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                  <text>TUeaday,January19,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GI raised U.S. flag over POW camp
O...U.I

I

LFCJ.yelll

110. ,._ p · e 1 aevcul -"'1
llltcn rn. A
W GJIW tild
beaa J&amp;ilauS d - ia Moool•qo

frn.-

aa .,.....,woddw.u.ne

TOYS FOR CHILDREN • Pictured are
Eloise Adams and Dora Wining or the Meigs
County Salvation Army and ''Mac'' McMillion
of Overbrook Center. McMillion was one or the

llltcn delai
ft liap d die
Gil I I GaL Gccqc l"'ltaa) 11aR
ArtrJ Slab llllde dleir Wll'f Ill lhe.
. . . . . . d ....... c:Bp.
Ollie of die llaell .... AmaiciD ..my ...... wlloat lbe
"wla ......y.
Gl dilnbcd 1111 die fltcpole, 1M:
dowD die aglyGa
.......
. .. , . it wilb tile I
N Slln
IIIII SlripeL• Well. MI. tblt tilay
01-me.
I - die pilot of. B-26 t- ""ci
shot down .,_ Nortb Aliii:a ill
JaniiiiY of 1943. Before 1 - IP.IIl
10 Moost ..ti. I W.. ia ..... FOW
camp, Stlllg LUft. m. Ia 1944, a
lalgc Amtrica 0., - . .,..ns
into die c:.np ..S houatato me for
hidin&amp;-(1-a""""'itycMiua.)We
wae ....eo put die Ore on
tile ptlillld ill CIIC lbe pWa tblt

elves that Santa kept busy aU year making toys
for chDdren. Items presented were wooden J'(J!:king horses, cars and a band crocheted baby
blanket.

we pmyal MUid oae day CGIIIe eo
libc:nllc us bid ~ idelitifymg
tile c:amp. I so-' die fill beho m

When Gel!. Paaon li\lerlral US,
my mommw IIIII 1 weal up to the
Gama fill IDWCI', 1lx* down their
fiii..S proucJly repllced it with the
b fiful .Amencan 1118 I bid kept
hjdc!Hi• ror 10 111111y mom.a
Sorry it lid me 10 kJoa 10 wri!C,
billl'lle been thinkiDa lbout this for
foar yan end decided it was time I
let you
DR. _MARTIN
All.AJN, SI:IREVEPORT, LA.
DEAR DR. ALLAIN: Can you
believe thit was 48 years ago?
1'lllllb for the memories, wl!ii:h
..,.,u me - BcJI) Hope will be 90

mow: ..

· ..
u
·
,_. old m
-,.
Dar Au LaDdfn: I just read
!he JeUer from "J.R.." who bit her
doctor's arin when he ~~:eideady
pine""" ber during a~

emergency room, tile doctor decided
I dim't need a pain ldDer liDce lhe
knee was numb. He tried to push
my kneecap bac411Ut it wu so
swollen it wouldn't go into position.
Meanwhile, the pain was
exapcialing.
Suddenly 1 sat bolt upri&amp;h~•
grabbed lhc doclllr's arm end bit it.
He Jet out a ICiellll lhat could be
'-\1 block away. Two emei'JIIIIC)'
room WOdm rushed in to IICIC.whit
was going 011. The doctor yeiW,
'Hold thM girl's 111!11 down!" They
· ~·and he pushed my kneeclp batlt
11110 ~lice.
•
.
This happeDcd 11 yean ago, blit I
remembcl' it like it was yesterday. I
don't drink wine lllymclle, but I still
love the Beades. •• CAROLYN
FROM CALIF.
DEAR CAROLYN: What a
III;IXYI Isn't it intereslina how aome
nigbunarcs fiom the put bllll out to
be fuMy when we look back at
them?
Gem of the Day: Old doctors
never die, tbey just lose their
palients.
·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Trimble

Pick 3:
209
Pick 4:

Page 4 .

