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..
•

""'-pomeroy.4Aiddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

· : Plgc . D8 .Sunday Times · sentinel

- .

W.ltted by

G6 Soil II Water

~Dlslrict

_
. . GALLIPOLIS - House Bill 88
·.:(dclll !ri1J1 pollution conuol affect&lt;ill ,water quality) was enacted in
.·Nquw~ Of ,1991. Although many
: ~belle~ it is just another bill
:wllidl ril not.affectlhern, in cer, t* ~ il will aker loggin8 tech·
.cl in the past and there·

:u.•: be IOUCIIIIIIII)' Uves.

ft1)ll aloging standpoin~ ero-

·.

: tioll COIIUOI must be used in order
·111 ..,_ willd or water erosion of

:·:dl810il and-to conuol pollution of

~~ -.Of dlo !lilt, the owner, OP.U·
; · 1M' or person responsible for s1lvi;~:~~~~n~ qJCnlions shall apply con-

; llhllioll practices and follow an

~ ·Gf

· ..,. IIIII management plan in
;ICIIUI I x with the "BMPs (Best
;::I'
11 Practices) for Erosion
.•c-ili.CII Logging JOOI" and may
": file 1K11 plans with the soil and
•· Wiler couervation district in the
: I:GIIIII)' w11ere such operations are
:pafG • · That 1UY - " lilce a very tech.:.aa at 1 -.L What it says in a
:•.....,II is that timber harvesting
'QPIIIIions must leam, if they don't
:alreldy bow, how to conuol the

s

Wf&gt;SHINGTON (AP)- u.s.
beef exports arc litely to rise about
14 pCrl:ellt this year. cootinuing a
trend, says 111 Agriculture Department CICOIIOil'lisL
In !989,, the United States
climbed to third place 81llQR8 world
beef exporters, tr~ling only the
European Commul!ity and Australia, said economist Uncia Bailey
of USDA's Economic Research
SeM:e.
Only a year earlier, the United
States had been sixth in world beef
expoljiS, ~ noted in a m:ent issue
of the department's Farmlinc magazine. Since 1990, U.S. beef
exports have risen 18 pen:enL
U.S. beef and veal exports 10
South Korea. Mexic:o and Canada
have been exiJIDding over the past
few years, t!ailef noted. They
soared 53 pen:entto ·South Korea
in 1991 ~ 1990.
The export gain was attributed
to the fact that South Korea
increased its minimum beef impon
quoca from 86,000 to 160,000 metric tons in the middle!! the year. ln

vol)lme and velocity·of water on
logging jobs. Concern about silt
and sediment in Ohio's streams,
rivers, and other water sources is
what prompted the writing of the
bill. Clean water is essentiaiiO our
health. Keeping our soU in place is
essential tor regenerating our
forests.
On July II from 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. a workshop~ Best Management Practices will be held at the
Zaleski State Forest Headquarters
on Sate Route 278 North of Zales·
ki. It is a workshop for loggers and
landowners who wish to learn
proper soil erosion control measores in the woodlot. A fee of $10
will buy coffee and donuts, lunch
and professional, instruction on the
tools and practices invoiVCI;I in pre·
venting soil erosion during and
after a timber harvCSL
This bill and Best Mana$ement
Practices is all about protccung the
future of the forestry industry. All
· log$ers are ur$ed to illlend to
rece1ve this traimng. DRESS FOR
TilE FIELD
· You may call the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District for
regisuation and program inforrila-

la~e 199_1, South Korea again

lions across the Canadian border
for meat inspection, which could
cause delays and inrnasc prices."
Bailey tlOied that despite growth
in beef expons 10 other countries,
Japan remains the United States'

shg htly mcreased its quota and
announced it would import some of
its 1992 quota early.
With beef· prices high in South
Korea, the government has stepped
up 1mpons 10 control inflatioo, Bailey said. South Korea will eliminate beef restrictions before July
1997 under the U.S.-Korean Beef
Agreement of Aprill990.
Beef expons 10 Mexico will rise
this year, Bailey said, as that country's ccooomy grows and IJI'Qduccrs
there Rbuild catlle
141 future
years, however, Bailey foresees
slower growth in exportS to Mexico
as i14 own outpul increases.
EXpons 10 Canada rose rapidly
because of demand from the food
service industry il) the eastern pan
of the country, Bailey said.
"However, as the country
adopts meat import inspectioo piocedurcs similar to those used in the
United StateS - as well as a new
grading system - trade could fall _
off,'' according to the report.
"Trucks from the United States
would have to go 10 specific loca-

:corn acreage up 4 p'ercent

· WASHINGTON (AP) - An year and 27 percent below two
.esti-lcd 79.3 million acres of years ago. "Low prices across the
:ccn llal been planted in the United country and irrigation water shon·
By Mldtelle Lobstrma..!lllel, t~~4 patent from last year, ages in Western stateS arc facun in
Publlc
Alfaln Speeialilt,
:ille Apicukure Department says.
the acreage decUne," it said.
Soil
Couemdoa
Senke
• Batty plantings were delayed by
GALLIPOLIS
•
A
videotape
llprillg rlins but overall planting Group files unfair
available
from
local
Soil
COMCI'Va·wu ccapleted ahead of normal, labor practice charge tion Service offices reinfon:es
what
,tJie. department said. Growers
fanriers have been hearing for sevexpect to lla'vcst 72.2 million acres
COLUMBUS
The
Big
Bear
eral
years: It is important to impleb .... up pm;eol from 1991.
Employees
Standing
Together
ment
conservation compliance
· Soybean growers planted or
Committee
(BEST),
a
group
of
Big
plans,
and it's not too late 10 make
1-' 10 plant 59 million acRS in
:1992, virtually unchanged from Bear workers opposed to union changes.
The VHS tape · is called
-1991 plantings. "Sprinil\olanting . organizing efforts at Bi$ Bear
Stores
in
Ohio
and
West
Vrrginia,
"Sillight
Talk About Your Conser·
aot oil Ill a good start wl'th':t!S jJer- flied an unfair labor practice charge vation Compliance
Plan ." It fca:telll Of dlo crop planted by June 7,
againstthe
Columbus
United
Food
_
~
S~S
Chief
W~
Richards
at cki*IIIIC•W said in a repon this
ancj Commercial Workers, Local dlScu.ssmg c~nservatton compli:wes.
- Willlel wheat growers expect 10 1059, and its intemational parent in - ance IISUCS w1th four farmers. The
main message of the IS-minute
._ vest42.6 million acres for grain Washington, D.C.
BEST
filed
the
same
charge
tape is that conservation plans can
:i• 1992, up 8 percent from 1991 against the Penn Traffic Company be
'fine wned, lhat.they arc llexible,
·bit don I percent from the June I
and
Big
Bear
Stores.
and
~ the lcey is to stan imple' forecast.
The charges accuse the unions menung them now.
· COIICIIII'CI to be planted totals
of
restraining, interfering and
"The 'last few years, we have
• • estimated 13.6 million acres,
coercing
employees
in
the
exercise
been
telling farmers that it's inlpor3 peiCCIII from 1991.
of
their
lawful
'rights,
and
also
tan
I
that
they don't wait to start
• "Tile Delta States' planting
the
unions
unlawfully
implementing
their conservation
alleges
:p.:e Je11C1811y exceeded the aver- sought and obtained recognition as )llans," says Joseph
C. Branco,
.. . . producers took advantage of
the bargaining representative of state conservationist in Ohio. "Our
' Clp&amp;l 'II'CIIIa,IIICI proceeded ~d­
employees
at various Big Bear
· ly widllieldworlc. Texas' secdings
Stores.
• !1111Wie 7 were 77 perce-nt comThe Penn Traffic and Big Bear
plete, but rain and cool weather
charges
allege that they illegally
• •"Wed ftllllntinl of some acreage
iui West texas,'' the department recognized the unions as the
employees' bargaining rcprcsenta·
• Two promotions
'• lllid.
tive and discriminated against of COLUMBUS
Dry beans arc planted on an
Gallia
County
residents were
; ellimated 1.60 million acres this workers opposed to the union orga- announl:ed r=ntly by Bob Evans
: year, dowa 16 percent from last nizing effon.
Farms Inc.
'r-------~~~~~~~~~~~~------~
Roger Burnell of Bidwell has
JACKSON CO. UVESTOCK MARKET
•
been
promoted to assistanl plant
Ripley, WV
marlal!er of the COIRJ.lG!IY's recently
Juae 25, 1992
ac11.uued
producuon plant in
SLAUGHTER STEERS:
Spnngfield,
Ohio.
59.00-63.00
• Good .t Choice
Burnett
has been with Bob
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS:
Evans
Farms
since 1983. Burneu
fl0.00-62.50
Good AChoice
served as slaughter floor and
• SLAUGHTER COWS:
smolce room foreman at the compa·
51.00.53.50
" ' Connercial
ny' s Bidwell plant and most recent48.()().
s
1.00
Utilily
ly
helped to e~tablish the Brown 'n'
36.00-45.00
c-&amp;c-z
Serve
room there.
58.00-67.50
- Bulla over 1,000 lb.
The Springfield plant is scheduled
VEAL:
to open for production in late sum90.00-98.00
Oloicc &amp; Prime
mer of this year.
80.00.88.00
l26-26S lb.
Rob Allen of Gallipolis, has
HOGS:
been
named plant manager of the
38.00-42.00
19()..240
production
plant in SPI.!!!gfield.
40.()().42.50
2.4().260
Allen
has
been WliliBbb-Evans
32.00-35.50
Sows
Farms
since
1975. Most recently,
28.00.31.00
BollS
Allen
served
in quality control at
20.00.27.00
Pip (by head)
the
Bidwell
plant, and as plant
35.00-46.00
tiG-up
manager at the Gallipolis planL
SLAIJG!fmR LAMBS:
Bob Evans Farms Inc. currently
58.()().6().00
CIL &amp;Prime
owns
and operateS 213 Bob Evans
55.00.59.00
10-90 ...
and
Owens
Family Restaurants in
15.00.18.50
(lei Sheep
16 stateS in addition to cintina del
YEARLING STEERS:
Rio, a new Mexican restaurant
72.00. 79.00
Good
A~
entry in the casual, theme dining
• 60().100
70.()(). 77.50
65. ()().71.00
: 100A
48.00-62.50
, F111'n TuU.s
• YEARLING HEIFERS:
70.()(). 76.00
(lM!Iu ot: good
aanoa~elag
58.00-66.00
601).7~

s

.*'"

'

local employees have !old them, we
put word out hom the state level,
and now the chief is telling them.
the longer fanners wait to imP.Iemcnt their;,lans, the less flexibiUty
they have, Branco said.
As a result of the 1985 and 1990
Farm Bills, farmers with highly
erodible land must follow plans
they developed and h,ad approved.
These plans detail how they will
keep topsoil from eroding from
their fields . they must be implementing their plans according 10
the schedules they develop, and
have their plans fully implemented
by 1995.1f not, they could be ineligible for USDA program benefits.
The video tape was made available on behalf of ICI Americans
and the Conservation Technology
Information Center's.Crop Residue
Management mlllketing Prognun.
to view the tape, contact the Soil
Conservation ~ervice, 33101
Hiland Rd., Pomeroy, Obio, 45769
or phone 992-6647.

Two Gallia Countians are -·.
promoted by Bob Evans Farms

S l'EBR CALVES:
• Good .t choice

90,()().II 0.00
85.00.92.50
75.00.86.50
65 .00.77.50.

300-400

400-.SOO

; 5CJO.(iOO

•· BULL CALVES:

75.00.88.00
70.00.86.50
65.()(). 72.50

• Good .t choice

: 400-.SOO

• 5CJO.(iOO

.

HEIFER CALVES:
Good .t choice
300-400

75.00.86.50
70.()(). 78.00
70.()(). 77.00
350.00-850.00
325.00-550.00

400-.SOO
, Cows ACalva (by head)

• Cows(byltead)
; BABY CALVES (by head):

Pick 3:

Wimbledon
PageS

5-2-8
Pick4:
5-0-8-8

Kicker:
0-6·9;6-6·9,

onn

1992 Cadd~c Sedon Deville, 10,000 miles ..................$24,900
1991 Chevy LumiiMi Euro 4Dr., 20,000 miles.:............$10,900
1990 Pontioc Grand~ 2Dr., 41,000 miles ...................$7595
1990 Chevy Corsica 4Dr., 23,000 iniles .........................$7495
1990 Chevy (ovat!er 4Dr., 30,000 miles........................$6595
1990 Dodge Spirft 4Dr., 37,000 miles .........................:.$7895
1989 Bukk Regcil2 Dry 38,000 miles ............................ $7995
1988 Ford Aerostar Passenger Van, 40,000 miles: .......... $7995
1986 Chevy Caprice Clo~c 4Dr., 64,000 mies .............. $5995
1986 Pontiac 6000 (E 4Dr., 80,000 miles......................$2995
1'86 Olds Cutlass Supreme 2Dr., 59,000 miles..............$4995
1986 Olds ClJtlasS Oera 4Dry 70,000 miles ................... $3995
1985 Merwty Marquis LS 2Dr., 79,000 miles:..:............ $4595
1985 Mercury Marquis LS 4Dr., 94,000.......................:.$2995
1982 Olds F'renza 4Dr..................................................S1595

GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO. INC.
236 SECOND lYE.
GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631
PHON' 614 446·3060
See Scott or Ralph $b•tl

.... Tue., we•., Fri, 9·1 or Tllun. • S1t. 9·3

Need a Fa•lly Statlonwal•n ltut
wl...a Sporty New Look -Try tills 2

Wheel Drive JI••Y at the Sp.edal
Low latroductory Price 'to •elt
· ' your 111ds. ·

•

VoU3, No. 4S
Copyrlghled 1182

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A well-organized parade, good
entertainment, a variety of games
and contests,-8f1d plenty of food
made Rutland's ·annual July Fourth
celebration an event offering
"something for everyone."
A parade carrying out the theme
"America: We are Family" kicked
off the day's activities and moved
along apParently without a hitch to
the delight of re_sidents and visitors
in the community for the annual
red, white and blue. festivities.
In the parade lineup were
numerous decorated trucks some
aUractive floats, over 25 eq~strian
entries, representatives of the J?CC·
wee, t-ball, Uttle league and mmor
league ball teams riding on decorated vehicles, a variety of .firefighting equipment the Meigs
High Band, clowns' 4-H clubs
commercial entries,' a variety of
wallcing entries including the tiny
Ruffles and Flourishes Baton
groul?, tiny motorized vehicles,
relig1ous theme entries, Girl
Scouts, decorated bicycles, representatives of a motorcycle club,
sharp well-preserved older cars,
dancers, horse drawn wagons and
even the mayor of the town, Ed
Martin.
.
.

The entries were judged and the
prize winners in the various categories as announced by Kim Willford and Marie Birchfield, parade
chairmen, were as follows:
Decorated trucks: By the Groeery, fttst; Chris Napper, second.
Decorated bicycles: AUce Livingston, first; Brian Colwell, secand.
Equestrian: Melvin Cross and
group, ftts~ Daniel Young, second.
Marching Units: Meigs High
Band, first; Big Bend Cloggers,
second.
Non-Religious floats: Rutland
Go-Getters 4-H Club, fttst; Meigs
· Oldies but Goodies Car Club, second. . .
·
~eh~1ous: Rutland Church of
Chnst, first. _
Commercial: Bank One, first;
D. K.'s Farm Toys, second.
Fire engines: Salem Fire
Deparunent, first; and Scipio Fire
Deparunent, second.
After the parade the center of
activities moved to the park where
there were craft ·tables, food and
$arne booths, a few rides, a dunk'"~machine operated by the Meigs
High School flag corps, and a gar·
den uac10r pull by the Scipio Fire

Country Misfits Band and White's
Hill Band.
Under the direction of Joan
Stewan the annual pie baking and
calce decorating contests were held.
The winners in the pie contest
were Melissa Houser, fttst, with a
prize of $25; Margaret Weber, second, $15; and Sarah Houser, third
with $10. In the cake contest the
winners were Dorothy Leach with
her "Heart of America" themed
cake, first, with a prize of $40,
Susie Drehel, with a state of Ohio
themed ~biotic calce, second, $20,
and Shari Drebel, with a flag calce,
$15. After the judging the cakes
were auctioned off 10 the highest
bidder with the proceeds going into
the firemen's fund.
A celebrity sale was also held
with items from Lionel Canwrigh~
Mario Martin, Hank Williams, Jr.
and several others going up for
sale. Keith Molden headed the sale.
Bringing the highest amount was
Hank Williams, Jr.'s autographed
cookbook, $36, with the second
highest beinA the four tickets to the
Cleveland Indians, $20. A total of
$169 was iaised.
The big wrapup of the annual
Ox Roast Fourth of July celebra:~=i~~~~~
lion came at dusk when a giant
and western music was fireworks display was held by the
the day by the . Rutland f~remen:
·

lttreo,
crul•

control,

alum.
whllll, P.W.,
P. door loc:kl,

\

Bobbie Jaye White and Bobby
Johnson were crowned 1992 Meigs
County Fair Queen and Kins,during Fourth of July festiviues in
Racine on Saturday. Jenny Varney
was named fair queen runner-up.
White is the daughlfZ of Robert
llnd·J?.ove ·Wbite, Jteeclsville. S~ is
pre~1dent of the Oppo.rtun111es
UnUm1ted 4-H Club and IS a memher ~f the Success R_oad Church of
Christ At Ea_stem High School she
paruc1pates m marchmg, con_cen,
pep and JBZZ bands, Teen lnsuwte,
newspa~r staff; student council
and VarSity E Club. She IS a mem,
her of the National Honor Society,
was named All-American Scholar
and attended Buckeye Girls State.

