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                  <text>Page-D-8 The Sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy

Middlepo~-Gallipolis,

Wheat yeild 55 bushels and acre

•
•
IDJUDCtiOD
•

Judge to .r ule on Firestone
By BRIAN MQOAR
,
.
CLEVELAND (U P! ) - After
three days of testimony in a
federal suit challenging the Fire. stone Tire&amp; Rubber Co.'s plan t.o .
move Its corporate headquarters
from Akron to Chicago. Firestone· Chairman John i'i~;vin says
he Is ready to go back to work.
"I'm not Interested In arguing
my _side of the 'c ase," Nevin told
reporters after the trial. ''I'd like
to get back to running a
business."
Final evidence was presented
. Thursday before U.S. District
Court Judge John M . Manos.
Closing arguments will be submitted In writing to Manos next
week.
Manos did not say when h!s
verdict will be delivered .
· The permanent Injunction suit

charges that members of the
Firestone Board of Directors
violated federal securities laws
when th'ey made a decision to
relocate the company In Febru·
ary - two months before shareholders were notified:
Company Board meinbers ·
Thursday said contingency plans
announcing the .planned Firestone relocation had been pre. pared In February, but no formal
decision to move the company
had been made.
Firestone attorney Patrick
McCartan Thursday renewed a
motlon to dismiss the case,
saying the company did not
viola te federal securitles laws.
Manos Is considering that
motion.
Attorney Norman Carr, who
represented shareholder plain·
tiffs Marlo Dl Federico, Frank A.

Goodrich

a~nounces

AKRON, Ohio !UP!\ -Citing
strong performances by its aeros pace. chemicals and plastics
subsidiaries, the BFGoodrlch Co.
Thursday announced record
seco nd-quarter net income.
Net income for the three
months ended June 30 was $38.3
million, or $1.54 a s hare, a 61
percent Increase over the $23.8
mlllion, or $1.02 a share, poste&lt;l !n
the second quarter of 1986.
Sales by Goodrich's core bus!·
nesses also Increased during the
second quarter, from $466.2 million to $551.1 million.
In 1986, however, results of
Goodrich 's tire oper,ations also
were Included, bringing total
second-quarter sales last year to

$759.1 million . Tire sales are no company's investment !n the
However, the company also
longer Included In Goodrich
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co.
took a one-t!me c harge of $5.2
results because In August 1986
Ong reported that weak million for ear ly retirement of
the company combined Its tire mar)&lt;et conditions, particularly $50 million of 12.75 percent
unit !n a joint venture company for original-equipment sales to long-term debt. With this step,
with Uniroyal Inc.'s tire automakers, held down results about $250 million of long-term
business.
for the three· month period.
debt w!lh an average cost of over
" The second-quarter resu lts
"While the level or Income Is 14 percent has been repaid s ince
are tracking in an excelle nt way less than we anticipated at this 1985. Ong said.
the company's overall recov - point In the development of the ·
For the first six months of 1987,
ery," said Chairman and Chief joint ve nture, we are satisfied Goodrich reported net income or
Executive Officer John D. Ong. that the benefils of forming $42.1 million, or $1.61 a share.
" Our core businesses - poly· . Uniroyal Goodrich are being compared with net Income of $3.1
vinyl chloride, specialty chemi- demonstrated," Ong sa id .
million, or 10 cent s a share, in the
cals and aerospace and defense
Goodrich reported two unusual first. six months of 1986.
products - are meeting or items in the company's second·
Sales reached $1.0 billion In the
exceed ing our expectations ."
quarter results.· Net income first half of 1987, compared with
beneflted by $7.6 million from a $1.5 billion for the same period a
Included in Goodrich's second· sett lement with the IRS on a year ago, when BFG Included
quarter 1987 results is pre-tax number of issues for the years t!re sales in its results.
income of $10.1 million from ..the 1977 to 1983.

Wahl and John R. Buck, said Page said the relocation had ·
Nevin Intended to liquidate Firestone Tire operations to streng- :;.n,:~~:~ssed, but no dectston
then the company's automotive
"My recollection Is that the
· primary focus was on the res·
retail and service business:
However. Nevin said the Fire: lr\!Cturlng Side, -not the reloca·
stone ·restructuring plan, which tion side," Page said. "You don't
Included relocation of co·mpany setlle On relocation Until You.
headquarters to Chicago, was know What you are going ~o do ... ·
designed to Increase company In broad prlnclple, 'lt was underprofitability.
stood what we were going to d o,
Nevin said. the restructuring but In detail, It was a very broad
was designed to focus company proposition."
Wllllam G, Phlllljls, another
efforts on profitable operations
board
member, said, "the mat·
while eliminating low-profit or
no-profit operations.
ter was discussed (but) · no
In a deposition taken before the formal action was taken."
Nevin said the company had
trial, board member Raymond
considering relocation In
C. Tower said !I "was under· '---n
un:=
stood" during a February 17 1985 as part of a restructuring
meeting that Firestone Intended · plan to make the company more
to relocate !Is world headquar- profitable and Increase share·
holder dividends.
ters to Chicago.
Board member Thomas C.

ocean. Every generallon Is a
wave," Neai said. "It could be
released ~very two or three
years. There will always be an
audience to see it."
Steve Frank, general manager
of Bakery Centre cinema In
Miami, which also expects the
film to do well, cited Disney's
extraordi nary publicity cam·
paign as one factor. The Disney
character has been feted on Wall
Street, In Disney theme parils
and on Hollywood's Walk of
Fame.
Cook declined to estimate the
cost of that publicity, or to say
how much the company expects
to make on the !lim this summer.
Disney will show the lilm 60
countries. In the United States
alone, Snow White will appear on
1, 700 movie screens, Cook said.
."It's the biggest break ever.
We don ' t really . know what to
ex pect," he said.
Recent releases of Lady and
the Tramp and 101 Dalmat!ons
grossed in excess of $30 million
apiece. Snow White is expected to
do al least as well, a Disney
pu bile Is t sa !d.
Snow White, which cost $1.5
million to produce, has grossed
$330 million since Its debut !n
1937. the publicist said.
Cook said It would be impossi ble to place a value on the Disney
archive.
"As long as we treat them as a

know how you can put a va lue on

it," he said.
The company has 26 animated
features In its film archive.
Some, like Dumbo, aren 't long
enough to be considered standalone features, Cook said.
Of those that are, 15 are
described as "evergreens" because of their staying power .
Besides Snow White, the Dis·
ney "evergreens" are Bambi,
Peter Pan, Fantasia, Plnocahlo,
Sleeping Beauty, Lady and The
Tramp, The Jungle Book, 101
Dalmalions, Cinderella, The Fox
and The Hound, The Rescuers,
The Black Cauldron. The Great
Mouse Detective and The
Arlstocats.
Disney releases three classic
rums a year. at the times when
families are most likely to s~ ·
movies - during the Thanksglv·
!ng and Christmas ~olldays,
spring break and In the summer.
Upcoming releases Include
Cinderella, The Fox and the
Hound and Bambi.
Disney also has begun to
explore the home video market
for its so-called "evergreens,"
Cook said. The company ha s
released video tapes of Plnocch!o
and Sleeping Beauty. In each
case, the release ·was for a
limited period of lime, Cook said.

What happened to other fertilizer?
Editor's note: The following Is - strongly absorbed nutrients and vatlon District, works with ian·
written by Robert Hendershot, pesticides leave a field by attach· downers to develop a conserva ·
Conservation Agronomist USDA
ing to a clay particle and moving · lion plan.
The co nservation plan Is the
Soli Conservation Service, and off !n the surface runoff water.
best
system of management,
Sieve Hawkins, program SpeThe nonabsorbed or soluble
structqral.
and vegetative con·
clallst for the ODNR Division of nutrients and. pesticides are the
servatlon
practices
for a field.
Soli Conservation Circleville, ones which leave through leach·
This
conservation
plan
is avalla·
Ohio.
lng or subsurface drainage.
ble
free
of
charge
to any
There are ways to reduce the
What happened to last year's
landowner.
fertilizer and pesticides? ' If 50 loss of theseexpens!vechemlcals
The 1985 Farm Blll or Food
percent were absorbed or broken through soli conservation practl·
Security
Act !s geared toward
down by plants, what happened ces such a gra&amp;s waterways and
Improving
water quality through
to the other 50 percent? Have you conservation tillage. Grasses
ever wondered about this?
and legumes In the- rotation help conservation plans developed
Nutrients and pesticides can be reduce soli erosion and filter locally. This act encourages the
delivered directly to streams and runoff water which carries the reduction j!edlment and runoff
through encouraging consls·
reservoirs through runoff from pollutants to the stream.
crop ftelds . Dissolved nutrients
The potential conta mination of tency among USDA programs.
and pesticides can reach surface · gro undwat er and subsurface To remain ellg!ble for certain
waters through subsurface drainage water can be reduced USDA program benefits, Jan·
drainage or make their way into by using management practices downers are asked to apply a
groundwaters, leaching through that ca!efully time and place conservation plan to their farm
so luble nutrients and pesticides by 1995, and have the plan in hand
the so!! and geologic layers.
Nutrients and pesticides vary when and where they are needed by 1990.
For more lnform;~tion , contact
In degrees of solubility and
with limited waste. The Soli
the
Meigs SoU and Water ConserConservation Service, through
absorption. attractio n to sol! clay
vation
District; phone number
particles. The less sol uble and
your loc al So!! and Water Conser992-6647.

Prices make buying fann .land good alternative
COLUMj3US Ohio (UP!) _
With farmla~d prices dropping,
·
,
one economlhstt says i!dt s ablmlost
cheap enoug o cons er uy ng
ur land Instead of renting it.
yoFarmers who bought land
during the high-priced 1970s
hn

co~I~n~~~~~~~s~~r~e~a~urno:;
. 1 ral econo·
ba~i ~~~ ~~~:~:~~e'uun!verslty

w e
m

tide Is turnln
approach In~ a point
bt w ld

sar,~~~e

wherese~~~::f.~as~d~~:..re~uF.
:'!em~~:ere's ;till~ slight cash

'
· ·
!n land
flow, advantage In rent g
'

but the cost per acre of buying !s
more attractive now thait during
the boom years "
In 1980 flnan~lng 80 percent of
'
land worth $2,000 an acre at 10
percent Interest made loan payments of $160 per acre. Cash rent
was $90-100
That sarn'e land Is worth about
$1,000 per acre today, Lee says.
At 10 ·percent Interest, the
payment Is $80 an acre. Rent has
also declined to an average of $65
an acre. Lee says that the $15
difference between buying and.
renting may be Worth consider- .
• lng because It Is so much
narrower than the $60- 70 differ·

~''

.. :,....: {

••
ence of 1980~
Still, th~ key is finding out If
you can afford to buy. Financing
Is usually the first problem·. If
h dl h t Le
you can an e t a ,
e says,
now could be the time to look for
land.
Before buying, study your
situation thoroughly. Analyze
your current cash flow and
co'!lpare It to potential cash flow
If land Is purchased.
Look at the alternatives to
buying land - renting, share
cropping, Oflls!delnvestors and
staylngthesam_e.Andmakesure
the land you re buying will
benefit your business,

·-------- --·

--~

-

It Is a general knowledge In the church Ieday that. man Is cons! ructed
of body, soul and spirit. It Is, at thesametlme, a matter well hidden. The
enemy of our Father and His Christ has been successful in his ef!o.~ts to
camouflage the truth within the context of familiar terms and rellglous knowledge." Most of the hidden llle' · within the very thhllngedls
missed, and we settle tor a shallow undersandlng. The. old·fas on
principle of humbling ourselves, receiving a love tor the truth, and
trusting the character of our Father Is still t.he way to turn spiritual
knowledge, as distinguished from mere mental apprehonslon.
In Job 7 ,17.18 He requires of God: :'What Is man that thou dost set your
heart upon him?" David declares 1n Psalm 139:14 that he Is fearfully and
wonderllllly mad,..... meaning that this man God created Is both _frightening
and unique (distinctive~ !rom all creation. He Is so constituted that to lakeac·
copnt of man Is to make us aware of the creative genius of our Father, rerognlzlng that we wUt never completely understand man In this life; but know
also that He doe'l noneaveus void olthe knowledge necessary to become the
Hvtng expression of Hlmseli that He Intended for man !rom the hegtnnlng.
In keeping with the matter o! hand {the latter rain, which Is the res·
torlng of the spiritual man In the earth\ , It Is necessary for us to see the
distlnctton between body, soul and spir it . But no matter how much we
know of man, there Is always more to see. There are certal_n aspects of
inan we can put our attention to In order to establish an understanding
of this matter. Let us go back to slmpllcltl.s as much as possible: then
as we meditate on these things , the Lord will enlarge them toourunderstandtng, as we see progressively the many lmpllcat\ons,
ood ·
Body, soul and spirit are comprised oft hrt&gt;e general aspects: Body : 8 I ;
bones; flesh (phy!llcal), Soul: Man (reason): wlll (ability to choose); emotion (feelings, etc.) . Spirit: Worship (outreach toward our Creator In res· .
ponse to Him\ : Conscience (Inward knowing of what we reduct' to right and
wrong J' Institution of revelation (faculty of seeing and hearing) .
I1 ls Important to have enough understanding of man to enable constant

and progressive growth; but through perversion of this area of truth, our
enemy has brought many of the.Lord's people Into bondage and limitation.
Although there is a distinction between soul and spirit, and It Is necessary,
absolutely necessary, to see that distinction. Il ls equally Imperative that
wp

see our soul as our Father sees us: not as an object of hatred a nddlsgust t

but as the great object of His love a nd constant a1te11t1on, He would. win our

soul to Himself, and bring us under His au thority. As Christ Ls reprod.uced

In our spirit· through Intuitive seelng. our .soul looks upon t he scene. and
through the constant faithfUlness of the FatMr ln our lives Is won by Hls

presence and love, and brought Into submission to the higher life of th~spl:,
rlt. As the soul Is yielded to the spirit , It Is r&lt;'COnstltuted Into the kind of hlf·
manltv the Lord Jesus perfected In Himself on eart h. He then went to the
Father and sent the Holy Spirit Into the church for the purpose of reproduc·
lng His life In us. This reproduCtion constitutes us through the procesS of
change, sultaqlr to exhibit His life as His body . His tulness !Ephesians .1 : 22,
23\ . This process Is solidly luld down In Rom11ns 12: 1. 2 and Scc&lt;lnd Corln·
thlans. chapters three. rour and five-~ .
A master strat£101 Satan has achieved In t)lr church Is thl' constnnt ha·

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Pari II Thfl Thr~lold CDnltllutlun of Man

19-2~33

34-35-37

•

at y

Vol.37, No.50
Copyrightad 1987

By DANA WALKER
and JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON (UP!) -EX· national security
adviser John Poindexter, called today for ~ ·fourth
rpund of tesumony at the lran-Coil!ra hearings,
has convinced at least some congressional
Investigators he did not tell President Reagan of
the crucial diVersion scheme - but they have
different reasons for believing him.
·
Lawmakers such as Sen. Warren Rudman ,
R·N.H., have concluded the 50-year·old Navy rear
admiral d!d not grasp the significa nce of what he
was doing when, In his own words. he hid from the
pres ident a decision to approve the diversion of
money to Nicaraguan Con tra rebels from secret
U.S. arms sales to Iran.
Other investigators, Including Rep. Thomas
Foley, 0 -Wash .• say they believe Poindexte r 's
assertion that " the buck s tops here with m e"
beCaUSe the lOW · key O!f!cer knew jUSt how much it
could hurt Reagan politically if ever exposed.

Rudman , Foley and other members of the
congressional committees lnvesHgatlng the scandal discussed the growing debate over Polnde:&lt;·
. ter' s credibility on.theeveofwhat \\'as expected t_o .
be more tough questioning of the witness today.
" I f!nd Poindexter astonishing and yet I believe
him because I think he did not realize the
enormity of what he was doing," said Rudinan ,
vice chairman of the Senate committee, on ABC's
"This Week With David Brinkley" Sunday.
" He just decided that this particular decision
was so dangerous and such a special decision In
terms of political vulnerab!l!ty that he was going
to take unto himself to make the decision and not
tell the president ," Fpley argued.
Either way, most Democrats and Republicans
agreed Poindexter's sell-described action was
dangerous and disturbing. Partisan fighting was
reserved mostly for the question of whether his
claim of sole responsibility fizzled the hearings.

tho pl ;~ceof tho soul: and those who

see th~ Importance of thP sOul cannot aHgn the spiritual sldf' with their rom·
prehension. One tends to ull ra ·grace: thr. other to ultra ·humanlsm , A grt•&lt;Jt
need In the church today is to see our humanuy n C od .sees lt . Our hum;tn·
tty lour soul) ls a " 'ondPrful creat ion or God. deoslgned t o('xpr~s to the re-st
of creation 1he person of the Creator. In the rail wt• becamP ro nslltutlo nally

unfit for this purpose, thus

th~

nc&lt;'d for ··n...,

bl rt~ ".

or birth from above.

and growth a whole n&lt;'W m.i n. ThiS r,I"()C("SS w\11 tv' cOmplf'!f'd wht·n our
bocly .IN cholngPd through T'(•d(•mp(lon nt o th nM\·· rca uon body tha t \~ de·
signed to exhibit th~ Christ, .,.lng rptJroduced Wit hin U&gt; now. as "·o fJx our
1

~"'"

up&lt;&gt;n Him. the perf&lt;'!'tod hamlnlty.

Th(" ~rf'ater the balanN' tx--eom es In us. lh m ore wt• will uppr lUI£'
our humanltv . because It Is beco mln~ ,.omrthln{!: 1&lt;) tx&gt; admirrd und r
the hand of Cod. AS we walt on the Lord, He wUJ makr real "''l thln us
•th eS(\ thlnas. and we will s~ as wr l')C ercls(' thr spiritua l f:Jcult les g lvPn

u&lt; by birth , or birth fr om nbo•·e.

PRAI~E

i H~brews ~:K

1416: 1·31.

lilliAN RHI, PAS!OR
SUNDAY q,JQ A.M. -7:00 P.M. .

TABERNACLE

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A1TORNEY - Fonner
national security advisor John Poindexter (lefO
confers with hbt attorney, Richll!'d Beckler, as the

Iran-Contra hearings reaumed In Washington Ibis
morning. ( UPI)
·

Claims posse poisoned drugs

.

87 Buick Park Avenue

PHOENIX (UPII - A man
claiming to be a rnember of the
Posse Comitatus says the ultra •
conservative group has lnfll·
trated a local drug ring and Is
selllng narcot ics laced with
deadly chemicals In a vigilante
effort to clean up Phoenix's
growing drug problem .
The man , who ldenllfled him·
sell only as "Max," called United
Pres's Int ernational and other
news organizations Sunday night
and said members of the group
were selling cocaine. inethamphetamlnes and marijuana laced
with unspecified polson.
" We've decided to tak.;o the law
Into our own hands with respect
to the drug problem In rhe
Ph-oenix metropolitan area," the
man said. "We'd like to let the
publ!c know that if they are going
to use these drugs, they're
probably taking their life into

th&lt;?lr own hands.
" ! can' 1 Imagine how many
deaths a re going to result ," (he
caller said. "Let the bu yer
beware.''
The caller would not say what
chemicals the group allegedly
used to polson the drugs, but said
more than 4 pounds of cocai ne
was laced with the substance.
The caller S(l!d he represented
the Phoenix chapter of Posse
Comitatus, a loosely knit group
rooted mainly In the West and
Midwest that questions the au·
thority of all fo rms of govern·
ment above the level of county
sheriff.
The caller said the poisoning Is
aimed at cleaning I!P the drug
problem in Phoenix .
"Maybe our program w!ll work
where the pollee have failed," he
said.
·
Pollee spokesma n Sgt. Andy

Anderson said lhe depart ment
was iook!ng Into the reports, qut
said It could be a hoax .
··There's not a lot our pollee
department can do," Anderson
said. "We' re kind of in a walt and-see situation. The drug
world is a buyer·beware world.
It's always been thai way. Any
time you buy a drug off the street
you're taking a big risk."
Should the alleged plot prove
fatal Io a drug user, Anderson
said those responsible could be
c harged with murder. ,
Anderson said ·u is possible the
alleged plot Is connected to the
theft Saturday of 50 bottles of
embalming fluid from a P~oenix
mortuary .
Phoenix Is one or several
Western cities that has see n an
Influx of "crack" cocai ne dealers
from Los Angeles·area s treet
gangs.

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Se.e Harland Wood,
Jim Cochran,
Kent Shawver
or Greg Smith

26 Cents ·

Henry Hyde, R-Ill. , complained that Democrats
are finding fault. unfairly .
"They've shifted the question," Hyde said. "It
used to be, 'Old - the pre~&gt;ident know of the
diversion? ' Now that that has sputtered out and no
smoking gun, not even a holster, has been found,
they'vemoved the Issue around that the president
ought to have known. I think the presldentlon of
what Reagan knew had been painted unfairly by
the White House as the chief question the
committees were seeking to answer. Larger
overall Issues remain to be addressed, these
lawmakers said.
"There's a myth that this committee was set up
to decide whether the president was Involved !n
the diversion knowledge," Foley remarked.
"Now that !t has been established that he Isn't
guilty of knowledge, I'm glad because I think It
does give the pres!deJII an opportunity to function
In the last 18 months of his administration."

roles In the Iran-Contra scandaL
Interviewed on the CBS "Morn·
ing Program," Buchanan , an
arch-conservative, called North,
Poindexter and the late CIA
director, WilHam Casey, heroes
for keeping suppl!es flowing to
the Nicaraguan rebels during the
two years that ended October
1986 when Congress prohibited
IJ .S . •iit.

"If ever there Is a free
Nicaragua in the future, it is
because they (·the three men }
kept the lifeline going, " Bucha·

nan said.
Calling suggestions that North
and Poindexter be Indicted out·
rageous, Buchanan said, "If
anyone belongs In Leavenworth,
It's the Sandlnlsta ·Democrats".
who voted the aid ban.
Buchanan urged Reagan ·to
·defy Congress if need be and send
the required supplies to the
Contras. He said It would commit
the 15,000 Nicaraguan rebels to
death If they were abandoned

now.

President Reagan plans to
meet CIA director regularly

311 -IU2

FACTORY OFFKIAL CARS HAVE BEEN DRIVEN BY
G.M. EXECUTIVES FOR APPROXIMATELY 3,000 TO
6 000 MILES•.MOST CARS ARE FULLY EQUIPPED
AND CAN BE PURCHASED WITH A SAVINGS OF
UP TO S3500 OVER A SIMILAR NEW CAR WITH
NO MILES. ALL CARRY THE BALANCE OF THE
FACTORY NEW• CAR WARRANTY.

1 Sect ion, 10 P~ges

A Multimedia l~c. NewspapiM'

"The evidence shows that the president d!d not
know of the diversion and that takes some· of the
air out of the balloon," declared GOP Sen . Orrin
Hatch of Utah, a steadfast Reagan defender in the
case, on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Hatch and other conservatives also took up the
political cudgel against those who would agree to
a criminal prosecution of Poindexter andor his exNational Security Counc!l deputy, L~. Co!. Oliver
North. Both men admitted destroying potential
evidence in the case and North acknowledged
lying to Congress.
"I think In all honesty it's time to end the
persecution of those people. There's no corruption
here," Hatch Insisted .
"I think , frankly the notion of criminal
prosecution of North or Poindexter is absurd. I
think the outrage has been overdone," added Rep.
Dick Cheney, R-Wyo ., the House committee vice
chairman, on CBS's "Face the Nation."
On a related point. Reagan defenders like Rep.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Former White House communications director Patrick Eucha·
nan said today !f anyone should
go to prison over the U.S. Contra
policy, it Is the congressional
Dell)ocrats who cut of! aid to the
Nicaruguan rebels.
Buchanan's comments followed his opinion column in the
Sunday Washington Post . that
urged President Reagan to pardon Lt . Col. Oliver North and
Rear Adm . John Poindexter
should they be Indi cted for their

Throufilh new birth "'e tx&gt;com~ a n£W rrea llon. constitutionally s1.1ttrd to
contain dlvlnt" llff?'. Thii prOC'£1SS of splriiUal growth l!rt thPenl argrmrnt of ttw
splrh (the new C'reat lon) , brlngln ~ the soul (nto submtsslon to It , tt nd c h a n~~
In~ thr soul throu ~h transfiguration {samr word use or Christ on the
Mount\ constitutionally lrito the !maR~ Of Christ. thus proqudn~ by birth

Although Cook said It _Is too
soon to tel! what lmpa(t those
releases will have on the movies '
appea l, he predicted home vld('()S
eventually will sap the movies'
box office strength.
Wometco's Neal disagrees.
Children will always co me to
movie houses to see the Disney
classics, he sa id.
"You can' t grow up without
seeing Snow White ."

tion near zero throup;h Tues·
day.

Buchanan blames Congress

maUD&lt;.Olsoul and spirit . Thetrkk has been to get people to think they must
hav~ dlfllcultv acceptln~

Clear tonight. Low near
70. Sunny and humid Tues·
day. ffighs between 1M) and
95. Probability of precipita-

John Poindexter returns to witness table today

choose one aspect at the expensf' of the othf&gt;r. TiloSf' who see th~ splrUual

side of things

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. July 20, 1987

rasslng feeling that we must always choose l)fltwet"n twoas~tsoftru th . ln
this present mrttter, It is rC"vealed in the sharp divls\on In th saints ovC"r this

Dems complete two-day Ohio forum
CLEVELAND (UP I) - There
were no s urprises at a two,day
forum for Democratic preslden·
tial candidates, ,attended by
nearly 100 delegates to the
party's 1988 convention, but
party officials generally agreed
each candidate performed well.
Delegates of the Association of
the St Gov. Bruce Babbitt, Sen.
Albert Gore of Tennessee and
Sen. Joseph Blden of Delaware.
Two presldenttal hopefuls who
have not yet declared their
candidacies - Jesse Jackson
and Rep. Patricia Schroeder of
Colorado - also spoke at t~e
fo_rum.
.
-~n anecdote Gore told Saturday seemed to capsullze the
results of the weekend.
Gore said he encountered a
sign In an airport during his
campaign travels that ·read:
"Advance men, check your bag·
gage • . many candidates look
alike. " .
'T he candidates were generally
grac'lolis toward one another.
Although .each speech was

heav!ly punctuated with the
pronoun "I ," ' 'we" was also used
a number of rimes In reference to
what the Democratic Party must
do as
whole to defeat the
Republicans In 1988.
"There are some awful good
Democrats running and you've
heard from them all," said
Blden. "But as you look us over,
ask yourself. one question: 'Ca n
we win?' "Do not pick among us,
no matier hOw much you like us,
someone who cannot w!n."
Collectively, the candidates
struck a harmonious chord re·
gardlng basic Issues.
All agreed that the Reagan
Administration breached consti·
tutlonal laws and the allegiance
of the , American people In the
Iran-Contra affair.
Gephardt accused Marine Lt.
Col. Oliver North of shredding
the U.S. Constitution and said it
was an outrage that the allmlniS.
tratlon wants an additional $140
million for the Nicaraguan Con- ·
tras at a time when American
farmers are losing their land.

a

'

Aside from blasting the admln·
lstration for Its foreign policies,
including Its poor relationship
with the Soviet Union, the Democrats criticized Reagan for cutting funds In education, lncreasln~ the trade deficit and Ignoring
the plight of America's farmers.
Jackson, who will decide by the
end of the summer whether to
run, said the Democratic Party
must fight for [letter housing,
health care, education, jobs, day
care centers and cures for cancer
and AIDS'.
After his speech, Jackson led a
march with · striking NBC
workers. On Friday, party offl·
clals said they opposed letting
non-union NBC crews covering
the meetings. But a u .s. Plstr!ct
Court judge Issued a r)lllng just
before the start of the meeting
saying NBC employees should be
allowed to enter.
Dukakls said the party must
win ·respect on the economic
Issues If lt·expects to take control
of . the executive branch for the
second tb;ne since 1968.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Aides
say President Reagan. starting
today, will meet regularly with
new CIA Director William Webster following revelations about
the role of his predecessor,
William Casey, in the Iran·
Contra scandal.
White House meetings with
Webster are planned every two
weeks, accordi ng to presidential
Spokesman 13en Jarrett, along
the same Jines as Reagan's
meetings once a week with
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and twice a week with
Secretary of State George Shulfz.
Jarrett reported the plan on the
eve of today's Reagan- Webster
meeting, at which the president
was expected perhaps to sound
ou 1 the former FBI director on
the fruitless search for a successor lo the post he left just this
spring.
,.
Attorney General Edwin
Meese has Interview several
possible contenders for the FBI's
top spot, but none apparently has
_shown much enthusiasm for the
job that carries a 10-year tenure.