a

Vol. 43, No. 189
Copyrighted 1993

in computing. Worked as electron- of Buffalo, N.Y., in 1987.
ics technician for major company.
He also gained credits toward
Speaks French, travels widely, his bachelor's degn:eat die Univerplays chess.
• sity or Mnssachusetts but quit when
One word made it all moot: he ran out ofmoney.
Homeless.
He was once nw:ried and, build.. _-.·
..
Unable to fmd a job for lack of a ing on technical skills learned in
home, DuBois has added a new the Army, worked on a high-tech
. item to his curriculum vitae: printer as a technician for Digital
Corp. in Westfteld for five years in
entrepreneur.
He has buih a small business as the 1970s. He earned about
a commercial window washer foL. $16,000 a year before returning to
about 20 clients in Northampton. school in search of beuer things.
He is now working for himself,
He inherited $12,000 when his
angling for more accounts, and father died but SPCnt it on his coleven slatting a new life in a rented lege education and medical bills.
room this wedt
.
He underwent successful operaBy his elllmple, Dubois is chal- tion in 1980 to remove a cancerous
lenging some widely held notions tumor rrom his chesL He had insur· ..
about il,le homeless.
ance; .but it-didn't pay for every·
"I liJce to work • and I can't get th'mg.
·
that permanent job,'' he said. . He was unable to find a job out
' 'You really wouldn't find any- of college. He said employers in
thing in a corporation, which Buffalo and Seau!e, where he also
expects you 1:0 have..a phone and looked; told him his knowledge
permanent ~s1dence..
was already outdated in the rapidly
Durmg an mterv1ew at Grove chanaing computer field.
.
Stree~ Inn,~ homeless shelt~r.
. Desperate for money, DuBois
DuBOis, weanng a tom s~eatslurt, picked apples in Washingron state
JENNA FERGUSON
sipped coffee as he reflected on - . the fiiSt in a string of tempoouy
how he W?und up there.
. jobs. He returned to Nonhampton
Techmcal terms about comput· in November - homeless for the
ets and insects, which he also stud- first time - after working con·
ied in ~ollege, crept into his C!ln· struction in Alaska
.
·versa lion. ~~ spoke of tounng
On extended visits in the past,
.
he had sometimes washed windows
Glenn A. and A.my D. Ferguson, Europe ll;"d Asl&amp;.
Th1s
•s
die
same
sbm,
bearded
for
-pocket money. This time, he
New Haven, W.Va., announce the
man
some
.people
shun
on
the
began
knocking on doors at stores
birth of a daughter, leona Danielle,
street,
even
m
this
college
.town
~f
and
offices
in earnest, offering to
on Oct. 15 at Cabeii·Huntibgton
f!Jnky
restaurants
and
lefttst
pohwash
windows
for about $5 a storeHospital in Huntington, W.Va.
ucs_.,
And.
he
never
panhandles.
front.
. She weighed seven pounds and
. I lbmk there arc people. wh~
DuBois now.makes only about
six ounces and was 20 inches long.
$30 a week, but it was enough to
Maternal grandparents are Frank think.we are gomg 10 eat the ncb,
.
enable him to rent a $90-a-month
E. and Carol S. Sisson, Pomeroy. he satd. .
Maternal great-grandfa'iher is . DuBOIS, whose fathe~ was an room on Thursday. Though his new
tnsurance agent.. grew up m n~y home is publicly subsicJized, he has
Ralph M Sisson, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are John Easthampton w1th. four ?ther. chtl· not applied for welfare or rood
and Joanne FerguSon, New Haven, dren m a French Canadian family. slamps
"I c'an survive without that;'' he
W.Va. Paternal great-grandmother He went to· French-speaki.ng
parochial school and earned a two. said. •'The Jess government depen·
is. Mae Grashear, Viper, Ky.
There is another child at home, year degree 1n compu~r sc1ence deney, the better."
from Bryant and Sua110n College
Luke Asa, age five.
The Order of Holy Baptistism
' was given to die infant by Father
Albert H. MacKenzie of St. Peter's
NEW YORK (AP)- Neil Jor- worse and worse, the business
Episcopal Church in Gallipolis on
seemed more difficult to get anyNov. 22. Godparents present were dan, whose "The Crying Game" thing through," the direcillr said in
Angela Sisson, Plano, Texas; has been mentioned as a possible today's The New York Times.
Amanda Sisson, Columbus; and Oscar contender, nearly quit the "You looked at what was coming
business less than two years ago.
Jack Hayes, Louisville, Ky.
• 'The movies were getting out: such paucity of invention . l

By JEFF DONN.
Associated Press Writer
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP)
- His resume was Jllenty impressive: Maurice DuBOis, 43. Degree

Moo""'wg.It-ro.p.billr.. 11ft
the B-deldt

lhepain.
.
·
When we finaDy .mived at lhc
1

m.-dl--.

By JULIA PRODIS
A......,.., PressWrilr
DETROIT (AP) - Retilemcnt
disappointed 67-ycar-old Mary
Himay.