Johnson is the son of Bob and
Sarah Johnson, Middleport. He is
junior assistant scoutmaster for
Boy Scout Troop 245. At Meigs
High School he has been active in
basketball, baseball, cross-country,
student council, Spanish club and
Business Professionals of America.
He is also active in scouting, 4-H,
. American Legion Baseball and
summer league baseball.
Varney is the daughter of Terry
and Faith Varney, Portland. She is
a member of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church. She has been
active at Southern High School in
the drama club yearbook staff and
has been hono~ed at the Southern

High School Academic Banquet for
foUP years. She has been a member
of the Meigs County Junior Fair
Board, was 1989 Bunny Princess
and 1990 Dairy Goat Princess at
the Meigs County Fair.
Others vying for the title of
queen were Michelle Laughery,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vic
Laughery; Lisa Hoffman, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoffman,
Long Bouom : Billy Jo Lons.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Denms
Long , Por~and ; Rebecca Wiles,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Wiles, Racine; Misi Neutzling,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
NeuttUng; and Kelly Ervin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ervin.

U

$20

stM____
,61 2
Rebate Discount-M $3,612

s17,000
lllOfl.

1-----------...:...------1
KETTLES-Ma aad Pa Kettle (Melvin
Cross) In this pony cart followed by their brood

Ust-----.
.
$21,387
Rebate
""" $3,387

2 dr. IJIOrt. tully !glad, 111110,
AMIFw.t8r.o, crul.. control,
alum. whMII, P.W., P. door
locka, air cond., and IIIIIch

mor.l

$

18,000

DERBY WINNERS - Danielle Peckham, sec·
·ond from len, will travel to Akron as Meigs
County's Soapbox Derby champion following
Saturday's races. Also pictured, 1-r, are Derby
Direclor Chuck Neutzling, second place kit car

Smith's GMC Truck Center

Your Plumbing Headquarten

IALUPOUI, OH. 45631
614-446·2532
Locally owned and operated by Herb Smith for the

day. Pictured are Tom aad Pam Lowe of Belpre,
the car's owners, wltb t~lr "Mayor's Choice"
trophy • .

. at the _''Oidlea but Good lea" car show 011 Sahlr·
•

I

·Ohioans being nudged to certain doctors, hospitals

•

.

. CLEVELAND _(AP) .- · Two
Blue Cross compartle!l whtch cover
40 percent of the Ohioans with '
medical in~uran~e hope IO 'have
!l!ost !Jf d!eu po~yholdcrs under
buymg m bulk managed care
plans by 1995.

(JEMVn

DuraSpout
5.49

Un~ m~ car~

insurance

compan1~s pick spec1fic _doc!On

and hospitalS thai meet theu guide·
lines for cost and performance.

About 30 percent of their memCustome!l w~uld be allowed to go
bers
are enrolled in "managed
elsewhere but would pay more of
care"
plans now and the goal is to
the costs
·
si~n.
up
10 (5 percent - nearlf 2.5
The cOnlpaD!CS save money by
mtllion
Oh10ans - by the muldle
negotiating lOwer rates in return for
of the decade. they slill. ·
a regular flow of customers. ·
John Burry Jr., Blue Cross
Cleveland-based Blue Cross &amp;
Blue Shield of Ohio and Communi· chairman and chief executive offi•
ty Mutual Insurance Co., a Blue cer, said the plan should cut costs
Cross provider based in Cincinnati by UD 10 IS oercent.
(Continued on Pg. 3)
use the managed care plans.
'
'

•

{

' '

.winner David Ramsburg; Richarci Ramsburg,
third place in the kit car division; Matt Thompson, fourth place in kit car; Chris Snouffer, lirst
place in the stockcar division; and Carson Mid- ·
kiff, second place in stockcar division.

Soapbox derby, parade top
Middleport July 4 celebration

133 PINE SIIEEI

·MAYOR'S CHOICE- nts 1940 Ford Coupe

1.79

White, Johnson crowned fair royalty

Iota, 1o1a

was Middleport Mayor Fred Hotrmaa's favorite

lit

the 1992 Meigs County Fair Kin~ aad Queen
took place at Star Mm Park in Raaue on Satur·
day during Fourth of July festivities there. Pic-