Webster, the former federal
judge President Carter appointed to lead the FBI in 1978,
took over at the CIA alter Ca~ey
resigned Feb. 2 In h!s struggle
against brain cancer. Casey died
May 6.
Webster is reportedly shaking
up the CIA, which had a slgnlfl·
cant role in secret U.S. arms
sales to Iran and assistance to the
Nicaraguan Contras at a time
when official American military
aid to the rebels was Illegal.
Reagan, meanwhile, has been
stepping up, his off!cial activities
and raising his profile, apparently .in an attempt to s how he is
in charge and not a lame duck
despite the effects of h!s worst
political scandal.
Casey, the president's 1980
campaign manager, had no problems with access to the White
House and often was seen there
- but his appointments were
rarely, !! ever, on the pu bile
record.
The plan for meetings with
Webster appears to be an effort

to keep closer tabs on the agency
l!nked to many aspects of the
Iran-Contra scandal - mostly
through· Casey , said by fired ·
White House aide Oliver North to
have been his mentor and closest
adviser In running those clandestine operations .
Ex·national security adviser
John Poindexter, testifying at
the Iran-Contra hearings after
North as the other key figure In
the scandal, Indicated he was not
aware of the shots reportedly
being called by Casey.
In his testimony, Poindexter
appeared to help Reagan by
assuming the blame and responslbillty for the diversion. Yet the
Navy rear admiral also revealed
a picture of a president not
making his own foreign policy
decisions. ' ,
~cent polls show Reagan still
has a cred!bllity problem, w!th
the majority of Americans sur·
veyed saying they think he Is
lying by asserting he had no hand
in bankrolling the Contras at a
time during the ban on a!d from
October 1984 to October 1986.

Celeste behind other candidates
ADEL, Iowa (UP!) - Ad·
mltting he is at least 80 days .
behind t he declared candidates, Ohio Gov. Richard F.
· · Celeste met with Democratic
activists in Iowa this weekend
lo see whether it is too late for
-him to enter the presidential
race.
"From the standpoint of
decided voters, It's not too
late. From the standpoint of
being able to build an effective
·organization, It's getting to be
a close call," Celeste said
during a stop at Nlzzl's Cuccina, a cafe visited by four
Democratic candidates this
year.
"Whether II is the right time
for me to pursue a presidential
candidacy Is the real QlleS·
lion," he sa! d.
Celeste's· Iowa trip, which
Included jlrlvate mee tings
with Democratic leaders Frl·
day and Saturday was his first
to Iowa, which hosts the
nation's flrst.presldential caucuseo; Feb. 8.
"Presidential politics beg·
Ins ,In Iowa. That's a reality
facing anybody who looks at
the presidency,'' Celeste sal&lt;!.
"But It's a long time betWeen

.spending two days in low a and
becomming a presidential
candidat e.
"If I don' t feel the time is
right for me, I won't run, " he
.said.
Celeste, who served . two
years as director of the Peace
Corps under preside nt J[mmy
Carter before he was elected
governor in 1982, said he offers
a "unique background of
experience."
,
"The governor's office may
-be an appropriate schoolroom
for somebody who aspires to
national leadership," he said.
Celeste, 49, said he will
spend "probably a· few
weeks" qecldlng whether he
can spend enough lime cam·
palgnlng and still tend to his
gubernatorial dulles In Ohio.
Shortly after Gary Hart
dropped out of the presidential
race, several Ohto newspapers published articles alleging
the secopd-term governor has
been Involved !nat least tl!ree
extramarital affairs.
Celeste acknowledged the
Issue of his personal character
was raised at one of h!s
meetings In Iowa, but said he

believes Iowa voters would
judge him on h!s record of
public service.
•:People arc entitled to know
as much as It' s possible to
know about presidential aspirants. My own view is that
personal life issues really
ought to be for an Individual
and h!s family and how he
handles !I," Celeste said.
"I'm prepared for folks to
judge me based on my experience as a public .official,
based on what they see in me
and my family and how we
live and work together.
"All I ask !s that people get
to know Dick Celeste," he
sa! d.
· Several Democratic act!· '
vlsts who m'et with Celeste
Saturday said they were !m·
pressed with him, but said he
may be unable to catch up
with the other candidates.
"I think he' s got a certain
genuineness about him. He
had an appeal that's going to
go over well in Iowa," said Art
Seamans, a Dallas County
activist who met \\'lth Celeste
In Adel. "But it's not easy to •
pu\together a campaign."

'

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.

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r.~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
THE LATTER RAIN A REVELATION

record quarter

new picture every time they
come out, I don 't know that there
is a stopp ing ·point. So I don 't

Mason
County

expecled to be ~5 bushels an acre,
the Ohio Agricultural Statistics •
Service. reports.
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio t UPI) The Ohio wheat yield for 1987,
based on July 1 conditions, Is

Disney classics are being released sooner
By DON FINEFROCK
UPI Business Writer
MIAMI- Quick. When was the
last time The Walt Disney Co.
released the a nimated film,
Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs?
"Generally, we re-release our
classics every , oh, five years,"
said Richard Cook, senior vice
president for J:luena Vista Distrl·
bution Co., a Disney subsidiary.
But Snow White, last seen !n
1983, is making an ear ly return
this month, in honor of its 50th
anniversary .
"It Is getting a shorter rest
than most," Coo k· said.
In fact , all the Disney classics
are getting shorter rests these
days.
Once upon a t ime, America ns
could count on seeing Dis ney
films like Snow White , Bambi
and Pinocc h!o every seven
years.
But the rotation has quickened
in recent years because Disney
believes children are growing up
faster and because the company
has rmore f!lms !n its archive,
Cook said.
Kenneth Neal, vice president
and genera l manager of the
Wometco Inc. cinema chain In
Florida. said the change hasn't
affected box offlce appeal. Worn·
etco has booked Snow White at
four of Its movie houses In
Miami.
"Snow White !s almost like an

July 19. 1987

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

- --· -·--·----

.

-· --~;)~

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cour&amp; Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVoTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

B m~
'qjll

.

r-T"'\.......1 L-, - , ~ .::::~.~

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEHEI\D
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press In ternational. Inla nd Dally Pross
Association and Ill!' American Newspaper Publlsh!'rs Association.
LETJ'ERS OF OPINION S.re~ wPlcome They should lx' ]('SS !han 300 words
. long. Al11f&gt;tt~rs are-subject t oedl lln~ and must be sfS:nt'd with name. addrC'Ss and
telephon e number. No unsignEd letter s wll! be ptbli!.h&lt;'d . Letters shouJCI be in

good iaste, addressing Issues. not per!'lonalltles ,,

Why believe North
and not the President?
• By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - While Lt. CoL Oliver North has been riding a
popularity crest, President Reagan's ctedibillty ,g ap has widened. if
the the polls are to be believed.
Why the public has chQsen to believe North, the ousted national
security staffer, who admits he 'Jied, shredded official documents to
protect himself and prob.ably the president. falsified papers and
participated in the planning of a cover-up, may have to do with his
persona.
But in throwing allegiance to North, the polls say that morepeopie
do not believe Reagan is telling the truth. It gets down to pure logic,
since there are so many contradictions and different explanations of
what happened, someone is lying.
Of course there is lying and lying. When it is done in the name of a
government, it is often excused away in terms of national security.
North says he lied to save lives. That has yet to be proved. There
appears to be greater proof that he has evaded_to protect himself, and
his recollections are indeed selective.
· · But It is the president who is on the horns of a dilemma. He has two
roads to go - professing total ignorance of a two-year operation In
which weapons were sold secretly to Iran, which he dubbed as a
terrorist nation, and the diverting of the profits to the Nicaraguan
rebels, or Contras, as well as to arms profiteers in Swiss bank
· accounts.
He also can acknowledge that he was vagu.eiy aware of some of the
efforts to keep the Contras going at a time when Congress cut off aid,
and that he did so for humanitarian reasons.
But the president insists that he was not aware that any aides in that
small Inner circle were bending the law and usurping presidential
P9Wer.
•
•That ali of these mind boggiing machinations.shouid be kept from
ttie president has been hard for the public to accept.
_
. The president's daughter said that since her father was told
nothing, he could not ask ·questions about financing the Contras in the
qllarantine period.
•
When Reagan was questioned on how he could not know about the
things that "went on in your White House," the president said: "I
ddn't think these things happened in my White House. they hapiJened
thciusands of miles away."
·
That is a disingenuous observation since aU of the witnesses, so far,
have discussed meetings and plans in the White House. To show that
they l!'ere bona bide agents of the president, North and others gave
Iranian officials a tour of the White House West Wing, Including the
24' hour situation room where crises are handled .
Some of the questioning of the president's credibility deals with the
fact that he was briefed every day by a national security adviser,
namely Robert McFarlane, and his successor Adm . John Poindexter.
He was also buddy-buddy with CIA Director William Casey, who
masterminded some of the operations and was North's mentor. Casey
was In and out of the WhiTeHouse several days a week. He also was
privy to Reagan's concerns about the hostages and determination to
keeping the Contras going "body and soul" in the period when
Congress cut off military funding.
Even when some of the Cabinet officials got wind that something
.was amiss and the national security staff was involved in foreign
Jiolicy operations, which is not part of The NSC charter, bypassing the
· CIA and the State Department, to hear the White House tell iT , no one
)Xlthered to tell Reagan.
•: With his hilmunity, North spoke several times of covering up to
provide what the CIA terms "plausible deniabiiity" for the
l)articlpants in the Iran- Contra affair.
-: But so far. Reagan has only been provided with "implausible
ilen
,. lability."
•

foday
in history
. .

::
By United Press International
·Today is Monday, July 20, the 201st day of 1987 with 164 to follow .
; The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
:.The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Sat urn.
·
.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They include·
talian poet Pet rarch in 1304; silent film actress Theda Bar a in 1890;
dmund Hillary, New Zealand explorer and in 1953 the first man to
onquer Mount Everest, in 1919 tage 671 ; Elliot Richardson, U.S.
attorney genera! under President Richard Nixon, in 1920 tage 671;
actresses Diana Rigg tage 491 and Natalie ·wood In 1938, and
L~tin -rock guitarist Carlos Santana in 1947 (age 401.

~

.on thfs date in history:
'In 1859, American baseball fans were charged an admission fee for
the first time as 1,500 spectators each paid 50 cents to see Brooklyn
P,iay New York. In 1945, the fiag of the United States was raised over
Bi'riin as the first ,American troops moved in to participate In the
.
occupation government.
·. In 1969, Two U.S. astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin,
landed the lunar module Eagle on the moon. Armstrong and Aldrtn
became the first men to set foot on the moon.
'In 1985, Mel Fisher's Treasure Salvors Jnc. capped a IS. year search
tor.wreckage of the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora !le Atooha, sunk
by a hurricane in 1622. He discovered $400 million in sunken treasure
off Key Wtst, Fla.

...

A thought for the day: Asked why he and his guide ·climbed Mount
Everest, Sir Edmund Hillary said, "We climbed because .nobody
cOmbed it before."

•

Pag8-2-The Daily Senti~

Giants triumph, close in on 'R eds, Astr.os

· Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
( Monday. July 20. 1987. _

,.

...... .

'

•

I

&gt;

NEW YORK tUPII - An
inspirational lift during a rain
delay Sunday afternoon helped
spark the New York Mets to an
11-lnning 6-~ victory over the
Ci ncinnati Reds.
Darryl Strawberry came to the
plate in thE' home eleventh with
on&lt;' out and runners on first and
second. A 1or rent ial downpour
during his at bat halted the game
for 58 minutes.
While the teams were waiting,
the eiPctronic scoreboard in left
center replayed highlights of last
year's championship season.
"Looking at that tape. seeing
all those. things that happen ed,
was like a dream," said Howard
Johnson. " It 's been a long time
since something like that happened. It just proved to us th at
this team -knows·how to win ."
When play resumed, Strawberry dr&lt;'w a walk to load the
bases. The Reds went to a drastic
prevent defense, using five infield~rs .. Bill Landrum relieved
Bill Scherrer (1- 1) and Eric
Davis ca me in from center field
to play directly behind second
base. Tracy Jon es and Dave
Parker played short left and
right center.
IT was ali in vain as Kevin
McReynolds drilled a liner
through the left side.

Foodstamp rip-off.__ ___Ja_ck_A_rul_er_so_n-:-a_nd_J_o__;esp:,_h_S_:,..'P_ea--:-'r
food sta mps . in to Federai , Re- serve banks. Exactly how much sentatlve assured the auditors ;
of the $202 million involved fraud that food stamps "can )&gt;e dupll' serve banks for cash.
'
Despite the opportunity for cannot be determined, Renken cated easily and accurately."
The
Food
and
Nutrition
.
explained,
because
of
sloppy
fraud, the Food and Nutrition
Service apparently relied heav- bookkeeping by the banks and Service wastes $2 million a year ·
by Its inefficient method of ·
ily on an honor system, accord- the Food apd Nutrition Service.
counting
$5 and $10 fOod stamps. ·
- The food-stamp system
ing to an Agriculture Depart·
ment inspector general's audit · Invites couterfeiters because the A change in the counting method
obtained by our reporter Karen agency hasn't kept pace with the could correct this. and proper
Talley. How badly the agency's threats posed by sophisticated policing wouid prevent the possl- ·
.
·•
faith was misplaced Is clear from color-copy machines. Food and bllity of fraud .
- Federal Reserve ·banks are ·
the following findings by the Nurtitloli Service officials told
Investigators as far as the new paid $12 million a year to count •
Inspector general:
copying
machines go "they antic- and destroy used food stamps - •
- More than $202 million
ipate
no
problem with counter- but private companies aren't ·
apparently was paid to local
felting
In
the future because allowed to bid on the destructlori .
banks for non-existent food
counterfeiting
in the past has Job.
.
••
stamps during one six-month
- "Theft, loss or mlsappropri· •
been
non-existent
."
period. Auditor Neal Renken said
But Secret Service experts told ation" of food stamps cannot be
the figure was derived from a
the
inspector general that food- ruled out (or proven) because the
comparison of the food stamps
stamp
forgeries have Increased FNS doesn' I keep close enough
reported taken In- by the local
banks with the amount the banks dramatically In recent years. A tabs on the Federal Reserve ·
received from the Federal Re- copy-machine company repre- banks.
- Perhaps the agency's biggest !allure in the fight agalilst
food-stamp fraud was the FNS
ISN'T THAT T~
bank-monitoring system set up to
lead the attack. The program
cost at least $2 million and failed
CQURT~
•
- to do• Its job, the inspector
general reported. "Why have the
system?" the auditor asked .
"Inaccurat e and incomplete"
information was fed Into the
computer monitor - or no
Information at alL A total ot$244
million in des posits never made
it Into the system , for example.
And one deposit of $52,400 was
entered as $5,240,000.
FNS administrator Robert
Leard s ubmitted a response to
the audit acknowledging the need
for " major redesign" of thE!
food -stamp re(lemptlon system.
He resigned a week later, but .
sa td his resignation had "absolutely nothing" to do with the .
inspector general's criticism.
The agency says ills taking steps
to meet the Inspector general's
criticisms. ·

WASHINGTON - Federal Invest igators have uncovered a
gigantic food-stamp rip-off, but
It's not being perpet ra ted by the
legendary welfare recipient who
buys unauthorized goods \Yith ·
food stamps Intended for groceries. The culprits are local banks,
Federal Reserve banks and the
Agriculture·. Department. and
their derelic tion of duty has cost
the taxpayers millions of dollars.
The foo!l -s tamp program,
which means the difference
between starvation and survival
for million of poor Americans, is
administered by the Agriculture
Department's Food and Nutrition Service. Retailers accept the
stamps as payment for ,marketbasket necessities, and turn
them over to local banks for-cash.
The local banks than turn their

1,00\( I
i'T'~

mue

~iH!

SIIPilEIM@

AVOIDES COLLISION- Kurt Stillwell, Cincinnati Reds second
bll!lcman , catches a pop lly and tries loavoide a collision with Dave

Parker. (UP II

Meigs Legion loses
legion tourney game

Portrait of a true patriot __~_G_e_or_ge_M_cG_ov_er_n
and energy of the men and
women who represent our interests abroad . Palmer Is an Impressive example of th e Foreign
Service at Its best.
Educated at Yale University
and given important responsibilities over the years by sen·lor
State Department officials including Henry Kissinger. Lawrence Eagleburger and George
Shultz, Mark Palmer has risen to
the rank of a first -rate diplomat.
Comparatively young, he has the
intelligence, character and motivation to go to the highes t rank of
his profession.
He has been on the job In
Hungary for Jess than a year. but
already he is on top of the
embas~y operation. Hungary has
a difficult language unfamiliar to
most Americans. ·Palmer now
speaks Hungarian and is studying diligently so that he can
speak even more effectively.
He Is pressing hard to advance
the economic interes ts of the
United States by cooperating
with Americans willing to do

business in Hungary.
He prods other American businesses to bene!lt from Hungarian
investment and trade.
He sponsors America n entertainment and cultural stars to
broaden the Am erican presence
overseas.
He skllilully interprets American policy tor the Hungarian
government and probes , Hunga ry 's concerns and insights on
the International scene.
Beyond all this, Palmer presides over the embassy "family"
with sensitive concern for thetr
morale and performance. He Is
constantly developing social. re·
creation al and cultural innovations that Improve the spirit and
motivation of his staff - both
American and Hungarian. Staff
members with whom I visited
spoke or the notabl e improvement in morale since his arrivaL
Discovering shortly after coming to Budapest that the city has a
statue of George Washington,
Mark Palmer assembled th!'
America ns residing in Budapest

and deli vered a speech on "The
Mea ning of Patriotism" in front
of the "father -of our country ."
There is no doubt that Palmer
Is a patriot :... not in the
tub -thumping , flag -waving
sense, but an American who
deeply believes that the democratic va lues we cherish are the
11:reatest gifts we can offer the
world.
He wants us to press those
values In our own society and In
the way we relate to other
countries.
He was instrumental during
his service at the State Department In opening the way for a
governml'nt -supported e ffort involvjng our two major political
parties. labor unions , buslne~s
groups and others In encouragin g
democracy abroad .
Ambassador Palmer and I do
not agree on all aspects of U.S.
foreign policy, but diffl'rences
aside, I'm glad that such men are
working for the U . S.
government.

Show down at high 'cotirt ___Wt_'lli_am_A_._Rus_h_er
President Reagan's nomina- affirmative 'act!Qn and quota tion of Appeals Court Judge favoring the former while opposIng · the latter. Probably no
Robert Bork to fill the vacancy on
the Supreme Court caused by the Supreme Court justice since
resignation of Justice Lewis Benjamin Cardozo has left quite
Powell may well outstrip the so many riddles in his wake.
Iran/ contra controversy as the
In nominating Judge Bork,
outstanding event of the final two
Reagan has chosl'n a rock-solid
years of . his .presidency. Cer- conservativE', which was to be
tainly it poses, for ihe expected. This particular man,
Democratic-controlled Senate, however, is also a legal schola r
far stickier problems.
(a former professor at Yale Law
P.owell has been described School) so stunningly well quali correctly as the "swing man" on fied that the Senate unanimously
the court as currently consti- endorsed Reagan's appointment
tuted. What has not been nearly of him, in 1982, as a judge of the
so widely remarked is what a
Court of Appeals for the _District
devastating gift he has had for
of Columbia .
leaving the law well-nigh incomThat would be. more than
prehensible in- the wake of his enough to assure Bork's swift
critical votes.
ratifiation for any judicial posiIn the Branz burg case (1972),
tion In the land- except this one.
for example, four justices afFor 50 years, by a combination
firmed that· a reporter can be of determination and luck, the
required to testify under oath in a
liberals have controlled the Sucriminal case as to f~&gt;cts In his
preme Court. Originally It was
possession. Four others, bowing because, In Mr. Dooley's immorto the alleged privileges of the
tal words, "the Supreme Court
media to conceal their sources, follows th' lllictlon returns." This
disagreed. Justice Powell con- was a predominantly liberal
curred with the first four, but country .and the court got the
wrote an opinion that so hedged ·l message. But the 'collrf is rarely
and qualified the requirement in a hurry; It is also famous as the
that the question has had to be last bastion of dying establish·
litigated afresh in almost every ments. It was upholding the right
subsequent case in which )he rule to own slaves (In the Dred Scott
has been invoked.
case) as late as 1857; It was
Similarly, In the Bakke case · Invalidating FDR's New Deal
(1978), fqur justices ruled that legislation right through his first
Allan Bakke, a white applicant term; and It remains today the
for medical school, was entitled sole effective support of such
to admission as against a black widely unpopular liberal nos·
trums as the forced busing of
applicant w.lth a lower test score.
Four others disagreed, support- schoolchildren, even though foring quotas for black applicants.
thright liberalism won Its last
national .election 23 years ago.
Justice Powell actually managed
Small wonder, then, that liberto concur with both groups, In the
· process making an unintelligible als . are girding themselves for
hash out of the whole problem of
battle to retain control of the

•

" We let this one slip away.'' · Hernandez drove In the firs I inning, to give the St. Louis
said. "We felt we should of run of the inning with a single of! Cardinal s~ 5-4 triumph over the·
had this one. We're never satis· reliever Rob Murphy and a San Diego Padres.
·,
lied with a ·spllt."
second run scored on pinchElsewhere, Montreal edged
The split of the four game hitter Lee Mazzilli's sacrifice fly Atlanta 2-1. New York outlasted
series enabled the· Reds to after Frank Williams replaced Ci ncinn ati 6-5, Ph iladelphia
remain atop' tbe NL West. The Murphy, who walked McRey- decked Houston 4-1 , San FranMets continue to try and put the nolds to load the bases .
cisco shaded Chicago 4-3 and
championship puzz le back
Cincinnati took a 3-0 lead off Pittsburgh belted Los Angeles
together.
Mets starter John Mitchell in the 7-2.
'
McReynolds' hit greeted Bill second inning on RBI singles by
Expos 2, Braves I
Landrum, the sixth Reds pitcher. Nick Esasky and Terry McGriff . At Montreal, Herm Winand made a winner of Jesse and an RBI groundout by Red s ningham singled home Huble
Orosco, 2-6, who pitched three starter Guy Hoffman .
Brooks from second base with
Innings of one- hit relief.
A bases-loaded walk to Mookte two out in the 11111 inning to lift
Bill Almon, pinch hitting for Wilson gave the Met~ a run in the Expos.
Orosco, walked to start the 11th. second, but Hollman got Tim
Phillles 4, Astros I
One out later, Keith Hernandez Teufel to, ground into an InningAt Houston, Bruce Ruffin
singled Almon to second. With a ending forceout.
pitched a five-hitter and Juan
3-1 count o~ Strawberry, a rain
Johnsonthomered off Hoffman Samuel blasted a solo home run
shower delayed the game for 58 in the sixth to mak e the score 3-2 to lead the Philiies. Ruffin, 7, 7,
minutes . When the game re- before the Reds knocked out did not walk a batter and struck
sumed. Scherrer completed the Mitchell with two runs in the out two·in collecting his second
walk to Strawberry. The Red s seventh on Davis's bases-loaded complete game of the season.
brought the infield in and Lan· single to give Cincinnati a 5-2
·
drum allowed McReynolds ' sin- lead.
Giants 4, Cubs 3
gle up the middle.
Other Games
At San Francisco, Mike Al -. '
Jack Clark improved on some drete homered in the eighth
New York now has 23 come- career-best and leag ue-best inning to brea k a ·J-3 tiP and lift •
from-behind victores among its numbers Sunday, making the St . the Giant" Aldrete led off the:
49 victories.
Louis Cardinals' seven -game eighth agailist Scott Sanderson.
Howard Johnson, who hit. his lead in the National League East 4-5, with his third home run .
22nd homer an inning ' earlier, look ever more insurmountable.
Pirates 7, Dodgers 2
enabled the Mets to tie the score
"It felt good to have a day like
At Los Angeles. John Ca ngelosi '
5-5 with an RBI single that this," said Clark, who hit his went 3 for 5 and hit his fir st home
capped . a three-run seventh second home run of the game. a run of the season to pace the
inning.
solo blast with two out in the 10th Pirates.
Day!~

...~ Mattingly's home run streak

-

Reading the news these days,
one can get the impression that
everything is going wrong. Time
magazine recently devoted an
issue to the problem of declining
moral values · in ·the United
States. I participated a few
weeks ago in a panel discussion
with prominent Americans who
were asked by the University of
Pennsylvania to examine the
collapse of values in our society.
In this atmosphere It is refreshing to encounter evidence that
some Americans continue to
pursue useful endeavors with
high standards of morality. My
wife Eleanor and I recently had
such an e xperience with the
American embassy personnel in
Budapest, Hungary, where we
were guests of U.S. Ambassador
Mark Palmer.
During my years of service In
Congress and as a member of the
Se nate Committee on Foreign
Relations, I developed a high
regard for the U.S. Foreign
Service. America is well served
by the intelligence , patriotism