So four years after sbe retired !IS
a clerk with the Michigan state
uncmpioymelit office, sbe hired on
with iecl1y Services IDt_and has
been worldng as pllt-time tt.mpo- ·
rary help fm lbe past,_-.
"After a while I got tired of
going visitiDJ. going shopping,
going here, gomg there. I clriW I
gotta gCt outa tberc." said Himay,
processiug telephone onlen at
~Foods Inc. in Troy.
' 'Ii Jally boc.a my mcnle up.
I'm such a busy penon, ~yone
who wants
. to ICC
... me has. to make

a

ir"""tmmt

.

an :znay isn't alone. A study

Fergus on birth
announced

released late last ,_. shows ihiR
pk:uty -of .,,,,.,a~ 10
hire reairees for everythin1 froiD
clerical to managooeat positioos;
however. lbe "''vi"" doo't biR:
many of lhem.
. The stady was conducted by
two Mic:bipn professon for die
A.merican Association of Relired
Pe&amp;ns. It found tblt 46 pticenl of
the 1,000 private compll!lics surveyed hire people over 50 wbo
have retired from otber jotJs. II!MIY
in pennanent, full-time positioos.
But 63 percent of die compaaies
lbat employed n:tirccs had fewer
than 1(1 0111he payroll
.
Researchers Cllpected to find
only about 20 pen:cnt of private
companies hiring retifces - and

arc

----Names in the news---kept thiaklng, ' Why not take up
somelbing mm: rcwmling?' "
The turnaround for the Irish
novelist ud director oa:wn:d 1Rcr
he came across in his desk a shan
SIDty he had 'Wfdco years . . He
turned it into a screeaplay m just
two months.
....... _ ......... w
d•
a or; -1--&amp; ~ 4 9&gt;'0 ID
New York and Los Angeles in
NoVCillbe{ and will go natioilwide
~'~-"

Community calendar

TUESDAY
CHESTER • The Meigs County
Livestock Sale and Show sub-com·
mittees have scheduled meetings 10
review 1992 livestock rules and
regulations and to make reconl·
mendations to the 1993 senior fair
board. The meetings are open to
any 4-H or FFA member, parent or
advisor. The swine sub-committee
will meet Tuesday at? p.m. at
Chester Elementary.
POMEROY · Alnerican Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, Tuesday. Dinner at 7
p.m.. meeting at 8 p,m.
LETART FALLS · There will
be a.special P'1'0 meeting at Letart
Falls Elementary on Tuesday at 7
p.m .
RACINE • A meeting on agri·
cultural law will be held on Tues·
day at Southern High School in
Racine. The session will be held
from 7 10 9:30 p.m. in lhe vocational aaricultuJe ciaJsroom. Fencing
Jaws, dog laws, Wiler rights, under·
ground storase 'tanks and many
other Jaws aft'ecting fanners wiD be
llilcalsed. The IIOIIion is ~sored
by the Adull B8lic Educatm Cen·
ter of Tri-County Vocational

School, as a pan of its continuing
education program. The meeting is
open to die public at no charge.
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold their
organizational meeting Tuesday at
7 p.m. at town hall.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT ·
"T h e
Middlepon Arts Council will offer
a series of dance classes on western
line dancing beginning Wednesday
at 6:30·p.m. Dances to be taught
include the Electric Slide; Texas
Freeze, Achy Breaky, Titsll Push,
Boot Scootin' Boogie and others.
Cost of the classes, per session, are
$3.50 per person and $7 a couple.
Call 992-2675 or 992-7733.
SYRACUSE • The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club of
Syracuse will meet Wednesday.
Bring items !0 make tray favors for
Febniary: red iind w.llite construction paper, red ink pen or marker,
glue.or paste, scissors and a ruler. ·
POMEROY • The Mii!dleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday

=-stars Fore.

i!)~

Whitak·
er as a Brilish soldier swicJned in
Nonbcm ln:illld who picks up a
beautiful TIOIJIIJl playa! by Miranda Richudsoa ..S discoms he has
been lured into a tnp by die Irish
Republican Army.

meeting for parents and students cif
the junior cla~s at Eastern High
School on Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in
the cafeteria.
·
ROCK SPRINGS • The Middlepen Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Rock Sl'rings United Methodist
Church. Gerald Rouaht, Pomeroy
Chief of Police, will speak on
"Morals of Children and
Teenagers."