lured, l·r, are' 19112 f.DI.r King and Queen Bobby ~
Johnson and Bobbie White, with 1901 Fair
Queen Michel_le Friend. Jenny Varney was
selected as queen runner-up. Also pictured is
1991 Fair King Brent Rose.

~~~

put

YourCbok:tl

FAJR ROYALTY NAMED ·The crowning of

said Monday.

DR. JAMES CONDE
Is
the closing of his
•edlcal practke at
155 N. 2nd lv. In Middleport, Ohio
ERective July 15, l992
Medical record will M transferred to
the pllysklaa of clloke apo1 r..Hst.
I wlsll to thank my patients f~r tllelr
sapport and wish you tiM ..., of ·
health Ia t•e future.

.. . FLUIDMA!IT.A,INC:.

·~

Parade, games, and fun
highlight Rutland's July 4

Fully loin ad,
auto., AMIFII.

- ~

..

ness.

1 Secllon, 10 Pogeo 25 conll
A Mutdmodto Inc. -papor

..Jirnt

.

TQillxbl, partly cloudy. Low
SSM. 'rii...tay lnc:reased doudl·

•

BIY
CliCK
IS

Forest service
tssues warning
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Forest Service is warning local
communities and visitors to national
for a long, dry ·
f~teforestsiO
season. prepare
·
In preparation, the Agriculture
Department agency has added 70
smokejumpers - r~ref'8hters who
are dropped to remote areas by
parachute - as well as II helicoptm anjl30 new fire crews totaling about 600 people.
"We also have alerted the
Depatlnent of Defense, which has
2,000 personnel available plus a
battalion of helicopters," Forest
Service Chief F. Dale Robertson

Super Lotto:
5-6-7-11-12-43

IBPIIIYDU

category. Bob Evans Farms
includes Bob Evans Farms Sausage
and foodservice, and the whollyowned subsidiaries of Owens
Country Sausage, Mrs. Gil&lt;;s Country ·Kitchens (producer and distributor of fresh deli ~) and Hickory Specialties (proilucu and distributor of charcoal and related
products).

.

•
WIDS

biggest customer. taking 242,000
melric lOllS of beef and veal expons
in 1991. That represented 45 perceot of the volume of beef and veal
~ from the United SlaiCS in
thlt1 year.

herds:

lt's n·ot too late
to make changes

lion.

Ohio Lottery

Agassi

.

Beef exports may rise 14 percent this year _-

fLaw and logging
·

July 5, 1992

'

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlael News Staff
Independence Day '92 in Mid. dleport will be remembered as the
day that Danielle Peckham and
Chris Snouffer won the Second
Annual Meigs County Soapbox
Derby; Gene Whaley took home
Best of Show honors in the Oldies
but Goodies Car Show; and Marcia
Karr was honored as Outstanding
Senior Citizen.
.
Soapbox Derby
Peckham is the daughter of
Steve and Debbie Peckham of Rut·
land. She and her family will uavel
10 Aleron, where .she will compete
in the All-American Soapbox
Derby on August 8. They will have
some company in the family of
Chris SliOilffer, who won the stock

car division Saturday.
Chris, of Pomeroy, is the son of
Gary Snouffer and Sarah Snouffer.
The derby was held at General
Haninger Parkway in Middlepon,
and was coordinated by Derby
Director Charlea NeutzUng. _
210 champions hom around the
globe will compeie in the ~lcron
COOlpetition.
Kit car participants and their
corporate 8po!lsors, where appUcable, were: Danielle Peckham (Cir·
. cle ~Auto); Joshua Dowell of Rut·
land; Stacy Gilmore, Rutland
(Feeney-Bennett American Legion
. Post 128, Middle_port); Jeremiah
Russell, Pomeroy (Valley Lumber);
Richard Ramsburg, Rutland
(Vaughan'.s Cardinal); Btlll:h Bradshaw , M1ddleport (Middleport

Truss Company); Brent King, New
Ha¥en, W.Va. (Dairy Queen Brazier, Middlepon); Joshua Hooten,
Pomeroy (Middlepon Trophies and
Tees); Matthew Thompson, Racine
(Home National Bank); David
Ramsburg, Rutland (VFW Post
91126 of Mason, W.Va.); Matthew
Smith, Middleport (Meigs County
Chiropractic Clinic); Jay Fisher
Middleport (Feeney Benneu Post):
and Joseph W. Young, Point Pleas:
ant, W.Va, (Thomas DQ.lt Center).
Stock car participants were· '
· Christopher Snouffer, Pomeroy
(Blue Slrealc Cab); Cirson Midkiff.
Pomeroy (Bank One); Dusti~
Marcinko, Tuppers Plains (H&amp;R
Block); Jennifer Smith, Middlepon
(Meigs County Cbirop~tic Clio(cOOiinuild on Pg. 3)

..

�.,...

Comment11ry
' .

: -The D8.ily Seniinel
••

• Ul Coart'Street
POmUo,, Olllo

IWiW.S:O 10 TD l1nBlUCir'r8 or TD IIEIG8-IIASON AREA

Monday, July 6, 1992
Page 2-The Dilly Sentinel
Pomeroy--Mddlepolt, Ohio
Monday, July 6, 1992

•

I

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

Perot told Armitage he th9ught
he had exercised bad judgmeni.
Armitage agreed. He believes the
letter to the judge written on
Defense Detlartment stationery was
"dumb." He. told Perot that he had
offered his resignation to then Secret&amp;fy of Defense Caspar Wein·
berger, but Weinberger rejected it
out of hand.
Armitage informed Perot he
hadn't seen or spoken to the
woman " long before the Jack
Andetson columns (revealing the
letter in I986) came out. Once I
wrote the letters !learned from her
attorney she had a serious criminal
problem with gamblinJ. and I just
ceased all communicabon.... I was
out of even .a friendship relationship with her before any of this
became public. ...
' 'Last of all, I said I didit 't know
how his fantily life was bull had a
good one, and I had a very open
conversation with my fantily about
what might or might not have happened. I left it at thaL' '
Perot repeated that Armitage

should resign, and the meeting f
ended.
- ·
.
With Perot as judge, Jury and
· executioner, life for Armitage has
. become a ni$hlmare since the
Te~ billfonaue became • proba·
ble pre$idenlial candidate. ".It:s
very embarrassing, very debllitat·
ing in terms of being able to con·
centrate on your work, and it's a
constant source of conversation and
·tension in the family," Armitage
explains.
Perot passed his informatioo on
to the FBI when Armitage was up
for Secretary of the Army in 1989.
"II had to do with MlAs and drug
. uaffickiiig and his connection with
a Vietnamese woman and her connection with Oriental organized
crime," one FBI official told us.
"He (Armitage) was connected to
this woman from a standpoint of a
20-year friendship but· none of the
other allegatioll$ had any substance
to,them."
While Perot constantly implores
the media to get its facts straight.
his own vendetta against Armitage
-the vindictiveness and disreganl
for fact - is emerging as a central
character question about· Perot.
Perot's office did not respond to
our interview requests or written
questions.
From the right to the left of the
political spectrum, Armitage's
character has been attested to.
Co'in Powell, cliairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, said he would trUSt
Armitage with his life. Rep. Steven
· Solm, 0-N.Y., who has investigat·
ed the POW"MIA issue fer nearly a
decade, condemns Perot's condUCI
as a "McCarthyite outrage," and
. hailed Armitage as "one of the out·
standing public servants of our
generation."
Armitage briefly entertained the
notion of sUing Perot for character
defamation, but was dissuaded by
his attorney; Perot was apparently
spreading the slanderous allegations more privately than publicly.
"Besides, your arms aren 'I long
enough to box with God,"
Armitage recalls his attorney warn·
in g.
Jack Andersoa and Michael
Binstein are columnists ror Unit·
ed Feature Syndicate, Int.

Letters to the editor
Responds to column

we

I

Scrub and burn Ohio coal

Sen. Jan M. Long

New abortion ruling a sensible effort'
Hod_ding Carter Ill

One is enough!

No more pate. jobs!

ao

Donati'onS a•s a nn•"ctat'.,d
/!y

·

eo.::

•

•

IJ.JliR:

5

_.._I

75,

::c-

· IND.
I

f!
1

• IColumbusl80' I

1

!m.-_. .2\

New York ~wned a tornado Sunday at Wapptngers Falls, produced
baseball -Size liail in Herkimer
County and ripped the roof off a
·storage barn and destroyed a silo
on a farm near Utica.
Showers an\1 thunderstorms
were scattered over the Rockies,
nonhem California and western
Oregon. Dry weather prevailed
across the rest of the nation.
Record highs were set Sunday
in Florida, including 96 at
Apalachicola, 97 at Miami11nd
Orlando~ 99 at Lakelan~ It ~as
Lakeland s fourth record high m a
row.
Today's forecast called for
hi~hs in the 60s in Maine, upper
Michigan and the Northwest coast,

scene.

5 TJ .... -

.. a cr...t
,._... e1 JalJ

parade. Bailt by t•e Oldies but Goodies Car
Chlb, tile llolt feabirtd a juke box playing old
reck MC5 roll ravar~tes.

Meip E.WJUICY Saviccs unill-aall3 'I I awl ClllL
On Satnrday at S:SS p.m., Rutland 1quad went 10 Paillller's
Ridge. Edna McKinney wu tateo 10 Holzer Medical Caller. At
6:01 p.m., MvldJeport squad went-10 Holley r-. 1111C ~
was liken to Holzer. Al6:1S p.m.,~ lqllld ..-10 .._
ersville Hill IIIII took Hdcn Etas 10 Vetw 1 g+ •ill
At
6:25 p.m., Racine aqnad went to ML Olive Road. Mpleee _ ~
was lWII 10 SL JOieph Holpilll At 7:04 p.m~ fl4idc!!qlort ..-1
wentiO Ovabtook Cenlr:l for Robat Vinic, wbo- llbltn Yes- . At 8:13 p.m.. Racine unit wenc 10 lbe p.t 11111 lOCi: 11na
Dear:r 10 Veta.s.
At I:22 p.m, oo Suiiday, l'ol1111oy liQUid went 10 PUnaoy MID. ing and~ Ceiller. Wayne Gil1ilaad wullllra 10 v.-.
ans. At 2:29 p.m., -Syracuc squd weat to Dlllty s..._ Galla
AIYIIdo was 1111at to Bober. At 2:39 p.m., RJ'dDe
to Smith Ridge for Jona Happ, who wullllat 10 St.Jollpla. At ~
p.m., MitAqlort squad went 10 Q.;abrook
~Hili­
llten to Vr.lalnd. At 3:37p.m., Pomeroy 1111*1 went 10 I'NR.C ..t
took Virginia Pbalia to VCierlns. At 3:4£ p.m., Tui..ii rw.
squad went to Rcednille. Nell W"tlson wu trliiipCd4 10 c '
et.t Memorial HosDilaL
.
011 Monday II 6:lS a.m., Racine ~ went 10 Soil'lwll Hip
School for Badin Brown, who wu 111fCn 10 Vetaa.

"'C

'

l!pd-r~ Gl JlllJ resttvltks ID Middleport Tbe tro-

,., -

(Continued frcm PJ. 1&gt;

rw Wllaley's 1"1 Biscayne.

praeated

e:

plans won't help p~ cow
10
everyone
"It's ~one of
meuures that the i we . . .
lrV wants to take ·10 PWC ill • ·

die....,

;{val," she said.
.
In June, Blue Cross liped a
contract coveriag 53,000 swe
employees and allowinc die . .10
pursue lllllll8ed en.

Shari Weir, consumer director
for the consumer advocacy group
Ollio atizen Ac:tioa, said llllll8led

cuw-111

r ::·, 1 =mar.- .... ,._..,
=:wtJ.":0lll*o
0:.,., Sn IIi
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Mea!' iG
110M
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W1PIWUIII

- ~Donln

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7 7 . . . . . . . . . . . Jill' . . _

,..,. II I-·~·

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.

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co
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e

7

27

ii:f=-~-PM
. . JZI:

=·

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t

.....

,.....,19;t
ye-., July 5.

R~l Downins.

IdS I ftAC&amp;-De X

died s
at hil residence followiq aa

·a

pas P

-----M .,
r

. ."

7
U.CCI16
Kenneth 1iemeyer
wiUalla~l'r: ; . _ 1-71
".r
$ ' J
KenlliCih Mania Tva eyer, 41, IUL
~
"JH
,._
s
Pomeroy, died SIFIIIday, JlllJ 4,
a
1992, at O'Bleneas Hospilll ia
Athena followia&amp; 111 u "" ill0. • f
7 $
ncaa.
.:.
He wu born in Ciuuri ca
No'l. 24, 19 SO a ioll of Lanaa
Youna TiemeJer 11111 111e
Ead
Tiemeyer. He worb4 u a
Msa.
haintjlilt and ncisL He wu a &amp;liz h ,wil k
e.s
..
..
...
.,
member· of St. Jolln'a UaitiNI
Cbulth, ~lewport, Ky.
Beaidel bia motllet be is ..,_
. .c.. .7. , · 7 7~
viwd by lour ...... Caul~ .•
will
11
7
I
I M • ile Park, X:y~ Ja.iDe 9 I lzi
IIIII!
_;a P.
;.
Melboame, Ky., J - llcC!ia- •All}alc "5 S • aP
, . ...
5

w.irlz-- *

_

...;...... c:,
• • • ,

.. ,

....

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~~=-~~:"':
William and Jala TIII,lllllll

of Pomeroy, David T~eyer,
Newport, Ky.; a faally friead,
U.. Bowen. MtMht•at a 4
nleceaand aepllews. lUll_.
lllldes.
Bnhln bil fadiCir lie •: L
l:edlld In ciDadl by a II ' ,
PriVSie ·IU Yicel wiU be IIIPd iz1
KeudyMthec:oa• · •of*

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Aiz..,..ltdl•beili·'

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by Filba FlziUII ~ ia 15!.
pon. .
.

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446 4514
..
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IMMitll ...,.'NIIDA.,
R LIRIII IF

IJ parade Saturday. The bpd received the first

~tu .

7:1Q,t:JO

p1ac:e lropby for the best . .rcbtng unit.

TMEIR

~:·

cW:i9e will meet Wednesday at
ltlO ..._ • IIIII cooference room t:J.
Ball Oac in Pomeroy. All membas ap:d 10 III.Uid.

Lottery

!
~.:

a

., I
·Del'
I)' "
5
A.-

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.'

7:00 I : t O ~ ILY. SATISUIIIMT.l:M J :ZO ~

SISNEY'S 'PINICCIII

Hospital news

....

'

.

:"'
'',,._,"'"'"';;"~
· "5:';.:""~"":;;·•;:··=·lp:1:!,1.I!.'
IITMRN lfTUINS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
Marjorie Schuler, Portland; Virgie
Roberts, Middleport; and Helen
Elias, Letart, W.Va.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
None.
SI.JNDAY ADMISSIONS · Virginia Phalin, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Kenneth Wolfe.

I 1 :"

• •mn . .. .,.....,.,,

7:111 t :JO DI.I L' - SAT SUII MT . l :OII ) :lDI I'I· U
.

INII.Fil EIIJWt

7:ZO ,I:JO'

•~~M~n .

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•

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SAT/ SUN MT. l :H,l :JO •

SllUl MUTIN .. llliUITill

..,

IIIIIPI lllll£1&amp; lo 1111(1 RtT

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7:JS.I :15

~Il l. ~T/ SI.IIIMT . I : 15 , ) : 11

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1:10 1:10 DI. ILT. SAT/ SIJI MAT ,l :lO J:l O 11C

LITHIL IIUPIN
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:._,-..,.alict . . . lr•i · 1b

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t.lemorial Coltribak• ..., • .
llllde
10 die Azan:lll
Soci_- ...:....e!
_.;.__==-:;
fit'/. Meip Coutzty Uilit, f\ " ·
or tile ct.lty of cimice.
L - - - - - - . . . . . 1,
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SPRING VAllEY CINEMA -

...._ '-•-a:IZik.

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~~~--··· .. •

Rodney Downing

Arra.nfem
_ eats
wiU · be
_ , . , . by filb:r Fanaa1 ~
in MiMiqJorL

~

Those winners were: Hope Bap- .._·
tist Church (Best Float); Ray .-•:.
Wedemeyer and family (Best ..,
Equestrian unit); Middleport Amer· ,·..
ican Legion (Most Patriotic);· ··.
RejOicing Life Chwdl (Best WaUl:' · ·
ing unit); and Meigs High School .. ' ·
(Best Marching unit).
·.'
,,;r,he Oldies but Goodies Car '
Cl··) received an honorable men-' .,
lion for its nostalgi~ ''rock and roll" · .'
float, and Marcia Karr of Syracuse, ~. ·•
who rode in an open convenible '·,
driven by Judge Fred W. Crow m, •,
was honored as the Most Dedicated .,. ·
Senior-Citizen.
·:.
Charles Kirchen, owner/operator .,
of Dairy 'Queen Brazier in Middle- &gt;
porL was emcee for the awards cer- .' ;
ernony which followed the parade: ·
The parade and related activities . '
were coordinated by Middleport S
businessman Bob Gilmore.
CarShow
-''
The Oldies But Goodies Car :· .
Club sponsored a car show on rlfst ...
Avenue during Saturday's feslivi'- .:,
lies. Trophies were presented to top· '"
entries by Middleport Village · ·
Council Dewey Horton.
· ·· ·•
. A 1961 Biscayne, owned by ,·.:
Gene Whaley of Darwin, took Best
of Show honors at the show, and s: .:y
1940 Ford Coupe, owned by Tonr ·.:
and Pam Lowe of Belpre, was tile: ,:
favorite of Mayor Fred Hoffman; ..: •
and was awarded a uophy for '··.
"Mayor's Choice".
·. ~
EnttrtainJHnt, ftreworks · .: · ·
Prior the the evening's enter• &lt;
tainment, Mayor Hoffman wei- ·-1
corned the clbwd. The versatile Lee •''•
Brothers, and the ahvays-popular ··&lt;
Shady River.Shufflers pecformed to .'•
an appreciative audience at Dave ··'"
Diles Park, overlooking the Obit&gt; ···;
River, and of course, a fireworlcs' ·••.,
display topped off Middleport's : ''
celebration.
, · ')

cte~~~=~: Area deaths

.......... '

;
•

l

porL

EMS units answer 13 calls

ex........,iDT u

j

(Continued from Pg. I)
, .. ,
ic) ; and Isaiah Kebler, Mason , . ~
W.Va (H&amp;R Block).
· •.
Parade wlnaers
.•
Trophies were awarded to the · ,,
outstanding· entries in the annual '· ·
Fourth of July Parade in Middle-

A IDCIOOiial ~ fund 11u been a1 bfwJw! bJ 11te r.iJ
of Howud
Llw•ence. wbo died ...
week • die.
raak of ia&amp;jo
. d
.
""'"'et DIID armed iubbeaJ•
The ICbollnhip fund will beaefit needy . . . . fnD llle,. 1
em Local School Dislrict in Racine, where Laww «I ' I
school, and Eutem ·Local School Dittric:t, the alaa- of
Lawreoce's cbildren, Patricia, Howie aad DoDicd
Cootributioas may be sentiO Jo Anll Lawnu:e,l..al&amp; ••••
Obio4S743.

een.a.

S

t

Soapbox...

n

,
,
:.
:
l
~

:
Both Anita and Serena Winter ,
who were injured in a horse and
wagon accident just as the Rutlalid ,
July Fourth parade was about to •
begin wm treated in the emergen- ~
cy room at O'Bleness Hospital, ;
Athens, and released.
)
A hospital spokesman said this !
morning that Anita suffered cervi- '
cal spine strain and multiple conhl- · ;'
sions and that Serena had multiple •··
contusions and strains. The two_:{
were lnlnsported to O'Bieness by
the Rutland emergency squad.
Two others involved in the accident on Depot Street, Karen Wyw\1 .,'
and Constance Wyant, were treated
by Rutland squad members at the . ·~

Lawrence fund established

of the bospillls in lbe Btoe Crna
managed Cllt nawod, said leaing
insurers dicwe clwpa IIIII procedures won't be • easy adjultuiCIII.
"I think that some people II'C
likely 10 be left behind,.. be llid.
" But how many, whit specialties
and
,_____for what reuons, I don 'I

;~

1

.....--Loclt! briefs---.

"That's whll's ooming and with
it will come lower cost and beller
en" be said.
'DaVid Randall, deputy director
of Ohio's lnsuruce "-•-ent,
said other inslftrs will;·d.eir
lead.
"There will be significant
changes in the way health care is
delivered," he said. "The rotal
fiee.dtoice model is
...

..,._

Two
in!j'ured
~
during parade

By Tile A......tm Praa
Wrt dt7 tUoqll Fridq.
A ciiiiiCe of altowaa and diun·
derstonns each day. Ifilhs mainly
in the 80Sind lows in the 60s.

Ohioans...

.

70s In the Great Lakes region and .
the Northwest, 80s on the East
Coast and f~om Kentucky to the
northern Plams, and _90s from the
South to central Caltforrua. Ternperatures above I00 were forecast
m Texas and the southwestern
desells. .
.
The htgh for the nanon Sunday,
was IISatl..akeHavasu'City, Ariz:

----Weather---

.0

Do we reaU:y need .princinals?

The Dally Sentinel-Page--f.

U _TI'na .
Aacatl!eutioll
·
ml1i1l
Thunderstorms lingered over
• Aaillla~.,....,c
.,.u of the South today, bringing
mwill a " ( .
!I h • - tunnoii t o - rated by hail
·•• f" -~ f . 1• , . . . ttial:e wind.
dlf, • .
~ ;ai_D ftl k
5rmns were reported early this
dt:lr _-. ~
'-' • 61: 501 lllllllling from Birmingham, Ala.,
. n.-sli ,4.
a
10 Key West, Fla. A cold front was
All I I
• 1 fnM _ ,_, 10 • - · them toward ·•·
. l ~--'
A.;'~b;midday.
UK;
illc ._li • 1 ..,.. ....
011 Sunday, wm gusts reached
r . 7.. 1 --~ 1S . at Albertville Ala. and 65
lliil.
• - IIIJib iD Georgia'sneKatbCounty.
Dc• a ·
ix
Other storms were scattered
lllis ._a 61: 5
SiiDday evening from west-central
Nissoo.ui through lbe upper Ohio
...... - • • i
ill 1911 Valky 10 New England. Lighming
wllile die"
• . . , . . - 43 ill in KID'¥ City, Mo., killed a man
-i!lll:aa6:9:tBJO pfayinc aicbtinapark.
r.
' •Z
n understorms· over upstate

Armitage speaks out on Perot's witch flunt
WASHINGTON - When
Richard Armitage heard th~ Ros"s
Perot was vi~g the Pentagon, he
had his secretary phone the visiting
office to arrange a meeting. The
two had never met nor spoken all Annitage knew was that Perot
was engaged in a high-intensity
campaign 10 smear him, and he
wanted to confront his accuser•
~rot's bill of particulars a31jinst
the then Assistant SecretarY of
Defense in charge of,POW-MIA
affairs consisted of more fumes
than facts. From the White House
to Capitol Hill, Perot had become
obsessed with Armitage' s brief
relationship with a· Vietnamese

•naport, Ohio

OJ

Thunderstorms lihger i..~ South

OHIO Weather

.

toid reporters and others privately
all kinds of.things. The relationship
with this woman is Ol)ly one ... he's
all over the place." ·
. ·In a rare .interview, Armitage
.ROBERT L WINGE'IT
told
us abQut the 1987 meeting ·
l'llbllsber
with PeroL
·
'
' 'We bad not a disagreeal!le
.PAT W8h'EIIEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
conversation," Ar~l!itage reeaUs.
.A ' •ut Pllbllsller/Coalraller
General Manager
" I just said that I heard you have
been saying some things. What's
the problem?" Perot raised a letter
Annitage hid written on Defense
Depanment
stationery !In behalf of
woman.
-·-Perot and some MIA fringe a Vietnamese. woman friend wbo
groups scripted an Oliver Stone· had been arrested on gambling .
sounding conspiracy theory, weav· char~es. "The JICI!Cra.l \hrust )Vas
ing together Iran-contra, gun-run- he S31d that havmg wntten thia let•• .t- ning, the ClA and living American ter for the Vietnamese woman I
somehow compromised myself,"
MlAs iD Vietnam. '
.
'
"My own picwre of what Perot he recalled Perot charJing.
.. . '.
Dear Editor:
Armitage pressed Perot, "Is she
tain State during election time, has said is vecy scauered, but gen·
a
spy?
What is your charge? What
·erally
the
·word
co11spiracy
is
In ~ 10 Fled Crow's col- Meigs Countians would make wellis
the
point?"
there/' Armitage said. "He has
umn of June 21, lillcd "New Meigs infiln1ted West Virginia voters.
Developments•, wherein he
And while on the subject of poladvanced the notion of Meigs itics: our U.S. Senators would be
~ GQ:O ~e.ws
County seceding from the Stale of (if Meigs County were part of West
Ohio and establishing 1 uew Stale Virginia) Jay Rockefeller and the
iS, tb~'r TfiiNK
of Meigs; with aU cfue respect to formidable Roben Byrd who, 'it just
Neeo Satk:T;oNS
Mr. Crow and his llOUICC, whom be so happens, chairs the all-powezful
referred to as a "'mY respecllble Senate Appropriations Committee. ·
ll.t-IYMQRe.
citizen whose name I will not. It is thia committee (more accumtereveal", this idea is - 10 put it ·ly, S,enator Byrd) that determines
mildly - simply ludicrous.
!Jaw 8J!d where the N.Wn's money
To even, lor a moment, enter· IS 10 ~ spent, and rec:ently a great
lain the thought thai Meigs County deal of It has been spent-you .
could survive, let alone dirive, as a suessed it..-in West Vuginia. We
state unto itself (especially in light could stop banging our heads
of the rec:ent collll*' of the Soviet against the Statehouse walls in
Union, the only nation on earth Columbus {begginJ for small pota·
with the abundant natunll tesoun:es toes like state pnsons) and start
to be self-sufficient) is at the very cashing in 011 some real ~-barrel
least, delusional at the ioost, utter projects like the Cl.A., F.B.I. or
lunacy.
any other fcdenl department head·
Please do not misunderstand. I quarters.
wholeheartedly concur that Meigs
County should give serious consid·
No adequate roads you say...as
