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                  <text>Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

12-llw DlillySI ....

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
031
Pick 4:
3195

Guide for
retirement
-i'n the 1990s.

\

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Inside today

I
PROUDLY
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mk140s.

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2 s.ctlono, 34 Pageo 25 cenlll

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 29, 1993

IRICAN ·
1GB END ·

A Multlmodla Inc. -P"I*'

Strike rumors circulate
through coal fields
.

OF -fiE
·
1·11 N 710NAL CHAMPIONS

S LL U I ERSI
U DERI G HERD
to
12
30,10
•

Clear toalgbt. Low around
15. Saturday , cloudy. Hlgb In

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ACCU)ENT KILLS HUSBAND, WIFE • .
Two Ohio State Patrol omcers look over the
,wrecka&amp;e of a car lavolvecl ID a three-car accident 10 miles east or Atheos Thursday ni&amp;lil.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) affected.
- _Strike rumors cin:lllated through
The UMW avoided strikes in
tll.e coal.fields as United Mine negotiating agreements with the
Worten·President Richard Trumka association in 1984 and 1988. The
honored one of the union's leg- 1984 agreement was the first in
endary strike leaders, Mary Harris more than 20 years that was negoti''Mother''Jones.
ated without a union-wide strike.
But in the coal fields, rumors
"The wor~ of Mother Jones,
like the UMW A itself, has often persisted Thursday that the UMW
, been defined by. t!)e strikes she will strike when its wage agree·
lead," Trumka said Thumlay at a ment expires at 11 :59 p.m. Mon·
.
ceremony in Washington. D.C., day.
"Overall, it doesn't look very
inducting Jones iniO the Labor Hall
good and we're preparing our
of Fame.
"Mother Jones undersiOOd that members for the worst," said
a strike is never a goal in and or UMW District 17 President Bob
itself. It is only a tactic," Trumka Phalen in Charleston. " Our mem·
said. "It's something you do when bers don't want to strike. But make
you're forced· to and when you no mistake about it. Our members
are ready to strike if need be."
have no choice.'~
"I was hoping that they'd be
. It will be up to Trumka to
,. decide. whether to call a strike ·able to resolve their differences,'·'
when tile UMW's a'greement with said Bill Raney, president of the
tile nation.'s largest coal opera10rs West Virginia Coal Association. "I
was ho~ing we were beyond that (a
e~ Monday night
The union began negotiations strike). '
" The union is preparing ror a
Nov. 6 with !he Bituminous Coal
OperaiDrS Association, which rep- variety of options, mcluding a
resents 12 or the nation's largest strike,'' UMW spokesman Jim
Grossfeld said. He would not elabcoallliOdueers.
The contract covers some orate.
The UMW is con4ucting sepa60,000 miners in Alabama, Illinois,
rate
talks with four other compaIndiana, Kentucky, Ohio, PennsylRobert Frazee, 27, and passeoger Penny Jo
vania, Virginia and West Virginia. nies that banded together as the
Frazee, 34, both of Vleua, W. Va, were killed
Pensions
and benefits for about Independent Bitumioous Coal Barlo the craah. (AP)
·
120,000 retired miners also are

Httsballd,-wife killed·in Athens .wrec.k

o·n

Pictures (Bring Your oW.. Camara)
- Sign Up For Cbanca To Win A.-r-shirt

ATHENS, Ohio. (AP) - A
Vienna, W.Va., couple was killed
when their car hit another head-on
on U.S. SO in Athens County, an
Ohio Highway Patrol dispatcher
said.
Robert Frazee, 27, and Penny
Frazee, 34, died about 6:30 p.m.

.

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Thursday as they tried to pass a
logging truck 10 miles east of
Athens, said .the dispatcher, who
identified herself only as S. Dicken.
The Frazees' car hit a car driven
by Donald Ifebb, 33, of Marietta,

Ms. Dicken said. Hebb was taken
to Marietta Memorial Hospital,
where a miiSing supervisor who did
not give her name said she could
not release any information about
his condition.
,
· 1bc driver of the logging truck
was not injured, Ms. Dickel:l said.

"We're not commenting on

anything that's currently going
on," association spokesman MorrisFeibusch said,
Thomas Hoffman, vice president for public relations at CONSOL Inc. and spokesman ·for the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association's negotiating team, was in
Washington Thursday, his secretary said. He did not return a telephone message.
Grossfeld declined to confirm
whether union negotiators would
meet with association representatives IDday.
"As has been the policy
throughout, we're not confirming
speculation regarding the status of
contract negotiations," Grossfeld
said.

EPA annu·un·ces ·wvowcleanup t~ intensify
ByAmyLeacb

Recycle Day scheduled February 2.0 . :!~;:~~;?~
·

·
,, .
,
·
announcmg wade IS scheduled to
February 20 from 9 a.m. until plastic jugs,~ newspapers, corrugat· numbers in the center located either irifensify in the near future on pasnoon has been set u a Recycle Day ed cardboard, and glass will be near or on the boctom. The number , sible containinadon at the 8,()()().
b theM · Countv Litte C trot accepted.
one plastic (liter bottles) should be acre site . of the McOintic public
Y
CJgs
·
'&lt;
·
r
on
Preparation
of
items
is
very
-separated
froq~ number two milk hWlting and fishina an:a (better
· Board, Kenny WJ8811lS, direciOr.
The recycling pro 111am will be iillportant 10 insure acceptance by and ·water jugs. All other pl.stic known as the TNT area). · .
carried out on Krogcrrs parking lot recyclers, Wiggins said. Newspa- marked number two can be put
McCiinti4; is under close scrutiny
in Pomeroy. As explained by Wig- · pers .should be tied in bundles, together. All caps, lids, or rings by the EPA, Stall: of West Virginia,
gins, outlets for recyling are althoug!) those in paper tillgs will should be removed but labels can Mason County and tbe ,City or
becoming more and more diff'JCult be accepted. All inserts in .Sunday remain, Wisgins said.
·
Point Pleasant After a brief inves10 rtnd but at tile Kroger recycling papers, such as funnies, grocery
~ ror gtass, beverage and food ti~tion of mateljal concenlllltions
day, most all household items will and shoppers' ads, nyers, and containerS they should be separated wtthin that broad area, warning
be acc:epted.
,
tabloids .wttbout staples, sbould be by color (clear, grt:en, or brown, signs indicate that there is a pasWiggins stressed that all items bundled SCIJir1lle)y.
but ':"'t crushed. Mirrors •.window sibility or contamination, it was
should be rinsed and separated by
Most pfasiic conl8iners, accord· or windshield glass, eeramtc or lab- told. State ood COWlty officials and
category. Aluminum, steel and tin ing to Wtggins, are eas~ to iden~fy oralOry, c.ry~lal oven ware, milk representatives or the EPA gathered
cans, soft drink plastic c~tainers, by the small recycle ~gle wtth gl~ or drinking~·
yesterday morning in the council
Tm food ana juice cans should room of the city building 10 discuss
havethetopslllllbottomsopenand probable solutions.
nattened, corrugated card~oard
According 10 the National
. As pan of a negotiated plea ing a conCealed weapon. Addition- should be .nauened, alum mum, Priorities List Site, lhe former West
agreement, former Tuppers Plains ally, a .25 caliber handgWl was ror- steel and bi·mc~ ~P cl!"s need Virginia Ordnance Works .;s six
Elementary School teacher, John . feited to the Meigs County 'Sher- not be
Wtggms S81d:
. mt"les north of p01·nt Pleasant The
·v. Perine, has resigned his posiiion .• ;rrs DepartrilenL
·
Ho~se Btll 5?2 .mandates that former WVOW site was eseffective this past Wednesday.
Lentes stated he was · pleased the solid waste &lt;!istnct must reduce tablished in 1942, as a United
according to a .report from Meigs that this matter could be hlindled landfill w~ d!Sposal ~ 25 per- StaleS
· ~mment-owned
County Prosecuting Attorney John without further delay and thought it cent. .f\~ W1ggans explame~ th~ (Department or
ense), contrac·
Lentes.
·
was a great savings 10 the Eastern m!R residentS recycle, the.easter 11 tor-operated plant f&lt;l' tile manufac·
~rine 'was.originally charged in School District to proceed in this w1U be to meet thati'C!Iu!!Cm~t. ture of explosives. Tbe production
Meigs County Court with assault manncr.
But men, than that, Wtggms S81d of explosives (TNT, trinitrotoluene)
and carrying a concealed weaPQI).
Eastern Local School Superin· wben residents recycl~, they create at vrvow resulted in contaminaAs pan of a negotiated plea the tendent Richard Smith also indical· cleaner,
h1ghways and lion or llie aoils surrounding
~ult charges agaiilst Perine were ed thal he was pleased with Ute out- com
conserve valuB:ble manufacturing
and
process
dropped and he was given three comeofthiscase.
polluuon, racilities, wastewater, sewer lines
days jail and a .SIOO fine for CBIT}'·
save
and the wastewala' holding
discharge area by TNT and associated ~y-products.
Additionally,. subsurface soils

,

Perine resigns teach er s post

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gaining Alliance. The union and .
those companies, which employ
about 6,000 UMW members, have
agreed 10 extend the agreement for
60 day~ _while negotiations·continue.
The Charleston Daily Mail, citing unnamed sources, reported .
Thursday that the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association was 10 meet
with the union in Washington
today to discuss post-ex)!iration
options, inclu!ling the posstbility of
extending the contract.

,

IIIII

posure, reasonable contact ratio and
what could occur if the area was
indeed contaminated.
The EPA admits that they wiU of.
fer a conservative assessment 10 the
public or Mason County, because
the levels or contamination will not
stay the same, and, on the average,
people wiU not be exposed at the
samerate.
.
"Citizens do not know the exlent
of the problem and that is one or
the main reasons for the. meeting,"
said Robert G. Thomson, P.E., Vuginia and West Virginia Superfund
Federal Facilities representative.
"If the local penple were at an
immediate threat, we would be here
tomorrow. If questions arise, · we
can have a public meeting," he continued.
At this point in time, the group is
in the process of establishing public
meetings, lieginning in March.
, According 10 Mayor Russell Hoi·
land, the investigation conducted
by the U.S. Army and the EPA is
still underway. The wort is
scheduled 10 intensify in the near
fuwre. He stressed thai both
representatives of the - . federal
government and the State of West
area. '
Tbe area cited ror a detailed in- Virginia have tested the water
vestigation by the Army include: supply or the City of Point Pleasant
Track 21 , YeUow Water Reservoir, and both agencies have round it 10
Acids Area, North and South meet all state and federal rePowemoiues, Magazine Area and quirements.
HoUand also commented that
the Red Water Resovoir/Sewcr
further
investigation wiU be conLine.
ducted
by
the EP~ and the U.S. ·
1bc EPA ·will conduct also
Colps
or
Engineers
.10 determineseveral risk asrssment testS thai
wiD name the contaminates, ex- whether lir not contaminants exist ·
, in the old West Virginia Ordnance
Works (WVOW) property.' Point
Pleasant and Mason C011nl)'
officials will be kepi informed by
tile investigative agencies.
ID crder to further undersulnd the
exlent or ~e incuned in the
area, the EPA presented the county
· ing out of the ordinary," Coler with two bootlets entitled, "Fteld
says
Sunvnary Report, Ground Wrll!r,
The ODOT officials believe that Surface W8U!I' aJ1d So~nt
tires aaveling ovcr ~ steel grid lnvestiption" ani! "Field Trip
where the surface of the bridge Report, Identification or Strc ed
deck has peeled off in places may Vegetadoo. • 'f'he8C jowna1s help to
be causina unfamiliar sounds. The explain the invcsligations already
deck is to be resurfaeecl with rub· cOmploted llld erial and ~lose
berized asphalt sometime this sum- shotS of evidenoe of contamination
mer which should eliminate any within the WVOW area.
souftds Coler lldda. ·
Accoldi1111 , to 'l'hoRIDI, the
No~al traffic now across the Potential Responsible Plrtiea
structwe is being llllintained.
(PRP'a) include tile State of Welt.
The Pome:t·Mason bridge is
Maul County
the ·
inspected 8JUI y by a consul~ · United St~~a Anny. Howowr,
rum which specializes in this wort. other haulers IIIII plants may tar.
be included.
and ground water have atso been
contaminated by TNT from
operations at the former WVOW.
The WVOW has been ranked as
the 84th site on the National
Priorities List under lhe Comprehensive
Environmental
Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA),
as amended by the .S~rfund
Amendment and Reauthorlzation
Act of 1986 (SARA), 42 U.S.C.
Section 9601 et seq.
In 1989, red water SCCJ.ll&amp;e, Ji.
quid waste produced during the
TNT manuracturillll process, was
observed near Pond 13 on the
wildlife station. In addition, the
ground was littered with resldues
and chunks or nitroaromalic compounds.
.:
Several years ago, a contract was
awarded 10 the Army 10 perform
remedial actions on the problem.
Field worlc was conducted of excavation IIIII flaming of the industrial sewer lines and flaming the
surface or the burning ground. A
soil cap was then plaeed over con~inated soils at the TNT
manufacturing and burning groWida

