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•

: Page- D-B- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant W.Va.

I

June 7. 1987

I

Municipal Court

MG~~Llf~LIS - In Gallipolis
L unDc pa oun Friday, Lonnie
· rummond. 35, of Rl. 1,
Cheshire, wa s fined $300 and
givenfa three-da y jail commit·
ment
D or DWJ.
E p k
onna · ec • 41, of Rt. 3.
Bld well , was fined S300 and given
a three-da y jail commitment for
Dwl · She had to pay court costs
...
Ior ur
1v1ng 1eft of center.
Steven A. Hawley, 40, of
Ches hi re, was fined $12 for
driving an unsafe vehicle. He
also forfe ited a $40 bond for
parking on the road,
Other fines were given to Els ie
L. Queen, 23, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
$12, unsafe vehicle; John E .
Ellison, 26, Wellston, $12. no
driver's license: and Ronald L.
Warner, 25, Point Pleasant
W.Va., $25. litt ering on another'~
private property.
Speeding bonds were forfeited
! TABLES ANCHORED - These fiv e picnic
There will be a program, a]larade, and fir eworks. by Michael D. McR ae, 40, BeckBudge! for the observance Is $3,000 with about
ley . W.Va., S42; Douglas A.
: tables, anchored down with chains to discourage
; vandals who might he templed lo shove them into
$1200 lt aving been r eceived in donations from
Childers, 55, Newport News, Va.,
individuals, businesses and organlzallons. Those $39; Trrry R. Dohman , 42,
• tire nearby Ohio Riv er, hav e heen placed at the
:!..front of the Dave Diles Park In Middh!port. Th e
wishing to help with the celebration can send
Eva ns, Ga .· $43; Leanna L.
; biles Park will h•• the central selling lor
contributions to Gilmore or to Middleport Village Downey, 21, Charlesto n, W.Va ..
; Middleport' s .July 4th cclt'hrallon whi ch Is helng
II all .
$44: Clay ton L. fteed. 25, Pi ck a·
• headed by Middleport Cotin d hna.n lloh Wimore.
Plan seminar JunP. 28
way, W.Va ., $42; Suzanne W.
:
·
!"
Thorniley, 36, Winfield, W.Va ..
" A.·
GALLIPOLIS _ The Groom $42; Richard A. Robinson. 51,
,.~ea
and Supply Shop will sponsor a . Circlevill e, $43; Paul R. Kingery,
! Hershel Halfh ill, of R!. 1,
A decree of divorce was made steer-groomin g seminar to all ' 43• McArthur, $40; Bobble R.
;Cheshire. and Conni e Halfhill, of
Monday in !he divorce case of F.F.A. and 4-H Club members Robert s. 53 · Fairfield, $4l , Ro·
Carl Howell , or Rl. 2. Vinto n. a nd having club calf projects on berl J . Chaum?nt. 38. Barry•·Middleport, received a decree of
~lvorcc Wedn esda y In Ga lll a Pa! ric la Mae Howell. of 1840 · Sunda~. June 28, from 1 until 4 tow n, N.C., $38• Lawr ence B .
4
~County Common Pleas Cou rl.
Eas lern Avr .
p.m . Mason and Ga lil a Coun ty ~~~i~n,J J~~bl~~ ~a~~~·m~ ~
t:A. Also,
a dec ree of di vorce wa s
Mark Christop her, of 811 Car- youth are Invited to attend, . . .' ·
.'.' '
. ~ ·
d
d
Ch
I
C
accordlnN
to
Juii'e
We
bb.
$41
..
Wa9yne
S.
Kazee
..
28.
Cmcm·
.,,an e to
ar es amden, .Jr ..
man Dr .. and Vasan thy Chr is·
"
$3 Sh
1A F h 34 R
"'01 Rt. 1. Bidwell . a nd Lind a
lopher. of 728 Cou nlry Lane ,
Tim Brown, a steer grooming nat I,_' ·:
£':Y · tic ' · 1·
~Camden. of Bid well , on Tuesday . recrlved a decree of divorce on speci alist will be working with a 2· Vm lon. S41 · Terry D. Muncy.
•
.
.
sleer dur'ln g the three- hour se· 28. Col umbu s, $40; Robert T .
Monday.,
min a r, inst ru cllng youth on Br~mfleld. 18. Rt .. 2. Ga llipolis.
' A decree of dissoluti on was
.gra nl ed Monda y to .James F' .
Gregor y .J · Ball. of R1. 4, ilem.s· fro m s ha mpooin g 10 tho $42, Glenn Ca ivm Selle. ol_ .
, Williams. of 56 Pl nr Sl.. and Ga lli polis. a nd Nanellc M. Ba ll , show ring.
" Wint er Hav!'n. Fla .. $42; David
;c hrisUne B. w.ill iams: of o:u; of Houslon. Texas, were handed
The semin ar will be held at the A. BUJt , 25. A90o Spr ing Valley
Jackson P lk£', Ga llipolis.
a decret' of di vorce Monday.
G
d S
S
·:
room an
upply hop, fou r
miles west of Galli polis , on Oh io
141. . .
.
.
,
Th1s IS a first-time event for
~ GALLIPOLIS ·- James Glenn !on. Ky., and ,Jane Ann Hively, Ga llla and Ma son Co~ntles. Ali
EARN
~ Cox, 29, E ureka Star Rou le, 20. ofE urekaSt ai' Roui e, Ga lllpo- youth having steer and beef
UP
~ Gallipolis, and H az~ l Louise li s. Thu rsda y:
ca ttle projects are encouraged 10
TO
: Ferguson, :13, Rl . 2. C&lt;I IIIpol is.
Bobby .lor Vrilh. 22, Rt. 1, attend.·
$20,000 Per Year
· received a mar rlag&lt;• licr nsr Gallipo lis, a nd T~ssena Audrey
There will be drawings lor free
Railing CHINCHILLAS
Thursday in Ga lll a Counl y Pro· Wells. J8, Rl. 4, Ga llipol is. grooming products. show eq uip·
: bate Courl.
Thursday:
ment and ha ts. The eve nt Is free
For Information write to:
-; Other marriage ll ernscs werf'
Do nald Mark Harr ison, 21. Oak lor children.
(p/Hseglve name, age
and phone numbff)
-- !(ranted to:
Hill . an&lt;l Lucille Harr is. 20, Rt. 1, Oivon'e filed
.; Terry A. Hamlll on. '17, 1'\1. 2, Vinlon. Tuesday:
RANCHERS
:Gallipolis, a nd An ne R. Coll ins.
DP ncil Lee Kimberling, Jr., 18,
P.O.
Box 3666
MIDDL EPORT - Ciaude!t r
Dehon, Georvio 3072 t
.36, Rl. 3, Gallipo lis. Thu rsday:
Leon. W.Va .. T ina Lou ise Whil e, Laudermilt . Middl epor t. ha s
!4041 278-4828
~· Mark Way ne Ghcr. 2o, 12:.
l R. 2000 Ch£'stnul S!., T u~sday:
fil ed lor dil'orce in Meigs Coun ty
· River St., a nd Kathy Sue Bell. 12o
Wil li am Paul Close. J r. , 20, 81 Common Pleas Cour t from Gre·
:River St., Thu1·sday;
Pin e Sl., and Robi n Kay Spencer. go r y Allen Laude r milt ,
Dean Kirk Akers. 27. of Lexing- 20. l:l() Pin r St.. Tuesday.
Middl eport .

Dr. , $42: Jerry D. Shaffer. 30.
N.C.. $40, driving 1oo close;
Plymouth , Ind ., $41; James D. Ricky A. Wilks. 25, Huntington ,
Stark. 56, Fostorla,$48: Laura L.
w.v.a. $40, illegal U-tu r n; Vern
Horsley. 20, Pomeroy, $40; Lori
D. Slaven , 24, 2216 Eastern Ave.,
D. Lan ier, 22, Rio Grand ~ . $44:
$35, no seat belt; KennyE .Siders
Wesley S. Pick, 22, Lan"as!or
,
' , ll, 18, R I. 2, Ga 11·1po II s,. S40 ,
$78; TeiTi L: Po lcyn, 20, R!. 2.
driving lefl of cenlcr: Mic hael D.
Gallipolis, $39: James D. Comer,
D ·
22 R 1 c
Cl! S40
67 w· r· ld W V
$44
d
a mes, , t. . rown y, ,
.
m Je .
. a..
: an
unsafe vehicle: Rober! J. Rose,
Ch
1 A· w e1ma
· hn, 23 , Rt . 1, Jr., 33, Enewood, Ky., S40,
, ares
Ches hi re, S39.
·
expired r~g 1stra tJOn;
and Mary
0 '0
Other bonds were lorleiled by
s. Burns.
· 64 , R t. .•.
• B'd
1 we II , ..,
,
Charles E . Smith, 24, Asheville.
r - - - - - - - - - - - - -i_m_p_r_op_e_r._t_u_rn_._ _ _ _ __

)

•

. Vol.37, No.23
Copyrighted 1987

By GREGORY JENSEN
VENICE, It aly (UPII - Leaders or the Western world's
majo r industrial nations set a hectic round of conferences today
to begin an economic summit meeting as much concerned with
politics- national and International- as with economics .
Insist ent immediate problems threatened to all but crowd out
longer· range financial matters at the 13th annual economic
SUmi'Qit of the United States, Britain, West Germany, Japan.
Fran'c e , Canada, Ital y and th e European Economic
Communltv.
Most pressing was the tension in Ihe Persian Gull, where the
United States pl ans to deploy armed forces to protect Kuwalll
lankers- which will be allowed to fly the American flag- from
a ttack by Iran.
It Is an Issue thai could dominat e the "economic" summit that
will run unf!l Wednesday.
White House chief of staff Howard Baker sa id Sunday It was
"inevitable" that the Amerl~ a n Intentions would be debated,
probably hotly.

I
d
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,.

1 Section, 10 Pag•

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Monday, June 8. 1987

European spokesmen made It clear they want the United
States to "cool it" in the gulf, fearing American action would
prompt Iran to take European hostages as It held Americans
during the administration of Jimmy Carter, who was pres ident
at the last summit held In Venice In 1980.
White House officials began a concerted campaign Sunda y to
try to talk Iran out of deploying the Chinese Silkworm miss iles It
recently acquired.
.
"I hope that all !his public comment and commentary and
concern will convince the Iranians that they should not deploy •
them ," Baker said. "They have not done that yet and I ho!X'that
they won't."
Spokesmen for the ·summit nations complied a long list of
potential subjects for discussion and, with not abl e exceptions ,
economic problems ranked toward the bottom.
One exception was a possible partial lifting of punitive
American tariffs on Japanese exports of personal computers.
television sets and power hand tools.
Some officials suggested that President Rea gan might

By ROBERT DOHERTY
WASHINGTON tUPi l -Congresslonal Investigators called
the celebrated Fawn Hall to
testily at the lran·Contra hear·
lngs today about her role In
destroying potential evidence In
the scandal with her ex -boss, Lt .
Col. Oliver North.
Hall, the former secretary to
the fired National SecurltyCounell aide at the center of the
controversy, already has told the
federal grand jury In the case
under Immunity from prosecutlon !hat she helped North shred
and alter relevant documents In
the · days before the scandal
erupted Nov. 25.
Propelled to celebrity status
partly because of her appearance, the part-time model was
summonf!d under slmll~r legal
protection to testily today aner
Bretton Sciaronl. legal adviser to

HOLIDAY INN
Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasclnt
Il/1/lmt.l.

enttne
26 Conti

A MuHimedle Inc. NIWIPIPI&lt;

a nnounce a partial removal of the 100 percent Import duties at
his .one-on-onf meeting today with Japanese Prime Minister
Yasuhlro Nakasone.
·Reagan also was seeing West German Chancellor Helmut
Kohl and Italian President Amlntore Fan!anl In private
sessions. Kohl and Nakasone were meeting separately and
Nakasone also was conferring with Canadian Prime Mlnli er
Brian Mulroney.
Bes ides the Gulf. these other Issues seemed likely to take
precedence In the summit Itself:
- Arms control, with Reagan seeking even firmer lnterna.
tiona! support for the " double zero" Idea of e liminating from
Europe both middl e- range and short·range nuclear missiles by
both East and West.
- A ca ll for a unified global strategy agains t AIDS.
- Internationa l codes to govern Individual na tions' sup]l(irt
lor politically powerful farmers through government subsidy of
agricultural produce .

Hall to testify in scandal hearings today

7:30 P.M.

ttn lfiJI" ,.,.••~ rmw

•

'

MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1987

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Focus on politics as economic summit open$

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ECON'MIC SUMMIT BEGINS Re111an mel with
Italian Prime Minister -'mlnlore Fantanl at the Hotel Cipriani
today as the •even nation economic summit began. (UPI)

...

•
'

the_ U.S. Intelligence Oversight
Board .
Sciaronl wa s called for ques·
lions about a significant Issue the view that the NSC wa s not
handcuffed by the Boland
amendment , which barred U.S.
military aid to th e Ni caraguan
Contra rebels !rom October 19R4
to October 1986.
Hall's testimon y, however,
was sure to dr aw the mos t
attention.
Sen . Paul Tribl e, R-Va., said
Hall would "tell us a lot about
Oliver . North , what made him
tl~k and what he was about."
Sen. David Boren. D·Okla..
said. "[ would say !he major
focus Is going to be on dorumenl s
and the destruction of docu·
mpnts, custody of evidence,
potential evidence."
Adding to previous acrounts of
document tampering, The Wall

.
.
' ,. t
Street Journal reported last generally apologized .b~t
week that North and Hall a ll ered warned. " Stay tuned."
'
an April JJ. 191lS. memo urging
The committees originally
that President Reagan be briefed planned lo follow Sclaronl ~nd
on details of privat e Contra aid Hall with Robert Earl, North's
efforts . The presldenl has repea t· NSC officemate, but now he Is
edly denied any prior knowledgl' sc heduled closer to the date
of such work .
North Is expected to testily undef
Hall, meanwhile, had drawn limited immunity - sometime
at tention at the hear ings even after .J uly 16.
before being called to testify .
Lawmaker~ sa id the end of
Robert Dullon, the retired Air Hall's testimony would signal the
Force colonel who aided the end of the fir st phase of the
Contra supply network, testifi ed hearings , which have concen·
Ma y 28 that Hall 's presence trated mainly on efforts to arm
ol!Prl'd "a little s unshine" to the the Contras during the ban on
project. And Sen. Howell Heflin, U.S. ald.
'
D·Aia ., caused a minor flap lust
The second phase, which will
month when he said Ha ll would locus on the arms sales to Iran ,
tes tify she smuggled document s from which monPy was diverted
In her underwear out of the Old for the Contras, may begin the
Executive Office Building and week of June 22. It Is poss ible that
gave them to No~\h .
alter thi s week the committees
Hall labeled Hellln'sstat ement will not ml.'t't again publicly until
false and sexist . to which hr July 7.

Debugging U. S. Embassy may be dangerous

By JACK REDDEN
MOSCOW (UPII-Theheadof
, a State Department lnvestlga·
lion said today thespylngdevlces
honeycombed In the walls oft he
new U.S. Embassy lndlcatelm·
presslve gains In Soviet esplon·
age technology and will cost
"tens of millions of dollars " to
NEW YORK (UPII -A friend
remove.
Armandt said she and Broad·
who accompanied Donna Rice on
James Schlesinger, a former
hurst wen! lo Hart 's house late
a Wa shlngtori outing with Gary
oi the CIA, told report ers at
head
Saturday and told him the Herald
Hart says Rice spent the nigh!
reporters were outside. Broad·
with Hart in hi s townhouse and
hurst later talked to the women
did not slip out through a back
privately.
door as Hart has cla imed. People
"It wasn 't like, 'We have to get
magazine reports.
the story straight,"' Armandt
In an exclusive lnlervlew re·
VEN1CE , Italy (UP II - Pres I·
lold People. "but he said It like.
leased Sunday, Lynn Armand!
dent
Reagan said loday that his
'This Is what happened.' Obalso revealed Hart's associa te,
viously I undNslood what they administration Is no! bluffing
William Broadhurst. coached
with saber· ratlllng warnings to
were trying 10 do. "
her and Rice on what to tell
Iran
against attacking American
She said once Hart realized the
reporters about the incident and
In the volatile Persian Gull.
ships
seriousness of the situation he
·said she thought " It was' abso"
I
haven
' t blulfed once since
treated Riel' brusquely . "It wa s
lutely clear" Rice had "slept
I've
been
here," Reagan told
very cold- not even a kiss on the
with Gary" during a boat trip
chee k. which really upset reporters as he began a full day
hey ali made 10 Bi min i In the
of meetings at the start of the
Donna, " Armandt said.
Bahamas.
Armand!. owner of a boutlqu(' annual economic summll of
Mc anwhll r, The New York
In Turnberry Isle, Fla ., called leaders of the world' s top non·
lmes reported tha t Hart with·
Too Hot Miami, also disputed communist Industrialized
rew from the race for the
Ha rt's account of the cruise he,
emocrallc presidential nomiBroadhurst and the two women
nation on May 8 after learning
took to Bimini.
that The Washington Post had
Hart said Rice and Armand!
obtained a private d !'t ecllv~· s
slept un Broadhurst 's boat , the
report containing evidence link·
Monkey Busln&lt;'Ss. a nd he and
1ng him to anolhet· woman . who
A Saturday night fire at the
Broadhurst
slept on another
lved In Washington.
Cletus and Iva Dalton residence
boa!. Armandt said she slept in
For her part. Rice. 29. a Miami
on Staneart Road In Columbia
the ca bin where s he and Rice put
Township was •'definitely arson' '
odel and actress, sa id In an
their bags.
according to Columbia Township
, rllclc In Life magaz ine that the
" I awoke at 7 o'clock In the
uror over her Involvement with
FirE' Chief Jim Gaston.
morning to the sound of engines
hl' former Colorado senator has
No one was home at the time
evas tated her career, given her . and I was a lone." she s aid. the Incident occurred. Gaston
" There were only th~ee guest
reported that a neighbor heard
n undeserved reputation as a
bedrooms and I assume she an explosion at the house and
'party girl" and made her " feel
didn't sleep with Broadhurst ."
ke a hunted animal. "
then . saw lire. The neighbor
Armandt said Rice was not
The Miami Heral d reported
contacted Meigs Emergency
specific but " It was .absolutely
ay 3 that the Democratic
Medical Services at 11: 38 p.m.
clear that she had slept with
fro nt· runner had spent part of !he
and within nine minutes. 17
Gary . She's not one to detail (her
weekend with Rice In his Wa Columbia Township volunteer
sex ll!et but she said she had a
shington home while hi s wile was
firemen were on the scene.
wonderful lime with him .. . that
In Colorado, but conceded later
Gaston said I he lire was "quickly
he was very gentle and romantic.
that Its reporters failed to stake
extinguished.' :
She said she really liked him and
out all theexlt s at Hart 's home all
It was dts;;tered tllat gasoline
thought th e feelings were had been poured on carpeting In
the lime.
mutual."
• Hart, 50. denied having a
the living room area of the llouse.
Pictures of the trip appeared In
sexual rela tionship with Rice and
And after firemen had the lire
the National Enquirer and It was
out, a one-gallon milk carton,
said Ihe Herald reporters did not
reported Mmandt sold them to
see Rice leave through a back
approximately two-tlllrds lull of
the tabloid. A People magazine
gas, with no cap, wa1 found on a
door with Armand! and Broadspokeswoman refused to say
hurst. Hart said both women
ln11de the house. The milk
stand
whether Armandt was paid for
slept a t Broadhurst's nearby
carton was just a few Inches from
her e~cluslve Interview .
home.
where llremen had stopped the
Armandt s aid she was sur· Armandt, 29, told People, " The
prised by Harl's relationship names Gaston said.
actual truth Is that some of that
Meigs County Sherl1t Howard
with Rice.
l&gt;ack·door stuff they talked about
Frank and an o1tlcer tor the State
" I thought he almost wanted to
never happened , and Donna
Fire Marshall were called to the
caught," she said. "He's a
be
actually stayed In Gary 's town·
scene to Investigate. Gaston
very smart man buthewasdoing
l)ouse Friday nigh t."
Continued on page 12
stupid things like being blatant
with Donna."

Rice spent night with
Hart, friend reports

the end of a 10·day visit to
Moscow that the Soviet -built
prefabricated concrete sections
of the elgllt-story New Office
Building had been "massively
honeycombed" wllh liste ning
devices.
He said trying to remove the
li stening dev ices from the concrete structure could danger·
ously wea ken the building.
Although Schlesinger said he

would make his first s pf;'CI!I c iletecllon devlc&lt;' had uncovrred
reco mmendations to Secretary the Soviet opera tion.
Scllleslnger said there had
or State George Shultz, hE' said he
been
a clear "element of com piawould not rule out recommenda tions to rebuild the top two floors . cency" In U.S. a ttitudes toward
!he construction methods, In
of the embassy or 10 build a
addition
lo advances In Soviet
second secure stru cture near by.
spyln!! methods s ince the origiHe said Soviet s pecialists had nal contract lo build Ihe embassy
madr Impress iv e progress In was s igned In 19'12 .
" A fundam ental change of this
spying lechnology and tllat only
the development of a new U.S. sor1 will not be Inexpensive.

President says he's not bluffing on Iran issue

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SEE HARLAND WOOD, lENT SIIAWYD, GREG SMITH

Senior Reagan admlnls trat ion
o!!lclals Iss ued new wa rnings to
Tehran Sunday and toda y, with
na tional security adviser Frank
Car lucci say ing It would b£'
" Inadvisable" for Iran to try to
prevent Am erican naval war·
s hips from escorting Kuwaiti oil
ta nkers through the Pers ian
Gulf. a s Is now planned .
White House chief or s!af!
Howard Baker warned Iran
rNallatorv

should It deploy Chinese- made
Silkworm missiles In the vital
St rait of Hormu z.
In advance of th&lt;&gt; eco nomic
Su mmit, Rea~tan said the strait ,
thro u~h which oil suppli es vllal
to thc Wcs l !low, " must slay
open."
" We're not out to attack
anyone but we will If fired upon
rir&lt;' back." Reagan s aid late iast
monlh.

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nations.
Asked If thai mea n! hr wa s
threa tening Iran. the pres ident
sa id: " No. It' s just a sta tement of
fac t."
Reagan declined further com·
ment on the Persian Gulf, where
a bloody 6'h ·year·long war between Iran and Iraq th reatens to
esca late into a wider conOict as
both superpowers s lep up their
military presence.

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DONATION APPRECIATED - Kathy Luebbert, It left, Carlelo8 !lchoors dlreci:OI' 'of
educalloll, II apprec:laltve of aliiN donltlo" to the
~elloollrom motorcyclllla from around Melp 1111d
1UITOIIDCiln1 counllell. The doaltlon wulo be used

-

to purchase recreational equipment. Luebt
and 11010e of the bikers who donated to the car
are pictured at the school with a sampling ol't
equipment that was bought.
,

___________,,,. ____ -

�The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Micfdleport, Ohio
''

clge-2-The Daily

Monday, June 8, 19~7 .

-·

111. Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~~

.-n....,.._-,-, ........,d,,.,

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT Wlll'fEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of Th e United Press Interna tional, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Ame rican Newspaper Publishers Associa tion.
LETTERS OF OPINION 8re welcome They shrukl be IE.'55 tllan J)J words
JoniJ . All letters a res u bj~ tt oed lflng and rn.ut hf&gt;slgned with name. address and
telephone number . No unslgna:t INters will be l)l.' blh; hed . Letters sho uld be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persooalltleS.

How Celeste morals
story went public
COLUMBUS - For yea rs, reporters on the Statehouse beat had
heard sto ries of Richard F. Celeste's personal Indiscretions. They
had heard them freq uently enou gh and from credibl e sources to make
them believable.
But nobody ever wrote about them.
They did nor writ e about them when Celes te ran for governor tn
1~ 8. when he ran for governor in 1982 or when he ran for governor In
1986.
The reaso n they did not write abo ut them was thall i nobody could
prove they were true and 21 Celeste's personal habits did not seem to
affect his abilit y to govern Ohio.
Now, somebody has written about them an d turned the Statehou se
topsy-turvy. How come?
Jam es Duerk, an ai de to Celes te's prime politica l adve rsary,
Republica n James A. Rhodes, had a very short answer when asked
las t week, but It was the right a nswer.
"Gary Hart, " said Duerk. "Jim Ba kker."
Rhodes, who bea t Celes te narrowly In 1978 and los t to him by a
la ndslide In !986, had collected through his many tentacles and
earpieces ex tending In to the state govern ment a dossier on Celeste's
personal foibles.
The Republican ca nd idate for governor had the gun cocked and
ready lo fire at Celeste In 1986, but he couldn ' t fi nd anybod y willing to
pull the trigger for him.
Rhodes would hint broadly at press conferences that Celeste's
personal backgrou nd could not stand close examination. "Nobody
ever questioned my mora ls or Ihe Int egrit y of my family," Rhodes
would say. Asked If th at meant somebody ques tioned Celeste's
morals, he would reply: "Nobody ever qu es tioned my mora ls or the
Integrity of my fa mily. "
And nobody too k the bait to write about Celeste's personal life.
Rhodes then tried to por tray his opponent as siding wit h homosex uals
and Nazi· sympathizers.
~' ru s trated at his Inability to captu re the public with those Issues,
Rhodes decl ared to reporters that sca nd al apparently was out of

"War p)an' for
WASHINGTON - I s a
mushroom-shaped cloud about to
mark the obliteration of t he
America n banking system? Consider this recent observation by
William Seidman, chairman of
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp:
"The finan cial area is, like
nuclear war , th e kind of area that
ca n get out of control, and once
out of control cannot be con·
talned and will probably do more
to upset the civil ized world than
about anything you can think of."
Seidm an's gloomy prediction
10 days ago that 200 U.S. banks
will fail this year, following close
on Clt!bank's an nouncement of a
minimum $2.5 billion loss on its
forei gn loans, may have led some
Nervous Nellies to conclude that
the na tion's biggest ba nk is on the
verge of collapse. Perish the
thought.
Before Cit iba nk' s deposit ors
start a r un on the bank, they
should rea lize one all -Important
fact : The federal govern ment
will never permit the collapse of
Citlba nk - or any of the nation's
top 10 banki ng inst itutions. Seid·
man's nuclear holocaus t ana logy
Is parti cularly apt here. The
reason the government won't let
a big bank fail is the same reason
no na tional leader has permitted

the use of nuclear weapons since
World W.ar ll: The co nsequences
are sir:1ply too awful to accept.
ln fact , senior Treas ury, Federal Reserve Board and FDIC
officials cont emplated just such
a financial holoca ust five years
ago In a series of intense de bates
behind closed doors. The scena·
rio they discussed was a hair·
rais ing one Indeed: the collapse,
more or less simultaneously, of
Cltlba nk, Chase Manhattan and
Bank of America. the nation 's
three b iggest financ ia l
lnstitlutions .
The scenario was not ~au that
hard to Imagine In 1982 and 1983,
at the height of the foreign debt
crisis. No r is it so hard to Imagine
today - If the federa l govern·
ment stood by and let It happen.
But when the officials followed
the hypothet ical script to it s
logical conclusio n, what they saw
was "Son of Grea t Depression,"
an eco n~.Jm l c horror that no one in
his rig ht mind would let happen If
It could be prevented . They
realized that the collapse of even
one of the top 10 would create a
rea l cras h, not just a recession
with higher interest and unem·
ployment rates.
The att itudes the participan ts
brought to these secret disc us·

slons of 1982-83 were interesting
in. their. variety. Some officials
were incredu lous tha t the debate

was even tak ing place, as if it had
just been discovered that the big
banks were perched on a giga ntic
financial fault line that no one
had detected .before. Some were
afra id the discussion would leak
to the press. shake public confiden.ce a nd become a self·
fulfilling prop hecy of doom. And
so me were simply annoyed at
being distracted from their grow·
ing workloads of actual problems
to e n gage in t heoretical
thumbsucking.
The sol ution worked out by the
conre rees was proba bly inevita·

ble; even for a conservative
Republica n adminis tration ideologica ll y dedicated to fr ee enterprise and deregulation : The
gover nmen t, with Its bottomless
pockets, was the only Institution
capable of guara nteeing against
the failu re of one or more of the
big banks. So the federal govern·
ment would have prepared to bail
them out, whatever the cos t.