eration to seceding from the State part of West Virginia the Feds will
of Obio, though not for the purpose build a four-lane, interstate highof going it alone (which would way directly to Meigs County (we
speU certain disasler), but rather, to could call it Conidor "M"). Or bet·
pelition for admittance to the State ter ye!, they could build a luxury
of West Virginia. Now there's an bomb shelter (Congress will con·
idea we Meigs Countians could linue to need protection from the
really sink our teeth into! Think of electorate if not from the Soviets)
iL .. the logic is poetic. Meigs Coun- beneath the Royal Oak ResorL
ty has far more in common with
The possibilities are endless and
West Virginia than with Ohio. For the future could be ours for the talcinstance: Meigs County and West ing if we were just part of West
..
Virginia rest entirely in Appalachia Virginia. But, alas, we are no( We
It has been exactly one year, Clean Air Compliance Plan, which We have debated this issue to
The time for debating this issue
(that mountainous region chsmcter· are Meigs County, Ohio - a poor
iled genenlly ·by economic depres· liule Oliver Twist of a county hold· since the Ohill Senate took action includes a proposal to install scrub- death. There are 1,000 jobs at stake . has passed. Now il is clear that the
sion and poveny}-most of Ohio ing out our empty bowl begging for to assist Ohio's coal Industry. In bers it the Gavi,n Power Plant.and at the mines. For every ,one coal PUCO has a responsibility to
June of 1991, the Ohio Senate burn coal from the Meigs Mines. minin* jol1 that is created; Ibm are' approve AEP's compliance plAn ;
does not. Meigs Counl)' and. West more Sl@lehouse gruel.
Virginia rely heavily on the pro·
Ahhough this flight-of-fancy passed Senate bill 143, Ohio's However, as of this week, the six spm off jobs that oecur. There and they should do so in a timely
duclion of coal for their liveli· · and Mr. Craw's recent column Clean Coal Bill, in order to COillply PUCO had accepted a staff altor· is absolutely no debate on the eco- fashion. To do otherwise, would
were intended only as entertain- with the Federally mandated Clean ney's repon to separate the Meigs nomic benefits of these coal jobs. . simply be economic suicide for our
hood-mostofOIIiodoes not.
.
Meigs County and West Vir· ment and light food-for-thought' for Air Act. Now after 12 months, Mines from AEP's compliance · Senate Bill 143 was passed with region and our State.
As always, please feel free to
ginia share a common beauty, his- the local reading public, they do Ibm is another attempt to burn out plan and rule on this issue separate· the clear intent to assist the coal
tory and culture--quite different speak to a far m6re serious subject: of stare coal with devastating ly.
Industry in Ohio. The legislation call or write me, State Senator Jan
As a co-sponsor of Senate Bill quite clearly spells out provisions Michael Long, if you have any
from most of Ohio. West Virginia and that is the level of discontent effects that it could bring to Ohio's
143, I find it quite disturbing that for tax credits for Ohio's coal questions or comments about.these
(and our pan of the counll)' as a and disillusionment that would spur Coal induslly.
This
past
week
the
Public
Utili.
at
this late juncture, there would be indusll)' and assistance for speedy or any other issues, my number is
whole), when n01 complerely oyer- ordinarily complacent citizens to
ties
Commission
of
Ohio
(PUCO)
another
"sn11g" in the continuing permitling approval through the (614)466-8156, and my address is
looked by Hollywood and the even consider, in their wildest
began
holding
public
hearings
on
saga
of
this
coal debate.
national media, is more than likely dreitms, no longer being a part of
regulatory framework of the Ohio the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
From my perspective the issue EPA and the PUCO.
depicted as "Hillbilly Heaven" Ohio. It is of this matter that the American Electric Power's (AEP)
43215.
populated by uneducated, inbred, State need wake up and take note. '
is quite clear; Lets burn Ohio coal.
possum-eali~ ' ~ubes who w~uld Fer today's dreams become tomor·
JUSt· as soon mvue &amp;·-stranger mto row's realities.
the .woods (ala the movie Deliver·
No single event (the pison fiasance) as loolt at him. Ohio, faring co was just another straw added to
much beller, is usually described as the camel's back ! there will be
' women and men can
serves a basic right while allowing on an issue dots not license the
Rational
home to sweet, albeit somewhat others) could foment such distrust and do disagree sharply about the
limited restrictions on that right. slaughter, figurative or literal. of
naive, God-fearing farm folk and distaste for the dealings at the legal merits and pracucal effects of .
Critics say it is legally sloppy, the losers. Defeat does not justify
("Why don't you marry a nice girl highest levels of State governmenL the Supreme Court's 5-4 decision woman's ri$ht to decide about avoiding the core issue, which is anarchy . All knew that there wiil
It has taken years of neglect and upholding Roe v. Wade. For those abortion wuhout restraint or the validity of Roe v. Wade itself. be another day and that the CXlQ!eV
from Ohio?").
Until the recent innovations of denial to bring us to this poinL We who fmd the original decision in advice, the decision is an unwar- To the contrary, it enshrines Roe as will continue; all sho~ld equally
satillite and cable transmission, all have not yet reached "critical 1973 an unacce~ble venture into ranted license for state JReC!dling in a precedent that must be preseryed understand they are hound by rules
of Meigs County's TV program· mass", but like so many others who lawmaking by JUdicial decree, or a purely private matter.
. for the sake of the "court's legili· of the game that do not change
ming and local news came to us via find themselves in similar circum- believe any and all abortions a
But for people like me, and I macy" and "the nation's commit· w!th each change in t!te political
West Vir~nia. We are well-\'efsed stances .-e wont to shout, "We're moral ahominalion, the new ruling expect for millions of other Ameri· ment to the rule of law." But it wmds.
in the daily goings-on in Buntin$· mad as hell and we're not going to merely compounds the original cans, the decision seems to be a also reassens the srare's "profound
It is to the Iauer point that the
to ri. and Charleston--liule 1s take it 11\\)'more". Well ... maybe a error. For those who believe in a remarkably ~nsible effort that pre· interest in human life,'' as repre· court's majority was speaking most
known about Columbus. With the little.
sented by Roe's emphasis ·on the directly. "Our obligation is to
constant bombardment of cam first trimester of pregnancy as the define the liberty of'all, not 10 manRoger Gilmore, up with whatever is lefL To all our ly they have even heard of it, .but normal limit on pennissible abor· date our own moral code," said the
paign ads and political progi-am •
Pomeroy politicians, I think it is past time for mention Meigs County and they tion.
ming we receive from the Moun- ·
.
opinion of Justices O'Connor,
all the poople of Meigs County and will say, Oh yes, we have heard of
As
Justices
David
Souter,
Kenoedy and Sourer. " ... Liberty
all over the state to clean house so Meigs County, th~t's where Anthony Kennedy and Sandia D!IY fmds
no refuge in a jurisprudence
we can see some new faces and theraise all the marijuana. I think it O'Connor conserv.pv~ Republi· of doubt"
Roe, having a acquiled
1
is past time to II)' and change this can appointees all, wrote for the a "rare precedenlial
I was reading an article about enough for no more work than they some progress in this county image,
fon:e," can be
dont you? In my opinion majontr, "What is at stake is the overturned only " at
instead of talk and passing the
lhli state 11etling money to fix up do. T!!ke the money and fix up the buck.
the cost of
·
thm is sliD a lot of good poople in woman s right to make the Ultimate both profound and unnecessary
roads, bndges, -etc. This doesn't road§; give them a black top. You
Futhermore, I am a little sick Meigs County. We just need to get
inc1ude our road, as we live oo a can go any direction in Ohio and
decision, nota right to be insulated damage to the court's te~limacy
and
tired of Meigs County having back on the right track.
township road. It shopld be includ· find that Meigs County h~s the
all others in doing so."
and to the nation's conurutment
P.S. Too late, .di'e-patcbing has from
the name of Marijuana capital of
It is an important distinction the rule of law."
ed as we all pay our fair share of only old dus~y
w ·gon roads.
laXeS.
A few su mers ago I com- the United States. Where ever we already started.
based on a clear understanding of
The most inreUigeot criticism of
Not returning for any offic,
:We asked the trustees Tor oil-to plained abou e dust affecting our have traveled, poople will ask what
the
normal
tensions
in
this
constihl;
the
decision, which allows
CharlesP. Bailey, tional republic betweeri individual starenewest
control the dust which is really bad. health. On of the uustees called part of Ohio are you from? You
restrictions
that do not impose
Syracuse
You guessed il We got the liule bit me up and chewed me _out for iL can name any town and it is unlike·
rights, the state's corporate inter· an "undue burden" on tbe
ests and the citizenry's shared woman's basic right to choose and
th;n was left over froin the other Well, I guess we will either have to
roads. Some of the other roads pray fer lots of rain or get out.and
responsibilities. No rights are of Roe itself is that they both lcxis like blad1q! roads.
· vote them out. I'm sick of the ltust
r
unlimited, though many are unai- ufacwre rights our of whole c:lolh.
Gov. Voinovidl wants Ill make and the trustees too.
Dear Editor:
taxpayers money that could be guable. My right to free speech is The Constitution is silent on the
some cuts. As for starters, here's a
Mrs. Freda Jacks,
As was reported in this paper a saved by having one superintendent constitutionally pro.tected, your question of individual privacy and, f
pllte to start. We don't need three
LangsviUe,Ohio few days ago, I found it rather over all the locals like it used to be. right to penalize me 'fot yelling fue by mference, abortion . So, tool ;
peqple for the li'uslees job, One is
interesting that the Southern Local You might say tbat would be in a crowded theater is ~U-fillab- s~d the c:oun be silent, say me · :
School Board appointed Bobby irnf!OSsible in this day and time, but lished. My religious beliefs .-e my cones, leavmg the issue up 10 the •
h
Ordas principal at no additional wwt a .minute, they p~ a lot of business; mx insistence 011 depriv- pull and big of the political~ ' :
emphasis on how great these·com· ing my chtld of life-sustaining meach of the SO SlateS. Roe, dccid· - :
salary .
.
Dear Editor:
standing this road was boil
Since he feels that he can handle purers are. If they are that great, 1 medical ·care because of those ed oo bad law and worse reasoning •
Regarding the controversy over
' ~
I primarily for horse .and buggy both positions, (superintendent and believe one person can do it from a beliefs can be property circumvent- should be overturned.
th~ location of the new prison, and later light tralftc.l see now the principal) poses a couple of ques·
central office. Big savings? You ed by the state.
But the court majority knows i
from what I undastlli4 the 1a1011 D O.T. or someone has painted lit- lions. First of all if he accepted this beL Maybe, just maybe the people · .A free, democratic society that, · thai the decision has tabu 111 a life l
Meigs County didn'tqlllllfy was l tie white markers all up and .dowa extra responsibility·just out of the of Meigs County should'remember - ~xpects to endure must. ultimately of its own, and is SllppOrred ia its '
pllrir bigbway system.
. this ~ighway, are they gettinJ ready goodness of his heart, did we need thia the next lime they want a levy respect two con!Wiing principles. broad outlines by most AmericiOs.
- 1f this is correct whlfis bap· to J!IICkey•mouse patch thts road a principal 81 this school all of passed.
·
The first is that the minority's right Overturning it now would u the
peniag to the milliooa of· dollars ag81n?
these ears?
Food for thoughL
10 vi$orous dissent and constant majority repeatedly ~ed do
cencrated by the laat tax they
W!th the increased heavy truck /
~we rea11 need a principal at
Charles P. Bailey, agilatlon far change must be pro- pave damage to the fallic of clvic
pi~Fed on sasoliae and shoved
Syrac~ tec:ted. The second is that the civic UUSL
·
.
traf~1c on Routes 338 and 124
y of our sc~ls? Think of all the
doWII our throlla. It _ . 10 me (which these roads were not an
enterprise must be based on fonda.
Hoddlng Carter W,- roraer
lhiL the stale could kick in a few designed for) what happens to
mental respect for the princip~ of State Departmeat lpolleaaaa
1
hurl&lt;• . t buikhomc bigbways in
these roads once the by-pass to the
'"'
rr"''
"'
.
majorityruleandp:ecedeiiL
udaWI.-.f·wbtDialreparter,edi· ,
Coullty.
.
. Ritchie. Bridge is completed? (If
.
.
The gap between those two tor and publlllter, Ia prnldat Gl; •
. ;Since I a 1101 111 llllbarity1oo . ever).
coffee break over the Memonal principles is bridged by the consen- MaliiStreet, 1 Wulllnatoa. D£.. '
Dear Editor
· ·· -· - c - . .
llued televlsloa =11011 CWI·
' this lubject, the Oily tbina I hive 10
I believe I have the answer,
The Meigs County REACT Day weekend. It was a tremendous
success
sual
.unclerlllnding
~
all
CIIIZCIIS
)llny and I ......o
~--a.. ,
qn ;, Whit the Old f"imeQ red these two highways will be all but team would like to thank all the
Mei
Coun
REACT]
are
bound
by
a
network
of
shaled
N
·~·~•
iDe; (speaking of Route 124 frDin forgotten leaving the folks who live people who donated toward the
andtyBarbala
rights and responaibilities. Victory 101
J!'tloll~l~er
Elterprlle ~ ·}
Pomeioy oo up river) mx imder· aloilg and lnlVel these roads to put

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The fiaily Sentinel

Sports
By AlAN ROBINSON
. PIITSBUltGH (AP) - Not
·many rnos, oot many bits, not
iuny r.s- it -lbe worst bolllbc PiUsiJurgb PiJales

.'~ld ' - m~ They're DOW
•

I ""'

wondering if7worst IS yet 10

~ CC1DC in Cincinnali.

.. So must the Reds' National
I rag,.e West !J!II&gt;O"CniS.
The Reds have bad a gmU time
..away rrom home this season, but
·it's been no vaeaUon r~ die rest or
· the West, which is swing up at
Cincinnati arter the Reds' £ourpoe sweep in Piasburgb.
"We bad good pi.:bing and hit·
ling and lbey didn't get timely hitling," die Reds' Barry Larltin said
.arter two eighth-inning sacrifice
Dirs gave Cincinnali a 2-1 victory
on Sunday.
Or much hitting at all.
The l'inlll:s managed just seven
runs and 27 hits in lbe series and
have just 11 runs in !heir last eight

Page 4

'

games- JlOl ~gJy.lhey lost
six of those eighL Tbear NL East
lead over Morureal bas dwindled 10

3 l/2games.

.

"You beat them rour games
here, that's a pretty good series,"
lbe Reds' Paul O'Neill said. "That
dOesn't happen vecy often. That's a
pretty good leam•••
Not right now. The Pirates took
a l.{) lead- their first of lbe series
- io the lint inning, lhen couldn't
solve Chris Hammond ~ relievers
Tony Menendez (1-0) aod Nonn
CharliOD the rest or lbc way.
"I thought we'd do more with
Hammond, but -we didn't get it
dune," Piriies manager Jim Leyland said. "tr aD these guys shut us
down, lhen we've g« scnous ttou·
bles."
So does 1bc NL West No team
in baseball bas played more road
games (46) ~ rewer home games
(33) than the Reds, who still must
play three in Chicago be£ore

returning home ror a 'four-game
remau:h with Pittsburgh next week-

grabbed Dip Roberts' high-hop
shot 10 stan a pitcher-to-home-toend.
rust double play. Dave Martinez
Even i£ the Allanta Braves get Jhen RIOI1IKied OUt
. hot again, the rold '&gt; the NL West
Larkin, 9 ror 14 in the series,
championship obviously runs tripled to open the sixth and
tluougll CiliCinoati.
.
O'Neill walked, but Hal Morris
!'There's no ~t: we're get- lined out to Drabclc, wllo doubled
ting ~ceptional pi~ and time- O'NeiD orr rli'St. Sabo then flied
ly hitting," Reds manager Lou out.
Piniell8 said.
'
Drabek "must have been wodting with that goalie (Tom Barrasso)
The Pirales bad the pill:bing Dou&amp; Dnbet was wOiting on his from lbe Stanley Cup champions,"
second straight shu!Ou~ until the _Larkin said. "He has as big a hea!1
eighth - but their offense bas dis- as any pil:ber I've ever seen. He's
appeared. And it would bavt been out there throwing with everything
even worse if it hadn't ~ ror be liis."
DraiJek's fielding,
Except an orfense. Drabek's
Cintinoali lollled 1bc bales with 2.95 ERA ranks amon' the NL' s
no outs in the firth,
best, but1le's pddled widl .a losilig

Scor·eboar·d
In the majors...

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CELEBRATE sWEEP- C.......U cltdMr
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lli11t five I• celeiii'IIIOII ol I filar•p.e Hrles

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"My magic ~and r~n C?Ut ~!
"We' ve got to start helping energy in the etghth mnmg, ·
Doug Drabek out," Barry Bonds Drabek said.
Leyland wonders why the
said. "He always seems 10 pitcb on
Pirates
are running out of fans. The
the wrong days. He's out there
series
attracted
only 95,191. or
pitching his butt orr. bUt every time
18
793
fewer
than
watched a threehe pitches it's a one-run game.
We've got 10 get ourselves IOgeth- ga:ne Expos-Pirates series on the
same weclcend laSt Y~·
er."
"They kept saying, '&lt;;live us. a
The Reds hit iniO double plays
fli'St;ptace
team and the Pirates will
in three sttaight innings, but fmally
draw.
Well,
they 've had a rirstgotiO Drabek in tbe eightb.
place'
leam
ror
2 1/2 ~ears and
Roberts sing)¢. Dave Martinez
we're
still
not
drawing,
' Leyland
hit a sballow try that bounced over
Bonds' head in lert field £or a dou- said. "It's a disgrace."
In other games, Philadelphia
ble and Larkin was intentionally
beat
Los Angeles 9-3, Montreal
walked. O'Neill followed with a
beat
San
Diego 4-3 in 10 innings,
sacririce fly. and Morris walked
Chicago
beat Atlanta 8-0, San
bebe Sabo drove in the go-ahead
Francisco
beat St Louis 3-1 and
run with II10iher sacrirJCC fly.
HousiOD beat New Yorlc 2.{) in 10
innings.
PhiUies 9, Dodgers 3
Mike W.iUiams (1-1) pitched a
three-hiue? in his second start for
his rli'St major league viclllry. Dar·
reo DauliOn and Dale Sveum hit
two-run homers ror the visiting
Phillies.
Ramon Martinez (4-6) allowed a
season-high nine runs - just rour
earned- in five innings as he lost
ror the.fifth time in six decisions.
Expo5 4, Padres 3
Delino DeShields drove in the
g()-ahead run with a squeeze bunt
orr Tim Scoll (1-1) in the lOth
inning as visiting Montreal won for
(See N!- on Page 5)
record (6-7),

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\' '·9. 1MA.p.l

Agassi beats Ivanisevic in five sets to claim Wimbledon ~i.tle

Monday, July 6, 1992

~~Cincinnati beats Pittsburgh 2-1 for.sweep, bigger NL West l~ad .

Pirates 2·1 Sunday. The decision gave Charlton
his 19th save of the year. (AP)

E&amp;JEWEL

91:

10-5, .661. 3.44.

sweep of host Pittsburgh after beating the

I

CINCINIIAn. a.:z. .180, 2.116&lt;CINCINIIAn. a.:z. .180, 1,.,19: I c) t
Atldl&amp;, 7·3, .700, 3.93; Nalllollao4,
Uo4c! . , 9-4, .m 3.53; Tomlia,
.
IG-5,M7,13.56;L 1611. ......
u.1,
.661, 2.61; ...... s.. Diop,

MEIGSCOUm
SliCE 1161

INC.

.

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England {AP)
, - They said he couldn't win the
big one - and certainly not by
playing from the baseline on grasS.
Andre Agassi proved them
wrong on both counts.
In beating Garan Ivanisevic ror
the Wi.mbtedon title on Sunday,
Agassi erased the stigma or his previous Grand Siam failures and
showed tbal a baseliner can win on
grassarterall.
Agassi became the farst bactcourt player to win Wimbledon
since Bjorn Borg, wh(/ captured
five straight tilles froin 1976-80,

. ByCHUCKMELVIN
CLiiVELAND (AP) - No
sense waiting 'til September to
think about a pennant mce. Carney
Lansrord says the Oakland AthleF
ics better be paying attention riaJit
now.
"We have 10 show some character and get through these times,"
Lansford said Sunday night after
the A's beat the Cleveland Indians
5-2 to-stay within a game of rarstplace Minnesota io 1be AL West
Crunch time came early ror die
A· s this summer because of
injuries that have sidelined several
key players. Jose Canseco is m the
disabled list with a sore shoulder.
Rickey Henderson is day to day
because or a sore hamsuing that
has kept him rrom starting ror six
games. Dave Stewart is on the DL
with a sore elbow.
"Ir we can avoid a long losing
. sireak before the break, tbal would
be a big advantage r~ us, .. Lansrord said. "What we're trying to do
now is, the guys who are available
are aying 10 suet it up, move it up
• another IIOICb. Harold (Baines) bad
a grest game tonighL We needed
. that.,,
Baines drove in rour runs with a
home run, double and single. Laos·
. ron! scored on each or the three

By JIM O'CONNELL
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - It
IIXi: Larry Bird just over two minutes 10 sum up the rust Olympic
qualirying toumameniiO be beld in
lbe United States.
The sore bact or the Boston
Celties forwau:d bad allowed bim 10
play in just ooe game imtil Sunday.
That was ooe m~ game than the
U.S. team was given by any of its
six opponents.
He lOOt lbe coon with 2:04 10
play with smiles on every face in
Veterans Memorial Coliseum, just
as there bad been all nine days of
the Toumamcntli tbe Americas.
He scored two points in that
time, not quite the pace lbe Dram
Team had managed in blowout
arter blowout, but it helped keep
the margin or victory as high as
expected.
"I played the last couple of
minutes obviously because I wasn't
going 10 get hun," said Bird, a cocaptain or the team along with
Magic Johnson. "I was almost

10 BIG DAYS ONLY!

~~ ll!M*. ....... 'J61B. U.... S..

CINON!!An. a .

fAYBI - c.dloo. CINCINNATI,

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11: w...i.M, - . 1:1; w,.! s;.,
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..... CINCINNATI. 11; Fraaco, New
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-'-erka La&amp;ue

BAmNG

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a."""'"'· r......,

lliooucu,
.332; llolior,
llilwa11t"' .322; 1!. ........._ Sca!!lc,
.311· r t1 t u
· .313: a.a..
.. i:i.t!YEuND. .310; y.;,_,'a.;...

.345:

SAVE 20~, 30~, EVEN 50% DURING OUR CLEARANCE SALE
OF ALL 1992 DISCONnNUED MERCHANDISE I

... .309.
RUMS - Pactcn, M.imr.caDI.I, 61;
'-+'-+ )f .., . 59; PhUlipa. De.... 5!1; E. .......... - 5 5 ; Nack,
lfi
' 54; lkG.U., OUiani, 51;