The Daily Sentinel-~age-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

court!- Necessarily, their Instru - rl'member, Pxactiy who they are.
Because, for once. the issue is
men ts for thi s purpose Is the
Senate, which must approvE' inesca pably clear. Either the
Reagan' s choice. There are still a Supreme Court, llkre the rest of
good many liberals in the Senate, our governmental institutions. is
most of them Democrats but a to have a healthY flexibility In
few Iitke Oregon' s Robert Pack- responding to our ongoing na wood) Republicans. The critical tional cont roversies, or it is to be
center probably consists of those frozen forever In the doctrinaire
Democratic senators not totally mold of 1960 s high -noon
in the liberals' pocket , and the ilberaiism .
The ~nate will tell us which.
coming vote will give the nation a
rare opportunity to see, and

'

Berry's Worl~

By JIM SOUI.SBV
· Casey's BOE and Miller's sacti·ft ce. Two more crossed In Ihe
Mcig's American Legion Basenext !ramP after Bissell si ngled ,
bali tea m was knoc ked out or the
Young walked and Bart rum was
El!( hth District Tourname nt by a
double loss to Lancaster 119-0l
safe on a two base error at short.
Scott Miller, who had not been
a nd Athens 19-8) on Sunday after
hittin g well In regular season
posting wins over Athens on
play , led oft the s ixth with
Fr iday and Wellston on
a not her single and scored after
Sat urda y ..
Meigs adva nced to meet Lan- Durst stngled and advanced to
third on two wild pit c hes.
caster by virtue of a 12 to 5 win
Another run was plated after
over Wellston,·The Meigs batters
tagged the Wells ton pitching
Bissell was safe on an error, Joey
s tart for only six hits but were . S~yder walked and Miller got a
aided by an equal number of base on errors. To round out
miscues committed . by the
Meigs scorlng in The eig hth.
IOSl'rs.
Collins walked. Becker was safe
Bryan Durst went the full nine
on a miscu e, Bissell was hit by ·a
for Meigs allowing only one base pitch and Terry Fields, a good
first year player. picked up two
runner in the first four frames
a nd not being tagged for a hil
RBi "s on his first hit of the
season. Durst showed good form
until the fifth . At that time Scott
S&lt;' hartenberger got a lead off as he walked only one batter and
si ngle, Rob Kuhn rapped a
faced only 35 men In the nin e
innings while scattering six hits.
doublE' to le ft center and Scharfenbl' rger was cut down at the
Batteries: Meigs - Bryan
Durst IWPl &amp; Rob Young (71 ,
plate trying to score as Kuhn
moved to third. Mike Abrams Jeff McElroy (2) .
sacrifice plated Kuhn. Wellston
Wellston :.. Rob Kuhn tLP-7
picked up an unearned run In the 1131. Jim Lants 12/ 3) &amp; Bobby
seventh as Kuhn reached on a Ward .
fielder's c hoice advanced on a
Line Score:
wide throw to first and scored on Wells ton .. .... 000 010 130- 5 6 6
Mark Lyle's single. Three more Meigs ....... ... .004 121 13--12 6 2
runs in the next inning on a
dropped third strike, back to
In Sunday's opener, Lancaster
back singles by Mark Williams completely demoralized the
and Bruck Crabtree and a · Meigs team with an eight run
fielding error end ed We ll ston 's outburst in the second fram e
scoring.
enroute to a 19 to Owhitewashlng .
Meigs jumped to a four run Brian Young got the win allowing
lead in the third when Scott only seven hits and giving up one
Miller led off with a a base rap free pass. Mike Bartrum started
and stole second, Bryan Durst on the mound for Meigs and was
was safe on an error and Jeff tagged with the Joss. He was
Caldwell and Ed Collins walked charged wilh twelve runs on
to force In a fun. Do·n Becker's seven hits and five walks i_n 4
sacrifice plated Durst and Brent 213's innings, Brian Freeman, In
Bissell's doJble picked up two relief, allowed five safeties and
more runs. Mike Bartrum score(! . seven runs. Meigs hitters were
in the fourth after a walk . Todd Rob Young with two singles,
Bryan Durst a double and Ed
Collins, Brent Bissell, Scott
Miller and Jeff Caldwell with a
The Daily Sentinel
single each. Bryan Young was
Lancaster's leading hitter with
1usrs HHIMII
A Olvl!don of MuUimediu, lnt·.
three. The only good thing abOut
the
contest from the Meigs point
Publlshf'd t'Wrv llfa•rnnon . M nnrla~·
of view was that It ended after 8~
r hrou~ h Frld:J,\', 111 Co urt ~~ .. Po·
mrroy. Ohio. b~· th f' O hio Vull1·~· Pub·
innings.
J\.ii hln ~ Compan y Mulllf!lNHa . In•·..
Batteries :-Meigs- Mike BarPomc· J V . O hio 4~7n9 . Ph . 9!12 -:! l !m. St•·
com\ "t\ss pnstaf.:t' paid al PomC'roy .
t rum (LP-42/ 3) , BryanFreeman
Ohl'
(3~). &amp; Rob Young (5), Jeff
McElroy (31.
M r nmf'r: U nllf'd Prf'!o;"l lnli' t na!lnn:al.
Inland O&lt;.t llv Pt' (\~i'l AM~oc· l; tt io n a nell hi'
Lancaster - Brian Young
Ohio Nr'Wspaprr As!-loc lallon. Nat lnnal
(WP-7),
AI Beavers tl) &amp; Norm
A.dvNIIslng Ri'pt'f'SPni~II,:C'. Br~anham
Hoppe (51, Dave DeFazio (3).
Nf'wspap&lt;&gt;r Salf'!'i, 7.\'l Th ird Awnu1·,
Nf'w York. Nf'w York 11X117 .
Continued on page 4

iVPII
Don Mattingly 's
home run s trea k Is over. His
quest to bring the Yankees a
pennant goes on.
Mat tingly ' s· record -set ling
home run streak came to an end
· Sunda y night with Texa s pitchers
Greg Harris and Jeff Russell
combining to stop the All -Star
fi rs t baseman In the Ran gers·
20-3 rout of New York.
Mattingly · enterE'd the game
ha ving hit a homer in elg\)i
straight games to tie Dale Long's
31-vear-old major-league record,
bui Harris limited him 1&lt;&gt; a single
In three at-bats. Mattingly hit an
opposit e-field double in the
. etghth inning off RusselL
·'I'm really not disappoint ed
It 's over," Mattingly said. "Actuall y, it was going to be over after

,.

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SAVE ON
ROOFING

arr as whf'rC' hom(' C'arrlt-1' scrvkc l!oi
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Cl1111t~yN!A,~ ~- ·-~.
"Is this your first stretch dress?' :

Mall SubscrlptlunM
IMide Melp County

13 W1'Cks .................................. $17.29
26 WN'kS ................................... $34.06
52 Wecks .... ...... ...... ............ ..... $66.16
Outside Melp County
. t3 Weeks .... ........ .................... $18.20
26 Weeks.·.... .. ...... .:.................. . $35. tO
52 Weeks ................................ .. $67. ~

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t.. Sloe•=
White. h4. Gr"n,
Colors

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Reg. $10.99

$989 .

NOW

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IDUl FOR IUID(NnAI, AGRICULTUU
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lrown, llodi 01111 Groy'
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FRIDAY thrv THURSDAY !

_j

" JAWS THt;
REVENGE "

FT.

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Transactions

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U -ll .17K 1\.&lt;r
31 52 •.all It

Kn ..... ('t l)'
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"1 1 1

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Rou:h••!Oh•r Ill Tolt•do

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.;r:; l

TOLEDO, Ohio iUPll
,
Driver-trainer Dave Rankin
guided winners in both divisions
of the $38,600 Ohio Sires Stake
serjes for 2-year-old trotting
fillies Sunday night a t Raceway
Park.
In the first pivislon, Ranki n
and 3-1 favorite Kristens Crown
led ali the way, covering the mile
in 2:03 4-5 To beat out Single
Sainte and Wildwood Sandy by
six iengt hs.
The second division, which was
marred by four fillies breaking
stride in the first quarter mile.
Rankin steered home Tinsel Hili
in a time of 2:07 3-5. PPaceable
Power finished second and Lu cious Star came in third.
Tinsel Hill triumphed in her
first career start a nd earned
$9.650.

Tldo•WIIh'l' :l, Mill 1M' '!. 1"'1 ~nnw
ndo·wah..-ll Mllhw 6, "!nd .-anw
Rlt·hmund 5, Pa'll'luduot 3
To lt·dt• 'l', H.ot· h~"''itt'r 1'1
M11ndll.y' " (lunw~
Sy rJtt"Ulll 'id (' ullllmiJJ"'
11do·wult'l' 111.1 ,\ hint•
Hit·hmund al Pawhli·kt1 . ":!
Rtll·h..,.h•r u1 Tuh•OO
Tut'!odll)'" G•ml""-

Houston Ml Monll'l•al, niKhl
;\llu.nt11 ut l'it•w l ' orll, niKhl
U••·l nruall ~ Phll"df'lphl.-, IIIKhl
toil . Lo•ls ut lA!'I AnJt"t'fi, •llllhl
f hlt'll~ Ill KMn 014•1[0, IIIKhl
Pllh•htuth"' san f' n.ndMoo. niKht

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Sunday resulls

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Scoreboard ...

SINGLF. C'OI'V
PRICE

·'

over

tonight anyway- one way or the Kansas City 5-1 and Oakland Reardon, who earned his 19th
save by pitching the ninth .
other. 1 waseithergoingtosetthe topped Bosto·n 5-3 in 11 innings.
White Sox 9, Indians 7
reJord by myself or it was going
Marln~rs 5, Tigers 4
AI Chicago, Greg Wa.lker hoto end."
At Detroit, Alvin Davis hit
Mattingly had only one good Detroit reliever Willie Hernan- mered to snap a 6-6 tie and ignite
swing against Harris and Russell dez' first - pitch for a two-run a decisive three -run fifth inning
In his four at-bats. He took a hard homer wit h none out in the ninth to spark the White Sox. Cleveland
cut at an 0-2 pitch in the third and . inning to help Seattle snap their has lost three straight after
produced a solid single. In the three-game losing streak against winning Thursday in Doc Edwards' de but a s inte r im
eighth, he took a home-run cut at the Tigers.
·
manager.
a Russell fastball , but tailed to
Angels 8, Brewers 5
Orioles 5, Royals I
connect before hitting his double :-------. At Milwaukee, pinch hitt er
At
Kansas
City, Mo., BiHy
"I didn't. really fry to hit a Ruppert Jones hit a three-run
homer until my last at -bat ," dollbl e to highlight a fi ve- run Ripken hit his first major- league
Mattingly said. "Russell' went eighth Inning. The victory home run and Lee Lacy also -,
right at me with his fastball. enabled California to spilt the homered to give the Orioles a That's the way IT should be."
four-game weekend series and sweep of the four - game series
against the Royal s. Baltimore
In other games. Seattle edged win t he season series, 7-5.
starter Dave Schmidt , 10-2, al-,
Detroit 5-4, California beat MilTwins 7, Blue Jays 6
waukee 8-5, Minnesota shaded
At Minneapolis. Tom Bru- lowed live hit s in seven innings -: .
Athletics 5, Red Sox 3
.·
Toronto 7-6, Chicago oulsiugged nansky drove in three runs and
At
Boston.
Jose
Canseco.
·.
Cleveland 9-7, Baltimore clipped three Minnesota relievers comgrounded
a
tworun
single
in
the
,
bined To pitch 61-3 strong innings.
Dan Schalzeder, 1-0, worked 3 2-3 top of the lith inning to lead the
innings with six strikeout s. Keith Athletics to their second extra·
Atherton pitched 1 2-3 perfect inning victory over the Red Sox
innings before yielding to Je ff in three days.

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LOVE
SEATS

�Monday, July 20, 1987

20.1987

Ohio

7am the best' says Miss Mississippi

Mason Co. Bat;' wins Kyger
Creek Little League tourney ·

FOODLAND -This Is a Little League team of
the Pomeroy Youth League Foodland team lor
1987. Pictured are front (left to right) Phil Green,
Trenton Cleland, Eric Wagner, Ryan Conde,

,Jerrod Douglas; second, J . P. Davis, Jack
Sla"Jey, Heath Hudson, Brian Walker, Jim
Pullins; back, Coach Dr. ,James Conde 11nd
Assistant Coach, Larry Walker.

By SHERA GROSS
VICKSBURG, Miss. (UP1) Toni Seawright says It Is not
enough that she Is the first black
woman to be crowned Miss
Mississippi, and while "the time
was right for me to win ... we're
not through making history."
Seawright, the South's first
black contestant since .1980 for
the Miss. America pageant, was
firm about ber position at a news
conference Sunday: "I want
everybody to realize I did not win
just because I am black, but
because I am the best. "
Seawright, 22. who bested 36
other contestants. Including two
other blacks, In the state pageant, said she hoped she would be
viewed as a role model for other
black women. "I hope they will
be proud of me because I am
black·," she said. "Everything
must change. The time was right
lor me to win."
She added, "We made history,
but we're not through making
history."
The choir singer !rom Moss
Point did not take · Saturday
night's victory enlltely In stride.
"I felt good about everytingl was
doing . .. , but I was very
shocked," she said. "I had been
working for It, and when It
happened I was In a state of

,.

Point Became tlie state's first black winner In the pageant
Saturday. The 23-year·old music and business major represented
the Mississippi University lor Women.
-

Meigs football physicals scheduled

CART n&gt;vised rult's
are announced
lU Pli -The 'CART Board of
Direc tors announced revised
rules for rt'ar wing size on
short -course ovals In an
attempt to reduce speed. The
changes take e!lect In 1988. The
Board will review the rules for
high-speed ovals following the
500-mlle races at Michigan and
Pocono later this year.

· PEE WEE - This 1987 pee wee team of the
l!omeroy Youth League is sponsored by Cleland
Realty. Members are, front (left to right) Shawn
Milch, Scott Mitch, Riehle Hagen, Paul Chapman.

hours.

•

Physlrals for all members of
the volleyba ll, go lf and tross
country teams have been set for
Saturd.av . August 8th at 1:30 p.m .
at the high sc hool. Any on&lt;' not

mnklng these dal ~s will be
required to obtai n a physical at
their own expense before they
ca n partlrlpatP In any of the
above sports. Dr . .Jim Conde will
conduct the football physicals
and Dr. Vlllaneuva will give the
physicals lor the other sports.

People

•

10

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

•

By WD..LIAM C. TROT!'
LANDIS IN HUDSON HOUSE:
Director John Landis reportedly
Is the mystery buyer or the
hacienda where Rock Hudson
died
of AIDS In 1985. The house
Ollie Wear label on the front ana
Town IOllell only sit-clown cafe
was
recently sold for $2.89
BROWNSBORO, Texas (UPI ) Instructions to "wash warm. million- 500,000 over the asking
.
- A fire that destroyed Dot's tumble dry and shred."
They carry the statement, price - to the Beverly Crest
Cafe, the only sit-down res tauTrust and the Los Angeles Times
rant In this East Texas town, left "America's behind you Ollie," says Lapdls Is the man behind the
res.ldents lacing a frightening across the back.
One o! the owners of Brief trust. Landis, recently acquitted
prospect.
In the deaths of three people on
" Most of us only have one Concepts Ltd. , Peter Lambert. the "Twilight Zone" movie set,
choice to eat now, and that Is at said the company plans to go reportedly plans to spend about
home," said City Manager Jack nationwide as soon as It gets $500,000 refurbishing the home.
some orders lor Ollie's undies.
Beall.
" We're not trying to get across The 5,000-square-foot, two-story
More than 100 firefighters and
Spanish-style house. has a courtvo lunteers battled the blaze any message ," Lambert said. yard, swimming pool, spa and a
Saturday that destroyed Dol' s " It's lust a timely product we hIll top view ex tending !rom
thought there would be a demand
Cafe In Brownsboro. a townol526
downtown Los Angeles to the
people located 65 miles east or for now . We' re not making any Pacific Ocean.
p&lt;:JIItlcal statement. ..
Dallas.
1
Tapping their way Into the record
" II was fully on lire when we
KENNEDY FACES DWI
books
got here." said Brownsbero
CHARGE
: Actor George
SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) firelighter Leroy Gullett . "It
Kennedy
has
an Aug. 6 date to be
Long-distance tap dancer " Rosie
appears to be a total loss."
Radiator" led 14 other tappers arralgne"d In Santa Fe, N.M .. on
Fred Kapper, owner or th~
Into
the record books when they charges of drunken and careless
calc, said Su.nday the blaze
i:lrivlng. Kennedy, In the Santa
danced
non- s top lor 7.3 miles.
started In the kitchen or the care•
Fe area shooting a television
Rosie,
whose
real
name
Is
Boss
trx;ated next to his trailer home.
movie · with singer Kenny
and
her
chorus
line
began
Balr,
"Once It caught lire tn the
Rodgers
called "The Gambler
their
noisy
journey
In
the
Potrero
kitchen, It was sucked up through"
3,"
was
arrested
late one night
Hill
district
Saturday
and
ended
the exhaust !an. We cou ldn't
last
week
after
he
was spotted
II 4 hours and 16 minutes later at
reach It with anything, " he said.
driving
the
wrong
way
without
Brownboro has two drive- Pier 39, whe re they were shoheadlights.
Court
records
show
through restaurants, but Dol's wered with confetti.
Kennedy
,
63,
refused
to
take
a
The 41-year-old dancer's 1985
was the only place where custofield
sobriety
test
or
a
blood
record, as verified by the Gulnmers could sit down and eat.
ness Book of World Records, was alcohol test and was released on
Another Ollie North news 'brief'
his own recognizance about 15
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) - A 5.4 miles
minutes
after he was booked.
Rosie
started
what
Mayor
men's underwear line named for
In
a
proclamaDianne
Feinstein,
Lt. Col. Oliver North - and
THE PEOPLE SPEAK: Eliza tion, calle&lt;r"'a San· Francisco
emblazoned with the s lo~an
beth
Taylor and Tom Selleck are ·
tradition·:
in
1976,
when
she
"America's behind you Ollie" &lt;)n
the
sexies
t people around and
. the back- Is on sale In the Twin tapped across the Golden Gate
fallen
angel
Jim Bakker Is Jhe
Bridge.
Cities.
Rosie said, however, that SaThree Minnetonka. Minn., busof 1,000 according
People readers.
turday's
"tong-distance tap was survey
least trusted,
to a
Inessmen who own a company
al)nual
poll
The
magazine's
ninth
her
last.
that specializes In printed boxer
''We've
decided
to
pass
It
on
tc;&gt;
shorts dreamed up Ollie Wear
shows that 41 percent of Its
the other tap dancers of the respondents said they didn't
last weekend.
The white boxer shorts. which nation," she said. "Let them· trust Bakker and another evangelist. Jimmy Swaggart, was
sell for $14.95 a pair, carry the carry It on."

.
;
•
:

T-BALL- This Pomeroy Youth League !-ball
team is sponsored by Top of the Stairs. Members
are Jront,(lelt to right) Sean Powell, Christopher
Darst, Jonathan Bell, ,John Hill, Donnie Call:
second row Michael Williamson. Grant Abbott.

Ryan Ramsburg, Jonathan Wyatt, Dustin Huffman, ,J. D. Brown,..fiyan Pratt· back, Coaches
Robert Ramsbury, Wyall anif~gcr Abbott. A
team member not pictured Is P. J. Erwin.

· Legt'on ... _ _ _ _ _Continu
ed_
from
page 1_ _ _____;__ ___..__
__
_;__..::.._
M etgs

J

· Line Score: .
Amburgey and Brian Freeman
Meigs ......... 000 000 000- 0 7 6 singled , Bryan Durst walked, Ed
.Lancaster ... 180 034 120-19 12 2 Coll ins hit safely, Bissell agai n
- Meigs had downed Athens in
got a free pass and Collins was
four of their live previous meet- cut down at third trying to
Jngs but could not put them away
advance. Alan McPherson, who
' In the one that counted most as
relieved starter Tony Coles with
·they lost 9 to 8 to be eliminated
the bases loaded, got the last out,
from further play . Athens came of the Inning and shu t the Meigs
'from the losers bracket with a 6 bats down from that point on
to 4 win over Logan and a 27 to 3 giv ing up only two more hits as
schellaclng of Wellston. Both
Athens chipped away at the
teams traded runs in the first.
Meigs· lead.
.f or Meigs Brya n Durst walked ,
Alter tyi ng the game in the
Ed Collins hit a bunt single and
eighth , the Athens crew put
pitcher Tony Coles loosed two
Meigs out In order in the top oft he
wild pitches to allow Durst to
ninth.
Then, with Bartrum relieving
score. Athens run came on back
to back singles by Ed Robe and
Amburgey on the mound with one
Kevin Barr followed by . Chris out. Rick Walls got aboard and
advanced to second on a double
Barr's sacrifice. Chris Matters
put the winners up one In the error. Rob Dorman's single
second as he bit safely and came
advanced him to third. With
home on Tony Cole 's bit. Meigs's McPherson at the plate, a wild
big third started after two outs pitch went to the backstop. At
when Brent Bissell walked ,. Rob
that point It seemed the runner,
Young reached on an error and pitcher and catcher were all
Mlke'Bartrum and Jeff Caldwell
undecided as to what to do". No
drew bases on balls. Dave __ pne made an e!!ort~to recover the

...

ball near the plate and Walls
finall y broke for the plate to
score the winning run and the
season was over for Meigs .
Batteries: Meigs- Ed Collins
(6 113), Brent Bissell, (1- 113),
Dave Amburgey (1) , Mike Bartrum &amp; Rob Young.
Athens- Tony Coles (2 2/3), AI
McPherson (6 113), &amp; Rob
Dorman.
Line Score:
·Meigs ..... ... .. 107 000 000-8 6 5
Athens ......... ll2 101 021-9 13 4

Featherweight tide
is retained
(UP!) - Lee Seung-hoon of
South Korea retained his IBF
Junior featherweight title Sunday, knocking out Leon Collins of
the Philippines 1 minute, 23 ·
seconds Into the filth round at
Pohang, South Korea.

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS COMING ON AUGUST 14th
ADVERTISING DEADLINE. IS
AUG. 7th
CALL DAVE OR PAUL TO PLACE YOUR
·AD ·IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 992-2155 FOR 'DOAILS

·. . .

•

Supreme Court who wants to
reverse Roe vs. Wade," the high
court decision In 1973 that legal·
!zed abortion.
Another priority for NOW
members would be to support
Schroeder, whO is considering a
bid to become the nation's first
woman president, Yard said.
Schroeder was given a thunderous ovation when she addressed NOW convention dele- ,
gates Saturday. The group
Immediately raised more than
$351,000 In pledges lor her candidacy, enough lor her to become
eligible for federal matching
funds .
"We are going to keep saying to
Rep. Schroeder, 'Run, Pat,
run,"' until she decides to formally enter the race, Yard said.
Remarking on the obvious
absence of other presidential
candidates at the conference,
Yard said, "We didn't Invite any
other candidates. We didn't see
them as addressing any of our
concerns.
"We never came anywhere
near raising as much money for
anyone as we did lor Pat
Schroeder," Yard said. "It says
volumes about where NOW's
hearts and minds are. "
The election of Yard, NOW's
former political director and
Smeal's personally phosen successor, was not without controversy. Her opponent, Noreen
Connell, a labOr organizer and
pre~ident of the New York NOW
chapter, had many. supporters

•

• i

FORT MILL , S.C . (UP!) -The Rev. Sam Johnson, the pastor
of the PTL's Her.ltage village Church, lashed out at dissident
backers of !allen evangelist Jim Bakker and called them
Philistines out to destroy the ministry .
Johnson, named pastor or the PTL's fl agship church three
months ago by the Rev. Jerry Falwell, the new mimstry
chairman, told worshipers Sunday he Is upset by repeated
attacks by some PTL partners.
_ Johnson said he read about another partners' association this one In Atlanta - "and they want to get together and buy
PTL. 1 didn't even know It was for sale.
"! want to tell you people In Atlanta, this minister and this
church and the works of God are not for sale," Johnson said.
The PTL Partner Majority In Atlanta plans to challenge the
right of Falwell, a fundamentalis t Baptist, to run the PTL,
which was founded as a charismatic, Pentacostal ministry.
Two other groups, the Association o!-PTL Partners and Bring .
Bakkevs Back, are also challenging Falwell. who was asked to
take over PTL by Bakker when he res1gned over an
extramarital sexual encounter.
Johnson said PTL partners who have s topped monthly
contributions to the minis try are not the real enemy of the
ministry, but are being used by a spiritual enemy.
" Judah belonged to the Israelites , but here ca me the
Philistines. Oh how the enemy would like to come this morning
to Heritage USA to possess this church," Johnson sa id . "I'm
lalklng about a spiritual enemy.
,
"They (the dissident partners ) are weak, they re demoralized , and they don't have unity." Johnson said. "But they 're
parading before us as If they're Goliaths."
Johnson called the PTL's troubles are symptomatic of a
"moral decline" In the United States and said, "The only
answer today Is that we, God's people, must turn our lace back
to God."

rated the second least trustworthy person along with Lt. Col.
Oliver North. However, the poll
was taken before Nort h's capt!·
vatlng testimony on Capitol Hill.
Taylor won the sexiest woman
honor with strong support from
female voters, finishing ahead of
Linda Evans, Raquel Welch and
Joan Collins, while Selleck outdistanced Paul Newman, Robert
Redford and Don Johnson. The
survey also asked readers which
American politician they would
least likely to see In the nude. The
winner: Ronald Reagan with 37
percent.
GLIMPSES: Political satirist
Mort Sahi Is back. "His one-man
show begins a four -week run on
Oct. 5 at Broadway's Neil Simon
Theater . .. Jim Lehrer, halfo!the
"MacNeil-Lehrer NewsHour."
has one play, "Chill Queen,"
playing at the·Kennedy Center in
Washington and will take
another, "The Great Man." to a
workshop at' Robert Redford's
Sundance Institute In Utah. In
addition, he Just sold a novel to
Putnam's . .. No word yet on
whether Barry Manllow will
appear at the International convention of his fan cl!,lb in
Washington from July 27 to Aug.
1. Some 1, 200 Manllowltes are
expected . .. Eight Bells, a
wooden lobster boat specially
built In 1928 lor the late Illustrator N.C. Wyeth to cruise on with
his lan:JIIy, has been donated by
his son, Nathaniel, to the Maine
Maritime Museum collection.

.
'
If you made a mistake or didn't take all the deductions or
credits possible pn your tax returns for the last three years: you
can still amend those returns!
·· ·
·
H&amp;R Block can amend your returns of up lo three years ago
and help you get back any lax money you're entitled to from
those years.
Come into or call your nearest H&amp;R Block (}fftce today and
ask about amending your past tax returns . It could mean more .
money for you.

BRING IN THIS AD FOR A FREE TAX RECORD BOOK.