.ODOT officials say bridge
has no structural problems
Ohio Department or Transpona·
lion off'teiall repo[t that no struc-.
tural problems wero found when
theY inapecllld the Punoroy-Mason
Bridge earliet today. The inspec·
tlon resulted from repons on
Wednesday that •t least one
. mot«ist had heard stran&amp;e noises
elllllllltiDi from the IIIUCture.
An ins~ on of !he structure
by • ~
btid~ ~ c.
~~~~·- Wlllll - fll tile willie
oo'OT·~ DislriCt 1~'M.teaa, ~
to
orfktl, laid MaJor llrace Reed ' · District 10 bridge mJpeetor Jim
T~:;:~•it Overt:!,~ alllra•berJ haa •eea
Corbett, revealed no problems.
n
Ia
fllllta . .lldtq ud "•
Jam01 P'roffitt, superiatendeat of
tllemiJ'OI'...., willie to rep!Ke •
the Meiss CouJ1tYODOT.a:£e
dowiUd .,aar tile not,
was a11o on lite. "We found
•

aut*"

Vupnia,

IIIII

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Commentary

1993

Danny Johnson
Robert S. Vore
33
· Danny Ray Jolwon;
• of
Robert Schwenke Vore, 83,
Mason, died earli Friday mominf,
Jan 29 199
·
"·-- s Lima, dicJd 111undav, Jan. 28, 1993

WASHINGTON - While the cials perceive as State ~t
State Department broke speed stiff-arming, open wart- is erupt·
records in an election-eve search ing between the department and
for dirt on Bill Clinton, it was run- members of the Advisory Cmlmitning 17 years behind schedule in
living up to a congressional mandate to declassify 30-year-old doc·
uments or older.
" During " meeting last Nove~ ­
ROBERT L. WINGETf
ber, a group of government-paid
Publisher
historians was rust informed that it
would not be until the year 2010
before the State Department could
CHARLENE
HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
comply
with an 1991 law requiring tee on Historical, Diplomatic DocGeneral Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
the release of classified documents umentation, which Congress cstabby next October.
·
lished to supervise lhe new declas·
•·
,·
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less lban 300
When Congress first imposed sifiCalion law. The part-time, nine: words. All leuen are su~ject to editing ahd must be signed wilb name, .. the two-year deadline, it was hailed member advisory committee,
., adc!Rss and ~elepbooe number. No unsigned letlers will be pu~lished. Letters . as a victory for the public's_right to whose members are paid by the
_ul_d_be_in.,;g;_ood_,.._,._
. od~dre:--'-sin...;.g..
_. •..•_
.._. n_o_•pe~no-llll_i..
ties_
. · ~~~..,..--:-' know, and a blow to the culwn; of StAte Department, has fired off
L.._sbn
•
· .. ·• -·
classification that may be the last scathing letters to top officials,
~
vestige of the Cold War. According warning the department that it is in
to sources with access 10 the violation or the lav.) and accusing it
nobody was thinking
archives, the vast majority are of " business as usual."
Slany also confirmed the exisinnocuous to national security but · "; .. we arc dismayed at the
tence
of a rift between advisory
•
invaluable to historians: The files thought of the State Department
range from the gossipy (unflatter- being 17 years behind the legally committee members and the
ing notes about &lt;;harles DeGaulle · mandated declassification review . bureaucracy, a rift he dcacribes as a
•
penned by U.S. diplomats) to more requirement,'' the advisory com- type of culture shock within the
: PIKEVILLE, Ky. {AP) -Federal law ~uires res~ts an~ olher
ground-brea~ng material on the mittee wrote Conner Secretary of
State Deplirunent. "This is kind of
public places to be accessible to all, but fast-food execullve R1ck Fink has
formulation of U.S. foreign policy. State. Lawrence Eaglcburgcr on a new day and the people who have
gone a step funhr.r.
.
As a result of what some offi· Nov: 25.- "Equally alarming is the been most accustomed to P!Otcct·
Fink divisional rnaimenance manager for Wendy's lntemallonal Inc.,
has set 'aside special tables for .liM: ~dicapped in. ~ 97 restaurants he
supervises in KentuCky, West Vuguua and North Carolina.
: '·'I was trying 10 fulfill the customer's nee!ls beller than .they ever
H~Y DRIV~R
Q.pected," said Fink, who works from the c~mpany's Rale1gh, .N.C.,
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
' DEVOTED TO T HE Jlll'l'ERBSTS OJ' 1'10!: IIBIGS-IIASON AREA
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By Jack Anderson.

and
Michael Binstein

•

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· en d y S sea IDg or
W
~Isable.d applaude d

:.:Ji::.d . .

...

()JR ~EYM&lt;:ON ~~~~
~KTHERE.

~~le those in the industry believe Fink's idea is unique and many
ali!&gt;laud his inrenlions, not everyone endorses the concept of separate eat~.~~ ~Y sure 1 see any.need for it,': said Bills~•.manag-

ipg editor of Mainstream Magazine, a San Diego-based publication that
deals exclusively with disability issues. "I'm really against kind of
..... .
le_....
,_mngpeop
. '"---~B.amcr
. ..,__En
.
Inc. IS
.
• Ron Mace ..-~
whose Raleigh-""""'
n.,.. vtronments
recognized nationally in architectural design for people with disabilities,
silys it's important to make facilities accessible to everyone, but at the .
Slime time, avoid creating a "disabled ghetto."
·
: "I think these ihings need to be ~~ded. but I don't know that 1#!ipg them is the best thing to do,' wd Mace, who uses a wheelchwr
bCcause of a bout with childhood polio. "We want the opportunity 10 be
there without the stigma or labelling.''
• Fink said he came up with the idea last year during renovation plans to .
mate resuwrant balhroorns and olher facilities more accessible.
· : Public btlildings are required to have doors, ramps and bathrooms for
1Jie handicapped under the American Disabilities Act of 1990.
•: " I just ~kicking some things around," Fink said. "I )ust feel like
i1's important 10 me to beller serve the customer .... make 11 as easy as
• 'ble for them."
.
~nk simply decided to position two regular tables with chairs - usulllly two per restaurant - near the doors to provide the ~ access and
marked them with the international symbol for the disabled - a
wheelchair.
.
•; He said he considers the tables similar to parking spaces set as1de for
tile disabled and hopes voluntary compliance by non-disabled customers
Will eliminale any potenlial conflic(4. He said he hasn't received any negative comments so far.
: Denny Lynch, a S)X_lkesman for Columbus, Ohio-based Wendts. said
(llere were no immediate plans to expand the concept nauonw1de, but
noted that some Wendy's restaurants in central Nebrask and Michigan
also have introduced separate tables.
.
: Michael Oestreicher, director of Challenges Unlimited Inc., a Springfil:ld Mass. company specializing in designing spaces for the disabled,
said he also 'was glad to see employees of one of the nation's largest fastfood chains making the effort.
" As tonf::~s basically inlegrated with the rest of the restaurant it's
fine," said .
icher. "And they should be applauded for that"

.
.,

ing documents have n.ow been .
asked by legislation 10 """n
-.- them '
up," Slany told ps.
.
This last sentiment was echoed ·. :
in a recent report prepared by the .•
advisory commiuee in which they ·':
decried the "'we' vs. 'Jhcy' atti· :
tude'' thal persists qver ~Iassifi· ,
cation of history. "A crucial pall of
the image we must have in order to ,'
serve as an el8111ple of democracy
is that of the United States is an
open society of laws where the
government is responsible to the
peOpteforitsactions."
Regarding the frequently
invoked mantm of national security
· to justify secrecy, full-disclosure '
prop&lt;?~~ents cite two precedents in
. which two particularly scnsiiivc ..
. sets or documents )ilere released ;
wt' th 00 1·11 e"ect on the nau'onal •
"' last year tdeased
. interest. The CIA
doclimcn" relating to the Cuban
Missile Crisis, and back in 19n..
the British and American govern· · ·
ments opened their World War n :
archives. In the tatter case, war ·
records were td~ through bulk J
disclOSIIIII- as opposed to the cur· rent na•c-by•page proccu that is
fi c"t
·
· ·
in mnc y more ume-consummg •
and costly to lallpaycrs.
.
Besides nationat- security,
sources on the ad\(isory conyniuee ·
cite two other motives for resis-.;
tance to dcclassif1C8tion. The fll'!lt .
is an unspoken and long-held belief •
within the State Department that .
diplomacy is a domain on which .
the public and press · should not !
·ll:CSJliSS The second is a mon: sin· •,
ister belief that some officials·
·involved in the process both at
Stale and the National Ardlives are
• angling for bigger budgets by citing wortloa4 .
"This is a tmnsparent ploy for . ·
· additional resources and also a
tlear attempt oli the p8fl of the
bureaucracy to preserve some •
jobs," said one advisory &lt;Xinuniuee.
member. Citing the fact that most ,
of the approximately 30 State
Department declassiflCd are retired .
foreign service officers, this mem-·,
ber called the laborious declassification' process their "golden

parachute. ••

r

eces, ~ws ~ COUS1DS.

Wyllis Joseph

cadre of scientists he hal\.once
associated with.
Today O'Leary devotes his time
to writing books and conducting

George R. Plagenz

workshops ~~round the cou~try.
Nicole Hunter, an ed110r at a
. greeting card company, was one
who attended O'Leary's "Audience Spoon-~ending Workshop"
, reccndy in Ocveland.
Her actount of the c;vents:
"When I arrived, I was skc:pti-cal of his claim that most of us
would be bending spoons atlhc Cnd
of the two-and-and-a-half-hour.session. I was certain I would either
uncover his 'trick' or be unable to
bend a spoon. However, I left with
a beautifully and symmetrically
bentspoon.
· ••A key feature of the workshop
was the breathing exercise. We
normal. In qu~oning the~ were to inhale and fill ourselves
laws of physics, he broke with the with the limitless energy of the uni-

verse, then exhale and ilnaJine we
were breathing this"energy 1JliO our
surroundings.
.
"Using this breathing technique, the audience toot about 10
deep breaths together while stand!ng and holding our spoons ~Y
1n our .hands. These were not tnck
spoons. We each btought our own
spoo11 from home.
"When 0 'Leary said 'Bend! '
we all began bending the spoons.
My spoon felt like butter in my
hands as I twisted it easily in three
lovely swirls.
· "Almost ev~one in the audience of 60 sueceeded, some dra·
matically. Spoons were breaking in
two, clanging loudly on lhc floor.
~orne were being twisted eight or
10 times, folded into tiny compressed ,pactiges - all by hand,
many by skeptical hands.
"Eiapatd time: aboul3 minutes.
"About a month later,) tried
bending a spoon alone ia lhe privacy of my ho111c. using ' the same·
breathing tcehniquc and an identi-

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At this writing, my beloved San ing during the winter or 1991-92.
So then snow fell in the Sierras
Francisco has just undergone 17 (TI!e months .from November to - great vertical yards pf i~ But the
consecutive rainy days - and March produce most of Northern water bureaucrats were unfazed.
couldn't be happier. The record- California's rain.) But the local These particular snowflakes, they
breaking drought that. began in
declared, were exceptionally
1986 is over.
"dry" ~ i.e., low in mOisture conBut six-and-a-half years are a
tent. The patient citizens of Northlong time in politics, 10d a lot of
em &lt;;aJVornia were condemned 10
bureaucrats directly concerned with water gurus would have none of il ·another year of dirty .cars and
California's water supply have got- In the rust place1 they explained brown -lawns and fcclina f.Uilty
® 11t3 by HIA. Inc.
ten accustomed to seeing them- the rain fell in ".lhe wrong places)' every time they flushed •·toilet or
selves on local TV news programs What did it maUcr if San Francis- toe* a shower - and all the guilti"Put me down. The honeymoon is over.,.
warning that the situation is bleak cans were up to their ankles in rain- er because their''public officials and
,..cand getting .bleaker- a ~~ario water? Everybody knew, or oupt the media rately reminded them
that the media, of cOUISC, ~lively to know, that the only prccipitallon that agriculture consumes 8S peradore. So it has been a 'terrible that mauen is what falls as snow, cent of California's entire water
struggle to force these Cassandras higb in the Sierras, 111d then melts supply, leaving the stile's 3Q.Jnil·
to admit that the .dr?ught has in the ~g into the Hetcl) Hctchy lion people and all other uscn comBy The Associated Pretrr
ended, and the baule 1sn lover yet. reservoli' and tbe otben that serve· bineCI to'llblre the remaining 15.
So )'l'e come to the winter of
: Today is Friday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of 1993. Th'ere·are 336 days left
Actually, things began i~rov- . the mettopoliran area.
.
.
1992-93. On Dec. 1 tbo National
in the year.
; Today's Highlight in History:
WeathF Service issued its 90-day
longe-rangc forecast, pre4icting
c;m Jan. 29, 1820, Britain's King George m died insane at Windsor Cas.
that the . ensuing three months
tle, ending a reign that had seen both the American and French revoluIn 1963, 30 years ago, the ftrst members o( football's Hall of Fame would be dryer than usual. Then
lions.
On this date:
•
were named in Canton, Ohio.
came December' - one of the
In
1963,
30
years
ago,
poet
Robert
Froltdied
ia
BOlton.
wctllllt Decembers in modern San
In 1843, !50 years ago, the 25th president of the United States
In 1990, former Exxon Valdez ~pper Joeeph Bar.elwood weru on trial . Prancltco history. All very well;
y.'illiam McKinley. was born in Niles, Ohio.
'
in Anchorage, Alaska, on charges llterllillq,from the nstion'a wont oil powled the MICI' warchdop, buta
• In 1845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven" was published under a
pseudonym in the New Yodc Evening Mirror. ·
spill. {Hazelwood was acquiued of the . . cbarpl, and convictedd a lot of tbo watet •:r~=
misdemeanor.)
·
' the J*tbec1 .nil
·
• In 1850, Henry Clay introduced in the Sena1e a compromise bill on
slavery which included the admission of California into the Union as a
Ten years ago: Secretary of Stile George P. Shultz left on a 12-day ~··-.the Nadonll eadMir
free stare.
tour of the Far East, illcluding four dayl of lllb wiJh Chinclc leaden in Servlu ~ itlelf off ..a ill1lld a
· In 1861, Kansas became the 34th Slate of the Union.
an effort to improve U.S.-Chiiia relatioal.
•·
90-day foreca~t for the period
Five years ago: Nicaraguan Pmideiu Daniel Dnep lllCeived a coolly beginning Jan: I. This, It plmly
In 1900, the American League, consisting of eight baseball •••ms ·was
Ofganjzed in Philadelphia.
........ •
,polite rece{llion from PoDe John Paul n • the Vadcln. A Boston-~ insllled, would be dryer thin nor• In 1936, the fll'lt members of basebalrs Hall of Fame, including Ty , Amtrak train demiled in Chester, Pa.,lnjurin&amp; 25 people.
mal.
Cobb and Babe Ruth. were ruimed in CooperStown, N.Y. · .
One year ago: Russian President Bor1t Yeltliil unYellcd an ambitious
Whereupon San Prancltco got
In 1939, Irish poet-dramatist William Buder Yeats died in Menton,
plan 10 cut nuclear weapons spending aad said hii :a=!fa::.r~ those 17 CODICCutiVC days of rain.
France.
would no longer be aimed at 10y U.S. llqjlll. A m ·
Middle In addilion. the Sierra silowPick is
· In 1956, editor-essayist HL. Mencken ditd in Baltimore,
East peace conference ended in Moscow with participants sounding the highelt it's been since 1'9112 ·In 1958, actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were married.
and this time the snl!w. is exccpupbeat President Bush presented a $1.5 trillion bud~et pian. .

William A. Rusher ·

~·· -~

[roday
in
history
..

.

.

1

I

'

I

Born in Logan and raised in
Nelsonville, he wu a sOil of the
late Charles Floyd llld Alice
Schwenke Yore. He was a poet,
news repont:r and teal:bcr.
A published Ohio poet, he
served 11 a repoilr.und advertising
salesman for the Athens Messcn·
gcr, McAnhur DeatiOUMic ~uir­
er, Middleport Review, Wilmmgton News Journal, New Lcllington
Daily News, Lancaster Eagle
Gazette, Ohio Tavern News and
. Ohio Gasoline News. He taught
journalism and English at Middle~High School and Lima Senior
High SchooL He received the distin~hed llumnusa'lt'Kd from the
· Alumnt
· · AssociBtion
· ··
Ne sonvlllc
following bis publicalioo of "200
Years in Nelsonville Ohio" and

.
;=~~ ~m~~S::~th

th •

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

cal spoon. I achieved virtually the '
··
' 'How was a skeptic like me ·,.
able to do that? Maybe because I
was truSting enough to try it? Or ·~
because some powers arc
omnipresent whether I believe in ·
or not?"
Whatev« the answer, she was in •
touch with the invisible, unknowable side of herself.
Few of Us, sayi W,aync Over in
his new book, "Real
have
been trained to tap this secret pan .
of their being.
·.
"We have been raised on a ··
steady diet of 'believe it wherl you
see it' mentality,'' he says. "We '
think only the visible world has
reality;"
'
Dyer quotes H.L. Menctren: •
"Having penetrated so ·many
secrets, we cease to believe in lhe.
imlalowablc. But there it sits, llCV· :
erlheless, licking its chops."
•
And helping liS to bend spoons. ::
Georp l'lllent ill a syDdicated writer lor ~ewspaper Enter· :.;
prise Allodatioli.
:'*

same results.

them

Weather

.

d. ·.
IQJUre
auto wreck

•

Two .teachers were added to the
substitute tellichcrs list wben the
Southern Local Board or Education
met Wedliesday night at Soulhem
High School.
Added 10 the lise were Bethany
J. Mayer and Michael Cucklcr.
S.ubstitu~ bus drivers employed
were Sc 1 Hill, Jerry Smith, and
Max Hill, r.
Supt. Bob Ord was aulhori;zed
bf the tx.rd to post a job for custodian to replace a high achool work·
er who qui~ Cheryl Teaford Smith
was hired as a substitute custodian.
AJllliOVlll was given to the Education Management Information
System budget of $4,000.
Attending were Sue Grueser ,
president, Joseph Thoren, vice
president, and Tom Roseberry,
board members, Supt. Ord, and
Treasurer Dennie Hill.

iLimL
t St. Rita' s Med1cal Center in

coHe is survived by his wife Edith
Wyllls {Bub) Joseph, 64, of
Monroe, Mich. died Thursday, Jan. Elinor Kinnear Yore: a son, Val
28, 1993 at the Merey .. Memorial {Martha) Yore, Hilfiard: three
Hospital in ~. Mich. He was daughters, Diane Brant. Columbus,
formerly from the Racine area.
Marilyn Barnes, Westerville, and
Born on May 26, 1928 at Min- Janice Stoocburncr, Pata•hla; 10
ersville, he was the son of the late grandchildren and fi...e IJ'Cil-grandDavid Joseph and Clara Ocnheimer children: two sislers, Mrs. Charles
Joseph. He was a veteran of the {Margaret) Quinn, Columbus, and
Korean War and a mc111ber of ·· Mrs. ltoy (Joaephinc) Reider, DayRacine Post602, American Legion. ton a Beach, f'la.; one brother,
He is survived by four sisters, Richard {Mary) Yore, Safety liarPhyllis Baker of Racine, Edith bour, Fla.
Keggeries of Monroe, Mich., Mary
Besides his parents,.he was preFarley of Newport, Mich., and ceded in death by a sister, Mary
Mabel Hughes of Monroe, Mich.; Alice Vore.
an uncle, George Gcnheimer of
Services will be Sunday at 2
Chester, two brothers-in-law, p.m. at Warren Funeral Holl\e in