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181 - Rtldor, llllmd, 69; l:kGwu.,

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AMERICAN LEAGUE
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IIOil, 99; Sioaa, ;...,, 95; MW&gt;«, Mil-

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HITS -

- B - 9 3.

DOIJBLD - lUll. Now Yodl, V; E.
M.uciaa. Suttle, 15: Matt.inaJy, New
YGik, 2:1; J.,...,~Woot Ci!1, 2!: v-.
Milw.U.e~t 23; Bn:u. Kuau City, 21;

auc.r:

HOME RUNS - M&lt;GwUe. OU!md,
T1 ; Dcu, Ocu-oit, 11; Ju1n Conzal~,
Tuu, II; ~lniCICO, Oakland, 11; TcalolOn, De1roit, 11; Carter, Toronto, 11 ;

BciJo. CI.EYELANil, l7.

STOLEN BASES - La11m, CU!YELAND, ~ Polonia. Califomia, 29; Littach, )olihr~a\lkee, ll; Andcnoa, Bahi·
more, 26; R. Hertdenoa., Oatland, 26;
Raina, CIU«:.~&amp;o, 23; KDobt.uch, Mi.D-

W~h Rails &amp; Foaffi Bu'*ies

$158 \

~ . 21 .

PITCHING (10 duiaions) - JuaA
Guzman , Toronto, lO-t. .909, 2.1-4 ;

LiTUJed
Ouaniilies
F&lt;Sl Come
''•sl Se!ve

Krucaer. Min.aaota, 1· 2, .100, 2..60;
f"loaUna. Sca!!lc, 10.3, .769, 3.TI; Jom;o
MonU. r ......, to.! . .769. 1.51 : Muui·
u , BlltitDorc, 9· J, .7.50, 2.Jl; Appiu,

1t.owot Car.''-!, .750. 2.3!: K. Bmwn.

Tuu, 12-4, ,7S0,127.
STRIKEOUTS - Clemens, 801tor.,
112: Juan o..m.n.
105; Peru,
New York, 103; K. Brown, Te111, 17;
Joac Gut.man . Teu1, 16; R. Johnson ,
S..ale, ll: Mdlowdl, a.-,12

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SAVES - Eckcnlc,, &lt;fU.land, 29;
Apilua , Minneaot.a , 23; 0 1101\, Balli·

mcn.11 ; Mm•aanet)', K.uuu City, 19;

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me and my l.ife, so muc~. lt:s a
~that I dido t respect 11 a bttle
earber."
. . .
Afte! lvarusevtc hit a hac~
volley. mto the net on malclt point,
AgasSJ coUapsed and lay face down
on the grass ror several ~onds.
When he got up, ~was crymg. .
"So many thmgs w~e gomg
through my mmd - W1mbledon
champion, Grand Slam winner, a
lot of. months aod years or people
doubting me," he said.
The doubters abounded after
Agassi rotded in his duee previous
Grand Slam rinals - losing to
Andres Gomez at the 1990 French
Open, Pe1e .Sampras at the 1990
U.S. Open and Jim Courier at the
1991 French Open.
I
"You would think l:ieing io the
fourth Grand Slam final I W9Ukl go
in10 it almost with tbal same~-

it.,

Cleveland scored a run in the
rust on Lofton's second home run
and anotlier in the sixth on Baerga's lith home run. The Indians
lert runners on base in eight
innings.
Jack ArmstroDII, (2-11) allowed
rour runs and seven hits in six
innings.
"Worrying about my record
isn 't going to help," Annstrong
said. "There have been times I
haven'tpitched well, but there have
been times wh&amp;t I've pitched well
and haven't gotten any credit.
That's baseball. There's no use
dweUing on thaL"

•

1I

rewm.

The 6-£001-4 lvanisevic fired 37
aces, a record ror a Wimbledon
final. His IOial ror the £ortnigbt was
206, a record for any two-week
IOumament
·
But Agassi held his ground,
waiting ror his chances, and lxute
lvanisevic three limes in die match,
while losing his own serve just
twice,

THANK YOU, LORD! -That's what Alldrt
Agassi seems to be saying as be goes to bis knees

=i

tr

banf;:"did·.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has
scheduled a public hearing in ca... - ·
92·573-EL·FOR and 92·574-EL·FOR to review
lhe 1992 Jono-term foricaat repons filed by CoJ.
umbus ·Southam Power Company (COlumbus
Southern) and Ohio Power Company (Ohio
Power). The forecast report1 conlaln informatiOn
on lhe lllililies' energy demand, peak and
reserves, as well as resource plans the comOhio Valley District
Free Public Library
401 Pika Street
Manchestor, Ohio 451:14
Lima Public Library
650 W. Markel
Lima, Ohio 45801
Ashland College library
401 Coll'1); Avenue
Ashland , hio :14805
Nelsonville Pulilic Library
95 W. Washington
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764
Auglaizo County Public
Dislrict Library
203 Sooth Parry Slreel
Wapakonela, Ohio 45895

Ma• iin~

r~rry

panios can implemenllo meet anticipated cfe.
mand. The public hearing will begin at 10:00
a.m.. Monday, July 27, 1992, a1 the·olfic:M of
theCommllliil'o, t80EastllroadStreet.
b&lt;ls, Ohio 432116-%73. The evidenliary '-lllg
will be ICI!eduled at a lator date.
Copies of Ohio Power's 1992lon!tJerm becast report may b e - by any m...- of
the public at the following county public library.

Willard Memorial Library
6 W. Emerald Street
Willard, Ohio 44890

Jackson City Library
21 Broadway StrMt
Jackl!on, Ohio 451140
Public library of Steubenville
&amp; Jefferson County
407 S. 4th Street
Steubenville, Ohio 43952
Public Library of Molint
• Vernon &amp; Knox County
201 N. Mulberry Street
Mt. Vernon, Ohio 43050
Briggs Lawrance County
Public Library
321 S. 41h Street
Ironton. Ohio 45638
Newark Public Library
88 W. Church Sireet
Newark, Ohio 43055

Public library

20 S. Fifth Street
Manins Forry, Ohio 43935

'

JAM SESSIO~ -The USA'a
Jordan (9) jams the ball
ill front of tallmate Patrick Ewbil and Ve~~ezuela's Victor Diu
darla&amp; Sullday's TOUI'IIIment of the Americas title game In Portland, Ore. ne Amerlcaus WOD127 -80 to win the crown. (AP)·

followin11 biB vidory over Goru Ivulsevk ill
tbe Wimbledon men's fiDall Suday. (AP)

LEGAL NOTICE

sleeping until the time Magic time every time ~Y missed a shot
ripped my J!llllts off."
You knew one thing; he was gomg
The Umted States was leading 10 get some shots off. I don'tlcnow
Venezuela by 45 points in the gold . if he's really tbal funny m: i£ he was
medal game - just below its 51.5 because he .had all !hat tune ~,Sit
average margin or victory - when there and th~ of thmgs to say. .
the sellout crowd or 12,888 starling
. The dectston ~n whether Bud.
chanting ror Bird to make a cameo will conllnue 10 s11 when the r.eam
appearance:
OJIC!IS play in Barcelona on ·July 26
Johnson did indeed pull Bird's agamst Angola will be made a£ter
warmup pants and lop off and he returns to Boston ror treatment.
stood menacingly over his rival or . " I figure that by Jru; ~~ of~~
the last -13 years as he tied his week I should be OK, Bird wd,
sneakers.
then he began to talk or the
The crowd roared liS Bird lOOk Olympics. "Personally. I can't
the coun and loved it even more as wait. I hope I can play. I think once
he got off three shots until finally we get there, we'll become more
scoring with 16 seconds lert for tbe serious and more focused, and
game's fmal maJgin o£120-87.
we'D be all business."
It was only fitting that Bird,
That has to be a scary thought
who slarled the tournament ror the ror the other ll teams which have
United States with the rarst basket, qualified - Venezuela, Puerto
scored the last
Rico and Brazil being the other
"Ma«ic was really giving him a three from this competition. •
han! time,· • said Chris Mullin, who
Injuries were the only negative
had 12 points on Sunday. "Larry thing for the Americans.
had been giving everybody a hard

.

.

Did he ever.
Sunday's final lived up to its
billing as a duel between the best
serve in the game against the best

1

:'drawing ·date Monday

JU.!t

shots."

. Ivaotsev1c came 10 the net 91
tl'lnes.- only t~ be p~ssed by
~ ao ~g 26 '!JRCS·
. Hew~ P8W;D&amp; ~· ~d.~
hevab!e.. lvaoisevtc Ill :
e
wa~. hmtng so bud. Nothtng to
do.
.
. .
In ~e rmal game, han1sev1c
made 11 ~1er ror AgasSJ by .doubte;faul_un, on the first ~ts.
. I di~,t ~ ~ ~~ Y
mmg yet,
hw . andut hls first
got 10 die mate pomt
.
serve went m10 the net. my el: ~t
up ~~as~ware.~ the :~t
cou
.. ne WI ooe
•
hi good backhand
h' h t a. .
ldn'
return, '!II tc 1vao1seY1c ~ t
bandle.
..
''I was just overwhelmed,
Agassi, said. •: ~III w~ tbinking
was: Its over, 111 over.

"I tboughl he should have ~ot­
ten there," Hargrove said, vis1bly
irritaled. "I talked to him about

: KCLL cliamondfest

The Kyger Creek tittle ~
Tournament will bold its draWing
for pairings on Monday,1uty 13 at
- 6 p.m. at the Kyger~ Bmpkiyecs Club's clubhoule, locMed olf
Ohio 7 across f'!Qm the Ohio Valley
·. Electric Company's Kyger Creclri

ball mentality:,;! hope ~· ~'t,lose
die rourth one, Agassi said. But
trek ~~y relaxed .. Inever £cit
tension, I JUSt ~ell a~thtr. I r~tt
mysell' ovelflowmg with this des~
to want to go out there aod btl

base.

Eric Anthony bit a two-run
: homer in the lOth inning at Shea
· Stadium.
· Jeff Bagwell singled orr Jerr
Innis (4:5) and Anthony rollowed
with his eighth homer and seoond
· in three games,
.
· Rob Mutphy (:2-1) pitched one
. inning for the victory and Doug
· · Jones got three outs ror his 18th
save in 22 chances.

For more information, contact
Mart Werry • 992-6118.

I

RBI single hit hard off the rightfield wall. In the third, Lansrord
singled be£ore Baines hit his eighth
home run, and in the ninth, Lansrord walked before Baines hit an
RBI double iniO the left field corner.
The last run angered Cleveland
manager Mike Hargrove, who
thought lert fielder Albert Belle
lOOk rar 100 long getting 10 the ball,
letting Lansrord ·score from first

Altrol.l. Mea o

.

Whitt·

w..:..._.,J

hits.
Bob Welch (6-4) got the win
despile giving up 10 hits in 6 113
innings, and Dennis Eckersley got
the final four outs for his 29Jh..save
in 29 opportunities this season ...:...
an ongoing major league record.
Over two seasons, Eckersley has
converted his last 33 save opponu·
nities, also a major league mark.
The A's £ell some pressure
going in10 the game because Minnesota had won an aflertiOOD game
against Baltimore. Oakland bas led
its division most or the year and
bas not been rartber than one game
back at any poinL
"It's meaningless until Septenlber, but I think it's a good sign 10
win a game like today, when you
know the other team has already
won," manager Tony La Rossa
said. "You have 10 do that a lot out
on the coasl"
The tast~place Indians would
seem an eaSy assignment in such a
situation, btlt aeveland curiously
had won iis previous six games
against the A's. Cleveland wins
Friday and Saturday had dropped
the A•s out of rirst place ror the
first time since June 1.
Lansrord, however, got them
started with an RBI double in the
fli'St, and Baines £ollowed with an

(Continued from Page 4)
the eighth time in 11 games,
Mel Rojas (2-1) pitched two
innings b lbe win.
·
Gary Sheffield bit his 17th
· home run and Fred McGriff hit his
·National Leaguo-leading 18th.
Cubs 8, Braves j)
Kat Daniels hit his fifth career
grand slam, and Rync Sandberg,
:Mark Grace ~d Andre Dawson
• also homered ror Chicago, which
· stopped a seven -game winless·
streak in Atlanta.
·
Gre• Maddux (10-7) gave up
four htts in seven innings. John
. Smoll2 (9-6) allowed three runs
and six h1ts in live innings.
Giants 3, Cardlaals 1
Kevin Bass broke a 1-1 tie in
the sixth at Candlestick Part with
his tOOth career home run and
added an RBI single io the sev~th .
Trevor Wilson (6-8) gave up
rive hits in 7 2/3 innings. Rheal
Cormier (1-7) gave up two runs
imd seven hits in seven mnings.

Dllt'ctrai&amp;J., B&amp;himcn_ 6; U..tacb, Mil·
...... 5: K. Al&lt;mu, r ......, 5; SMm.
Tu.u, S; White, Toronto, 5; Lofton,
&lt;UVEI.AND 4· L ~ OU..so, I ·
Pld::eu. ~. • : JWDca,

e+-tn• fll \haln•mtt""''l .........

tantas booming serves.
Wimbledon, wllere serve-andvolleyers like John McEnroe, Boris
Becker and Steran Edberg have
dominated ror the past tWade, was
considered the least-likely placdor
Agassi 10 malce his breaktbrough.
For three years, from 1988-90,
Agassi hadn't even bothered to
show up at Wimbledon, prel'erring
to stay holl)e in Las Vegas. Back
then, he didn'llike grass or Wimbledon's predominantly white dress
code.
It's a decision Agassi now
regrets.
"I am really kind of sad," he
said. •'This IOumament bas offered

NL action ...

0 \(C'l '-'0
HOC~ 11u&gt;lll

-..:.-a.r.21.
lliPUlf- Aadenoo, IW...._ 6:

.

John McEnroe - Agassi's victim
in lbe semifinals- in 1984.
"l rely on my Jl?Wer baseline
game,' · Agassi satd arter his 6-7
(8-10), 6-4, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 vic10ry
over lvanisevic. "That is lbe way 1
choose 10 play, and it sure worlced
ror me in the past and worked for
me these two weeks."
The women's fu)al on Saturday
saw the deft:at6£ another baseline
slugger, Monica.SCles, crushed by
Steffi Grar 6-2, 6-l. But basefuien
are the norm i.n women's tennis.
In these days or powCf tennis,
Agassi illususted that thundering
groundstrokes can be just as impor-

•U.S. downs Venezuel.a to capture
Tournament of the Americas title

1!6&lt;-.-. 1161 S. Fa •n,
Nn v-. 107: a. ....... c.;.....
~ 92: a;Jo,

and die first American 10 win since

Oakland hands Cleveland 5-2 loss

c- New Y..t.

STilW!CUI'S -

The pa11y Sentinel; Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 6, 1992

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Mary Lou Johneon Hardin
County Dlllrict Library
325 E. Columi!UI Street
Kenton, Ohio 43326
Puskarich Public Library
200 E. Market StrMI
Cadiz, Ohio 43807
Napoleon Public Library
301 ·W. Clinton Street
Napoleon, Ohio~
Logan-Hocking County
Dlllrict Library
10 Walnlll Street
Logan. Ohio 43138

Logan County
Districl Library
Corner Sandusky &amp;
Main Streel
Bellelonlaine, Ohio 43311
Marion Public Library
:145 E. Chu1ch Slreet
Marion , Ohio 43302
Meigs County Public library ·
216 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

Dwyer·Marcor County
Dislrict Library
303 N. Main Streol
ca11na, Ohio 45822
Monroe County
District Library
96 Home Ave.
Woodsfield, Ohio 43793
Kale Love SimpsonMorgan Cobnty Library
358 E. Main Street
McConnelsville, Ohio 43756
Mt. Gilead
Free Public library
35 E. High Slreet
Mt. Gilead, Ohio~
Musklngum County
Library System
220 N. Fifth Street
Zanesville. Ohio 43701
caldwell Public Library
P.O. Box 385
caldwell, Ohio 43n4
Paulding County
carnegie Library
205 S. Main Slreel
Paulding, Ohio 45879
Perry County Dillrict Library
113 Solllh Main Street
New Lexington, Ohio 43764
Garnet A. Wilson
Public Library
201 N. Market Slreet
Wavorty. Ohio 45690
Pulnam County Dillrld Library
525 N. Tltomal Street
P.O. Box 308
Ohio 4587
ManalteldiRichland Co.
Public Library ·
43 Wtst Third Street
Mansfield. Ohio :14902

Ott-.

Bl r~:hard Public Library
of Sandusky County
423 Croghan Street
Frernonl, Ohio 43420
Portarnoulh Public Library
1220 Gallla Street
Portiii!IOUlh, Ohio 45862

Holmes County District
Public Library
28 W. Jacklon Street
Milltrabu'9, Ohio :14864

caum.

Tiffin-Seneca Public library
n Jefferson SlrMt
Tiffin , Ohio :44883
Stark County Dillrict Library
715 Market llYOnue, North
canton. Ohio :14702
Akron-Summit County
Public Library
Business , Labor &amp; Gov'l Div.
55 South Main Street
Akron, Ohio :14326-0001
Tuscarawas County
Public Library
. 121 Flir Avenue, N.W.
New Philadelphia, Ohio :14863
MarysvHie Public Library
231 South Plum Slreet
Marysville, Ohio 43040
The Brumback Library
215 W. Main Streel
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
Washington County
Public Library
615 Fifth Street
Marietta, Ohio 45750
Wayne County Public Libraty
304 N. Market Slreet
Wooster, Ohio :14691
Bryan Public Library
107 E. High Slreol
Bryan, Ohio 43506
Wood County Dislrict
Public Library
251 N. Metn Streel
Bowling Green, Ohio 43-402
Upper Sandusky
Community Library
301 N..;.lndusky Ave.
Upper S.ndusky, Ohio 43351
Kaublsch Memorial
Public Library
205 Parry Street
Fostoria, Ohio :14830
Mary P. Shelton
Public library
200 W. Grant Avenue
Georgelown, Ohio 45121
Middlelown Public Library
125 S. Broad Streel
Middletown, Ohio 450:14
Wilmington Public Library
268 North Soolh Street
Wilmington. Ohio 451n
Highland County
1listrict Library
10 Wlllet18vilte Pika
HillsborO. Ohio 45133
London Public library
20 East Firll Street
London , Ohio 431:10
Pickaway County District
Public Library
166 East Main Street
Ci!Cieville, Of:&gt;io 43113
Preble County
Dislrlc\ library
301 North Barron Street
Eaton, Ohio 45320
Chittie«ho Roa Counties
Public Library
140-46 S. Point Street
Chil~he . Ohio 45601
Amos Mlmorial
Public Library
230 E. North Street
Sidney, Ohio 45365
Hert&gt;ott WMCOat
Memorial Library
122 Well Main Street
Mcllllhur, Ohio 4585 I
.Lebanori Public Library
10t South Broadway
Lebanon, Ohio 45036

a

Alllntorestad membera ollhe publiC wHI be given an opportunity IO be hMrd at lhe heltlng. FUII!ter
information may be oblalnad by contacting the Commlnion.
'•

�'
Monday, July 6,,1992 .

PQmeroy

' Uil•nlll•v. July 6, ~99~

'
Dally Sentlnei-Page-7
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

,~];r~~T~op~l~ac~e~an~a~d~-t~~~~~P~ub~llcN~ot~lce~r=JI~t~tVI~S~I
·i·nruee;s~s~·s·.·~e~r~v;.•·tc~e;s;-.-"-T:
Call992 2156
:
1---__;;;;;;;;,...,.:~:;:..::;,;;;~..=;,.=,.=,.,...~...;::..,;;;;...,,;...;;;_,;;:;..;;;;...;;..;...._~

Queen candidates

feet to the oanliorllne of
ten l)ounty Road C..2S. .
peroonl (10%) of the amount
The -..nngaln the above
thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M, - SAT.B-12 of
auch • .....,led bld, biotin· deacrlptlon are INIUII on 1
no ·event len than Three
Harold D. Wllal'l''
CLOSED SUNDAY .
Hundred Dollara ($300.00) I Re9ai.-id Surveyor No. aPOLICIES
nor mOle than Ten Thousand
. Thegrontora herein In the
• Ad. ou"ide llae co•ty your ad niDI MUll be ptepaid
Dollara
($10,000.00).
The
grant"'
h.,.ln, their helra
• Betti.. dilleouat for ad. paid ia adY&amp;ace.
unpaid bollance of the pur· end ...lgns are to hJve 1
•~Ado
· : Gi-wayaad
. F~adadouadtrl5wordowlllhe
chaae price ahall he due and mutual right-ol·way over uld
"' 3 dt,. •• "" c:hup.
payable to lhe Sheriff within rlghtolwayhorelndHCflbed,
• • ol ad for aU eapitalleUen U double price of ad eoe:t
thirty (30) clayalrom thJ date together with aU edjaoant
• 7 poiatliM typo oaly ....!
of the conftrmatlon of the property owp111, their heirs
oale. The purchaaor ohall be and aaolgno. All property
• Sealiaal it aot ... po•ible for erron .,.... r..... clay (check
required to pay lnlereat on ownera are to share In the
for arron r,..., day ad.....,. iD p0por), C.U hefore 2:00 p.a.
uld unpaid bollance alllght maintenance upanua aa
da1 afler puhltcalkNI. 10 JUke conettioD .
percent(&amp;%),. annum from outlined herein. .
• Adl tlaat MUll lae paid U. adnaoe are:
~ dete of confirmation of
Str"t addrou: 43285
C.rdor'1'huU
HappyAdo
the aale to the dale of pay• Frank Rood, (Route 3,
l• M-on..
Yord Saleo
ment of. the balance uniHa
od E
) p
the balance thall be made Wlldwo
lteteo ' om·
• A cluoif..,j od•-at plocod iD tloo GaliipoU. Daily
eroy, Ohio 457ae.
T..U.. ... (•cept Claulf'..,j Dioplty, B..iD... Card or Lop!
within eight (8) dayalrom the
Paroal No.: 03.00842.000
No..._) will oloo .,_. iD tho Pobat Plouut Hopoter ud
date of ..11.
Current owneroare: RichJAMES M. SOULSBY ard A. Motzgor end Monti S.
!he Doily s...w..l, r.doi"' .... 18,000 he...
Mllga County Sheriff Metzger.
D. DEAN EVANS
Said preml111 Ia ap·
Plalndff'a
Allornay
pralaecl
at $55,000.00, and
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADI.INE
(6)
2$;
(7)
6,
13;
3TC
cannot
be
eold lor 1111 than
. Moitclay Paper
1:00 p.m. Saturday
two-thlrda of that amount
1:00 p.m. Monday
Tllllday Peper
Terma of Sate: Caah or
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
Wednelclay Paper
certlftecl check accapted.
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
Thunday Peper
10% down on the day of the
IN THE COURT OF
100p.m. Thunday
Friday Paper
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS aale. The FULL purchaae
1:00 p.m. Friday
prlce ahall be paid to the
Sunday Paper
COUNTY, OHIO
within 30 daya from
Sheriff
SHERIFF'S SALE, RE~L
ESTATE. CASE NUMBER the elate olufe and on failure
to do ao, the purchuer ahell
92·CV·85
FEDERAL BANK, be adludged In contempt of
Days Words Rate Over 15 Words CITIZENS
couit. Dopoaltto be waived II
A FEDERAL SAVINGS
aold to the Plaintiff· Cltlzena
BANK, MIAMI, FLORIDA,
1
15
$ .20
$4.00
Federal Bonk, 1 Foclant SavPlolntlff,
..
Ing•
Bank, llllaml, Florida.
.
15
$6.00
$
.30
VI.
.~
Jamea Ill. Soul1by, Sheriff
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
RICHARD A. METZGER, ot
Melga County, Ohio
ol., Delendonte
(6) H (7) 8, 13; 3TC
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
COURT OF COMMON
Monthly 15
$1.30/day $.05/day
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In purauanoa ol en Order
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be of Sale to mo directed from
PROBATE COURT OF
charged for each day as separate ads. ·
oald Court In the entitled
MEIGS cOUNTY, OHIO
action, Citizen a FeelerII hnk,
ESTATE OF VIRGENE
1 Fedorol ·Sovlnga Bank,
ELLEN ELBERFELD,
llllaml, Florida v. Rlchtrd A.
DECEASED
"Cltmified pages c011er the
Metzger, et al., l, Jamet
CASE NO. 27498,
Salaby, SherlffwlllaxpOMto
DOCKET 13, PAGE 388.
foUoll!ing telephone eJ:changes .•.
aallat public euctlon on the NOTICEOFAP~E~
lrontatepaoltheCourthouae
OF FIDUCIARY
GaDJa County Meip County Muon Co., WV of Molga County, Pomeroy, Revlaed
Code, Sac. 2113.08
Area Code 614 Are• Code 614 Area Code 304 Ohio, on 'Augull 3, 1992 at
"On June 17, 111112, In the
10:00 A.M. of tald clay, the Melga County Probate Court,
following deacrlbecl real e• Caae No. 2741!1, Reyrnond C.
992-Middleporol 675-PL PI-••
4-46-Co!lipolio
lite:
Elberfeld, Routet1, Pom•oy
S67...a-wre
458-Leoe
SltuetedlnChetterTawn- Pika, Recine, Ohio, 45771 waa
Poaaeror
ahlp,lllelga County, Slate of
576-Applo c.....
3.,._\'latoa
985 C'rerter
Ea...,tor of the
Ohio end being In SecUon 5,
245-RioG,.....e
1143-Porolood
113-M.oo
Elber·
Town2North, Ranga13Woat
882-Now a.•..,
256-Gooyoa D1ot. 247-Lotott F.U.
of Route
of the Ohio Company'• Pur· 1,
Racine,
949-loclae
891M.otott
64J..AnWA D1ot.
chaae and being deacrlbed Mel go
742- Rudo..
937-BWI'olo
"
5'19-'ll'al..t
ulollowa:
E. Buck,
667-Cool.tlle
Beginning at a polniSouth
Problte Judge
•-----------------l25Roda(412.51eet)andNorth
Lena K. Neaaelroed, Clerk
~
8e degree• 59' 42" 1048.07 (6) H (7) 6, 13 ; 3TC
feet and South 5 degreea 45'
11" Eeat191.41eetandSouth
7 dogr- 29' Waat 84 laet
IN THE COURT OE COM·
eatata, beg lnnlng I I lh e andSoulh4dogr-08'Woal
, "'"S MEIGS
Southeast corner ~I Section 1211eetand South 7 degreea
NOnCE OF
IliON p....,. '
No. 13, Town 8, and Range 45' Eaat50 feet end South 82
PUBUCATION
COUNTY, OHIO
•- N h 50 od dogr-15' Waat84flltlnd
IN THE
· Star lank, NA, Tri-SIIta
~~~::.-wC:.t :roQa :nd South4degreet08'Weat121 COMMON PLEAS COURT
Caae No.U.CV-42 F.K.A.
r..tend South 7 degreeo 45'
OF
Sllr Rink Gllllpollo
links to the center ol the Eaat 50 feet and South 82
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Plolntlii·VS
road;lhenceSouth7-1l2deg. dogr- 15' Well 186.5 feet BILLY JOE TROUT,
Harley W. Eblin, Sr., Et AI
Eaat 10 rodt and 22Eallnke: from the mid point of nld
VS
PlolnUII
Defenclanta
thence South 8 dog. 11 51 Section 5 North line, uld
SH~RFF'SSALEOF REAL · rodund10Nnkl;thenceEnl point of beginning being BECKY s. TliOUT,ETAL
·
ESTATE
to the piece 33
of beginning, marlcedbyonlronpln;thenoa
Der.nde I '
lnpuraUiftCitoonOrdor oontelnlngl8. acrea,more South 82 dogr-15' Weal
· CASE NO.-.ofl-123 n
0