Ba nkin g is essentia lly a ga me

of confidence, with the perception of sta bility almos t as Important as actua l stability. Most
banks that fa il ru n out of depostor
co nfiden ce long befo re they run

But It popped In to fash ion last month when former Colorado Sen.
about his personal Indiscretions.
Meanwhile, the evidence moun ted that Celeste was going to enler
lhe Democratic pres idential sweepstakes himself.
The governor and his hometown newspaper, The Plai n Dealer, had
been In a running battle for monlhs. The newspa per felt t ha t "the
governor !r·om Cleveland" had been a disappointment. Its reporters
and columnists felt he had deceived them and downright lied on
occasion. Celeste a nd his people felt the Plain Dea ler was " out to get

Keeps track of hearings
WASHINGTON - SenPtary of State Gro rge Shult z says he has not
been watching the Ira n arms·Contra aid hearings bu t that "we keep
track of them.' '
Hr ac kn ow led~ed that the hearin gs are "some dist raction, " but
sloughed off any suggestion that there Is any para lysis as a resu lt.
As for sca nd als distracti ng the government, Shu ltz has been there
befor(•. He was In the Nixo n admin is tration at the time of the
Wa terga te sca nda l and alt hough not In volved, he saw around him the
damage tha t was done to the people whose lives were affected.
At a news conference, Shultz pa id tribut e to Assistant Secretary of
Sta te Elliot t Abrams who was one of the key witnesses In con nection
· with dealings wi th policy toward the Nlcar'aguan rebe ls.
"1 havecomplereconfldence In Ass ista nt Secretary Abrams, .. sa id
~nu,t tZ. "He's a p&lt;•rson of tre mendous enel't'y , Integrity and - 1·m sure
1e wi ll appea r In that light ."
Shultz must have fond memories of the Tokyo Economic Summit In
me !986. He was ecstatic when British Prime Minister Margaret
•archer led the way, at U.S. behest, for a strong statement aga inst
rorlsm. All the time. the ad ministration was selling arms to the
lon that was on the department's terroris t lis t.
- as one member of his tea m said recently: "Consistency is the
..,_,.,.., of little men."
c llitiC&gt;n may be licked In the administration's eyes. Butln the
e House press room thefprlces have go ne up on all the ca ndy and
rette machines.
eloor&lt;•ttemachlne was slipped In to the snack area while ABC's
Donaldso,nwasn't looklng. He has successfully waged a one-man
against smoking In the White House press room. No
--1.~~'!':slgns are up and anyone who lights up Is filled with guilt.
• ,remlah O'Leary, White House reporter lor The Washington
1es, has been having a number ot 50th anniversary celebrations
year. He celebrated the 50th anniversary of his high school
luatunp class and tbe i!Oth anniversary ot the start of his career as
ipy boy on the Washington Star.
'Leary through the years has covered Washington and Central
-•o•leA He had a brief stint with the Nation I Security Council staff
he White House, but soon found out that the press Is held in low
-,.em by thOse aides whO work In tbe cloak and dagger atmosphere
side of the government.

&lt;

most good - that Uncle Sam
stood ready to protec t any big
bank that found itself in serious
difficulty. The top 109 of 15 were
effectively declared fall -safe.
l1 wasn't quite fair, of course.
The assurance of gove rnment
protection meant the big banks

could take plunges that smaller, . ·
expendable banks couldn't.
'
But there wou ld be a price for' ·;
Big Brother's protec tion . If the ·
government was going to step In
for the rescue, It would at !hat'
have more to say about the
operations of the banks for which
it had just appoint ed itself
guardi a n.

Hav in g made the basic decision , federal officials spent the
next 18 months or more workin g
out and revising contingency
plans to be put Into play In the
event of a major banking crisis.
The fi nal result was a 40-page:
confidential blueprint for the
emerge ncy nationallzat ion of the

nation's biggest banks.
The premise behind this revo·
lutlonary prescription was per·
haps bes t stated In a federal
in teragency report by our associate Michael Blostein:
"11 mus t be recognized that
traditiona l methods of handling
bank fail ures are probably un· workable In the case of a banking ··
cri sis. The (traditional ) metho·
dolog ies result in disruption ot ·
serv ices and would fuel the
public perception of fin ancial .
disaster. Assuming that one or ·
more of the ba nks In jeopardy Is ·
among th e nation's lop 10 banks, .,
the typica l ... transac tion wit~
another operating Insti tution
would not be feasible, du e to a ,
dearth of eli gible bidders, the
necessity of raising a lot of
money under the darkest of ·

worth of unissued currency at

any given time.
The FDIC would let the Fed·
eral Res erve be t he main fire·
man by makin g loa ns as needeq
to restore public confidence
quickly. The FDIC would handle
the adm inistra tive side of the
crisis, assuming temporary control of the teetering bank.

us.''

That was like waving a red flag In front of the Plai n Dealer, which
knew different ly. Celeste was not goi ng to step cas ually over that land
min e on his road to the White House without so mebody tri pping the
det onator. And If the Plai n Dea ler didn 't, the natlon.al press corps
would .
The resulting ex plosion changed the co mplexion of Ohio's
participation In the 1988 presidential race and changed the na tu re of
the relationship Celes te, his administration and other politicians will
have wit h the Statehouse press corps.
Celeste's chances for national office, now or In the fu ture, arc up In
the nit·. But as one vetera n pollllcl an observed. Celeste's first lob
mu st be to make sure he docs not loseco nt t·oi as governor. where he
has to spend ~ \6 morP YL'&lt;H s.

is rea r itself.
:
So the word was spread __;
quietly, but where It would do the ' -

fin ancial scenarios, and/ or a

Unanswered questions _____G_e_or-=-ge_M_c_G_ov_er_n
Foll owing congressio nal hea r·
ln gs on the lran-Nicaraguan
debacle from E urope, where I
am now lec tu ri ng, I fee l that
so me of the mos t lmportanl
ques tions are not being pursued .
How Is It tha t our constitu tional
democracy co uld fa ll into a
swam p where a networ k of
pr ivate interna l lonal ar ms deal•
ers, mercenaries, ex- mlll1ary
offi cers and would· be dip lomats
could be orches trated in sec ret

aga inst the laws of the land by
White House offt clals a nd others
charged with maint a ining na·
tiona! sec urit y?
On what legal. moral or const i·
tutlonal basis can hig h-ranking
officers of the U.S. goven ment
draw lederal pa y whil e raising
secret funds fro m olher gov~?r n ­
ment s to subvert U.S. laws?

Wh ere was the Department of

Jus tice. the FBI, the Interna l
Revenu e Service and Congress
while all this was going on•
How does a president who has
pledged to uphold the laws of lhe
land explain publicly and pri vately urging that means be
fou nd to bypass laws enacted by
Congress?
Does anyo ne suppose that th is
shabby network , operating with
the knowledge and participation
of the White House, was consistent with the cons titutional syste m of cheeks and balances
erec ted so wisely by the men
meeting 200 yea rs ago?
ArE&gt; w~ even assured a const itu-

tional democracy when such
practices are not only a llowed,

but deliberat ely planned , by our
pres ident and his men?
To me, the pusult of the

question, " What did the presi·
dent know and when did he know
11?" seems seco ndary. It is
im possible to believe that such
ex tensive operations were not
known by the pres ident. They
clea rly represent ed effor ts by
subordinates to ca rry out their
boss's objectives.
One case in point : How could
the president and his men pub·
llciy urge private cit izens and
foreigners to conll butr to causes
- described as charit able and
tax deduc tible - when they
clearly were In defi ance of the
Intent of Congress, If not the
letter of the law?
Shouldn't the presiden t exe·
cu te the laws of the land Instead
of looking for ways to persuade
foreigners and Americans to do
an end -run arou nd them?

President Reaga n an d Olive
North may believe tha t us ing :
U.S. tax dollars a nd arms to
sabotage the government o(
Nicaragua -which we ofllclally
recognize as the legitimate go·
vernment of that country - Is a '
good Idea.
But tha t was not the will of
Congress for a period of lime.
It Is true that Congress has
been spineless on this issue unlike the Anerlean public ,
which has Indicated In evry poll
that it does not want to get
involved In Nicarag u a's
struggle .
·
But bo th the president and '.
Co.1gress surely know by now
they were not being faithful to the '
laws of the land In much that has ·
happened In the affa irs under
Investigation.

New baker in the kitchen___w_u_ua_m_R.u_sh_er:
The new White House chief of
former Senator Howard
Baker, has settled comforta bl y
Into his job and is discharging It ,
to all appearances. extremely
well. It may be a little too soon for
a fi nal evaluation, but the early
Indications are that , In picking
Baker, Pres ident Reaga n made a
flrst·rate choice.
~ta ff ,

There Is no sound reason fo r

condemnin g Do nald Regan's per·
formance as chief of s taff. He
gave his total loyalty to the
president and did his Impressive
best to Implement the Reagan
program . l1 was n't his fault that
his career on Wall Street left him
untutorec;l (for example) In the
mysterious ways of Congress.
But being a truly exceptional
White House chief of stat! requires very special skills.
Howard Baker comes from an
latensely political background:
'l!oth of hls parents represented
Tennessee In Congress, and his
father-In -law was the late Senate
minority leader Everett Dirksen
of Illinois. Baker's keen Intelligence and diplomatic abilities
marked him early as a "sena-

CINCINNATI tUPil - Pe rhaps It was the curfew that did it.
Or the tbngu e lashing by Tom
Lasorda. Or maybe it was jus t
those Dodger bats coming alive,
led by slugging Mike MarshalL
Whatever · the reason, Los
Angeles !llanhandled four Cincin. nail Reds pitchers Sunday to the
tune of 17 hits in destroy ing the
western division-leading Reds
13-7.
"When you're the m anager.
you try anything.'' sa id Lasorda.
who Saturday impossed a 1 a.m
.curfew with a fine of $300 for any
violators after bera tin g his players for a Jack of effort , besides
eliminating pre-game batting
practice.
Marshall, o ff the disabled list
since May 29 after being side·
lined by an operation on his left
Index flnger and back problems,
was a one-man wrecking crew
wilh four hit s - back·\O· back
400-foot homers and two singles
-good for live RBI and four runs
scored.
" We didn't Jet up on t hem like
· we did the other nigh t tw hen the
Dodgers lost alter fri tt ering
away a 6·0lead )," said Marshall.
"We just kept golng 'a t them and
Bob Welch did a good job of
stopping them untilhe tired lnthP
late Innings .
" It's Ihe first ga me 1 put it all
together and got my.tim ing back ,
but It actually was a real tram
effort on our p art ."
How about lefty Jerry Reuss.
the former Dodger who sta rted
for the Reds a nd was tatooed for
five runs and eight hits in just 2
2-3 innings whi le losing his lourt h

out of money. To adapt a phrase
from the bankers' old sparring
partner. " that man In the White ·
House" Franklin Roosevelt, the ::
main thing the banks have tofea( ·:

lack of time In which to eonsum·
ma te a transaction.''
.
Subj ect to further revision, the
contingency pla ns call for the
Federal Reserve Banks to rush ,
currency to a big bank In the .
throes of a run. The reserve ·
ba nks have about $19 blllion .

Ga ry Ha rt was driven lrom the pres \dentlal race by a series of stories

rrnm running for prl."sident.

;;;.
.I ~·'

banks_ :J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_o_n -:-an_d_D_a_le_V_an--:A--:-t~ta

vogue.

In view of the new " Hart" rule of pol itics and journalis m- that
persona l lndlscret Ions by president ial ca nd idates were fair game for
the news media - the Cleveland newspaper prepared a story on
Celeste's alleged esca pades. It held the story .
But on June 1, the governor denied at a press conference that he had
any Hart· type pro blem In his background that would precl ude him

~odgers slap out 17 hits, rip Reds, 13-7:

Senti'
*
::::
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :::

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

.

tor's se na tor"- one who instinctively knew how to obtai n results
In that prickly cha mber. Nobody
was surprised when the Senate's
Republi cans chose him as their
l ea d ~ r .

Noboby was surprised- but
conse rvalives were uneasy .
Baker was not libera l, but
neither was he Identified with Ihe
fast-growing conservative movement. In most respects he was a
ca uti ous m i ddl e -of - the ·
roader; but. he also voted to ratify
the Panama Canal treaties someth ing many conservati ves
rega rded as a make-or· break
issue.
It Is true that as Senate
majority leader during the first
Reagan administration Baker, In
most cases, delivered remarka·
bly well lor the president. But
when he retired from the Senate
in 1984 to make some money
practicing law, and to prepare
for his own race for the presld·
ency In 1988, the tatt er possibility
still left most conservatives
dfstinctly cool.
That was undoubtedlY one

reason why Baker's candidacy conserva tis m of the Reagan
never really caught fire. And the program , moreover, Baker has .·
dimness of his prespec ts In Turn sought out lead ing co nserva tive · ·
may have Influenced his decision spokesmen and solicited their :
when Mr Reagan asked him to Inpu t. Consequentl y, as far as
beco me his chief staff early this many conservatives are con ·
year.l n a ny case, Howard Baker cerned, he has rapidly qualified · '
put his own presidential a mbl· as a loya l supporter of the' · ·
lions aside and went ot work to Reaga n Revolution.
make the last two years of the
Has all thought of 1988 van· ·
Reagan preidenc y a success.
!shed from his mind? That would
Baker could have taken these be Jsklng a lot of a lifelong
condescending attitude that he politician . Baker must know that
was being begged to rescue a If Bush. Dole, Kemp and the
presidency gravely crippled by ·other Republican hopeful s dam ·
the Ira n/ contras altair. He could age eac h enough, there's an'
even have considered himself a outside cha nce that the conven·
trustee In political bankruptcy tlon might turn to him as the man
almost a "surrogate president" . who has stood at Reagan 's right
He could have , but he didn 't. hand. On' his recent showi ng, It's
Instead, · he went cheerfull y to unlikely that many conserva·
work to Implement the remain· tlves would try to veto him.
lng Items of the Reagan agenda,
But Baker (who ls60) certainly·
using his own personal knowl- cannot ca mpaign for the nomina·
edge of Capitol Hill and his fabled tlon from his present position as
skills as a barga iner on the · chief o! staff, and there Is reason ·
president's behalf.(He also re- to believe he has truly put all
vea led himself as a shrewd temptation behind him - tor
tactician when II came to limit- now. He has been heard , how· '
Ing damage from lhe Iran ever~ to reminisce about a·
hea rings .)
relative of his who lived to 102.
Far from trying to dil ute has

CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- Los Angeles' Steve Sax Is tagged out
by Cincinnati's Nick Esasky (left) after being caught In a rundown
between Esasky and Bon Oster (right) in the third Inning. The
Dodgers won 13-7.

Clippers.drop 7-3 decision
By United Press International
Reggie Doble scattered five
hits over seven· Innings and
Randy Milligan hit his 15th
homer of the season Sunday to
lead the Tidewater Tides to a 7- 3
victory over the Columbu s
Clippers In an International
League game in Norfolk, Va.
Doble, 4-4, gave up three runs
- two earned - walked three
an'd struck out four. The
Clippers' Ron Romanlek, H.
suffered the loss.
Keith Miller, who was 3 for 4,
added two RBI for Tidewater.
In other games, Rochest er
defeated Pawtucket 8-5 In a
rain-shortened game, Toledo
edged Richmond 7-61n 10 Innings
and Syracuse.shut down Maine
3·0. .
At Rochester, N.Y. , Rex
Hudler and Carl Nichols ho·
mered to lead the Red Wings i ~ a
'

I

I.

game shortened to seven Innings

straight game?

"He was falling behind and
then he had to comr in with his
fast ball whic h we were sitting
on, " pointed out Marsha ll who
si ngled in the first a nd third
innings, was safe on an_error in

the fourth a nd them blasted
two· run ·home r uns that bounced

because 1 love the gu y," · said
Lasorda. "I thought Welch
pitc hed very well even though he

was wilder than usual twlth six
walks ) but he made the big
pitches when he had to after

giving up three runs In the first
Inning."

Meigs Legion snaps losing streak
By Jim Soulsby
The Meigs American Legion
team broke the drought over the
weekend winning three of four
contests to put their season
record at 3 and 5. Against
Glouster Sa t~ rday, Dave Ambur·
gey went the dista nce allowing
but two runs on four hits as the
defense played their bes t game to
date comm itt ing bu t one error.
Amburgey turned In a superb
performance fanning 13 batters,
giv ing up one freebie and hit one

drove him hom with a base hit.
Collins doubled In the fifth and
Brian Freeman hit sa fely to
score him. Rob Ybung had a base
hit and Bissell two safeti es to end
Meigs's hitting.
With the score tied in th e
seventh Scott Sha m hart walked,
Mike Phillips moved him to
second on a sacrifice and Jeff
Kqon si ngled him home with the
winning run for Glouster.
Batteri es : "Brian Durst (LPI
&amp; Bissell, Dave Kovach. Sham·
bats man while his tea mma tes hart (WP ) &amp; Chapman .
plated 10 runs on 11 hits.
Line Score:
Meigs scored first when J . Meigs .. .. ......... 100 111 0-4 11 4
Johnson si ngled and Jeff McEl- Glouster ...... .. . 012 100 1-5 6 I
roy dou.bled him home and ta llied
Athens was spott ed a rut\ In the
another In the third as Brian first by the Meigs nine and then
Durst tripled and Brent Bissell's Meigs roared back to pus h across
sacrifice fly scored him. Ten seven of their own In the second
bailers went to the plate for for a lead they never reli nMeigs as they broke the game quished. A base rap by Ed Robe
wide open In the filt h. Johnson followed by Ch ris Matters sin gle,
singled, then ca me two outs, a walk to Nick Gill and a hll
after which Caldwell and Durst batsman gave visiting At hens
hi t sa fely. Ed Collins wa lked, their score.
Bissell singled and Mike Bar·
After work ing out of a jam In
trum ri pped a double and the the top of the second, the Meigs
score was 8-2.
bat s ca me alive as Rob Young
ln the fi nal fra me Durst drew a si ngled, stole second and Mike
base on balls and Bissell ham· Bartrum drew a wa lk . J eff
mered a round tripper to end J ohn son then rapped a single and
Meigs' scoring. Dave Amburgey Dave Amburgey beat out a bunt.
had a base hit and Kyle Davis Jeff Caldwell singled to left ,
picked up a double for the Durst sac rlficl'd. Coll ins reac hPd
wi nners. Hit ting for Glouster on an error and Bissell ripped a
were Mike Chapm an with a double down the third base li ne.
homer, Mike Phillips and Scott Youn g, for the second time In the
McMa nu s doubl ed a nd Jeff Inning, go t aboard on an error as
Koons had a si ngle.
Bissell crossed the plate for
Batt eries : Amburgey (WPI &amp; Meigs sPventh tall y.
Dav is. Keller (LPI. Chapman.
Athens plated a run In the third
Shust &amp; McManus.
on 1wo Meigs miscues und single-s
Li ne Score:
by Rob Dorman and To ny Coles.
Meigs ... ......... 010 Hi() 2-10 11 1 For Meigs In th e four th , Caldwell
Glouster: 200 000 0- 2 4 I
was sal&lt;• on an error and Bissell
Mei gs outhlt Glouster In the hU a towPrln g homPr over lh l' :no
second game 11 to 5 but ca me up mark In left .
No t will ing to play dead ,
on the short end of a 5 to 4 score.
Once again errors caused Meigs'
Athens picked up th ree In the
fifth when Chris Barr wa s hit by a
dow nfall as they commllted four
pitch, Rich Walls walked and
miscues. Meigs got on the board
first as Caldwell led off with a Tony Colrs blasted a homer to
left . Amburgey 's a nd Ca ldwell's
base hit, Durst walked, Todd
si ngles, co mbi ned with two
Casey singled and Rob Young hit
safely after a double play by Athens errors, gave Metgs their
fi nal ru n. McElroy al so hit sa fel y
Glo uster. Agai n In the fo ur th
Ca ld we ll si ngled and Casey
for Mei gs.

Ed Collins was credited with
the win whiffing 6 and walking 5
In 6 2/ Jinnings as Bart rum ca me
on to fan two a nd give up one free
pass In relief. Coles went the
distance for Athens allowing 10
hits and 6 bob's as the visitors
committed 6 errors.
Batteries : Collins (WP) &amp;
Bissell, Coles (LP) &amp; Dorman.
Line Score:
Athens ............ 101 031 0- 6 6 6
Meigs ...... ........ 070 210 ·-,-10 8 7
In an ex tra Inning at!alr the
visitors picked up an unearned
run In thl·' first frame as Todd
Nuzum walked , stole second,
went to third on a passed ball and
scored on Allen McPhersons
sacrifi ce. Then, despite a shaky
second Inn ing, Mike Barlrum
settled down allowing only three
safeties. all singles . by Jim
Abbott. Kev Kostival and Chris•
Barr. Behind him, Meigs played :
good defense and In the fourth
tied the score when Terry Fields
walked, Joey Snyder reached on _·
a fi elders choice and crossed the
plate on bark to back base knocks
by Mark Jenkins and Bartrum.
The winning tally for Meigs
ca me In I he bottom of the eighth
as J eff Johnson singled to center ·
and took second on a wild pitch,
.Jenkins drew a bob and Amburgey got a base on errors to load ,
the sacks. Reliever Chris Matters then uncorked a pitch
Kostlval couldn't handle and
John son slid Into home safely on
a closr play.
For Me igs Ba rt rum struck out
11 a nd wa lked four In seven
In nings In a fine mound perform&lt;m cP wlth Amburgey coming
on In relie f In the etghlh striking

out two and gtvln g up one base on
by rain. Jackie Gutierrez and off the cent erfield sc reen in the
balls .
Nelson Simmons each had a pair sixth !Off Guy Hoffma n 1 and in
the
eighth
toff
Ron
Robinson
\.
Batteries: Barrrum (71. Am·
of hits to power the Red Wings'
burgcy
(WP I. Ill &amp; McElroy &amp;
"
He
seemed
to
be
throwi
ng
the
15-hit attack. Mike Griffin, 4·0,
Blss(•ll.
Mc Pherson. Matters
ball
well.
but
his
contro
l
got
him
earned the victory and Eric
in
trouble,"
ad
ded
Mars
hall
who
tLP
l
&amp; Kostlval.
Rasmusse n notc\led his fourth
hiked his average to .280 and his
Li ne Score:
save. Chuck Davis fell to 2-2.
Athe
ns ........ .... ]()() 000 00-1 3 3
homer
total
to
fi
vr
with
his
bi
g
At Rlchmon\1, Va., Tim To!·
Meigs
....... ...... 000 100 01-2 5 3' '
man cracked a grand slam to day with the bat .
Me igs travels to Parkersburg '
" He never short(· hanged ffi £'
help Toledo overcome a 6·0
Wednesday
night for a . twlnlte
(In seven seaso n in a Dodger
deficit and beat the Braves.
doubl
eheader.
uniform)
and
I
only
ca
lled
him
Morris Madden Improved to 3·1.
Juan Eichelberger. 2·2, took the nam es twice during the game
·
, - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - loss.
At Syracuse, N.Y ., Odell Jones
and Colin McLaughlin combined
on a seven-hitter to lead the
Chiefs to the shutout. Jon es , 7-3,
pitched seven innings, struck out
nine and walked one. Colin
McLaughlin finished for his
seventh .save. Fred Toliver, 4·5,
took the loss despite giving up
only three hits.

.'

'-

Summer results

EAST MEIGS- ,In local pony
league action Syracuse defeated
Eastern 1l 12-4 In. an opening
round game of the Meigs-Mason
league.
The Eastern II team.conslstlng of th~ younger Eastern
players In the seventh grade, fell
behind early despite a strong
effor t.Syracusc's Mark Tay lor
picked up the victory on the
mound with relief from Andy
Baer. striking out twelve co mbined and walkin g seven. Doug
Lavendar completed the battery.
For Eas tern Jeff Durst.M I·
chael Smith, and Rod Newso me
combined on th~ mound for eight
strikeouts and seven walks with
Danny Short and Steve Barnett
completing the battery.
Barnett, Durst, and Smith
were the big sticks for Eastern,
while Jarod Moore had a double
and two singles and Brent Shu ler
a double and triple for Syracuse.
New Ha ven defea ted Eastern
1!20-1 as they pouned out thirteen
hits enroute to the victory In local
poay plax.Tom McDermott was
th~wlnnlngpltcherwith no walks
arid eight strikeouts. Michael
Smith, Chris Hali,Rod Newsome,
and Mike Newlund combined on
th~ mound for Eastern. That
Quartet walked 7 and struck out
three.
Smlth,Brad Poweii,Durst. and
Newlund were the EHS hitters.
Mike Newlund beat out a bunt
single with good huslte and Jeff
Durst pounded out a long t riple
being thrown out at the plate In a
bang-bang play.
Bob Ash, Tom McDermot ·
t.Tom Knapp,Mike Harbour.and
Bill Perkey had two hits each for
New Haven.
In other action Pomeroy II
edged Eastern 3-2 In a hard·
fought battle.