Edwin Farley of Monroe, Mich., Nelsonville with Rev. Robert
and Ernest Baker of Racine, several Hauser offiCiating. Burial will be in
nieces and nephews.
Greenlawn Cemetery in NetBesides bis [llllellts, he was pre- sonville.
ceded in death by four sisters,
Friends may call at the funeral
Martha Hendrien Florence Custer, horne on Saturday from 210 S p.m.
Ruth Roush, and Esther Joseph,
In lieu of flowers, ~tribu!ions
and two brothers, David and Floyd inay be made to a favonte charity.
Joseph.
'llT
• •
Funeral services will be held Blr nOmaD
I p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funcr- · •
at Home. The Rev. KennY. Baker ID
will offiCiate ancl burial will be in
· ·'
·
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may
A New Haven, W.Va., woman
nera1 h
Saturda ·was ~to Veterans Memo.caII at e •U ·
orne
Y rial Hospital following a onc-vchifrom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Military cle wreck on U.S. 33 in Bedford
graveside riles will be conducted Township Thursday around 6tl5
by Racine AmeriCan Legion.
p.m.
.
Man cited after wreck
According to I report from the
Gallia-Meigs .Post of the State
: An Oak Hill man W8$ cited for Highway Patrol, Jobnetla S. Jenkfailure to control his vehicle fol- ins, 38, was eastbound on U.S. 33,
lowing an accident on Route 33 went orr the left aide of the road
near Pomeroy's north corporation . and struck an embankment Jenkins
line early Friday morning. .
stated she had fallen asleep, the
Pomeroy police said that ~
Charles s . Johnson, 36, was travel- . J~~ iransponed by' ihe
ing north on Route 33 wllM he lost Meigs County Emcagency Medal
control or his 1986 Chevrolet pick- Service to Vela'llll Memorial Hilsup llllck. The truck hit the bank on . pi~a~ for treatment of minor
the left side o' the highway and UIJUfiCS.
J:&gt;amqe to her 1986 Ford Bronstruck I g&amp;l i1IOier damaging iL The
front end and right front quarter eo n wa lislfid 11 heavy. No citipanel-were damqed. The driver tions were i!lj1CXIeCI.
was not injured in the accident
which occumd a 4:29 Lm.
, Middlepon village council will
meet In special seasioll on Monday,
Veteraas Me_.lal
Feb. 1 at 8 p.m. Purpose of the'
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS • .meeting is to conduct business
Virginia Michael, Pomeroy: Naoll!i
Hoschar, Middleport; Virginia whi~h would normally have been
done at the n:gular meeting.
Sayre, Syracuae. ·
THUR.SDA Y DISCHARGES • Marriage license issued
Lucy Donohue.
A marriage license has been
'
issued by Meigs County Probate
The Citicorp Bank of New York is Court to Bobby Glen Rope, 34,
the largest U.S. commercial ban~. Pomeroy, and Bonnie Joe Moodiswith total assets of $216,922 million. paugh, 26, Pomwoy.
.

WJ:tat we can do is mind bending
Uri Geller claims ig.,bend
spoons by just thinking of bending
spoons.
.
Brian O'Leiry uses his hands to
bend spoons,' but in some ways his
method is more remarkilble than
Geller's.
Geller, a 47-year-old Israeli, is a
pyschic who says he has supernormal powers that allow him to tmnscend physical laws.
O'Leary teaches ordinary people
to use their hidden powers in·
unusual ways. He' s a former
NASA astronaut. who has taught
physics 81 Princeton University.
• Gettin~ people 10 bend spoons is
O'Leary s way of demonstrating
how they can gain access to the
"universal energy" available 10
everyone ...:.. and influence the
physical universe around them.
· He was a member of the scientific establishment in the 1960s and
1970s.
Then he turned his energies to
serious investigation of the para-

•

The furieral will be Sunday, 2
p,m., at. the Foglesong Funeral
Home w1th !he Rev. Benny S!t~
and . Rev. '-:ICtor ~ offi~181lng.
Burial . will be • m Kiikland
Memorial
Friends Gardens.
call Satunla 6 to 9
may
y,
p.m.,
at
the
funeral
horne.
.

Jack Aadersoa and Michael
BiasteiD are wrlten ror United
Feature Syndicate, IDe.

Is. California's drought really..

'

111

•
' HOSJ)ital.
'
~••
Memorial
Born Oct. 18, 19!59, in Mason, he
was a son of Carl D. and Evelyn J.
{Lemley) Johnson of Mason.
SUI'Vlving, in addition to his
parents, are three brothers 'lllld sisters-in-law, David .G. and Tammy
Johnson or MiddlepM, Donriie E.
and Peggy Johnson of Gallipolis,
Terry A. and Vicki Johnson &lt;il'oint
Pleasant; two sisters, Vicki L.
Millet of Pomeroy, Jill E: Jolmson
f M
~i ason: sevei:al 81111 ~· uncles,

State slow oil declassification mandate·.
.
implication dial this situaii'on will
·
detcri orate -"''"""" than IDIJliOVC.
...
We are n(lt convinced that this
lengthy delay is wholly or even
largely a matter of IUOurces. We
have recommended, formally and
informally, that existing dcclassification review procedures - from
personnel to the mechanics of the
actual review process - be fully
· d
ru· 1 1 · th
re-cxammc • pa · cu ar Y 10 c
light of the new inlanlltional situation that exists with the end or lhe
Cold War."
William Slany, who serves as
the State Department's full-time
historian and is not a member of
the advisory commiuee, said: "It's
·
mostI Y a case o r how does one
orgmiize a mille.accck:ntcd disclo- '
sure of documents . Part of the
problem is !hal un_tilthis ........'""'•.'•"·.on

Two substitute , ·
teachers
added
'
to Southern list

--Area deaths----

. Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 29, 1993

....
....
r-------------,-~-----------------~........,;..--------:

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON
{Including Domestic and Forelga Subsidiaries)

The P~oples Banking &amp;
Trust Co pany
State Bank No. 176
of Marietta, Washington County, State or Oblo 45750, at the close of business December 31,
1992
.

Loans and lease financing recei,vables:
Loans and leases, net of uMamed income.

Soutb-Ceatral Olllo
Tonight, clear and cold. Low
around 15. Saturday, variable
cloudiness; High 40-45.
Exteaded forecast:

Suaclay through Tuesday:
Sunday, fair, except for a chance
of snow nortlleast. Lows 25-30.
Highs in the upper 30s to upper
40s. Monday, fair. Lows in the
upper 20s to low 30s. Highs in
upper 30s 10 upper 40s.

The Daily Senlinel

Premises and ti lted asse ts (including c api talized leases) .......... ,.... ......... ..... .............................. ..... ....... 6,939,000.00
Otber real estatc owned.............. "...... ..............................................:......... ............................,...... ............. 25.000.00

Intangible assets .... ................. .................... ................................................................................... ..... ...... 214,()()().00
Other assciS .................. .................... ........................ .. .............................. .......... ........ .............. .............. 4.SOS.OOO.OO
ToW assels ............. .'............................. ...................... .................... ,................... ....... ..... ................... 404,363,000.00
Total asseiS and losses deferred ursuaniiO 12 U.S.C.
1823(j) (sum of ilems 12.n and 12.b)................................................ .... .... ...... .................... .. .......404,363,000.00
LIABILmES

Deposils:

a. In domestic offices ............... ...... ..... ..... .......... ."......: ..... ..... .. ..... ......... ..... .......... ....... ............ .. ...... 350,753,000.00
( I) Noninlerest· bearing ........................... ................................................... 40,212.000.00

(2j lnleiOSI·bearing ............................. .. ,..................................... ,............. 31Q,S41 ,000.00
Federai funds purchased and sccurilies sold under agreemcniS
to repurcba:oe in domestic orftces of the bank &amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries, &amp;. in IBFs :

a. Federal funds purchased ........... .................................................................... ..................................... 435,000.00
b. Securities sold under agreemenls 10 repurcbasc .. ,.... ...................................................... ... .......... ...8,750.000.00
Other bonowed money............. ........ ...................... ............................................................................. l0,916,000.00
Other liabilities..... ................................................................................................................................. 2,829,000.00
Tolalliabilities........................................................ ...........................................................................373,683,000.00

·

Mo-. no Aaodalod Pnu. IIIII 1be

No.._.
NoNowYort,N"'Yorlt

Aloael•lloft. Nallaul

Obio

~

HopnHDtaU.., llnDham .

llalso, 733 Tblrd 10017.

POSTNASTI1R:

8oDd-

The Qoi!y S...u.ol.
~0Hlp41i769.

...

c~ to

111 Coottt &amp; .,

.
BUUCRIPI'ION llATB8
llyc...tor or-.. a-11o

OM w.u. ................,.........................$1 .60
OM Moatll .... ,....................................$6.95
' OM Yoor....................................- ..$83.20
BIIIGLII COP!'

--Dot

PJUCB
DoUy.:..............- .........................25 Conla

•am. ..

poy tbe corrimaJ'-nmit in •~b•ace lltirec&amp; to Tbe
Doll)- Billlliaol "" a tllne, oiz or 12
...... - . Cledil ril be P..• ..mer
-h.....t.
No -Jill- by moil permiUod in
anu whml home ~:rri~~r Rrvic:e •
..,.ilable.!
llaUB-pll111'

l..tdo-pCo-17
t3 Woob.....................c.......... .:.......$21.84
95 Woob. ......................................... $43.t6
62..W~ ............... ,..............., ........ ~.76

"' OiotaYo - · OO.U.I)&lt; " '.
..·13•wootJ.
......................................... w.co
95 Woob. ....... ,................................. N60
52 Woob. ............................................ tO

.

EQUITY CAPITAL

I,

lhe undersigned officer. do hereby declare lhal Ibis Report or Condition has been prepared

We. the undersigned directors, attes t lhc Correctness of the Report of Condition and declare that it bas been

examined by us and 10 the bcSI of our knowledge and belief and has been prepared in confonnance wilh official
instructions and is true

and correct.

Robert E. Evans
Directors
Dennis D. Blouscr
State of Ohio, Coun1y of Washington. ss:
.
.
, " SY.&gt;t!'rn 10 and subsclibccfbeforc me Ibis 21st day·of January, 1993 and 1 hereby certify lbal I am not an orficer
or director of this bank.
Thomas C . Vadakin -

Last Clulnee To au,. At 11M J.otwd
Prices Ever On QUal"» J'urnftunr
From Mafor ManufllduNn

~

5 PC. ILICI LICGUII
IIDIOOM SIRU

Not~. . . . . ~··:.

are:

are;

Use FAST FIJNDS

the

. l le:1

jiolllem llll't
11'1
lboruigllted and lncompelent pub-;.
lie tervaals who can contrive II"!
flllliDe In the midJt or such over-':
whelmlai ~ty.
, .._
Wllllili a..., 11 a syadat~~
eel writer lor Ntw~paper Enter•. ~
prise Allocllltlon.
~

8
MONDAY 8 A.M. 'IlL S P.M.
FREE FIIIAIICIIII *

-~~
~
• u ..... ~be':

Wiler

',

'

'

,,

conformance

John W. Conlon,
Chief Financial Officer &amp; Treasurer, Jan. 21, 1993 - (614) 374-611 2

A

about 3 WeeD Nlu.ada.

in

with official instructions j.lld is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.

r\

Cor normally 2-4 daya
remnda or
·Eleetroaic Flllaf Cor

.

Common siOctJr:/o. of Shares a . Aulborized .......,..........300,000) ... :..... :......c.. ..................... ............. l,875,000.00
S"'l'IUS (e&lt;Ciude all surplus rclaled to preferred s10ck)..... :.......... ............................... .........................7,346,000.00
a. Undividal profils and capital rescrvcs .................................. ...... ................................................ 21 ,459,000.00
ToW equity capital .. ....................... ..... ..................................................... .. ........................................30,680,000.00
ToW equity'capitol and losoes defencd
pllrSUOIIIIO 12 U.S.C. 1823{j).......;......................... ... ....................................................................... 3Q,680,000.00
TOtal liabilities. limilcd-life prefencd siOCk. and equily capilal,
and losses deferred pursuantiO 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ....... ................ ................................... ............... 404,363,000.00
MEMORANDA: Amoun IS ouUUD&lt;IID«·os or Report Date:
Standby letters of credit. TotaL ................. :........ :............................................................ ,..... ............4,82S,boo.oo

..••'.

OIIO~dc
aut-

.

allowance, and rescrvc ... .......................... ............. :.................. ......................................................2~2,80!,000.00

H ospitlll news

·'•
tionally ''wet." People have beea ·•
drowned in floods all over the ::.
state: great mansions have slid ·;
down rain-sofrcned hillsides: Gov. -~
Wils6n has proclaimed several •
· waterlogged counties "disasler 1
areas." From one end of California
to the other, pcec1piJation for the ~
. season to dale is running from 125 •
to 265 percent above normal.
But the drought addicts battle •
on. The rain (which, remember,
reccndy vanished into the dusty.
earth) can·not help us, they now•
insist, because it is. cascading:
futilely into the sea: The soil is too',
wet to absorb more. And while::
many local run-off reservoirs
literally overflowing, it's true, as"'
they point out. that Hctcb Hetcht ;
and tbe ~ bi~ that get their
water from the S1crra snowpack
still only about half-full - •
bccauae, of COUI'Ie, the huge snow~~
pack hasn't melted yet.
,;
But what will these Calamity:::
Jlllllil tell us ~hen tbllmow meil('
into tbe resorvoin? I don't ltnow ~{
and frankly I'm beglnnin~:.?: 10'
or.;!
care. If tbo auardiiDa of
nla's Wiler 111pply Clll llosh theh(1
wiy
wbiter. wet.~~ '

•

Loans and leases, net of unearned inoome .. ................................................. 2S7,438,000.00
LESS: Allowance for Iolii and lease losses ..................................................... 4,637,000.00

Council to meet

Magic:''

=.

ASSETS

Cash and balances due from depository institutions:
a. Nonlnlerest-bearing balances md cum:ncy and coin .................................................................. 15,916,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances.................. ,...........................................................................................8.980.000.00
Securities.............................................................................................................................................93,783,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased ~ ndec agreemcnls
·
to resell in domestic off'ICes of lbe bank &amp; of iiS
Edge &amp; AgJ\'Cillcnl subsidiaries &amp; in ffifs•
Federal funds sold ...................................................................................... .................................. 21,200,000.00

�The .Daily ~=:

Sports

--------------~------------------------~------~-------------------------~----------~p
~
"
Meigs ascends to TVC_summit with 52-44 victory over Miller~
title hunL Belpre, which was idle
on Thursday. will travel to Alexander (7·4) Saturday evening.
Akxander was dcfea&amp;cd by'Federil
Hocking on Thursday 29-26. Miller
feU to 7-10 overall and 6-7 in the
TVC.
Missy Sisson sccim:l eight points
in the fust period as the Marauders
jumped on top 14-12 after one period. The Marauders went into the
locker room at the half with a 2220 lead.

By DAVE IIAlUUS
Setltlael COitHpCI":Ie'llt
Lori Kelly and Missy Sisson
combined for 27 points as Meigs
dcfeaed Miller 5244 in girls' TriValley Conference basketball
action Thursday night at Meigs
High_Scllll()l.
The win gives the Lady
Manudei'J a 13-2 record overall
and a 10-2 record in the TVC .
Meigs is a half a game ahead of
second-place Belpre in the TVC

pulled in 29 rebounds led by Kelly
with 14. Tbe Marauders turned the
ball over 18 times and had ei~ht
assists led by Henderson wtth
three. Turner had four of the
Marauders eight sreals.
Michelle Nelson led Miller with
nine paints. Jamie Hanning added
eighL
In the .reserve contest Mei~s
rolled over Miller 32-14. Bobbte
Bulehcr led Meig$ with 10, Melissa
Clifford added nine, Alisha liaggy

MeW. whil:h inaeased the lead
to 34-3l'l beading into die final period, the pmc • the foul line,
hillinJ 10 of 17 in the fourth period. ror the contest, Kelly was a
perfect in 13 chances from the
charity stripe. Meigs oinscmd the
Falcons 18-14 in the last quarter. ·
Kelly led all scorers with 15
points,llld Siaon Mded 12.
Meigs hit 14 of 44 from the
fiQor for 32.,, but made 24 of 34
from the line fer a hot 71.,. Meigs

seven and Cynthia Cotterill six .
Julie Lanning led Miller with four.
. Meigs will travel to Belpre
Monday nighL
·
Miller
(12-1-10-14=44)
Sandy Hem 2-0-1•S. Jeannie
Wycinsld 0-0-1=1, Jamie Hanning
3-0-2=8, Tracy Doughty 3-0~.
Michelle Nelson 3-1-0=9, Mandy
Coote 3~. Jenny Platit 2-l-0-7.
Erica Toki 1-0-0=2. Totals - .17-

'·

C:

"We weren't patient enough,"
said Eagle ,coach ·scott Wolfe.
wbose charges fell to 5-10; "We
jlllt had IOIIIC shots that just dido ~t
fall"
.
The Raidas (8-7) Sl8lted off by
scoring lite game's fust four points
and led by nine about halfway
through the first quarter before
Eastern reeled off seven unanswered points - five by senior
. center Stephanie Otto and two by
junior guard Jaime Wilson - that
. cut lhe Raiders' lead to 13-U with
30 seconds left in lhe ftrst frame.
Raider point guard Amber Staton,
who led all scorers with 18 points
in pan on 6-for-9 field-goal shooting. doubled her team· s lead to four
with a layup that fell in with six
seconds left following her steal.
It took four ,missed field-goat
attempts (three by Eastern) and
three muffed free throws (all by
Eastern) in the firsi 3:31 rilllte second quarter before Staton ' ~t layup
Raiders altead 17-ll. But
executed inother string of
.seven unanswered points - four
by Jessica Karr, two br. Otto and .
one by Wilson, with Wilson's foul
shot at lite 3:32 mart being lhe piv0181 placelilcnt - to talce an 18-17
lead, its firSt of the game.
Wilson had a two-foul shot
opportunity. lmd she made the ftrst
before mtssing the second. But
twnmaiC Amy Redovian, who got
the rebound on that missed shot,

e

got a chance at the line for the oneand-one five seconds later after
Raider guard Belh Salisbury committed her third foul. Redovian
missed the shot, and the Raid.ers
took possession.
River Valley reeled off eight
unanswered polnts, with junior
center Elisha Meadows puttmg the
hosts back on top with a 17-foot
jumper from the right wing after
taking an Alicia Ward pass. Then
layups by Meadows. senior forward Shelly Metzjler and Meadows
again gave the Raiders a 2S-181ead
with 1:56 left Staton had the last
three assists during that run.
The Eagles, who played plenty
of pressure-cooker defense
throughout. started chippinll away
at the stone again, bl!t th•s time
they did it wilh an equal application of rteld "goals and free throws.
Otto, who led Eastern with 17
points on 5-for-11 shooting from
the floor and a 7-for-9 perfonnance '
from the line. canned all four of her
free throws in the last 76 seconds ·
to get things started.
Between one-and-one chances
by Otto, teammate Nicole Nelson
got a tayul? with a minute left
before halftime. Mter Otto's second one-and-one series cut River