618 EAST MAIN STREn POMEROY, OH. 45769

nESt~ay -~IJT.ednesdtlgNigl·L~ ~ipecia/s

llllflll''

'IU

~J

Dinners

MOLLY YARD

Including NOW's first president,
Betty Frledan.
·-

Masoa-Diun LJae.
The Mason·DlliOII Line, traditionally the dlvidln1 Une between the North
and the South, was In no way connected to the Civil War. The Jiae waa
drawn much earlier to end a colonial
land dispute between the Calverta of
Maryland and the Pen111 of Pen111yl·
vanla. The line was fixed by two sur·
veyors, Charles Mason and Jeremiah
Dixon, between 178~ and 1787.

YOU
liN YOUR

r--::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

NOW elects Yard to presidency;
will replace Smeal Saturday
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Molly Yard's election as president o! the National Organization
for Women Is an Indication the
group will keep Its focus on
lighting Reagan administration
policies and pushing lor the
Equal Rights Amendment.
. Yard, who was elected Sal ur: day to replace Eleanor Smeal,
.·:said the first Item on her agenda·
: Is to oppose the Supreme Court
nomination of Robert Bork, the
federal appeals judge who she
' called a "nea nderfhal" on
, women's Issues, particularly
• abortion and birth control.
· At a news conference Sunday
~ concluding NOW's covenlion.
Yard also pledged to put all the •
: organization's Ioree behind the
• potential presidential candidacy
-:or Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D·
~ Colo.
7 Yard, who was opposed by
• NOW members who favor work; lng at lower leve ls lor the~r goals,
said NOW's 150;000memberswlll
be "out In the streets and also In
the courts" to work against
• Reagan administration policies
In general and the Bork nomination In particular.
"We are lighting mad on this
Issue and we are not going to
allow It to continue," said Yard, a
diminutive, tough- talking grandmother raised In Ligonier, Pa,
who Is des!;I'Ibed as being In her
mid-70s.
, "Bork Is a neanderthal," she
said. "We aren't gomg to stand
; for having someone on the

dissidents are Goliaths

the News ...

Quirks in the News ...

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In,.

Todd Hawley; second, Jason Sheets, Todd Mitch,
Cass Cleland, Travis Abbott, Jell Darnell, Travis
Curtis; back, Coaches Hank Cleland and Roger
Abbott.

And the new Miss Mississippi
quickly dismissed a question
asking her to compare herself to
Vanessa Williams, the !lrst black
Miss America who was stripped
of her crown In 1984 after nude
photographs of her were published In Penthouse magazine.
"Even though we are both
black, we are not o! the same
creed and beliefs, " said · Seawright, who sings at First Baptist
Church In Moss Point. "You'll
never catch me posing (for nude
pictures),"
There have been few black
contestants from the South In the
Miss America pageant. The mQ:&gt;t
recent was Len cola Sullivan, who
won the Miss Arkansas title In
1980 and was fourth runner-up for
Miss America.
Seawright, who bested 10 white
women In Saturday night's !lnals
to become the 1987 Miss Mississippi; was applauded enthusiastically by the crowd of 1,366 at the
Vicksburg Municipal Auditorium when she received her
crown.
She had won the preliminary
talent competition by singing a
bluesy version o! Jeffrey Osborne's "We're Going All the
Way," changing the lyrics t9
"! 'm Going All The Way." By
then she had become a crowd
favorite.

awe.''

111117 Slate Queen - Miss Mississippi 1987 Toni Seawright of Moss

shO ulder p~d fillings will bf' hPid
on the same day starting at 1000

PJl pastor says

l

•..'\

The Mason County Bar Assocl- Joey Henry with fwo hits and NAPA downed Middleport Fire
allon won the Kyger Creek Little Randy Randolph with two h_lts.
Dept. 9-8. A four run sixth gave
League Tournament Sunday
For the B!lars David Koelng NAPA the win . Randy Randolph
beating Bidwell (1), 1-0.
was the losing pitcher. Koelng was the winning pitcher. Robby
The winning run was scored In and Randy Kaylor combined lor Chase, Joey Henry and Randy
the bottom of the sixth. With one eight strike outs and nine hits. Randolph each had two hits. For
out Roger )i"ultz singled, Brent Wes Arbaugh had three hits lor Middleport Bobby Johnson was
Sang and Chris Taylor were both . the losers .
the losing pitche r and had two
sale on errors to load the bases.
NAPA took the lead with a hits.
Randy Bright then lifted a fly ball three run third and never looked
Bidwell (11 defeated Hannah
to right field. Fultz beat the back.
Trace 11-2. Rob Canady cointhrow to the plate with the
In the semi-finals, Saturday, blned with Chuck .Yost to pitch a
winning run.
Bidwell ill dumped Tuppers one-hitter. Mike Campbell and
Jim Barnette was the winning Plains 11 -1. For Bidwell Rob Yost had two hits. For Hannan
pitcher striking out seven and Canaday comliined with Chuck · Trace Chad Barnes took the loss.
giving up three hits In the six Yost to toss a one-hliter and pick Ricky Dillon had the only hit.
Innings he pitched.
up the win. They struck out 12.
Several Individual awards
Rob Canaday was the losing
Mike Campbell bad lour hit s were presented at the tournapitcher going the dl~tance giving and Ca naday t~ree hits.
ment . The most s trikeouts was
up five hits and striking out
For the· Bears Randy Kaylor recorded by Brent Smith
seven.
had the only hit and David (NA PA) with 32 . The award lor
For Mason Co. Bar Travis Koelng toook the loss .
most home runs was shared by
Tolliver, Jim Barnei'te," Roger
Mason Co. Bar In their semi- Brent Smith !NAPA). Chris
Fultz, Brent Sang and Chris llnal game defea ted Pt. Pleasan( Tay lor (Mason Co. Bar), Jlm
Taylor each had one hit .
NAPA 13-5. Ma r k Georgi was th(' Barnette (Mason Cq. Bar) and
Chuck Yost, Brent Schult z and winning pitc her. Roger Fultz. Shane Grimm (New Have n
Jerlmiah Johnson each had one Chris Ta ylor and Mark Georgi Reds) .
hit lor Bidwell.
each had thre(' ·hits to pa cP a 14
Thl' best defensive player was
In the consolation game, Pt. hit attack.
Ranbdy Kay lor (Tuppers Pla~n
Pleasant NAPA defeated the
NAPA was led by Robby Chase Bears). Recording the most hit s
Tuppers Plains Bears 7-5_ For wit h. three hits and Mike Durst was Roger Fultz with 10. Chad
NAPA Brent Smith struck out 13 with two hits . MikP Porter took Nelson of Coolville Bane One
and gave up five hits to pick up the loss _
tossed a no-hitter.
the wln."NAPA 's top hitters were
In earlier game Pt. Pleasa nt

Athletic Director Gor don
Fisher and Head Football Coach
Bob Ashley have announced that
physical examinations for prospective Meigs High players are
scheduled lor Thursday, July
23rd beginning at 0900 hours at
the high school. Helmet and

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,.

�.'

r

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~p~~~~~6~TI.~~D~~~Iy~Se~u~tiM~I=:~~--------~----~--~~p~~m~~~~~~M~~~~~p~~~~~.~O~No~------~--------------------~M~~~!~~J:u~~~2~0~,~19~8~7

Community calendar/area happenings
SUNDAY
TUP PERS PLAINS - Tuttle
: : GREAT BEND - Reviva l at l'amily reunion Sunday. Tuppers
11:.30 each evening Sunday Plains (Jt·~hous~ . DinnPr at12: 30
'through July 24 at Bethlehem · p.m .
Baptist Church at Great Bend
with Blaine Farley speaking;
POMEROY - Reunion of the
Don Kouns, song leader.
c hildren ol the late Charll's and
Alma Snyder,Sunday at the road·
s
ide park on Rout I' 33 South. Take
· POMEROY - Biggs lamily
c
overed dish.
reunion Sunday, home ol Na than
Biggs. Basket dinner at noon.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Winding Trail
RACINE - Racine Chapter Gardl'n Club will ml'l't at ~p. m .
134, Order ol the E ;&lt;stern Star, at thl' Ohio Power Co. lot .on
will have a picnic Sunday at 6 Spring Valley Lane and then
p.m. at the shelter house near the travl'l to Gallipolis for a dlnn€'r.
Syracuse tennis courts. All ofllc· Following rl'turn to the home of
ers and members are Invited and Addalou Lewis for a meeting.
each is asked to take a covered Plans for participation In the
dish.
Meigs County Fair flower show

will be madP, with the schedule to
be discussed and tickets to be
sold.
SYRACUSE - London Pool
will ofler swimming lessons
s tarting on · Monday. Adult
classes will begin at 9 a .m. ;
ad1·anccd beginners and Intermediate at 10 a.m. and beginner
at 11 a.m. All classes are$12 with
registration at the pool. 992-9909,
or with Heidi Cobb, 992-3402.
RUTLA ND - Rutland Garden
,Club wUI meet at. the home df
Mrs. Virgil A'tkins for a garden
tour and picnic Monday at 5 p.m.
The program wll Include a
workshop using the Meigs
County Fair flower show

·shopping at home

Catalog ordering on the phone
bathroom when they need one.
By MICPLE DIGIROLAMO
They
can shop at their conven. United Press International
ience In their ~ home using a
Your wardrobe need updating?
telephone."
.
.
Forget the shopping mall - . it 's
The key is definitely conventoo crowded.
ience. Credit cards. toll-free
. Besides, who has the time
telephone numbers and catalog
these days- or th.e inclinationsales centers that are open 24
to fight the traffic and search for
hours a day make It easy for a
a parking space only to be
busy person to shop beyond the
mistreated by a surly saleswotraditional
store hours.
m;m and end up waiting In a long
"If
you
have
been working late,
line to pay for your purchases? ·
you
come
home,
you have to
Why not just throw on some
make
dinner."
Generelll
said.
old, comfortable clothes (make"At
11
at
night
you
can
still
order
up not required since no one will
a three-piece suit and It will
see you. except other family
arrive the next week."
members). curl up In your
The Increased popularity In
favor.lte armchair and join the
catalog shopping has resulted in
millions of American consumers
more and more catalogs on the
who are spending billions of
market. sparking ill tense compedollars . annually shopping by
tition, Generelll said.
catalog.
Last year, catalog purchases
The trend now Is towards
tallied In at 14 percent of total
" very upscale attractive" catalretail sales and Industry olf!clals
ogs, she said, resembling slick
magazines. Catalog companies
predict that llgure will rise to 20
percent by 1990. Cat a log sales
are adding editorial contents,
are Increasing at a rate of 15 displaying advertisements and
using higher quality paper and
percent a year as compared to
snazzy photographs. The trend
retail sales, which are · only
has even spawned a new term growing 5.2 percent annually,
magalogs.
according to Karen Generelli, a
spokeswoman lor the Direct
"They are all fighting for that
Marketing Association.
consumer dollar ," Generelll
said. "They (catalogs) are much
The DMA does not have figures
for catalog sales alone, bUt more exciting and much more
·
Generelll said total consumer fun to go through."
For example, Lands' End's
mall order sales increased from
$36 bi!Uon in 1980to$50bllllon last summer catalog, In addition to
year. What Is prompting this glossy pages of khaki shorts, polo
shirts and canvas briefcases,
surge?
:·A big reason Is- the tremend· features two articles solely for
ous amount of women entering reading pleasure. One, .;Bush
the workforce," Generelll said. League Dreams" tells of the
"We're talking about a career thrills · and heartbreaks of basewoman In a two- Income family ball's minor leagues. and the
averaging $35,000 a household. other Is a tongue-In-cheek essay
Neither partner has the time to about the pitfalls of barbecuing.
A late-summer version of the
go shopping.
"You're talking about a degree catalog arrives q!sgulsed as a
of .discretionary Income with no Dodgeville, Wis ., newspaper.
Ume to spend it." ·
"We have for some time now
Added Terry Wilson, a vice worked to make the catalog a
president at Lands' End, a keeper - somet h!ng that people
Wisconsin catalog company sei- will read for Its editorial value as
Ung classic casual clothing: well ·as lis shopping Informa"People tell us they just dislike tion," said Wilson, whose comthe crowds and the hassle of pany's sales skyrocketed from
finding a .parking place and a $72 million In 1981 to $265 million
last year.

Calif()rnja ·s Banana Republic
appeals to the yuppie crowd,
emphasizing clothes for armchair adventurers. Its catalog Is
printed on a parchment-type
paper and is filled with jungle
skeiches and clever yarns of
derrlng"do.
Multiproduct companies such
as Sears and Spiegel are us!11g
computer databases 'to · target
their consumers with spin -off
speciality catalogs such ·as
larger or petite sizes. executive
wardrobes or outerwear.
"As we listen to What the
customers are telling us , the
need for speciality catalogues Is
there," said R. Joseph McLaughlin, vice president of marketing
at Spiegel, whose sales doubled
over the past five years, exceed·
lng $750 million.
The possibilities lor catalog
shoppers are endless. Apparel of
every style and lor every purpose
can be purchased over the
telephone..
,
If you prefer that clean. all·
American look of classic polo
shirts and A-line. poplin skirts,
check out the Lands' End catalog , the nirvana of
preppiedom.
A pregnant executive looking
for soml'thlng a bit more businesslike than an oversized Tsh!rt that brags "Baby Under
Construction" can look to Mother's Work, a Philadelphia company, and a catalog brimming
with execu live rna tern tty
clothes .
Feeling a btl racy? How about
a skin-tight leather skirt, a
leather "French Knot" bikini or
a pink spaghetti-strap leather
sheath !rom the North Beach
Leather catalog In San
Francisco?
Need some outdoor togs for
hiking or boating? Maine's L.L.
Bean has' got your number.
Clothes for the kids? Page
through the catalogs of JC
Penney or Sears. And the chic but
pricey · Spiegel catalog even
makes It possible to have som·P
designer haute clothing stuffed In
your mailbox .

For your eyes only: selecting designer frames-·'

.,

just as long to pick out their
frames and color as a woman.''
However, Bill Kern, at Optique
Nouveau In Kansas City, said
women ~sually take longer to
select their glasses.
"Women take longer, but
that's because men don't have as
much selection," Kern said.
" Guys come In and try one on,
ask If they look all right, and buy

By AMANDA MUELLER
-KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) Gone are the days of only black
horn-rims or rimless spectacles
dangling from a neck chain.
Eyeglass wearers are looking
for, and finding, high-lashion
frames and lenses to complete
their wardrobes.
. People viSit an optometrist to
get their eyes examined but they
biiy new glasses to improve their
looks, and there are hundreds of
styles, colors. frames and lenses
to choose from.
Whether the cost is $40 or $400
for a new pair of glasses, the aim
Is the same - to look good.
~'There are more and more
people who wear glasses who
· wilnt to make sure they are
fashionable," said Eddie Murrell, who owns the Optical House
Inc., In the Kansas City suburb of
Mission, Kan. "They aren't going
til' come In and just pick out any
old style.
· "There's a lot oi'people who
don't want to spend over $50, and
there are a tot of people who don't
care how much they spend. but
the average If probably about
$70," Murrell said.
.. The American Optometric Association In St. Louts says eye
care and eyewear Is an $8
bllllon·a-year industry. About 120
million Americans wear correc·
uve lenses, with about 100 mllllon
cJiposlng glasses over c.o ntact
lenses, and an estimated 40
million Amerlcaris also own
prescription sunglasses.
Before someone spends the
money, though, there's the timeconsuming process of picking out
just the right color, frame and
matertal for the glasses,
· Most people- men and women
alike- spend at least 45 minutes
selecting their new spectacles,
Murrell said.
"They (men) are ·very styleronsclous, jusf as much as
women are," she said. :'Men take
.

them.''
"If you've never worn glasses

"Also, the 1950s looks are
·coming back, with a lot of people
wanting the cat eye shapes."
Frames can be made of plastic,
leather, metal, titanium or snakeskin and the shapes can be
round, square, heart· shaped,
swan-shaped or even guitarshaped.
.... E.Yf.!l..lf_ a _person spends two
hours finding the right frames,
he or she usually Is back within
two years for a new pair usually because that is what eye
doctors recommend- but sometimes because they simply want
to update their look.

before, you try on the different
materials, you look at all the
different styles," Murrell said.
"It's quite an Investment."
Choosing plastic -· or metal
fi·ames from hundreds of styles
Alter the first pair is purand colors can be difficult, given
the ever-Increasing selection chased, many people buy a
available. And If money Is no second pair- el ther prescription
object, the price can be down· sunglasses, sport glasses or
_simply to fit their wardrobe.
right royal.
Optlque Nouveau · offers a
special-order pair of eyeglasses
"Ariy color that Is fashionable
originally designed for the Du- In clothes In a given season,
chess of Windsor, Wallis Simp- you'll see frames In the same
son. Made of platinum, they color," Murrell said. "Eyeglass
feature diamonds and emeralds wear changes just like other
fashions."
,,
- and a $56,000 price tag.
No one has ordered them yet,
Although most people prefer to
Kern said, but one customer buy their first pair of glasses in a
spent $11,000 for a pair of glasses . neutral tone, many of the second
"They had diamonds and gold, pairs a~e sold In reds, blues or
a little plainer than the other other bright colors.
model," he said.
''We know by seeing the clothes
Name brand lines like Ray- in the stores what the frames are
Ban, Revo, Blagottl and Porsche going to be that season," she
are the most popular sellers, but said.
Kern also offers rhinestoneFor those who want their
studded or snakeskin-covered glasses to make a real statement,
frames for someone with an eye fashion or otherwise, customfor the unique.
made gla.s ses are available.
One of the most popular styles
In 1985, Kern made a pair of
In 1987 has been the plain, wire glasses for himself In honor oft he
frame, reminiscent oft he glasses World Series that !eatured a
worn by the late John Lennon.
Kansas City Royals emblem on
What do consumers have to one lens and a St. Louis Cardinals
look forward to this season?
emblem on the other.
"For one thing, glasses are
"I made a pair of glasses for a
more moderate sized now," Kern guy's Doberman Pinscher; too,"
said. "Five years ago, really big he said. "I charged him $175, but
lenses were ln. Now they're his dog won first In the dog
medium.
show.''
.,

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TUESDAY
RACINE - ' Work session at
so"uther.n High School, 6 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday to tear
down old bleachers on football
field; In case of rain postpone to
Wednesday and Thursday; take
tools.

special meeting ·
PORT··M
MIDDLE
Lodge
363, F&amp;AM,
willlddleport
meet In
special session at 7 p.m. Tuesday . Work will 'be In the fellow craft degree and refreshments
will be served following th(!
meeting.
'

annual picnic.
HARRISONVILLE .. Past Ma ·
trons of Harrisonville Chapler,
Order of Eastern Star, will hold ·
their annual picnic at 6:30 p.m. ·
tue~day at the home of Donna
Nelson. Those attending are to
take a covered dish.

TO PLACI AN AI C&amp;Ll "1·1116
MONDAY""',_., I lA t• 5 P.a
I A.M. Ultflj MOOtl SATUIDAJ

__ __

. :::... I

·- - .. - - - ....... . ... ..... ... .c-

··--""-"
...:::.=·' - ....

:.=~::... . ~-·- · ·
~

- ::::
~....~J~: v
JMO .. III IOU

BODY SHOP

CLOSED
JULY . 11TH
FOR 1 WEEK
VACATIOM
REOPEN JULY 20th

.

Carole Hess, New Owner

·
Today, more than ever before, a person's image depends to a large degree on
healthy, fashionable hail: A beautiful head of hair can make any person look and feel
younger and more attractive. In this area, fashion-conscious men and women have found
Gallely Hair Arts. located at 118 East Main Street in Pomeroy, phone 922-3233, to be the
mfJSt progressive hair desi~ studio around, These professionals specialize in precision
cuts that provide high-fashion styling with easy-care simplicity.
,
Cutting and styling alone are not enough to ensure beautiful hait At Gallery Hair
Arts,
.
t.heir experienced personnel take time to evaluate each person's hair type to best
detennine the proper care and treatment. PennanentS, tinting and coloring are·all featured
at this complete hair salon.
There are few investments you can make for your total image that will provide more
exciting, yet affordable results than a visit to Gallery Hair Arts. Why not call them today
and make your next appointment?
·

·

e.z

ond Stoto Route No. 143.

Bkf speclficelions mav be

picked up at tho Moigo
County EnginHf' s Office at
A~ute 2 , Rocksprings Aoed.
Ponwtroy, Ohio.
,

Meiga County Commleaktn·
ers;

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
DIAMOND SAVINGS AND
LOAN COMPANY
Succeuor in lnlere.st to The
Alhens County Sa-.inga &amp;
Loan Compenv
- vi -

__

1--------Public Notice

_
_
_
=:ei·--

PUBLIC NOTICE
A public heorlng will H
hold on Moqdoy, July 27,
1187. ot 7:30P.M. in vYioge
council chomHro. 237 Race
St. ,· for tho purpooo of ol&gt;tolnlng public input lor o

,

,,_......

N..ft. "'tll_l_..o

..-.. ----

·--

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

~:=...-=-

11- - o . - . -

y_,_,':"""_
........
_.......

n--...~.-.

:;-~--

Adminlstr.ltrhc of the tttate

Executrix of the eitate of

ol Eldon Chorloo Blake. do- Charlet L. Craft, deceatad,
COHod. tote· of 117801 State late of 50194 Pine Tree
Routo124. Reecjoviilo. Ohio Drive. Tuppers ~lains, OH .
45n2 .
46783.
--·--- . ·....
Chorloo H . Knight
Charlea'H. Knight.
Acting Probete Judge
Lena K. Netaelroad,

Clerk

171 20, 27; [8)

7:30P.M. Jutv 27. 1987.
171 17

• Cue No. 87·CV-08
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

&amp;4 Misc . Merchandise

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

Street . Miam 1 Florida .

There's nothing like a fence to define, protect, beautify ancl personalize your home.
For many years, the Aa:ent Fence Co., located on New Uma Road in Rutland, phone 742'1J.Yrl, ha$ been the choice of discerning homeowners in this area. Their reputation has
been earned by their high standards of work, quality materials and the ability to complete
the job in the rune allotted.
· All work is done by professionally trained installers who use the finest materials,
guaranteeing the homeowner the best possible price.
. From chain link, post and rail, to stockade fences, the Accent Fence Co. has it all, in
a style and color that will add ~~~2': privacy and protection to your home. They are also
specialists in all types ,of comm · and industrial fencing as well Why not call for a noobligation cost estimate on your next job? Whether it's a ~e or small job, these ·
prolessionals have the experience necessary·to guarantee satisfaction.
People in this area !lave come to rely on the Accent Fence Co. because they know
they are here today-and will be here tomorrow. Contact them for all your fencing needs,
and you, too, will discover that quality makes the difference. .
. .

twenty -eight (281 dave after

the list publicetion of thia
Norice. which will be published once each week for siJt
(6) successive weeks . The
last publication will remain