Chris Nutter was the winnin g
pit,cher in relief of J. Johnson.
\!'hey combined to fan : nine and
walk5.
Kenny Caldwell suffered the
loss In relief of Scott McDonald
as th ey fanned nine and wa lked
nine.
For the winners S.Kearns had
a single and double,Burrls a
single,B.W. Kea rns a single, S.
Ross a s ingle. a nd O'Brien a
single.
For Eastern Kenny Caldwell
had a triple, double, and single;
Jason Hager a double and single;.
Derek Yonkpr a sin gle, and J eff
Horner double.

into a Fantastic Family ·

a

Easter n II defeated Sy racuse
to up its reco rd to 1-1 after
cl aiming the 15-2 win. Kenny
Caldwell posted the win on the
mound with Scott Fitch coming
In for' an Inning of relief. They
combined for len strikeouts and
six walks.
Syracu se pitching fanned three
and walked eight , led by the staff
of Brent Shuler. Jarod Moore.
and Andy Baer.
John Bissell had a triple and
double; Derek Yonker two singles: Scott McDonald a double;
Shaun Savoy a single; and Shawn
Busha triple.Mark Murphy had a
single.
Syracuse hitt ers were Mark
Taylro with a home run and
si ngle; Baer a si ngle, Moore a
si ngle, and Shuler a si ngle.

Eastern II defeated New
Haven 6·3 Saturday to boost It s
record to 2-1 as Scott McDonald
fanned ·six In picking up the
v ictory In a great effort . McDonald walked just four In posting
the win.
Tom McDer mitt sut!ered the
defeat despite a good effort wltrh
relief from Tom Knapp. That duo
combined for twelve strikeouts
and walked 4.
For the winners Jason Hager
MASON·Mason defeated East·
ern I 6-5 In Melgs·Mason Pony and McDonald each doubled,
league play after Eastern had led Caldwell slngled,Scoq Filch
theenllre game. The winning run singled twice, 11nd Derek Yonker
came home on a wlld pitch as did a sacrifice ny and RBI.
Tom Knapp had two hits for
three other Mason runs.
New
Haven, wllfleShawnBarnetS.Kearns scored the winning
run alter drawing walk, while D. ' t,Mitch Harbour.and Bob Ash
Fields scored the tying run each singled.
earlier In the final round.

l

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•

�Ohio .

June

1987

Angels lose 4-0;
Indians bury
.
A's, 12-2; Yankees.triumph
""

(

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sporta Writer
Bill Long is probably the only
person in North America looking
to avoid a trip to Hawa ii.
When II comes lo play ing
baseball, Long, a rookie pllcher
for the Whil e Sox, prefers Jhe
windy city of Chicago to the
beaches of Watklkl.
Long pitched a slx·hliler Sun·
day to beat the California Angels
4-0 and notch his second shutout
In six start s since being recalled
from Hawaii of the Pacifi c Coast
League.
The 27-year·old right- hander.
excluded from Chicago's 40- ma n
roster over the winter, Is 3-1 and
says he Is working hard to stay
with !he White Sox.
"I'm Just tryin g to ke&lt;'p my
job," Long said. " I felt In t he
minor leagues I had the capacity
to do It, My hard work is paying
off. "
Chicago Manager j tm Fregosl
hinted Long could have been
demoted If he had fallered .

"His career was at stake,"
Fregosi said. "If he didn 'l pitch
well there was a chance of him
going right back ."
Long struck out six and walked
none In beating another rookie,
Willie Fraser. Fraser, 2· 4,
allowed only seven hits, but two
were home r uns to Carlton Fisk.
Fisk hit a two-run homer to cap
Chicago's lh ree·run fou rth and
added a solo bias! in Ihe nint h.
Fisk en tered Ihe game bat!lng
under .200. but said he benefiled
from some ex tra work In the
baiting cage.
" I feel better in bal li ng prac·
lice," Fisk sa id. " I've been
working on my swing and the
work Is starting to pay·off ... A lot
of people don't necessarily ad·
here to the work ethic. I do. "
The game was the 13t h straight
in which the Wh ite Sox have hit at
least one home r un. setting a: club
record. Chicago has hil 28 ho·
mers du ri ng that st retch.
In other games, Toronto

Weekend summary...
MISSES FLY Bi\LL - Oakl and's l.uls l'olonla
watches as shortstop Allred Grl!lln lets ,J uo
Carter's pop ny fall to the ground lo r an error In

ll rst Inning In Sunday's game against the
Cleveland Indians. The A's made seven errors as
Cleveland won, 12-2. (UP I)

( 22)

Majors

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Toledo results
TOLEDO. Ohio iUP il - Di x·
lr's Sco1·r sel a track record In
Sunday nigh t' s fir s t ol lhrN•
divis ions of the Ohio Sires Stakes
for !hre&lt;'·year·old trollin g fi ll ies
al To ledo Ha!'cway Park .

The Doil y Senlinel
(USPS 14$.11ii01
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Turuulu N, II ~ U imurr ~ . ll lnnln r,.
I alllur nht t l 'hll-;~o,~:" I, II! lnnl n~r&gt;
IMru~ ~. H~P.&gt;Iun .'1 lllnnlniC'
Uali.landii, f ll•vo•i llll d I
:\l inn•""""' :t, ' l't• .\;~" 2, 1:1 hmlnJ:~
Mllw.· ~~u• ··• · ~ . N ~ w \ 'ork ~

~ tiiHII\f ' ~ U:o~mt..,

Si . f .IIUP.III I'hiJ ,Idd jJI\l"- ulal~
I 'IU ~b lr &amp; h Ill Mnnl r PIU. niJ: ht

t'lmll

State champs
determined

'

T ra n ~a1·1ion s
Ra.~ ! · lulll

~ l nnlro ••tl -

ll•••·ll.lh •d plt1·ht•r ll••nni•
lf11 r Ihlo't fmm I ndl ,.,.llflfl lloo of 1l11· Ann•rl·
' 'lUI i\&gt;..o ;ndal kln(l\,\ t\ ): "''niplli•hf•rJ ur
T1 t•hoo tulniJIHnapulloi.
·

Dix ie's Score. driven by Cliff
HubN . tro ll ed th e mile In I: 59
:1.:;, beat ing lh&lt;' mai'k or 2:00 set
lasl yrar by Heavens Glow In a
si rrs sta kes ra ce. She took the
IPad on lh(' final turn and beat

Erlkas Impulse a! Ihe wire.
In the seco nd division, Ms La

Mlragr was limed In 2:00 3·5. She
Is ownrd, Irai ned and driv en by
Chris Boring and won her second
straight race and third In five
~ l al'ls thi s season .
Dernonrss I&lt;. won Ihe Ihlrd
division in 2:05 l·o for Don
McKirgas. She won her first
slakes race in only her sL~!h sta rt
of thr ~· rar.
The crowd of 2, 866 wagered
$270.~2 .

. Basketball
BOSTON (UPI ) - Greg Kite, a
lumberin g reserve on a slow
team, Sunday _contained the
leading scorer and one of the best
fast breaks In NBA history.
Kite, who did not score a point ,
slowed Los Angeles center Kareem AbduJ.J abbar and grabbed
9 rebounds du ring his 22 minutes
of play ing time to lead the Boston
Celtlcs to a 1()9. 103 victory over
the La kers and pull t he defending
champions wlihln 2·1 in the
best·of- seven NBA fin als.
The Celtlcs, defea ted eas ily In
Ga mes 1 and 2, hill7 of 21 shots,
81 percent, In !he decisive second
quarter to send the La kers to
their second defeat In 15 playoff
·
games this year.

prospec t of a fiflh set being
postponed until Monday.
" I' m very glad lo prove eve·
rybody wrong and win lhe
hardest Gra nd Slam I've ever

won," said LPndl , referring to
charges that he was not mentally
tough enough to overcome Wi·
lander. the !982 and 1985 French
Open winner.
Lend! also won the tournament
In 1984 and 1981; and has been U.S.
Open champio n for Ihe pas I two
years.

.

By The Bend

.

shaded Balllmore 3-2, &gt;IX!troit
pounded Boston 18-8, Mlnnesoia
defeated Te.xas 7·4, New York
topped Milwaukee S.3, C l~velan d
routed Oakland 12·2, and Kansas
City rolled over Seatt le 9,.!. '
Blue Jays 3, Orlok!s 2
AI Toronto, Garth Iorg singled
home Manny Lee fro111 secOnd
wit h two out in the ninth inhlng lo
give the BJue .Jays a sweep or
their three-ga me series.
Tigers 18, K ed Sox 8 • .
AI Boston, rookie Matt Nokes
blasted two home runs whlle Ciiet
Lemon and TomBrookens hit One
apiece to power a 21-hit Detroll
attac k.
·
·
Twins 7, Ran gers 4
.
AI Mi nnea polis, Randy Bush
doubled home the tle· breakjng
run to highlight a lhree. run
seventh.
Yankees 5, Brewers 3
At Milwaukee, Ciaudell Wa·
shington singled 1\ome t,wo runs
wll h !he bases loaded In Ihe sixth
inning tii brea k a 3-3 !ie and lead
New York.
Indians 12, Athletics 2
AI Oakland, Ca lif., Pat Tabler
drove home four runs and Cleveland parlayed seven Oakland
errors Into eight unearned runs.
Royals 9, Mariners I
AI Seatlle. Bo Jackson ho·
mered twice and Willie Wllwn
added a home run to back the
combined five- hit pitching ofBud
Black and Sieve Farr.

111 rout1

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - The Harrisonville
Holiness Chapel, Iocallod near the lire station at
Harrisonville, is now under construction by Glenn
: ·: !llssell of Bissell Builders and Is ex pected to be

- Students al !he Ches ler Ele·
: menl ary School making a "B" or
: ~ bovr in all Iheir subjects lo be
·J islcd on the final six-werks'
:!trading period of Ihe school yea r
•were as follows:
-: Grade 1: Keii iBailey. Stefani
·8 earhs, Brandon Buckley, Tra·
:vts Lodwick, Blllee Poo ler.
·; Grade 2: Meredilh Crow, Eric
·Dillard, Maria Frecker, Traci
Heines. Bryan Inscoe, Shanna
· Mach'lr. Kelly Osborne. Lrslie

-~Alfred

m eal in the backyard was f' n·

Summer results

Ottl' W('(lk ........ .. ...... .. .. ........ ... .... $ 1 T.1

Onf"' Month ............. ............... ... $~.45
Ott('

YNl ~

................ .......... ..... .. $H."i.lll

SJNOLE CO P\'
PRU;E

SAVE ON

joyed by a iL Present were Linda.
Dave, and Aaron Wil liams. Bel·

ROOFING

Alfred UMW vo ted to give
flowers for !he outside boxes at
t he cjmrc h when Ihey mel May 19
al lhe home of Florence Ann
Spencer . Thelma Hrnderso n
read a letl er from Jeanne
Wlnlrl ng ham : a m issio nar y.
Mrs. Henderson selrctC'd a missionary lo Japan from the PrayN
Calendar: a nd Ihe societ y signed
a birthda y card for her .
Ten membPrs answ£'J'('d roll
call and 49 sick calls were
reported. Guests were Janet
Eva ns, The Plain s. and Sandra

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Cha pter
53, Disabled American Veterans.
will meet al7 p.m. Monda y all he
chapter home, 124 Bullrrnul
Ave., Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - Intcma ·
tio na! Order of Job's Dau g ~l er s
will meet a t 7 p.m. Mondav atth
Middleport Mason ic .Temple wil h
initiation to be held.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Orange
Tow nship Trustees will hold a
special meeting Monday. 7: 30
p.m., al the Orange Township
fi r e sta tion. to dis cus s dust
control. The public Is lnvlled ,
Bradford
BRADBURY
Church of Christ Bible School91o
11:30 a.m. Classes for &lt;:hildren
a nd teenagers. For lnformalion
ca ll 992·5844.

that won't rust.

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Free
blood pressure clinic will be
conducted from 10 a.m. lo12 noon

Dall,\ ' ............. ........ ............. 2.\ ('1' 111~
Su b.&lt;~c rtbf'r~ nlll dMilrln.-z l n pay 1hr rar·

rlt•r ma.v N'mll In ac\vt~n.rf' rtlrf'r t 10
b".~111 . C1:('dit ""'Ill bf' Rlv('n rarr ll'r l'a r h

4'16'7" - 26 ..... feet SIIMt
,tcl '"""'' •....._ .,.

wrt'k.

c......

No !lllbsrrlp!lon!t by mall JK&gt;rm lnrd In

Reg. '10.99

al'f'liS whert' homf' CllrriN S&lt;'f\'IC'C Is
avMitabll'.

NOW

Mall SabllcrlpUOM

l•hle Melp Coanty

w•.,... .................................. $1 7.29
52 w.. ks ................................. $66.56

13

2fi Wl'&lt;ks .................. ·· ·• .. ........ · S:W.\1;
OD tslde Melp Coanly

13 w..ks .................................. $18.211

20
52

w..k. ............. ::................... $35.10

w...ks .................................. $67.00

,., . .,

I CO.IOAl APPUCAIIONS

lrow rit ltectiM~

A[IIWOI......, I 00

......

1

IDUI FOI llf!IDENTIAI. A..._llla

(oltu ln Stec.lu
llloito. lt&lt;l -

1qulftl CVfflltfy

$989

1ft

-...........
.... .....
--............-- ..........
"'"""'

'""'"IMIIwiR ............

Sink your teeth Into something speCial •
at Dairy Queen~ OUr y, lb~ lender
homestyle double burger looks.
cooks. and fasles Uke homeltiOde.
· Md rON Irs on sale. At pa llclpatlng
Daily Queen- Blazlei&lt; stores.
'flle.oooloed wt.

WI . . . YOU...-r•

\

..
.,..,..._.~ IM O.Q C.,

"

Massa r , loca l. Thank -vous were

read from Ellzabe!li Je(fers,
Dlslricl UMW president; Tamml
and Rob Barber, Si ne·Cera, The
Plains ; Marg uerlle Stearns,
locaL
President Nellie Parker an·
nouncl'd Schools of Missions at
Ada in July a nd Burr Oak In
October. She also a nnounced
vls il alio n at Walerford. Ju ne 25.
The socte1y signed a card lor
Ann a . Thompso n who is In Ihe
hospitaL
Mrs . Henderso n led the pro·

Tuesday by the Harrisonv ille
Senior Cit izens Club al the town
ha ll.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce month ly
mee ting Tu esday at 12 noo n al
lhr Court St. Park . Lunch will be
provided. In case of rai n Ihe
meellng will be held al Trl nlly
Church. Guest sp&lt;-aker will be
from the Meigs County Plon&lt;-er
and Historical Societ y concern·
ing Herilagc Weekend.
POMEHOY - The Bend Area
Merchant s Assoclalion wil l hold
ils mont h!;· meellng at 8 a.m.
Tuesda y al Bank One.
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet at
7:30p.m. Wednesday at Eas lern
Hi gh Sc hooL Plans will be made
for a July 41h barbecue.
Bible
school
MIDDLEPORT
- The annua l

vacat~n

Bible school of the

.,

Calvlnlee were recent visitors of
Mr . and Mrs. Ha rley Johnson·
and Tammy.
Harley J ohnson, Cheryl Hoi·
ley, and Calvlnlee· vis ll ed Iva
Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
Langsville spent Sunday evening

Mrs. Leslie Fra nk, Sara h Beth
and Ma tthew Rya n, Texas Road ,
were Tuesday vis itors ol Mr. and
Mrs.E ugene Ha nlng andRon ald.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
visited Monday wttli Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, La ngsvllle
and Mr . and Mrs. Jack Peterson
New Li ma Road. ·
'

wedding ca ke and a videotape of
the ceremony.
Sc huler said she was dragged
to the singles event by a cousin
and Miller said he just happened
to be there shopping. The couple
said they would never have rnet
otherwise because they lived on
opposile sides of Louisville. ThE')'
started to chat.
" I too k the grocer y bags home
and went back," Miller said.
"Who would have gu essed that a
vlsl! to a grocery store and a
chance meellng would turn Into a
llfellme of loving."
Two hours later Miller and
Sc huler left , each with the olher's
phone number. They began dat·
lng when Miller, an electrician,
offered to fix a broken celilng fan
In Schuler's apartment.
The couple plans an August
honey moon In San Francisco.
Markwell has sponsored fiv e
singles nights at his store. He
said several couples who mel
du ring there are now dallng and
at least three are engaged.
"There are lots o! lonely people
and few safe ways for them to
meet," Markwell said. " I wanted
something to promote the store
and fill a need for our customers.
This wedding Is the grand fi·
nal e."

The1·r will be a J un e 27 party a! I, ollerln g them, at no charge,
By WU.LIAM C. TROTT
t he Ma libu home of Julie An· half of his 29· room hot el and a
United Press International
drrws
and Blake Edwards lo home In lis owner's sul!e, which
JACKSON WONT 'T TESTIFY
FOR WITNESSES: Mi chael . celebrate !he elghlh anniversa ry has gold·plated bathroom fixJ ackson reportedly has quit lhe of the Operallon Califor nia lures, In exchanRe for their
agreement lo promote 11 •
J ehova h's Wllnesses bul the charil y.
The agency has deli vered more
"They 'll have certain obllga·
singer's manager won' t co m·
ment. An official of the Los !han $50 million In medical , food lions !ha l they'll have lo fill.
Angeless congrega tion where a nd emergency aid for di sas ters mosliy promotional, and th~y'II
Jac kson belonged told the Los around Ihe world and supporlers have 10 spend a ilme living
Angeles Times thai Jackson had Incl ude Ed Asner, ,Joan Collins, here, " he said. "It' s striclly
"di sassociated'; himself from Jan e Fonda, James Garner, Terl business on my par i and has
!he congregalion and " no longer Garr, Deml Moore, Olivia nothing lo do wilh Ihe ministry.";
wa nts 10 be known as a Jehova h' s Newt9n-John, John Ritter and One promolion will be to give a
Ally Sheedy. Andrews and Ed· pair of "Tammy Jammles" to all
WI! ness."
A May 18 feller obta in ed by Ihe wards were Instrumental In !he women checking ln .
GLIMPSES: Gary Qarl Is
Times from the Wll nesses' Init ial Operation California relief
Brooklyn headqu art ers also sa id fl ight lo famin e- ravaged Cambo· looking for a New York publisher
the organlza llon "no longer con· d la In 1979 and have supported lo handle his book about his
career bul t'he outline makes no
slders Michael J ackson to be one the agency evt'r sine('.
,JIM AND TAMMY INN: mention o! Ihe Donna Rice affalr.
of Ihe Jehova h's Wlln esses."
Thai could mean troubl e In lhe " Pass Ihe Ammunition," a rna· In his outline, Hart say s he was
Jackso n elan beca use J ehovah 's vie ~ bout a sleazy te lev ision nearly killed In a bombing ·raid
dropouts arc supposed to be ••va ngellst, was recenli y filmed by Ni caraguan rebels In 198.1
shunned by family members who at J oseph M~Clung'&lt; holrl In The tentative title Is "Steppin g
stay. In lhe sf'Ct. J ackson's Eureka Spr ings, Ark.. bul he Stones Across an Era: The
mot her. Ka ther ine. Is a devout hopes thai won'! slop ,Jim and Unfin is hed Story or a Genera ·
Tammy Bakker from beeomlng · tlon" ... The crowd at !he
WI! ness.
Belmont Stakes Saturday InA spokes ma n for Epic Records pa rtners In the hotel.
" II will be slrlclly business. No
cluded Cab Calloway, Corbin
and J ackson's manager. Frank
Dileo, refu sed lo comm ent on the hanky· pa nky," sa id McClung, Berenson of " L.A. taw," oddS·
singer's personal life and would 38, ow ner of Ihe Coloni al Ma nsion maker limmy "The Greek"
Hotel. He sa id he sent the Snyder,' Jack KluiJllan and lin
not as k Jackson to co mm ent.
PARTY FOR CHARITY : B&lt;lkkcrs a registered IN ter June Harrblon.

Michael, Jamie Ord. J ess ica
Rad ford , V. J. Van Meter.
Grade !i: Penny Aelker, Victor
Coa tes, Andrea Dillard, Adria
Frccker, Eric Jac ks, Tyson
RosF, Am ber Well, Andrew Wolf.
Gra de 6: J eremy Bucklt'y,
Lisa Hofm an, Mi chele Metzger,
Kim Mi chael. MaH Michael.
Carrie Morrissey, Stephanie
Otto, Sherr! Smllh, and Tom
Wilson.

pre: Margaret and Carleton
Mrs . Judy Av is hosted a Home
Foil rod , Po meroy: Mr. and Mrs . Interiors and Gi lls part y May 22.
Sherma n Henderson. Pam and Nancy Bra ndl was Ihe dls pl ayer.
Bi ll Amos, Roger. Susan. and
Mr. and Mrs. Cla ir E. Follrod
Jason Pullins, Harold. Wil ma. atlended lhe Cin cinn ati Reds
Sharon, and Lisa Henderson, all ballgame at Cin ci nn ati May 23.
loca I.
They tr;weled with a group of
Mrs. Nin a Robinson and Mr. Ohio Univers ity employees.
• nd Mrs. Hobart Swartz arc
Guests al lhe Poole·Parker
announcing Ihe bir th of a great· home were Mr. and Mrs. Ha rold
grandso n, Ross Calvi n Gi bson, Felt y Sr .. Langsville, and Mr.
son of Dennis a nd Vlc ke Swartz and Mrs. Terry Fetty, Karen and
Gibson, Convoy. Ohio.
Sandra, Fairbor n.

Wolfe
Pen happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Holley and
wllh Mr. and Ms. Charley Smll h.

. I
:

Parker, Li'a S!elhem, Tracie
West john, and Anna Wolfe.
Gradel: Ryan Clonch. Melissa
Dempsey, Jessica Karr. Chris
Mi cha el. Jennifer Mora, Nicole
Nelson. Noelle Pickens. Brandi
Hecves, Amy Sm ith , !lea ther
Well. Lauren Young.
Grade 4: Charlie Bissell, Hya n
Buckley, Travis Cai n, Jess ica
Chevalier, Dav id Fell y. David
.John son. Sara M&amp;.clllr. Todd

silting at Ihe table cry ing," she
said.
Fontana and Apollonl eventually exper ienced something of a
marr iage ceremony - a priest
say ing a few words for the couple
in a park In Windsor - · but !he
proceeding apparenlly will not
be recognized as a legal marr iage by ell her church or state.
Couple married
at grocery store
LOUISVILL E, Ky. IIJP(J
James Miller and Darlene
Schu ler became man a nd wife In
the produce sec tion of a grocery
store. affi r ming Iheir love amid
zucchini and leafy heads of
lelluC&lt;'.
Miller. 38. and Schuler. 40, mel
at Markwell's Pic Pac las!
Oc tober during the firs! of the
store's singles night s. They became engaged in December.
Flanked by fr iends, relatives,
shoppers, and vegetables they
were married In the produce
depart ment of a grocery store
where they met.
The bride tossed a bouquet of
broccoli.
Store owner Lw Markwell and
some friends paid lor the wed·
ding recep tion at a nearby hotel
and ga ve them two round·lr lp air
tic kets to anywhere In !he conlln·
ent al Unil ed Stales, a Iour·llered

People in the news._ _ _ __

gram The Power of Posill ve
Riski ng wilh all lak in g pari In
rea ding a nd discussion.
The hos tess served ham sa nd·
wlches, chips. and frull salad to
those ment ioned and 10 Clara
Follrod. Ni na Robinson. Mart ha
Poole, Charlollr Van Met~r.
Ma rtha Ell loll , Kale HodPhaver.
and Osle Mae Foll rod .
Next meeting will be al the
church JunP 16 wll h Martha
Eilloll and Charlotte Va n Meier
as hostesses. Program will be
Task of Mending God's Creation.

Community calendar/ area hCfppenings

If your old roof is

' Th&lt;' Oallv SPn!lnPI on :13. 6 or 12 monlh

site are from .the left, Henry Eblin, trustee, David
Ferrell, piL•tor, Mrs. Arthur Eblin, and Norman
Hysell, trustees.

Alfred ,UMW conducts meeting

rusting awey, put up

-

i'k:tiii;;;J at the t'Onslructlon

community happenings

: ,Sunday School attenda nce Ma y
-24was22; church attendance. 12.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lloyd Brooks
vlslled their son Kevi n in Col urn·
bus and helped him move lo a
duplex.
The 92nd birthday of Os ie
Henderson was celebrated May
17 at the home of Clarence and
Thelma Henderson . A picnic

~ ...