Valley's lead to 25-24, the threepoint margin created by Ward's
six-foot jumper in the lane with 43
seconds left was slashed to one by
freshman forward Rebecca Evans •
16-foot jumper from the left wing
with six seconds left
.
After four missed shots - three
by River Valley - and blocked
shots by Otto and Raider redwood
Cindy Armstead, Eastern, which
weni 8 for 22 from the field and 10
for 12 from the line in the flist half,

saw .Iledovian redeem herself for
missing the chance to pad her
team's earlier lead wheu she sank a
I Hoot julnper from tile ri~t wing
with 6:18 left in the penod. But
Eastern's 28-27lead lasted 17 seconds, because Armstead took a
pass from Statoo inside and put up
~ succcsaful layup that gave the
Raiden a 29·28 lead. .
llaskets by Statoo and Ward in
th~ next 66 seconds padded the
hosts' lead to five. But OUo cut it
down to 33-32 - the Raiders· last
one-poilll lead - with a layup and
two foul shots. Then with 2:48 left.
the Eagles seemed to have one
more chince to lead after Raider
forward Nickie Meade missed a
~ throw and bid the second one
negated because of a Raider lane
violation.
But the Eagles missed the shot,
and the hosts reeled off six more
unanswered poUlts in the last 2:30 .
to talce a seven-point lead into the
final quarter.
Eastern OUISCOred River Valley
10-S in the first 5:19 -Ibis subset
of time ended with Wilson's two
free tluvwa - of the fourth quarter
to cut the hosts' lead to 44-42. But
the Raiders, who ·allowed the
Eagles to shed most of a sevenpoint deficit by misSing six of nine
free throwB before the 44-42 score
was established with 2:41 lett,
made aJ.I of their last six free
throws to sew it up.
The Raiders will finish their
three-game home stand Monday
against Warrc,. Local, whil.e the
Eagles will be the psts of Trimble's Tomcats.
River Valley
(13-12-14-11=50)

Staton 6-0-6=18, Meadows 4-00=8, Metzger 4-0-0=8, Salisbury 01-2=5, Ward 2-0-0=4, Annstead t0-0=2, McCormick 0-0-2=2,
Twyman 1-0-0=2, Meade 0-0-1=1.
Totals -18-1-11=50
Field goals -19-50 (38.,)

6)

Tltree-polaten - 1-1
Free throws - 11-22 (SO%)
Rebounds - 28 (McCormick
.
ASsiSts -11 (Staton 8)

Steals- 10 (Staton 7)
Turnovers- 16

Southern girls beat Symmes
Valley 48-41 for second win
By SCOTT WOLFE .
Sentinel Correspondent
After falling behind 37-36 in the
fourth quarter, the Southern Tornadoes posted a dramatic 48-41
come-from-behind win over the
Symmes Valley Lady Vikings
Thursday night ill non-1~ girls'
varsity basketball action in Racine.
The Tornadoes (2-11), winners
of their last two games, led most of
the gllfle before falling behind
momerilarity in the fourth round.
Southern was led by sophomore
Aimee Mills, who notched 24
points, seven rebounds and had
seven sreals. Mills hit three threepoint goals arid hit six two-pointers
while also having a well-rounded
performance in the other areas of
her game.
Symmes was led by Erin Sells
with 15 points.
·
Southern lOok a 15-9 ICad in the
fitst round and led 27-19 at the
half. Symmes staged a third and
early fourth quarter run to talce a
37-36 lead, but Southern settled
down to hold on for the win.
Southern bit 16-SS from the
ftetd, hit 3-9 three~! and was a cool
7-18 at lhe line. Symmes was 1439, 0-l on threes·and 13-25 811he
line.

•

2-'4 44

Melp
(14-8-12-18:52)
•
Vema Compston 3-0-1=7, Lee
Henderson 1-0-0..2, Lori Kelty l0-13=15, Katrina Turner 1-0-4=6,
Missy Sisson 4-0-4=1:2; Joy
O'Brien 2-0-0-4. Amber Blackwell 1-0-0=2, Heather Hudsoit 0-00=0.--Vimessa Compston 1-0-0=2.
Totals -14-0-24=52

River Valley shak~s small deficits to record 50-44 win·over Eastern
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stall' Writer
River Valley's Raiders survived
a four1h-quarter run for lhe roses by
the visitin. Eastern Eagles m
Thursday mght's girls' basketball
which saw lhe Raiders win

•

-.

Apostolic
Cloordo t1 J - Clrill-'jf o11. .

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES l SERVICE

..............
~. oH.

204 Condor 8t.

ClDIED IIOfCIAY
OPEN TUEIOAY ntAU FJIDAY
IAM-5PII
. SAT. I All-12 Noon

-

.

~THE

Southern grabbed 13 rebounds,
led by Stover's eildtt. while Mills
and Ohlinger eacn added seven.
SHS had 22 steals ( Mills ~v~n.
, Janna Manuel and Ohlinger five
each), 19 turnovers, e'ght assists

w-.

- . . .1
Clsan:~~oret...tat
33226 Ooildren'a Hcme Rll.
Sunday School - IIIJIL
Wonbip -lllo.m.,6p.m.
We&amp;lesday Savic:es - 7 p.m.

S. !Woa
- 10:30 p.m.

.. ·

-7

570 Uflllt:&gt;l.,

MJ""' art Cllllrdl ~arlit

===-)

"5obllldMain . '
Paaor: AI iWuoll
Sunday School - 9:30 .....
Wonllip- HS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnaday Serviooa-7 p.m.

P.-:Rev.
Sunday school- 9:45
Wonbip ·II a.m. ind 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Siorvic:e -7 p.m.

.

Wonhip-lla.m.,

............. 11141• Clo.... oiCIIrlll
Putar.1od&lt; ~
Sunday School ·9::!0 o.m.
Wonhip • ID:.30 a.m., 6::10 p.m.
. :Wednesday Services . 6:30p.m.

.

Wcdnoaday ilcrvia:-7:30 p.m.
J

l!v H&amp;R Block

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Rulload Flnt Bapdll Cburdl
Sunday Sd!oo1 • 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.
p...,er., Flnl Bapllit
. Ran Main St.
Pa110r: Dr. U. Morris
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WOJShip - 10:30a.m.

7Jca Clo- ., Cllrlll
l'onteroy. HuriDrvillc Rd. (RLI43)

Flnt Soolbwn Boellll
41812 Pcmoroy Pike
Pu1or: E. .Li.mar O'Bryant
Sunday Sd!ool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Siorvicos - 7:00 p.IIL
Flnt Baplilb Cbun:b
6lh md Palmor St.
Pastor: Reo. Jamc:s A. Seddon
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
WorsbiJ&gt;- tO:lS a.m., 7:00p.m.
1\.B.Y.- 5:30p.m. ·
Lord's Supper bt Sunday or ew:oy month.
Wednesday Siorvia:· 7:00pm.

Suncby School - 9:30a.m.

-

~ rec~ntly added a deck to my

r.=...

.• l'utor:-

• Sunday School •
Wonbip·l0:301.11!.,7:30p.m.
W - y Servi""' • 7 p.m.

llradburJ Cll- ., Cbrl•
PuiOr: Tom Ruayon

. Wcnhip • t0:30 Lm.
Tlsppen Claurdl ., Clorlal
PallOr. Bill Wines
Sunday Sc:llool • 9 a.m.
Wcnhip ·9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Dator Cis- llfCIIrlll
Pall«: OuU Slewort
s...doy-- 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip -10:30 a.m.
Wodnaday Savica - 7 p.m. ,
R • - 011- II Clsrfll
Putar: J!u- B. U... wood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wanhip • ID:.30 ....:. 7 p.m.

.,... Jlopllot

Youth P-Rick Hanis

home at a cost of about
. Can I deduct any portion of
expense?

Sul&gt;day School • 9:30 o.m. ·
Wonbip . 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Siorvices ·7:00p.m.

A

I

M - Clourdl II Clsrlolil
Millor St.,""-, W.VL
School- 10 .....
w -tl a:"'·· 7 p.m.
w
y s.m-- 7 p.m.

5

Sliver R.. B"J'lllt
P111or: Bill l.inle

You can't deduct your expense , but that doesn't mean
you have no tax benefit. The fvll
amount you spent for your deck .is
added to the basis ol your home.
When you sell·your home, the .cost
.of the deck will reduce your gainthat
may ptherwise be subject to income
tax. Be sure to keep all records and
receipts related to !he cost ol the
deck.

Smulay Sd!oo1 • IOa.m.
W«1hip ·IIUD., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioa· 7:30p.m.

w.n
ClitJ,... o~a.~~o~
St. Rt. 12.4 ... Co. Rll. s

I'IIIOr. Dooolt Slump
Suoday School- 9:30 .....
Wonbip·ID:30a.m.• 7:atp.m.
· WodnesdayS.+ic:ol·7:30p.m.

. MLUoi..,Ba~

Pa110r : Joe N.
Sunday School-9:4 a.m .
· Evcnina ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Savic:es -6:30p.m.

618. E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

'

s.-a... CII

.. IICIIIiol
Putor: 1oao!&gt;11 B. Hoatiaa
Sunday sdoaal - 9 a.m.
Wonlllp·- to....., 7 p.m. '
• Wednoaclay Servic:a -7 p.m.

llelbltllemBapUII
Pastor : Reoool.Bul ~ulel • . •
Sunday Soh - 10:30 a.m. ·
Worship ·9:30a.m.
Thursday Siorvic:es· 7:30 p.m.

,

992-6674

Old lldbe Free WUIBipllot Cllurdt
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepoll
Sunday School-tO a.m.
•
Eveaina -7:30p.m.
'

•

• •Liloorty Clttl I

40,000 mtlla. Hurry I

•3,995

1990 CHM FULL SIZE
PICKUP
Auto., 350 V-8, •lr, .t..o.

Follll Baptist Chordl
Railtold St., Mason
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Savices • 7 p.m.

•10,941

·,

s.:.,

••

·

PASS TO THE OUTSIDE - Crowded by
Rlnr Valley's Elisha Meadows (far len) attd
D-a Twymaa, Eastera's S*'pbanie Otto (24)
, _ . to teammate Amy Redovlan (22) in the
paiat in the first quarter of Thursday night's

.

Autograph sessions
in'Middleport Saturday

.

All-American tight end Mike
Bartrum of the NCAA Division 1AA national cham pion Marshall
University Thundering Herd witt
appe;u- at V111,1ghan's Cardinal and
Locker 219 in Middleport Saturday
for autogtaphs.
Bartrum, a 1988 Meigs High
School graduate, wiD be 81 Vaughan's on Saturday morning from 10
a.m. until noon and at Locker 219
Saturday afternoon from I to 3
p.m..
Bartrum, a 6-foot-4, 245-pound
senjor co-captain, was selected ftrst
team all-Southern Conference Ibis
p~ season aDd received secondteaOt All-American OOIIors.
Par the season Bartrum pulled
• in 62 passes for 680 yards and nine
!OUfhdowns including two CliChes
for i16 yards and a touchdowns in
the; 31-28 win over Yo11ngstown
State in the championship game.
He :Was also the teams long snapper
and was second on the team and in
the Southern Conference in receptions behind, teammate Troy
Brown.
,
Bartrum was an All Academic
selection All Southern Conference
and was presented the senior scholar award at the ieam banquet on
Sundays evening. He also won the
Buck Harless Scholar Athlete

11me at ·River Vafley Hlall School, where .the
Raiders shook two Eastern leads to beat the
Eaales S0-44. (OVP photo by G. Speaeer
Osborne)

··~·?hea-d~

Sd!ool- 9:30 .....
Wcnbip - ID:.30LIII., 7:30p.m.
Wodooo41ay Servi"" 7:30p.m,

R•lr ~t QnQ a..c~~
Cl!ulu. Dailipl
Sual!aY
........
10:30 ..... .
Wonblp- 9:30a.m., 7 ~.m.
R di'IIICis- llfCIIrlll
Pul«: l'idlip Saana •

w..,.._
Billie...,_
w

s.dly ScltooE 9:30a.m.
ID:.30a.m.
t dey, 6-.30 p.m.

Ctlrtstl31l Un1on

.

a.c-

Paaor: Ouy Hlaos

Sunday School- 9:30 ......

Episcop31

H - {Middleport)
Putor: Frank~
Sundoy School - 9:30a.m.

Wonhip -10:30a.m.IDd6p.m.
W""'-d.ayS..X...-7p.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
WecNsday Siorvicc• • 6 p.m.

Ch-C~urdielliiiiN..,._
PuiOr: Reo. ~~.,bon Orate

trl milo df Rt. 325
Putor. Rev. O'Dolt .Maoky
Sunday School- 9:30 ......
Wcnhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeMce, 7:30p.m.
Pulor: Rev.
Sunday -

-9:30a.m.
Wcnhip- !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneldoy SeMce -7:30p.m.

1992 OLDS ACHIEVA

l991 .CHM FULL SIZE
PICKUP Low Mltee.

Auto., nlr, • - ·
bucket -~~. 4 Dr.

S9,999 Dr
SJ99t1Dwt
5
199 pen•.

AulD, elf, 11111o, Vl,mnl.

'11,371

1990 PONTIAC
~-----------1 GRANDAM.lulo,awitu

1992 OLDS CIERA

~

.
-:.
7195

...,.,

1916 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

10,~9.9

5

1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE.
·

Sevendto

chooee fnxn
AS LOW AS

1

19,999 1

!:":!, .

*14,495'

or God
-.Jolla F. eo.-.
~ Scbool -

L3ttet-D3y S&lt;:11nts
Rwoc ·t IC1s. . . llf_,_Cisliol
lo Lo&amp;..- Dor Salall

S&amp;.J... ~- ClsPtoe Gsvve
.
I'IIIOr. Oeoqe Weiridt
Worship- §:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 LSI!· :

Jl'ut«: Klmoth Baker
Sunday-- 9:30 .....
Wcnhip • 16:45 a.m. (21111 A 4th 8101)

Suaday School- 9:30 o.m.
, Worship - II a.m.

M..... Siar
Pulor: Klmoth Bolter

AutO., air,~

CAPRKE4 DR.

va, auto., ••· . _ _

=

W

Appo..tSootoodSU.

SUDIIay School , ID o.m.
Wonhip- tiUD.

P-. Edset Hort
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - ID:30a.m.,_7:30p.m.

Laorol CHirFroo Moat o It• CII-

Dy. .lle c.... _, CUrds

Sunday &amp;hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 LID., 7 p.m.

Fettow•r, C•w
Salem SL, Rutii!Dd
Pastor: Robert B. Mus ...
Suaday Sc:bool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip. tl :1hm.• 7 p.m.
WocNoday Service • 7 p.m.

~an

W~·9a.m.

, .... Gaoliel Clo.....

kWCiiordo

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
· W"odnooday 7:30p.m.

Tuesday s.m... - 7 p.m.

l'ulill: Rev.l)svid
R..U
. ... , ..
---

.
' ..

-••
•

'

..

.' ."
'

.. . . .
• ··,;

·''

I

• I ,..

'

...
. . ..
•
'

' • ' 1.:

...."
··~

.'..'
•

u

.-.

Pentecostal

' - -·A-"'f

St. Rt. 12.4, Rodoe
lU«: Willi. . lfobadt
Suoday Sdlaol • 10 o.m.
Evenina-7p.m.
Wedneoday Siorvices - 7 p.m.

Mlddlet&gt;or1 l'lllle&lt;allol
1'hird Awe.
Putor: Reo. Out Balter
Sunday School· 10 un.
BYeaiq ~ 6p.m.

~

;~

•••

·='
.,.
• ••
• &gt;....

•..J

.,.••'•.
~··

'
-.
.·•··. ..
••

·. • •
:· : -

. .,

WedooodaySeMces-7:3011-111. • • '

Presbyterian

•·~·
••

Ho....-.vtUe -YI«tto~ • ,
Wotthip ~ 9 Llll.
... •
Suoday SchOol • 9:45 ....
:. :
Middleport ........, _

--.

":;

Sunday Sd!ool· 9 Lm.
• •
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (21111 A til!-): :

+:
•. . •.
.

'" a

S)TICUII Ji1nt Ulllted ,_,...._ ·:
. Suoday Sd!ool- tO 11.111.
• ,
Wonbip - II a.m., 4 p.m. (Ill 6. 3niS..) .• : •

Seventh-Day Advent1st

s..--o.1A••-

··-

Mulbeny Hu. Rd., I' amy
Pulor: Roy I.Awinlky
Sllwday Services:
Sabbath Sc:bool- 2 p.m.

ML Olivo Communlly Churd! ·
Puaor. Lawrenoc Bwh
Sunlby School - 9:30a.m.

E"vcaina - 7 p.m.
Wedttoclay Service· 7 p.m.

Uolled Fol.. Church
RL 7 011 Pamc:roy B)'·Pass

Paaor: a ... R1D:rt B. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30o.m .• 7 p.m.
W-ySeMoo · .7p.m.

Un1ted BrelhrPn

-,

Mt.a--u.w•••

Ia Cllrlll Cia.,..
Texu Com.-y df at 12
Pastor. Robert Sandon
Suoday School.· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
. Wodneiday Siorvices -7:30p.m.
EciOII Uallod Bl A • I• Clsrlat
2 1/2 miles nonh d Reodmlto

on State Route 12.4
Paotor. Rev. RDbcrt Malldey
Suoday &amp;hool · I0 a.m.
.
Worship· 7:30p.m.
Wodncsday SOrvices • 7:30

..
...
....·

'

· K&amp;C JEWElERs' ·
I

Mill Wo1k
Cabinet Makin~
Syracu·se

212 t. M1in Street
992-3715.· Pomeroy

9~2 · 3978

' •7,999 .

.

IAWUNGS.C:Oln

Crow's Family Restaurant

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME ·

"I'Nfllrin8 K..,tuoty Frl«&lt; Ch/ckffl"

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

. 992-5141

264 Seuth 2nd

"992·5432

MlisliiWAle...
porort

P•••Y Flower Shop _(M;', .

BrQPn:Warner

GEO lllCIER 414

INSURANCE .--.....
: SERVIC~S

.,...

COIMRTILE .,
OM Owner.

ltlllael

'·~

·

214 E. 111~
!192-St:JO Pomeroy

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

· II S I. llloiiiO&lt;iat Dr.

204 Contlar St. ·

awwd.

Pictures wilt be available for
him to sign 81 ~ locations while
supplies last, or you can take in
. your own anicle to have it signed.

.......y. Clll.

992-2975
I

FUNERAL HOME

,,

.

~

..

,, .

"Dil(nir~·

and &amp;&gt;r•·iC"P Alu·nr11"
Established 1913

fllatiGnwide Ins. Co.
ol (olumlloll, 0 .'

. '"*·¥•in

Pomeroy

992 -7104

'.

P. J: PAULEY,-AGENT

992-2121

to

106 lulllorrr Aw~-

tfl·llll P.omtroy

'

•

. .,,

••

RACINE PLANING MILL

1

·, ·

Wonhip - 3 p.m.

••
'
•
•

I

"

• •,•

Lona koaan

T......... Rll. &gt;168C
Sunday Sil!ool- 9 a.m.
• Wtlllbip- 10 a.m•
Wtdnaclay SOMces- tO a.m.
Hoctl_. Clowcb
Grind~
.
Sunday School- to a.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.
w-...y Services - a p.m.
T-OoCo. Rd. 63
.
Suodoy School • 9:30 uti.
Wcnhip • 1D:.30 a.m.

PaiiOr. Rov. Seldon Iobnsoa
Suaday Sd!ool- 9:30 Llll.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Se!vic:es ·7:30p.m.

=:.r.

Putor: Lawrax:eFoaw
School- 10 a.m.
w
y Services • 7 p.m.

.

M- Cllopel Clourdl
S.,..: Mike Mall&lt;n
s...fa.l' sd!ool · I0 a.m.
Wriip • II a.m. , 7 p.m.
w~ Senice -7 p.m.

CoolvUII Uollod MliHdllt P.W.
Pastor. Helen Klioo
CoohiUoCioln:ll
Maio ... Fifth St.
SundaySchooi-IDI.DI.

. Lao·-

..

500 N. 2nd A.._, Mid!ltport

iiuol C..•uoiiJ Clsurdl
Off Rt. 12.4

Rudaod Bible Medlodbl
· Pastor. Rev.Ivan Myon
Slllday S&lt;;haal- 9:30 a.m.
BV&lt;IIIIIJ - 7 p.m.
WocMscloy Service• • 7 p.m.

Worship · 9:30a.m.
Scliool· 10:30 LJII,
ySorvica-7:30p.m.

'llle Slindooo Anor
liS Buuemut Ave.. Pometoy.
s,.,day School- tD:30 LUI.
Wcnhip · ID:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.

s7.--..Mt-

Putor.Peoor'J'ranblay
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wanliip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WocMscloy Servicos • 7 p.m.

Joppa

Sllvernt• Ward ril Fold!
Pastor: David Doiley

Rejoldq Lll'a Clo-

t41t Bridacman St.. SyMICIIsc
Pa-. Roy (Mil:e) Thompooa
Suaday Sc:bool · 10 ......
Evcnina - 6 p.m.
WocNoday Semce -7 p.m.

Pu!ar: Ropro,_

.

Col•"'1 Pllpi• ClsOpll
HarrisonviUe Rood
' Putor: Reo. Viclor Rotisb
Suadoy Sehool9:30 ......
Wonhip - 11 a.m, 7:30p.m.
Wednadoy Service· 7:30p.m.

.,

,,

..

Follll Fll""'""" ~~ t..- C1ortot
Pu10r. Re.. l'1lnldin Dicbno
Scrvic:e: Fridoy, 7 p.m.

SLI!day Sd!ool9:30 a.m.
B-.-7p.m.
Thursday SaW:e -7:30p.m.

llailoy Rlla Rood
Putor: Reo. Bmmeu RIWIIOII
Sunday School- I 0:00 un.
l!wrlina7p.m.
Thanday Service • 7 p.m.

Eoolt:-.

MLOIIvt Ullled M - I l
Off I 2.4 behind Willwville
Putor. Owlea J&lt;IOOI
Sunday Scboot- 9:30 Lift.
Wonhb&gt; - t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday s.m... - 7 p.m.

Wonbip ID:.30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedaoidoy SeMce • 7:30p.m.

I'IIIIIT.....,_Qolrdo

· Pastor: Ropr Once
S111day School· 10 o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
RodM

Wonhip ·9:30a.m. Oil"- 21111 SaQ),
7:~ p.m. (3rd .l 4th s,.,)
W~esday Service-7:30p.m.

Rov.lllocl;wood
Suoday Sc:bool - 9:301.111.

Wedneoday SOrvioe- 7:30p.m.

Putor: Kl:metlt ~
Suodoy School· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip • ID:4S a.m. (hi .t :ltd SUD)

G-~~

Cot..-, illble Cllurdl
l\xik40f Pike, Co. Rd.

s-tay SchooiiOa.m.
Bwnio.s • 7:30 p.m.

Sollao

UnitPd rJiethodiSt

Loutt, W.VL R1. I
· P~~~«: ra•• Lewis
Suoday School • II a.m. .
Wonbip - 9-.30 un., 7:30p.m.
. WedoeidayStnloo -7:30p.m.

57$ PWI St., Middlepnrt

Sunday School· 9:45a.m:
Wonhip ·10:30Lm.
Thursday SCM..,. -1;30 p.m.

SL Paul LuliMno Cll....
Comer S r - A SecoDd SL, Pane!oy
Paaur. Oeoqe Weiridt
Suaday Sdtool- 9:45 LDl.
Wcdip-lh.m.

- ..

.

FlimowBI!Iea.-·

1

1

-·-

Sunday Sd!ool - 9:30a.m.
Wcnbip • ID:.30 11.111.
Wednesday Servioe • 7 p.m.

a.-

--- '

"

Putor: Rov .l'billip Ridoaour

-fill

c.......IJ Clllln:ll

.'

Wlllla'lc..,...w....,..
Coolville Rood

Pa-. Rev. Rolond Wildmao
C.urd! - 9:15 Lm.
Wonhip- t()-.30 II.JD.

Middleport

..

Our So- Lotlaoru Cllurdt
watn.. 111111 Hcruy s.... Ra-swood, w.vo.
Co-putors: Reo•. Ridwd ...

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
htA 3rd Sunday-7:30p.m.
~,lSd!ool· 10:30 .....
W
ySioMc:es·7 :30p.m.

s , - Cllorcl! ., God

w••

I'IIIOr. Flonmc:e Smiob
Suqdly School- 10 a.m.
•. 'Wonhip. 9 a.m.
BdUDJ
Pulor: Keanoth Balter
Suaday School- 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 un.
W - y Somoa -ID a.m.
·Cantot

P.-: Rov. Roaer Willford
~ Sd!ool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- ID:&lt;IS LIIL. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe • 7 p.m.

•

1'01•1 PI Flnt Clo- eltl!e N - e
I'IIIOr. William Jaatis
Sunday School- 9:30.a.m.
Wcnhip • 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
WodaoldaySorvica - 7p.ni.

Trtaltr c .._ . . . . ,

.. •

, ,•

Freed.- GaoptiBald Ko!ob, .. Co. Rll. 31

PnJ.(Il Jlarlioclum dlurd! eM bae 33)
Putor: RDbcrt v"""'