on 1he 27th day of July.

~~~om£~tmolet-OidsmobU~adlllac, Inc.

1987, and the tweniy -eight
(28) days for answer will
commence on that date.
In the case of your failure
to enawer or otherwl1e
respond •• requ111ed by the
Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure, judgment by default
will be rendered· against you
and for the relief dem-ndad
in the Complaint .

.

,,
·----------=-.

Dated this '17th day of
Juno. 1987.

.
'

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Couna
By Marlene Harrison.

Deputy
(8122. 29 ; 1718. 13. 20, 27,
8tc

NEW liSTING - Ower 70
ac're larm with older home,
garage and other bu tldings.
Close to Pomeroy. ASKING
$42.900.00.
NEW liSTING - SYRA·
CUSE - Remodeled 2 story
home, 3-4 bedrooms. II&gt;
baths, basement. garage
and old barn on appx~ I acre
of ground. Priced to sell at
$39,900.00.

2 s(

PH. 949-2756
Joh.n K. Benf'l
Owner/Mechanic
$.$.'17·3 mo.

CAll 992·6771

7-6-'IT-1 mo.

WELLMAN'S
PAINTING &amp;
SANDBLASTING
RISIOINTIAI
COMMERCIAl, INDUSTRIAl

I'll c••• ,, v... Pottl~l.
SeoAiutlot
MASONRY REITOIUION,
SWIM POOlS, STilt, URNS,
FAIIMtNG IQUIPMINT,
HOUSfS, !TORI FIONTS, lTC.
Work: Guaranteed
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 1114-U6-3021

6 -29-1 mo.

DAVIS METAL SALES, INC.

P.O. BOX 1166
. MT . VERNON, OH. 43060
DAVIS METAL SALES is the Nation's fastest growing
MANUFACTURER of D·RIB metal roofing &amp; siding.
We offers 4 profiles: D·RIB. HI-RIB. 5-V. COR·
RUGA TED. Orders custom cut to the inch at no extra
charce. OMS offers 10 buutiful colors plus gatvan·
ized and aalvatume. FREE delivery 100 squares or
more. Trims. skylights and accessories. Quality dis·
counts available .

ANYTIME
BUTCHER SHOP
Wo know whoro tho lltof i&lt;.
We also bow tt. ploca for
butch•ing and procttting.
We sati1fy or you don't pay

NEW liSTING - RACINE
AREA - Approximately 26
acres or vacant land really nice buildmg sites.
CALL TOOAY! $13.000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Here is a 2 story
colonial in Middleport, that
has many great features.
Great living room, great
woodburning fireplace,
great workshop, plus a great
apartment lor rental income. WANT $34,900.00
MIDDLEPORT - PRICE
REDUCED - Th.is older
hom e 1s close to stores and
schools. 2·3 bedrooms, level
lot. carpeting and other features includmg a nice front
porch MAKE OFFER.
$19.000.00.
POMEROY - Older 2 story
home with gorgeous wood·
work, fireplace &amp; nice cabi·
nets in kitchen. 3 bedrooms.
huge living room, dining
room &amp; equipped kitchen.
Central air, garage and stor·
age building. MAKE OFFER.
$39,900.00.
CALL CLElAND REALTY'
"THE WINNING TEAM"
IN REAL ESTATE
Hanry E. Cleland, Jr
.992-6191
·Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Tracy Rlfflt........ 949-3010
.Offica .............. ...992·2259

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Clet!ning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949.-2168 ·
~~' "4'-22-87 ·lfn

CHECK THE

[IJl551flfD5
for All

Your Needs
L
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Stcond
Mid.opart, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carrv Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bllls Here
1 IUStNISS PHONE

....,• ..., (6141 99n$SO
REStOENCI PHON!

(6141 992-77$4
1128/ tln

Roger Hyselr
Garage
Rt. 124, Pamtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Alu Tr••••l••loa
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6· 17-tfc

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
-C~ncrete work
- Plumbing and flleetrical
'-work
(Free Estimates I

992·6215 or 992·7314

Pomeroy,

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SiDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•REMODELING &amp;
ROOM AOOtTtONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE

. REFERENCES
Phone Day or Evtnl•t•

985-4141

e -30 -1 mo.

SIDING CO.

Ntw Homes Built
"Free Estimetes"
PH. 949-2860
·

A1111 ou ncem en ts

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-341.0
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

-We would like to thank 1he
· staff at PleauntVellt!lf Hospitals
I.C .C.U . f9r their klndnns. Dr.
Sheh, friends, neighbors who
sent cards. iood, flower• 1nd
their pr1yers. All to whom
showed cont'trn and care. Rev .
Noah Callicoat. Rev. Danny
Richardson, the singers, · pal·
lbeareJs, flower girls and aleo
WMcoxen Funat'al Home for thair
kindnasJ. May God Bleas...:..The
famity of Melva Roberts.

4

2 calico kittens. Long hair-to

good home. Call 6,4-446 -

Full bred Border Collie. Female.
4 years old. Also pan Border
Collia, mala, 2 montl'!a old. Call

614-949-2705.

CALL ANYTII!\E

CERAMIC BISQUE

446-8318

lf2 PRiCE

Month of JulY.

6 klnena free to good homes.

773-5826.

7.75. 304-675·1366.

Floor model color TV, needs
rep8ir. 304-0715-4103 .

IHURU PM-EI U!

8 Lost and Found

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

GOLF
LESSONS
0 8.00
NEW
GRIPS
'3.00

10 Hout (ord Gorr1n
t~o P'r 11nm,
OV!I! 110 PfOPtl
~I&gt;~ p,r qornP

I ~••·

&amp;H

.,.,1,.~

.... ·~

ld·-n

of mrnrmum porio:r~qP
lrmrt I ~m lu!Tomrr prr

8rnqo truron
Ur. IJGOS· 01 h,. lll,I U

TROPHI~S

PLAQUES
BADGES
JOHN TEAFOID

/

Lost around Mercerville. Medium siJ:e black dog. part Collie.
Rew•rd e10. Call 614-268-

1321 .
7

Yard Sale

.......GiillTpons···--·····
&amp; Vicinity

PUIUC INVffED _ __ _

CHESTER,

J.R.'s REPAIRS

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYl &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years .

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Salas
Installation

Service

"Free Estimates"

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

EUGENE LONG

614-843-5248 .

,

Ph. 1614) 843,S42S
5·22·B7· 2 mo. pa.

REASONAIIE • REliABlE

8· 20-'86 tfn

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

U. S,' RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authorized John Deert,
· Ntw Hollond, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
. Otaler

farM EqqlpiTiellt ·
Parti &amp; Servlee
1·3·'86 lfc

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

Riverine Antiques

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

1124 East Main St.

,

Pomtroy
HOURS: Tuo.·Wod.·fri.
11 a.m. fa 7 p.m.
Sunday: 1 p.m.-7 p.m.

~

~

ly Chanu or Appointment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

Licensed Clinical AudiQlogist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
~llipolls, Ohio 45631
8-13 Hn

7·3-17 I mo.

NEW HOMES_.
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

FREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED

"AI Reasonable Prien"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

.

'

BOGGS

Carport Sale. 167 Woodland Dr.
July 20.21 .22. 9AM-2PM. Col·
lectible glasawsre. 2 old McCoy
Yllft. new country crafts and
supplies. clothing . Lots of
goodiee.
'

8

Public Sale
8r Auction

Rick Pearson Auctione11r licensed In Ohto and Weat Virginia. Real Estate. antique, farm,
llquid•tion 111... 304 -7735785 .. 773-5430.
Auctioneer Cot Oscar E. Click,

304·885·3430.
9

Wanted To Buy

General Centracton

IRACINE,

OliO

949·2741.

1

Exp•ienced body man needed
to build salvage cart. For intervi~. Cell 014-388 · 9~15 .
,
Attention Nur1es. Rewarding
eJtperi.,ce for the socially or·
lented nurse. A 36 bed n.Aer
.fecilrty for the buicalty ambula·
tory etderty with a historv of
telzure dl1order or menttl rater·
dation. Currently seeking ..
part-time &amp; call· ln aub LPN t#
Work iH shifts. Be part of 1
growing company. ContaCI OH
Job Service. 814-"46· 1&amp;83.
Wanted et Acro11 the Stri.thp.,-ienced hair stylist. Prefere·
bly with a following. Call 814·
446-9610 ask for Ro"ie.
Aeteil Security in local ttore~
Store detective. 1t1rt M •3.86
per hour. training program •
equipment included. Send back'ground Information with phona•
numb• to Fiahers Big Wheef
NO . 18. 100 Waahlngton·
Square, 'fl•hington Ct. Houfe..
OH 43160. Attn: L.P. Man~gar.p r o g r a m 0 i r e c t o r l•
Comprehentive outpatient aybatance abuu progrem . AeJpon·
sibilitiet include progr•m"'
adm inlltration. sup•rvltiOnl J
counaftling, and public relations.
Qualjficiations ahould includ1at
least twq
eKperience_ in'
subttance abuaa fifMd. some
adminittrative experi..,ce, and
in procen of certification. Send
letter and resume by Juty 31. to
Peraonnel Committee, VintonJack.on County Alcohol. Pol
gram. 287 Pe•l Street Jackson.

Y•••

45649, E.O.E .

.

Middle aged lady needed to stay
with widow. Light houaework.,

614·446-1023.

Easy telephone work at home1
Excellent income. For info. ·call '

604·649-7922 E&lt;t. T-313.

LABTECH
...
Jackson Gener11 Hoap. Riply, w:
Ve is accepting application• tor a•
full time medic1l Lab T•chnlclan,
qualified applicant. will hrwa Jr ~
or 4 year degree in MediCal
Technology and a current ASCP-.
Registry. Hoapital offers excellent salary and benefits tor mor~1
information call, Personnel Dlt• '
cotr 304-372 ·2731 or appty at
Hoapital busslness otfie..
··

oP.,:

AVON, no JMYice charge.
territ"orles, phone 304-076 ·
1429.
.
h
VETERANS-Earn extramon., in
the Army National Guard. 304-

.•

••1·800·642-36~9

AVON • All areal. Call M•rltyn

w..v ... 304-882-2846 .

~ , ~,_

Babysitter wanted for 5 month-",
old. Mason- New Haven .....
Ret•encu required. 304-7)3- .
9166.
Earn •40 free merchandise af'd'
more. Have a Christmas Around·
The World party . Call C1rmen.

304-675·1861 .

E:lcellent Weges for spare ttri'i"'"ii
auembly work: electronics~
crafts. Others . Info (60•1 6410091, E:r~:t . 3007. Open 7 deya.

CALLNOWt ,

.,

18 Wanted to Oo

------..:.::
·~

Jim's odd jobs painting, driv~
way rese•ling, cwpenter work • ·
roof !epalr, trees &amp; hedg~ ·
e.11per~enced . Call 614-379-'
2416.
~ .:
Babysitting done in my home. ·
Vinton area. Call 114-3"88-

8236.

Light or heavy house cleaning!
Reference on request. Call 61 4·

367-7869.

'•
Can do light hMtiing androofing. 1
Reasonable rates . Marion
Snider. 614·949-2629.
: . ..
;

Room &amp;nd board tor elderly ancf.,
handicapped with personal care.
In Middleport. Call 614-992-

8873.

'

Grover' s Lawn Mower Repalr:1
We'll pick up and deliver. Good/ '
used moWers for sale. C•ll .,

614-742-2393 or 6I 4· 742·
3091 .

't

,.

We pey cuh for lata model clean
used c.,-s.
Jim Mink Chw. -Oidslnc.
Bill Gane Johnson

FinanCial

814-446·31172

TOP CASH paid for "83 model
and newer uted cars. Smtth
Buick-PontiK, 1911 Eastern
Ava ., Gallipolis. Call 614-,.41-

2282.

aubmergabla wster pump Y, to 1
HP. canet•-379· 2868 or &amp;43·

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

Buying Standing Timber. Call

lNG CO . recommends that you
do bUsine11 with people you·
know. and NOT lo send money
through the mail until you htwe '
inves1igated the offering.
~

Older home or mobile in country
wfth •crNge. on land cont,.et or
Nnt with optk»n to buy. Must
htve 1t leaet 3 BR . C1ll 81·-

Opportunity for Soft Frozen1 1.
YogUrt Store. Complete layo~t. •
order a11istance. 1ncl equipmern
packege. No franchise t.... No ~
royatties. Ca11304-"22-&amp;4101 ·~

oon.

·

814-379-2758.

446·8231 .

8uylnQ d•lly gold, 1ltwr coins,
ringt. jeWelry, aterllng w•"!• old
colnl, 1.-;e currency. Top prlc•. Ed lurUtt hrblr Shop,

., '

For S81e: Cove Bar. At. 7 ,
Pom.-oy, Ohio . $40,000 firm. •

614-992-9901 .

2nd. Avo, Mtddt_.. 011. 614882·3476.

-=:":c-'';7'--.,---:~_;_
· ' I a!
eon At Tromm ot 114·742· 31 Homes for Sale

Wanted to buy, atandlngtlmW.

232..

BELL CONSTRUCTION

Local m_..,ufecturtng firm il
INking an ftltetro / mech~t~lcal
graduate engln.., who contid-ers Meigs, Maton or Gallla •rw
home. We prafar a peraon with
about 20 ye•rs In e brolld range
of electrical, • mechanicel d•
sign Mp.-lenc:e. Salary il n.;otl·
able. PI••• tllr1d raponce to
Bo• T· CD-1500 c/ o OalllpoU•
Dally Tribune , 825 Third
Avenue. G•llipolit, OH· 45831 .
Include. educttior' experi1ncl.
•nd patents,etc.

675-3950

14 " wheat with tire 7 .50 or

7-2· 1 mo.

BINGO ·

Help Wanted

Giveaway

Kitten to give away to a good
lovmg home. 614-992-7382.

an~d

11

Cott

3539.

DABBLE
SHOP

St:• VII. I",

OH

1 Card of Thanks

3-lt·tfn

7-15-17 l mo. pd.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY &lt;AUS

BUY-SELL-TRADE

Mile full bloodad Pomeranian,
not good with children. 304-

GENEIIL CONTIICTOIS

CALL:

PH. 949-2969

BISSELL

l Hord lard\ fRH
wrth tf-or~ IHI and purthn\f

BUILDINGS

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER
PARTS • SERVICE
Repairs on All Makes
Transaxla Repairs
located Halfway Between
Rt. 7 and loshan
HRS: 12:00-6:00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

PLASTIC CRAFT

CHISnl, OHIO

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPlACEMENT

992·2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

W/IHIS COUPON
Good thru August a

FRII IUTCHEIING

7-6· 1 mo.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

PAT HILL FORD

CARPENTER
SERVICE

304-676-4249.

EAGlES ClUS-POMIROY, OH.

NEW- REPAIR

YOUNG'S

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

N. 2nd AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

1548

ROOFING

5/ 1/ rt n;

or 949-2801
No Sunday Colis

CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

Howard L Writesel

SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAt.WERED LAIWI SHADES.

.&gt;

RESIOENTIAL / COM~ERCIAL.

Truck, auto, 8r
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding .
(All makes &amp; models)

ton.

601

E. Mlin1l.lrlll
POMEROY,O.
992·2259

FREE ESTIMATES

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Business Services

lion. 1264 S.W. 128th
33168 , present address
unknown .
You 1re hereby notified
lhlt you hiVe been n1med
Defendant in the action
enHtled Oi.mond Savings
1nd Loan Company, Succesaor in Interest to The Athens
County Savings I
lotn
Company . Pl1intifl. vs . Chi•
rles Humphreys. et aL , Defendants. This action has
been anigned Cese No .
87-CV-68 , and is pending in
the Court of Common Ple11
of Meigs County. Ohio .
45769 . The prayer of the
Compleint demands judg·
nte'nt egainst tha Defend'"''· Cherles Humphreys,
Amy Hill, aka Amy Routh.
Ike Amy Humphreys. Vernon Dele Humphreys. aka V.
Dale Humphreys, and Alice
Humphreys, in the sum of
114,681 .96, plus interest at
a rate at $3 .21 per day from
January 22. 1987. end the
costa of this ection; that the
mortgage be foreclosed and
that the liens 1t1d/ or interest a in or on said property, if
any, be marsh1Ued and the
real aatate title quieted and
taid property sold in the
foreclosure action and all
amounts dua Plaintiff be
paid from the proceeds of
the sate.
You are "entitled to answer
the Complaint within

.. D:~ii1~,18OHIO

SEIVtNG AU MAJOI II.INDI Of
HOUSEHOlD APPUAII(EI. AU
REPAIII GUAIAIIIEED 1 TIM,
PAitl AND l.UOI.
Senicing rtfrigtf'ators. frttt·
trs, AC I Window 11nits only,,
wcithtn, drytrs, rangtt, clishwashtu, miuowaut, gor·
bagt dispMGh, trath compac-

SIZE 23X30X007

1

TO : Cherlet Humphreys,
whose lest known address
was c/ o Haileys Anocla ·

Let Us fe•ee You In

MIKE'S APPLIANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
Service Call
Only $J2SO

ment Funda for the purpou
of providing HWttgt IYitem
improtJenwnta In order that
ftow from the propo..ct
1 OO· b.d nur~ing home cen

m"tlng or tubject wrtnen
tttttments to the&gt; Meyor"a
OHico , 237 R!ICo St,. Mid·
dleport. Ohio no liter than

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Fraezers

3

Tho· Vittogo of Middleport

Aatldentt ert invltM to
meke oral commente et thit

Good tlw..P :&amp;.,. 30, t 917

Clerk

ment apptlcetion .

with EPA regulotlons.

Ho-•·

ACCENT
FENCE COMPANY

•Renges

Acting Probate Judge
lanl K. Neuelroad,

propoHCI economic develo·

.b e hendled in compll1nce

15 Yn. Experl-• in
' Sthools,
Churches• .

RADIATOR

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 14, 1587. in the
Meiga County
Probate Melgo
Cou"ty Probate
Court, C111 No. 28.684, Court, Case No. 26669.
Angelo Rucllor. 151937 Bi· Myrtle 'L. Craft, 50194 Pine
gloy Ridge. long Bottom. Tree Drive.· Tuppers Plains.
Ohio 415743, woo oppointad OH. 46783. was appointed

ONLY

Aloooiotiolng,,.,... . . . .
UU • FOI Fill IITIMAIE
992· 6116 or 367-7220
7-9·' 87·1 mo:

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July ·14. 1987, In the

(7) 20. 27: (81 3. 3tc

lecelve 50'"1. Off
SECOND tunint if
done wltl!ln one
year.

TIIIU JULY

•Washers •DishWashers

PARTS and SERVICE

Public Notice

PIANO TUNING

40"/o OFF ON WIHDOWS

All Make•

WANTED TO BUY:New cameat
blodco. C.tt 614-912-H40.

I 'lli"''l''"''tl

TAYLOR BUILDERS

,85-3561

4-5-tlc

1--- - - -- - -

Oefendan1s

Steve Wdliams, Owner

.,

----··-

!1:5::.,.,
::::.-

el.

6

- --·

___.._

. I(EN'S
APPLIANCE .·
SERVICE

;t::"-...

==-.::·: :
............._...

CHARLES HUMPHREYS , ot

When you are looking for a legal representative, you want someone with both
expertise and experience. With these qualifications and the determination to obtain the
best I~ solution possible, O'Brien &amp; O'll,ien is ready to serve you. They provide
pro.. fessronal services at affoidable fees from their office in Pomeroy located at 100112 Court
Street, phone 992-2381
The general law practice of O'Brien &amp; O'Brien handles a wide range of cases:
bankruptcy, personal injury, domestic. corporate and business and real estate. They give
personal attention to each of their clients, and quick ,and efficient attention to .each case.
O'Brien &amp; O'Brien offers a free initial consultation so that you clearly understand the
legalities of
situation and your legal options, as weU as the servtees that they can
rendet The
for routine, uncontested legal services are moderate, and those for more
complicated or contested cases are appropriately priced. ~&lt;~. ' ·
No one enjoys going to court. O'Brien &amp; O'Brien makes the experience as painless
as possible. Their knowfedge of the law and commitment to your best interests are
qualities which make. them a wise choice for all your legal needs. Their fine reputation
also speaks for them. Hyour situation calls for legal advice or services, give this finn a call

.

'i ---·=

Cl.uified pep• ~er '"" .
foAlotiJ4nl reJep~ne •chlfi1P•·"

Ia considering fllinCJ an appll·
cet:ion through the Ohio De·

Public Notice

O'Brien.S O'Brien.

____ , ____
... - -···--

,.._,_ ....
n--•••

n
--•-·
.,., _
_"- · ;::::r=-..

Philip M. RoHrts, P.E.. P .S.
Mtigs County Englnoor partment of Devtk)pmant
171 13. 20. 2tc
lor HUD Economlc·Dovolop-

Most peo~ have fond memories of the caring treatment they received from their
family doctOI:
m broken bones to routine check-ups, he was always there when you
needed medical attention. The Holzer Oinic strives to maintain the combination of oldfashioned skill and care with modem state-of-the-art knowledge and technology.
Emergencies such as bums, cuts or broken bones can happen quickly. VIruSeS,
including colds and inlluenza, often require immediate attention. That's when you need
the reliable services of a family physician. The Holzer Clinic provides l'rompt, professional
ireatment f?r minor ~~encies and complete family medical care. They can quickly
treat anything from infections to spramed imkles as weU as perfonn routine medical
check-ups. With their recently expanded facilities, they are prepared to serve you even
bettet
.
Conveniently located at 150 Mill Street in Middleport, phone 992-7271, their office is
open Monday through Friday from 8~ a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and on Saturday from 8:)) a.m.
to 11~ am When you ;need ~ergency _trea~ent or regular routine medical care, it's
nice to know that there JS a skilled phys1!J311 available to take care of your needs.

.,

._. . . .
M
......
_ _ M _ _ _ . ,. _. . . ......,

~~

(CUT OUT FOI FUTURE USE)

·--·-_

l l t .•

from the Northern CorpOra-

By Order of tho Board ot

In this day and age when every car maker has sw;h a wide selection of models to
choose from. it is reaDy difficult for you to decide where to go for a new car. All the
. companies advertise that their cars are the best. but who is to say which car really is.
Obviously, all the cars on the market today must have their good points, or they
wouldn't have survived the ups and do~ of the business. We therefore can conclude
that the real difference in buymg a car is the dealer you buy it from. The ideal dealer to
buy a car from offers a fair price on the new unit. as well as an honest doUar for the car
you trade in. Howeve~; the most important factor is the service that you receive on your
new cru; year after.yeat
One dealer that considers the me&gt;St important part of sellirw; a car the quality service
he can offer you after the sale is Jim Cobb ChevroJet-Oidsmobile-CadDia&lt;:, conveniently
located at 3ffi East Main Street in Pomeroy, phon!! 992-6614. They are dealers for the
famous Chevrolet, Oldsmobile and Cadillac automobiles, Stop in soon and take .a good look
at their exciting new lines.
·· ·
See them today for a new or quality used ~ or come in for service work. You11 see
why we say "Customer Consideration" is their byword.
·

---... ..-·-

...

RE:~~~~ci~~ ~~RK

.metelv
mil• tothalnterlectlon of ,N ew· Llm1 Ra•d

_..,._
=-· ..

......
.._...,.:..

.•t.,. ..- .·

tion limit ol tho Village ol
Rutlond northerly opproxl·

The Holur COnic

Accent fence Co.

· -·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
from the lnterMCtion of
OF FIDUCIARY
Succ•s Road end Stllte
On July 8. 1917. !n tho
Route No. 7 southllttorly
County Pr-w
opproxlmatoty 3.84 mit.. to
the lrtttrMction of Succeea 1 "'"''" Cose No. 25617, ·
Ho~. 287 Coil!
Road and St1te Route No.
Stroot. Middloport, Ohio
248.
ProJ•c:t No . 2: Fornt Run 45760. woo appointed Ex•
cutor of tho oototo ol Mlldrod
Rood (County Rood No.
from tH ~nten~lon of FO· E. Howley. llouoood, toto of
rnt A un A oH and State. 1110 North 4th Avon.... Mid·
Route No. 7 outorly op- dloport. Ohio. 4!710.
Robert E. Buck.
proxtmatoty 3.86 mHos to
PrOHtO Judge
lhl intereection of For•t
Run Aoed end Pine Grove ...,no K. N01sotrood, Clerlt
Rood (County Rood No. 34) . (71 13, 20, 27, 3tc
_ Pro~ No. 3: Now limo
Public Notice
Rood !County Rood No. 31

READER ADS IN THIS SECT,ION PREPARED BY CONTRACT ADVERTISING, INC. • ALL Rlb HTS RESERVED. 1987

Gallery Hair Arts

.....

NOTICE OF
· APPO.tNTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY .
On July B. 1987, In tho
Meigo County ProHto
Court C11o No. 25,1136. Ed·
word Otlo Andoroon. 315116
Porltor Run Rood. ...,ngsvltlo. Ohio 46741 woo op·
pOinted EKec:utor of tho ••·
toto ol Myrtle M. Gordner.
dece&lt;iood, loto of 33198
Now Limo Rood. Rutland,
Dhlo 46775 ,
·
Robert E. Buck.
ProHtO Judge
...,no K. N01setrood, Clerlt
(71 13, 20, 37, 3tc

411768. untM 12 Naon. tho
29th ol July 1987. Tho bldo
wilt thon bo oponod It 1 :30
P.M. on tho 28th of July
• 1987 and rood oloud lor tho
foltowing rosurfocing pro·
!octo:
Projoct No 1: SuccHo
Rood (County Rood No. 411

.

.

........ on..
.,._.

Public Notice

Meigs County Commission·
8ra, in the County Court·
houM,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport

,....
.....- ···-...
·..-...... ···...
....... "·.,._
RATt:a

Pul!lic Notice

ON DESIGNATED
COUNTY ROADS
BETWEEN CERTAIN
TERMINI IN MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
Notice Is horoby given
to Ruurfocing ConstNction
CO!Rponles that bidi wMI be
rec:olvod by Tho Boord ol

.=•USINESS .R-E_V...._I_E_W_
~~

-....