Only ONDUUNE can cover
your roof with a lifetime
warranty

Bride at altar,
groom at border
DETROIT (UPI) - Marcello
Font ana we nt to his bachelor
part y and missed the wedding.
He couldn' t gel io t he altar
!lecause lmmtgrallon officials
wouldn 't let him over the border.
Fontana, 25, an Italian na·
tiona I, went to a bar In Windsor,
Onlarto, wilh his best man and a
few buddies Friday night. U.S. ·
lmmlgrallon. officials refused to
lei Fontana back In the count ry
the next morning for his wedding
Saturday.
Fontana, a mech anic, came to
Delroll from Italy in May strict ly
to get marr ied. He was expected
to exchange wedding vows with
Erena Apolloni al St. Anne's
Rom an Ca tholic Church In De·
troll . But when he lefllh e Uniled
States, he apparently violated
terms of his visa and co uld not
re-enter !he coun try .
At 11:30 a .m. Saturd ay - an
hour and a half before !he
schedu led ceremony- Font ana
made a last·ditc h effort 10 cross
!he bridge. Instead, he spent five
hours wilh U.S. lmmigrallon
officials.
Back In Del roil, his bride· lo·be
kepi checking her watch.
" I was going to pick up my
flowers and I sa w lliy mother

:(:hester Elementary announces list

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Upper
Arli ngton captured !he Class
AAA championship, Coldwater
the AA lllle and Parkway I he ·A
Golf
crown In the fi nals of !he Ohio
POTOMAC
,
Md . iUP II -Tom
high schoo l baseball tournament
Kite.
a
model
of co nsistency In
1his weekend.
the
1980s,
earned
the biggest
Arli ngto n shu! out Toledo Star!
his
career
with
paycheck
of
4·0 Saturday. Coldwa ter bias led
Irregu
lar
play.
Mason 22·5 and Par kway de·
Aller suffering four bogeys in
fea led Newark Ca tholic 7·1
Tennis
I
he
front -nine and leading by just
In the AA ga me. Coldwa ter's
PARIS t UPI ) ~ I va n Lendl 's one stroke eight holes Into the
Nick LoB ianco went three for condil lonlng, patience and toler·
four wit h a double,lrl pleand four ance lor rain Sunday proved as final round, Kil e birdied two
holes and eagled a nother on th e
runs balled ln.
important as his serve, forehand back·nlne Sunday lo coast Ia a
For the weekend, he was six of and backh and.
seven-stroke v.ictory in the
eight wllh a double, two trip les
Almost fi ve hours aft er they $700.000 Kemper Open.
and a home run. LoBianco also fi rs t stepped on the court, Lend!
drove In elghl runs a nd scored six overcame Mats Wll ander 7·5, 6-2,
limes in l he fi nal s a nd 3-6, 7·6 (7-3) Ia win the F rench r-----------l..~
semifinals.
Open Iitie for Ihe third tim e.
Coldwater 's Greg Haskell
The first set lasted 80 minut es
went three for five Sa turday, all and a ra in delay added another 35
t hre&lt;' dou bles. and tea mm ate minutes to the tot al play ing lime
Brad Muhl enkamp was three of of 4:17.
four with two RBI.
The deciding t ie-b reaker was
Scoll Eyl nk got !he pit ching played In more rain, with fhe
evening light fading and the
win for Coldwater.
Ne ll Schaffn er was three for
three al the plate for Parkway In
the Class A ga me.
The wi nners scored five runs In
In Pony League play Rutl and,
the first Inning and added 'two coached by Woody Call, upped
more In Ihe second.
Iheir overall reco rd to 5-0 (3-0 In
Pilcher Greg Slel necker went league ) wllh a 7 to 1 win over
Ihe dis tance for Ihe win.
Mason·and a 17 to zip pounding of
Softball
Pomeroy one. McGuire and
ASHLAND, Ohio tUPii Ogdln allowed but ·one hit and
Ta ll madge won the Class AAA lour Ire&lt;' passes while fanning 15
crown , Akron Hoban the AA titl e bailers. Collecting hil s for Ru·
and Strasburg t he A champ ion· lland we re McGuire with a
ship In Ihe fin als of t he Ohio high double and sin gle and McGhee
school softball lour namenl !his wllh two singles . Johnson and
weekend.
Nutter shared mound dulles for
Tall madge garnered lis seco nd Mason.
i\AA trophy llhe other was In
Agai ns t Pomeroy pll che r
1981 I with a 5·0 shu loul of North Kevin Taylor and ballery ma te
Ca nton GlenOak. defendi ng AA Scott Ogdln struck out 10 ba tters
champion Hoban picked up Its and wa lked lwo giving up but one
fourt h s late crown wllh a S.! hit to Pomeroy's McElroy. Ru·
triumph over Portsmo uth West !land hitte rs were Jeremy Rupe,
and Strasbu rg's Ta mmy Spidell Shawn Lamber t, Scali Ogdln ,
tossed a no·hlller to blank Tony M11Ier, Kevin Taylor and ·
Mineral Ridge 9·0 for Ihe A title. Terry McGuire. On the mound
In the Ai\ game, wi nning for Pomeroy were Blankenship
pllcher Gina Snyder ended the and Wells who walked 8 ba ilers
season wllh a 21-0 record.
aDd struck out 8.
Hache! Cow ley slapped an RBI
The Pomeroy Royals rolled
triple In the fifth Inning and over Eastern 17 to zip as Kelgh
collected a total of two r uns Hagen limited the Eagles Jo a
balled in lor 34·0 Akron. Two single by Kevin Hunt, gave . up
other Hoban runs were walked two walks and struck ou.t eight.
ln.
Mea nwhile· the Royals pounded
In lhe Cinss A fi nals, Stras· out 13 hits against Jeff Durst and
burg's Lori Ward sel a tourna· Michael Smllh. Randy Corsi and
menl record wit h five RBI Jason Wright wllh 3 singles each ,
(previous record four) and team· Mike Corsi with a triple and
mn le Hulhann Long smacked a sin gle, Terry Reuter a double
solo home 1·un In Ihe fourth.
and single Wes Young with lwo
The only Mineral Ridge bail er base knocks and Eric Heck wllh a
IO reach base did so on a Spidell single kept the basepath hot for
C'rror.
Pomeroy. The Eastern pitching
Strasburg ended the season ~ rew gave up five free passes and
2H
fanned five.

Paml'l'oy. Ohio 45769.

SUIISCRI PTION RATF.S
lly Carrier or Molor Rnutr

Monday, June 8, 1987
Page-&amp;

Quirks in the news,·_____

tHtdt't '~'~-~ &lt;'h [ l n~-..;

~n!lnrl .

_The I)aily Sentinel

Middleport First Baptist Church
has been set for J une 1;. 19, fro m 9
a .m. to 12 noon each day.
Following lhe closing of the
sc hoo l a picnic and pool pa rty
will be held begi nning al 6 p.m. al
Ihe Lo ndon PooL
MeiJ!l! alumni
MIDDLEPOHT - The Meigs
High Sc hool Alu mn i Association
Is sponsor ing a D tea m soft ball
tourname nt al !he Middleport
Park, June 13 and 14 . Entry fe&lt;' Is
$75, no bails. Those interes ted In
laking par! shou ld conlacl Max
Whlllalch at 742·2435 or Gene
Wise at 992·6224 before Ju ne 9.
Drawing for the tourney wil l be
held on June 9.
Meetin g c han ~e d
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Educa tion sche·
duled for J un e 9 has been
c hanged 10 J un e 8, 7 p.m. at the
county office.

Wienermobile on ·the road again
By Unit ed Press International
Wit h America relishing for
nos talgia, the Oscar Mayer &amp; Co.
has pulled lis once- pop ular Wlcner moblle oul of storage and put
in on the roa d aga in, opening a
summer lour today ln Ci nclnna iL
The vehicle I hal looks like a hal
dog In a bun will be In Dayto n and
Columbus this wee k as It sw in gs
through !he Great La kes Slates
and Norlheasl by Labor Day. The
ve hlcll• will vlsll Toledo, Akron,
Youngs lown a nd Cievla nd later
this summer.
The Wle nermoblle, bor n In
1936, became the hoi dog maker's
goodw ill ambassador.' By the
mid 1950s, Ihe vehicle led ma ny a
parade m enu.

By 1976, the company reti red
the vehicle to ga rages and
museum s after emba rking on a
television-oriented campa ign.
But 10 years later, 10 celebrate
il's 50th anniversa ry, Ihe vehi cle
mustered a co mebac k and loured
1he Soul heasl.
Company offi cials say public

demand was so great th ai they
launched a 1.3·week summer
Nostalgia Tour through !he Nor·
lhcasl and Grea t Lakes sta les .
The Wlenermoblle will be In
Clnel nnailloday and Tuesda y; In
Dayton Wednesday and Thurs.
day a nd In Columbus Friday and
Sa turd ay .
The vehicle will ' vlsll Wes t
Virginia, Pennsylvani a, New
York. Connecl lcul , Rhode Is·
land. Massacbusclls, Michi gan ,
Ind ia n a. Wi sco nsi n a nd
Minnesota.
As lhe ve hi cle swin gs back
through Ohio from the New
England stales, II will calr h up
wil h fans In In Youngstown .J uly
28 and 29. Cleveland and Akron.
July 30 and Aug. J. and Toledo
Aug. ~ and 4.
The first Wlener mobllc be~a n
cruisi ng Chicago streets in 1936.
II was a 13- fool metal hot dog Ihal
held open·alr seals for the dr iver
a nd a companion.
In the 1950s, the Gcrs tenslager
company or Woos ter, Ohio, whic h

Rock Springs health group meets
A donation was made lo the Agnes Dixon reporled on project
Ca ncer Society at a recent wor k. Mrs. Blac kston condu cted
me&lt;'ling of the Roc k Springs lh~ contes t wilh Mrs. Dixon and
Belter Health Club held al !he Violet Hysell wi nning the prizes .
home of Mildred J acobs.
Mrs. Bartels will host the June
Li ll ian Moore of the Cancer 18 meeti ng. Ot hers altendlng
Society had a program on breast were Trccle Abboll and Berna·
ca ncer and di str ibuted literature di ne Chase. Mrs . J acobs served
to the members. Devollons were · refreshment s.
given by Mrs. Jacobs, a nd Ann
Mash and Helen Blackston had
secretary· treasurer's report.
Louise Brtels was reported Ill.

had made post office vehicles,
designed five new Wlenermobllcs when ih ~ original one
relired.
Changes were made In the
Wlenermoblle aboul as often as
new models or aut omobiles hit
lhe streets. li s presence drew
crowds as flu orescenl li ghts
glowed from behind and the
popular jingle blared from a
buiiHn public address system.
" II was prelty to look al, but
not to drive, " says reilred
Wl enermoblle driver Charlie
Bisselte of the 1p58 model.
He said the engine was too
small when air conditioning was
added. and drivers had a hard
llmt reaching the maximum
recommended speed or 45 miles
an hour.
He agreed wllh J ack Spohn,
manger of Oscar Mayer's Madl·
son (Wis. l plant the "drivers
feared the '&gt;8 Wl encrmoblle."
" II had no Iron! bum~r. If
somebody hi! lh&lt;• Plexiglas nose,
Ihat would be Ihe end. You'd be
left with just u stet•rlng wheel in
your band." Bissette said .
Ten Wiencrmoblles were con·
slructed bu t only five exist today.
, One . Gerstenlager model Is on
display al an auto museum near
Madison, Wis .. and the co mpany
stores one at lis Madison pla nt.
The 1975 model Is lou r ing Spain
and a 1969 model Is In Puerto
Hl co.
The flllh model, a 1969 edllion,
Is touring th is summer.

rr:======:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-1

CARRIERS NEEDED

COIBIIIA11011 DIIIIIER
. DINING ROOM ONLY

FOR MIDDLEPORT
I'EAIL ST.,

••c•

ST. -

SYCAIIOIE

n.

IF IHIIIISliD PliASI CAU

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
I

AliAS

FOR JUST

Served wilh wttipptd potaton, chicken 111vy,
cole
hot roll, butttrtnd calf"- Sorry,
no
ucept btl'tllll wilh addi·

$3.25

(ROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. "2-5432

Frltll Chkk111

I'OMIIOY, 011.

�Monday, June Br 1987

Report: Hundreds
of species lost daily

THE WINNf: ltS ARE .... - Th1•

I~X7

Tony Award wmlll'r. for

Plunkett, who won for their roles In th e musical "Me and My Girl,"
Lind,, Lavin, who won lor her performance In the play "Broadway
Round ," and .James Earl .Jones, who won lor his role In the play
" F'f!fl( 'C_lS." ( UPI)

aclrc~s

ht-st actor and

in a play and musical pust' for
photographers at the Mark llcllingl!rTheatre Sunday following till'
awards cen·mony. F'rflln lefl ard. ltuhcrt Llndsa.v and Maryann

l..es Miserables'
sweeps Tany Awards
BY f' Rt:JJERitK M . WINSIIJI'

Ul'l Sen ior Editor
NEW YORK I UP II - A Brlt l' h
lmporl , " Lrs Ml s f'rablcs,"
turned lltr 19H7 Rrsl of Broudw.t v
Tony Awards into the Hugo
Awards. by wlnntng tn Pighl of
!he· 19 culpgo rlPs, tnclutllng Hcsl
Mus ic-al.
The mu sic.J I Vf 'f" Jon of Viclo r

Hugo's lurbu iPnt novel of t hr
F'rench R&lt;•volutlon won tltr• An·
lolnt•IIC Pcn y /\ward Su nday lot
Brsl Musica l. and also pttkl'd up
awards for direction, book an d
scom bes t f!'a tu rcd artor and
actress .md S('rn lc a nd li ghting
des ign.
Wllh lour suC"ressful ll tt! h h
slag&lt;• import s - " Mr an d Mv

Hou ncl ·
I'm so glad vo u ltkrd mv
work · La, In told thr hldf' k-t•c
C' l owd

'' l 'm

so

proud.

I ' vC'

Wing, was t~IN·as l na
ttonall \' from thr Ma rk Hell inge r
Thl'atcr on CBS a nd was tapPd
Th~al~r

t'(• Jpa sf" ow•rsC'a s for

an

r sttmsalcd total aud lr n('t' of 1'&gt;0
millio n viPwrrs.
The"" at t1 shu"· includccl Irib·
ut rs to producr r·di rector Gcorf(r
A hi )() l! on thr o c e&lt;Jslon of hi-;

IIIOth hit lhdal' . th r late mu sical

u nd " l.t•s Lwi ·
sons Dang,·reu s(•s'' - nowd ing

comrdv sta r ltohPrt r rcs ton i.l nd
curnit Jut·kll' Mason for hi s
cu t t r·n t OJW·m an
shov.- o n

l ·:x prp~s."

thr Tony numlnalions list. tlt r
Brlflsh, as expeclrd a massed !hi'
lion's sharp of th!' Ton ys.
Bul two p l a y~ Cd ffi (' I hi ou gh !o 1

!he Aml'rlcan s: "Frn&lt; rs" dnd
" lJro;1dWa \ · Round "

" F'&lt; •ncrs," thr Pullt t.&lt;·r prizr•
winning clr.1 ma
p lo~ v ri g ltt

l1y 1\ mPi l('dll

Augusl Wilso n, won 1hi'

Rroddwa y
Thr 1-lPst !lt·tor a nrl .~clrcss In"
Mu sk ,ll award s wPnl In H!t l i!-ih

" ·"

li ub&lt;• • t Lind sa1 lot

1\m&lt;'rican
f. 11l " ,md
AnH'I'lf'a n
oppos riP

I ts ~ ldr .l.liTII '!-.
Eurl tunr•o.; Wt l" votl'ct HPst 1\(' ffll
1n a Pl .l\'
hi:-. !il'CO nd Toll\

IJI'in g un

t\\\&lt;tlcl

th1 s

Bcost Pl.t,V

.lW .. I I' cl

,l bi:t l'k m. l l\
Wl l h 111r IWIII'f lli ,tl Ill'

"F'(' Il {' l '"" dhOUI
otls.-~s t •d

('Ould hm1• 111 '1' 11 ;1 p1o ft•sslon ;1l
ba s t'ball pi t~\ t'l', . li ~O \\ nn ,J\\'.11 li s
for lh·s l [)1 11'1 11u11 nl a l'l m ;nu l
! Jest FPa tuf '(•(l

t\C'I r' t•s~ .

l.ln da 1.;1\ In won IIH• H(•:-.1
,\rll'l'SS m n Pl d~l tlwa 1cl ror hr1
10if' In Nrll S1mon's " Hroudwuv

hts

dPbut m " !V1 r .r nd M v
M tll y.11m P lunk(•tl , un
actr0r.:s who plr~ ~'('( i
him

ln

thr

Lo nd o n

llll JJ OI I
" C&lt;~ n

\'OU nn.tglnf'
J ·: ng li ~, h

h m~

acto r holclirll.!

on ll ro.tclwa\ ., ..

'&gt; .tltl
hol .. tmg
11 oph v

1 l rrl

111:-.

I 11HI ~~n

bt·&lt;.:t

ac to t

DISPLAY AWARDS - Tltt• winners for best performances hy a
featured llt'treS&lt; and ado•· In a musical, Frances Rulfellc and
Mlchurl Ma~uir&lt; , hold up th1•ir Tony at the Mark Hellinger
Thl'atrc, Sund ay, durinp; the 41st annual Tony /\wards ceremony.
Tltt•y won for tlwir performunc&lt;'' in "Les Miserahles." (UP I)
!.I.Jbnn~

Dan grt('lJ &lt;.,f'S ·

to win

nm ,twc~rd s d l all
l.lol(l WPhPr's "St,OI l1gh t t: x
p1 1'"'"·"wit h" 1 o\lrr ·ska ll n g

T lH' l&gt;iggf•s l &lt;.: UI IJII &lt;.: t•s 11 f l h t•
t'\ 't •ni ng \.\'C'I'P tht• ~ in g!P aw-.u (!
,C I\ ('ll .111 0 1 hf •l Bl'll ls h lmpot1 , I ht'

p&lt;&gt;pul.ll musical ·Starlight

r.;,

)JI'('S"i,'' (OI' &lt;'O~!U mt• d f'S ign. ;md

!ltv lnilun · of !ttl' l' t'il lea lll'
.trr lalmr d Btltlsh pl&lt;t)'. ' I.e&gt;

fast
1:r mp

sk 1mm1ng OVflt p J c~bor.J I P
v. d vs. g.Jr nt't rd st'VL'n nomina
1ton.-.
· L( '~ I .ld\Sons Dangfl
n ls o

tt'IIS( '

J'l'l' i f'\'Ccl

"' l' \'('Jl

nomirwtrons

The

ol hrr

\\'!fl O C' !'~

W('f(':

Ton1

13est Fra1ur0d Actor tn a Play
- .John Randolph in "Broadway
Bound. "
Fl0st P'Pa lurpd Actrc•ss tn a
Pial'- Mat .\' Ail e&lt;• tn " F'f'nres ."
80s! tc0alured i\ctm In a
Mustra l - Michael Ma guire.
mdktng his Broadwa)' debut m
" l.&lt;·s Mtst•t ,,!Ji cs."
Fll'st Chm rogra ph1 - Gillian
Ctrgor\' for " Me and My Girl.·

HOUSTON WPI) - James
Wade Willingham died trying to
help someone, and In death he
still managed to do a good turn.
Police call the good Samarilan a
hero - desplle his criminal
record and the fact he was
driving a stolen !ruck when
robbers killed him.
"This should, 1n no way,
diminish !he fact thai he was q
hero, or at least hew as !he kind of
clllzen !hal we would all want lo
help us," pollee Sgt. J.C . Mosler
said. "He was certainly trying to
do the right thing and he was
killed because of II."
Willingham, 30, was shot dead
May 17 .after he and his wile
pulled over to help . a stranded
motorist and her daughter. An·
drew Davidson Jr., 29, and
.Vincent W. Robinson, 22, are
·charged wllh capital murder In
!he shooting.
Pollee said Willingham and his
wife were helping the stranded
couple when two men walked up
and asked II they needed any
help. Willingham had gotlen the
woman's car started and told
them he dldn 'l need any help and
thanked !hem, said homlcldeSgl .
Larry Webber.

FILM STlJI)ENT IIONORED- l&gt;&lt;•hra \\'lng,•r
IUld Timothy llullon pose with Antonio Zarro.
center, alkr they presented him wllh tlw
Dramullc 1\ chirwment Award for his film "Bird
In t\ Cu~tc. " ul tht• 14th annual Student Film

Awards of the Academy of Motion Picture t\rls
and S&lt;:Ient·cs Sunday in Los Angel.,.. Zarro Is a
student at CBN Univ ersity and dlrt•clcd the film.
(UPil

Boy awarded $275,000 in suit
•
CLEVELA ND tUP IJ - An problems
could ha 1•e been
arbitration panel has awared caused by an intern who admlnis·
$275,000 loan Olmsh'&lt;l Towns hip lered an Jmproper comblnallo n
boy who suffered cnrrltar dtTest of drugs. ·
and blindness, a llegedly because
The Incident occurred four
of the actions of a Cleveland years ago when George "'aS In
Clinic Intern.
the clinic for dialysis treatment.
A Cuyahoga Cou nty Commo n
The clinic. which declined
Pleas Court panel. In a del'ls lon comment , can ask thallheaward
released last week, ordered the be overturned and the cas!' heard
award to Ralph George. 12. by a jury.
stating that George's medi ca l

I

group calling Itself The Commll·
tee for a Hot Reception .
After the greetings, Reagan
drove off In a bulletproof llmou·
sine, flown In ahead of time. In a
heavily guarded motorcade to
the northern suburb of Upplands
Vasby, where she planned to
Inspect an ambitious effort by
municipal authorllles, parents
and voluntary groups to check
drug abuse.
Helleoplers fl ew overhead for
the lCJ.mlle trip, Reagan's firs!
trip to the neutral Scandinavian
country.
"We are honored that she
wants to take part of whal we
have achieved here," Slgurdsen
told reporters "Anti-drug cam·
paigns diller from country to
country and we must learn from
each other."
Reagan, whose special project
Is fighting youth drug and alcohol
abuse, was to spend mosl of her
two days In Stockholm examln·
lng Sweden's successful cam·
palgn against the use or Illicit
drugs.

'
population
and the razing of
forests for farmland, pasture and
roads, according to the report.
Wolf credited some govern·
ment agencies with recognizing
the evolutionary consequences of
converting wildlands. F.or exam·
pte, he said, the World Bank has
adopted a policy seeking to
preserve natural areas In tropl·
cal nations.
"The policy directs bank offl·
clals to refuse to finance projects
that would require converting
.biologically unique natural areas
- a tendency for which the bank
has been widely crlllclzed by
environmental groups," the report said.
World Bank President Barber
Conable, In announcing the crea·
tlon of an environment depart·
men! to monitor bank projects,
said last month, "Sustained
development depends on manag·
lng resources, not exhausting
them."
Wolf also noted a decision by
Congress to earmark $2.5 million
appropriated for the Agency for
International Development to
support conserv;uton projects.
In a statement released with
Wolfs report, hol!'ever, World·
watch said: "This Is an Increase,
but far less than the U.S.
government pays to maintain
troops In Honduras, one of the
countries where deforestation
and specles loss are proceeding
fastest."
Wolf reporled at least 38
countries are now working on
national conservation strategies
to help protect plant and animal
species.
He concluded: "Although the
consequences of human activity
loom large, the tools wllh which
to exercise evolutionary respon·
slblllly are more numerous and
more powerful than ever."

IN MY HOME-DAILY 01 WEEKLY

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Lots Of Fun! Lot• Of Lo•ell

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

TREE HOUSE • SAND BOX • SWIMMING
GIANT SWING SET • WATER SLIDE
CHILDREN 'S MOVIES • CRAFTS • STORY TIME
NUTRIOUS MEAlS-! SUPEIYISIIG ADUlTS
IS han bp. - Vtry l•nn••l ..,..

PHONE 992-7532

•

GENBA~ ALLf~IST
"WE HArE URI ~ /D$

11

CAll (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244
..

-

3t2t

18 Wanted to Do

General Contractors
RACINE, OHIO

June 16. 1987

The Board of Education
reserves the right to accept
or reJe ct any end all bids
Jane Fry, Treasurer
Meigs Local School Oistr~ct
621 S. Third Avenue

'

949-2748 .

Employmenl
Services

5-18.'87-lln

11

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting SeJVices

Public Notice

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601

GET PAID for roadmg bookal
$ 100 00 per tlllo Write ACE·
33, 2 Pima, Naperville, ll
60640

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

TRAIN WITH PAY Learn to
rep&amp;u ·meuH&amp;In &amp;lrcratt peril
and equipment Siulls taught
mclude welding and r1vo1lng
Applicants mu't be 1 8 26 ve er
old high tchoo l graduates To
ap pl y for our ll'o'I&amp;Wm opemng
coli tho Penonn~tl Office toll tree
m Ohio, 1 · 800· 282 · 1384 , M on·
Thurs 9am· 2pm

8·13 tin

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

ICUI OUI FOR FUTURE USil

KEN'S

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of oil Typos
Worked in home area

•Dryers •Freezers

SERVICE

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
llenching of Any Type
Backhoe Servtce

&amp;
16 B North le&lt;oncl
Middloport, Ohio 45760

REGISlEIED NURSES
ICU FUll niH
Nurse with
experience in
ICU /CCU preferred.

Plumbmg Serv1ce

Custom Welding
Lowboy Hauhn&amp;
Septic Systems

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Concrete Culverts

We Carry F11h1ng Supplies

licensed &amp; Bonded

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

bcellent benefits, pen ·
sion plan, long term dilailility, hospitalization.
11lary commensurete
with experience. Equal

-

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING SERVICE

1BUSINESS PHONE

Rl. 4, Hysell Run Road
Pome~o'l . Ohio 45769
PH (61 I 992· 2834 01
992·6704- F!ee Esl!males
5·13·2 mo

t6141 992· 6550

RESIDENCE PMONE
1614) 992-7754
•

l/2R III n

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

6·2·87·1 mo

TERESA COlliNS, RN
614-992-2104

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Real Estate General

992-3410

YniiAN! IIUIOIIAl HOSPnAl
115 last llomMiol Dri,.

·-oy,Ohio

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

601

lO·B·tfc

E. Mllun

POMEROY,O .

NEW LISTING - RACINE
- AppJO&lt; 3\? acres olland
w•lh 3-4 bedrooms. bath.
Iron! porch wrlh deck
overhead Also small mobtle
home lor renlal tncome!
ASKING $24.000.
POMEROY - Ahome lor ll
cook t If you spend a lol of
I• me tn !he kitchen lh1s one
ts lor you Beaultful modern
krlchen co mpl tmenls lhrs 3
bedroom home wtlh a deck
101 outstde ealtng. conve·
ntenlly loc aled !01 access lo
you1 gour met 's ktlc~en
Basemen! and lois ol closet
space $44 900
NEW LISTING - TUPPERS
PLAINS - Ranch type
house on SR 681 Needs
some tepa11s AS IS. Up to 4
bedrooms. 1•; bat hs, on a
ntce I00'' 100' lot Wan I
$50,000 w1lh frnancing.
$45.000 CASH PRICE Ia
seller

I.I

MIDDlEPORT - Ntcely
remodeled I11 stmy home
on a QUiet streel rn lawn
Fenced ya~d , cute front
potch Many other lea!Uies.
MUST B£ SEEN' $21 .900
Honry E. Cloland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell .... 949·2660
Dollie Turnor .... 992·5692
Ollico . ........... 992·2259

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Roger Hysell
Garage

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACE
MENT
•REMODELING &amp;
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Oh1o

CHESTER, OHIO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trantmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 997-7121

Phone Day or Evenings

985-4141

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

SERVICE
- Addons and ramodehng
- Roofm g end guu er work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electri cal
work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

WEllMAN'S PAINliNG
&amp; SANOIWIING CO.
COMMERCIAL
I'll tome to rou.
Po1tablo Sao~blastlog
MASONRY
RESTORATION . SWIM
POOLS. STEEL, LAWN
FURNITURE. BARNS.
FARMING EQUIPMENT.
HOUSES , ETC
WOU GUAUNUEDIJIU lUIMAftS

CALl 614 -446-3021

5·19·1 mo

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP
A COIIIIIITIII'ltSI
HANO &amp; CIA SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS · SNIPS
PLANER BLADES
ROUTER BITS
CLIPPER BLADES
KITCHEN KNIVES
PRUNERS · BAND
SAWS - CHAIN SAW
CHAINS

31178 0'* Hill ld.
long lott-, DH. 4 57 U
915·4182 ., 667-6954

511171mo

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Custom Painting ,
Service, Rustoratian
&amp; Collision Service
Wash &amp; Detail
Servke
550 PAGE ST.

x RT.