even then only on a temporary, human resource skills 'ibcy need.
(Jirt-time basis.
. •.
They look at retirees as a very nice
"C011vc:ntiooal thinlting is that source of skilled labor," Hirshom
when you're 60, 62, 6S you redre, said.
KeDy Services Inc., lhc nation's
then you play and you die. It's not
happening Illy longer," said Joan largest temporary staffing compe,Kelly, manager of AARP's busi- ny, recruits older workers for its
ness pannersbips prOgram.
Encore program. Of the 550,000
Aicll AUwine, president or Pre- people who work for Kelly Sercise Metal Products in Phoenill, has vices, about 10 percent are ove~: 55.
four retirees, ages 61, to 72, in his Mally have fOUIId tetircment boring
)Wit force of l!Oe,Two are skilled or expensive and want the social
labaeas working in manufacturing, interchange 111d ·exua cash a job
the tbinl a supervisor 111d the fourth can bring, KeDy officials say.
' ' 'Com(JII!Iies are going to have
an engineer.
·
"The reason wt; hire them is to look 10 the more mature ,..orter.
because you don' t .~ve to train If they don't, they're not g:'£ to
them. They already liave lhc sldlls
IIIII lhc kilowledgc and the
C!ICC." Allwine said
dent of Kelly Services Encore Pro.
.
· The !IlDdy for AARP was ,con- gram.
ducted by Barbara Hirshom of
Critics contend that although
Wayrte Stale UniVersity's Institute more companies may be .hirjng
d Gerootology and Denise Hoyer olcb workers, they are giving ~
·
of Easlern Michipn University's menlll jobs.
"The problem is not enough
College of Business. It used mail
end ICJcphone surveys in late 1991 jobs are available for ~le who
to coruact privale companies across want them. There is an inJlate SCIIIC
the country with 20 or more that lhe older should move alo!tg
employees.
.
. and let in die younger, who have
"Companies have pared down families to suppon and need thelj'
so fast 111d completely, they have chance," said Boston . Globe
divested lbemselvcs Wsome of the . columnist Juliet BIUdney, author of
"Forced Out," aboutlhe problems
' .
of retirees finding work.
"People who come back setde
·"l
for very little in terms of whtr~
'Thinker~ goe~ to China
they were when they gat ouL Most
PARIS '(AP) - Auguste of the jobs I know of ... are routine,
Rodin's famed sculpture "The clerical jobs, or food service, or
lbinkc:r" left. Franccl for the fttst bagg!~ in a' supermarket," Brud·
time Monday, bound for a dispiay ney
.
in Beijing along with 112 other
Hirshorn and Hoyer aclt;n 0wl·
wads by the French aculptor.
ed$e that many companies employ
A giant crane hoisted lhe 6-foot- relirees in clerical and lower-end'
higlt, 1,500-powtd·bronze aculpcure jobs. Days Inn motel chl!-in and
at lhc Rodin Museum IIIII lowered McDonald's restallrallts are known
it into a wooden c:nte..
for hiring senior citizens to work
Organized by lhe French .Asso- the front !lesk or serve hamburgers.
ciation For :Anistic Action, the However, the mearchers also note
show nms in Beijing fiom Feb. 15 hbw many companies hire older
to March 14 111d. Shanghai from workers in management, profesMarth 27 to April 18 before head- sional and technical jobs.
•
ing to Hong Kona and Taiwan.
or die companies surveyed that
''Tile Thinker''. will then return 10 hire retirees, 36 percent had retirees
Paris from Taipei.
in m111agement positions, 40 per· •
· Tile sbow is lhc fiiSt Rodin ret· cent had some redrees in prores:
rospeetivc: ever in China. •
sional positions and 28 percent
Tile ~· showing a seated employed some older workers in
nude with his head in hand, deep in technical positions. The lsrger the
coua:mplatiou, is one or the best- companies, the more likely they
known WOib by the 19th-century were to hire redrees into upperse~.
•
level jobs, Hirshom said.
·

ewen- ~~c':rt:~h~a:~~~

.

'