~~~-.:r~~'i\:::.::
~~~"
,.,,,. .

- , . . , fll l i&gt;U "'"~

BILL'S ·QUALITY

lOS Hudson St.

~=

-

r;:==========:;

Monday: Burlingham , county
mobile home park, 3: 30-4: 30;
Harrisonville. church. 5-6; New
Lima Road, 1 mile south of Ft.
Meigs, 6: 40· 7: 40;

11111u
·--tel-.. ,. , .;. . - _.
noR~

~· ...... ~ ..
-,_.,.. " "''
·.,·-- - ~-··_,,
_
,..,. .......~- ., ........
.;::.::-:::.:.-:.=

registration ceramics
MIDDLEPORT .. Jan e Coates
will conduct a .c eramics work·
shop for children at 2 p.m.
Wednesda y at the . Middleport
Library . Registration Is required
and there Is a $5 materials fee. •

Meigs Bookmobile routes
Bookmobile service In Meigs
County Is provided by the Meigs
Public Llbraray under contract
with Ohio Valley Area Libraries.

Business Services

·.

,.

EAST MElCS - All boys
Interested In playing varsity ,
POMEROY - Orange Town- football at Eastern High School
ship Trustees will hold a special .this fall aretoattend a meeting at
meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at tb ~ 7 p.m. Tuesday at the high
horqe of Dorothy Calaway, clerk, school; those Interested in help·
to discuss a levy and other . lng as managers are also to
business.
attend the meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - The XI
POMEROY . - Meigs High Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Beta
School Alumni Association meet· Sigma Phi Sorority will meet on
lng 7:30p.m . Monday at Main St.· Tuesday at 6:30p.m at the home
Pizza , Pomeroy.
of Sharon Stewart for a picnic.

The Daily

Ohio

•

schedule.

~ ~

OM to two .,... of lllnd tn
oount'ry for ti'IIH•· Mu• hWe
_ . . - ..u. - -.. Md

- Ohio..
U·
ZWrito
- lt.. AMid._.
. . 7110.

---------=-' •.
•

•

'

j,

Lovety nWt 3 IR flomabultt thts '
.,tng. 2 Clf , . . . . . nloa 'wM.N~..
Clov·ally-&amp;~nl•trom

OotlipOIIo. Wll conoldtr mobllo
homo I I trodo-ln, .47,1100. Colt ~
., ...... 8031.

..,

.. ~

...

�1987 '
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
31

LAFF·A·DAY

Homes for Sale

2 BR. 10 yr., mint condition,
beautiful · locetion, Near Northup . PrieM right or wiU trade.

SWAIN
AUCTION, &amp; FURNITURE ·82
Otive St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· e pc. wood group- U99.
L~ing r?Qm suit•· *199- t699.
Bunk beds with bedding- *199.
Full 1i1e mlttreis &amp;1 fOundllllon
lt'arting- · S99 . Reclinera
staning- &amp;99.
USED- Beds. drnMI'a, bedroom
sultea. 5199 · *299 . Oeskt .
wringer washer, a complete I ina
of used furniture.
NEW· Westem boots- t30.
Workboets 118 &amp; up. tStael S.
soft toe) . Call614-448-3169 .

In town 3 BR. 'h bMem•u.
garage, C .A ., aoma applillf'lcet·

. good locat ior,. f37 , 000. Call
Bud McGhee R••ttv. 614-448 0662.
-

fur Sale by Owner:. • · 5 Br .. 3

baths, 4000tq. h . living area.

City schools.t1?3,000. Tennis
Court end 25 1cres. Call 614·
446-3386. Serioua buyer~ only,

Please.
For 'sale bv owner: 2 atory houte

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV 18tl.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Man thru
Sat. 814-446-1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .

in M iddleport O'tlariooking perk.
30 yr . guarnteed vinVIe tiding.
w -w carp·... 1 Y::! bath, · unique

woodwork. 814-992-5126 .

6 room house. Ron Hill, Pom• ·
r'!)y , Oh. 1 .3 acres. t17.000. AI

Valley Furniture, new &amp; u•ed .
Large section of quality furni·
ture . 12,6 Eastern Ave .,
G1111ipoli._,

Martin 814-678-2613.
Government Homes troin $1 . (U

3 bedroom housa for ula in
Pomeroy. 61 4· 992-2285.
Four bed.raom houlfl. 2 . 7 acres ·
land M·L needs work. $12,500.
One f'llile peat r.1eigs High 01"!
right. William Snowden resi·
deRCe. Co. Rd . 26 .
6 room house. two baths. new
r'oof. Nuasah windows. garage.
246 N. Fourth Ave., Middleport .
Make offer. 614· 247-11672 or
614-247-2632 .
4 bedroom home. 1 1/z bath.
garage. located o., Gravel Hill.
770 ·Ash St . Middlaport ~ Ohio.
ca11 &amp;14-992-5714.
3 • bedroom home. like nBW.
Rural water. 4 .8 acrn. Meigs
COunty . Reduced under
830.000. 614-742-2295.
33'x.87' ranch home; 3 br. 2'h
l:iaths, living room. dining room
&amp; kitchen . 2-car garage. All birch
paneling. large utility room. 3.7' '
built-in TV, built-in range, griddle
&amp; ov,n, very large see-thru
fireplace. new shears. fully car·
peted, lull b11eroent (furnished).
Mint cond. 3 aetet plus 1lh acre
stocked lake. $160.000. Fh. ?at
Five Points, PomMoy, 0 . and
alec. Lowery orgen A-1 shape.
81 ,000. firm . 1-814-992 · 2571.
Five room house. cellar. 1 'h
acres on Jim Hill Road . County
water ready for hookup. Owner
financing with down p-vment.
304-676-4182 or 676-2866.
Nice 3 br. partial basement, lot
100x200, 208 Midway Dr. New
Haven . LoW 40s. Jake Somerville Realty. 304-875·3030 or
876-3431 '

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE ~()ME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 36 .
PHONE 814-448-7274.
1973 Freedom 12x50 , 2 8R.
total alae . Underpinning .
$4000. Call614· 388-9724.
1 984 14x86, fenced yard. 3
lots. Rt . 180 at Evargr.. n.
$18 ..500 . Call614-446-1339 or
61 4· 446-1528
1984 Shultz 14x70 with ek ·
panda. 3 BR &amp; 2 baths. Land
contract e11eilable. Call &amp;14·
446-6726 .
1969 New Moon,.. 1 Ox60 .
S3,000. Call 814 -379-2292 or
379-2730 .
'
1976 Skyline. 14k70. 3 bed·
room. complete with 11x22
Urban petio covflt', and door
canapy . Like new condition.
$1 0, 500 . 1974 1 2x60 . 2 bed·
room . e•cellent condition .
$6300. Delivered."blocked and
leveled on your lat. Kingsbury
Homea 900 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Otlio. 614-992-5587 .
Nashua. 3' bedroom. 1 Y2 batt..
partly fumiahed . Would consider
reniing ground with free gas.
water and garden. 614· 6876536.
For ule 1973. 12x65 Viking.
1 •; , acres. Just out of Bashan on
Eagle Ridge Ad . $11.000 .
O .G.Polk.
1980 Uberty. To1al elfiC1ric, 2
bedroom . furnished . washer and
dryer. central air. Call614-992 ·
7479 .
Mobile home and lot. · Priced
reasonebltl. 304· 676· 7669.
1 2k70 Windsor witt! eApando, 2
bedrooms, 88,000. Call 304 ·
675-6965.

r

2 rm·cotlaije furnished. utlliti"
pd. *56 .-wk. Single person. Call
304-875-3100 .. 876-6609 .
Six room house. Fain~iew Road,
Camp Cantey. *225 per month.
304-876-1371 Dfl76-3812 .
6 rooms. ~th , referenc• and
deposit required. t2&amp;0. monltt.
newly decorated. l•rgelot. 304·
675 ·1090.

2 BR 1 2Jt60 unfurnished. HaH

20 aere farm Hannen Traca
Road . Glenwood, W. Va. for
mora information cali 304-7735118 OT 773 -61 B6 after 5 :00.

34

Business
Buildings

CommMcial buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt . Pleaalnt. St~rfl,
offices. A-One Real E1tet~.
Carol Yeager, 'Brqker. Call 304876-6104.

36 Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 .92 acres with 2 bedroom
mobile home. Approk . 4 mi.
from Middleport . Asking
s1 2, 000 .. Hobstetter Realty.
614-742-3092 .
1 'lr ac lot on Jerryl Run Rd.
Apple Grove. with rural water.
304-578-2383 .
V2 acre trailer sites $5,900.
County water, a few hundred
feet from Rt. 2 . 304·578·2028.

a.

One acre trailer house aitn. Y.t
mile from At . 2, •a.aoo. County
water. 304-578· 2025.

m;le paot HMC . CA. ret. &amp; dep.

Summer Spacial : Laureland
Ap.,.ments, George St . New
Haven. Immediate occupancy to
qualified epp&amp;ieants before Aug.
1. 1987. Completely cltfpeted. 2
bedroom a, range, refrigerator.
pleaaant lltl'roundings and pley
area. (304) 882-3716. 10 am to
9 pm. EHO .

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day. week.
month. G1llla Hotel. Call 614·
446·9715. Rent •slow as $120
month.
Furnished room. S76. Utilities
paid . Shari!! bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.

47 Space for Rant

required. Call 614-441· 4369 or
304-876-9760 .
2· SA mobile for rent at Ever·
green. Cell 614-379-2878.
2 BR trailer. t1fi0 mo. t75
deposit. Call 614-378-2436.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Plastic cistern state approved.
pl11tic sep1lc tanks, plastic
culverts. metal cutverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES; Jack''"'· Oh. 814-286-6930.
Sewing machine &amp; 1weep.,.
repair , All make~ . models. Parts
in ltodl . Work guaranteed.
Re ..onable prices. Call 614·
446-1488.

Antique oak buHet, waterbed,
fireplace insert,. woodburnar.
misc. glassware. Call &amp;14- 388·
8185.

-c--------------~
·

1$ " '· Alum. flahlng boat 1nd

1· .1•

J~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·IJRJJJ.~~~J

l

•

58

Fruit

71

&amp; Vegetables
Canning tomatos for aale. 7
miln south of c;JallipoUs on St.
R1. 7 . Jim Baughman flfm. Call
614.-256-6631 .

e.

unfurnished apertmMt.
Utiliti• paid. Carp.ted, no c:hildren or peu. Call814-448·1137
Up~airs

Fumished apt. nMt door to
Ubrary. One prof... lonal AdYH
only. Parking. Ph. 446·0338.
Furnished apartment• . t210.
utltltii• paid. 1 bdr. 120 fourth,
Oallipolla. Call 448·4418 after
8pm .
Apenm.nf for Rent : 3 room1.
*1215/ mo. Adulta. Call 304·
171 -8104, or 678-7738.
Upttalrt, 3 BR. 1 beth. kitchen
furnished. no pete. O.p. • Rei.
238 First. •250/ mo. Call 114446-4926.

Autos for Sale

1880 Citadon. Good condition,
Call 814·192· 3877.
1174 Corv.rte convM"tibte. 310
L82 engine. auto ttansmi11lon.
,-or parts only or all. "814- 949 2758.

Home grown tomatos
sw.et
corn. Other farm veg_.abl• &amp;.
truitt . Glauburn Farm Markllt. · 1 980 Cordoba •1 000. 304·
St. At. 180 near Porter . Call 678-3385 ..
814-388-9027 ..
1983 Chewelle. tour door, auto ..
For 11te: H•lf runner beans and ' air, PS , PB, good condition,
Ky. wonder bMna. •12.00 bu· U ,7&amp;0. Call 304-171-2513.
111&lt;11. 614-742-2322. '
1981 Ch...,.y C· 10, 305 V·B.
•·•p., ps. pb. ae. slimtlfte fiberI Mill Siiilllltn
otau top , trail• hhch. buck_.
Hwti. 17.000 mil•. 1m· fm
/; itV!:SIIII.k
cauitte. *4.600. 304-875·
4883 "' 875-1230.

61 Farm Equipment
CAOSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 315 W••· Jackton, Ohio.
614-216-6451 .
M11My Ferguson. New ttoland.
8uah Hog SaiN • Service.
40 Yaed tractors to choose ff'om
&amp; coml)letl line of new • used
ttqulpment. lergMt Mlkt6on In
S.E. Ohio.

Ov••

Utility bldg : 27'K38' x9' · 13' xl '
track door • 3' wallt door .
•«44 er.etlld · Iron Hone
Bldgo. 614-33t-8745.
!150 Oliver traetar with lolldar,
12350. Late mo.d -' 273 ' New
Holland hay baler. •Ut&amp; . 7 ft .
flell mow•'· *19&amp; . Naw I ft .
aatata mower . Cell 11114· 211·
6522.
New HaHand IMIQI blower .
Same IS n.... u..d Vt'ry little.
614-6117-6917.

lnt.-natkJnal forage Harv.. tor
with one row corn htNid . Good
condition . Come look- make
off•. 11•·117·1137.
Bars, chains, and tprodlets to fit
almost any uw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .. Hllndanon.
w. v•..304-871 · 7421 .
FOR SALE - UO lnt•national
trac:tor. ·:;8 HP. disc: plowt.
cultlvato,rs with side . . ...,.
Blgg8f ttlan the Cub, tl, OOO.
Call 304· 11171-5703.
1978 Cllf"lt model C30040 far !II
lift with 111" TSU . 42" forkl

1917 Chevy aMckUp, •zoo:
1971 Pfymouth Volare. t300:
19n DodQa plcllup. tiOO.
304-451-1566.
1980 Chwttte, fOOd condit6on.
otoo. &amp;14-367-nt7 .
1911 , Okls Cutla.. Suprtllft•.
air cond., PS . Pl.
rear window defog. tilt wh ....
cr:u...._ AM -n11. good tir•. Very
dMn. Exeellent ccn6ttJon, 304·
671-6662.

v.e. auto ..

1970 Chewalla SS . red with
bladl 1trtp.a, t1700. 304·1715•
6711 ... 614-446-4803
1973 Chrysler Nawpon , 400 cu.
tn. englna. lought New. Kaplin
e•cellent condition . E•hau•t
syttem ona month old. Motor
and tranlmillion ~ · Good
tn-... IYsted rMf lend•. Mth
Ot1er. Call 304. -·"'"'n ~ OR
IA.lti~V. 'AI ¥. - '

72

T ruck• for: Sal a

·19h Nlsaan plcllup. s~nd1td I
IJM*I, aUw• l.ctor;t ""'d flaps.
FM · AM Cassette and back
bumper. Call 114· H2 ·1311
after 2pm or 1· 304· 1 75-4340
•tension 3n after 1 1:30 ~
1981 GMC piCk· up. 8 C¥1 .. Short
whMI bMe. PS, AM I FM radio,
low mMNI._ good i;oQd. Call
114·...e·1011 or «1·1720.
1879 ford Branco . AC .
AM / FM / Cau .. lod. ln · out
hubs. Good cond. Calll14 · 446·
0237.

and sid• shtft• LP Powered;
197"' Clerk mod.. C50031 1917• GMC Jruck 4WO ,will
forldltt with 119" TSU. LP tM1 old trucill an trade ln . Call
powared. C. II batwun 9 &amp; 5 . 6 14-371-2820.
304-671· 2312 .
.
1971 FOt~ F 150 •••. pu, new
brallea , shocks , and e• h.,l1 . • 3000 negatlebl ..
62 Wanted to Buy

Now buying ahetl corn ~ ear
corn. Call fof' lat ..t quat. .. Aiv•
Chy Farm .uppty, 81•·448·
2988 . '
CCC Generic Certiflcatn. 304676-1107.

63

Livestock

Duroc So••· Ired just like the
botts we t•ted 1t the Ohio
Testation t.hat gelned ower 2.1
lbs. per dey. Aog• len,tl., ,
Sabina. OH . 613· 514- 2398.

54

Hay &amp; Grain

11110 Chev.. lA ton t"'ck. 4
whtel drive, 4 speed. 19, 000
mil•. Call aft.- 5 :00 p.m.
614-446-4221.

985-3981.

1975 Chevy pl~up, 350, auto.,
PS . Runt good. Good for work
truck. t500. 'Call 304-1752563.
1876 Chevy pu· truclt. 3&amp;0
englna. 73.000 mill•. n.~ns
good. body fair. goad tirft,
eaoo. 3o•-aez- 317&amp;.
1971 Chwy •x4. VY ton. lho~
WhMI b•e. Pl . PB. 4 apeed
transmtulon, lo&lt;:k· 6n klcl ·out
hubl, AM -FM r~io. with Ins.
fibltglasa topplf. After I p.m .•
304-46S-1161.

73

I r&gt;~nsprtrLtl r ttll
71

Autos for Sale

Vane

1979 J . .p Cherok... 3 speed,
4WD, aa is or parts. CaU
114-·7 42-31 18 unl;l 2 '30 p.m.
1971 Jeep CJ·7, 304 Mlto., PS,
f1250 . Coli 304-675-2513.
1987 VemMa 310 B~ Be• fou;
whMI drive. 100 mil•. like
new. 304-175· 1128.

74

Motorcycles

1981 Kaw ..lkl110 •·whiJtlar.
Asking a1·1oo. 1987 Mercury
Lvn• sports c•. PS. PI 4 spd
with IUnroof. C•ll 81 4· 241-

8828.
1982 Cutlua Suprema
Brough8ft!, exael. cand .. lo.ded.
coll614·446•8834.
1182 muda. 82• dlllux. ax.cel.
cond. .. door. cruia• AC . c: ..l
614-441-1967.

Would like 10 rent tot to' trtiLer
with all hook· upl. Prefer Lang•·
ville or De~~;t• or Painten Ridge
areaa. C1ll 814-742-2146 or
614-742-2339 .

Mt:r t:ll.ttHitsl:
61 Household Goods

Baby bed for ula, *15. Call
614-441-3548.

Reginald saved himself from the cannibals
by organizing a hunger strike ....

•

1

1•n Chw. C.prlco Strnlon
Wagon. Good Condition. · 1983 Dfl100, lull float•, exc.
f1SOO. Coli 614-441-0711 of- oand. 304-171-1111.
•• I PM.
1tl1 KX 210
1812 KDX 175
1881 PCM'ItiK Grand lAMIIns. 4
CillO
· olC.,olM-FM rodla, AT.C.II 187t
c.tt •"- IS p .m .. 304-171114-446-2677.
66341. '
1 t77 Chwy C.mro 301. 1t77
Hond• !loldWing Ol 1 ooo. aood 1177 Harl-r *~er. Many
condhlon. Coli 614-317·11'111 new perte. •a.tlent .oondttlon.
caii304-61S-1491 oftw 1 p.m.
.. 317 -otl41.

f~AN/C"L.If'J

PIP

$AID ONL.Y A ........._

fOOL- HA.S"
t'ilMSEL.F FO~
A T~ACHE~/'
.
. ...'
._·. · ~­
.. - "

you ftNP

TliAT OUT ALLBY you~si:L.F?

.·

\1-&lt;AV!i.$ 1·l0
1 ,

C1 lMI ..........

ALLEY OOP

1970 Troutwoad Trl\lel Tnllar
for Mia. Call 114-441· 4282
1971 Gil• 18ft. camper. Call
114-251· 1117.

... BUT I GUESS
IrS BETTER
THAN NOTHING!

7:35 ()) Honermoonera
1:00 (JJ Deklllrl
II Cll 91 ALF Lucky
disappears and the family is
convinced ALF has eaten
h;m . (R)
(I) 8 (I) ABC' I Monday
NlghtleNbalt
(!) [!) .In Search of the
Trojon Wor Michael Wood
links all the evidence to
suggest what happened to
Troy.
1111 111!121 Kate &amp; Allie Kate
cannot resist tile u~ to play
cupid for Louis . (R) Q
IIJ Prlmene... Wrap ups of

the day's world news and In
dep1h feature reports. (1 :00)
® MOVIE: A Force ol One
(PG) (1 :30)
81 (l) MOVIE:'I.ove'l Solvage
Fury (1 :40)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: C1ctuo Flowor
(PG) (1 :43)
1:30 II Cl1 91 Valerie Following
argument wtth twins' soccer
coach, Valerie takes charge .
(R)
~
1111 My Slater Sam Sam· gets

1171 OMC 3500 Serl• Stlf
Cont.ined Campef and To,per,
Call614 · •92· 7214.

St:rvrc1:s
Home
· Improvements

®SO.p

a

WEU.,THAT
DOES'I'T
GIVE; LJS
MUCHTG()
ON ...

EEK &amp; MEEK

a rough rul)around when she

&lt;=lET AWAY FRCM

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOFINQ
Uncondittonel litet1me gu•rtn·
tM. Loc:al rtf•.,c" furn ished.
Fr.. ...lMate-.. C1ll CGIIKt
1·114-237 ·0411. drt or night.
Aogert8a1ement
Waterproofing.

HERE,CHIA5 /

IT KNOWS

MY
NAME/

tries to g81 a refund . (R) Q
8:00 Cll 700 Club
II Cll iiSl MOVIE: 'Unnatural .
Cauua' N8C Monell)' Night
.. the Movtel
(!) (!]) American Maotera
Maurice Sandak discovers
how Mozart influenced his

own crea~vity. Q
illl NeWhart Stephanie's

SWEEPER and M'Wing m.chine
rat)alr. parts. and supptl.. . Plc:k
up and delhtaJV. Davis Vaeuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Geotg• Cr.- Rd. Call 114·
..48-029 • .

Cousin Ned has a birthda~·
bash to end 1hem all. (R)
1121 Larrr King Llval In dep h
intarvlews with top
newsmakers arid celebrities .
Ill @ My Slater Solm Sam
gets a rough runaround

,,..,

.......... _

1·1o

f' otar, or cable tool drilling.

Most wells completed •wne day.
Pump sal• and a.-vic«~ . 30•895· 3802
Starks TrM and Lawn S•M~
lawn c••· landscaping. stump
remov11 , 304 ·&amp;71 · 2842 or
578-2903.

Chris's dad asks for a favor

1hat compromises her
Integrity. (R)
[!) ® 'New•
.
IIJ Evening New• A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (·1:00)

a

'•f

Plumbing
llo Heating

I

7 -20

•

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone &amp;14-441-3888 or 814·
441-. .77

BARNEY
HERE COMES
OJ: WllFERD IN

HIS HIFALOOTIN'
CONVERTIBLE

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

em ao.p

10:20 (IJ MOVIE: That Touch of
Mink (NA) (1 :39)

I SEE HE'S

HE MUST THINK
IT'S FIXIN' TO
RAIN

GOT HIS
TOP UP

10:30 Cll New Generation
(!) Human F - of the
Pacific Focus on current re
emergence of traditional
Tahiti Island cuhure. Q /
(!])

women o1 Summer Q

e (l) USA Tonlglll
Raaidenli .. or commercial wiring. New service or repaira.
Ucensed electrician . Eltlm11e
fr ... Ridenour Electrical, 304·
676-1788.

11:00 Cll Hantc.ooUe and

McCormick

II Cl1 Cll •

General Hauling

(!)Sign

IIJl

1111 • il2l

DA NET T

(I) WRkP In Clnclnnell

e (() Nlgl1tl~11 Q
illl f"Npper John, M.D.

'

Wattarson ' a Water Hauling, '
reasonable ut ... immediete •
2.000 aallon deiNery, cisterna. ' ..
t
pools. well, etc. c111 304 -5712918.
~
,.

(!])

~·

Form•tv Ken' a now Jo n's
Water Service, John Wetterion.
Jr. Owner. 1.000 or 2 .000 gal
aervice. 304·678·2241.

PEANUTS
I HAvE A
PROBLEM, MAAM ..

Upholatary

A a. M Cuatom Cduchaa and
Aeupholstery, St. Rt . 7. Crown
City, Oh. 114-251·1470, Eve.
114-441-3431. Opan daily 9to
4 :30, Sal . 9 :30 to 1:30. Old s.
~~~ Uphoatered.

THE WATER MAKES M'f

FEET COLD, ANI? I 14~TE
TO 6ET M'{ HAIR WET...

Tltla Old Houll Q

IIJ) ~ Tontghl Action
packed aporia hlghllghta with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
'Bimon and limon'
C8l Late Night A.J. and
Rick Investigate the murder
of • food Cfftlc. (R)
. 1R TI'II!IPII' John, M.D. Give
Till It Hurtt

•a

.,

WELL, LET ME THINK ..:

el!lLa\88how
t2:00 Cll Buma

n

~(() AIC llpOrta Pr..lnte
"Fla.-, lpartauilll"

[l)llgnOII

'~'r
11

than to be

••••••••

"

Co mplete the t;: h uckle q uoted
.
.
by Id ling in the missing words
L.....I_..J._,.L__.L-11-..J you develo p fr om step No. 3 below.
.

.

.

PR INT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

f)

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

Rudely - Vouch - Arrow - Confer - FOR YOU
Very wise saying: "Ask for people's plesslngs in your
endeavors, bui don't .a sk them to do It FOFI :YOU."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

When fourth-best
is second-rate
By James Jacoby
Now why do you think that Sr:&gt;uth
was relying on his Q-8 of clubs as stoppers after the two-club overcall by
West? The answer is simple - West
was using a two-Club overcall as an ar·
tificial bid showing both major suits.
Of course West would have preferred
having five cards in both majors for
his bid, but be had to play with what he
was dealt. Since Sr:&gt;uth had both majors stopped and a good diamond fit,
he was happy to bid three no-trump.
There was unexpected good luck
when West led a low club. Declarer
won the queen and immediately ran
all seven diamond tricks, pitching the
eight of clubs and the three smail
spades from his hand. West could not
save himself even by throwing away
all his clubs. Eventually he had to ei·
ther unguard hearts or let go two
spades. If he blanked the Q-J of hearts,
declarer's nine would win the last
trick. II he discarded two spades,
Sr:&gt;uth could play A·K, establishing
dummy's small spade as a winner. Either way, declarer South took all the

tricks, making seven.

NORTH

'

7-21-11'1

.• s 4 3

.K 10
+A Q 10 8 7 4 2

.4

.

.J

EAST

WEST
• Q 10 8 7
.QJ 8 2

.76 43

t6 ~ 3

-" -

.A K 7 o 3

.J10962

SOUTH
.AK9'62
.AH
KJ9

+

.QB
Vulnerable: Nei!her
Dealer: East ·
West

Nor1h

Eut

S..tb
!NT

Pass

2••
3+
Pass
Pass
Pass
P;~ss ·•shows both major suits

3NT

Opening lead: • 5
combination. Instead, West should
have cashed !he A-K of clubs. Aild
wha! a bonus West would bave re.
ceived when declarer's queen droppe_d
and he set the contract' Incidentally, if
North-South had bid it, six diamonds.
could be made on the same squeeze described above .

There is an important principle
here tbat defender West completely
A new book by James Jacoby and
,overlooked. When you hold all the de- his father, the late Oswald Jacoby, iJ
,fensive high-card strength and you now available at bookstores. It is "Jaknow you are going to have to make a coby on Card Games," published b&gt;·
lot of discards against a no-trump con· Pharos Books.
tract, It is sllly to underlead an A-K
@ 1~7. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

ACROSS
1 Bullet
5 Platter
9Hue
10-Heep
lZ Twit
13 Yeast
15 English
river
16 Slosh

17 Before
18 Poem
20 Tropical

fish

Zl Pledge
22 Frigid
23 House
maid
(Fr.)
25Fop
26German
art song
-27Lummox
28 Likewise
29 Unwilling
32 Get 'em,
· Fido!
33 Falsehood
34 Palm leaf
35Becharm
37 Tricolor
38Somber
39Meander
40 Barbara

2 French
river
3As a ward
4 Holy smoke!
5 Minn. city
6 Incensed
7N.M.
Indian
· 8 Hold in
check
Yeeterday'a Anewer
11 Presage
23 Devil·
30 Thrall
14 Donkey
may-care
31 Avid
16 Apportion 24 Lubricating 33 Tennis
19 Motto of
25 Peace
term
the
symbol
36 Insane
Seabees
27 Chinese
37 Monk's
ZO Surmount
iiiir.-"""1'!'....,~~ title

'1

Southwest
wind
DOWN
1 Swagger

DAILY CRYPI'OQlllJI'Ei- Here's bow to work It:

7120

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
·

CRYPTOQUOTES
7-20

F
G R Z

Y J V A Y
TVZGK

AK

E F V

F

DNAYS

H RS

ZB

S L S N J H R A VQ

HRS

L F WI S

ZB

F V C

VZHRAVQ

IIJ ...w....htUvenewa
¥jtlh Patrlclt Emory and
Klraten Undqutal (1 :00)

ZKYFN
GAWCS
Yeetenla)''• CI')'Jitoqaote: THANKS TO THE INTERSTATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM, IT IS NOW POSSIBLE TO
TRAVEL ACROSS THE COUNTRY WITHOUT SEEINQ
ANYTHING.- CHARLES KURALT
e&gt; 18111 by King Feature~ 8rncflclte, tnc.

••timatet .
l'

;

.

YEstEiDAY'S SCIAM-i.ITs ' ANSWEIS

Allen

(I)~(R)

;!

I

Off

()) BllortaCentw (L)

.

they stayed together and the wife
replied , "Better to .b e quarreling

~--,~,::;.....:.;1_;;;_,:1':-.:,1.,1-'-rl--l E)

Monert~ne

Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. 10:30)
® Tate• from the Dar1111de
Hallowun Candy
el!l Love Connection
11:30 • Cl1 iiSl Beat ol Caraon

A &amp;. A Water Servict. Home
cisterns. willis, pools tilled.
Formerly James Soya Water.
Cell 304· 675· 1370.

Mowrey'• Upholat•ing 1erving
tri count~ ar11 22 years. The btlt
in furniture upholitarlng. Call
304-&amp;715 - 4114 for fretl

(I)

91 ......
()) Major League· Baaa~ll'l
Oreatell Hill ihe Seventies
(R)

Dillard Water Service: Po.ola. ' Cistflt'ns. Wells. D1livery Anytime. Call 114· 441-7404-No ..
Sunday calls.

87

I

when she tries to get a

refund . (R) Q
9:30 1111121 Newhart S1ephanie's
Cousin Ned hes a birthdar_
bash to end 1hem aiL IR) Q
10:00 (!) Alive lrom Off Cenlll The
a ·uay brotllers present an
e&lt;traordina_!l work of puppet
animation. Q
1111 Ill liZ Cagner and Lac.y

-;;---:--:--:------ +- "I ~o~'

1811 M-o VF700C 8,000
mil•, mint oond. , will trHe for
truck t2,000. 304-B:71-2174or
614-446·0018 oft• I pm.

®aenoon
(l) Star Trek
7:05 ()) Solnford and Son
7:30 II Cl1 Cll Newlywed Oame
(!) 1817 u.s. Otrmplc
Featlval
·
Ill (I) J~dge
1111 Wheel of Fortune Q
IIJ Croltllre (0:30)
e1121 lUI J-ardyl Q

e

78 lupergllde. Cell 614-..-e1301 after lpm.

1117 D~tiCh•l•· IUtoml'lic
tran•., 700 mil•. ti200.C.I
614-378-2726.

1 .1 .1 .1

.

lf.w~H::c(~~~Lehrer

::::-::-:----:-:-::---- :

1983 Hond1 XA 100 • like niW.
•too. 304-675-1758.

e (I) ABC Nawa Q

IIIINaWI
11J Monerllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
1111121 91 Wheel of Fortune

1 Ill Bu~:uki 230 Quadsport:.
Excellent condition. Aaklng
f1 800. 1 tl3 luau lei QS &amp;SOL
Good conditio~. Askin, t 1 000.
Coli 614-441-1262 I· 0 pm.