50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

U.

Authomed John D..re,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm £quipmtnl
Dtaler'

Farm Equlpme111
Partt &amp; Service

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PH. 992-3537

5· 19.'87·1 mo.

1·3·'86 tfc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSULATION

VINYL &amp;

AlUMINUM SIDING

BISSELL

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm W1ndows
•Repla cement Windows
•New Rooftng

SIDING CO.
New Ho- Built
.. Free E1tim1tea"

" FREE EIT!Mll£1"

PH. 41441·2160
or 4149·2101

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

llo S.ndtty Calh

6·2-11-lmo.

l·ll ·tfn

Riverine Antiques
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy

HOURS, rut.·Wtd..frl.
11 o.m. 10 7 p.m.
Sundoy· 1 p.m.7 p.m.

lr (hcm(e

or Appointment

RUSS MOORE

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

REAIONUL£ • RIIIAIL£·
8·20·'86 tfn

5·21·87·1 mo

RT. I. BOX 278
32933 ROMINE ROAD
RUTLAND
742·2070

25 YEARS EXP.
REWINDS ALL TYPES

OF MOTORS

Due to illness no tre1pa11lng on
Clarence and Carol Trlplettl
property, 31086 Ro11 Rd ..
Portland, Olllo
Friendly Home P11nies Oet
150.00 frae w111l 1150 00
party, plu1 booklnljl glh1. Call
Angela Marcln co 61 4 · 992·

VETERANS Earn ,DintB money
In the Army Nalional Out~rd ,
30•· 876 · 3960 or 1· 800· 642 •
3619 •

8&amp;!4.

R1du ce ufe and fe1t whll
GoBen hbletl and E· Vap " we·
Hlr pills" Fruth Phermacv

MAS'TER ! VISA1 Re'gardiHs of
credit hlllory. Also, new credit
ctrd. No one flh11edl For mfo
e.ll 1-316· 733·6062 Elll M ·

573

L&amp;N CLEANING
CARPET

UPHOLSTERY PLUS
446 -11323 Day or Eve.
Any livin&amp; Room and
Hall - 134.95
Any 2 Rooms and Hall
144.95
Any Three Rooms and
Hall - '59.95
Any Five Rooms and
Hall - 194.95
~-U· l

1·14·110.

mo.

THOMAS
BODY SHOP
n. 4, POMIIOY
992-3989

ROOFING

NEW- IEPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ELECTII( &amp;
ECETYLENE
WELDING

949-2263
or 949·2161

4·22·11·1fn

,.

SMAll ENGINE

IE PAll

Authorized Service
&amp;Parts
Brlg111 &amp; Strotton
Tecumseh
. Weed Ee1er

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At JeaSOMI!It

homtlito
Jacobnn

VAUEY LUIIEI
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.
992-8811

~I HI

Giveaway

2 Puppieltoglvttewav 3 mont h1

Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4·16·16-lln

Will tulor childr en grades 1-6
Ca ll 614 -266 ·601 1.
CAn do light h tiUIIng nnd roofm g
ReaaOJHlbl o r&amp;1ftS Medo n
Snider 614 -949-2629.

Gr1,1e p1eno and or gan leuontt o
bag1nnen. advtmted stud en ta
nnd ndultB In my home Als o
teach conling nnd t run~posl ng
Call614 ·992 ·6403

Wonlod to do Beby sittlnl) or
hou se cluanmp Hn ve roferon ·
Call6 14· 742· 2404

Cll

lawn mower repnlr Will pick Up
and delivttr. Also lig ht hauhng
C11ll 614 ·742 ·2393 or 614·
742 ·309 1
Will baby sit 1n my home Gal IIIlO·
111 Fe~ry area starlmg July 1,
304·676· 6930 or 676 · 3346,

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO . recommends lhat you
do buainen with people you
know, and NOT tO lAnd mon(¥(
through lhe mn•l unlil ynu h8\l'e
lrweltJ g!flttd the offe1mg .
HOT NEW CONCEPTI
Open 11 t13 00 lldles AppArel
aloro 1elhng top brand name
clothing worth up to t 4 0 00 for
• 13 99 end leu We ello open
large 1ir.e , chlltJ1 t1 ns and offp! lc e l.die~ 11oro1. t19,975
In clude~ Inventory, fl:o~tu1et. In·
stor e trAining, auppllea tnd
mu ch more Call •nytilnq tor
brochure 1 · 904 - 786 ~4111 .

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

1 Y1 ttorv Cap e Cod bv R~tndal
Homftl. S omething new In M od·
ul•r Houting on display at
French Cl!y Mobile Homo•, In c
Golllpollo, OH. Ph. 614· 4469340
New 4BR , 2 bath, Clarlt 01.

t62.000. Newly remodled H1.
28 R, 122,000 in Addieon C11ll
···· 8888

WANTED lead 11nd Uleond gulur
player, alao keyboard pllt'/et ,
must hiWt own equipment, for
forming ractc band Will bt
pitying 80 '1 70 I end 80 '1
music. Phone after 6:00 pm,
1 ·304 ·176 ·6370 o r 1 ·614 ·

QQ..,.,tnmlfll Homu ft om 11. (u
repeirt De linq uent te~ propttrty.
Repou8aalonl C• ll a05 - 687~
6000 Ext. GH ·9808 lor cutrMI
repo list

MONEY for collftQfl Call the
Army Nat lonnl Guard fo r FREE
informat ion paclwt 1·800-&amp;42-

36 19

For ule by owner: 2 110ry h0u11
In Middleport overlooking parlt .
30 yr. guamteed 11 lnvte siding,
w-w ca rpet, 1 'h bAih, uniq ue
woodwork 614 992 ·6126

Fully hnnlt hed 2 bedroom hom•

m Rnclne wllh equlpp&amp;d kltcMn,
rtver view proporty, 11crou from

General Store. Eaay acceu to

Olllo Rlv$r bo11t htunch lno aMd
111ndy be•ch 116,000 . o 14·
949· 2168or614 ·949. 2268

I ~=========4=:::::::::::::::::::

old
2200Wormed end shols U6 · ~
4 KiHens. 7wkl. old. litter
ttllned &amp; nu,l lhltl' cet On Neigh·
borhood Ad . Ph 614· 446 ·

49!3

2 k•ttiiJill . Heir Angora. fem"•
Houst tfa in ed 614 ·992· 2073 .

Lltllt kiUenl , 6 weeh old,

304-&amp;76-6747.

6 Lost and Found
Loll: 2 dOgl, WlllowCree~ ~ret,
Pametoy . Female Do~ . red
collar end brown long hah male.
Rtwtfd 814·992 ·2 73,

150 rawerd for lo1t femele Toy
Da1hound Reddllh brown . lost

in Llngaville--Oe~~:ter area

au.

742 ·2086 .. 614· 742· 2&amp;44
FOUNO set t:tr keys, fou nd 1t

Cuey ' 1. claim at Atgluer. 200
Main St , Pt. Pit .

8

Public Sale
8o Auction

Aick Purson Aucllonear H
ctnltd In Ohio and We11 V~rg l
nit Retl E1t1tt, enliqut, hrm,
liquid trion ulu, 30•· 773 ·

5785 •• nJ-5430

9
Howard L Writesel

Houte c leaning 1 ,day a wcok
Regular basis. Galhp ohs aroa
Call 614 · 446·8869

Appli ca tions now being ac ·
cepted tor 1 part time e11enlng
shift position tor medical lab
tech . Can tact p1111onnel aHice
Plenent Vaiii!V Ho1p Valley
Drive, Pt P11 , WV Ph one
30 .. ·876· 4330

992·8286

leftover fr om rummage sale,
Leon Tawn Hall , pitlt up 8:00PM
on Sat , June&amp; , 304 -468 · 1896

992-2526

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR REPAIR

_ _____ ,,_

Something New Un der The Sun!
Reps needed for But.lnell Ac ·
coun\1 Pari Tim• t 1B.OOO Po·
tent lal Full Time 160.000 plu l
potential Work own hours·
Training provided Call 1-612·
938· 0019 M · F B.OOam ·
6·00pm (C S T )

~W,·'t.'l~

....... GallTpolrs·...
' &amp; Vicinity

Mantell &amp; box 1prlngs . good
cond 304 87&amp;-7834.

Electronic Organs
Mobile service
614-843-5248

6 1 4 · 3 79

BabyllltmgJn my home or yours
Ph 614·446- 16 30 11ny tim e

tor quellfied
epplltAntl, tell ERA, To wn tlnd
Country Relit Estate. 304 ·676·
6648

Herbel 1/hl Call 614-446· 313 1
or 4-U-2200.
_;,_;,.:_:_

4

Ph

2416

Scolt~rlhlp avt~llable

Free Kittens to a good home 2
while 2 black. 2 ~rtv ttrlp!IKI,
litUif trained e1 4·2!16- 1793.

4-15 '861c

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

511/ 11 11

Will care for elderly p~trson In my
llome. Will lurnlsll ret. 8 yuu
experience, 304 ·6713 · 2989

J.R.'s REPAIRS

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

HIR lNG ! Government job•· vour
Area t16 000 $68.000 . Phone
c11il refundable (602 )838 8885
ekt 1203.

3 Announcements

Pomeroy, Ohio

6· 17-tfc

5-6-'87·1 mo pd.

Wanted· Del! M&amp;neger , fiJII.PD
rlence In Dell Managoment
noceuary. Btmg resuma to
Veughena Ca1dioel In
Middlepor1

A11 noun ce111 ents

liSIDI111AL, IIDUSTIIll.

(ONTAtT

Ekce llenl wages tor spare time
auembly work; elermonits
cref11. Othere Info (6041 641
0091 Ext . 3026 . Op~tn 7 day 1

FREE ESTIMATES
R£S IOENTIAL t COMMERCIAl

air conditonma for mobile or

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772

Domonnrate the lergesl line In
party plan Freo kit Tovs-glfuhome deco, · PIUI brand new
Christmas line 011er BOO lterna
No deliver ing no collecting No
ex per ience. Call Friendly Home
Pertin 1 · 800·227· 161 0

fENCE COMPANY
Let Us Fem ~ou In

modular homes lnslolled on
pad and Jtadl to .cool. Plitt:
11199.00 plus Ill
0&lt;" HEIL2't. ton Heat Pump in·
stalled on you1 elect•ie furnace.
P1iee $16!19.00 plus Ill 5·21

way reseahng, ca rp enter work &amp;
root r ep111r , trl'te$ &amp; hedges.

HJ00-247· 4616

ACCENT

dllionin&amp;
All wo1k cu01anleed. Call.
(6141985·4222 IJeSidenco)
"Special. HEll packa&amp;e central

Jim's odd JObs , pflmtmg dl l\le·

Truck driven needod Male or
femal o. Call 614 992 2376 o•

5·12·87·2 mo pd

4 5•11(

Residential and small com·
merclal units. Installation of
duct work. humidifiers. fur·
nace, heat pumps and a1r con·

HUDNALL
PLUMBING HEATING

GOVERNMENT JOB S
$16.040 · S59.230 yr Now
Hirrn g Ct1ll 806·687 -6000 E:o~t
R· 9806 lot cu rrenl1edera l list

Ph. (614) 843-5425

HEATING &amp; COOLING

Help Wanted

614· 446 ·2346

EUGENE LONG
(Alb

•Ranges

•R efrigerators

and

Help wanted at th e Down Und er
Restaurant Im mediate openin g
lor an experloncftd Mixotogtst &amp;
Hoaten Call tor an 1ntarvi1:1w a.l

20 yean
" Free Estimates''

•Washers •Dishwashers

PARTS

Need b&amp;bysitter full umo Ph
61 4· 388 9862

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

985-3561
All M•ku

MINERSVILLE - Bea ultlol
home wtl h a beaul!lul vtew'
3 bedrooms, full basement,
I'? baths all qua lrly con·
s!Jucl1on, Front porch liie·
place Ca pe Cod destgn
$54.900.

M 81 M lewn Care &amp;. Wind ow
Cleamng Ca ll anv day aher 6

Dltpttrl &amp;nced

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Business Services

Help Wanted

EXCELLENT WAGES for spBte
t1me uaembly work; ulectron
ICI , crafts Others Inf o (6 04)
641 ·0091 EXT 2987 Open 7
D11y1 CAll NOW •

~

992·2259

J1m's odd JObs pein11ng drl\le·
WilY reseal ing carpenter workS.
roof rape11 tr eos &amp; hedges
e•perrenca d Call 614 -379 ·
2416

PM 614· 379-2571

Moddleport, Ohio 45760
16!1.8.15

NEW LISTING - Lon g
Bollom on lhe Rtvert Ftsh.
boa! 01!USIJela. and walch
TV on you1 own salelltle dtsh
•n lh 1s 2 bedrm ru slrc ca btn
Thrs coz y collage has lur·
niShed ktlchen, rural water
and 1S 1nsulaled Front deck
to vtew the Beaultlul Ohto
Large lol ~14 . 500

Schools
Instruction

Scuba dlll lf\\1 lessons on m ore
lnform11t1on contact Orwe Lo11e
JOV aher 6 00 PM , 304· 676

4 Bread and Bakery Pro·
ducts
5. Milk and Deny Products
6. Tires and Tubes
In order to be considered,
all sealed bids shall be received in the Treasurer's of.
fice, 621 S. Third Avenue.
Middleport, Ohio, on or be·
fore 12 00 o'clock noon on

employment opportun·
lty.

Help Wanted

15

3 Gasoline and Oil Products

11

11

Page 7

Cleaning end kitchen help
needed Apply m pers on at
Crow's Stoak House , Pomer oy

FREE ESTIMATES
1-1-17-1 mo.

'

Wanted To Buy

1. School Accident Insurance
2 Fleet Insurance

Pollee. taking special precau·
!Ions for Nancy Reagan's protec·
tlon, turned down a request by
the Swedish Communist Party's
youth league to protest American
policies near !he route she would
!ravel.
, __ _
Commulers In the Stockholm
subway have noticed small
stickers with a burning Amerl·
can flag and the warning:
"Nancy, we'rl' waiting for you. A
flghllng genera lion."
On May 2!l about 30 youths
altacked a U.S. Embassy sentry.
smashing windows with rocks
and sticks and palnllng anll·
American slogans on walls.
Calling themselves "Kom·
mando Coca·Cola," the d!'mon
strators claimed Sweden cor
doned "U . S. Imperialist
capitalist and fascist policy" by
receiving lhP !Irs! lady .
Up to 300 Swedish policemen
and an undisclosed number of
American bodyguards were detailed to. shield Reagan during
her visit. the firs t by an Amerl
can president' s wife to Sweden.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

9

lolloj'ing:

The lwo women and the girl
were standing near the front of
the car and they all heard a loud
bang and thought the car had
backfired, but knew something
was wrong when the men start·
lng grabbing purses. The sus·
peels took the purses and Wll·
lingham's wallet and drove away
In the victim's Iruck.
Willingham's heart, lungs,
liver and kidneys were lrans· .
planted Into five patients. all In :
good condition at a Houston .
ho~pltal.
·
Sgt. Larry Webber said Wll·
llngham had served prison time
for burglary and was driving a ·
stolen truck when he stopped to
help the woman. But he said
pollee have no reason to believe
Willingham s,tole Ihe truck or
knew It was stolen .
Wendy Willingham said her
husband found the vehicle near a
!rash dump with the keys Inside
and no license plate. It was there
several days later, and Wll·
llngham, assuming It was a ban·
doned, took It, she said.
"I know my husband wasn't a ·
saint, but he was a good man,"
she said. " He was straightening
himself out. I was helping him.
He was doing good."

CHILD CARE PROVIDED

The Daily Sentinel

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of the Meigs
loca l School 0Jstrtct desires
to receive sealed b1ds for tha

Swedes tighten security around Reagan
By ROLF SODERLIND
STOCKHOLM, Sweden iUPI)
- F'irsl lady Nancy Reagan. who
pla ns 10 examine Sweden's sue·
ccssful campaign against drug
use. arrived today amid light
securily aimed a! prolecllng her
from anli·Amerlcan protests.
Na ncy Reaga n arrived al
Stockholm's Arlanda Interna·
Ilona I Alt·porl at 1 p.m. on an Air
F'orce plane from Venice, I!aly.
where President Reagan re·
mained for the Venice economic
summit. She was met by Social
Welfare Minister Gertrud Sl·
gurdsen and U S. Ambassador
Gregory Newell.
Some 50 parents and .students
of the American School In Stock·
holm waved Swedish and Amerl·
ca n !lags and ban ners saying:
" Welcome to Sweden. Nancy ."
Reagan also received a bouquet
or fl owers from student Amanda
Drlfmeyer, 10
No protes ters were seen at the
alr porl but an anti-American
rally was planned for 5 p.m. on a
downtown Stockholm square by a

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Public Notice

Police say Samaritan
had a checkered past

of d Pldy 01 Mu sical
Th1• 41st an nual a11 at d crrem·
onv . !-; j)onso rrcl by 1hP A mC'rlcan

C !rl. " " L(1 S M 1srrdhlf's ." "S!;1 1
li~ht

The exllnclion threat Is
couched In a growing world

thought of not hin g elsr for t he
'"·" :mda ys "
,\Jih uJ Miller's pia). "fill My
So ns ... was namrd Rest Rrvtv al

for

By ELMER W. LAMMI
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
end of the century could wllness
an end to many forms of plant
and animal life because of man's
destruction of forests and wetlands, the Worldwatch Institute
reports.
"WIIhout Innovative efforts lo
preserve natural ecosystems
that remain - and to restore
those that are degraded - the
Earth will experience the fargest
loss of plant and animal species
since the disappearance of the
dinosaurs 65 milllon )'ears ago,"
warned Edward Wolf, who wrote
the report released during the
wrekend.
Wolf, a senior researcher for
the Washington research organl·
za!lon. said as much as one· fifth
of the world's estimated 5 million
species could be lost In the next 20
to 30 }·ears - a loss of several
hundred a day.
In "On the Brink of Extinction:
Conserving the Dlverslly or
Life," Wolf noted most of the
species In danger are from
poorly explored tropical forests
and many have not even been
named, much less studied, so
"their potential value to society
remains an unanswered
question."
Two-thirds of the bird and
plant species In Latin America
could be doomed If present
trends continue, Wolf said. The
species likely to survive "tend to
be ecological opportunists. They
reproduce quickly . eat lndls·
crlmlnately and tolerate a wide
range of condlllons -character·
ls!lcs we associate wl!h pests"
such as sparrows, starlings, rats,
cockroaches and weedy plants,
he said.

Monday, June 8. 1987

Wanted To Buy

We PlY' cnh for lite model clean
uNd cart .
Jim Mink Chtv ~ Oids In c.
811 O•n• Johnl()n

814-448-3672

TOP CASH peld tOt '83 mod ..
tnd
used cart Smhh
luldr.·Pontlac. 1911 Eastttn
Ave .. Gallipolia. C1ll 614· 441·

n...,.,

2282
Old Cltwfoot 8t1h Tub In goad
cond. to be uud ~ 1 hom• Ctll

114·44t·3318 .
TobiCCO pl.-ta Ph. 814· 245•
6812.

Vatd Sale Jun t 8, 9 , 10. 1 am 10
7prn, 1136 Second A\le , Gall/.
poll•. ltttma otfer~td . Antlqun
collectable•. bultermold , picture
frames . cene rocker. blanket
boa , M cCoy p o turv 3
c roc lit(br ., grn,t, iron ~ ton e .
woadchurn. work tebft, 5 oil
IMnpl, wal COtn~ lhelf, WI!.
table, oMt labia (rough), dish",
Slone chum, pr doll bed•,
tolhtCtlon of 11tlentln", hand
urved lhftlf, tar lv mepl t cor d
bed (oonllerted- nted• ri lls).
books !one by 0 0 . Mc intyre), 2
bowll, 2 pit chl!fa (demar;red).
mlfrora, magulntllids, medrclnn
c•blnet, shuttet, graniteware,
pep.r ltema, olk boolt stand, Y,
cirde hell table. gluswart, 78
records. porceltln, Ice bo•lgood
1h1p1), an De co(193'•1 True
ton a lldlo(pleyt), pr. m~g f lnl1h
'It circ le boo~ c ues. maple
bachelor~ cllt~t with do1k. 3
c lockt fklt chtH'I, chirne. wJ inutl.
An Ol eO rd , wall lheff. ut 6
placa ellverplate, and mat~y mort
old hems. Household Goads·
dilhH, pllltl , W•kford crystal,
pau -pan1 . bulitta , prln•s,
frem ... p ic ni c bllket 200 plus
paper·h•dback Donlts, ubi ...
jew.,lry , 1lb um1 8r 45 -• . Xmas
stand it•m•. window fr amftl. 4
Ilium. shutten, llltchen lttms
TV tray Itt. tumblftflstemware
milllg1all. 1!1verware. Tuppet·
ware, 2 B&amp;W portable TV lifts
clothing ..... .,. wall pl.caue1,
mirror•. pr. bookceset. oval
co ffee nbla . 2 k e roune
hnt•••l18.000-9.600}. Whirl
pool weshlf/h Ia), brre·e· brac
whet·nott, gadgtii·QIImos, and
lou of oddl snd ends. Mise
Gerden tl11ar(II· I•J . dlsplav
ttands. 5 horae go· Cift f• Is).
88rS 8o1Ung motor ptrts, ledder
trough), aoma nlill·lle l.mp
p1r11 It t , Vehid ~ 19153 Ford
ptdl·up , 351 ·V8. Yr ton , lttp·
1;de Wed. ell remein ing •tems
reduced to half prlct': Not
tNponsible for accldtntt, til
MIN final , no refuttdt, all h1rn1
told •• Ia, TtJma. C81h. Fr..
coffH &amp; c:ookl11 t iff 1 Dam for all
you e•lv bird1 Come 1nd bring
a h lend We ' ll btloolting lor you ·

4 Femlly , Mon &amp; Tu11. Juno ft &amp;
9, J mil es oul Bidw11 tl Rodnev
Rd . lit hou se on Ftlrvnrw Rd
Antt(lun. d l1hes. hl'llket1 ,
c:h11 ln , l odt.liltf to adult clnthlng
Bryant Pa inter

Early Am•lcArl touch &amp; c hah ,
K9dflk Ca rousttl alldR pr r,j !101Qr &amp;
Pionft~r . radm &amp; reco r ~
flll'lyer , lllrgt IPeftkfi:ll , CfiUUttrl
retordnf Ctot Ma, di1h111 June
12· 13 . Old Routll7. Cheshire

ICt een,

614 · 367·0672.

.. · · Pomi:;o·v.. ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
3 htrnrly C!lrport 11le Mnn And
Tuet J une 8 lind 9 487 S 4th ,
St Mlddlepodrt, Ohio
Men woman (litlll c:tuth 111
l'i&lt;&gt;t.u e hold , m•ar. uom M One
mrle tr om l ang .t v lll~;~, Ohin C Rrl
10 De-lrtr Ad J une 6 ·9. 10 0 07 ;00p m . Pho ne 614 · 742 ·

2&amp;ee

631 S 2nd Ava, Middlf! pott
Wild llnil lhur r or th e IIJHm
1h1111 lots of yArd gt'IOdl Mlar..
1 O . OO~t m 5 OOp m

PtPieiisailt ·
&amp; Vicinity
Oerage sal11 'I• ml out Sa nd Hill
Rd atrou from Nur 1lng Hom e,
Saturday , 9 to 4
9 00 June 8 end 9 , Mon and
luee, 19 3 · 19 1 Perk Or iva,
C1ntel ll rtin
YltdleleJune12&amp;13, 9 ? 4th
&amp; George St. New Ha11 en Men,
womAnJ , boys, glrl1 clo thing,
thon all slzee. l.ee Je•na , milk
can tor dtcoration.
3 family vard u le. Wtdnt~day &amp;
Thur~day, 2306 Lincoln A11 1

�Page- S- The Daily Sentinel'--r'Ai=r"'AnA'V:----r.~~Po~me~ro~y~!llliidd?fle;,por;;t;,O;h~io::;::::;;::::T.;:;.:;;;:;;-;;-;:-:;:;;,;:;;;----...;M~·on~da~y,~J~u~ne~·~8~,1~9:::8~7
lAFF·A·DAY
51 Household Goods 55 Building Supplies
KIT 'N' CAALYLI ®br urrr Wrltflt
75
Boats and
31 Homes for Sale

Monday,

June 8,

1987

Pomefoy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio
' " "' •·• - · • •

The, Daily

r

BORN LOSER

Motors for Sale
LAVNE'S FURNITURE
Forecl01ure Homn. From* 1.00

Sof11 end chairt priced from
8395 to 8996 . Tables $fi0 and
1~ up to 11215. Hide-l·bad• 8-390
to t696. Recliners , 8226 to
1375. ltmt)s 8-28 to •126.
Dinettel 8109 and up to 849fi.
Wood table w-6 chlifl U86 to
8785. Desk S100 up to 8375.
HutChes 1400 and up. Bunk
beda complete w-mMtr.. ..,
1296 end up to $396 , Baby bed1
f110. Matt"re.. es Orboxilprtftvt
full or twin t63. firm 873, end
183. Queen sets 1226, King
$350 . 4 dr11wer chnt169. Gun
cebine1s 6. 12 gun. Gu Dr
electric range $376 . Baby mat·
treue• $35 ~ t45 . Bed b ema
120, $30 &amp; King frame 850.
Good ~election of 'bedroom
auites, metAl cabinets, head·
boarda $30 and up to 865.

on up en(t lot:&amp;l tax d81inqueft1

propenle1 . Call 1 -800-22·3·
7135 . Al•o ore" evenlng1.
3 bedroom country home. 3
acrn ot wooded privacy . Some
furnlahing• lnt:luded. 125,000.
Priced to ull thi1 summ8f , Call
614 -949· 3039
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, .1.1 acre
lot , aluminum siding snd win ·

dow a, furnac e plu1 woodburnet' .

Ca11614 ·992·7285 .
2 bedroom home Camp Conlev.