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MoN.

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Public Notice

1111 ISfiiUfiS
NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

AUTO RENTA;t, INC.

"l•tlafaetl•• Onrt•tu•"

$~9e95 A DAY AND UP

Tromm Builders 614·742·2321

CALL (614) 446-9971 (KELLY)

20 Yrs. Exp.

R...,.••

,,.i.....

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. i
COMMQlaAL and RESmENTIAL
fRD: F,STIMA'I1'.S

. 614·949·2801 or 949·2860
Clo Sundar Calls!

l

SATELLITE T.V.

New HOI!Itl • Viayl Siding
New Gara..s • Replaceme•t Window~
· Roo• lddltlolls • Roofing

Adorintl Dulus fw:

Toshiba • Drab •
Unlden • Panasonic
Sales·Service-Esthlates

.d•LJJ

446-2411 or 1-8Cl().386-122B

St. Rl 588 Wilt :
Gallpolls, OH. ~

RATES

Public Notice

Bible school held ;
Ricine First B~tChurch hel4

its annual Vacation Bible Schoot
recently with the theme, "Team U~
With Jesus."
. •
Aclivities each dar. included
songs, games, aafts, Bible lesson!(
and a puPJlel show.
:
The highest attendance was 14~
children with 40 teachers andi
helpers.
:
Certificates were presented' a~
the closing program.
· 1
did not name.
The bible school theme will be;
She referred to the eating disor·
dtz bulimia, which a new book by continued for the children' ~ pro-1
Andrew Morton says Diana has gram each Wednesday during the,
bad since before her marriage !0 summer from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Fur-:
the heir to the throne.
ther information may be obtained:
" He will not denounce his by calling 949-2867.
wife," Junor wrote. "He knows
she is unweD; and it is beeanse she
is unwell 'that she has twisted the
facts and distorted the truth."
In liVO, Gen. CoHn L. PoweU, chair·
Monon attributed much of the
man
of tbe U.S. jolat dllefs of staff;
information in his book, "Diana,
won
tbe
~ru Medal, awarded an.ller True Story," to Diana's
nuaUy
by
tbe NaUonal AJIOCiat!f,o lor
friends, some of whom he names,
tbe
Advancement
ol Coland People
and it has been widely infetred that for tbe hlglwt achievement
by a
they talked to Morton with her
Amerk:an.
knowledge. ·

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

Prince's side of marriage story
LONDoN (AP) -

Priace

Clliwb' ftlenda • l'rinc:ea Diana

is "se~ioully •h~ c~" l1ld has
dislOrtiCd die trudi about the COil·
pie's lllllriaae btcMae her ill·
ness, a new. reponed today.
"The fact IS he
spent the
11 yean liYinJ witb I'IICriom·
~IJ"ht'W"d wife," Slid. arlicle
in Today newspaper by Penny
J11t0t, author or several boots on

oe

•as

' QUEEN CANDIDATES · Pictured, ln .no
' partktllr order, are candidates vying for the
t111e or Melp Couaty Fair Q"eea as tbey participated Ia tile Fourth ol July parade In Racine on
. '' Sattrday morning: Mlcbelle Laugbery, Lisa .

~ : ---People
-..,;..
' :: NASHVILLE Tenn. (AP) ,Daily Queea helped Tom Hanks
'&amp;et beefy for his role as a washed- •
"'Up home run hitter in " A League
·of Their Own."
~ : "We were filming in the Mid'.WCSI where there's always a Dairy
·Queen within three blocks, · ' he
..,pc~ in an interview published Sat'linlay in The Tennessean.
" I also discovered pork pit bar·
:.becue, which tastes grea~ but I fig11red I was using up about three
jl&amp;ys worth of aneries for every day
1gorged myself,' • he said.
. •· Hanks plays Jimmy Dugan, a
·bmer major league player given a
last chance as a manager of a
women's team in a league orga·
nized during World War II.
., He said he drew the line when
asked to chew tobacco.
"Fortunately we found a suit·

Mil

Hofflllan, Billy Jo Lonl, R~ Wiles,
Neutzllng, Kelly Enln, Bollble Wblte •d Jeany
Varney. Bobby Jobson wu tile Ollly,candidate
for fair king. Tbe quee\1 and kina were crowned
S.tutdly evening at Star MW Park.
'

royalty.
"The princess is not the only
one who has beell mit«able IIIII
lonely and disillusioned by an
empty lllllriale.' ' it said.

NOBLESVILLE, Ind. (AP) John Mellencamp entertained more
than 20,000 fans at a holiday concert that was free, at least somewhat
Fans were admitted at no cost if
they held a ticket bought for one of
Mellencamp's three shows earlier
in the week. The concen Sawrday
at Deer Creek Music Center was
carried live on !50 radio stations
and broadcast later that day on
ABC-TV.
.
Mellencamp was raised in Seymour and lives in nearby Bloom ington.

from friends or a.les, whom she

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Olympic gold medal skaters Bonnie Blair and Kristi Yamaguchi
went two-on-ooe with Team USA's
Larry Bird.
"I got two out of five, but hey,
wllen Larry fli'St started out, he was
missing them too,'' Blair said after
the July Fourth shootout at a picnic.
The speed skater and her figureskating pal were in Portland to
warch the Olympic b&amp;Uetball team
compe~e in the Tournament of the
Amrricas . .
Yamaguchi hit three of five, but
once Bird got on a roll he was
unbeatable.
Magic Johnson backed out of
the shootout, pabbing the emcee's
' microphone and entertaining the
crowd.

~bos::!,r:;cr: : , 1r::

ollwlw nle at public euodon, II the front "-of the
Court llouM In Pomoroy,
Ohio, In the aboVI-IIImed
OOWI!y,onAuguet3,1t92,at
10:30 o'clock a.m., the fo~
lowing deaorlbed rut Mtete
eltueled In the County of
lllalga and Stall of Ohio, towlt:
mACT NO.1:
The following daacrlbed
1111 .,,., alluoted In the
Ylllage ol Rutland, County of
lllolge and Stall of Ohio:
PARCEL 1: Being all of
Lot a of S. RuUond InsUon • · Town a, ·R - 14 of
~- "'Ohio ~-·"\" Pu
....
Y•
,.
ahaee, uoopl fill of! the
SouthtldlofLotaaolcltoF.
R. Dunfllend Gamet Dunfee
11-o!•IZ.
A.f•• IOII.m. •-tovol- lll"""a
um• 121, Par..=-311,

- •

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WEEK #1:

· •· Community Calendar items
RACINE · Racine Village
:Mppear two days before an event Council will meet Monday at 7
iud tle day or tbat event. Items p.m. at the council chambers at Star
•Ill be received weD in advance .Mill Park.
to -re publication in tbe cal·eadar.
SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Moo,, ,
MONDAY
d~ at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
·," POMEROY • A three church Municipal Building.
sponsored Vacation Bible School
·"'ill be held Monday through FriCHESTER • The Chester Town·
~ from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the ship Trustees will meet Monday at
eroy United Methodist Church 7 p.m. at the Chester town hall.
with other host churches, St. Paul
Lulheran and Trinity. All children
POMEROY • Meigs Lccal Band
are invited to participated. The Boosters will meet Monday at 7
.lbeme is ''Team Up Wilh Jesus."
p.m. at the high school band room.
All parents are urged to attend.
LETART · The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 7
TUESDAY
.J!,m. 81 the office building.
POMEROY • Regular meeting
••
of Drew Webster Post No. 39,
.,.. HEMLOCK GROVE · ·vacation American Legion , will be held
Bible School at Hemlock Grove Tuesday. Installation of officers
Cllrildin Church wiR be held Moo· will be conducted. Special dinner at
·py throu&amp;h Friday from 6:3().8:30 7 p.mand meeting 818 p.m.
:)1.11. ''TCIIII Up With Jesus" is the
.1h11e; Claues for ages two
PAGEVILLE • Scipio Townlflnluah hilh school. Closing pro· ship Trustees will meet Tuesday at
p1111 will 6e Slll$y at 7 p.m. All 6:30p.m. atthe Pageville town
i'j:llikft;n invited.
hall.
'
'
I'
PAGEVILLE • The Columbia
ANTIQUITY · Then; will
be a
"J'ownship Trustees will meet Mon- hymn sing Friday at Yp.m. on
!!,ly at7:30 p.m. at lhe fire station. Route 338 in Aniiquity at Faith
'
Fello.wship Churc h featuring
:~; REEDSVILLE ~ The Olive "Headed Home" singers and oth:
,TiJirmllljp Trustees will meet Mon-.. ers.
i~lf."nina at 7 p.m. at the
~ver Forestry Building in
POMEROY • The tdeigs Coon-

.