1184 Capr._ Cl••a.2·11aor
Lon .....-loodod. C.ll614·
216·6740.

S

L--....L.--L--L...--1-.....J

the sntertalnment world Is
anchOred live lfom New
York. (0:30)
aJ)Jell...,na
6:35 (I) Luve II To le8Yer
7:00 Cll HardcaaUe and
McCanntck
G Cll PM Magazine
(!) Sport.Center (L).
(I) Ent-lnment Tonight
8 (I) People' a Court

a.

J • J Water Sarvlce. Swimming
pools, cisterns, wtlla. Ph. 114246-9285.

.

,

'79' Motors Homes
c.mpera

85

I

(!]) voraae of the Mtml
IIJ lhowlllz Todar News of

Will 1ell for parts •· 1979
Sub.-u. 1973 El Camino , 1 97•
Camero, 1977 Dodge plcl!.up
4x4. 1 t7e O.taun, 1171 Ply·
mouth Volwe. 304-4151!1· 1518.

&amp; 4 W.O.

EEB0
o••~ .
The neighbors were always
t-:5....,r-=r...::.-r~;:--:r-l .. yelling at each other . I asked why

t!J Nightly Bu-1 Report
ill -~~~ CBS New1

BUDGET Tr•n.emlssions: Used •
fhbultt. AM typM. Guaranteed a
m;,lmum of 30 davs. will
dtUver , c•h • Cll"rt Or lnatal.
Call 114-371-2220 o' 1 · 304·
875-6758 .

84

I

Adv-(Fi)

S!:N

82

r. ll I 1· I 1-_.
-=E~1-:..:

-T-0-M..:.A;-Y::...;:.S

e

(I)

FLUOIH
~

Secret City
® Oood Tlmeo
(l) Buck Rogera
8:()5 ()) Down to Eerth Stereo.
1:30 8 Cll 91 NBC Nightly N•wl
(!) John Fox'o Ouldoor

ALL We HAVe ~0 00
IS 1\0P OVER THE,E
LITTLE- PJ;'AK,\

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Fetty Tr- ·Trimming. stump
flmO\Ial. Ca113M -675 -13l1 .

H1y. 76c off wegon. 304-8755578.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
RoUte 33 . . North of Pom.-oy.
Rental trailer•. Call 614-992·
7479.

3 or 4 Bedroom house In Kyger
Creek Sehool Oittrict. Raferencn Ph. 114-441-8621.

'

FISHING BOAT - Coleman
Crewdld,. 4 .15 HP Mercury motor , 1 yeer old. Like new.
304-676 -1640.,

1978 Ford heavy duty J,4ton ft.t
bed pldl -up. C.ll...,.ningsl14·

I

91 Newe

14' boat, illlurNnum u-heul whh ·
he~~ty duty factory boat treil• .
Call 304· nJ-15004. t400 .

8 ·1

•

· (!) ipomLook (T)
(!) Dr. Who Underworld

14 ft . fliMrglass , 18 HP Even·
rude and trailer. t6DO. Call
304-678-8855.

76

be·
low to fo rm fo ur si mple words

• Cll Cll • (() 1111 • @

AIN EASY

the

fo~r

(!])

1

WOlD
UMI

~y CLAY I . POllAN

Edlr•d

letten of
0 Rearrange
scrambled wo rds

8:00 Cll Big vener

~
o-ZD

t700. Call 614·112·3880.
• ...
40 HP JohnMtn 8oa1 and trailer ...
CLEAR THE DECK SALE: Win·
ter prices on aM 86'a and 17'a In
ftodt. S.ylln•, Starcrlft, Slra·
.10;1. Founh outboard•. Force.
We must make room far 88
mod.-.. AI usH boett in· atock
reduced. Come in and SH our
wide sel·e cdon ' of boats and
motors. (It .y ou are not buying
from us your paying to mucfd ..
lmp•lat Marine In c. 11 12 Mary
St. Parkanburg. W.V, 21101 .
304-418· 2 1 18.

ori&amp;48 - ~4 .

Good, Clean. Mi ..d Hay For
Sal a .10 per ball. Calll14-«81411 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

47Wanted to Rant

_l

18 ft. 8syliner Boat and trailer
wllh wallt thro~gtl wind shield.
81 HP Chrysl• Motor. Cell
114·892-7883 oftor 4'30.

RON ' S Tefevit ion Sarvica.
HouN eMit on RCA , Queur,
qE . Speci1Ung in Zenith; Call
304-571- 2381 or 814· 441·
2464.

1871 Fotd F·2BD 4'-4 nMds
pe6nt •2110, chrome wh ...s Y.
ton Ford 11&amp;0. Call 4•8· 1492

1978 K100 Kenwonh 3408.
410 hp Caterpill• engine end
1971 Trail mobile trailer. Exc:el·
lent CondiUon. t23.000 . Call
bMween 9 and 5 . 304-1752392.

1 and 2 bedroom apa~rt:menta for
rent. Buic rent for 1 bdr.,
*1B3.00; 2bdr .. *219.00. Also
requir.t a t200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dapt. Ph •48-3997
Equal Housing Opponunlty.

Furnished Eftldency t145. Utilities paid. share bath. ·607
Second Ave.. Gelllpollt Ph.
446· 4418 aft• 7PM .

f.CI,l!ttf'

tt~a,"'A. """

MON.. JULY '20

S@'\t&lt;R}lA- L£ £~~s

-------'-~

EVENING

01ep-V Bow ·Rlder loat. Ski ;.
and Camp Equipment indudtd. _.
8arg-n price. C.ll 114· 448- ~
2030.
•

Musical
Instruments

Furnished &amp; unfurnished ·apta ..
*1 50.00 and up, references Ph.
304· 675· 7738 or 30•·111765104 A-1 Real e.tate.

;
•i
•

trailer, Call 114· 317·7577,

Polled Charalals Bull Aeg .. EJC.
cellent Quality 1 7 mona. Cell
George Woodward 814· 3792597.

Office Space for Rent . Excellent
for Attorneys, .A ccountant, etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Raal Estate Agency.
614-448-3644.

•

'::~:~:~'

I

z,..

Rat Terrier puppies. $150 each.
Call 304 -895-3681 .

58

$'~LZ

1985 i2 ..
Pontoon floelboat.
70 HP Evenrude motor. trallar. ·
Lots•htras. See et OalllpoUs
Boat Club. Call 814· 44&amp;· 4782.

1 yr. old stud '1:1 quartar har... 'AI
Tenn•Me Walker . t200. Call
814· 379· 2884 .

1 mod 12-12 gusge 30" full. 1
mod 12 -12 guage "2 8 " mod.
1400 Winch .. ter 30" full. AU
mint condition. All for 11000.
Cell814-448-3346.

WI~JE; GOL~c:&gt;...

·Motors· for Sale

Dawn to dusk lig..,t, 860. Topper
for Toyota . truck, l~;~ng )Vhael
base, 835. Call 614-448·2822.

For Sale Spinet-Console Piano
Bargain. Wanted; Responsible
party 10 take over low monthty
payments on spinet·conaole pi·
ano. Can bsseen locally. Call Mr.
White at 1 -800-327· 3345. EXT.
101 '

tire~

Television
_. Viewing

A CDMPAc:T.. ,

~mD f.!I~T [;QHN

;7~6;.::;a:o:a;ts:· :a:n~d:::::

12 ft .,boat, trail.,, 3 hone power
motor. Sea Eaglalnflatabltboet.
Darton Compoynd Bow. hn
Pearson Recurve Bow. Tent .nd
all camping equipment, Movable
10 ' ~t12 ' insulated aluminum
building. Tools of all kind.
Canning jars . Call 814-o\.489635 . Will conaldar guns f01
trade in.

57

W~ ""l

·~08 .

range, couch. coffee &amp; end tabl•. lamp. Dinette
set. Color TV. twin bed •
waahttr . Calllll14-441· 3224. ,

1987 16 ft . Horse &amp;. stock
trailer. *2496 . Used 2 horse
trailar ready to go to 1how.
8995. Call614-288-8622.

IT

1971 Honda CB 710, dr ...ect.
Excellent oondhlon, 30t1-175·

Ratrig~rator,

3 miniature poodle pups. AKC
regislar.cf, 2 female, 1 ma'e.
S126 . firm . 814-882-3672.a

CAr..IV6 Bm1 $1'01-E'tH

Motorcycle!'

llon, UIOO. 304,675·21508.

2 Kaw. motmcyclt parts, t40 .
Weightbtnch and weights. t30 .
Call 814-2515· 1489,

AKC Samoyed puppi• only 2
left . 7 weeks old, t175.00.
304-678-2728 or 876· 3466.

BORN LOSER

w.y, .cbein, u:ceUent condi-

:;:;==:::;;:=====-t;;::~;~~:;;;::::::-1

2 BR. ell utilities pd . exc:ept
elec .. furn. or unfurn .. sec. dep.
r&amp;f:l 'ed . Convenient location.
Call 614-448-8558 .

Mini Farm. 9.6 acres. 6 rooms.
bath. full basement. Small barn,
1 out building. Bashan Ad.
Meigs Co. $26,000. 614-3786209 .

74

Four Moundhlll Cemetery lots.
Good klcMion. Clll
814-446-4738.

transformed our yard from a
weed-choked jungle
into a
"
barren Wasteland.

1971 Schult mobile home. 2
bedrooms, pertialty furnished an
rented 'ot. Underpinn-ing and
block included. $4500 . 304882-2048.

8 acres on Tribble Rd . otf Rt . .62.
Plus store building, warehouse.
3 OR house. barn. cellar. plus 2
other buildings. All black top
ro11d. Call 304-468· 1818. Call
1fter 6PM .

Wright

1Ox20.

·"All by himself Ken has

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Farms for Sale

Krt 'N' CARLYLa

64 Misc. Merchandise

GOOD. USED APPLIANCES Refrigerator &amp;._leywn mower . Call
WashMI, dryars, refrigerators, 614-448-081 1'
ranges . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper Riv., Rd. beaide Stone 1973· Piper CheJ okee 140
. N6698B . 3250 hrs. TT, 1240
Crest Motel. 614-448· 7398 .
hrs. SMOH , Com 1 1-Nnll.
Appolto 602 Loren, Auto Gas
LAYNE 'S _FURNITURE
STC. AT1"0 tranaponde~, lntlf·
Sofas and cha;,o pr;ced from com with dual hudsets, new
1396 to $995. Tables t&amp;O and tires. new carpet. Well mlin·
tained. 1-'61• ·949-27156.
to
t696.
S225
to
up to
S12S.~ecliners
Hid8·'! rbeda
t390
S376. Lamps *28 to t125. Gas hot w•ter heater. Good
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
44
Apartment
Dlnrn••• oio9 and up •o 0496. Condition . Phone 814·992 ·
for Rent
Wood table w-e chairs t285 to 3573.
$795. Desk $100 up to $375 .
Hutch" 8400 •nd up. Bunk New, 8000 BTU Climatrol ait
Excellent house site on At. 2. Y,
acre. Exc. neighborhood soil. 2 BR , 2 bath. carpeted,, kitchen · beds complete w-mattresse1 conditioner. *280. Call 814·
furni1hed, no' pets. dep . &amp; ref. 1296 and up to t396 . Baby beds 992-2802 .
Call 304-676-2026 .
t 1 10. Mattntlln qr box 1prlngs
$325 / mo. 11 Court St. Call
fuN or twin I&amp;U. firm $78, end TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, hot
27 acres of land In Mason. Ci~ 614-446·4926.
rebluelng. now taking order
t88. Queen seta •226. f(i'lg
water and sewer. 304 -7731350. 4 drawer cheat *159. Gur1 orders for custom MauHrs. Call
Modern 1 BR apartment Call
6569.
cabintts 6 gun . Ges or electric 304·875-4831 .
814·446-0390.
ranije S375. Baby msttr•ses
Brookside Apartments : 446 - •35 a. t45 . Bed frames •20. AVON . look at us now. Earn
1932 or •46-4839. One Bed- 130 • King frame t&amp;O. Good Extra Money . 304· 675· 1429.
Renliils
room apertment with large •election of bedroom suites.
country kitchen. new applian· metal cabinats, heedboards 130 FOR SALE: Restaurant Equipment. Two head soft ice cream
c:es, utility room. water, sewer and up to *86.
maChine. one 24" ·electrlc grill,
and trash services provided. ·
90 , Days same as cash with two burner nelnless 11..1 h01
·
·auiM area.
41 Houses for Rent
approved .c:radit, 3 Mllis out
plate, one salid bar • equip·
ment, commercial 4 · slice toll·
Bulevilte Rd. Open 9am to &amp;pm
Furnished effieiency . 701
Nicety furnial'!ed small houSe. Fourth Ave. • ·1 60 utilitiH pd. Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614· 446·
tar. slush IT!Ichina a suppiiN.
Adults only. References re· Call 114-446·441 6 •ttllf 8pm .
36" stainlns stMf equlpmMt
0322.
quired. Off atrHt p..-king. Ph.
ttble, autometic: hot chocolate
814-448-0338.
. PARSON'S FURNITURE
machine. 8 A.M. to 12 Noon
1 BR . unfurnished apanment
Only. t»h. 304-882-2955.
near HMC . No peta. t169
Kitchen furnished. carpeted. 2 month. t1 00 deposit. Call614· New wood 6 pc. living room
BR, 1 1J: bath, ·no PM•, Dep . •
Portable lighted sign, *299.
suites, 1399.96; New living
448·381?.
Ref. 233 Second Avenue.
room suite1 from t179 . 95 to Factory direct . Free D1INery &amp;
*360/ mo. C.H 614-44111-4926. 1 BR apt. 740 Seoond A..,e. t700.; Cheat of drewen, 4
Letters . WV · 1-800-842 · 2434:
*186 PM month. Deposit re- drawer. *48 .. 6 drawer. •&amp;9.96; Ohio, 1 ·800· 533-3463 .
Newly remodeled 3 SR Mme. quired. Calll14 -446-4222 be- End tables from t69 .915 set .
Call 814·446·15278.
Uud Furniture: bedroom auitea,
1Ween 9 • 6 .
55 Building Supplies
full 1i1ed bed1. IWin beds and
For sale or rent, 3 BR, b.th a. %, The Oaks Apt. newty renovated rot.-kers. Reclineu from *99.96
f1mity room. loc1ted on 588. apanmenta with stainm•ter and up
·Ref. &amp;. dep. requiriHI. No pets. c.rpet. Pl-vground area for
THE WORKING
Buildinil Materials
Call 814· 261·67S9 or 614- children. Watlf, trash. and aew· MAN'S FRIEND
Block. brick. sewer pipes, win·
266-6205.
age paid. One or twa Br. apts.
dows, ll!'ltlll, etc. Cl1ude Win·
CAAPET
availabla. Nice loc.tion in quiet
tars, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 61•· .
8 room house •76 p• month. 8 area. For more lnfor. call 814· Remnantt· AII .ili1a1. Altll cut
2,46· 5121 .
room houset175 per month, PI· 682-7670 . Office hours-Mon.- carpet· U .OO yard • up. Living
.Pie.. . Call Broker A·1 Real Sat. 9-5 . Closed Sun. Manage- rooms- 1300 &amp; up. Financing
Concrete blocW;s all sires yard or
Estata 304-876-6104.
ment by U.S . Shei•Corp ., EHO . available. Motlohan Furniture.
delivery. Mason nnd. Gallipolis
Upper Ri11er Rd. Call 814-446·
81odt Co., 123 'h Pine St.,
Two cottages, furnished , 3
7444.
661 3rd. Ava., 2 BR ., unfur·
Gallipolls. Ohio Call 614-441·
rooms . All newtv redec:orlted. in nished, witt. refrig. and stove
2783.
towm. Aduha Onty. Call 114·
.U50 per month plu1 deposit. Kenmore gu range. Kenmore
448-2643.
10 ,500 BTU air conditioner . Call
Call 614-245-9595 .
Ready mik conCt"ete and all
61 4-446· 3821 .
concrete supplies. C1ll us Vall.,
3 Br. 1 floor. fully carp. Cent. Gracious liYing. 1 and · 2 bed·
Brook Cement and Suppll•.
AC, ..,pliences, near GOC a.
roorn apartments at Village
304-773-6234.
new golf course. t360 mo. Ref.
Minor and Rtv•side Apart· Twin Bed frame,· 4 drawer
8t dep. required. Adults pref. Call
ments In Middleport. From dr••er, full mirror. desk/ chair &amp;
114-441-4722 aft• lpm,
t215. including utilitin . Call night stand. EJCCet cond. for
56
Pets for Sale
child. Call 814-«6· 9324.
814·992 -7787. EOH .
2 bedroom houae and apt. for
rent in Pomeroy. Partially fur- For rent: Effitiency cottage, Mt. Oak drop leaf table A-1 Condi·
nished, deposit required. Call Vernon Aw. Pt. Pleaunt. Hud tion. Calllll14·441· 0737 .
Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
614-992-2381 .
Groom i ng . All breeds ... AII
approved. 814-992-5S58.
Deep freuer, 22 cu. ft , Sears styl ... Jul ie Webb Ptl . 114 -446·
4· rooms. bath. on a floor house,
3 room and 5 ro!)m furnish~ chest type. 1226 . Call614-448· 0231 .
attached &amp;•age, in Middlaport. apt. 814-992-5434 or 304· 2367 .
.
Carpeted, stove and refrigerator 882-2666.
Oregonwynd Cattery Kennel.
furnished . ldlli .. for a aingle or a
Lo\le eouch. 11100. Hide-a -bed CF.A Himalayan. Persian and
working coupla. Sorry, no pets One bedroom apt. in Middleport. with inner spring mattfesa. Siam•• kittens. AKC Chaw
or children. *17&amp; p4us HCurity
t175 . per month . Call &amp;14 -992· 1126. Soh. chair, and kitchen puppi". New kittens: Siamese
deposit. Phone 814-992-6292.
and Himalayans. Call 61 • · •48dinette. 614-992-35•3.
5160.
384• after 7~M .
Nice five rooms, bath, lovety sun Two bedroom apt. in Middle- Broyhill floral c:ouch and chair.
porch, one floor plan home on
pan. All Ulilitiupald. 1210. per Catnapper recliner. All 3 for AKC quality Yorkshire Terri•
Mulberry Ave., Pom•oy. Full
S250. Good cbndition, 304· puppies, females •360, males
month. Call 114-992-6150.
b11ement. Cltfplrted. stcw:e. re1250. Mature 4 lb. femtle.
882.·3307 .
frigerator and draperiM pro-- APARTMENTS , mobile homas,
1375. Call 814-888· 15•40 or
vided. oft· street parking. S226.
61 " · 886~6 787
houses. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipoa month plus securitv deposit. Hi. 114-448· 1221 .
53
Antiques
Adults onty. Sorry, no pets.
Male S c hnau~:er , black &amp; sil\ler .
814-992-5292 .
3 vears old. Aeg. Call 814-3882 bedroom iurnlsed apt. ref and
8866.
deposit. New Haven. W. Va .,
3 bedroom. On lir,coln Heigttts
304 · 882· 3267 or 304-773 - Vintege oak c:hina cabinet. origi·
nal condition . Iron lletlle with AKC registered black bad&amp; Baa.
in Pom.-oy. Phone 814-9926024.
s1and. 304-875· 4604 .
7889 lfter 5 :00p.m .
satt pUps . t12&amp; . 614 ·167·
6758 .
.
3 rooms and bath, gas heat.
Aemodekld in Ch•t..-. New
ground floor. washer and dryer
64 Misc . Merchandise AKC Baasett pups. 2 male. 2
panelling l!nd c..-peting. 3 BR,
hook up , no children. immediate
with small den. Reesonablerent.
female . $100 and up . 614· 687occupancy. No pets, phone
Call 614-881 · 48S8 .
6967.
304-876·4•80 ext 63 or 80.
Calla~en ' s Used Tire Shop, 0\ler
2 bedroom house overlooking
3 &amp;ad room apt. •II electric. Crab 1,000 tir•. 1i1n 12. 1 3 , 14, 16, Registored Pomeranian PUPPY· 7
park in Middlepon. Call 814- Creek Road. 304· 875-8609 ef·
16, 1&amp; .5. 8 mil• out At. 218. month• old. Orange male. •200.
992-2598.
Call614· 992· 3408.
Call614· 251·6251 .
ter 6:30. 304-675· 1 087

1978 Brougham mini home.
Sleeps six, ac, has generator.
$12,000 . 304-675 -2574 .

33

61 Household Goods

1111 Hlrt-v'. 10 al. n.w

Call614-2&amp;8-6200.

. rePair). Delinquent tax property.
Repossessions. Ca\11 -805-6876000 EKt. G H· 9805 for current
rapo list .

Monday, July 20, 1987

-Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio '

Pege.:....1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 20, 1987

--Local briefs-------. Crews get upper hand on most Westem fires
EMS has 10 weekend calls

"The only prootem . we· re en·
By ETHAN RARICK
countering now is· a change of
Unlled Press International
With only one major forest fire weather," Lau said. "We've got a
still 'burning out of control in the warming and drying trend slowly
West, firefighters were mopping toward Wednesday .
"WP're really playing a cau·
up hot spots, and resting· up for
the posslbllity that lightning tious, walt -and-see game - do,
would touch off more blazes in ing a lot of mop-up work and ...
waiting to see what the weather.
the near drought conditions.
Rain and cooler weather dur- does," he sald. "There's still ... a
ing the weekend"iieijied fireflgh· lot of potential for something to
ters gain the upper hand over happen. It's a big if."
About 60 !!reflghters we~e sent
mos t of th~ blazes, which have
home,
the first time the ranks
killed three people, destroyed
had
been
reduced since Wednes·.
dozens of homes and charred
day,
when
sparks .from a faulty
more than · 100,000 acres In
several parched Western states tractor battery touched off the
in the past week.
killer inferno.
Last week the fire blazed
Nearly 800 firefighters were
working to complete a line across dry forests and even
around a 10,30().acre Inferno on jumped the South Umpqua
Bland Mountain in southern River. Two loggers who were
-RAIN
SHOWERS ·
Oregon near Rosebu·rg that has trying to save some costly
~SNOW
been called one of the worst in the equipment from a burning ridge
"Cold
. . Static
Occluded
FRONTS: "
Warm
state in 20 years, but were were killed last Wednesday when
•
they were trapped by the blaze.
concerned that the weekend's
WEATHER MAP - ftlaln and showers are fore(astl\Jesday for
cool, rainy weather was al;lout to Eight homes were burned down .
the
north Atlantic Coast !&gt;lates. Showers and thunderstonna are
In Southern Ca lifornla, a 6QO.
.
change.
possible
In parts of the southern lnlerrnoutaln rep;lon and the
Firefighters had hoped to clear ·' acre grass flre started by the hot
southern plains as well
the Great Lakes and the GuH Coast and
40 miles of firellnes by Sunday ex haust from a passing train and
parts
of
.
t
he
south
Atlantic
coast. (UPI)
fanned by gusty winds threa· •
night.
"We didn' t make It. We're still
tened25homesSundayinarural r;~~~::::~;;~~~~~~~~~;!;;~::~~~~~
about 5 percent short," Depart- community at the CI!Jan Summit 1
ment of Forestry spokesman . of the San Bernardino Mountains
before its progress was halted.
W
Randali Lau said.

Meigs Count: -' Emergen~y Medical Services rE'ports that 10
calls were answered over the weekend by the vanous units m
the county.
Saturday at 12: 13 p.m ., Racine transported Henry Waugh and
David Ferguson from an auto accident on Route 338 at Letart
Falls to Veterans Memorial Hospital, Waugh was later taken to
Holzer Med!~al Center; Pomeroy at 4:04 p.m. . transported
Doris Patrick. to St. Joseph's Hospital; · Syracuse Fire
Department at 8:.40 p.m. to a brush fire on the Porsei Stewart .
property; Racine at 9 p.m . to Bashan Rol!d far Betty Willis to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital; . Pomeroy Fire Department at
10:33 p.m. to a mattress fire at the Courtney residence in the
Country Mobile Home Park on Route 33.
.
.
Sunday at 1:48 a.m., Pomeroy to Route 681 East for William ·
Smith to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 4:44
a.m. toRoute 681 West for Deborah Watson to St,.,.Joseph's
Hospital; Middleport at 8:36a.m. to Route 7 for Ruljy ·crum to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Syracuse at 3:25p.m. to London Pool
for Marlon Snider who was treated but not transported;
Middleport at 6:25 p.m. to Laurel St. for Robert Clonch to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

rn

Merchants to meet ·Tuesday
Pohwroy Merchants Association will meet Tuesday at.8a.m.

as

Eastern athletic boosters to meet

TUfMAY N/QHT $PEC/AL

Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at
the high school. to discuss participation at the Meigs County
Fair.

Eight die on Ohio roads over weekend
Eight people, including two
pedestrians and a motorcyclist.
were killed in accidents on Ohio
roadways during the weekend:
the state Highway Patrol re·
ported today.
The victims died in separate
. accidents, including1woSunday,

Gailla~Melgs Community t;ction Agency will hold free
clothing day lor lmv·income persons on Thursday, from 9 a.m.
to 12 noon, at the old high school in Cheshire. ·

Final classes start July 27
The final sessions of swimming classes at the Mlddl$&gt;port Pool
have been set for next Monday, July 27, through Friday, Aug. 7,
Laura McCullough, .jnstructor, reports.
RegistratJons are being taken a nd those Interested in any of
the offered courses are to register at the pool or call 992-9969.
Classes being offered and the time schedu le includes :
swimmers , 8 to 9 a.m.; intermediates , 9 to 10 a.m.; advanced
beginners. 10 to 11 a.m.; beginners. 11 to 12 noon. A junior life
saving course will be offered from 5:30 tO 6:30p.m. and there
wlll be a class for adult beginners who must be at .teast 18 years
old from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

night. Three of the auto- crash
five
Saturday
andwearing
one Friday
victims
were not
seat
belts, a patrol spokeswoman
said.

Newsweek .blasts Col. North -

Kathleen Young

Kathleen Young, 67, of 106 E.
· Caldweld St., Bradner, died
·Sunday at the Community Nurs'
ing Home, in Bowling Green.
Born on Jan. 6, 1920, she was
the daughter of the late Henry
·walter and Merlie Ann Moore
.Cunningham. She was married In
Pomeroy on June 15, 1941 to the
late George Wilbur Young.
' She is survived by two daugh·
· ters, Mrs. Barbara L. Quickie of

' File for divorces
Flllng for divorces in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court are
·Aitonso L. Thompson, Long Bottom , from Betty Jo Thompson,
·Crown City; Jeffrey Clair Shiflet,
Rutland, from Melissa Renee
Shiflet, Gallipolis; Edward L.
Laudermllt, Pomeroy, from Lor·
ena L. Laudermllt, Middleport;
Coral Lucinda Saltsman, Racine,
from Ol!vlo Francis Ralph Salts·
:man, Vinton. A restraining order
.has been issued against the
·defendant In · the Saltsman
'd ivorce. \1
'

'1 (

bombing.
Now Newsweek, in releas·ing
its July 27 issue Sunday, says
neither charge by North - Is
accurate and in fact the Marine
himself was the one who leaked
details about the 1985 capture of
the Achille Lauro terrorists- to
Newsweek.
"The colonel d'id not mention
that details of the interception,
first published in a Newsweek
cover story. were leaked by none
other than North himself." the
magazine said. "Moreover,
David Halevy, a Time magazine
correspondent who used North as
a source, co·wrote an article in
the July 1987 Issue of The
Washingtonian (magazine) in
which North identifies the Israelis as the source of major
intelligence during the Achille
Lauro affair."
North charged during his six
days of testimony last week and
the previous week that "a
number of members of Congress" divulged details of the
daring U.S. Interception of an
Egyptian airliner carrying the
suspected terrorists who hi·
jacked the Achille Lauro. killing
an American tourist.