304-676-2829.
3 bedroom homl!l2110 N , Main
St Make an ofl8f , will conaidvr
trade in of house 'reiler. 304·
458 -1876

90 Dav• same 11 cash with
epproved credit. 3 MilliS out
Bulaville Ad. Open 9am H.. 6pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 614-446 0322 .

5 acreli, Mi l , 4 bedroom brick, 3
full buement, 30~32
llttached garag e. Gunville Road .
$96,000.00. Will contider trade
'" of other propeny, 304-4581976
hR ih s.

N1ce 3 br, 2 bath, 5 aC ret land
wi ll coru ider tall a mobile home
tiS trt~da - in
304-675-3030 or
576-3431 .
Arbuek le · Very niee 3 br, family.
dini ng. living, utility, 1 '11 bath.
$36.000. 304-686-91 48.
ApproJC 1'h acntl ground. sma ll
houstt, need1 repairt, cella r,
smolle hou1e. elty water about
rf!ady for hook up. All rOild
fron tag e, Ji m Hill Road, Hender·
son, W Ve !120.000 00 will sell'
as is, 304-675-4182 .
FO ~ECLOSURE

HOMES from
00 on up and local 11111
dnliquenl propertiee Call 1 ·
80 0 -433 · 521 9 a lto open
tlVe ning s
51

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT 36.
PHONE 614-446-7274 .
NE W AND

Furnis hod 2BR , Shultz Mobile
Home T11ke over paymenu,
balance $6, 000 . Call Evening•
614 -446·4489
1974 Grandville 141170. 3 BR .. 1
8r \o't Baths. Total e i ~Jehic , new
c11 rp~tt . E•tra nice 58960.00 Ph.
614 -446-0HS .
Schult 14x70, JB A.. 1'1i baths,
CA, e•callent candltl(ln. On
rented tot In Gallipolis. lmmodilltu poue11lon . French City
Orolc.er&amp;gll. Call6 14-446-9340.
1973 Freedon , 28R , total eltK:t·
flf; PM. 614· 38 8-9724
1973 Altona 12.1166 . porch.
underpinnin g, ut fr lgerator &amp;
t tove. gill heat E\lery thing
includ ed Mutt sell Ph 61 4379 ·2898
141170 Ptlrk Estetos . 2 bedroo ms, 1y, b11ths, furnished , 2
e11 pandoa. porch, thad, cent ral
11h end heot. underpenning, all
oluctr lc. price reduced 11 steal et
516.000.00 . 304 -876-6704.
1986 ColumbiA 141180, 1ee 11
Kan&amp;uge Mobile Home Sales.
Kiln Rug&amp;. Ohio . or call Peoples
Bank, 304 -676-1 11 21 , flne nc·
ing I'IVaila ble
'986 Clayton Winne r Ill ,
S 1, 600 down and assume loan
304-675 -6224 .
E.11c . cond. 14A70 Pacer, 3 br,
1 'h buth•. stove-retrig , de ch ·
undor p inning , patio doon ,
, 2. 000. 304 -578 -2629.
12 •65 Pnrk Vill111. 2 br, 1 bath.
:nove &amp; rufr iu .. •mall por ch, bay
window
86 ,800. 304-676·
2629

3 rn 1ltts f10m E..,nn• on Donohow
Ad
, 2• 70 trftiler 68' nn.
14 ' •15 " br 14 ' •20' liv ing room.
ros t porc h 1 0 ncres land wall
ltlnced. springs , btun &amp; outbuild ·
H1{J5
126.000 ~ ev . · Armor
Sayre. 304 -372 4048 .
Vlcto11A11 Homo. immeculale
C(HHI. 14• '/0 . I WO bttd rooms.
cenna l Kl r, firupltu:e, gard6n h!b,
oil etocttlc, 304-675 -1317.
1970 Liberty 121160, priced
r•ght , efordable st11rt er or rent11l
treil.,- 304 -87&amp;-3763.

33

Farms for Sola

8 ne rc! on Tribble Rd. t~ff Rt . 62

CA ~PE T

On a lot on Rt 2 near Goodyear
Plant. 1onad tor hou ae only .
810.000 firm. Also 10011 100
trailer or nousa si teson farm lan a
U ,OOO firm . 304-578-2026 .

Rentals
41

Ni cely turnish&amp;d small hou•a.
Adults only . Re fer ences re·
quired. Olf .street parking. Ph.
614-446-0338 .

3 BR . houae for rent. No secu rity
deposit required . c.n 446 ·
5426 .

1 bedroom apt . in Pomeroy.
TotAl electric. Rent SHiO. per
month. plus dapotit . 614-9926215 .

28A , home 20 miles from
Galtipo1s . Patriot Oh .
.,26 .6268.
Nice house 6 rooms and bath.
FuU basement and firepl11ce in
Pomeroy . Ph one 814 -992 31 87 .
Smell. nice 2 bedroom ca rport .
Rt. 248. Call614-985·4244.
HOUSE FOR RENT in Cheu er.
Comp let ely remodeled. Four
bedroom, carpeted. Now,panel·
ling. Av• il11bla Jun e 16. Deposit
and referencn required. Call
1 -861 ·4886 altet 9 :00 p.m.
House for rent Hanford. nice.
118"1 clean, clo•e to school,
1200.00 per month, phone
304-8 82 -2016 .

6 PM

70 Acre Form in P~tt r;o t . Cell
614 · 379 26 4 ~ after 3
53 Ac re FA rrn with 8 roo m
houn, lg. shop. bam. Midi&amp;
uo·. Call 8 14 -256 -1618 No
SundiiY Cttl ll
20 11cre IArm Hnnna"' Traeft
Roact. Glenw ood. W Va. fm
n1oro l nform~ttion call 304 · 773·
511 8 or 77J-5186att er 6:00
110 ftCtes , leon Baden Rd.,
Houle &amp; o~•tbwh:llng Stream
tMI Ough propttrty 304 -458 1086

34

Business
Buildings

build ing• for lease.
Downtown Pt Ple11s anl . Stores,
offi ces. A·Ona Real Estate.
Carol Yel\(ler. Broket . Co~~ II 304676· 6104 .
Commercl~tl

747 lnddustriiiiiS10rAQe 12 IOOI
over he&amp;d door . 3 phaut• of
olecnlc. 1b 48 steel building
614 · 44 6 · 2362 F o r
appol ntmant

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

For ule lot, 120 ~t180 . BfUlm
Addition Chattier Town•hip. All
ulilithtl J11Ailablo. Ca11814-469·
9630 .
41ots appro•. 2 aeras each. H11rd
road, wt'ller. el&amp;etrlcestlblishod.
Coii614 -992· B883.
SO ecrea, hH ga•. e•callent
building sites . Call 614-992·
8883.
Land for Sale. 7S acr&amp;s Crab
Creak Road, 304-676·4324.

APARTMENTS. mobil a homes,
houtes. Pt. Pleaunt and Gallipolis. 614· 446-8221 .
1 bedroom ground floor. private
ent rance. recently remodeled.
E11eryttling furn., toe. outtkirts
Henderson. 8280. month. 304675-6730.

2 or 3 br tlomft 304 -876 -3030
or 675 · 3431 .
3 bedroom house 2206 North
Main St.. Pt. Pit ., 304· 4681728.

42

2BR , AC , cable, Mud accepted.
Riverview in Kll nl'luga. Fotteu
Mob il e Home P~rk. Ph. 614 ·
446-1602.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home in
Crown City. Ph. &amp;U -266-6&amp;20
141170, 3 blldroom. l 'h bath,
ce ntral air, total electric. In
Middleport. Call 614 ·992· 2367
before 9:30 am . or &amp;he:r 6:00
pm. Anytime week-ends.
2 hAdr oo m mobil e home ,
81&amp;0 .00 per month. 30• · 676 1 371 or 676· 3812 .
Two 2 badroom mobile homes.
furnishvd, yard with chain link
fence. S75.00 depos it, phone
304-676-6612 • Iter 6:00pm.
2 br trailer, partlelly furnished,
nlc~t 10 1. Gall ipolls Ferry . 304·
676-7942.
2 br trailer, f11nced In yard, turn .,
garage. worklhop. we•hhouse.
2 dusk lo dawn lights. Plymale
Rd. Ge lt. Ferry. 304 ·675-4044.
i260. plu• dl'!posil .

44

1 Bedroom b~tslc rent t176.00
plus electric. Also requirtd a
1200.00 uctuit~ depo• it. CONTACT: Jackton Estates Dept. Ph
446 · 3997 Equal Housi ng
Opportunl tv .
Furni•hed &amp; un furni•hed apts ..
1160.00 and up , referen ces Ph
304 · 675-7738 or 304 -675·
5104 A· 1 ~aal Es tate
FurnishAd Apt 1226. Ut llitiM
Pd ., 18R 607 Second Ave .,
Gallipoli•. Ph. 446· 441 6 alter
7PM
Furnished Eltic;iencv S1 •e Utili·
paid, share ba th. 607
Second Ava.. G•llipolls Ph.
448-4416 ah er 7P M.
tin

Maple bunk beds with attached
detk - new mattressn, 1975
Gran Torino Ford. 2 dr. Call
614--446-1822.

45

"Single, dlll{lrced, lonelyl Dis·
creet introductions in your are11
by telephone. Call: l6 151 2926900 E11t. C247.

Furnished Rooms

for rent, d.,. week.
month. Ga llia Motel. C11ll 614 ·
446-9715 . Rent aslow•s t120
month.
~ooma

Space for Rent

Office Sp1ce for Rent. Excellent
tor Anorneyt, Accountant, etc.
Close to Court Houae. Call
Wiuman Real Es1ete Agency .
61 4-446-3644.
CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33. North ot Pomeroy .
Rental tr11ileu . Call &amp;1•· 9927479.
Space for 1mall trallert. An
hook· up a. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms , air an d cable. Mason,
W.Vtt. Call 304· 773-6651 .
FAMILY PRIO£ MOBILE HOM E
PARK . Rt. 2 lOuth, Ge!Upolis
Forry, WV. Now ren1lnglots for
S-66.00 per m{lnth. Call 304 675· 3073 af1et 5 :00PM.
Trailer sp11ces tor rent GaiUpolis
Ferry , cit¥ Wlltttr and garbage
pick up, S-76 00 per month.
304-676-6335 Of &amp;76-32 46.
Pa1ture l11nd. 76 acres pasture,
304-675-3316 .

47 W an ted

to Rent

Merchonl11 sr
51

Household Goods

Green freen1 18 cu. h .. u.cellt~nl cond .. self c1...wno JOln.
wide WeatlnghouM Ranee. v..-y
good cond. PH . 614-441-4881.

"b

Dining room 11'1·
new , h•.wy
Beachwood, olk finish, t•We. e
chairs . 8376 firm. Call 614446-9229.
G E wuher &amp; dry..-. Vert QQOd

condldon. HantH1 OOkl· U&amp;O
Coll 614-446· 7t04.

Dining table. 6 ehMs 1nd hutch,
Very nice, 1800. Andque4door
ftel well cu pbowd, e360. l•k:twin Pio no , 1700. C611814-982·

Upstein unturn ishtd tpartment.
Utilltlel ptld. Ctrpeted. no children tw peu. Call &amp;14 -441· 1637

6082Loveseat &amp; sofa. Broyhill ttWi·
tion1l. cal ~r~ . . . . wry nice.
After 5 :00 cl41304·112-2189.

Furnished Apts. Next to Rio
Grinde CoHege. Ph. 514-4468983 .
Delu xe 3 room unfuml•h• Apt.
New kitdten, Clfpe1 H~tu out,
1tt. floor, off ~tr..C plfking. Ph.
614·448· 4804 01' U8 ·2802 .
Modern 1 BR apt. C•lll14· 441·
0390.
Furnished 1pt. n•t door to
Librtry. One PfOf.,ionel Adutt
only. Perking. Ph. 441·0338.

Iron Fireman auto coal stokOf
and controls 8150. Cuuin1 Fern
furnace go11s whh stoker t50.
660 gal. watet" tenk t60. 614·
992-7580.
Family size M.aytag wash er and
dryer. Both for $196 . 614-9923324.
Tonv'• Gun Repaiu, hot reblueing. Open 9:00AM lo 7r00 PM .
Cell 304·676-4631 .
Surplu• dunim, rental. army,
Carh art clothing. Sam Somorvill a' s Eut AIIVf'lniWOOd. Fri.
Sat. Sun. 12:00 till 8:00PM .
304-273-5665 .
U111ity trailer new lightm ready for
the road 1360.00 . ButchMing
equipment , band taw , meat
grinder, tenderizer, cutting ta ble. paper ho lder, must ull ell .
81,000.00. 304·882 -3793 .
Crosley ceiling tan, hugger type,
62" 4 blade, 3 1peed, brand new
$40 . 304-675-3243.
King size wat~;~rbed. 1 yr old,
S276.00. With bedspread, cur·
taln• . 2 sets ,ot sheets _and
mattress p11d. $321S.OO. f lee
1tove $100.00 . Frost freerafrig·
en tor. 2 vn old 5200.00. Table
and cnalr• 840.00. Phone 304·
676 -7436.
Exercise treadmill reg 5200.00.
witt sell 880.00. Porch swing
and lrtme $36 ,00. 304 ·6756536 after 6:00 pm.
Used 64 " link 100cc, 20 cu . ft .
treeur 1 160. Metal office desk
8100. 304 -675-2408 .

56

Building Supplies

Building Ma t11riels
Block, brick, tewer pipes, win·
dows, lintots. ate. Clttude Win·
ters, Rio Grande. 0 . C11ll 614·
246 -6121

Hi .'· V4 lC4x8 wood oak panoU"g
(8)
and 5.99ea.
10.96 . 1(AI
1.00grtde
off 26pc.
8.96ea.
up.
1 6.· 'hx4x8 Birch Paneling Reg.
24 .95 now t 6.96. 17.- Pinoond
c~dat wood wings coating
166141 . 11. pr. package $8 .96 and
S10.96 pk. 18.- 4x8 Glaze tile
bath panels (8 )4.99 tnd5.99ea.
19.· Perma [R) lnsutared sheet·
.
f Ol., one II"de [ •Vu 4 xB- 4 .99 )
mg
I" 4 B 6 99 1 4 B 6 99
,.x Thermol
K - · ply
I 1insulati11eshea·
· IC • ' ) .
20.·
thing foil 12l sides 4d 4.95
25pc. up 1 .00 off Pr. Pc.
21 .-lnsuuln.ad tempered glal8
peneia. '1t1132•76· 29 .96 ea.
JSpc; up 25.95 . 22 .· Pine inside
lovered ai:IJu•tablll shutten. til
sizes below whol esale con.
23.·K-lux bench mark -brick
corners 60 cent' boll . morto r 2
gel. 10.96 : 24.- Prefinished
bmce oak floori ng JA th ick 2 14
wide. 20tq . ft . ctn . S45.00 10
ctn. up. 39.96 ctn. 25 .-Prehung
interior doors prefinithed and
unfinished l'lll •ll&amp;s (8)29.96ea.
26.-Steel eJCterlor in•ulated preMung doora (81 69.95ea. 27 .Exterior steel door blanks (Bl
25 .00ea . 28 .-Pine louwered Bv·
fold doora sets 124-29.96) (3036 .95) {32-39 .96) {36·44 .961
(48-69 .90} . 29.- Double•idelite
entrance door sets with decorated gla•a and sl1eel pane4
doors. 360.00ea. 30.-Bronze
al uminum double comm&amp;rCilll
entrance door• seu 699 .95 or
sinQels 399 .96 with handelsand
locks. 31 .-Single or double
leaded glass steal insulated
doors sets. reg. 699.00 to
1800 . 00 now 349 . 96 to
896.00 . 32 .-Steel doors end
jamb. prehung 1 'IJ hr. fire reted.
1B9.95 . 33.- Prehung steel
insulated doors with VJ glus
insulated 1 29 .96ea. 34.· Prehung pine panel doors all silts
B9 .96ea. 36 .· Blank hollo w core
doort from 12 to 20 wide 80
long· 400ea. 36 .· Prefinl•hed
prehung oak legtu:y doou end
jamb all sizes 44 .96ea.
PENNS WAREHOUSE WELL·
STON . OHIO 614-384 -3646 .
Ready mix concrete 'and all
ccncretA 1upplies. Call Ul Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies,
3D4-n3 -5234 .

56

Oragonwvnd Cattery Kennel.
CFA HimalAyan, Persia n and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New kittens; Siamese
and Himalayan• Call 6 14· 446·
3844 after ?PM .
AKC Reg . Pekingeaa puppies,
AKC Reg. Dachshund. Also
adult Pekingese. Call 614 -4467920.

58
&amp;

w.h. .. *fan.
r•ng11. lklgee A"
Upp• Atv•R4 . - Cr_, Motel. 114-- - 7 -.

Fruit
V e getables

Strawberrios: Pick vou• own.
Br ing containers . Claude Win·
ters. Rio Grande, Ohio. Call
6U-245-6121 .
Taylors Berry Pelch closed for
the teiiSon. Set June 6 at noon.
QuAlity Fr uits and Vegetablus
ret&amp;il and whol esale. 8 . &amp; S.
Ptoduce acro u from Pin• Hut,
Gatlipolia, Ohio.
baakof Now Hoven. WV at Unton
Campground . We pk~ $1 .25.
Pick yot.~r own · run ol1he field
76c. Nico betr iM . 304 -8822237.

59

Supplies
&amp; Live stock

f ~rrn

61 Farm

Equipment

61 farm Equipment

66 MF Tr1ctor ~2460 . 7h. Flail
mowet 8200. Hty w•gon t300.
Poll hoe digger t276 . JO
hemmw mill 8125. Ph. 614286-6522 .

C1r1. Jeeps and Truclt• under
$300.- b~y direct! Local Gov' t
ail II. Siezed and repo vehicl".
Call nowl 1 ·51 B· 469· 3635 Ext.
J -13850 tor directory ~ 24 hr•.

Super 66 Oliver Tractor nice
with 3pt . hitch rake. Equipment
in good shape. All for •2696 . Ph.
614-286-8622 ..

1960 Ford Galaxy, 4 door, good
condhlon. One owner. John L.
Werner, 915 Perk St .. Middleport. 614-992-7866 .

AC Tractor with betty mower &amp;
plows. 2 row plan1er. J1795. &amp;ft.
buth hog •295 Ph. 814· 286·
6622 .

-------..

Ford 601 mowing m.ehlne 7'
cut. Good condhlon. A•klng
5496.00 James l. Oaviaon. Jr.

1980 Toyota Tercat. eJCC cond,
tow mileage. 304-n3-6800.

Ph. 814-448-4637.

'79 Olds Cutlets, girls 10 apeed
bicycle. see 1911 North Main
St .. Pt. Pit.

8N Ford Tr•ctor. some equip.
01 .800. Ph. 441·4375.
Ro11ry cuhiv1tor, plow. mower
for 1 Gravely tractor . Also u"d
pans for a GrBVely Tractor.

1976 Pontttie Firebird Formula,
factorv tibetglata hood. 350
engine, auto, tlumn wheels, ftir
cond. 0500.00. 304-875-2846.

John Deere Dieltl 3020. Front
weights, wide front . Excellent
condition. Call 614-742-2808 .

'74 Chevy Vega tinted window•.
alum. slottl(l wheelt. 304·875·
6136.

Buy one11ny •ize chain stw chain
.nd get second chtln half price.
SIDE~S EQUIPMENT CO ..
He nderso n, W. Ve. 304·676·
7421.

1986 Pontitc 1,000. 2· dr. ac.
ps, auto. em·fm. radto. 8,800
mil•. John D . Gerlach. 304676-6253 .

New Holland 7' heybine, Gehl
96 grinder-mixer. New Holland
717 forage harvester. Exc. cond.
304· 273· 4216.

72

Wanted to Buy

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotn. Rl11"'
City Farm Supply, 61•· 446·
2985.

For sale or trade 1876 4x4 Ford
Bronco, 302 auto, AM·FM,
1 8,549 miln on eng. Fair cond.
Cell aftet 6PM Ph. 614·2661819.

63

1987 Ford R~no• 4•4. AC. fuel
injection. 61-4·246· 5294.

Livestock

-------d
1976 Chevrolet pick up ,
869&amp;.00. 304·876·2848.

7 ynr old riding horse. 304675· 2409.
Hay

&amp;

73

&amp; 4

W . O.

Clean. mi11ad hay. 81.00 • bale
vou pick up In the field. Cal1
61 4 - 44~· 7803 o• 446· 2784.

1978 CJ-6 Jeep. Call446·0912
before 5pm. or 448-4179 after
5pm.
·

Hay for ule. 81.30 per bale
... n. 304-676-2465.

1982 Convertion Van Dodge
Rem 2&amp;0. 4 C1pt•ln chlirt.
couch, curttina, venetlln blinds,
11nted alus. 8-tr•ck S. cauatte
lrter. air, crui••· aut{l, rack &amp;
adder. 19500 or bftt offer. Ph.
114-446-7835 .

a1

I -::---~~-=-~-~7.":":"

Round bile of hay in field .
!Nerege 1.000 tbs. t12. bale.
304-896·3808 .

r.

NBC Nl9hlly News
(I) John FoJ'I OU1door
Adventure• (AI
·
(I) II CIJ ABC Newa Q
(I) NlghUf lulint11 Report

-YOU'RE ONl-Y
0~~ ?T~P FROIA
HEAVEN .

71

1986 Carev1n, Mini Van. 7
passenger. Low m1t11age. excellent condition. Priced to sell.
814-742-2025.

Autos for Sale

1988 Ford Conversion Ven.
E160. lolded. 816,000. 614992-7683 .

1 980 Chrysler Fifth Avtnue,
good condit ion . Call 814-446·
0008.

78 Ford v1n, 11 Pllltnger, good
running cond. 304-676·2989.

1984 Dodge , utra claan
12795. 1981 Chevy Malibu 1
Owner 58,000mi. Like new .
12360. Ph. 114-288-8522 .

Jeep Ch•ollee can &amp;14-379·
2 7..,
4_5 ·- - - - , . , - -

_

1980 Honda Custom 160, low
miteege. t700. Call 614·3888245.

992-2104.
1985 Hart~ Sport•ter. Good
condition. 81000. Call &amp;14742-3188 .

&amp;

2

T0-2 . .... . 114-

86

-

General Haulipg

atete. •c shepe, one owner.

e•111• klpt. 304-n s . tUJ Hondo S h - . . . ..
, 3.800 .... ,._, 304-n3-et4t.

,;aoo.

rna-.

'71 Hoftde CXIOO, low
. .c. cond . lh•rp . Priced
.800.00 under ACU. 304·t71·
513&amp;.

76

801ta and
Moton for S1le

]

t 49.9S
o

7:35 Cll Honefmoonara

&lt;XI

8:00 [ll Doktari

II [%)
•

NOTBciNG A
Il

1~'

i

•.

'

ALLEY OOP

II]) ALF In order to
help out with the family
linances, ALF t6kes a fob.

(A)

TAf?L-E?? .

1

•

(!) Flahln' Hole (A)
(I) Cl (J) ABC'a Mondor
Night lllloeball
Cll Specelllgh1 This episode
looks at our current and
luture dire ctions in space. Q
OJ Billy Gr1ham Cruoecle
Columbia South Carolina 1;1
II] Wondarworka Chimney
sweep Barnacle Brown lalla
into a p1o1 or murder and
Intrigue. 1;1
I!)) Primonowa Wrap ups ol
lhe day·s world news 6nd In
depth lea1ure reports . (1:00)
411 G2l Blllf Graham Crueedo
aJ1 MOYIE: 'Houaa Calla'
P~m• nme (PG I (1 :36)
Ill l1l MOVIE: The Naked
Fact iRi (1 :43)
8:05 (}) MOVIE: Tht
Mateua-Neleon Murdera

(2:281
8:30 D [%) II]) Valerie Valerie

EEK &amp; MEEK

I HAD A DA-rt: WITH MJ
AtJT1-IRCffilOGISr LAS!"

A REAl

fRIMffiV~

WI1H

~Y?

lUa-1UJ. ..

1flt.Y~EDA~

Af-'IY&lt;. HIM AT 1H£
MUStLM Cf IJATURAl

HISlC'RY

gets David to work oul his
lear or having surgery. (R) Q
9:00 [ll 700 Club
D [%] II)) MOYIE:
'DICeptlono, Pari 1' NBC
Mondly Night 11 1ht Movltl

~High School Dance Ttam

Champlonlltlpo From
Orlando, Florida (A)
(I) I!Jl American Playhoult
Ellzabtlh Frenz portr6ys a
woman and her baHie with
ago raphobia.
11m
02) Newlierl Stephanie
be&lt;:omes the unlikely
temporary leader ol Ranger
Girls. (R) C
1UJ Larry r&lt;lng Live! In depth
ln1erviaws with top
news makars and celebrl11es.

e

NO LEMONADI:: IN

IT'S TOO EARLY IN 11-IE
58ASON lV BE 5ELLINC:,

THI6151M-iAT'!OLJ
MIGHTQ!.L( A

YOLlR P ITCHER'?

LEMONAC€ •• .

'DRY RUN:·

HOW COME

TJ-IERES

a '

1:30 11m 111 02) Deolgnlng

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

I

r
l

i

Women
Suzanne's lnUmate dinner
party goes awry bolore II
begins. (R)

10:00 (!) Wom1n'1 Volterball
K8n1ucky Fried ChiC ken
ColOnel 's Classic Women's
Volleyball: USA vs USSR
rrom Pen6acol•. Florida (T)
OJ 1111121 Cagney lnd LJICIY
The department must pr01ec1
a white Soullt Alrlcan
marathon runner. (AI Q
OJ Evening Newa A wrap up
or IOday's news and a look
ahead 10 lomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
IBJ NIWI

Ia ell Soap

t 0:30 [%) Bill Coaby
(I) Ollie &amp; Ruby This o ne
woman play depicts the lives
or 3 blac k women in the

BARNEY

AN' VEAR5 AGO

Soullt. Q

THAR WAS WILD

II] New1

INJUNS RIGHT ON

11:00 rn

Tl415 VERY
SPOT!!

Hll'dcllllt and

~

• Ill ill • ()) OJ 1111121
iiJl NIWI

(I) Sign Oil
II] Ollie &amp; Ruby ANew
York man goes crazy
be&lt;:ause his relrlgerator
won't work right. Q
I(J) Moneyllnt Curren1
reports on world economics
and linanclal &lt;MWI wllh Lou
Dobb6. (0:301

1BJ HoneytnmiC_IO_fH~tnra

e Q) Love ConnectJon
11:05(]) Bononzo Magnlllcan1
Adlh

Watterson 's Wate r H1uling ,
rea1onable r•te•. Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, clstetna,
pool• . well, eto. call 304·678·
2919.