'

c

-.r

Cou~•
PA
L 2 • "-'ng 33 '-~

.,.oiLotaof
,..,
Off "'-South-......
'""
Soutll Aullnd end being In
8eotlon 1, Town 8,11anga14,
Ohio Compr~ny'a Punihaae.
Ref1111101 le made to Vol11tH 131, Parp 110, llllllga
County Deed lltolh'de.
·
· Together wllll Ill the

July 6, 1992 ·July 10, 1992

Community calendar

· ·~.

PubliC Notice

ty Board of Elections will hold its
regular meeting Tuesday at 10
a.m., follow in' the official recount. There wtll be no meeting
July 14.

307,f'lga 441,11111lga County
Deed "-rde·
TRACT NO. TWO:
The lolo~Glt! dllcrlbed
raal Milia, ehulded In the
To-rrlpofRutlahd,County
of~ end ltete or Ohio:
Boghinlrlg II the NorthMII
oomer of IIDIIGn Na. 18,

REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the high school
cafeteriL Further information is
available,frorn Sl!ldy Bowen, 667·
6785: Evt.ryone.llfiCd 10 altend.

TOWI\I,Incllllnge1~;thencl

POMERY • The Big Bend
Sternwheel A.ssociation will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpen·
ter's Hall in Pomeroy. Anyo11e
interested in ~ with the festival is urged to
.

South Ill roda; lhllica Will
44 rode •nd 1t Qnb to tho
01111• ol the road; lhlnce
Nortli 11 clag. Eaat 12 roda
and* llnkl; ihence North 10'
roda, ' and 22 llnkl• the.North :a clag. W11112 rocla;
~. Nortli ..112dag. Weet,
11 rode ind 24llnkl; the., Eaat 111 the place of boglnnlng,aontalnlna1U8-,

.

Bring this coupon in to a Farmets Bank loca~on
near you and save even more on our already
low interest rates on auto loans I

WEDNESDAY .
REEDSVILLE • Past Councilor's Club of Chester Council No.
323, D or A, will hold its annual
picnic llld meedng ·at Forked Run
State Park in Reedsville on
Wednesday at 6 p.m. Officers will
be nominaled and installed. Guest~
welcome. Brina gifts for the

Your Bank/nJ¥.. .
r.;:l Farmers Bank
L:.!J

games.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at 8:30 Lm. 81 the conference room of Bank One in
1'omeroy, All members urged to
attend.

m_OI'
....,
Al.BO. the following real

2

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11t WeltleoOtlelser..t'

\J;,AM ft.o. 1011 tat
- - -

· ~oy. Cll G'ltil ~
61-·2116

•••

•lied

I
I

of

I

VERNON L.

••

:

WEBER

I.I

..... 7

~.o. eo. •

JupPtfs ,._,., OM .a?U

614166J.II61

llarchS, 1128JutyS.1t83

l

!

J'
1

rn Loving Memory

•

......... F.D.t.C.

. Roald Am •Ill 11' ol ~1 111'111
ille ' NwthWIIt p_.. ....
tweett 1101 .... 1101.

lnMIIIIOIY

I ,

Real Estate enera

I

1

····d~II rtll'lt W.e,r

365-1229

3

Offer Good ThN
July 31, 1992

Call tor

IA~OIIIO
u-.tr
.......

Bas.. RIL,Radle

PAm SERYKE
Mowen e Gail Sows
• Wtecleaten

YOUNG'S

11-28-'112·1

Q Iffy

S

UD .

C

•
:• ··~
:
••

Acldltlona
Work
and Plumblnl

•• · N·· c

••

[!]

.,
.......,

One.

Andy &amp; Chris,
I love you.
They took away
my home; they took
away my money;
And they took ME
away from YOU. But
they can't take away
my love tor you.
Love,

Gntndp.a BlBAII
W0.1 mo. pd.

Mr. .leek
Comet
Archbo4d,

.c.

,·992-6215

!r.rnlna,,
lion.

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY

WORKud •

LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

992·7553

POIUIOY, OH.

MICROWAVE
•ld VCR REPAIR
AU Mill
lrla~t .. OrW.

lilt'S I~INCE
SERVICE

304·273~5555

r all (6) aucoeaalVI

992·5335 or
915·3561

wlllka. The r..t publication

Rid- aalolloat- Go11ooa
E-~ "WWIar Plio"
mlllbla Fruth liNg.
•

Toblola l

Rid,_ Solo And FOal With
Cap!lla And E·~

Oo-

DluNIIc AI frulh Phi""'"Y. . '
limo
ShiN
UnMa Al/Ci
Campground Momballlolpo. Dialr.. a...., ChMatii 'Worldw!ta
Solocllono. Call Vocallon ,..
"""' U.S. And ~ 1-III073W250 or 301111 2203. F,..
Rtnlel lnfonnallon 305 113
1518.
' ••

=

Weight
'O.WIIjl:
St....: Nlillll. ., Blnaara, Ellorial
Eoloro, 121:11.
Yarlaty Of Olol Ptlla A¥111
•
Ctll lrfaUonal Plww;; C~l

""' lntonnaltort. , _ _ _ ,_

C.O.D. 'oiCrodll Canlo Aooatolad.

Whl-. ........P.o:

- - - 'l""""*lon: 1 l'IZ-RAFT, Tripa ""' AI ONou~
. Floato,
. White w.... ~':::!
243, OIIOn Join, WY
•
Whit- Roftl!!t, Vir•
glnLI'o N- And Oil!!lol' tuw..r..
CaN Tocloy
1·
-~RAFT. Drllh\-111, Inc.
P.O. lox au, Fayoa-,

""'-llniclouow:

wv...

~.

POWUWIII

b:==~~~~~~~4--~G~Iv~u~w~a~y---, yr old ....., oat I'IIY I

Truc:b
Tnrc:tor •Trellera

BISSELL &amp; BURKE ..,..,Bwkoldklnona-• wh~a. 304~8.
·
CONSTRUCTION · · 2 Eight - h Old PM Bull

HouMoblle Holltll
Equipment Clelrned I
. DigiMMCI
FREE ES7111A7f!S
45711 Flotwaada Road
..........,, Ohio 41711
(114) IIZ·:M11
(114) 11:1475

:t::

Homes

Re•otltling
Stop &amp;CoMpare
FlEE ESTIMATES ·

985·4473
667·6.179

H·92·1fal

llo1or To Clood ttom.o, llbc

Pupa. 0... Mila, One l'erroolo,

AHocllonoli, lnlalllgont Clll
114-141·1111Aftorlp.m.
...
Fl'll Ktttel'll, 114 441 4207. .~
Mall klltM to I good hooM,
!04..7Wi03.

6

Lost &amp; Found

rRIM and

Flljlnd:. Eva 0 - On 7\lp
Block, Foulh A - , ...,.....

7

Yard Sale

REMOVAL
: •LIGHT HAULING
•RREWOOD

MIDDLEPORT· 2 atory lramelahingle. houoe 2-3 bedrooms,
cabiheta, oink &amp;gu fumenoe, fii!IPiaoe. besemonl
on paved 11n111. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I $25,500

BILl SlACK
992-2269

LETART· Manual Ad,· One acre landscaped for rncble
horne ar building 1111. $3,500 make 111 olferl.

Pomiroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

USED

t.oige 2 story home 3--4 bedrooms,

AN OWNERI $22,600 (COME SEE...MAKE "N OFFER)

POMEROY· P11ilooklve.· 11/2atoryhorne3 bedrooma,

newly III!Mldalad lnew Dlulnblna. wiring &amp; lhermapeyne
w:odowe. Sldt ·deciUng, Polch, fu'l boleement on • loll. A
unique looldng home.l32.500

'

.

· WE NEED UBTIIIGB FQII AU; AREAS OP MEIGS
COUNTY I WHEt! 'I'OU'RE THlNIQNQ OF BUYING OR
IELUNO •• , lEI! US FIIIST fOR aLL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDII ·

•

Full

WANTeD:
time office Worbr.to wortc In
·a utility afllct In Melgl County. All phalli of
..Cretarlllt tldla wiH bt requlrtcl; tomt form
of IICCOUnllng dtgnell a mutt. Ply Is MilO"
tiablt, fuH benefits·pacaa- 1s otrwed. You
must have office experience, CQmputer
stdlls wiD bt req~ also.' Ufltllilil! employ·
ment a poetlbiUty, It . tht right pti'Mn Is
found. PINM ~ply to The Dally S.ntlntl,

box721D.

.

lmi'S LIWI
IUIIIEIIICE
949·2627or
1-ION37·1460
lAwn Mowing,'
Fertllbdng, Weeding,
ltldlleedlng.
' lhrubllldTI AeiiiiMII

Trlmmlnfl

1lo!oldanllriR&lt;-I!IIdoonllril- •

Caeacuallll

frwf4' I 'n

'

'·

AI: O.Hipolla ~lr T - . . .
Thlnl Annuo, lilllljlollo, ~.

&amp;CO.

LONGBOTTOM· 1 acre with 'River Frontage! "n e&lt;oeHent
camping ailal sa,ooo

ahad, building. lmme&lt;l. Ill P..-tlo!IITHIS HOME IN DESPERATEliEED OF

'

'

P-r,Ohlo

ft:'bllahedonce_h_kllL----~~~

buemert~, 1011'18_pine WOildwolt&lt;,

'
'

8:30p.m.

W•lk•• All•l

•

.

CARPENTER

614·949-2804

Millwood, W.Va.

NEW USTlfiG. Home under conatruction 'Fairview SUbdivision" Approx. 1600 sq. ft. ful beaernent w/2 car garaga,
3 bedrooma, de: room. 1 acre of ground. (Buy now and
choose your own color lcheme) $85,000

g~..tahllciNn.

,.

UCIIE

Rf 2

992•2259
608 fAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

:
•

TANNING

UJLLEY
INC.
w,

Public Notice

!t

CONSOLIDATED SECURin SYStEMS!.'
Phone 446-9595 or 1

lo:M4 W.... Mer

L11n1

will be mede 011 July 11,
1112, end the twenty..aight
(21) dayo for en~wor will
comm.,.. on thlt daa
In .... of yoll' !allure to
anower or otherwlae
reepond Ia required by the
Ohio Ruin of Civil
Proeadura, Judgm-...1 by
default will be rendered
agalnat you lor the relief
ilemended In the motion
delied.
Larry
Clark of Courtlo
(8) .. 15, 22, 29; (7) .. 13, 8IG

•
'

.

CLINIC

Agriculture

E..,_..

ollttclnn, and'

\I

24 " - · Experle(lce
Stale Llcennd
'Eatlrnalee • Conaullllllon

St. Rt 588 Weat • Galllpolla, OH

RAONEMOWER

fOR SALE

::11r::l ':~::U0:1uf ~:

Dirac:t

:

30 VISITS FOR '30

acceaa RIW to en Iron pin; the atatt of Callomla, you
.(all614·992·6637
thence South 14 [)ogi'H834' •• hlnloy notified 1111 you
St Rl 7
14" Eaat ~.03 :feet to an have been Mmed clelencllnt
• •
Iron pln, cronlng an Iron pln In • legal ecU011 IIIIUUed
(be shire OH.
1
at214.02feet lor relorenoa; Billy Joe Trou~ plalntlll,
thence Nortll 113 Dogreea 59 verauo Becky S. Trout,
t!2J'Hnl
feet Eall 188.5feet to an Iron der.ndanL Thla ecUon hie ll....,_ _ ,........,.,.._.
pin; thence North 25 dogreea . been Mlfgned CaN No. -.
28' 31" WMI 241.89 feel to DR·123 end II paneling In 1.,._ _ _......_ __
the point of the beginning, the Court of Common PIconlalnlng 1.01 ecr11, more In llelgt County, Pomwoy,
or flu.
Ohio 45761.
Doacrlbed below 11 the
Thl object ollhla motion
oantllllne of on occeaa right Ia to change the permanent
o
olweytotheaboved-lbed cuetody of Paul Oulm •d
lot:lloglnnlngatapolntNorth Mere Quinn from Mere
7 dog,_ 45' Weat 25 feet Quinn, Sr. lo BUly Joe Trout
fr
th pol
I "-1 In
om e nt o ....,. nn g Md for -~~~.
of the ebow deacrlbed lot;
You 111 raqulred lo
1
thence South 82 dear- 15' anawer thla 110tlon within
weatm.sr..t(5010otwlde
.£L.htl21) .._
1111r
twenty__,
_,. a

EXCEPT one acre prev~
ously conv'l'ed 10 Jamaa L
Schulor,
All oldl, gee, ml lner~oya~
Ilea an rente 1 un
eny
e•laUng 181111 ahall belong
tbaolutlly 10 the Grentlla.
11
SUBJECT tO all
,.
menll, hlghwayad, ~~~-II end
mineral reaerva ona, eny,
of 'R:i:mDoeclt:Volume
nd Vol
237, Page 721• 1
ume
311,Page445,lllelgaCounty,
Ohio, Deed Recorcla.
Proporty addraaa: Route
11, Middleport, Ohio 457110.
Pr~erty appralaed at
ARCEL 1 a
TRAC NO. l; P
'
PARCEL2: $5,1100.00; TRACT
2' Ul,OOO.OO and c.nnot =~~ 0at 1 ;:~: 3~enW
NO
btl aold
for lloa than . _
._~
1,,_
d
10
l·-•olue
Weat85.1•-•(changlngtoa
lhlr TERMS
... appra
.... v · 40 1001 RIW to IhlI cour11 );
OF SALE
The euccaaa 1u 1•; pur· lhence South 82 degr11a 15'
cheaor,ouoonu hl a ~·d
... 1• W••t t9.4 feet end aouth 58
eel ah u be
1 eel degr- 01' 30" Weal 291 .5
..:•:••:•:;Ft=.:..,.::.::':....:.:...;.req~u..
r ...!..----..--..-..... 1
G
I

Pollc•Fire Connect. :

RNidenllal - Conunerelll

Beunetts Mobile Ho~~
1391 Safford School Rd.
Cal 4)

tone O. ·
SIZED LIMESTONE
!~ 511:'0~~'101~:0\":::e ._:·~~~ ===~~
FOR SALE

~~:::r;.:.c:,;::r~•!:.

0

Qaa.ty Hi Efflcielcy AW
Co..tioHn, Heat
F1naC.s &amp; Now
Water Heaten.

Public Notice

or =:EPliNG 2 acr.. ond

MINERSVILLE Rd.·

•

&amp;,Savings Company

OH., wv. ' H.U.D.
Ap,miiiiMfildlrltl
llw. . Prodllds.

'J

You're Invited to .Oui . .

'.

'

black

Juncr said her informalloll came

in the news---

able herbal substitute. I knew
exactly .~e jowly !ook I was lookmg for, Hanks satd.
The movie also stars Geena
Davis and Madonna.

Public Notice

BURGW ·FIRE
CLOSED. CIRCUIT T.V. ;

IIIWOODS .
lOME RINIR
.IVICI
YAimU

949·2671
IACIII, OH.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

'

�p

SNAFU® by B~ Beattie

Yard Sale

,

Monday, July 6, 1892 -~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

a The Dally sentinel

-

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Ohio

-·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Television
Viewing _

GeUipollt
&amp; Y!!=lnlty

:'f.~

=:o:..r •-·
.

'

•

'

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

t&gt;·:~ := =-•r:
=-:
cu ..,,.. ,..

'

., '" s. Wllh Ul ..... ,_And
,"""'
__
-~_.Tole-:
. You ~ Thll
~ ICf'
'Ill: Dlllr
.....,
Cllum.
11Waadl - " ' UoMn •-.

'

I

s

35 Loti l Acreage

0

a.PDIIU-Iookt.

"lhls ~ su-aln originated either In an Asian jl.o1gle
or l.f1der lhe back seal Of a New YOfk Clly cab.'"

=
o:.--...""C ::s r======r-======1
r:1r;:,. tJ
ll!ll!tflll

~
!!!rd_:,
...,.

=•toold.rp=,=:

-· -.

Mop 1.., ~ Bra•

•-

11

Help Wanted

11

laoy Work! ~Jonl Poyl Aatomblo Pn&gt;ducll AI HomO. Coli
~F-. 1-«1Q.417-4MI, Ert

ToOII,

0111111. Elporlonoldllehnlclln-.
01111 ,.., Ploll-. !f"p1'Of Mnd ,_.,. to: lor '113,
_._. ~~ Tlblo - ay Pam•~. Ohio or .., 114-112--... - -

..-. -

'

. Clothing •

2!llllouppolnt. .nl,

· ... ~ Children, II&gt;JOII AVAIU.IL£
- . Pole /Pane, .......
Ptclln
1'1111t11 U0.
, _ Kltohln Ul WHIIIy}l'ul or ""II·Tilnl,
. . _ Pial~ Ctookl.
• Duo to lhe lllgh coot ol loctory
Couill:•••r.. WIY ~ .,_., IMWUOI, wotklr"e
Prill
~ _ , , compenllllion, 1nd other CGifto.
fllulll ...,.:;;;;ii,...~ pony - · ...., ......