S!o!day ......... - 10 .....
Wedaaday servioa- 6:30p.m.

Wonllip -10:15 a.m.

Luthet an

Evc:niDa - 7 p.m.

Wedncodoy Savioe. 7 p.m.

-

l'lllw: Reo. 'l1lamU MoCJuna
SUodoy School- 9:30 .....

lodllt.o

- c• ..Sa

w.

Other Chutches

Putor: ... Fim:e
s.doy School· 9: IS LDI•

............RociaoRd.
..._,Jerry Collin• .
Suoday School- 9:30 .:...
'
Wonhip - IO:JOa.m.
Wednesday Somoa -7:30p.m.

!I'll)' ClitJ!1* .,... Ill•

I

Pamr. ClYde
Hondenoa
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Waribip - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wedaoidoy Servit:os • 7 p.m.

w.........,

Paaur. Reo.1oho Neville
Suodoy School to .....
Wonhip-llo.m., 7:30p.m.
W-.!oy Stn1oo -7:30p.m.

I hod.... Cll- .
Kinubarv Road

Carlelon lolel

N-Ho••CIIllrdlelliiiiNII Putor: Ola!dan Suoud
' Suoday Sc:bool -9:30a.m.

Sllldly ~ • 9: IS a.m.
V{onhip • 10 a.m.
Serviocs - 6 p.m.
R.Uond
Pastor: Allhlr Crabtree
Slttldoy School- 9:30a.m.
Waiddp - 10:30 a.m.
'J'hundoy !lervica- 7 p.m.

.......U.vlllo HDII- Clloptor

Pu!ar: Rov. Seldon 1olollon

w.-.., Sorvi.ca -7 p.m.

' ·'

Pa~~r

R-

10 .....

w....,..IJ .....,, ......

s3,495

1919 OLDSMOBILE
CIERA .

Pastor: l!tmiJae (GIIc:e) Kee
SuodoySchool- 9:1S a.m.
Wonbip • 10::10 o.m., 6 p.m.
w-,Srtioa - 7:30p.m.

P.-w: Bralda Weber

·-a......

v-a, ·•uto., •Jr.

air, V6, t-----,...--~1--...;..:..;;....;;,...;;.;__
' stereQ, m.
1990 liKOlft
1919 OIMOI.O
~to.,

.·.

)

l'lllleror

HJIIII Rua Hollll• Clourdl
Paaur. RID:rt Mlllley
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thunday- -7:30p.m.

•,

· Ru- Cll- Ill tile N-. .•
Pastor: s ..uc1 Basye
Suodoy Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wanliip- 10:30 UJt., 6:30p.m.
· Wednoodoy Servicu- 7 p.m.

PUla: Flon:nc:e Smiob
Sunday Sdlool · 9 a.m.
Wcnhip- 10 am.

Roy Mc:Colty

...-'·..

Suadax Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip - It un.. 6 p.m .
Wodtladay ~- 7 p.m.

'-1 Cllopel

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
SUnday Sdiool- 10 o.m.
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

W"""-day Sorvi.- -7 M· .

..

Mla...We
Pi-. Doron Newmon
Sunday &amp;hoot • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- ID a.m.

W....,7u B1b1o H - Clllln:ll
75"Peul St. Middlopad.

' •'

s;........-c~urdi"'liiiiN
w
Putcr: Rev. Glom McMillall
Suoday School- 9:30 .....
Wonbip -ID:.30Lm., 6p.m.
Wednoodoy Servicu- 7 p.m.

Sundayacbooi; 900Lm.
Suodoy - - . . -7 p.m.
w-.y pnyer a • ··- 7 p.m.

..... c.... illblo Ball- a. .....

-·.'

Suoday Sd!ool - 9:30 Ult.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoaday Servicu -7 p.m.

&amp;•IISIIanltiiii-Cio ..
Now IJmo Rood, Ru!load
Putor.llov.~Kio·

I .

tr,

F-Run
Putor: Doron Ncwmaa
Suoday School • 10 a.m.
. WO!Jbip • 9 a.m.
Thwoday Siorviccs • 6:30 p.m . .

Putor: Sharon Hauanan

MI. Mortolt Cllllldl ol Gotl
Rooiuo
l'lll.ar:R.-..1-s-&amp;ld
Suodoy Sdlaol· 9:&lt;1S a.m.
tr..ma-7p.m.

R-.eFolo

i!loiWoodJ

Holiness

...

Cllurdo II Iiiii N
Pu!ar: .ld.!·W. Do!'llaa

Putor: Kciob Rader
Suoday School • 10 o.m.
Wtnhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thursday Serviees - 7 p.m.

AnllctuiiJ lopllot

Rullaod F'rf&lt; WIU Jlopdll
Solan s..·
Puaor. Reo. Paul Toylor
Sunday - 10 a.m.
Bwrlina-·7p.m.
Wednesday Savillll -7 p.m.

Puaor: Kciob Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuoad.ay Services • 7 p.m.

Wonhi_p- 6 p.m.
Wodneod&lt;y SoMali • 7 p.m.

-.

-

Wanbip • I0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodai!aday S. .X... - 7 p.m.

Eo~rlse

Chiller

CtHJrcil of God

Paaor: Thomu 1.. Oates, n
SLI!day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncidoy Semces - 7 p.m.

Mlddl.,..t Cloordlelllle N,_..o
.Pu!ar: Reo, Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Suoday School • 9:30a.m.

Suoday School - 9:45 .....
Wonhip • II am.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

NnLII'aCII-.IIC..

Alfred
Pastor. Sha1011 Haui!TIII\
Suoday Scboot- 9:30 Llll.
Worship - I t a.m., 6:30p.m.

x.m..h SmlJh
SUDIIay
School-9:30a.m.

Wonhip -ID:4S a.m.
Thursday services-7:30p.m.

~'N!".:!..

Sunday School- 10 LDlWanbip- II a.m.
Wodneod&lt;y Senoiqo : 7 p.m.

N-etu.

ML Moria~~ Bapllot
Founh A Mfin St., MNidloport
Putor: Reo. Oilbe!l CniJ, Jr.
SUDIIay Scbqol- 9-.30 IJII.
. Worship - I0:45 a.m.

Flnl Clsordo II IIIII N

-

c-.. a .....

l'utor:r.u-

I

Naza1 ene

-SundaySlwon
School""'""•
• 9 Lm.
Wonliip. to a.m.
1'ucsday Sorvica -7:30p.m.

CloordleiGod oll'l 1 I '1
OJ. While Rll. df St. Rt. 160

Mtlp Ceaperatht ,. ......

F.-RunBiptllt
Pastor : Ariul Hun
Sundoy Sdlool- 10 a.m.
Worship- U o.m.

•

Tis..... Pia... Sl. l'lllll

Wcnlup- ~:JU a.m.

E..... Servia~~-7 p.m. '
Wodoesday Servicia - 7 p.m.

"Patricia llonds-KJua

s...doy School- IOa.m.
B..... ·7p.m.
Wednoaday s.m&lt;io -7 p.m.

HUIIIdo Bapdll Clourdl
St. Rt. 143 jyll df Rt. 7
PallOr. Rev. Jam• R. Acroe, Sr.
Sundoy School- ID o.m.
Wo~!'% • It a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wcdn . y Siorvices -7 p.m.

1986CHM
5·10 PICKUP

a.-

a

.
Daler
Pui«:WoadyCoD

Thursday~-7:30

VIdor Ba!11bt
S2S N, 2nd ~L Middleport
PallOr: limes E. Keesee
Wonhip - tO..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvice1 • 7 p.m.

Soliday--

Koao Cllurdlel Clriit
Wonbip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdiool - 10:30 Lm.

Free WUI B~t&gt;JIIt Cburcb
Alb SU..~ Middleport
PallOr. Mark Morrow
SuUiday Siorvico - 7:30p.m.
Swtday School· 10 a.m.

TaxTips

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Paaor: Alldtn Milcl
s-toy School-9:30a.m.
Wonllit" 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W.....,.y Services - 7 p.m.

II God
Muon, W.Va.

.

.m~

212W.~St.

Assembly of God

Reserve game - River Valley
30, Eastern 22
~orlng leaders- River Valley (7-8) : Erica Mollohan - II.
Eastern : Michelle Schl!ltz - 9

S

~ Cllll... eiCIIrlll

V..ZendJIOidW.,.tl d.
Pu&amp;or: J. . . Mmcr
. Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
E...... ·7:30p.m.
Wodaoldav Somoa 7:30

Eastern
(11-15-6-12=44)
Otto 5-0-7=17, Karr 4-0-2=10,
Wilson t-0-5=7, Aeiker 1-0-0=2,
Congo 1-0-0=2, Evans 1·-0-0=2 ·
'
Nelson l-0-0=2,
Redovlan 1-0-'
0=2. Totals,_ 15-0-14=44
Field goals-IS-44 (34.1%) ·
Three-polaters - N/A
Free throws- 14-22 (63.6%)
Rebounds- 36 (Otto 16)
Assists- 7 (Wilson 4)
Steals - 17 (Otto &amp; Wilson S
each)
Turnovers - ·26

Southern
(15-12-9-12=48)
~mber Ohlinger 2-0-2=6,
Aimee Mills 6-3-3=24, Andrea
Moore 2-0-1•5, Sheni Stover 4-00=8, Bea Lisle 1-0-1=3, Jennifer
Cross 1-0-0=2. Totals - 16-37:48

Chlllch of Chnst

992·''"

..

• 211 hrth
'
SH....

IWthpert,

. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~~! l~1
Prf\CriPIIOn\

tn ?tSS

Pomtf"Oy

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
5~l£S

... "

_ _ _ __ . , .. 1,

&amp; SfltVICE

992-7075
112 NO&lt;tlt Socolltll An•
Ohia

·

"

�.

By The Bend

The Dally Sentinell
'·

Friday, January 29, 1993 ·

FU TIEl StiYICE

Page . 6

-r------------------~--------------------------~--------~----~--------------------~-------'
..--------------~~----------~-0

~ouple's

•Dear Au Llllders: Whal do you
dillt of Ibis keUie of fish? Foor
, _ . lpl, a couple wilh whom I
wu frieadly bought a building
With two lpllbneuls. They plaaDcd
to .WI ill Olle IIJIIIID«&lt;l IIICI asked
19l' htt!w d llld me if we would
lite to JUt the other. We were
Jilanning to move anyway, so we
li cepled 11ley genetOIB(y lowered
1M Rill Ill we IIOIIId afford i1.
; Since lbco, we have found out
... lhe bl!alemmt Clcctticity is wiml
1,9 ,- decuic: rnecer. Our landlords
irlreeed 111M ·it involves no more
~an three lights and the heat
pump, which runs only in the
Wiil1er. They nrferecl to pay $5
lllwlld our eleclric bill 10 COV«' iL
'QI.is ICCilled rair,111 we agreed.
We dlea diJcoveml that one or
tile owlrts in their ljlllllmenl, ilong
fith all the appliances in the ·
INisement, including two fisti
lilb. a teliigmlor and a plant light,
ire also lleing charged to our
tlcctric bill. What's more, they
~ave deliberalely plugged their
wuher llld ~ into the oullets .
·t'hich are billed to our apartmenL I
Ogured this out when the circuit in
fir lpiKtment blew, and I had to
11a1et iL When I did the reSetting;
their washing machine went on.
:..liy lnisbmd says I Shouldn't make
~issue of it because we cannot
~ord to move. While I agree wilh
.... I wander how far this rottplc
•

••

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) (Wbidl COW!'~ Reno) - 11!11" does the
Waniet Bros. Records. wllicb &amp;fOod
capital of Nevada, Caraoa City,
by Ice- T when his song "Cop
allow prostitution. Alao, street KiUer'' prompled pOICSIS and boy·
COlts, won't release his new album
)llllllillllioo IIIII JDiiciting ate not
nextmonth. .
legal anywhere in Nevada. Swe
.
The company is releasing the
ANN LANDERS
law pobibits boaiCI of prallillltian
rapper
from his contracl in a mum"199%, Lao Anctlet
in counties wilh a)qi'!JI'ior of over
Tunts S)'MJ&lt;ou
.
a! agreement because of "creative
400,000. Funhetn101e, local 0011111y
Creol0f1! S)'Ddicato" '
·differences,"
division Chairman
govei!lments have the option 10
Mo Ostin said Wednesday. He
pobibil or pennit tbe opetation of wouldn't elaboralc.
·
Jmheh
No telephone listing could be
Mln)r poople lbiak of our 11a1e as found to reach the entertainer,
will go. What if thty decide to
chan&amp;e ~ wirq, and we ead up the.a•~Clpilll ~ 1be United whose. "Home Invasion" album
bul it iaac.b than that. was to be telealled IIClll IIIODth.
paying for their TV, their Ji&amp;bla 111C1 ISUlCI,
enjoy tMna iD Me.
il
"Cop Killer," an an'ry rap;
their refri&amp;aatol'l
'.
bas
majeeliC
!IIIO.i
'
e,llrillilat
blue
included
the line: "I'm bout to
· Tbcy reca~dy ~ for I
sides
llld
c:leln
(IIIOit
d
the
time).
dust
some
cops off.... Die, die, die,
Dl()!ltb,lllll our electric biD- $30
its
spmely
PV'
td
llld
has
no
pig,
die."
less. Whal do you thint we *"ki
It sold 200,000 copies in .its f'IISI
stale i1Ji00itiC tu, llld I can get a
do?,.. CHICAGO RE.NTERS
twomonlhs.
·
DEAR RENTERS: C.. you fmd good edUcllion II I low COli while
Poli&lt;:e
and
· li!ic:ians caiJed on
a place you like u wen for $30 a enjoyincllllllhine 80 ~~~of the · Warner to ~'JX!Ibe
song 111d more
moolh more? If you c:a, llltc IL year. - CJ. SMITH, CARSON than l,OoOMo"res removed the
CITY
Meanwhile keep your eye on the .
DEAR C.1.: If you are not album. Law enfOn:ement groups
electric bills. If those "Thomas
called for a boycou of Warner
Edisoos"' figure out any tMiriopa! employed by the Chamber of products.
·
gimmicks, tell them in a non- Conunc!'l:c. diCy Ollilllt Ill !lite you.
Warner defended Ite·T's right
·
aa:IISIIOiy way that their ingenuity · Thanks for writing.
to record the song. Ice·T eventually
Gem of the Day: The lhings announced the song would be
is costing you money.
lllllll
people show aa extriiDidinary dropped from the album.
Dear ADD LaDders: You recently
intaat
in are Ullllliy lllllll: of their
insweted a question from "S.I."
hiJ•b:n
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)- .
teganling legalized prostitution. I
F~liltg
premnd
10
ltave
sa?
Madonna
too old? That's what Sir
hope you are aware that~
Hf1'tll
wtU·ilrfonJrttl.
tue
yo11?
Write
A!Jdtew
Lloyd
Webber said Thurs·
is .Jegal .in some (liltS of Newida for
A1111
Lmlikr~'
bool:let
"Sez
day.
He
said
she isn't young
not Gil, as some d your I'CIIdcn may
enough
10
plar.
lhe·titie
role in the
111111
lite
Teeii-Gfer.
•
Sellll
a
selfbelieve. For example, prostitution
proposed
fi
m
version
of his
is not legal in two oC the llrpst Gddrelletl, lollf, b!ISilleu·sire ''Evita. ''
Nevada counties •• Clar:t (which CIIWIIope 111111 a CMCic or 1Mf1ey
"She made noises that she
incjucles Lis Vegas) and Washoe order for $3.6.5 (tllis i"d!ldes wants to do it, but I don't think
poslllfe 111111 lltuvllillg) 10: Tcei'IS, she's right for it," Lloyd Webber
clo ANI IIJitder, P.O. Boz ll562,
'
ClliCGfO, Ill. 60611-0562. (Ill said.''Perhaps io years ago when she
CGIIIIIIG, Mill $4.45.)was younger, butlthint she's a bit

Ann

Landers

t

1 Commualty Caleadar items
fppear two days before aa eveDt
pd tile day ol lllat event. Items
· li'!llllt be receiYed weD in advaDce
Co .-.ure publication io the cal·tBar·
~...

,..~

*

eome.

.

100 old for it now, bccl"'"' (the real
life) Evl• died wben lbe . . 33."
Lloyd Weber said he ,worked
wilh the 34-year-old popsw·in the

r;!. and "I actually q11ite like

.But; be said, Madonna's image
had been hurl by her "Sex;" book
and by her latest movie, "Body of
Evidelice."
He aid he did not tnow who
would get the role.
. Lloyd Weber was

742·2MO

Indiana University School of i
Mwac.
.
.
. . . .I
Tbc university said Wedne""ay
that Aronoff will join the faculty
while continuinc to perform and
record with Mellencamp's· baitd
and others.
. '
Aronoff, who also has classical '
training, has recorded wilh Elton l
John, Jefferson Airplane, Bob !
Dylan, Iggy Pop, .Ion Bon Jovi,
Bonnie Raitt and B.B. King.

Call 992-2156
...

MoN.

·
~ Sydney 10
see productions of two of his other
WHo~ upintloa laU
worts, "Aspects of Love" and
Chapter 11 refen to the proviiiOna
"Joseph and His Amazing Techni· · in the Rederal Bankruptcy Act for
court-superviled reorganlatlon' ol
colour Dreamc:oat.' '
debtor companies. A compa11y files
lor Chapter II protection wileD It can
BLOOMING'ION, Ind. (AP) Kenny Aronoff, John Mellen· no longer pay ita crediton ,.. when it
future liabilities it caanot
camp's drummer, has a new part· expects
bope to pay, like product UabiUty
time gig: leaChing percussion at the damase awards.

HEALTHCARE PACKAGE
EXPANDS

~Fin. 8A.II.·5P.II~.

SAT.8-12

1:00 p.m. Wedaeoday
tOO p.m. Thunday
l:OOp.m. Prlday

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES
• Ado ........

lllo......,.

,........~

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

446-G.,,
••
16741 ....

• Adr ..._, ....... paid ill ........ .,.:
Cud of 'l'lwob
lloppy Ado
lo "'-orioro
Y...t Soloo
• Ad illrolool•-t ploood 1rt l1lo Golllpollo lloilr
Trilorao (....,. Cluoiflod Dll,loy, B - Cud or Lop!
~) . . . . . .,,.... l1lo Poird p ........... ood

"

st8-VW.o
245 lila c..Mrr
216 c., .......
643-.AnWo DilL
S19-W.t.t

Godfather of Soul' has takeout
'Fuller, a funeral director, was
the son of Perry Fuller Sr .. who
worked as a milsaeur to Brown.
Alter delivertns a brief eulogy,
Brown, 59, signed autographs and ·
posed f&lt;r pictures.
Later, Brown and his etiiOUI'8IC
stopped at a chicken restaurant,
bought a $30 takeout order and
tipped three employees $10 apiece.
"He came in, and be did hls little dance slep and said he had to
have some Church's Fried Chick·
en," employee Flora Gilliard said.
"We were excited lhe rest or the

nac of Records and Facta, the only
man to be U.S. president lor a day wu
David Rice Atchison. There WU DO of·
ficiai president for one day after
Praldent Polk't term expired and
Praldent Taylor's bepn. For reUJioua IUIOIII, ·Taylor would not be
sworn In oa a Sunday. So, from noon
on Sunday, March 4 1111UI noon on
Monday, March 5, '1848, Atchison, the
president of the Senate, was the head
of atate.

'r

· 'CLASS OF 1994 • SENIORS
Studio Ambulladoo'MOOELS
Waollld From All
Anlll High Schcora
For An Application Call:
PUTNEY PHOTOGRAPHY ,
(304) 675-2~7

J2 Ill STOCK

PubHc Notice

SJ3.I 965

Public Notice

NOnCE
Nolloa Ia har.t»y given
..., thlllllllenlgnW ftlod In
C... No. 17710 application
to the eo- ,_Court,
Probata -Divl•lon of lloiga

Stock# OH 1238 ·

County, Ohio, lor an order

S:AVEI

AS LOW 4S

· . TRUCKING
992·5380 .

I

complaktL II alanillcant pubI public
m..dng moy be held. Aa to
ony acdon, Including rocelpl
of vartllod complalnla, any
penon m~y obtain nodco ol
further actlone, and addl·
Ilona! information. Unl•a
otharwtaa rrovlded . In
- Net!caa 0
particular
I aCilona .tl communlcollonl
. I hI 11 u.
,:_ lORI 10,• HH r1ng
Clark, OEPA, P. 0. 8o1 1048,
Columbua OH 43ae-o148
Ph. (814) .8.M-2iu. Conalllt
ORC Chap. 3741 and OAC
Chap1. 3741-47 and 374t-1
1 Card of Thal!kl .
lie lnt••t ••fate,

-------------------11I

Stock 1 12043

s &amp;1

Ill oheagt hl1 neme to
· Robert Nloholu Smhh.
Said application will be
hurd In uld Court, 1110:30
A.M. on tho 1Oth day of
March, 1113, at Probata
Court of llelga County,
Ohio.
.
Robert Nlcllotao.
(1) 211, 1to

$8I 000
OFF
.

an.-

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

The lollowln~wtra r•
the Ohio
Envlronmental rotectton
"-or (OEPA) latl ...._
Eft..tlvt datoa of flnol
oelwadlp..,_

ltmily of Ptrry
HDIIIIIID would llkl to
11pr1u our thanu and
appriiCittion to ·all tho11
Who unt. c1n11, llonr1,
~ tnd offeNd eny tup..
poll tnd sympathy during
th1· rac1nt d11th of our
lather and bnlthlr.
A lf*lti thanks to tht
Middleport Emergllncy
Squad, 11111 11 Vlltrll,.
Memorial Hoeplltl, Rev.
l.nler Fortmtn, and tht
Fllhtr Funartl Home lor
thtlr po:ofHtlonal nrvlcas
lnd allilttnCI.
Your pno,.,. 1nd tho...,.
'"""...
lulntlt Will IIWIIYI bt
rtmtmbtlld tnd 11ppraci·
llad.
Clllldrt11: KtMIIh, Frtnk,
RoMit, Dtbbla,
Patty, Fntncil;
bralhlr, Flld Hollmln lind

LeBaron Convertible

Stock 1 12067

NOW$12,985

NOW

StOck #

12035

sloI·6ss·
.
,
.

. 1993 Shadow &amp; Sundance

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

lor r.qulremenia.
Final ·la_ouonce cl Pormto
lo lnatall
EPUNG'S ASHLAND
17083 81 RL 124
RMdnllio, Oh.
EllactJva Daie 01121193
F. II
·
·
IC I ty 0 aacrlplion: Air;
GaooUna Dlepan.tng Facility
with OM 2,000 gallon gaaoUna atonge NO.
tank.08-3&amp;5
._pllcollon
3
T..,.l
I
h 1 lnal eclion not

:!~~:da-.:'d 1 :~~.':!':.!~!

EBR
HILLTOP GROCERY
374B1 St. RL 124
Mlddlepor1, Ohio
EHacllvo Dllo: 01121183
,
Facility Deacrlplion: Air;
Gaaollne Dlopenalng Focllo

lty.

Appllcollon No. 08-35111
Thla .flilel action not ·
preceded by propo1odl
aclian and Ia appealable to
EBJ!. .
(1) 28, 1tc

$ •.

I

AstOWM

Stock 1 12049J

•

I'

8,995:

t.AHOIVILLE- O.Mr Road - Approx. 2 am11 of be.,..
•"" boiiOm land. ~·- enc1 e1acu1c ...nabla. A grut
hallie cr mobill toomesite.
$6,500.00

IUIINEII FOR BALE - At. 124 - Hal!&amp; you aver
dreMIIIf of ~ing your~ butillou? lhil·bullntll II

.REEDSVILLE - 1 llocr block hOrria willo. 2 bedrooms, 1
• ·beth, ono car garagt, produce bulclng, ,.., oo,..nod .
porch, on .8051 acN. Affotdobly priced ol$18,000.

!!AHDYIIAN'I .,eCtAL - 1111 StrOll - Thill 3-t bedhorne hal potential, but doN need WOik. It
1tt1 12 lola lhllllljDin Ill pm.
ONLY N.OOO.OO

149,1100.

,
Seeding.
SIINb and Tree :rrimming
l AMoovll

R Tldrnl.., a Commen:'-1
FreoEotlmolol

AREWOOD FOR SALE
1-21·'12-tfri

WI(K'S HAULING
SERVIa
36970 a• R•n Road
Ponwoy, Olllo

I

••

NEW UBnNO - SyrtiOuee - 19811 modular willo 4 bed·
room•. 2 balls, PANG hilt, clodciog, llor~ building,

14 SESSIONS"" 14...

Limh 2 Per Culltome,r., 1

&amp;001 UITil FEL 20:

949·2826 :
1·

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •c
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Middleport,

o•lo 45760

(614) 843·5264

ALL HARDWOOD

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

SHsoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

;a

1213119211fn

·~

~

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To Recover Yo!lr Investment"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto

and Office Seating

UCIIE, OHIO
614-949·2202
614·

MICROWAVE ORI
••IIIVCI IEPAII

319Mt.e.llftl
CrNkl...