_ _

I I I I I
•

•

•

.

0

Comple10 1he chuck le quoled
by f1lling in the mi~ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

11:30Drn II]) Bet! of Coroon
fi) lportiCenter (l)
(I) WAKP In Clnclnnlll

D CIJ Nlghlllw 1;1
aJ Mlgnum, P .l.

YESTERDAY'S SCilM-UIS ANSWERS
/ldlame - Elves - Proud - Defile - FULL SPEED
Cutting in on some c onversalions is about as easy as
th reading a sewing mac hine needle when it is operating at.
FULL SPEED .

.BRIDGE

When th'e ruffing i==~~NO-RT_H_I_·I-8-7----,
gets tough

:m•o

By

• 63

James Jacoby

+42

EAST
South had such a strong hand he WEST
• 10 3
couldn't get out of his own way. Did
KQ J 9
North 's bidding indicate any s pecific : ~ ~
72
t98
support of hearts? Not really. When·
K 10 5
+QJ9863
your partner has opened with a strong
SOUTH
forcing bid (artificial or not) and you
show preference for his known long
• A KQ 10 9
suit, yDu might be showing as little as
t A KJS4
two small ca rds in his suit. In today 's
....
7
deal, change North's heart jac k into
any small club and the bidding would
Vuln e ra ble: Neither
Dealer: South
probably still proceed as shown. So
South was rewarded with a dece nt
Norlb Eaot
dummy when he jumped to six hearts. I Weal
Unfortunately, after overbidding the Pass
Pass
hand, he underplayed it.
Pass
Pass
He won the spade lead, played A-K ' Pass
Pass
of diamonds and ruffed a diamond Pass
Pass
with the heart jack. He came to his p1158
PaHS
hand with a heart, hoping against hope ,
that he could ruff another diamond ·
Opening lead: l&lt;
withDut being overruffed . East of
course did overruff , and the defenders
my's other club as West wins th e trlclt. ,
later took a c lub trick.
There is a little-known play th a t Now the filth diamond In South's hand . ·
would bring declarer home . It was fine will be good , and dec larer will be able
to ruff the first time with the heart to ruff his losing club in dummy. By
jack. But rather than futilely try to discarding dummy's club on what Is In
ruff another diamond loaer, declarer any evenlll losing diamond, declarer
should come to his hand with the c lub , transfers the rulflng tric k he needs to
ace. Then , when he plays another dia- a suit that cannot be overruffed by a
mond, let him simply discard dum- defender.

+
+ 0

•au

....

i

+

lly THOMAS JOSIPH

ACROSS

1 German
composer

II

Condescend

4 Not h ers
6 Lu~ter

6 Ex-chess
champion
7 Potpourri

10 Punge nt
12 Cut In two 8 F'ace shape
9 Kept in
13 Puzo
best seller 11 Entertain
Ill Use an ax 14 Insincere
talk
16 Mover's
Saturday's Answer
18 Lead-tin
·vehicle
alloy
25 Arrange for 34 Father
17 Danube
19
Clan
printing
311 Agitate
tributary
20 Stroke
26 Verb form 37 Casset!e
18 Credo
lightly
28
Minute
material
20 Forsake
part
38 Besides
23 Neapolitan 21 Night
30
Challenge
39 Watched
before
painter
32 French
41 Young
27 Stave off 22 "-of
troubles
...
"
city
sheep
28 Cafe
24
·Clear
33
Biblical
42
Playing
patron
Day"
land
marble
29 Navy
or kidney
SO Cross
verbal
swords
31 Bring joy
33 Written
letter
36 A Wallach
37 After ess
40 Section
of N.Y.C.
43 Tricksy
sprite
44 Slip
411 Amalgamate
48 Garden
nuisance
DOWN
1 Maine city
2Twinge
3 Si)ip's

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:
AXYifL8AAXR

II LONGFELLOW

hints. Each day the code letters are dHfe"rent.

CRYPTOQUOTES

II] Thla Old ltotloel;l
a1J&amp;pom Tonight Actlorl
packed sporu hl9hMghta with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

87

ea1121 Annuor Millie Cltr

GNMQU

JCGTQI,

W Q X

NeWI Country Awards
IBl Mlgfltlm, P .r. Never
Again ... ~ Aga in

N Q X M

RJMEQI

H W

(0:30)

Upholstery

A &amp; M Cunom Couchn and
Reuphol•tery, St. Rt. 7, Crown
C. .. Oh. 114·266-1470. Eve.
814-441-3438. Opon dolly 9 to
4:30, Set. 8;30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
ltnte'a Uphotttery Shop: Furni·
ture, c• IIIli, bo~ IIIII, tiC .
C1tt 114-2&amp;&amp;·1270. Aocklidt • ,
Rolld. Crown City.
· :

PEANUTS
I WANT .TO flE

SURE IT'S REAVV
TO HAND IN .. .

'(Ol)

MI55PELLEP

EVEil.'r' WORD !

em LoW.._

12:00 (J) lll'na lind Alltn
(I) 8pomLook (R)
(I) lllghlllotl;l

• ()) 4IC llpOoto ,.,......
"Mandly lp DfliUtll"

I!J) .... Ofl

IIJ Nenfllght Live IIIWI
Wl1h Pe111ck Emory and
Kirsten Unclqultt (1 :00)

12:05 (]) Nttlonlll Clec+..... .
!Jploref
12:30 (llllla1 01 ~

&amp;ts

One letter stands for another. In thi.5 sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all

Form•lv Ken's now John's
W•ter S1rvice. John W•ttertOn.
Jr. Ownef. 1,000 or 2,000 g1111
•""ice. 304-571· 2248 ,

2111. -~~~- · - 4-1 , 120
H.P. -....., 1-0 ·relu'**"t
• ..... .....
Wll
... . . . . . . lor .. _
_ Ph.
·Mowrey'• Upholst«ing t.Ving
-.70zs.
trl county.,.. 22 year~~ . The bat
in fumitur• upholstttiRQ. C1ll
14' , . _ ,.....,. .- T -. 2---01001· 304 - 675 · 41 5 4 for iru
a.nt weudllon .... 8ti7Yhtelt. •tim .....

'
------------------

J I-

eaJ1 G2lJeHeraona
II]) Jeopardy! 1;1
·

WHe-N li'.S

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Clatflt'ns, Wells. Delivery Any time. Ca11 _, ,.14· 446 ·7404-No
Sund•v calli . .,

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools. cistem s, wellt. Ph. 614·
246 -9285.

1t84 Hondo Ooldwtng lm•-

1171 , ....
441-1332.

Reaidentlll or co mmercial wiring. New ser11 ice or repaira.
licensed electrician. Eatimata
tree. Ridenour ElectricaL 304 676· 1786.

1 882 HOndt 1150 Nighlhlfwk,
ect 12.000 miiM, 11 ,eoo.oo.
304-175-3097.

1184 L111r tflol•. lli· ep, AC,
AM-FM ltereo •1200. Ph. 446·
9310 ovonlnp.

IZH.

Electrical
Refrigeration

R &amp; R Wit•r Service. Home
cist e.-ns, Wtlls, poo!• filled
FormfJI'It ,Jlft'l es Soya Water
Same 11111. C1ll 304 -675 ·
6370.

1180 Kewsnkl 750 LPO,
10,000 MiiM, fuMy drtued. uc
cond, $1 ,100.00. 304-418 1088.

OCCASIONAL
TABLE

CARTER "S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolit, Oh io
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614·
446-4477

198• V-30 Mtgn1, exc cond,
like new, g•tt• kept. must •ee
to tiPPfidate. •1 .850.00 11rm,
304- &amp;75· n62.

1972 Monte C•rto 310 eng.•
1uto trent., good th.,. C. II
oft• 8 Ph. 814-24&amp;-9211.

WHAT IS IT

Plumbing

1112 Kaw1salt l KDX 176 dirt
bike. Good co ndition. Cell 814·

Game (AI
Q(J) Judge
11m Wheel of Fortune Q
I!Jl Cro11flre (0:30)

&amp; Heating

Motorcycles

1980 Vtmlha IT·260, looks
good, Nn• gre•t. A•king $600.
Ph. 114·441· 3199.

(I) NewlfWid Game
(I) Mlljor League BeoebaH'a
o,..talt Hltl1971 All Star

Building and remodeling, room
additions. roofing, layout , level·
ing, siding, b&amp;throoms, concrete, electrical. drywell. plumbing. 304-676 -3713.
•• •

1----------

1978 Old1 Regency. 2 -dr., tull
power, new tlret. no rust.
hcell~tnt condition . S•e at
French City Mobile Hom• Call
614-446-9340 or 304-675·
8e9B.

7:30 II (2)

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care. tandacaplng. stump
re moval. 304 -676-2842 or
678-2903.

84

74

fll
i Bamer Miller

Tree &amp; ttump removal, chain link
fen ces, stone. muleh, new lawn•
seeding . Don 'a lands capes .
814-446-8846.

Professional tree service, call
304 - 675 -2633 for fr ee
estimate.

.

(0:301

I]) SpomCenter (LJ
(I) Ent-lnment Tonight
II CIJ People'• Court
(I) I!J) MICNIII/ ltl1rer
Nlwattour ( 1:001
11m New•
[J) Moneyitne Curren1
reports on world economics
and financial J18WS with Lou
Dobbs. (0:301
G2l !Ill Whetl or Fortuna

Vinyle &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm windows IS&amp; doors. over
hang g utter~. Free asti mat es.
Ph. 614-446-6332 ..

Dry walland repair work. 20 vrs : ~: ·
ex'perience, tree estimetet, reat·
onabta r11t11. 304·675-4462 •
after.6 :00 .

_

McCormiCk

Ace Con•tructlon. Roofin g, gut·
teu, masonry work. All work
guaranteed. Call814-389-9766
o• 388-9792.

Fetty Tree Trimming, 1tump
rem oval. Call 304-615·1 331 .

5

.

Grandpa to Grandma after
greeting their guests: "One good
thing about being b41d is that,
when company arrives , alii have
to do is straighten--."

II Ill PM Magazine

Home
Improvements

RON 'S Tel evisio n Servico .. .
Houle c1l11 on RCA ! Quazar, · ' ·
GE. Speci1ting in Zenith. Call · ·
304-676-2398 or 614 -446 2464.

.

~

6:35 (I) Leaw It To Beever
7:00 (]) Htrdc1111e end

FRANK AND ERNEST·

SWEEPER and sewi ng machi ne
repair. part1. and supplies. Pick
up and delivery,_ Oa11i1 Vacuum •
Cleaner , one half mile up
George• Creek Rd. Call 614446-0284.
.

.

anchored live from Now

-1973 Starcraft 23 tt camper,
exc cond. full awning. reuone·
ble prlca, 304· 675-1797.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifeti me guaran·
tH: local referen ces furni t hed.
Free e:stimates. C11 ll collect
1-814-237-0488. day or night.
R oge r s Ba sement
Waterproofing.

..;.rl.:.:.,l;.;..;;.l-1

[J) ShowBlr Today News of
the entertainment wo~d Is

7:05 Cll Sanford and Son

81

I'"I_F_R_E_T_O_F_'I
p y MNH

1---,l:,..~

11m Ill 1121 CBS Newa
l!ll Vo,age of 1111 Mltnl

York.

:.I

I .

6:30 II Ill !Ill

fll (l) Star Trek

82

Tr ollS port d t ion

1187 Pontile Sunlllrd OT, AC.
fuel lftiiCikN\ . ..... 114· 241-

'.

Vaos

Must sell 1985 Ford Renger
4x4. Pay oft loan . Cell •464786.

Grai_n

118&amp; Hoode Mogno Y·ll. llh
..... low ...,_._ Ph.
114-446-1301 .

......~... .......... ~

CAPTAIN EASY

1980 30 ft. Terry C11mpi ng
Treiler tor sale. 614·992· 3529.

1919 Ford 600, see at Skiers
EquipmMit. Henderson•. W. Ve.
Clll 304·676-2248 or 304876-7421 .

Duroc 801r1. Brad ju•t like 1he
boar• we tetted at th11 Ohio
Tea1ation that gained over 2 .8
lbs. per dll\'. Roger Bentley.
Sabina, OH . 613·584· 2398.

1910 Oklo Doho 81 Royall. llr.
new thu . good cond .
11.800.00 Col 114-2H· or 448-1111 .

'"":t:::

Truc:ks for Sale

1986 Dodge pickup, 3 1/4 ton,
21.000 miiH . • 8900. 1969
lnt•nationll 2 ton with winch
Colll14-992 -6488.

1-----------

1984 Celebrity Eurosport,
laMIH. 27,000 mil•. Clll 114U8·2110 oltor 5pm.

A~PUANCU

---- -- -- ------- ·-

1977 Olds Cutlau. AT, AC,
AM -F M 8 track. good tiret, runs
good. 8960. 00 . 304 · 676 8118.

Sean Rototitlet excellent condi·
tion $600 . Ph. 114-256-1267.

Buck Rogera

6:05 Cll Down to Eallll Stereo.

S.

Services

-F-L_,_I__,_Q-rU_T...--tl

Secret City

fll (l)

MIRGYL

r. I I I I I'!

3
II]

Motors Homes
Campers

' 86 Trin• Am, exc cond, loaded,
with T-tops, $600. down as·
auma loan. 304-15715-22915 after
4 '00.

I

1:00 (]) Big V1lley
• Ill (I) • CIJ 11m • G2l
fiJI Newa
(I) Sportalook (T)
(I) Dr. Who Face or Evil, Part

198 6 rave master·new con . ·
T
By Coachmen,
1
27 fl . Call
d
·
114-261·1 287.
-----:-----1 19n Apach11 fold d_
own, sleeps
6. contains AC -OC convertet.
stove. sink, ice bo• . P11 . 614·
379- 2688.
---------1967 Hyco Hi-low
o. I Scamper:
2
s1ov11, iee box , o • nk. leeps .
$600. Ca11614·448· 7106.

'82 lonneYIIIe Pontiac. loaded.
•3.000.00 firm , 3()4.·675-2663
.... 6 :00.

3000 Ford Tr~ctor. PS, U995.
Sft . finish mower 1796. JD 14
Ton Baler $695. JD 4 bar rake
0860. Coli 614-281-8622.

I :::::::::::::::::::::JO:::::::::::::::::::::~ :,::9::7::9-::F:-Ioet_w_ood-::::Co-::d:::UI-oc9724.
.-:,::8:::7
9

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Autos for Sale

---------For tale: 1971 Dodge Charger
600.340 auto. slap stick. 6,1 4·
992-3342. No Sunday calli
piene.
1980Cemaro. V6.nica. I190d.
814-1815 ·4388.

273 New HoiiMd sq. Iller
• t•oo. Fo•d 301 . Roko 1325 .
•
Sh••"
Pool onv
· If •700. 7...
.....
''
Locuat
potU
S1
.35 each Ph.
814 .388-9832 .

CROSS &amp; SONS
Concre1e blocklall sl1t• y~trd or
dell11ery. Maton sa nd. Gallipolis U.S. 35 West. Jackson , Ohio. 198&amp; VW Jen• 4-dr., auto, AC.
614-288-6461 .
Block Co .. 12311• Pine St .,
PI, PS , AM -FM c•sette, 4 -c yl ..
G111ipolis. Ohio Call 814-446- MuMy Ferguson. New Holland. 42,929 milea Ph. 1514·44&amp;·
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over ot82 IJit. 37.
2763.
-40 uHd tractor• t{l choose from/
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
1982 Dodge 400 2- dr., HT,
equlpmen1 . L11rge11 lftltM:tion in auto, 4-cyl., AM -FM c•aene.
67
Musical
S.E. Ohio.
81 .6&amp;3 mlln. Ph. 114-448Instruments
011112 ext. 37.
801 Ford Tractor with plows,
disc. mowing mechine, rtlle, h.-, 1176 Dodge A..,. Station
For sale lowery Org~n Ph . bal8f $3795 . Ph. 614-286 · W-aon. end Un DodttAspen
&amp;14-246· 5836.
~622.
Statton WfOOn. Call 114-381·

r

Auto Parts
Accessories

~~===~=====~~~==;:~=~~~~

For Sale or Trade

Sale o, trade for WO -WO 46 A. .
C. Trector. VW Dun&amp; Buggy with
fiber gin• body. Ph. 614-4467339.

~eramblod

28 ft. Titan motor home. completely self-conta ined, genera·
tor. aleeps 8 . S8900. Call
814-446-0008 .
.

71

GAM I

•. ioUAN --~--------

. low to form four slinplt words.

White Truck Topper, will fit S -1 0
11nd Ranger Short Bed. goad
conditton. Ph. 814-446-6166

79

WOII

legrrange . l•tterJ of the
0 four
words be-

BUDGET Tnnlmissions; Uted &amp;
Rebuilt. All types. Guarantee(~ a •
minumum of 30 daya, will
delinr. cuh &amp; carry or inttel.
Ph. 614-379·2220 o' 1 -304·
876-6758 .

Roush's strAwbe rr ies. 2 milea

Vlllett Fumltufe. ..,. a WMd.
la'fO _ .. . . ., ....., tun . 1211 fHtern Ave.,
Oollipallo.

2 8R. unflo•nlohlldopt . 322Thlrd
Aw. Adutta onty , no ~*~· Ph.
614-441-3748 01' 251-1903. •

&amp;

64

County Appl l~nc.. Inc. Good
uatd 1pplienc:. Mil TV atea.
Op"" BAM to IPM . Mon tlvu
Sol . 114-UI-IItt. 127 3rd.
A... Golllpalla.OH.

GOOD USED

76

S@~g{}\t\-~t.trs®

------------ld~d~rC~Y

12500. 814-992-2369.

62

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... Ail
stv ln. Juli e Webb Ph. 614-446 0231 .

fiAT tAllY
PUZILII

115 ft. fibergl••• runabout, 60
HP , Mercury, trailer, gqod condl·
tion. S•e on Hyaell Run Rd .

Pets for Sale

SWAIN
AUCTION • f UIINrfUII£ Ill
Oli11tSt., G1l ....... Ntw.YMd
wood-co•lttov"' I ,eWOOIII L"
IUIII $399, bunll bHI f181,
recliners n., 6 Ylld bedrevm
suit11. wring., waeMn. •
aho11. New ti'Jiftetoom tuft•
tt99· •ete. ' -· C:oll 114448·3189.

1Se1 Third lVII., unlumW.Id.
28r., 1ppli.ncw, c_,..ld, out·
skit atataga. U50 ptua depoatt
• ut lllti•. Ph. 241-9541.

-· ....

New window a ir Gibson 18,000
BTU tess then 1 'It price Ph .
614-446-2153 .

3 bedroom apt all electric;,
located on Crab Creek Road.
refcren coa required . 304-675 ·
6609 after 5:30 call 304-676 ·
1087.

1 BR Ap art ment. 740 Second
Ave. $185 per month. Depo1it
raquired. Call 61 4 · 446·4222
batween 9 &amp;: 6 .

1 B~ . ground floor , ali utilltlet
p11ld. Near McDantlds. Cell
448-7025 .

Couch. cheir, love saat. coffee
tablB, clothes adults &amp; chlldrens.
Ph. 614-44tl · 6425

White Weddin(l Dross. Victorian
1tyte with train. SLut 9. Ph .
614-388-9809 .

3 or 4 Bedroom house in KygM
Creek School Olttrict. ~ e f.-en ·
t81 PM 614-U&amp; -1621 .

Apartment
for Rent

Plastic cistern stat e appro\led,
plaatic •eptic; tenks, planlc
tulller1S, metel culverts. RON
EVA NS ENTERPR ISES , Jock·
IOn, Oh. 6 14-286· 6930.

In Middleport 2 bedroom fur·
nished apt, 304-882 -2668.

47
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile Homes
Ph. 614·446-0527.

CallAhan's U1ed Tire Shop , Ove r
1.tl00 tires, •lzes 12, 13, 14, 15 ,
16, 16.6. 8 miles out Rt. 218 .
Call614· 266-6251 .

Uniden Satellite System . Ph .
614-245· 5294 .

fu rnished room. $116 . Utllh l011
paid. ShAre bath . Single mate.
919 Second. Ga llipolis . Ca ll
446-4416 after 7pm .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Good used eoior floor mod eland
portable TV . Ph. 614 -446 1149.

2 bedroom turnised •pt. ref and
deposit. N•w Mavlft"l, W. Va.,
304-882 · 3267 o•_,--304-773 6024 .

4 room hOute Camp Conley

eroa. $ 160 .00 per month , 3046 76-, 371 0 ' 676-3812.

Cerp't remnant• 86 .00 a yard
And up. Mollohan Furniture.
Upper Riv.er Rd., Ph. 814· 4467444. Open t ill 7PM on Weak
Davs.

Graciou• liv ing. 1 and 2 bed· 1986 Amana Model RS -60
room apartments at Village Radar Aange. Never baan used,
Manor and Rivttf"sida Apart- 0300. Ph. 614· 246·6804.
ment s in Middleport From
8216. including utilities. Call Side-by-Side Harvest Gold Refrige rator. 8100. Caii614-266614-992-7787 . EOH .
880B .
1 bedroom apt. In Middleport.
All utilities paid. 8210. per
54 Misc . Merchan dise
mont h. Call6 U · G92·6150.
3 room furnished apartment for
rent. Cell 614-992 ·6434 or
304-882 -2566 .

Plus slore bulldlng. wArehouse.

~t ft or

Garage "apt . 3 roams II bath.
Furnished. including WMher,
dry er &amp; ai r . Clean. No pets.
Adult s only . Ref. &amp; dap requ ired.
Call 814 -448-1519.

Housa 2BR, with stove &amp; ralrlg.
Located 58 Mill Creek. 8160 per
mo., 876 Oep. Call 614-446 3810 Of 446 ·1340

3 BA hau te. btun , tAihu, phu 2

nth or build inn•· All black top
ro11d Call 304 -468-1818 Cell

Houses for Rent

Two 3 room apu. Days 4487472 after 6 448-1980.t

BUYOUTS - SECONDS CLOSEOUT"S
1.· Counter topa. Kitchen 11ld
bath and bar. $2 .99 Lin. Ft. IB) .
2.· Marble Vanity Top' a (BJ From
16-19 to "2 2·48" 810.00 10
160.00. 3.- 22-30 Almond
Vanity and M1rbte Top 179.96.
4.· 60'' Steel Bath Tub'• Almond
and whit t89 .96ea. 15 .· High
GLo~ tub walt kits al'f!ond and
whi1e. *29.95. 6 .. 1 pc. Fiberglua tub and shower combination. White and colors 8169.96
to t 179 .95. 7.- 2 pc. Fibergleit•
tub .nd thtJwen combinatiOn
wbila and colon S199.95 . 8.0elux.e ecrylic tub and •howars
with top. Rag. 869 .95 Now
299.9!5 . 9 .· Color Commodes
&amp;69.95 . 10 .. Fibergt11u Roof
shingles 181 $16 .95 sq.-90wt.
roll rotting 69.95 . 11 .· Pine
rough sew T.- 1 -l1 sidi ng
(lflx4119' 12.961 25pc. up .1 .00
off pr . Pc . · 12 . • '11 114'.-.:8'
Plvwood-8.95 v~- 6 .95 26pc.
up. 81.00 ott pr. pt. 13 .14Jl4xtlx tongue &amp; groo11e water
board. $9 .96 or ['!.114K8· 8.96) .
25pc . up 1 . 00 off Pr .
Pc.(7. 1 6thsJC4JC8-5.96) 14.- 4x8
cedar or treated lattice 12.95

Sentinei- PaJf-:-~

BHML

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'

PRJEXQW
P.
PGXMGU
Satarda)''e CI')'Ptoquote: IF YOU MEAN TO KEEP AS
WEU. AS POSSIBLE, THE LESS YOU THINK ABOUT
YOUR HEALTH, TilE BEITER.
OLIVER W~ NDELL
HOLMES, SR.

�Pomerov

Page 10 The Daily S 1 ilinel

Middleport, Ohio

Monday. June 8, 1987 :

...---Local briefs--Thunderstonns return to up
·· per Midwes
_ -1.·
Name speakers for evenl

Pat Anderson and her husband. Lenny, wll! be speakers when
the Pomeroy Women's Aglow Fellowship meets Tuesday
evening at the Meigs SeniOr CitiZens Center in Pomeroy.
A bultet at 7 p.m. will be followed by the meeting at7: 4o p.m.
The Andersons pastor the Rejoicing Life Baptisl Church in
Raleigh, N. C., and he is bishop of the Rejoicing Life Baptist
Churches of America. The couple have miniStered to over 300
Fall Gosepl Businessmen's Fellowships, Inc.. and Aglow
meetings over the years. They have been in the evangelistic
field for 12 years and have pastored 10 years while rearing lour
.children.

Freeman apprehended Sunday
Douglas E. Freeman, 19, Pomeroy, who escaped from the
Southeastern Ohio Correctional Institution, Lancaster, Thursday, was apprehended In Middleport Sunday evening.
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Ultie said that Middleport Pollee
and oftlcers from the Uncaster lnstllullon staked out a home on
Broadway St., in Middleport, after Freeman was seen entering
the home. Approaching the. home, ottlclals were told that
Freeman was hiding in the basement. He surrended to otflcers
without a struggle and was returned to the Uneasier Institution
Sunday night.
Freeman was sentenced to the Institution In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court last March on charges of car theft and
receiving stolen goods.

'

Jury seared lo hear testimony
A jury was being seated in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Courl Monday ·morning to hear testimony in an aggravaled
assault charge against Johnny C. Eblin, 35. Pomeroy.
Eblin Is charged with aggravated assault after allegedly
shooting Charles Napper, 38, Bailey Run Road,ln the left leg at
the Eblin home, W. Main St., last September.

Ask residents to conseroe water
The Syracuse Village Board of Public Affairs asks that
resldenl s of the town retrain from waterln~ their lawns and
gardens during the day In an ellort to conserve water. Lawns
and gardens can be watered from 7to 9ln the evening, however,
according to the board.

Missing boy found Saturday
A nlne-yea r·old boy was reported missing in the Painter
Ridge area on Saturday at 2: 2.i p.m. according to information
from Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank. The boy was located
within about 45 minutes and returned to his parents.
Also on Saturday, the sheriff's department was called to
Fisher's Big Wheel for a male shoplifter. One arrest was made.
Late Saturday night. the sheriff and the state lire marshall
were called to the scene of a tire at the C!etus Dalton residence
·in Columbia Township.