I

,

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken ClliY}'.
cole s
hot roll, butter and. coffee. Sorr~.
no
except bewraae with addl·

FOR JUST

S3.25
. ..

·

·.a .

(RO.W'S fAMILY RESTAURAnT
POMEIIOY, 011.

PH . 992 _5432

road.
r~County
r~a~il~ro~a~d~~cr~o~s;si
~n;g;o~n~a~P~o~rt~a;g~e~~;;;;~;~~~~~~~Fr~itti~C~hi~·c~k~tn~;;;;;~
-··--

Daih· Numht•r
73:2
PiC'k 4
1621

•

'

Vol. 37. No .5 I
Copyrighted 1987

. By United Prt'Ns lnlo•rnallonal
. Ohioan s; s~r king rrlirf from the hcut of rhr
hottes t d".l' of th~ .v~ar . pur a r~tord drmand on
the pow~r companiPs a nd mar&lt;' of lhr , amr is on
the way .
Tl'mpcr a turrs rxr··~d••d thr ~0 - d&lt;'grPr mark ali
acr·oss the- s tall• Monda,1·. making It rhr hottest da.\'
of the yrar. lron irali.' . just on ~ ,1 ·rar ago Monda)·.
trmperatur~~ all across lhr s tair were in thr 911s .
Electric co mpani~s throu ghout the s ta te
r~portC'd a il·tl mc demand for pow~1· as Oh ioa ns
turnPd to air conclitl oncrs alid fan s to bi'at th&lt;'
sea rln~ hca 1. co mbinC'd with hu mldH-.v.l&lt;&gt;w&gt;i.&lt;;.&lt;&gt;l-titJ-.cP"rr cnt ot· mor'r .
. Thr highest tPmpcralure Monday wa s rh~ 9:\ at
Tolrdo. foilowPd by thP 94 at t h&lt;' Wright ·Pat tcrso n
Air F'otTP Ra se c'tnd a t Clevela nd . and a 9.1 at
Ci nci nnat i.
icvPland' s 9l was thp highps r s ince a 97 wa s
recorded .July l!i. 19M. Monday 's trmpera tures
·did not hit t'C'&lt;'Ord marks. si nre reco rd hi ghs for

.Jul\' 20 were· 9.1 ar Youngs town and Mari s lieid and
io:;·at Cindnnat i. a mark sci in 1 ~: 14 .
fktween :1 p.m. and • p.m.. cus tomt•rs or the
Davton Pow&lt;'r and Lighl Co. used 2.309.WO
kilowatts or Picetrieit~· . somr two percent more
than th ~v us&lt;'d on las t year' s hollesl da y.
AI th~ sa me tim e. customers of Co lumbu s &amp;
Soulhcrn Ohio Electric Co. cus tomer s used a
record 2.r11.0011 kilowatts . sa id CSOE spokes man
Bob Jan&lt;'s.
In Cl&lt;'v~land. cus10mers of Cenlerior E ncrg~· ·s
two oprrar lng su bs idi aries. rhc Ci~ve land E lrcl ·
ric lilu min.tling Co. and Toledo Ed ison. ser a n
a ll - rim~ record of !i.164,1~11 kilowalt s. The oid
Ccntcrior F.nerg,1· sys tem r0cord of !i.lf21 ,000
. kilowatt s was set .lui~· JR. 19B6.
&amp;tween J p.m, and 2 p.m. CEI customers
demanded J,6&amp;l.!i10 kil owal ts of elrrtri ci t,1 ·. Th e
old CE t ma rk wa s 3.601.000 kiiowatls.
Customers of Toledo F:dison used 1.-lR4.fjJO
kilowatts or eiectrif'it\' Ol 2 p .m .. breaking TE 's

0/o

OFF

l e\'~·

Young al so rcpol'led that Consolidai Pd Cabl0 Co mpan,~· has
removed ('(Juipmf'nt from

SC'\' - ,

arily s trPet lighting. Thr renewal
will be plac~d on thc No,·f'mbrr
ballot.
Co uncilman Bill Young I'&lt;'·
port!'d Ihat ha ndicap ramps arc'
now be-ing ins(a liC'd on thr
\'illagc·s downtown sid!'wa lks.
Younl\' salt! he and Councilman
.John Ancl&lt;'rson are sp~ak ing wIth
downtow n me rchant .&lt; to SN' if
1he,1· would considPr pa,ving for

sc hedul~d for r&lt;'moval through ·
OUI !hl' \·illagf'.
Council brlefi.\· di srussC'd Mon
kC'&gt;. Run Park wit h Ma,·or
R ichard ~C',I ' i l'r reporting the
majorily of drainagpprobiPms at
LJ1£Silc hav~:. born corret&lt;l£.&gt;l arul
propOs!'d plans for lh r park c·an

a ddi.1ion a \ . sid0wa lk imJ)ro\'£'·
mf'nt s i n rro nt of thC'ir own
bu sin0sses .

ma~· or Is rh0rkirig in to ho rsf's ho0

and ins tall new po les on thP
parking lot s ide of the slrf'et.

now move rorwa r d . Counci lmu n

Bruce• RPed said h&lt;' has designs
fo1· lhe ball diamond and the

picnic Tuesday

NOTHING HELD BACK - HURRY IN AND
··SAVE. ON:
KnCHEN GADGns, UGHT BULBS, SCISSORS, GUSSWARE,
DINNERWARE, Cun.ERY, MICROWAVE COOKWARE, TOASIERS,
CORNPOPPERS, MilOS, nECIRIC •oNS, TEA Kmi.ES, FOOD
. GRINDDS, CAN OPENDS, CLEA.NG SUPPUES, CANISIEI
sm, RU88ERMAI) PRODUas, lUSH BAGS, INSEO SPRAYS
AND MANY OTHER HOUSEWARE ITEMS.

~lemorlal

Saturday Admissions - Eura
Largent, Syracuse; Alexander
May, Pomeroy; Betty Willis,
Racine.
Saturday Discharges - Do·
naid Covert. Wlll!am Cook, ·
Henry Eblin, Ricky McClellan,
Stanley Holter.
Sunday Admissions - Mary
Pierce, Pomeroy; Muriel Mulford, Ew!ngton; Robbie Clonch·,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges - Hilda
Hart, Russell Seymour, Owen
Colmer, Mary Pierce.

Here Are Some Examples of How You Will· Save
REG. S21.19 32 gal. TRASH CONTAINER w/LID.................. s14.19
REG. $100.39 SUNBEAM MIXMASTER MIXER .......................... S67 .26
REG. S22.49 BLACK &amp; DECKER CHROME TOASTER ............... S15.06
REG. S62.99 . FARBERWARE STAINLESS PERCOLATOR ............ s42.20
REG. S61.49 BUN COFFEEE BREWER..................................... S41.19
Reg. S66.99 PRESTO PRESSURE CANNER ............................5&gt;S4:4.88
REg. S149.00 .FARBERWARE STAINLESS COOKWARE SET •..# ...Sf19.83
.
REG.. S25.99 BATHROOM SCALE ............................................ s17.41
REG. S13.99 SUNBEAM HAIR DRYER ...................................... S9.37
REG. S9.79 PYREX MIXING BOWL SET ..........,...................... S6.55
REG. S7.95 THERMOS LUNCH BOX &amp; THERMOS ................... S5.32
REG.• S8.95 SILVERSTONE COOKIE SHEET ..................:........... S5.99
REG •.s 18.39 SOUD MAPLE CUniNG BOARD ........................ S12.32

Weather
South Central Ohio
Sunny and humid today, with
highs between 90 and 95. Clear
tonight, with a low near 70. Surmy
and humid Tuesday, with highs
between 90 and 95.
The probability of preclplta·
tlon · Is near zero through
Tuesday.
Winds wlll be from the southw·
est
at five
to· 10 mph today,
.
'
becoming nearly calm tonight.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Hazy throug)l the period, wltll
highs between 90 and 95, possibly
turning cooler F'rlday over the
northern part of the state.
Overnight lows will be near 70.

ELBERFELD

PLENTY OF
FREEPARKING ·.

I

,

POMEROY

992·3671 .
•

·a-s possibl(' to SC'C' if the- water
runoffs ('&lt;Jfi bC' C'OrTPCtC'd b.'

building up thc adjaCC'nt si reNs

or installing catch basins.
Brca us0 of problems which
ha,·f' de\'C'Ioped this summer
with Sf'\"f'ral old strert culverts.
\'illage workers sill I haven't
. caught up with mowing acrord·
ing to
the mayor and
Clerk Treasurcr .Jane Walton.
Th~ mavor sa id that work&lt;'rs
have b0&lt;'n busy repa iring th e
cu\vC&gt;r.tS' b.Ut · po\nt~ out \ha' U'l\!'.
ryp~ of work I ~ not a lways
0\'idPn t to I he g&lt;'neral publie.
Young notrd lhat he has
rC'CPived QU&lt;'Stion~ from rcsidcnls as to where the village's

i.ncomc I ax monPy is being spent

this year. Walton sa id income tax
mon~,1· is he!ng used for in·
creas&lt;'d wagcs for viilag&lt;'
workf'rs, and was usC'd lo pur-

c hase s&lt;·,·cral pieces of equip·
m0nt including mow~rs and
wcC'd('afcrs.

Council accf'pted io bid of
from Carl Hys~il for lh c
\'illage·s old police' cruiser. This
wa s thP on l)' bid submi tt E'd for

~4 :\R . 7R

thl' \'f'hir!r.

•

Poindexter feels It was not
a big deal; hearing continues

Clearance Sale Prices On Our Entire Stock

Hospital news

.

ro mPf't our customers' needs ."
ThC' plant is now in its preopNational lestln~
phase.
·
Ginn said in addition lous ing ali available coa l
a nd oil genera ling unit s. bolh operating com panips bought subs tanllal amounts of power from
surroundi ng ('lectric companies.
The Perry plant ncar Cleveland was in a !C'sting
slage on .a hot day in June a nd produced 239, 000
kilowatt s. Carter said.
Perry was not available Monday , becau sp it
was down for a Nuclear Reguialory Commissionmandated test. he said. .
'
The hot humid weather will continuo through
thP week with a lillie relief b:&gt; thf' weekend . Highs
will be near !lO Thursday and Friday and in the
inid ROs Salurda.\' . Lows will be near 70Th ursday
and Frida y and b&lt;'!ween 65 and 70 Saturday .

for current ex pen se's. prim · · 0rai Ohio Power polcs whic h ar~

along fh(' downtown sidC'walks

The annua l picnic of past
matrons of Harrlsonvilie Chap·
ter, OrderofEasternStar, wlll be
held at the home of Donna Nelson
at. 6: 30 p.m. Tuesday. Those
attendin g are to take a covered '
dish.

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs CountY Probate
Court to Richard Eldon Swanson
Jr., 25, Pomeroy, and Jamie
Lynn Cunningham, 33, Pomeroy;
Ear l O'Dell Pickens, 23, -Racine,
and Kimberly Sue Mahlman. 23,
Toledo.

wt' f'P sound. :· he sa1d : " If our new Perry Plant had
brC'n in operation, we wou ld havp been be-tier able

pirs lor the f&lt;tl'iliU\·. Pla~· ground
&lt;'quipmenl was co mpi~!C'd somC'
Since th£' vi lla g~·s ronlraC'! lor
limP ago but nc\'cr ins t&lt;i ll f'd
~ tr f'flt lighting PXpirf'~ in anothf'J'
bf'causf' ot thr inadrqul.llf'
yf'ar. Young vo luniC'flrrd IObC'gin . drainage.
looking for anot her I&gt;'PP of pol~ In
D r aini..IJH' prob l(lms at I'C'!'! i&lt;lrn ·
bC' US('d in lhf' downtown ilr('a in
cPs on Lincoln H&lt;'ighls and Rork '
placP of 1h&lt;' wooden poiC's nw
St . ''-'C'!T• ulso discussed. Thr
•·ent lv in usc. Co uncil hop0~ 10 b&lt;'
mayor said hC' would havf' \'illagC'
ab le 10 rcma\'1' Ihe wood!'n poics
wor kers chPck t hC' siles as soon

Middlepori Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
wiii have a special meeting
Tuesday, 7 p.m .. for work In the
feilowcraft degree. Refresh ·
ments wili be served.

25 Cents

A Multime't tialnc. Newspaper

record mark of l ,42J. OOO kilowa tl s.
Customers of Ohio Ed ison Co. used 4,Ci79,000
kilowatts of electricity at .1 p.m. when the
temp eratur~ hit 89 degrees. ThP prpvious high
demand was the 4,260,000 kilowat ts set July 9.
Monda\' ·, record use "exceeded the ppak load
that was not PxpectC'd to be reach~d until1995 ...
said Ohio Edison spokC'sman Bud Carter in i\ kron .
Car tPr said the utilil y's s,1·s1e m was in good
shapp to mePi the customer dem&lt;.ind that was
ex p&lt;'CIC'd to inCI'eas!' as th&lt;' week wor~ on.
Carter said thc demand was slightly down by •
p.m.. wh i c~ reflected the fact that some
bu s i ncs srs and industries eit her changed shifts at
:1p.m. or finished work for the day .
RobC'rt M. Ginn. C~nrerior Energy r ha irman.
sa id the record demand supports the fact that
addil ional general ing capacity is nPedPd through our this region of thr country.
"These r!'cords point out that Ihe plans W&lt;' mad&lt;'
yC'ars ago to build l hfl Pf'rry nuc le-ar powf'r plant

Pomero~· VillagC' Counc il ap·
pro vf'd a mC'asure Monrlav night
to rrnf'w an ex is lin g 1 . ~ mill la x

'

I

· i Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy· Council renews tax
levy; to appear on fall ballot

Plan special
meeting tomorrow

Veterans

enttne

Ohio electric firms set mark; heat continues

Middleport Youth League will
have a picnic and swimming
party on Thursday, from 7 to 9
p.m ., at Middleport Pool. All bail
players and families welcome.

An~ual

ln upper 60s. Sunny and
humid Wednesday. Highs ln
mid 90s. Prohahlllty of
pre&lt;'ipitatlon ·near· ·zero
through Wednesday.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July' 21, 1987

......

Firm
Price
Am E lectric Power ...... ... .... 27%
AT&amp;T ... ..... .. .. ... .... .. .......... .. 31~
Ashland Oil ........................ 68%
Bob Evans Farms ........ ... ...... 25
Charming Shoppes .............. 31 Y.
Federal Mogul. ................... 48\ol,
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .... .. .. ...... .. 70%
Heck's Inc ....... .... :... ........ .... 3%
Limited Inc ............... , ........ 45 %
Multimedia Inc ............ ....... 64'/,
Rax Restaurants ... .................. 5
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ..... ... .10 Y4 '
Shoney's Inc ........... ....... ... .29%
Wendy's Inti. ......... ............. 10¥.
Worthington Ind ...... ............ 2l'A.

Mostly clear lonlghl. Low

•

at y

Plan picnic

Bradner and Mrs. Ann Nelson,
Bradner, and two sons, Charles
E . Young, Wapakonetta, and
Gary D. Young of Fostoria. Also
surviving are a sister, Ileen
Justice. Pomeroy, and a brother
Louis Bass, Ravenna; nine
grandchildren , and seven great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Marsh·
Beckman Funeral Home in
· Bradner. Bishop John A. Evans
will officlate·and burial will be In
the Bradner Cemet~ry . Friends
may call at the .funeral home
today from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Mem&lt;'lrlal donations may be
made to the Diabetes Assoclat ion
or the Heart Association.

Licences issued

COMBINAtiON DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Pro•lded by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt EliLs &amp; Loewl

Eddie Patrick, 18, of Middleport. pled gujlty Monday morning
to a charge of escape from the Middleport ;Tall in May, and was
sentenced by Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight to six months in the Chillicothe Correctional Institute.
In other court matters, Jeffers Trucking and Excavating,
Pomeroy, has filed an action against Hanley E. Hardin, South
Zanesville, requesting judgment of $1,480.
Cases dismissed by the court Include State of Ohio vers us
Bobby Mitchell; State of Ohio versus Timothy. Gibbs; State of
Ohlo versus Dennis Shuler; · State of Ohlo versus Robert Lee
W!lliam·s and Kenny Daniel Neal.

I

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

Daily stock prices

Patrick sentenced by judge

Area deaths

The patrol counts fatalities
resulting from accidents on the
state's public roads each non·
holiday weekend between 6 p.m .
Friday and midnight Sunday .
Killed were:
Sunday
Ravenna: .Jerry M. Neely. 30,
Kettering, when his truck
slammed Into a train at a

By United Press International

Free clothing day Thursday

WASHINGTON tUP!) - Lt.
Col. Oliver North Is guilty of
leaking one of the ·very . news
stories he accused Congress of
publicizing at the risk of Amerl·
can )lves, Newsweek reports.
In his recent testimony before
the congressional committees
·investigating . the Iran-Contra
'scandal, North admitted lying to
Congress to conceal U.S. arrns
sales to Iran and the ,diversion of
profits to Nicaraguan Contra
-rebels.
The former White House aide
justified this deception at one
point by citing what he claimed
were two damaging leaks by
lawmakers of sensitive Informa tion- one case involving the U.S.
attack on Libya last year,
a nother involving interception of
an airliner c'arrying terrorists
bel!eyed guilty of hijacking the
.cruise ship Achille Lauro and
killing one or its American
passengers.
The chairman of the Senate
Iran-Contra panel , Sen. Daniel
Inouye, D-Hawaii, strongly dis·
credited North' s assertion on the
Libya story by recounting the
specific administration news
leaks leadi ng up to the Aprill986

N

Ohio Lottery

Reds
hike West
Division
lead
Page 3

ONE \\'A\' TO RE1\T THE HEAT - With llu•
l&lt;'lllfll'ratun· in lht' rnld·SO. Monday, a .logger runs

h(•nt•ath u \\ah_•r ~·sprinkl(•r un tht• Washington
1\lonunlt•nf gruunds. No rt.'lil'\'4' is in sight . ( UPI)

Postal contract
•
expires; resume
talks again today

By .JOSEPH Mli\N0\\'1\N\'
and .JUDI H:\SSON

•

By Di\N Ci\RMICIIAEt
l'PI l.ahor Ro•r•ortPr
Wi\SH INCTOt&gt;: 1 UP It -Co n
tra ct n!'goti.,tions b!'tweert the
U.S. Postal Servic&lt;' and its two
bigf!&lt;''t unions dra ggo'd into !hC'
rar lv hour·s todav wlth labor
l!'ad.!'l's r~jt•cting 'a ca ll for an
illcgai nationwld&lt;' s trik &lt;' .
·
In a compulcr m•·ssugr 10 his
union offices natlonwld&lt;'. Moe
Bil ler. pr&lt;'sidcn t oft hc Amcrica n
Pos tal Work!'rs Union, said he
was &lt;'X p&lt;'Ct ing a new war:e offer
from lh ~ Pos ra l Scn·ic&lt;' but
add!'d no fur•th!'r dNalls.
L&lt;obor t•ontracts technical!:•
c•x pirPd at midnight Monday, but
talks continu&lt;'Ci earl,· toda,1· at a
Washington hole!. Nrilh&lt;'r sid&lt;'
would sa\' whct hC'r they had
agr&lt;'Pd to "stop thC' clo&lt;·k, ..
k&lt;'!'ping contracts in ef!&lt;'C't, but
lh!'re was no call for a strik&lt;' that
would lntrrl·upt mail sc• rvke.

WASHINGTON ;UPII - Th&lt;'
fateful decision that J~d 10
Prf'siden l Rf'agan 's worst erisis

a nd stailC'd AmNican fa r&lt;'ign
polk~· for months apparen tly
took

Shortiv aftrr midnight . chlf'f
Posral S!'n'iC'e spokPs mun .Jim
\'an Loozeh said. "A il I can rell
\OU is that nobody has ieft thP

·h otf'l. I simplv don't ha \'f' an~·

mOl '!' foi · \'OU ... .
Officials said !'arliN th a t il' lh~
c·o nlnlrls !'xpired lhr· dispu!!'
would b!' ,pnt to an arbitration
panel. Under f!'d!'rallaw. postal
workf'rs ('annat

~ ~ rikr.

RiiiPr and Vin &lt;'rnl Sombrotlo.
hc·ad or the Narional i\s,oc lati on
ot l.f'lfPr \arriflr!-i . sai d Monda~ ·

lh&lt;'.l' hop&lt;'d to reach an agree·
mc•nt with the Poslal SC'n'kP
1'0\·cring !;j!I. (XKI emp lO)'e!'s .
"VInni£' Lind I

Wf'I T'

in\'01\ Nl in

lllrga l strikPs bdOI'C' ... Biller
"lid. "Wc don' I think tltis i.&lt; lhe
tim ~ for it ·with whar's going on in
!hiS

c·ountry,

b~ing

tht·

prf's idt·nc~ ·

und!'r siC'gC'. Congress
thr AmNican .P&lt;'OPI&lt;'
Cant inued on page 10

ini'Oi\·~d.

TREATED FOR CANCER
- Suprt•me ('our! ,Justirc
Harry Blai:kmun i' hrlng
trc.•;,h•d for a rN·urrl'nt!r of
pro!'itatit· can~t·r at Mayo

!'link in Rocht•stl•r. Minn., a
hospital spokesman said to·
day. lliat·kmun is und&lt;•rgolng
lr!'almenl on an outpatient
hasis and th e prognosis for
re«.:OV£'ry is "cxccllt:~nt'~ uc·
. mrdln~ to the clinic spokes·
nt11n. (UPI)

Ohio Power receives national award today
Thirtv·Pight winners. includ· underway for the second annual
.
ing Oh.io PowC'r Co .. accc•pted . observance.
Accepting
the
award
for
Ohio
awards in thc first annual "Take
Power Co : w&amp;s C. A. Heller,
Prldc In America" program in
president of the Canton-based
ceremonies today at th!' White
investor·owner electric com·
House In Washington, D. C.
·
pany. The company serves
The program. launched In 19R6
627,000 customes In 53 Ohio
b,1· President Reagan and Secrto·
counties .
tary of tht&gt; Int erior Donald Hodel.
In add it iori to the Whit e House
attracted C'ntrles from 40 states
ceremonies
Involving the .3~
and two U. S. terr itories. The
winners.
a
reception
was held at
!'ercmon!es tod~y marked the
the
National
Arbpretum
io honor
culr.ninat!on of flrst .year activirepresen
tat
ives
'
of
the
500 na -.
ties, and plans a Iready are

tiona! nominees and the 127
finalists in the national judging.
Ear liPr this yPar, Ohio's Governor Richard Celeste hosted
ceremonies in which Ohio's win·
nlng entries'in the slal e porl'\on of
the "Take Pride In America"
program were honored. Winning
entries. on th!;' s ta le level were
then submilted to Ihe Governor's
office for consideration in the
national program.
Ohio Power Co. was ci ted for
Contimied on page.lO

r

formC'r

nat ional securit_,.

ad,·iser .John Poi ndeXIer only
minuto·s to makc - a nd hr still
does not think it wasa ny bigdral.
Shl)wing brief flashes of anger
in a fourt h dav of testiman,l'.
Poindexter told lh~ congres·
s !onai committf'es probing lhr
Iran -Conlra scanda l hP has no
r&lt;'grC'ts about his aciions and
sees nO nc~d !O apo logize far
misleading Congress about the
operations lhal have riveted
much of the nation for ~ig ht
months.
·..

dcxlrr answerc•d lh at question F'cbruan: 1986. He said he
la.st WP&lt;'k, but his cla im th ai the bclievC'd.l he scheme• was Nor th 's
prpsident wou ld hcl\·e appro\'ed . !dca.
,
thP plan had Whilr Hou sP offi ·
"l thought about it for s~verai
ciu ls disputing him C'\'C' n as hr
minutes while he was sta nding
rerurnNI fo 1· qurstioning there.·· Poindexter re?Calied. " At'·
Monda.\·.
tel' thinking about it and thinking
Ll . Col. Oliver Nor th . lhC' about what authorit.\ · I had . what
MarinP who prPsented lhP. p la n to th~ president would do if he wcr!'
PoindextC'r as a Na tiona l Sccur· asked. Ihe cont rovPrsy that
it) Council aid!', ha s sa id the wou ld exist if this became public
d ivC'rs ion Wil S suggesl(ld lo h1m
. . . l told Colonel Nort h to go
in .lanuarv 19R6 bv Manucher
ahmd bel'ause I thought il was a
Ghorbanifif'r. an Jra.nian middlr·
good idea."
.man w ho was sC'arching for a
PoindextPl' said hC' thought lhC'
way lo mak~ arms sa i ~s to Iran
plan would bt~ a l0ga l wa~' 10
mo'rC' palatable to lh~ U.s.
prp\•ide h('[p In 111r I'Cbt'is fight ·
gav&lt;'fnmcnl .
ing Nicaragua's ll'flist Sa nd i·
Poindexter lold the commit ·
nista go,·!' rnmC'nt un ti l C'ongmss
tC'es Monday that North prC's·. approved $i!HI million in new U.S.
e nred the idea to him at a brief
aid, whieh il did a few monlh s
afternoon meeting in his office in
iatN.

The Navy rear admira l we~s

summon!'d lodav for a fifth and
fina l appcaranc~ at thf' televised
hC'arings on Capitol Hill.
It was Monday ·lhat the pipe·
smoking Poindexter. who asserts
h&lt;' alone approvcd the diversion
of money to Nicaraguan Contra
rebels from · secret U.S. arms
sa l ~s to Iran. told the commi ttees
h&lt;' made that decision in a matter
of minutes iast year because he
was certain the p1·es ldent would
hav!' liked the idea. .
In thosp sam~ few minutes,
however, Poindexter said he
immediately recognized the pol·
!tical damage tha t cou ld be
caused if the diversion became
known and he therefore decided
not to te ll Reagan about It .
At the time , U.S. military aid to
the Contras was prohibited by
Congress.
Whether Reagan knew of the
diversion despite his repeated
,. denials eventually became a
· fei&lt;'al point of the scandal. Potn·

CONCLUDES TODAY- Former natlomd s~rurlty udvlsor.John
Poindexter .i s expeclt•d to wind up his uppej,l_ranci• ""fort· lht•
House-Scnulllran·Contrll commltlee som~tlmr today. ( UPI)
.'

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