All liliES
lrhta'lt Ia Or WI

llitl•l•port, Ohll

····992·71"
10/tm

"
104-Mulberry
A11enue
Pomeroy , OH 45769

FIREWOOD .
FOR SALE

OWNER:
JeH Wickersii•

nv~

SuMo~y · MondaY -Closed
~
Tuesct.w ·Wednesday · Friday- 9:30 a . IT) •• 5: 30P. m. :
Thursday - Saturday - 10 :00 a .m .. 3:00P. m.
.I

HOURS.-

IMPROVE
MORTGAGE
SrTUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
COt-4SOUDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
61-4-992-7523

992·3470

li§!IP!.

lfn

UCINE GUN
CLUI
GUN SHOOTS

KIN'S APPLIANCE
SIIVKI
992·5335 or

IUSOI, WV. Across fr- the Post
·We Specl•lize II

n..... Alit•me••• • ~~:•••st•
Check our Price or We Both Lose

915·3561

lnllOCATIOI TO SERVE YOU lmER :

POMIIOY,OIIIO

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

. ..... , _ . . . Oiflce
217 L lecaorol II.
316190/lln

SUNDAYS

JOE ..N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

air. $47,500.

BIN"'"'
EAGLES

EVERY THURSDAY

CLUB
IN POMEAOY
6:46p.m.
Spec.lrll Early Bird.
$iOOPayoft.
Thia ad good for t

. FREE card.

Lie. No. 0051-32

(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
·,
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
. •·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

61/t~~2roT·~::.~.,o
., · ,.5~3139

,.. ,_..,c...,

HOWARD
EXCAYAnNG
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE

-

TRACKHOE WORK

614-742~2138
1·11·'11

TUPPERS PLAINS - 2 otooy, homo 3-4 bodrooma, 1
bath, hal hid 101M Nmodeling CCIIrlplelad, 2 fireplacoo,
hanclcrdld chanclalitn, 1+ acra will t.ncod btck yard.
V.oy pretty homtl $48,900 ..

Public Notice
N011CI
Nodoe Ia her.t»y g!v111
thet ... uncl...tgnad lllod In
ea.. No. ame applloatloft

IALEIIlOWNIIIP- Beautiful blk:lc ranch home with 3
btdroomo, 2!i bello, attached 2 car~· fuR finilhod ·
""-~ attic 1pa01, INplact, l!pplilhcel, bemo.
pond, .....,g. •"'ra trailer hook-up on 22+ ...._ Han:llop
roiod. c.ntnil location approx. 311 m1n. !Join Oallipollo,
Pomarvy, Jack1011 &amp; Athena. $138,500 (may -1).

lo ... CollliMft,.... Court.
Ptobeta Dlvlllon of llhlaa

County, Ohio for an aniW
to obango ~lo name Ia

lrlnclan Todclllftllh.
Said l]lllllolltlen will . be
hurd In uld Court, II 10:00

WE NEED UITIHOI OF ALL IHAPI!I ' IIZEI FAOM
EVERY AREA OF IIE!OS COUNTY! IF YOU WANT 10
ELL CliVE UB A CALL... WE'LL OET .YOiJ AEIULTII

A.ll., on lh• 1Dtll lllay of
. 1111'011, 1"3, at Probeta
Coun of llllge Counly,
Ohio.
.
INnlfon TIICIII Qrovw

, I

•

(614)
667·66

SIZED LIMESTONE

(1) ill,110

'r

EXCAVATING .

Reas011able Rates

The Fahrenheit thermometer ~e~le
wu developed in 1714 by a German
physicist named Gabriel Fallrenbeil.

,.

~.

D. A. BOSTON

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; .COAL

REDUCED - Spl~ Ioyer home roo,tod near Albany, 4
btdrooma, 2 balloo, garage, lpf)liancoo, balam11111Work·
lhop, lru~ - · ohod on 8.35 acres. NOW ASKING

NEW USTING - Pomeroy - f ftoor frame homo with 3
btdroomo, 1· ballo, full finiohod · ba•monl .on lot of
1001&lt;150. ASKING $10.000.

RUTLAND_ Depot 11rae1 - 130 teet &lt;!1 road rronrago .
encfiiiiPfOI 20() fwl dUfl makll I hutll, bHIIIIful yaod
with Iaiii of ftow- and llvl)blleoy. AIID lou I very ,_, 3
blbodl:•:::tlli:Jhanle w111o Yin~ lldlng.
- wiodOwt, lind VW'I
---!Uiihld"'l·
•
$32,500.00

S

\

HElP THE ~ 10 lllllD PIOSPIIOUS .
MUll fOI MEIGS CCIUIITJ' ·
'
IIElP US IN 0111 A11tiPT TO GET -STIY
.
COIIITJ
.
W- 5 It 6 ACID Of IIWIVRT RAT WID!

"'"'-'-UI.NI
ro•s-r ww ....

...

II . . ., ....

.PHOII:

1

1

Box 189 ·

· HAULING

-•rar

Silling onii!PIIflll. o,. 11018 comer lot along • route.
$50,000.00.

........,. .,.... :

........tl.,bdlll

985-4473
667·6179

L.-.
Fartlllzlng, W....,g, and

1:00
OPEN
TO '·""·
PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
1/2819311fn

2D5 North second Ava.
Middleport, OH
POMEROY - Eb1Mar stnM- F. . lil&lt;a home.with 3
bodloomll one ball lleaudlul kltcloln cabinets. newer
root. and FANOturlooic..
·
$111,500.00

s.rt iNking money !llday.

~·

Rocky R. Hupp,·D.C.U. ·Agent ··

1·100·837
·1460
Mowing,

1-26·9

992-2259

IQUipped with shake machine, deep fryer, 0. llnlalll
m8chlne. 4 lrWzer1. o. machine, grill and Iota mere.

TANNING

Sto~t&amp;C=•n

949·2391 or

In Memory

actlona and ltautnce dat•
of propo- action• and of
IN MEMORY OF
draft action• are atalad.
LUCY CHESSER
Final action• may be
app101oc1, In wrtdng, whhln
Who pa..-ctaway
$0 daya of lha dllo ollhla
January 3Q,1887. ·
notice, to The Envlron_,t~ be unto you, and
alloard
of R...,
Rm. 300,
238 E. Town
SL, Columbue,
pe- from God our
OH., 432.1&amp;. Nodoo of any
Falhar, and from tht
appul lhall be ftlod with the
Lord JIIUa ChriiL I
director within 3 daya.
Utank Ill)' . God upon
Propoaad ootlono will
wery
rtmombrance of
~m• ftnal uniHI a writ·
you.
lin ed)udloatlon hNrlng
. PIUL J r2-3
r.q-t to aubmittad wllhln
Loved anciiiiiMd
SO day• of the iaauanco
Btrthl
y Sla ..__
dote; or the dlrootor lftl.. r:====::::::::::.c:===ou=r==
. =··=-=-·
.
IIIWidldrawt lht propo- laotian. Any parlOR may
Rul Estate Gene..l
oubmh com-ta and/or •1-----...;.;.....;;.;.;.;;.;.;...:...;.;,;.;_;;...__ _ __
meadng regarding any dreft
action within 311 dap of the r-----------~----­
dotalncllcotod .. "Aotl!in"; 11
u11d above doee not
Include receipt of a varlflod

.

.

eCo!IIPMt•

• 0

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

,OFFICE 992-2886

.

FOREVER
IROIIIE

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

2·7-92·111

Real E8blle Ganentl

1993 Dynos1y

•G•••• .
······-·
•......u.,
FlEE II

PubliC NotiCe

2.

992-6193

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only
10-19-92

BISSELL &amp; IUUE
CONSIRUCnON

Marketplace

1 - - - -......

· 1993 Caravan .

In State or Out
Of State.

667-COohllo

DEIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY IEFORE

Fifth Avenue

FLITIED WORI

882-1'1-a....

·--·

(lt.onJaltWLillr

.

FORKED RU~
SPORTSMAN
CLUB ..
SUNDAYS
12:00NOON

992-6215
l'olllroy, Ohio

'

day."
Ilia&amp; for 1 doy
Accordlnc to the ~ids World Alma·

895-IAion
917-llorlFolo

°

Public Notice

JUSt RiCEIVED ,J2 'U1111S

HAULING
lOG HAUUIG,
LIMIER, or

•The Area's Numher I

.

..

247-'-F. .
949-Jla......
. 7.0-llrrtluol

Po-r
985

.I

I

'.

MIDDLEPORT • International
Order of Job's Daughlers will be
having a lea for perspcc!ive members on Sunday at 2 p.m . ai lhe
Middlel'!&gt;n Masonic Temple. All
per~pecuve members and parents ·
mvtled to atlend.

E
-·-

~

6711-Pt.. . . _ .
tl8 I••
S7fk\ttilo c17s • a•

tloolloilr S..liool, ....~ ·-t8,0GG .....

Administrator Scou Lucas announces the addition
of Dr. George A. Kusnir, M.D., to the medical staff at
Veterans Memorial- Your Hometown Hospital.
Dr. Kusnir is board certified in Internal Medicine
antl board entitled in Nephrology, diseases related to
the kidneys.
Dr. Kusnir's offices are located ih the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
For information or an appointment, residents may
call992-7463 or 992-7579 .

,..,v

992-M!dfl

I I'3Y. W. SIC-

SHOOT

lHG-92·111

eu"-'••···

... s...,............
.
• Prioo o1 ad rot .n capb1 t.-..11 ........ p11eo ot...t • 7po1at Ia;,. •air ..,..
• s.irdrtollo- ....,..,.o.lo lor onon aftor flntolay (oloook
fOr.,._ lint UJ ad nmolrt ,.,...). Call Won 2:00 P·•·
.r.,. o11or ,.wio•lioto to rub wtwllo•

SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES

POIIIIOY, 011. •sl'"'' l '

c••••lre, 01.

USED RAILROAD TIES

Clouifjed pap• COHr rluJ
/""-ins eelepho~~e
GaJIIa Cooutty Melp c-nty M_,. Co., WV .
AN• Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

• Lo.i.. ....,_,for odo pold lrt ad-.
• F.-Ad.: Ch.•rud F..... odo ...... 15-rdo willt.o

6637
St. lt. 7

BILL SLACK
992-2269

1:00p.m. ~

.Payroll

Call 614-992·

•LIGKT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

DAY JIER)RJ! PUBUCA'na-1
1:00 p.m. Silurclay
t:OOp.m. Monday

. olncomo Tu Pr-allon
-Baakknplng

.SIZED I.UIESTONE
FOR SALE

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
To place an ad

WOLFE&amp;
ISSOClAIII
ACCOUIITIIG

Q•allty
StoHCo.

Removal
A••Fully'lneurad
on.._ AIDe

Rev. Sharon Hausman at 985-4312
for information.

FRIDAY
. R S PLAINS • The Tup·
Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Auxiliary will hold a round·
MONDAY
square dance Friday from 8LOTI'RIDGE
• Cub Scout Pack
~ p.m. Music will be by Her·
316
will
sponsor
a
spaghetti supper
!II!Je Expres.s. Everyone-is welat the Lottridge Community CCriter
on Monday at6:30 p.m. Cost is $4
ORTLAND • The Lebanon for adults and $2 for children and
wnsbip TrusleeS will meet Fri- senior ci!izens age 55 and over.
.at 7 p.m. at the rownship l&gt;uild· Crafts will also be available. Menu
includes spaghetti, tossed salad,
.
.
~garlio bread, pies, cates, coftee and
r-'&lt;lfESTER ·• A special meeting lemooade.
of Sbacle River Lodge No. 453
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
F&amp;AM, Chester, will be held Fri·
illy at 7:30 p.m. There will be ty Veterans Service Commission
....orlt in the E.A. degree. Refresh· will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
JDC"ts wiD be serVed.
Pomeroy.
I
'
SATURDAY
SYRACUSE • The Sutton
MEROY • The Belles and
Square Dance Club will Township Trustees will meet Mona half-way dance Saturday day at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
'
·11 p.m. at the Senior Cili· Municipal Building.
ns Center in Pomeroy. Billy
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
IIC Evus will be the caller.
Township
Trustees will meet Mon·
eatern style dancers invited.
da~ at 6:30 p.m. at lhe Pageville
~
ToWnhall.
~UTLAND • There will be a
MIDDLEPORT • Bible study at
Iince at the Rutland American
Hope
Baptist Church in Middleport
ion Hail on Saturday from 8
will
be
Monday through Feb. S at
. to midnight. Music will be
6:30
p.m.
Classes for all age
vided by Pure Country Band.
groups. Jim Ditty will be the adult
lie inviled.
teacher.
: LONG BO'ITOM • Services at
RACINE • Racine Chapler No.
· Olive Community Church in
Bouom will be Saturday and ,134 Order of the Eastern Star will
y at 7 p.m. wilh Evangelist meet Monday at 7:30p.m. Mem~Vid Crowell. Ravanna, Mich. bers bring hearts or valentine relatPastor Lawrence Bush invites the ed items for auction. The district
hean represenlative ~ scheduled to
public.
attend. Refreshments.
•
'
SUNDAY
RACINE • Racine Village
t CHESTER • ''Growing Through
Council
will mee~ Monday at 7
will meet at Chester
p.m.
at
Star
Mill Part.
lnh••d Mlet~10di.st Church . Call

..

....,.,

Community calendar

•
•

I

:

good deal turns sour --People in the news---- .:

•

•

Topping, Trimming,

••nr • .., ......

····= ......

231 .. ,..,..

TIOUEY STARON CRAFTS

'

�.

29,1993

1993.

Ohio

Kl1' 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtpt

SNAFU® by Brute Beattie

The Dally

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
. ALDER
42 Mobile Hamil
torRent

NORTH

J.U-11

+AKS

•k

t986$2

+9743

.J

'
EAST

+QH
7642

+tn

SOUTH .

Soodo

I NT

· WHAT

Sq. Fl., ll ... lot, 2d
Willa, 2 comploll botho, clnl"'l

,_,,llvtna ,_,, Sbdnn., Wllti'
.. luiiJ CIIIJIIIod, 2 ott., electric
heat, ~ ...ove,
In -

1
refriGerator, -•c wlrea, Home
Nlt'fBink, Roclno, OH.IM-11411-

--Willi
-•Y

ZHO.

3 Bodroom
z
Cor Gorago And
On
Comor 1 112 Aero Lot 114-381111141.

.

z:.:

·3 - - . :i litho, -

::;., ~c.zo:t.~..

--.
-

.... -Jllr old ......
odoNilllll .......... - IIIII Colllo

110, •

N.a:H:'s.

HAPPE~t

-----,...-·=
=·b=~
Ill. II, 1110 .... - · · 11M 182
....,
own .-..,
, . *" ll!ldiillln wllh
'C
_..,., .... -Int.

TO YOU?

LOWEEZY AST ME
TO TELL HER TRUTHFUL
WHAT I THOUGHT OF
HER NEW HAT

nu

-II'"

"Anllquo l'umllon
121
,. ...., w........ 1144'411141.

luy or Mil. R -

Ani.....,

1124 E. lllln 11-, on R1. l24
Puo•OI· Moon: II.T.W. 1liGG
l.lll: to 1:00 ... ~-, 1:00
ta 1:00 p.m. 814 . . . . .

114-

LEND ME A PENCIL,
WILL 'I'OU, MAIWE?

::::r.:-"
..., .., ••ua

DON'T 1-lAVE A

1

1MNOT TI-le

PENCIL, MA'AM ,.
I LE~T IT TO TilE ''KID II IN
KID IN FRONT
OF 'r'OU ·
OF ME.. /"--,,.._ __..

·' PRINCIPAL

FRONT

u.r--'_. . . . .,-=. .
Lolt&amp;Found

6

OI=FICE

Yard Salt

so lnolo Tii111n 11M • Wittlllloll DoorDIIRint Con-

·FRANK AND ERNEST

=-.. . . . .

d111on11111 441 12111 Allor 4 P.ll

Ttll.f IS t'tlt GthJFG.tt

:'Q 1711.
..........'

Gatllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

......

Aolo.-EPSOORE-

C,o1~fTAI'~F.....

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='C., : ...., ....

C.,...tiii.IM 4111171.

S1 Fun Fqulpllllnt

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dlpltwl--

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l!ody And Ins

11417.
Wonlod To Bur: Jtolk Aut•

18 Wllnted to Do

Lo1ry 1J1101r.l1ll IU IJOI.

DR Til&amp; IEAYIC&amp;. T1:i,
Ttlwllllllno. TrN Removal,

Fot--··
..........,............

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b::~=-~c::;
Qolol Co1rW. II.T.I. Coin lloop,
W. ,., .......: Mot: Ill,
AwJ Cfn d!'•ltf1 ~ IDIL

Emplo'lmenl Srrv1ces

11

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in-

,fr• EollmotHI I
Aft• 4p.m.

-.~-lod.­
IIIPII!J'ICII•, o'ertltld ..... new

=·

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411 A. 8 Room Btlcll Aonch 3
IR, 2 a_111ho, 3 F l - - . : :

pllno - I n . . , - · - - 2 8orno, Worlt
,
to
blglnnera.
aclw111 a1 d Crtb Wlih Shod. 1-23110.
- . oncl1ra""":'.;!: It ln- 11 aCN oountty ...... with
-.od;OIIIIM-9!12
· newly
Ylnlon.
tolonlola terge
......
houM
remadalad.

bema.

M~mnw ~

prage,

lludla, hun11na ooblfl, 11J - ·
RedUC*fltM-!11 10.

•a

78

R-larranl·-or-h.
lllorllnc II
HotiL
~14 t•IJIO
• • • ,.... ..... ~
Aa.o trder . . . . All t.a~Hip&amp;
call lllf 2:00 p.Jn,, JIM•~

NOimo.-

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llorood•

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.,. ... Sl'll.
Larp ....,.. • -~~=~
~

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maoao.~

1

Old ollw - - · dnp ..,,
....
tollll -. . . . .Oltoft
- . ..
blkletMa
.....

HELP WANTED

~=-'=1.\ri.:i!~
lipd.at~udllw&amp;.

r,1CfCI1J lld I SC

..•7lU-n your clutter into caJa,
S.U il eiuJ 'W UJGy...fa ghone.

Cor1lftod _
.... 111M, 4,1411
-In , . __
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.....
lng . . . . Jar DIIINID-ill l
Fill~&amp; 11 .. ,

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MNT ADS bring·.
Vacation Money .,

~

An.,.M'Urila,

...... _

.....

i'oUiWiM~

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Rul Fltltl
Wanted

--= . .·
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Inc ...., - - . , . -

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DoorW
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lnlor1IIMW1'11 Coitler'o 8141 Or
ti.IIZ ~ 1hciJI..... ...,.

41 Ho11111 for Rent

N:
Or 4 -

Plu.

21
OHIO

. BullnHI

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No ~On lllltiiOWn:
Nalhi,.I.,.Jii
cowl.

COUNTIIY

Uood

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27 Fu.l .
28 Ar1NIIIIIo
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34

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36 IIIII aolate 37

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42 Nol preltJ
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411 llollart -

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.

50 Drill ••• .: .

13 Co. llhctor... •• •

.,.
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••

.'

OUR LANGUAGE

~&lt;:&gt;?

By JefFrey MeQullln
. ORBICULATE ( "or-BIK-yuh-let")

• Q. I was taughl that FEEL is a link·
ing verb. Is thai still true?

PIECE OF CKAU&lt;AT MCi

Cln!plll &amp;
llalor llomll

W

A. Yes, FEEL may .still be used as
a .linking verb, as in the song "I Feel
Pretty• from "West Side Story."
same verb, though, may also be
as an action verb meaning "to touch
or handle"; the action verb is used
wilh an object, as in "Feel this malerial." You're free to ·u se FEEL as a
linking verb or an action verb, de·
pending on how you feel.

IT eLIP.E RUINED
MY AF'r e I ITE
R:IR L.L.lNO-I '

THIS .MORI-JI NG-...

,•

;:

.

:
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Home
_,.:lm.:..:PftiVIIIII,.;.;nt.;,;;l__:.

to

AITR0· 1GRAPH

6---------~----­
8.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
~~---.....-..------

'Blrthday

10·...___ _ _....;,.._.,;,_ __
Jl.._ ____________

12~-------~--~
18..____;;;..,__ _ _ _ __

which signa are roriianllcally pertecl .for LEO (Julr -.Aug: 22) If y011 and yoUr
you. Mall . $2 plus . a long, Mil-ad· male have a ~~Agreement ab0111 an lm·
drassed, stamped envelope 10 Match· pot1anl luue today, don't air your dlf·
·maker, clo this - · P.O. Box foranceo In public. Others will be unJ;IERNICE
comfortable and ltwtll make bolhol you
91428, Cleveland, OH «101·3428. .
PIICEI (Felr. !!Wion:h ao)ll could be look bad.
BEDE OSOL very diHicult for you to own up lo your VIRGO (Alii· 21-hpt. 22) Subdue tenmlslakeo today. Responding In a hOI· denclee lodly to mentally magnify your
tile, defensive manner won't alter the probioma ond responsibilities. Uoe your
factelf you are wrong.
. lmaglnallorfconetructlvety; not dOIINc·
ARIEl (........ 21-Aprll 11l Your ex" 11\llily.
travagant lncllnallons. could be rathlir , LIMIA (lepl. D-Oc!. 23) Be dliiCrlmlslrong todey.lf you yleld.lo them, there nallng today regordlng your counter· '
Is a poulblllty that .you will walla your . part In joint -tureo, !&gt;Oih IOCI81 and I
resourceo on several thingS you buii.-IM. Your UIICIIWi proCUIII
iiloouldn't.
might nol be up 191*'·
1
TAURUI (April 20:Mitr :18) It may be . IICOIIPIO (oat. It Na o.a) Ulually you
•- - 1113
n«IIII'Y for you to make liCs 1 - a --organlnd lndlvldultl. Today, •
-·-. .
cornlnodatlono today, partlcularty In · llouua,.r, you might do thlnga In 1 hlp:
Chart ~dic:at• you may eotablllh YQUr ln...._,ll wtih peoplt wll0141 l haZard m111ner and what you hope to f
· agroupof.-objeetl-foryourtlllln, lntereote ora nolalcln to yours. Ad)uat- , • complete might- get-.
·
1 IAGITTAIIIUI (Maw. ......_It) Treat
u.,_,lhlld EYWithOUghtheywtUbe· menta might be difficult. ·
1 departure .;_ your uau81 targata ' 01111111 ,.., fl..._ :Ill) Try not to [ ~-- wKh ~ tociiJ.
you -.ld be IUIJhlllugiJ ouccmf\JI. ' view the outcome of-~ Mgatl\llily . Kind ~ llld gllltll d h - • 111111
· ACIU'IIUI (.IM. JO.Peb. 11) Look out today, - a e l l you rio, you lrB llklty ~· wltlle .com·
10(
lnl-ta today but do not . to dl*lla In a manner that OOIIld fulllll i manta Wlllncur wrath•
.
1 i · yourpr~.
I C.VRICONI (Dee. IWan. 11) Thll
~': 1
CANCD (.111Mfi.Ju1J21) Self-&lt;fecep- 'j might no1 beane of your- cllrl!ot
.
· will t~ be IIIII· tlon could be your Aclllllet' hall today.
managing your,_,_ o r - peo:,.::~~=~to look lot ro- Evellllt• lltuellons catefully and ~'+' ple'a manay. Don't put )IOUIMI!In ~ po·u ftnd 11 The All,.,.. kid youi'MII lbOUt worl&lt;lng
11 llllorpohlre you ,_. complllecl t~ take
Mll~er 1not8nt1y .....,, atrwtgth If you're not.
·
.
~ rtlka that you lhouldn't.

'Your

9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

12

Plumbing&amp;
lltltllijj

14

I

v-

*" *:

PI
awn
,..n'~.a:::
,, , ; CJ a "

14·------------.............
15 _ _
446-2342
9J2-2156

4.1111

1

!££tHA,V·

no need leo11e your llome.
Pfqce xour danjtjed gd ktdgyl
15 UHJnll or lea• .3 m,,
3 pgpea. 15,40 paid ia oclwuaee.