New phone numher relelll!ed
The new telephone number for the Meigs County Board of
Ment al Retardation Is 992-liGSI.

Believe...

Continued from page 1

reported that authorities remalned at the site until about 2
a.m.

Damages to the one-story
framehomehavebeenesllmated
at approximately $3,000.

Area deaths

By United Preu International
A cold front reaching from the ,
Great l,.akes through the high
Plains touched oft thunder·
storms that continued early
today while a low pressure area
in the Gulf of Mexico brought
more rain to south Texas.
In the upper Midwest, the
storms blew up Sunday afternoon
and evening In the midst of a
crop-threatening heat wa ve. Intense thunderstorms struck In
Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
The National Weather Service
reported a tornado touched down
brletly north of Rock Rapids,
Iowa, at about 6: 10 p.m.
Thunderstorm winds caused
damage In Barron .. Rusk and
Chippewa counties In Wisconsin.
A barn was blown down and trees
were toppled 20 miles west of
Thorp, Wis;, and trees and power
lines were downed at Becker,
Minn.
Barron County authorities reported trees and power lines
down and atjeast one tree caught
fire alter being struck by llghtnlng but no Injuries or major
damage was reported.
"We've had a lot of trees down
and power lines down," said a .
Barron County sheriff's dis·
patcher. "We also had wind and
hard drlvlng rain and small
hall."
Ahead of the cold front,
temperatures had soared into the
90s Sunday from Nebraska and

South Dakota Into Wlsronsln and . California and Oregon across the evening 20 miles south of Whea- :
Illinois. The temperature at Plateau and Into the Rockies. A !land, Wyo., but thl!re were no '
Minneapolis-St. Paul reached 94 ·tornado touched down Sunday lnj~rles.
. ,
· ~·
degrees, the seventh lime this
year the temperatureattheTwln
Cities has hit 90 or better. The
heal has threatened crops and
dairy production, farmers said.
A flooded South Texas river
crested Sunday and !)egan slowly
dropping, but dozens of homes
remained flooded and rescuers
were unable lor a second day to
lind the body of a 42-year-old
motorist swept down the Guada·
lupe River.
DeWitt County sheriff's depu·
lies and stale public safety
officials planned to continue
searching the Guadalupe River
today for the body of Willie
Canady of Victoria, Texas.
Canady and a friend were
driving from Victoria to Cuero to
see the extent of the flooding
around 10 p.m. Frldav, DeWitt
r.~~·-1SNow
BRAIN
~sHoweRs
County officials said. They drove
FRONTS: wwarm . . .Cold
-Sta,ic ftOcduded
around barricades on a flooded
WEATHER MAP - 'l'llanderatonns will reaeh aeross lOUth
road and were swept downTexas.
Ralnohowers will douoe New England. Sc!Utered showen
stream by the sirong current
and
thunderstorms
will extend from the Gre!U Lakes and the
authorities said. The other pas:
Ohio
Valley
..ross New York, Pennsylvania and New
northern
senger escaped from the pickup.
Jersey through northern sections of Maryland and Delaware and
DeWitt County sheriff's dis·
10uthern Louisiana and south Florida. Showers and
across
palcher Tommy Hensley said
wUI be scallered across the Intermountain region,
thunderstorms
floodwaters were " going down
Rockies,
southern
and central Plains, Iowa and northern
the
awfully s low" on Sunday and
Missouri.
'
observers were tearful of the
cloudy skies.
"lilt rains, we'll add misery to
misery," Hensley said.
By United Pres.• International
Dayton, killed in a one-car ,
Elsewhere. showers and I hunaccident on a city street in ·
derstorms were scattered from
Allcasll4 people died in I raffle Dayton.
Wilmington : Franklin W. Daile
accidents In Ohio this past
weekend. the State Highway Jr., 25, Clarksville, killed when ·
Patrol said today.
hit by a truck on a Clinton County .
Meigs County Emergency Hospital; Tuppers Plains at!O: 54
The
count
showed
four
deaths
road.
Medical Services reports 18 calls a.m. t Limburger Ridge Road for Friday night, eight Saturday and
Marlon: Henry Jensen Jr., 50, ·
over the weekend; nine on Ernest Vineyard to Camden- two Sunday. The Patrol said Columbus. killed when his motorClark Memorial Hospital: PomeSaturday and nine on Sunday.
three pedestrians and one motor- cycle collided with a car on Ohio
Saturday at 12:02 a .m., roy at10: 58 a.m. to Naylor's Run cyclist were among the victims. Route 98 in Marlon County.
Tuppers Plains transported for Hugh Leifheit to Veterans
Victims Included:
Cincinnati: Valleous Farmer,
Br)an Rector and Greg Cole from Memorial Hospital; Rutland at
Friday
night
59,
Cincinnati, killed in a one- car
an auto accident in Chester 11:13 a.m. to Harrisonville for
Bowling
Green:
Donna
on a Hamilton County
accident
Township to St. Joseph's Hospi- Norman Lee to Veterans Memor· Wenner. 63. Tontogany, killed in road.
tal; Pomeroy at 12:18 a.m. lal Hospital; Racine at2:J9 p.m. a two-car accident on a Wood
Clnclnnatl: Gladys Germaine,
transported Kenny Chapman transported Carla Aelker from a Courily road.
63,
Cincinnati, killed when struck
from the same accident to St. bicycle accident on Fifth St. to
Gallipolis
:
Phillip
A.
Bradby
a car on a Cincinnati city
Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at Wterans Memorial Hospital; at bury, .'W, Cheshire. killed in a street.
.
9:15a.m. to New Lima Road for 4:33 p.m. to Holzer Med leal one-car accident on a Gallla
Toledo:
Jeffrey
M.
Kuyoth,
20.
Susie Bess to Veterans Memorial Center; Chesler Fire Depart- Countv road.
Toledo. killed In a two-car
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 12:20 ment at 3:02p.m. to a grass fir e
Cleveland:
Jaya
Peoples.
5,
accident on a Toledo city street,
p.m. to Reedsvlllee for Marla on property on State Route 7; killed when he was hit by a car on
Cincinnati: Bruce Hutchens,
Hall to Veterans Memorial Hos· Syracuse at 6:31 p.m. to Yost a Cleveland city street.
31,
Hamilton, killed in a one-car&gt;
pita!; Middleport at2:21 p.m. to Road lor Martha Ash to Veterans
accident
on Interstate 275 in
General Hartinger Parkway for Memorial Hospital; at 7:50 p. m.
Hamlllon County.
Fairfield:
Craig
A.
Eric.
26.
Courtney Morrison who was to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunday
Fairfield, killed In a one-car
treated but not transported ;
Bucyrus:
Troy
A. Kltzler. 16, •
accident on a Farfield city street.
Racine at 2: 40 p.m. to Bashan
Carey,
killed
in
a
one-car acciSaturday
Meeting is tomorrow
Road lor Levlnla Hayman to St.
dent
on
state
Route
103 north ot
Swanton: David Plelss. 22R,
Joseph's Hospital; Tuppers
"'· ~
A meeling on the Chapter II Toledo, killed when his car Bucyrus.
Plains at 6:12 p.m. to Success Block Gran! will be held at 10 explOded and burned in a three·
Lancaster: Lena L Logue,
Road for Addle Baker to St.
car accident on U.S. 20A In Lucas Lancaster, killed in a two- car.
Joseph's Hospital; Raclneat7: 35 a. m. Tuesday In the office of
accident on U.S. 33 in Falrflea··
p.m. transported Patricia Stan- Supt. Richard Roberts. Eastern County.
County.
•.
Dayton:
Ronald
C
.
Combs.
3.3.
ley to Veterans Memorial Hospi- High School.

Dcpartment
at 11
:38 p.m. Fire
to a
tal; -Columbia
Township
structure tire on Township Road
13.
Sunday at 8:54 a.m., Tuppers
Plains to Forked Run State Park
tor Kenneth Hanson toO'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
at 9:27 a.m. transported Brian
Hayes to Veterans Memorial

Howard Clinton Turnbull. 64, of
Wlndson. Ohio, died Saturday,
June 6. 1987, In Warren, Ohio.
Born Aug. 20, 1922 at Hartford,
he was the sonollhe late Richard
and Carrie Riffle Turnbull. Also
preceding him in death were four
brothers . William, Paul, Richard
and John .
He was a driver I sa lesman for
lh&lt;' Nickles Bakery Company, a
U.S. Army veteran of World War
II and a member of American
Legion Post 719. Orwell. Ohio.
Surviving are former wives.
Rulh A. Pa1·sons, whom he
married June 18, 1948, and Ruth
A. Simpson, whom he married
June 26. 1964; two sons. Marc
(.yle Turnbull. Apache Junction.
.t.rtz. and Trace Alan Turnbull.
Windsor, Ohio; one daughter,
l&lt;athy Cubanyar, Jefferson,
Ohio; two brothers. George Turn·
~ull. Hartford. and Harry Turn·
bull , Albuquerque, N.M.; and six
eranddaughtcrs.
Serv ices will be Wednesday at
• p.m. at Foglesong Funeral
liome with the Rev. Clyde Fields
~fflclatlng . Burial will follow in
braham Cemetery with a milItary graveside serv ice.
L Friends ma y call on Tuesday
rrom 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

William Clarence Owens. Jr.,
66, formerly of Middleport, a
resident of the Four Winds
Nursing Home In Jackson, died
Sauth-Central Ohio
Monday morning at the Athens
Sunny today wllh a high near
Mental Health Center.
Born In Middleport on July 20. 90. Mostly cloudy tonight with a
1920. he was the son of the late chance of thunderstorms. Lows
Luna Hamrick Owens and the will range between 6S and 70.
Partly ~ loudy Tuesdaywlth a
late William C. Owens, Sr. He
of morning showers.
chance
was a retired worker of the
Highs
will
he in the mid 70s.
Athens Mental Health Center. He
The
probability
of preclplta·
was a member of the St . Paul
tlon Is near zerotoday, 40 percent
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy.
Surviving are a son and tonight and 30 pecent Tuesday.
Winds will be from the sou thw·
daughter-In-law, Bill and Debbie
est
at 10 to 20 lies an hour today
Owens, Battle Creek, Mich., two
from the northwest ai!Oto15
and
daughiPrs and sons-in-law, Judy
an hour tonight.
miles
and Benny Thlvener, Galllpolls,
Extended Foreca.•t
and Brenda and Kenny Lawhorn,
Wednesday through Friday
Wormlnster, Pa .; a daughter .
Mostly sunny Wednesday
Billie Lynn Owens, Athens ; five
grandchildren and one great· through Friday. Highs will range
between 65 and 75. Lows will
grandson.
range
between 35 and 55.
In addllton to his parents. he
was preceded in death by a
brother. Richard, and a grand·
daughter, Debra Thlvener.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Veterans Memorial
Wednt'Sday at the RawllngsSaturday Admissions - Susie
Coala·Biower Funeral Home Bess, Rolland; .Marlon Hall,
with Pastor William Mlddles- Reedsvllle.
warlh otflclatlng. Burial will be
Saturday Discharges - RodIn Riverview Cemetery. Friends ney Spires. Thomas Cross, Romay call at the funeral home bert Slawson .
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Sunday Admissions - Hugh
Lellhell. Pomeroy; Jeffrey
Werry , Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Franklin Casto, Pearl Hawthorne,
Harold Jeffers. Glenn Winland.
Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to James Harold Newell.
( A.s oliO: 30 a.m.)
21, Cherry Point, and Susan
Provided b7
Marie Bailey, 19, Long Bottom;
Bryce and Mark Smith
Homer Leroy Welsh, '!/, Pomeof Blunt Ell!o a. Loewl
roy, and Anna Jean Nicholson,
27, Pomeroy.
Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ... .............................. 25',\
Lod8tl meeting
Ashland Oil ........................ 623,\
The regular meeting of Shade Bob Evans Farms .... .. ........ 25\7
River Lodge No. 4S3wlll be8p.m. Charming Shoppes .............. 27 ~
Thursday. Refreshmenls will be Federal Mogul ....................... 42
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... 67
served.
Heck's Inc........................... 4!'
Limited Inc........................ 43%
Multimedia Inc...................... 57
Meeting tonight
Rax Restaurantil .................. 5\7
Robbins It Myen ................ 1017
Racine Board of Public Affairs Shoney's Inc.......................... 27
wlll meet 7 p.m. tonight (Mon- Wendy's lntl .......................... 10
day) at tbe ShriDe ParkBuUdlng. Worthington lnd ..................... 20

'

Granted divorces

Divorces have been granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Karen Ilene Love from
Larry Roger Love, and Terry
Lee Wolfe !rom Deborah L.
Wolfe.

Action dismissed
An action in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Karen
Grimm against James Grimm
has been dismissed.

Daily Numlwr
711 Pi1·k 4
8166

•

at y
Vot. 37. No.2 4
Copyrighted 1987

Weather

Township clerk and trustee posts, school board
positions, and offices in several villages will be
filled this year, the Meigs County Board of
Elections reports.
.Petitions of candidacy for the various posts are
available at the board office on Mechanic St .. and
the deadline lor filing is 4 p.m. on Aug. 20.
In each of the 12 townships, one trustee and the
clerk will be elected atthe Nov. 3election with the
exception of Salem Township where in addition to
tHe one trustee and clerk to be elected, a second
trustee will be named to fill an unexpfred term.
Persons whose terms will exp ire this year in the
various townships include: Bedford - Stanford
Stockton, trustee; Barbara Grueser, clerk;
Chester Township, VIctor A. Bahr, trustee;
William Michael Will. clerk; Columbia Township,
Guy F. Johnson, ·trustee; Gloria Hutton. clerk;
Lebanon Township, Elson R. Dailey, trust ee;

Shirley A. Johnson. clerk; Letart Township,
Harry Hill, trustee; Joyce While, clerk; Olive
Township, Chester Wells, trus tee; Barbara Ann
Hannum, clerk; Orange Township, Wilbur E .
Robinson, trustee; Dorothy Calaway, clerk;
Rutland Township, Charles E. Rife, trustee;
Edna Swick, clerk: Salem Township; Stanley
Hutton, trustee, unexpired term: John F. Colwell ,
trustee; Bonnie G. Scott. clerk: Salisbury
Township, Gregory Eblin. trustee; Wanda Eblin.
clerk; Scipio Township, Donald Weaver, trustee;
Betty J . Bishop. clerk; Sutton Township, Delbert
A. Smith, trus tee, and PaulS. Moore, clerk.
Voters in the three local school districts ol
Meigs Cou nty will name board of ed ucation
members this yea r and all Meigs Counllans will
name two members to the Meigs Count y Board or
Education.
In the Meigs Local School Dis trict, the terms of

The modern, high-tech way to cool your home is with the flameless electric
heat pump.
Central air conditioning only works for you during the hot summer
months. The heat pump gives you.air conditioning in the summer, plus it
keeps on working for you all year long. Because in the.winter, it teams up
with your furnace to help heat_your home more economically. That means
value all year round . ·
The flameless electric heat pump. It heats. It cools. And it saves. Get the
full story by contacting your power company
or your heating and cooling dealer today.

GRANT APPROVED FOR PROJECT - A
$25,1100 grant from the Ohio Department of Health
wUf make possible an expansion .of the dental
program through Child Health Services IIi the
Meigs County Department. Currently the depart·
men! has a chair and some minimal equipment

Hospital news

Apply for license

Daily stock prices

----·"t"______. _____..__._,. ___----- ... .

;

·'

··-

members and a clerk·l reasurer . Incumbe nt s
whose terms ex pire this yrar are Jamrs M . Fink ,
mayor; Warren C. Black and He1·bert N. Elliott ,

council members. and Gregory VanMeter .
clerk-lreas urer.

ren. Dr. Lawson, health commlsstoner. has provided the service
on the basis of two days a month
when the regular child health
clinics are held.
,
Providing more dental servlces Including basic sealants ,
cleanin g. and emergency fillings
on the basis of a sliding fee scale
or ability to pay Is being planned
once the new equipment Is In
place.
Jacobs says he even looks to
the time when the services will be
offered to the general public. and
not just the children who are
coming In through the child
health services.
The one-lime grant to Meigs
County was awarded, Jacobs

'

WASHINGTON t UPII- Fawn the National Security Council
Hall. the " loyal secretary" who staff.
Hall, called back today for
"did as I was told,' ' has raised
serious questions about criminal another round of questions at the
activity with her testlmonyabout Iran-Contra hearings, testified
helping Lt. Col. Oliver North under limited Immunity from
destroy. alter and smuggle away prosecution Monday that she fell
documents In the Iran · Contra " uneasiness" about her actions
Nov. 21 but never questioned her
scandal. lawmakers say.
Telling congressional lnvestl- boss of four years.
"I believe In Colonel North,"
g~tors in public what she is
known to have lold a federal she said. "I know there must
grand Jury In private. Hall has have been a good reason he was
ottered an insider's slory of asking me to clo this. And I did as
North evidently getting rid of · I was told."
Asked ·if she ever questioned
po!ential evidence in the case
four days before lhe scandal the Marine at the heart of the
Continued on page 10
ero,wted and he was fired from

said, in recogn ition of being the
on ly county In the state to have a
dental program operated with
levee monies .
The new equipment will In·
dude another chair. x-rayequlpment, drills, a com pressor, ,
carts, lights, and stools, as well
as a quantity of supplies used in
treating dental problems.
As explained by personnel,
children must be seen first In the
child health services clinic be·
fore being referred to the dental
program . Clinics are held on a
regu lar basis the first and third
Wednesdays of each month with
appointments to be made
through &lt;;arol Ta nnehill, R. N. ,
director of Child Health Services.

lh~

nuclear det errent, and ex·
co ncern about human
rights und regional confllrtssuch
"'Afghanisian.
The agreement on a polltlcal
lssul's statemant came hours
after terroris ts exploded a car
bo mb ou tside Ihe U.S. Embassy
In Rome 250 miles away, tossed
lour explosives into the front
co urt ya rd and d~tonated a crude
device In the front garden of th~
nearby British Embassy:
There were no serious injuries
and no immediate claim of
rcspons lblllly . Pollee ordered
security lightened around the
embassies of all parlfclpallng
hations.
There also was a security scare
In Venire when security forces
found an d blew up a water heater
lining found float In~ In the lagoon
abou t 1 mile from the summit
site. The device Initially was
believed to be an explosive and
S&lt;•curit y appeared tighter on the
island where the three-day summil that opened Monday was
being held.

pr~ssed

State
awards
grants

provided by Dr. Margie Lawson. Before the
month Is over, there wllf be a second chair and
up-Io-date equipment, Including x-ray. Carol
Tannehill, R. N., pictured, Is director of the Child
Health Services, of which the dental program Is a
part.

Hall shredded items
on orders by North

' ·-

In Syracuse Village. voters will select a mayor,
two cou ncil members, two board of public affairs
members and the clerk treasurer. Incumbents
are Eiler 0. Pickens. mayor; Glenn Cundiff, Jr.,
and Ja mes Hill, coun cil members; Robert
Cunnin gham and Laurence Ebers bach, board of
public affairs, and Janice Lawson, clerk ·
treasurer.
In Racine, voters will also elect a mayor, two
council members. two members to the board of
public affa irs and the clerk-treasurer. Those
whose terms ex pire this year arc Charles Pyles,
mayor; Richard Wamsley and Lawrence Wolfe,
council members; Ben Petrel and Bobby E. Roy,
board of public affairs members, and Edna Jane
Beegle, clerk- treasurer.
Elections will also be held In Pomeroy and
Middleport on Nov. 3. Candidates. however, in
those two towns were selected earlier.

Dental grant approved by
Ohio Department of Health
Expansion of dental facilities
and treatment programs through
the Child Healt h Services at the
Meigs County Health Depart ment has been assured by a grant
of $25,600 from the Dental DlvlSlon of the Ohio Department of
ljealth.
· The one-time gra nt will be used
to purchase add it tonal equipment and supplies for the dental
program which has been In
operation at the Health Department lorthepast year, according
to Jon Jacobs. deputy health
commissioner.
Currently the department has
one chair. donated by Dr. Marg ie
Lawson of the Racine Dental
Cline, and minimal equipment
for dental evaluat ions on child·

Part of American Electric Power ·

Larry C. Powell, Richard W. Vaughan and Robert
F. Snowden expire this ye,ar and In the Eeslern
Local School District , the terms of Jimmy C.
Caldwell. Rogel' C. Gaul and Carolyn Sue Heines.
expire with voters to elect three persons to the
board in each district . In the Southern Local
School District. onlv two board of education
m ember s will bf&gt; efected . Those w ho~e terms
expire are Joseph Thoren and Don P. Smlt h. Thr
terms of Harold Roush and Oris Smit h will expire
this year on tho Meigs Cou nty School Board with
two members to be elected.
In the non-partisan vlllagr election in Rutland
Village, voters will select a mayor, two council

By GREGORV ,JENSEN
upheld . The free flow or oil and
VENICE , Italy tUPII - Lead - other traffi c lhi'Ough the St1'alt of
ers of the world's major non- Ho rm u z mu s t co ntlnu&lt;•
communist nations today called unimpeded."
fo r U.N. mediation to end the
On other l.&lt;&gt;ucs. the sw t&lt;·mcnt
Iran-Iraq war and agreed to to be Included in a final summit
pursue ways to protect rr('{' declaration conde mned "all
navi ga tion In the Persian Gulf.
form s or l ('tTorlsm " und said
The leaders. meeting hours "whatrvrr It s motlvt's , ter ror·
after bo mbings In Rome and a Ism has no jusllllcat ion."
security scare In Venice. agrrcd
The stu tem(•nt sa id the leaders
on a draft of a joint declara tionon w&lt;'rP com mitted "to t he principle
political issues following a morn- of making no concessions to
Ing of talks at the 13th annual terrorists or thei r sponsors" and
Economic Summmlt .
to support " the rule of law In
In addition to the gulf. the bringing terrorists to justlct•."
st"tement dealt with terrorism, Thev pledged lnternallonal cooparms conll'Ol and relations with eration In fighting terrorism .
the So\·let U.nlon. The leaders of
On East -West relation&lt;. !he
the United States, .Iapan, West seven reaffirmed their shared
Germany. C'a nada, Fra nce, Bri- pri nciples of a "strong and
tain and Italy were to deal with credible defense." Although th~y
economic Issues later In the dav
were encou raged by new devol·
On th e gulf, the leaders agreed opmcnt s In the Soviet Union, the
to press both Iran and Iraq to io' adcrs sa id there were still
negotiate an end to their 6\-!, · " profound differences" betwrcn
yea r-old war and said they the two sides and that the West
reaffirmed "that I he principle of must l'emaln vigilant.
freedom of navigation In the gulf
The seven said they endorsed
Is of paramount -importance for Increased securit y "at lower
us
for others and must be levels of
"whl
ng

"I air condition my home
with aheat pump~ ~

'

1 Section, 10 Pages 26 Cen11
A Muhimadil Inc. New1paper

Free nations turn to U. N.
.for support in Persian Gulf

r-rr===================================~·-

Ohio Power Company

enttne

Filing deadline for general election Aug. 20 ·

Ohio has 14 weekend traffic fatalities

t

Partly cloudy tonlp;hl .,
Chance of sho)"ers and thun•
derstorms curly tonight. Lows
between 50 and 55. Sunny
Wednesday . Highs between 75
and SO.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 9, 1987

n:

William Owens

Callla·Melgs Community Ac·
lion Ag~ncy will hold free clothing day for low-Income persons
on Thursday from 9 a.m. to 12
noon. at the old high school
building in Cheshire.

gives Reds
7·6 win
Page3

Squads have 18 weekend calls

Howanf Turnbull

Free rlothing day

Ohio Lottery

Rally

POSE FOR PICTURES - British Prime Mlnilller Margaret
Thatcher ch!Us with President Ronald Reagan during an offh:lal
group photo session at the slarl of the seven nation c~:onomlc
summit In Venice Monday. (UPI)

Petition asks for crackdown
against Middleport speeders
A pet ltlon signed by 43 res I·
dents of North Front St ., as king
for a crackdown on excess ive
speed on the streel ; was presented by Mr. and Mrs. Don
Geary, Jr., when Middleport
VIllage Council met in regular
session Monday night.
Council discussed the problem
with Mr. and Mrs. Geary who
stated that speeding on the street
takes place at all times during
the day but Is more prevalent In
the evenings and on weekends .
Council and Mayor Fred Hoi·
!man Informally agreed to provide more patrollng on the street
to enforce the speed law and to
post "children playing" signs.
A second reading was glvert to

an ordinance In creasing meter
deposits for the water depart·
ment from $3' to S!iO and council
approved the Ma y report of
Ma yor Hoffm an showing recei pts of $4.012.06 in fines and
lees.
Councilman Bob Gilmore who
is heading the annual ,July 4th
observance reported that he is
working towards gelling pro·
gram features nailed dow n.
Mayor Hoffman said that tw o
new contributions to the obser·
vance, which will conclude with a
fireworks display, have been
received. These came from the
Ladles Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Continued on page 10

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio ilJPII The stat e Con !rolling Board has
awarded multimillion dollar low·
Interest loans and grants lor
major Honda andAvanllaulomobllc plants in Anna and Youngstown. respectively.
At the same time Monday, the
board released another $312,760
to pay legal fees for prosecutln~
the Home Stale Savings Bank
sca ndal of 198.5. bringing the
state's total Investment in that
case over the $4.8 million mark.
The board approved a lOW·
lntPrcst loan of $1.!; million to an
Indiana car manufact urer which
Is bringing a ~U million Avant!
facility with an csllmatl"d 48.1
jobs to dow nt ow n Youngstown.
The board also released a $:1. 1~
million grunt to Honda of Am~r·
lca Manufa(·turlng lne,. for an
expan.• lon ol It s motorryclr manufacturi ng pl~nt a1Anna Into a
major parts far lory lor Accords
and Civics.
The $R.R million site prl'para·
tlon Is part of Honda's $44R
million c•xpanslon announced
lost Janua ry . When finished at
the end of 19!l0 II will employ ROO
people making engines, drive
trains, sus(Jl'nslon assemblies
and brake parts.
New Avant! Motor Corp.. of
South Bend. Ind.. In a joint
venture with the Cafaro Co. ot
Youngstown, was I he winner of
the $1.5 IJIIIIion state loan and a
$450,000 grant to raze 21 buildings
for the auto manufacturing facility on a 9.o-acre site at the Ross
I ndustrlal Park.
The loan is at 5 percent
Interest, repayable In 10 years.
The grant will he used to remove
· asbeSios and demolish buildings
for an adjacent parking lot for 500
cars.
Avan II will he making two new
Continued on page 10

\•

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