=
c..

~-- C:O.::
Top - · - . . - .

And IAII

or ()dolo

And Endl.
Wid, Jfb I All IIMuolnlnt · A I ... To IIIII PriCI. No
A p altlla For Acctctant-, All
111M 1'1..., No llelwHII. All
• - 1o111 "" 11. T~n~~~: Cull.

=".:"'~~";~i

8

=rtaa

9

WantadtoBuy

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

:u:~:'~·i:E

lnt "riiif£ 0111 Mm-

oulto -

mon ..., -

·

llllmllli

=~~~·- ~il:'.::

- _,...,... fi!IOIIIIIY
-..
. , _ 10

~-..:.i...,~CJT,,"=:

I-· . . . . .,.,.

-

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

-~·--..... lor
~~~1100 blclhlllh .... .....,,
HelpWintad

It was a
twenty-one gun

.

salute.

I

UK S HY

,.,_To Ride I""'"
auanar - . Plft·,._ •
W.nlod:

~,...5;;1;~~6;;1;~~;~~;...,' awhile,
~~~~~thenH:~\~
q~:11/:
he tumed to me
ifE

I

I

WL A I

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

and asked, 'But - -- it ··-?"

L.
. ...J

Complelo the chuckle quolod
by fill ing ln the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

~...--~~~-

•,

SCRAM.t.ETS ANSWERS

12

1-3

Puddle· Rocky· Spum ·Belong · UPPER BUNK
New army r~rwt to very large drill sergeant, 'You're
the type of sol '! !'ve always wanted to serve with, provi~ing you don't alee the UPPER BUNK:

81-, Pl.-.,,., W.VI., 304-

17W0G.

- O n Wn~s 1111, HoYO
Erpo-.114 2111 IIIZI.

Situation
Wanted

NORTH

Duotoooll IM 112 IIIII JOE.

'AVOM' ALL AIIIAIIIhlrl rour
-.,.,...
.......
'lou'l
the coming
Eltnl
For Up.
M --And TV SM.
To
,,.1 ..0 ta
Alt

.. Flfnd On-IMotlon. Good
..., No lrp ...... lleQulood.
Coli , _ _ F o r ln""tion .. •11 v.....

$UIIIIIn.

14

Buslneu

-

fllltr.

Training

.763
.KQ

+106432

.

1112 a..tt• .....,
lion For .... ftJ C:J,.,
hiUIId. ., ••• .,..

:-RII~..~In:--~,~...~lll~lau;llh:-::,.
....,.:-.,.,00' 2 IR 1.... In oountry. $200

~~~~
Rogletllllllon

18

tZllll.

Wantld to Do

Wll ~lly- fen.
cod In
Aoi-ICII
AYII,__
AIM. Coli
114o24WAII7.
'

-·
--

·Polnl
1200P
.._
•• 2 "'''•
l - . :tCM-113'1-

--

.......

1 ••d UOftl • • good toc:llllan,
101 llllh • lliln Sl. lllwly
rwm adJit d wtth
UIIIHIII not lncl
, dopooll
=~· :10W11-Tt31 ... 171-

":.?."'iancel.

Opportunity

goo.-......,~­

--oto.DifloAIIIo, •·

=--~~-,. :
lhc~
bod_fll'!r.J!II ~·- ~... . :·... 301·Tn-MTr.

ALDER

Ttil! ·15

••' TONI6MT'5
..,,
TOPIC :
•••

"'

·'

'·

,,..,

POT.

A""fFICA
~

.

Call AR·11 fl.lllr lllldl - .

Now

-

tulbo. ~
I ojld.,

Coeh· hiTII,
-FuR And
- 2, llod
12 30"
IlL
Ooubi.

Enoomna. MIM $110 Cooh•
HhOoo Flild o..ito 12 IlL FuR

And llod. Ortalnol, lllnl Cone!.
MIG c.to. 1'11. Doyo And

R-

aa -. bod roam

= vw,
-Ci.o.::ql(

z.,t_~ Aoldng

hmter ivory . . . . . Elaborll1
fllh Tanto, 2411 .lacklon Awe.
Point PI
nt, IOMJWOII.
full .... Troplcot .'::'d.lllnll,

--Inola

=
-

•

Ford Eacon, Grell o..
R,.. GreiiiiiOO. IM-

Scrv:ccs

•

"
-. .
-nlln
- "
.."
Old,
_

3

HAPPY .lACK IIANGE LDTION;
hilling lnd heir
i1nJw1b to any lll:lftlll, hot opol,
or luriaoa on dogill hooiooe
wlhoui"CortlooolllllH-.
Suppiy,
...........

'
••'

All tYOII mu cIll,, brill&amp;. IIIDc*

• ...... Free lllh 7

·-..tiM.

m.2,

•

bod"::::_.

Cent•{,:.::,••

·-··Now

E:J:a=IIII,J-,OH
1
'

FORECL08ED I REPO . _ ,
Mlrltlt Yll•. ,.......,
ll¥1nae. y- ,..... 1-411142lxt. f l . - For cu-.

•

--.

H. Third llldd'l' ~rt,

h1hom ..,........., 1pl, dip I
At. teO North, I 811, llloo CIOIIdKI..,, 131,000. CIH lor IJI-

~~- IIWIM111

or -

'hoo

IIi, All

&amp;lory-·,_,

=:~~'='

-·

....
N0w
nllloodlfii, •P• ..r
.-.

. ..................·-_,.,_

54 Conductor
Zublft57 S.uii-

Miflt

80 DIMago

MYtrtfJ

&amp;1 Old ago

62 . . . . .

prtnc.,.

&amp;3 Concerning
(2 wdl.)
&amp;401&gt;11uh
85 Btlllfl
8&amp; lllxle1n

Drglltl

....... .._

. :ze- PlUto

~

·. 28 Swiii!Ont1
' 31 Ftnter

33t:

· Truotl,
1171 -For -1100
404 ~
~

- . Wlh A 20 CU. Ft.

=.."=:'•.="&amp;·all.

60DDY If STROLL DOWN TO
TH' STORE AN' GIT ME A PLUG
OF CHAWIN' TERBACKY

61 Farm Equipment
1111Johnllllrl-11

3 Reltrllo
4 NufMncll

lhrub

34(:foM
311AeWill

Cobly Tnllh Cot! IIRDIDr\,cr;

OMve

58Ettc11

24 BrNihlnt

==-111~

5 Tiling In llw
8 w. Coni coli.

DOWN

31 Tuagcy.
40 IIIII
41 OM of Hoe

7 Ptrlllnfng

to

·~·

1 PltiM ropiJ

8 ACirHI

2 Two-toed

Shtlley 9 R1re Dll

lllotll

1111110 ltyllar, EllctJic FNII U11
Wit~ Chlrger. 1111te 28.
'

........

~-1211.

:=.=~=~~ ~'"=-12

63

HovMO 2 ........ fur.

1511owtng

I

21 Ullll
22 - of Wight

'"" 111111. c.to . . . -

$5,1111,

1

51P::Jt'l

II8L 1nol Ga.

MIJIMVI-IIL

-1

HU~=:•:-LU
21 HP4 WD - . ; 2DHP 4WD

Oh~,

12 Cut

18 Goflllrollll

tlon. 11111. 0110. 301-17Ht47.

·-~

Todl,t1-40k

44 Ftllllle word
45 Cenltr
48 Hualft
50 Gravel rldllf

20Belwew

Good - .

Anewer lo Previa• Puatt

rtlnciHr

11 Zero

Mu1lcaf
lnllruments

D-4, CIIIFJIIIIw Dolor, V-r
SOund IIINialil - . , Pony JD 1010 Trootor - n g ...,.
Mo4or, P,IGO. IM 3INSOO
.
.....
Ford -100
.
Nlghtl.
Olio, Willih,JSO. 1MDouble window w11tonn win-KUIOI'A
1 lnmlng, 5dl/2', MO.
304-t75-1101.

Lilt.

..

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

. The World Almanac 411 Crossword PuZzle ·

vllllcfeo

FJrm Suppl1es
&amp;L1veslock

+AJI

+QJ

I

18 Serb, • •, .

-

• A 52

By Pkllllp Alder

13 Off-wlollo
14 Thll (Sp.)

Uloo -

+AQJI09

Establish
the key ruff

... ' 1

I_,...

~~uroc~y.

+A 9 7

SOUTH

1 Cui of me11
5 Foh IIOfi'J
lboul
t 14, Romtn

c nufHot

+109853

+Ks5

ACROSS

57

'10 4

West
Nor I~ Eall
_ You are faced with a loser ill your . Soa*
1•
Pass 2+
Pass
. hand. And if you lOBe that trick, you 4 •
Pass Pass
Pass
will go down in your contract. What
chances might you have to eliminate
Opening lead: • K
that loser?
·
·
Right! An opponent might revoke.
But if you til ink tllat is likely, buy one
lottery ticket - you're bound lo win a
major prize.
Realistically, there are lwo com· pitch.
mon waY3 to get rid of I loser. Either
H you can't take a discard, perhaps
you can ruff it In what !like to call the you can ruff a loser in the dummy. But
short-trump hand (whicll is usually the how can you arrange tllat ruff when ..
dummy), or you can discard it on one dummy bas three hearts too? Well
of dummy's winners. Let's look at you can, if you look down the road. '
tllese possibilities today and
The simplest approacll, if not tech- ·:
tomorrow.
nicaliy perfect, is to duck the first ·
After covering tile East-West cards, trick, win the heart continuation and
· clan the play in four spades. West cash two lop trumps from your band.
eads the heart king.
Continue by playing a diamODd to .
As the lead has dislodged your heart dummy's queen, overtaking the dia· ~
ace, you are laced with lour losers: mood king with your ace and C8lhlng ,
two hea!V and two clubs. You don't the diamond jack, whUe discarding ~
have the time lo establish a long club dummy's remaining heart. Now ruff -.
on which to discard a heart loser. The your last heart with the spade king. Fi- ..
opponents will have'.cashed their four nally, concede two club tricks but ·
tricks long before you have let up the . claim your contract.

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H was a dark Suddenly,twentyOJld stormy night one shots rang out!
...
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'14110 2 lr, 1 South of
Eureka, on Sl. Rt.7. No pwo,
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Help Wanted

words.

penile con- • - ot
doltaro In production limo with

· PubllcSall

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MQN.. JULY8

1'11AT MIT
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TA.II.ot ICinllllil. Ohio. !!11 .. 01 Dono ...... Dllw

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. BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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·

•

OUTSTANDING ENTRIES· Honored for
tHir ouiStanding entries in Middleport's lode·
pendente Day Parade on Saturday were: l·r,
Ray Wedemeyer, acc!Pting for tbe Wedemeyer
famUy, best-equestraan entry; Jerry Hawley,
Post Commander of Middleport American
Legioa post for most patriotic entry; Marcia
Karr, honored as tbe most dedicated senior cili-

.,

zen; Earl Gilkey, also rep-nlil!J Middleport
A!fterican Legion; Daniel Russell of the Meigs
Hagb School band, best marching unit· Tabnee
Johnson, representing Rejoicin&amp; Life 'church
best walking unit; and Donna Grueser and
tor Dave Bryan, Hope Baptist Church best
float.
'

PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT IN 'PLACE.
This dome-Hke piece ol playground equipment is
provic!ing m!'cb run for youn111ters at 'Star MiD
Park m Racme. Tbe purchase of tbe equipment
by the Racine Park Board was possible with a

Pas:

donation l'rom tile Meip C..I:J lllkm. Blrt, :
In.~ afternoon oa S.tarday tllei'e was a 11q :
r&amp;IS!ng at tbe park by
oldie .Una lew
Legaon Post 602, Tile Ruritu Clab ud Plfk :
board.

••bers

•

'

"Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
in Maspn, Gallia and Meigs counties."

. In Meigs CoUIIty

.·In-Home adaptive ,equipment
'

GOOD ENTERTAINMENT • Country and
• watera music. ftUed the Rudand Park for the
• Fourth ol July celebration. Here David Wills at
- lbe microphone and the Country Misfits Band

.

' '

OUTSTANDING SENIOR. Marcia Karr
age 101, of Syracuse was honored as the Mosi
Dedicated Senior Citizen In Middleport's Fourth
of July Parade. She greeted the crowd in a

close out their afternoon performance with
"God Bl!ss America." Evening entertainment
was provaded by White's HUI Band.

sporty white coavertible, drivea bJ Jadae Frtd
W. Crow nL Here, Bob Gibaoft, toonlillatlllf Ill
the activities, preseats Miss Karr willa 1aer trophy.

.. Many elderly adults and/or
family members are auemj)!ing 10
keep loved ones at home as an
alternative to nursing home
placement While caregiving is
never an easy job, there is adaptive equipment which can. be
bought, rented or obtained on
loan which will ease some of the
burdens. Many individuals&lt;Use
these devices for their own per·
sonal use.
•
Equipment is available for
housel)~ld. adaption, personal care
(ex. bathang and dressing)
and
.,
.

~.

~

~. ~~

~~~c

Frida)~ ~ J .

'

aids to independent laving (ex.
amb~lation and eating).
1- ·Household adaption includes such items as rolling
storage carts, grab bars for
kitchen and bath, door latches,
door,kickplates, automatic operators or sandbags and portable
ramps.
2· Personal care - includes
such items as sock stariers, long
scroll brushes, sponge mitts,
shower/bath seats, tub rails sham·
poo JnlyS lind raised toilet sealS.

3· Living aids - includes
such items as canes, walkers.
wheel chairs, egg crate mauress·
es, hospilal beds, lift chairs. suction cups and plates, built· tip han·
dies for utensilS and special
devices for cutling and holding
food.
.
The Center's Health Service
program has magazines from
which adaptive equipment may
be ordei'ed. We also have a book
entitled ''The Doabl~·Renewable
Home" which contains ideas for
·expensive home adaption . The
book may be borrowed by individuals who would like 10 obuain
.ideas.
The Senior Center has small
items which may be loaried 10 60
plus individuals. We have canes,
walkers, handrails, bath chairs. a
bed board, crutches, and tub rails.
Sl!ould you need any of these
items, pleaso contaCt the Center al
992-2161.
Larger items, such as beds
wheel chairs and lift chairs may
be purchased or rented through
=~1 equipment and supply

.

The Gllllia Coupty Senior Citizens Center is the recipient of
United Way Funds this year to be used to implement an Adult
Day Care and Respite Program. Pictured are Chloris Gaul,
United Way B01rd Member; Wayne Benson, United Way President; Lloyd Blazer, President of the Gallia County Council on
A'ing B~rd ofTrustees; Paula Thacker, presenting check, and
Kam Sheets, United Way Board Members; and Harry Pugh,
Vice President of the GCCOA Board of Turstees.

.

S&lt;?cial
Security
benefits·
are
not
,,
reduced by·earnings·
after
age
7
0
.
'

'

Social Security earnings teSt does from Social Security.
not apply aflel you'n:ach age 70.
If you're now 70 or older and
The exempt amount for bene- you've never applied for Social
ficiaries age 65·69 this year is Security· retirement benefits. you
Are you 70-years-old or older $10,200. For earnings above should contact our offices. Our
and still working full time?
$10,2PO, $1 is deducted from the toll-free national number is 1lf you are, then you should individUal's Social Security bene- 800-772-1213; or you can call
' know this: you 1don't have to fits for each $3 earned· up 10 tbe my office at 446-7660. The local
~~ !0 ~ getting Social Secu- flill amount of tl!c potential bene- · Social Security Office is ,located
,1'11)' benefits..
.
fiL Undet this rule, a person who at49'01ive Street in Gallipolis.
.
, Before S'O.u tu~ 70, Social always paid the maximum
The benefit application pro. AMERI~RA TRIP • Sennl ol ... Melfi CotUilJ s.Jor
Secunty earnmgs llmus may have amount of Social Security tax cess only talces a few minutes'
, Ceater tranlers •••1••1~1 •••lr da1 at Al!l'rlnora 'U Ia ' .' J .eJl! you from ·r=~~~ benefits if coqld .earn over S4!MOO a year . and you can get bacl: to wprk .
. . . . .c~~.UI!I~.I;!!a~,l!M.~J.'!i!.~'?!.~ !!!f. ~ .~~- .':: .yAlll.wen:: .a'bl&amp; .eaJW. lllll•tl\e.' .'alltl'iilll.h!t'tlwt.So!M. bbflU'Iis' ' : :: •·.'. ·.-:. ·: .':: :.' • ••. ·.
'
' '
''
· b)' Carollnriii·Carter
, SoCial Security Manager
· , I,.GalllpoUs, Ohio

~---.20
....
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IN STOCK

'$4''

25% OFF

STOCI

ALL URIOS

BED
'.

SYLVANIA .25" .
:25%
~
0FF
p
_ ___. COLOR CONSOLE TV ,
SAVEl

SAVEl

22 STYLES REDUCED
STORE HOURS
••••., 9:3G-8:00

···••t5a11rday
foJO-S:GO

'

$46300
.

ANDE

25
19~

FURNITURE
F

SYLVANIA ,COLOR TY

REMOTE

$

00

S

FURIIIUIE, IPPI.I•ICES, IY's, FLOOR COYERIIG
DOWIIOWI POMIIOY, OliO • 992·3671
'

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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33621">
              <text>July 6, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5243">
      <name>downing</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2337">
      <name>tiemeyer</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