~~~~-----

U.AI _ _ ....
_
MI,IM0..0
..

'(()U .

GETON6
!£NII..E,
GlX/0!

•

5.__...,;__________
36

tm

ALE:'X MeR!iiLE Tl-lt&lt;S,V A

4;. ______......______;;;____
..... Cloonlnc. quolly-

AAIIE

"an orbiculate pattern"). R9und out
your vocabulary by adding the shapely adjeetive ORBICULATE.

1------------------3. __________________

l

t

+5

means "circular" or "rounded" (as in

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Cla•p r'

All pass

DOWN

I VI

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

Serv1ces

Lody"o Collo llen'a Col!o, Plo1UIII ~ led

••

Aulo Partl &amp;
AcCUIDI'III

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

33 Farm• for sale

' I~

'.

::........"""'~"!lil. _,

---....
-·-....

Pllnto Ad.

-

Help Wanted

=

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3 llecelwlr of

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79

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oolnlod
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Mrfoul
In-

011-POII--IIdon'
,... loao 1o 1ho m H Juot
OIIIIOM7S-1lS7.

. ..-. . . . 211,.,

CA~H~U

SChull - · SI,OOO Rlbotl On
81-od
llodola,
F - Cltf llolillo Homoo, IMt418MO
Sc...lz. 1411V, Zbdrm., 1ot11

t_..,, Willi Bod Ell(llno,IM-245-

-

Want to:
PIN cioAaEXTRA

Bualneas
Training

14

IIIII

-~~~ To lur: Pille Or llolor

71D.
CUJ1~11111M,
.,....... XT 100.

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...... -- --•••u lll!t .w.
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...... 1111.

- - .-.-lonll

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BORN LOSER

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1

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.

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miller

7 , .. of..,_. ,

••••

Pews.

..

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-

tlf MINI&gt;S MY
ki:YS ANI&gt;

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Eost

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...

40"dd" Dllp lUck Ins
- . Hal 28 1lr 11" FlU ·11' 01

z

E111trMr
54 AnWoptl
55/offlnnlllye
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57 Brllllfllt

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7

33111'1 Jlllrlnlf

dig.

.....
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noc-..,llm,J~M - ·
-....lieN-

town
32-P-

eo••••

52 lllldch

Declarer WQn ~t's club king with
his ace. Tbis was gbod play, because if • E " V
0 J K
M 0 J S M 'E 0 T
East began with K-J or K-10 doubleton
.
of clubs, the suit woold be blocked.
ZBHHDZA,
IVK
,KUDZD ' R
OJ
South, thinking· he could see nine
.
· tricks by way of two spades, two ZOSRJD
SUEPLZDO
UBND
KJ
bear.ts, foor diamonds and one
•'•
immediately played out three roworlsl UDIZ
AJYZ-PDKKDZ
GJZLR
JO
of diamonds. However, West
tlefeilders look their three club .~...... 1
c a v DR
1z J Q o .
'
and exited with a heart. South had
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thai's why 1hey made 1omorrow - eo - don't
way bict to band to cash the h"'trt I · _llave 10 do overylhlng today." _ 11e11y Jones (Lea Meriwether).
ace. Eventually be lost a spade
and finillled oae down.
T~e simplest play is to lead a low
amond from band at trick two.
lAIII
there is no t111uble in cashing the
-•nl
~
trlcb.
·
Reese's final paragraph (slightly
-'· ..,
edited) sums up Ibis predicament well:
.....,
'It's not easy to frame any general ad·
vice about tb- deals where a singleton bonor Is capable of causina ·
K AND
block. Just recognize that there
be a problem and 4oo't lay down
card until you are aure yoo can
YDlU' lricb separately.•
&lt;0-. ...,ANIIBMirlc-J'"'JIIII...,.

u.r: ____ _ , ..

lind -

51

ercise in communication.

Tonlllle --RIWARO.
. . . . IllS.

loll:
-

48111wordl

in Of
ambition
that life
can ~~:~~~~~I
coune, all
ambition
means
thinp to different people, but
bridge player shoold want to play
ter. And a good place to start is
,ence Reese's book "Bridge for Ambi·
tious Players• (Gollancz, ,12, The
Briqe World, 39 West 94th Street,
New York, NY 10025-7124). In deseribing 65 deals, Reese provides
many pearls of wisdom and dry
humor.
Today's deal from the book is an ex·

~ntlquH

53
Pllrlllntl, well

JIPIRIII

111111
42 I.Qer ol .,.
44 Wreltll
411 Part of railroad track

U I may start by paraphrasing Sam·
uel JohDIOR, "When a man is tired
ambition, he is tired of life; for there

44

n"""" All IIIIIIIIM Plld,

helltllloll

By PbUIIp Allier

h4411-~~~ ln~n,lortiN!nO.
1821111llor-. .

~ K8111· 114 ue

41 Electrical

14 , .. bllllnd
11 Gola out
17 Copf
18 Spooltlly
21 Prudent
22Pient
contllnlra
24 lllll.ftml
25 Unit ol

. Everyone should
retain ambition

NOW
YOU TELL
ME!!

.CII tor

, ....,_, , 112 ....Exr~

13 Sp•ech

31~~•

Norlll

Opening lead:

BARNEY
Real Estate

West
Pass

12 Llyw ~f

21 lUI or Apple

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Business
OpportunitY

21

36 Salary date
36llltlr-

39 Slndwlch
type(-.)
40 SOund of

dll11111roYII

21 011••, .
27 Bucclnllr

+10764
• Al085
+AKS
+AI

Help Wanted

I Tropic81 fNit

IE,..,_

Clltfi!ICY

+KJZ

11

...
-

341.ad

35Per-

I
l

tl Rrr

I

..

1

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II I I I
i
I. -.,,.,=.-t;... . : ., ...:. 8
B L I CM
s
. . . .

.

~

S 1 D EE M

A dummy went to a dude
ranch lasl summer. He said he
was surrounded by Indians
and thai he only escaped by
buyingablanketandlwo-.

-iiF::7..;.;,_ -1

Complete lho chuckle quoted

•
_
•
_
_
by filling in the' missing words
L......L.-L......L.--l'--..L....._J you d.,elop f•om Sie1&gt; No. 3 bolow .

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

f) ~~i'!~~~~~ LETTERS TO

t

III I I II I

'
SCUM-I.ET$ ANSWERS
/ ·18
Vendor · Giver· Opine - Mutton • MORNING
A true optimist is someone whQ leaves the dinner
dishes in the sink because they'll feel more like doing
them in the MORNING.

.

-....
~

•••

..":

...

'"'

....

.~

•••

·-·
~·

'

�•

1993

a 'Sniper' has success in its crosshairs.

Beat of the Bend...

Review.

by Bob Hoeflich
The important role of the Meigs
County Emergencr Medical Services in helping residents with their
health can: problems js emphasized
by the fact tllat the services made
2,498 runs in 1992.
Bob Byer, director of the services, reports that units took 1,219
patients to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 336 to the Holzer Medical
Center; 196 to Pleasant Valley
Hospital and 207 to other instiwtions last year. Units drove
64,728.7 miles in answering the
approximaae 2500 calls or an average of 26.4 miles per run. It' figures with our world as it is today,
the services will continue to grow
and grow.
Incidentally, in 1992 the servii:es assisted or handled a total of
39 calls involving helicoplelS transporting ~IS. With January not
quite fmished, the services has
worked with nine such calls
already this year.
And here arc some tips in case
'you have to get help-aDd I hope
you don'L First, post the 1elephone
number of lhe services in localions
where it will be readily available to
you day or night-the number is
992-6663. If you have to call the
services do try to keep your cool
while giving instructions and do

Doug Adkins, IJid !heir ~hru
Megr both Vel~ IIIII Doug
nurses at lhe Ho~ Mcdicll Center. and Paula Kay Swiaher Bonnett, manager of lbe Pizza Hut in : : :R
Pomeroy, and her husbud Mike •••112(011tofftve)
Bonneu who is also employed in TriSI8r Pictures
the pizza business, 8lld lheu: son, (Now p/ayiiiJl IJI tire Sprl11g Valley
ByK]i:VJN
Chad. The Adkins reside in Gallia CiMm~J 7. Check local listings for
PINSON
County and the Bonneus live on time) ·
Lincolil SL, in Middleport.
I know you WMt to join me in
Every now .and then, a rose '
wishing the Swishcrs happy. blooms from amidst a pile of • a ,helicopler exttaction following a ·
happy anniverssry.
garbage.
successful mission, Beckett· is
Sni~r, starring Tom Berenger teamed 11p with a civilian sharP.George Bums has marked his and Billy Zane is such a rose.
· shoorer from the National Security
97th birthday IJid still is appwiug
In a pile of action films with Council·who has zero experience in
as an enter11inu. He wlll be guest- sound-alike.tides and steroid boys the jun,le.
ing on "Golden Palace" on Feb. 12. pumping tons of ammunition into
TheJ,J' mission is io take out a
Seems like that says SOIIICihing for nameless baddies, Sltlptr stands Columbian drug lord who their
humor and smiling has got to be out as Platooll did a few years 11g0 intelligence reports is planning a
closely related. So do iccp thai during the rash of Viettwn flicks.
coup for Panama's el~~:tion day in
smile going.
With lliOSl shoot 'ern up action- order to place his own man in
·,
adventure films, the only brains offJCC.
displayed arc lhe ones which hit the
Beckett and Miller get along
wall after someone gets shot
SCOTI'SDALB, Ariz. (AP) through the head.
Rock musician Gunnar Nelson's
Sniper, however, is a psychorestored 1965 Ford Musrang con- logical thriller with some thought
vertible was stolen l'rom an exotic behind i~ Although it does not lack
The Lydia Council of the Bradcar auction.
. for action, the viewer does not have ford Chwch of Christ met rcccndy
Nelson "wanted someone cool to worry about overdosing on 100 at the church.
to buy it, someone who'd keep it mry fire fights and explosions.
The meeting Ojlened with prayer
like it was. There was a lot of work
The real story is not the action, · requests and prayer by Janice Fe~,
put into this car. But it's just hut what goes on in the minds of president Secretary 110d 1ICBSUrcr s
gone," said Gary Grosjean, Nel- two men as they struggle through reports were giver).
son's manager. "It's such.a drag."
the mission.
.
A shopping trip to the Lancaster
The car, which organizers estiThomas Beckett (BeRnger) is a Mall was discussed.
mated was worth $30,000 to Marine sniper making his living
A wedding shower wa5 held at
$35,000, was taken Sallp'day ni~ht cutting down political figures who the church for Kristi Parsons
lhrougli a hole cut in a chain-link get in the way of lhe United Stale's bride-elect ofTim DursL ·
'
fence, auction officials said.
South American plans.
A
D.epression
Doll
class
was
A police spokesman said ThursWhen bis spoaer is kllled during held Tuesday with Karlits Slump
day that lhe car hadn't been found.
as·leadcr.

not move someone who is burt
unless lhe individual 'is in danger.
Keep the patient warm and comfortable. Mark your location with
lights or a .bright cloth and rna1tC
sure your house numbers are large
enough· that they can be spotled
readily .by lhe squad members who
arc conting to help. .
S~ has had a big upset and
already its new catalogue has
become a collectable. That clidn 't
lake long did it? What's $0ffiJ. to
happen with lhe company ts slill a
bit vague so in the meantime it's
business as usual at your local
Scm store. ·
.

Would you believe that Paul and
Mae Swisher will be observing
their 65th wedding anniversary at
their home on Hysell SL, in Middlqxm on Feb. 11? Now that IS a
long time.
.
Paul and Mae have a son, Bill
and his wife, Nola, who live on ·
nearby Grant St. in Middleport.
Grandchildren and great-grandchildren are Dave Swisher and wife,
S110dy, and their children, Robbie
and Kim-Dave is a major in lhe
U. S. Army and is stationed at Fort
Leavenworth, · Kansas; Velvet
Swisher Adkins and her husband,

a

Convertible stolen

Sun&lt;la'.

7-~ n·nt"

about as well as gasoline and a lit

m~

is none 100 happy with
being stuck in a life-lhrcatcning sit- .
uation with a wet-behind·the-ears
Yuppie who has never killed a man
and Miller finds himself relying on
a lifelong military man who is so
us,ed to operating alone or with ~ .
partner, he can'r take orders from ·
someone with no experience.
~
On the outside, Becken is the
characteristic nail-chewing leather:
neck. A cinematic peck into his
psyche, however. reveals he is a
man with a conscious, a man who
shares his mind with the f11ce 0 ['
every man he has ever killed - all
7Softhem.
"

Illinois.hands OSU fifth straight loss - C-1

l\'liddleport's ·
contaminated
'dream home'

•

Diamonds area man's worst
enemy • Kevin Pinson ' Page B-8
.

B-1

'Animal Talk'.· Beat of the Bend
By
Page ·A·S
-·
. Bob Hoeflich
.
•'

•

•

. ..

•

.

