to
bum SO,OOO 10ns of materials a
year at the Mason County site and
be held under the regulations of the
federal Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act of 1976.
·

Leasing bill set for Senate vote
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) - A bids on aggregate leases or
bill to regulate more closely ·purchases amounting to $10,000
lease agreements entered Into by or more In a single fiscal year.
the state neared the half-way Approval by at least five
point In the legislative process members of the seven·member
today.
state Controlling Board would be
The Ohio Senate was scheduled required to waive bidding.
to vo~ on legislation proposed In
Only purchases totaling $10,000
response to questionable office or more are subject to bids under
eq ulpment leases by the adminis- existing' state law. Aronoff's bill
tration of Democratic Gov. Rl· extends that provision to leases
chard F. Celeste.
as well.
Also under current law, at least
The measure, offered by Se·
!our
Controlling Board members
nate Finance Committee Chairmust
affirm all such unbid
man Stanley J. Aronoff, . R·
Cincinnati, cleared that panel9.0 purchases. Aronott;s proposal
raises that number to five.
·Tuesday.
''Currently, !our votes could all ·
The bill requires competitive
come
!rom the same political
'

.

party, making the board's deci sion a foregone conclusion," said
Aronoff. "Five votes would provide for some checks and balances and give two· party Input."
. Several state agencies signed
unbid contracts leasing hundreds
of thousands of dollars worth of
high technology telephone equipment from Telecommunications
Inc., Brook Park, wlllch was
connected to a majqr contributor
to Celeste's political campaigns.
Also clearing the committee
Tuesday was legislation creating
a "percent for arts program" to
be administered by the Ohio Arts
Council. ·

Meigs students observe
National FFA .week

89,

1~i

"PRICE BREAKERS" We've
CLAIROL

1

.100UNCE
VASELINE

'

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Nawsp8per

Witness outlines murder plot

.69

enttne
2 Sections. 14 Pogos

fW

Share A Spe 1 : ; : : ;
DOU
c a1Memory!

Clear tonight. Low between
.10 and 15. Parlly cloudy
Thursday. Highs near 25, .

•

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Announcements

PHONE NO ... .............................................. ........... ............ ..

"'1-------------------------------~
~
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Dally Number
333
Piek4
6291

.'

.

YOUR CHOICE

3. Do you presently rent or own your home?

, ' · J,

By Unlled Press lnlernallonal
Snowshowers and gale force
wind warnings remained In e!•
feet over upper Michigan today
as a Canadian low pressure
system pushed Into the upper
East Coast, bringing rain to
northern New England.
Advisories for snow and strong
winds continued over Lake
Huron · and Lake Erie early
today, said Harry Gordon ·of the
National Weather Service. Winds
will cause blowing and drilling
snow.
Snow over northern New Eng· .
land will become rain today
across eastern New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania and · the
upper Ohio Valley and the
Tennessee Valley .
Snowshowers were scattered
over upper Michigan early today
with blowing and drifting snow
over northern lower Michigan.
Snow extended over western
Minnesota and the eastern portion of the Dakotas. Snow also
reached from eastern Montana
across eastern Wyoming into
no.r th central Colorado.

Ohio Lottery

.

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...... Vfe!IU ' 1
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