Inside
Along tbe river ---.. -Bl-8

Business!Farm....... - .....Dl-8
Clllsslfled ----------Dl-7
Deatlls. ••• _ ..........- ......... ..A.-2
Editorai .• _ .. _. ..........- ....A4

Sports ..... - ..............- ..:..Ct-8

•

'Vol. :17, No. &amp;0
Copyrlghtocl tm

15 Secdon 134 Pages

Mlddleport-:-Pomeroy~lllpolls-Polnt Pleasant, January 31, 1993

A llu.IUmodlo Inc. n-pepor

.Going...going.••gone! ·
: Board to act on BREC bid for Southwestern
'GALLirOLIS - . Th~ now- were on hand for the auction, convacated Southweslenl High School ducted by Lee Johnson of Crown
wUI become the new headquarters City. Prior to the auction, Gallia·
fofBuckeye Rural Electric Cooper- Local Business DirectOr Max Haf- ·
ative hie., pending approval of felt outlined the specifications of
BREC's bid for the structure and the sale and answered questions
l
20 acres of propen)' by the Gallia' about the property from the crowd.
BREC Genenl Manager Willer
County Local Board of Education.
. . ~'no ' ·
••
V.
Truitt ir. said acquilition of !be
The COO(lel alive, which services
is pari of a
customers in a nine-county area, · bUildings and
tendered a hil!h bid of $125,000 long-range p;n to up'-rll4e· all
during an aucuon at the school site facets of the coopemli~ s service.
Saturday. The bid was made on BREC provides electricity II&gt; some
behalf of BREC by Gallipolis aaor- 15,000 meters in Gallia, Lawrence,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counney D. Dean Evans.
l.f the board accepts the bid, ties, and 11&gt; smaller areas of Athens,
BREC will come into =.ssion of Scioto, Ross and Pike counties.
Truitt noted that the sile "woula
· lite buildings and the .d. Excluded from lhe sale by the board were be a much more central point in lhe
all unauached furniture and equip- BREC service area, and provide
ment, all equipment in the bus . greatly improved access and faciligarage and the modul~~r class- ties for both syslem operiltions and
.. BID f?.ETAILS -Buckeye Rural Electric
·vacated buildings ror its ll'ew beadqparters. - . rooms. AU items are to be removed administrative requirements."
It would probaj&gt;ly be· 1994
Coc!Penitlve IDe. offered a :lb bid or $125,000
Reviewing tbe bid are, kom ldt, Gallipolis
from the propenf within 60 days
a move is made from
before
ror ille.Soutbwatera Hlp
ool site at an auc. attorne~ D. Deaa Evans, .Gallla Local Superln·
after closing of the ~e. while the
BREC's
current headquarters in
modulars and fiber optic cable shall .
• tloa Slit!D'day.
apP,rovll of the bld 'by
leadeD! Robert Lnaial, -rr-nr Judy SaUD•
Gallipolis
at 143 Third Ave., he
the GaUia County
lloU'd oiEdacadoa, tbe
dera and Walter V. Truitt Jr., BREC's geaenl
be removed within 120 days.
Galli&amp; Ulcal Schools Treasurer added.
"The old 'headquatters facilities
Judy Saunders said the board may
·
reached
their maximum utilization
act on the bid at a special board
meeting slated for thts *ek. The a number of years ago, while the
date the meeting had not 'been outside operations and administrade!ermined· as of Saturday. U not, tive requirements have been1
the. bid will he considered at the stretched 10 their limits Iii lcc;ep·up
regular
monthly meeting on Feb. with the modein service standardS
· By KIMN'I'INSoN ' .
throUgh the new,longer kiCks.
IIUouilhs." the lag book was ttansour customers demand," Truitt
22.
~Seli!lael Newa·Stalf
Between the tl•(iL, "lock
Continued on A-2
.
.
More .than 50 people, including said. ~
"If the Southwestern High
prospective
bidders
and
spectstorS,
· HOGSETT - Just as it wa~
believed to have done at the Gallipolis Loeb and Dam dedicalion
'.
ceremony more tban a half cenlury
ago,' the J.S. Ltwis chugged
through ihe old locki 'for the last
·time Sllli!J'day morning. ·
~
In a quiet ceremony. wilnessed
by oilly a handful of press, mem• bers of the U.S. ;t.rmy Corps of
• E111ilt'1 ~ra and weD wisbers braving
APPLE GROVE - Apple Grove the Ohio River. The company is a
.; the' sharp-e(Jged cold, lhe small tow
Pulp and Paper Co., Inc. has subsidiary of Parsons &amp; Whitownad 6y Madison Coal and Supapplied for-permission to build a temore, Inc. of Ryebrook, N.Y.
'Jlly Company became the las! ves- •
''They're doing things a bit out
26-acre industrial landfill at lhe site
.·.sel tb "'QCk through" the outdated
of
its
~sed Slbillion pulp and of order," Jerry Ray, Water
system.
.
paper mtll Qear Apple Grove, . Resources assistant permiuing
Kathy· Gibbs, acting public
according to a report in Saturday's cbief told the Gazette. "We .usually
llffairs chief for the Corps. said the
receive the application for wasle
Charleston Gazette.
Lewis is believed to be one of the
the company has applied with water trc8tment before we hear
boats which
through the old
the stale Wolter RCSOUICCS Division anything about a landfill."
. locks at the 1938 dedication cerel.ast year lhe Water Resources
for a permit the build the dump admony. But because the boat
Board
rocommeruSed the stale legis·
jacent 10 i~ pr~ plant along
changed hands several times and names also - it is impossible
to verify, she said.
lhe new Robert C. Byrd Locks
and Dam officially went into operLOGBOOK -'Loeb aad dam leaders Roe Halley, left, and
. ation this mominJ when lhe AshJ• RJme trusrer lllllolbook lrOia the GaiUpolla Locks and Dam
land~ Company s S~rAmtf!ca, .
lodlhclae 10 die R~ C. Byrd Locks and Dam lol*bouse Satur•J)uslung barges filled WJth gasoline,
day aoral•l as tile Ill!!' s:rn. aoes operationaL (11mes-Sentlnel
became the first tow to pass
pboto by KeYIIl ..._)

r.openy

THANKS THE
1992 CONTRIBUTORS

M elge C ouney Council on Aging, Inc.
M.Jitlpu ';l:lae Elel"'ior- Center, 1st Floor
(814) 992·2181
MJbet , 'Y Heig,te, f'0. Box 722, . F'cl1 oeroy, 01io 45789

1992 DONOR LIST
SERVICES lt PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

Ruth Allen
Gerald Anthony
Emma Adams
Nonnan &amp; Mary Allen
Frances MarthaAnderaon
Charles &amp; .iean Alkire
Coelle Alkire
Galha Alvanado
Shirley Appleby
Charles Aldndga

AT THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER
A lzhelmer's Disease/Related
Disorders (famUy caregiver tmtn·
tng and support groups)

Care Support System (aisess·
ment of hbspualfzed seniors for
foUow-up

care after discharge)

. Case Management (ldent(jiJtng
problems and obtaining asststance)

Center Dining (nutritious meals)

Day Activities .
Educational Programs

Health Assessment
Health Cllnlcs
Information and Referral
Protective/Legal AssiStance
Recreational/Social Activities

S upportlve Assistance (for example. fUUng Jut Insurance/

medical forms and answering

benefit questions)

·

Tax Assistance
Tra!Jsportatlon and Escort {eight
uehtcles, Including one van with
a wheel chair lift. are auailable •
for personal/medical trips)

SERVICES &amp;: PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS
t.

IN THE HOME
Chore ServiCe (cleantng·laundry)

Homemaker /Health Services

Home Delivered Meals
Home Maintenance
repairs)

.

(minor heme

~

Outreach

Respite Care (assiStance for
famO.Ies who are c:artr!(l for an
elderly family member In their
home)

.

•

Gladys Dillon
Charlie Kisor
John Shain
Gamel Ervine
Lewis Kennedy
Betty Sayre
Freda Edwards
Mary Kautz
Albert &amp; Clara Smith
Edwllld &amp; Edna Evant
Eura Largenl
Josephine Stiles
Eth-' Euler
Amber Lohn
Oria &amp; Pat Smith
Wather &amp; Katherine Evans Calvin &amp; Mabel Lane
Francis &amp; Dorothy Shaeffer
Doris Lewis
Fred &amp; Bertha Smith
HaNey Eriewina
Mr &amp; Mrs Allen Eicflinger
Harold &amp; Ell2abetti Lohse
J . A. &amp; Dorothy Smith
Mary V. flloterday
Mary Lyon
Rblh Simpson
Wanda Eblin
Dorothy Long
Daiay Sayre
R~beccaAnderson
Ray Fosler
Mary (UDle) Diana Family . Mary Seaman
Mary Arnold
Halon Fisher
Mary Lou&lt;*lor
EiiMn D Smith
.
WiMiam'L. Folmer ·
Joeeph U.vlng
Hanrietta Sinclair
Louise Bearhs
Edison &amp; Bemice Baker
Ruby Frick
NBMaomlrM: eLondonUtle,
Jolvl &amp; Mary Southern
1
·Eu,etta Bechtle
Wanda Fetty
June Soullby
Ada B1ssell
William &amp; Hazel Fox
Robart &amp; Martha Hamm
Joe &amp; Myrtle Sisson
Goldie Basham
Eari &amp; Lilah Frecker
cella Hart
Fay Shultz
Helen Brown
Reymond Furbee
Jilckie Hildeb.mnd
Mary A. Samuels
Julia Boyles
MariaS. Fosler
Ronald McDade
Pete Shields
Helen Bosler
Aretta Flint .
Judy McHaffie
Lois Ann Smith
. Connie Black
Wanda Findley
Gene &amp; Dayton Mci:lmy
George &amp; Vytlce Sellers
Juanita Bachlel
Batty Fultz
Virgil McElroy
Harrlena Slnclal~
Eugene &amp; Rila Buckley
Roger &amp; Mae Fahneolock. Mae McPeek
Nellie Smilh
Gertrude Bass
Mr &amp; Mrs Carl Gorby
Kerm~ McElroy
Rose Slssori
Ed Bumem
Mary Grueser
Diane McElhattan
Carroll &amp; Kathryn Swanson
Virginia Buchanan
Thelma Garrell
Camline Miller
Camlyn Smith
Laura Baker
Erwin &amp; Margaret
Bruce &amp; Donna Morris
Eleanor Smith
Margaret Biaettnar
Gloeckner
· Neva Moore
Helen Swartz
Mabel GoH
Joan Morris
Ray Sayre
,Mary Bush
Paulina Myers
Troll &amp; Ema Schoenleb
John Brewer
Gary &amp; Susan Gr"'l"ry
Chuck &amp; Daisy Blakeslee George Genheim.er
Evelyn Murray
Betty Spencer
Ethel Grueser
Donald &amp; Betty Maurer
Lawrence Stewart
Freda Bowen
Henri ella Bailey
Martha Greenawey
Maya G. Mora
Jane Teafoid
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Burdette Ralph Green
Gaorga Molden
Doris Thomas
Edw1n &amp; Marg~e Bumem Roberi &amp; Geneva Gardner Cecilia Milch
Bessie Turley
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Walter Burl&lt;e
Holly Green
Violet Morarity
Kenneth Thomas Jr.
Homer &amp; Alpha Bailey
Aoberi &amp; Maxine Durst
Jessie Martin
Edna Triplett
Loretta Beegle
Robert &amp; Virginia Duckworth Joan May
Edgar &amp; G"'lla Thomas
Elhel Hug,as
·
Mary B. Mossman
James &amp; Eleanor Thomas
Elmer Bailey
John &amp; Martha Dudding
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Joe Moscorro
Sadie Trussell
Robert &amp; Bemice Bailey
Nan Moore
Hazel VanCooney
Malinda Christy
Willie Davis
Manley Christy
Dorothy Downie
Dorothy Neuliling
Paui .Voll
Marcella Chapman
Fannie Durst
Plllll Nease
Sarah Voss
Edna Chrisman
Clarence &amp; Judy Daniel
Ethel Newman
Linda Ward
Ernesl &amp; Sadie.Carr
Focie Hayman
Addie Norris
Monad Wilson
Sarah Caldwell
Emest Damewood
Bernice Nelson
Mabel Waddell
Elizabelh' Cannan
Ons Hubbeid
George &amp; Margaret Nichols Samuel &amp; Beverly Worl&lt;man
Ruba l Caldwell ,
Marvin &amp; Geraldine Dountz Maxine Owens
Nel Wilson •
Dorothy Deyo
· Ecith O'Dell
Michael Wri!tJt
Mildred Caldwell
Otis &amp; T~Niha Caslo
Dorolhy ~
Susan &amp; Raymond Oliver
Pearl Williams
Levanch1a Cain ·
Aelha Day
LuciUs Owens
Beulah Waid
Dalton Henry
Sam Pickens
Margaret B. Weber
Jewell &amp; Nonna Curtis
Reuben &amp; Thelma Collins Allen Dill
Domthy Pierce
Ema Wayland
ala Hysell
Inez Pooler
Vlclor &amp; Allee Wolfe
Evelyn Casto
Doug C1rcle
Virginia Hoyt
Erwin &amp; Lucille Potrelz
Audra Will
Carole Cole'!'an
Lula Hamplon
Deylon &amp; Irene Phillips
James &amp; Katie Weber
Harold &amp; OUida Chase
Kelhel Hallield
. Roy Pierce
v
Jim &amp; Jlnny Whitlatch
Lola Clarl&lt;
David &amp; Deloris Holter
Albert &amp; Jo AM Ouivey
May, &amp; Debbie Whltlalch
Kenneth Cundiff
April &amp; Marv Hamm
Ella Quillan
·
Torry &amp; Paula Whi~atch
Mary L Crossan
Allen Hill
Lulu Mae Oulvey
Mlna Walker
Geraldine Cross
Robart &amp; Eleanor Hoover Dorothy Reibel
W. E. William
Bemice Hawk
Amold &amp; Aorenco Richards Leah Williams
Ella Cullums
Betty Carsey
Mildred &amp; Paul Hudson
Josephine Rltcllie
Clara &amp; Sam Williams
Carl Casto
Helen Hood
Frances ROIJBh
Henry &amp; Kalhlean Wells
James Coltrell
•
Wilkie Holman
Pllllline RidenOIJr
Harold Wolford
Mildred &amp; Greta Carnahan Carl &amp; Oorolhy Hendricks Virginia A""'
Helen L White
Mae Crouser
Ora E Hill
Laona AC~a~;h
Jean Wrighl
Audrey Ciarl&lt;
Nellie Hatfield
Mary Rinehart
Mae Weber
Andrew J Chonko sl al.
Wm &amp; Elizabeth Hobstetter V10la Rumflald
Belva Willard
HHda A Harns
Marilyn &amp; PMirce Rica
Gwlnnle While
Florence Circle
Betty Carpenter
Rhoda Hall
' Maxine &amp; Slaigg Ray
Galland &amp; Elizabeth Weaver
Jeneves Chesher
Carrie &amp; Pallnglas
Ecilh A-'eer ·
Floyd Webor
·
Martha Chambers
Mildred Ihie
Brenda R..x.lph
Bernice W~aon
Edna Cannan
Violet Jarrell
Eva Robson
Thomas &amp; Julia Willoughby
Bonn1e Conde .
Bertha Johnson
G.m.t Roulh
Jane Wallon
Lucille Clay
Blidle 0 Johnson
Harold &amp; Margory Roush
Lewis &amp; Emettine Williams
Helen Combs
Margaret Johnson
Ed Rlnick
Helen Williamt
Perry Curtis
Ruth Johnson
Nonga Roberta
Gerald Wildermuth
Robert Chapman
Carroll &amp; Mildred Johnaon Orion &amp; Kate Roueh
Margarat Wolfe
Freda Carpenter
Marvin Kelly
BNI &amp; Mary Ruulll
Orville Wllea 1
Exa Mae Christian
Chesler &amp; An alta Knig,t
Marthd Roulh
Nelle Welherho~
Alia Dill
Golda Krackonberger
Herm.n &amp; Thelma Reetle Robert &amp; Norma Wilson
Leo Davidson
Sadie Kramer
Rose Reynolds
Alfred Yeaugor
Mary Davidson
Marvin &amp; Maljone Kaabough Nina Aoblnton
·
Eva Dessauer
Robert King
Wilbur Matilda Rowley
'
Lorena Ravia
Adeline Klrt •
Dorothy Roller
·
MaryG ' Durat

a

I.

Pro

iJ;;~r;;;v~:;~;;;~;;raii";;~rspboto).

SUPPORT YOUR
SENIOR CENTER ·

.().ut w_it~ the ·~ld, jn·-wi~h t~e .new

BUY A 1993 MEMBERSHIP
Your paid membership to the 'Meigs County
Council on Aging, Inc. is a measure of
support for the Multipurpose Senior Center
and for the many seiVices ~ provides. Each
paid membership received verifies to
regional, state and national funding agencies
that the Senior Center is providing needed ·
programs to oldet adults.

Sunny. High In upptr'40s.

Weather. _____........ ..A-3

J

Meigs County Councn
on Aging, Inc.

·-

:t

•

The mother-daughter banquet
will be held May 7 816:30 p.m. imll
commiuecs were appointed.
.
The January sunshine baske.•
will go to Helen Kibble.
.
The.next meeting will be held Ill
the home of Delores Frank at 7
p.m. with Karlita.Stump as a conJ
tributing hostess.
,
Refreshments were served 10
: those named and Becky Amberg~
Diana Bing, Carolyn Nicholson,
Gerry Lightfoot, Jackie Reed 1
Brenda Bolin, Charlotle Hanning
and Cherie Williamson.

'.

•

· .Kevin PiaiOD Is a staff writer
· ror Ohio Valley PubUsblng.

Mother-daughter banquet set

.

~

of

.

=
:nu::=:"u;:=t

Scho;ol site is acquired, it sho'!ld
provtde the necessary
10
relocale and .upgrado our
uarand

Southwestern, opened in 1957·
and vaclted last fall wbelt Oallia
LocaliiiiMd Ill soconclary . . . . .
to River Vllley High School, was
evaluated 10 determine soundness
for remodeling. Truiu Slid. Preliminary estimiiiCS indicated lhe work
could be done for u much as SO
perccn t less than erecting a new
building, he added.
However, "additional architectural and engineering studies would
be done to asswe lhe best possible
return on investment before the ·
project goes ahead," Truitt said. · •
~'tOOperltiVC has been located near down10wn Oallipolis sini:e
its orpnization ,in 1938 and moved
into its present headquarters 'i ll
19 52. At the lime, BREC served
less than half of its current consumer membership, but grew siJnifiCBDdy from its originall)alc tn
the Gallia-Lawrence area.
~
lhe board's approval d lhe bid
would Dlark the second struciUJe
the district bas sold Iince die &amp;:Jo.
sure of three of its
. ~ buildings ldst fall. The North Clillla si1e
was sold late last year at auction io
~~lis businessman Rassell

Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper
applies for landfill permit

The cost for membership for 1993 is $3.00
per individual. What is your $3.00 used for?
The dollars raised through th·e Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center Membership
campaign will be used to pay for the cost of
printing and mailing 'the newsletter six times
per year and as local match dollars for in·
home services.

.-sed

You may stop in at the Senior Center or mail
your membership to: Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center, P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . If possible, please ·
include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ·
Thank you lor your support.
************************************

NAME
ADORESS

lalurc raise the limit on dioxin,. a

byproduct created by pulp ·mills,
laheled by some liS toxic. Gov. Gaston Capenon halted the measure for
·further study before lawmakers
voted. The legislature will be faced
with lht; recommendation agaill '·
next sesston.
Caperton said he b¢Iieves Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper is willing 10
build the plant with or without an
Continued on A-2

PHONEN MBER
1992 GROUP DtSTRIBUTORS
CHURCHES

E. Letart Unltod MOihodial Women
, MI. U..lon Bepllal Church
MI. Moriah BepUat Church
Ml 'Moriah Church of God Ladles Auldllary
Rulh lllttlonory Circle I
Pomeroy United Melhodlal church
Trinity Church
Racine Unlt.d Melhodiol Mon
Racine Unltod llethodlat Women ,
Aocktprlngo Unitod llethodltt Women'• Club
Sliver Run lleplltt Church
- laurel Clift Fr•llelhodlal Church
. Roclne BIPUtl Sundoy School CIHt 14
Tuppera Pleina Church of Chrlal
ORGANIZATIONS
Dr- Webeler Poat 138
Dioobled American Valereno, Chapler 53
v-... llemorlarl Hoopital
Racine Amerlc., Legion AuJdlliory 1602
The Bridge Club •
Return JonalhM Melge ChiPier O.A.R.
1
BUSINEISSEIS
SOuthern Ohio Coal Co"!pany
Hubllard'e o... Hou•
Flaher'allg Wheel
Swlther lr LohH Ph~~m~•y
Ctark'a JIIINify Store
The Cor- Ae.IMirenl
Anderton'• Furniture &amp; Appllanc•
IIIMk Hou..
llcCiure'e FllliiHy R•IMirMt (Pomeroy)
FrulhPharm•v
·
Ahereldo Food Marl
RutlenoiFumllure

'

•

arternoon. Dab!f lias beell estimated at
$150,000 ror tlle
ess. (OVP pbaCD by Mlacly

BUSINESS DESTROYED BY FIRE Jobn's Aato Repair, lc1eated. at 102 Horton
Street, Muoa, wu deat~oyed by fire Friday

Keams)

'

·

. Auto·shop fire damage estimated..at $250,000
MASON - Detnaac 10 an auto side lhe lKisinCss at the1time, but no
repair shop in Muon has been es- one - injured.
limated at nearly $250,000, after
lhe lite depai buent had trouble
lire ~k lhe business Friday af- · fiahting lhe lite bcct!tJSC' Ihe met!il
ternoon.
buil~ had no windows. F'uemen
Muon firemen rcccivcd' tbc call tried tWICe to enJa' lhe buildina. but
shortly befote 2 p.m. aaJoltn's AulD could not. They were forced 10
Repair, 102 HariOII Street. where !c:ecp the business "warercd down"
fini had broken 0111, The blaze ~ . : until !hi: roof collapsed
belleVIId to have lltslted from a
Se~~· occurred inkeroaene heater.
side tho
. • belleVIId to be
A fire department spqkeS"'M from lhe 10~ vehicles that were
said four people
werc workin&amp; in- inside a1 lite. •. ....
: ~ b:lllcd
.

·er-··

1 •'

.

r

.
1

. ''

i

.

..

very near the

buiJdmg were saved
from clamaF·
Details of lhe fire II'D still under

invCsliplioo. Tbe ~ owner,
Jobn Roush, wu in Sbutll Clrolinl
at lhe tine d tile
owners ·
u well • emme• d !be vehicles
inside lrc 1101 knclu.
MasoD '1M wi'lcd by the New
Ha-. Paneroy llld M~
clcplrlmalll, • well • the Mascia .

.,.._llld

EMS.

.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32179">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32178">
              <text>January 29, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3368">
      <name>joseph</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6355">
      <name>vore</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