Patrick H. O'Brien, affid, and Hazel P. Bearks, SullOn.
CarlL. Wolf, Meigs.
Hazel P. Bearks, 4 A.· Lot lt4,
John I. Kerr, Angela M. Kerr, Sec: 16, t 2, R 12, to Philip Bear•
·
1.10 A, to Gregory K. Lee, Tina L. ks, Sutton.
Don L ..lleizing. dec' d, by Exec: Lee, Rutland.
Williatn Earl Cray, Bonnie Loil
, 10 Thomas A. Stone. Salisbury.
Wanetta &lt;;l. Radekin, parcels, to · Jewell Cray, parcela, S. 12, T-8, R·
Robert V. H~::;ty, dec'd, Arlin .Radeldn, Patricia Radeldn, · 15, 10 Walter Jewell, Jr, Jeuie Jew·
,.
ell, Salem.
,
affid, to Lucille
erty, Midd Columbia.
Paul E. Beegle, Helen Eileen
Edward D. Neece Rhonda F.
Viii.
Guy T. Hayman, Sue Hayman, Beegle, 0.5078 A., T-IN, R-12 W., Neece, S.17 A, t-l,R-13, Charles
1.98A (conection deec,l). 10 Clellie to Dwight D. Hill, Lorna J. Hill, T. Neece, Gerturde Neece, Sa!isl.ellrt.
.
bury.
Maddox, Olive. •
Benz Land Co. by partners,
Charles T. Neece, Gertrude
Helen L. Conrad et al, Sberill's
deed, to Lowell D.~. Bon· pan:els Sec. 3, to 1o1m L. Hageny, Neece, 5.000 A. T·lN, R·l3W, to
Dorthea A Hagerty, Columbia.
Edward D. Neece, R~onda F.·
nie Sue Olevalier, Rasville.
Larry J. Roush, .Once Roush, Neece, Sali~ury.
, Stella S. Snyder, Michael A.
Da1lu A. Cadle, Betty Jo c.dle,
NeutzlinJ, Brenda Kac Neutz.lin&amp;. 4.20 A., to E!lward A. Young,
·
Malea
YOUilg,
Cheattt.
parcels,
to Willwil Leach, Melody
parcels, to Michael A Neatzlinl.
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice K. Leach, Midd. V.
.
Brenda Kae Neatzlin1. Poe. V.,
Tbompaon, parcels (corrective
Charles B.· Humphry, Vivian E.
Salisbury.
Marpret 1. Burdlc:r, plll:el. eo deed) , eo Associated l"abricators, Hump~=:•
·~ Jayrnu
"·'J,J r.,
,
,...,
,
Lilli111
cne Hall, Jon Thomp·
Michael
Millie On
r, Inc., Pam Vill
. Midd. v.
.
William E. Lewis et al, Sheriff son, Tamn L. Thompson, Dwi&amp;Jit
Ruleaa RoiJem,
23, deed, to Dou&amp;las M. Dempsey, Iva Thompson, Donna P. Thompson,
T-2, R 13, to GreiCirJ 0. King, L. Dempaey, S)'IICUSC V.
Emmett Roy Thompson, Pamela
'
Nancy T. ~ Sali~.
.
· James Thomas Ours, Dorothy Jean ThompsOn, Olive.
Alben Quivc:y. Jo Aim Qaivc:y, Ours, ~ S. 26, T-3, R-11. to
Leeira Stroiiiiiei•mdec'd, affid, to
aka , _ Quney. 3.97 Aim Pr. Andrew Miliiman. LebaiiOlt.
Richard H. Sh
u, Salisbury.
116, to 1o1m T. Jaat«, s..- M.
Guy T. Hayman,~. Sue Hayman, · Rufus Wesley Young, Lela M.
ButAif, Bedford.
•
1.98 A, to Mose II . Hagerman, Young, tnc:lca, tQ Rufn Wesi,y
Roller N. BuctleJ, dec'd, a1fid, Olm. '
· Young, Lela Mae Young, ICudand
ill DadeneJ. Buddey. Olester.
Pauli. Bearks, dec'd, affut, 10 .. Vill
.
.
Compiled bTEmmogene Holstem C01110
Recorder, Meip County, Ohio

POMEROY • The Democratic
Executive Committee ·will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters HaD.in Pomeroy.
· STIVERSVILLE·- Evangelist
Brother David Carpenter,
Belleville, W.Va., IVill be preachin~ at the Stiversville Word of
F111th Church OJi Thunday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Dailey iuvites
die public.

.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Special
at the library in PomerQy. Mrs.
meetin&amp;,
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Ronald Reynolds will be the host·
No.
91»3,
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. to
ess. The bcxlk tcview will be pre.
elect.ll
quartermaster.
AU membcl's
sented ·by Mrs. Eileen Buck on ·
urged
10
at!Cnd.
"Ellcept for Me and Thee" by Jessatnyn West. Roll call will be to .
POMEROY • Poultty S~­
tell of a Quaker custom.
mittee, Th!lfsday, 1 p.m .. Mei's
County
Extension Office an
THURSDAY
POIDflOY. .
REED.SVILLE • There wi.ll be. ~

..

)

)

•.

--County land transfers posted-~

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home in
Racine. ·

.

Clllltlda, send $4.45.)

Companies·hiring more retirees·

~·

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that eveut. hems
must be received weD in advance
to assure publicatio!l in the cal·
endar.

Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (IN

o-.

....-See.

•

2 Secitono, 14 Pogeo 25 cenlo

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
Wednesday, January
20, 1993
. ,.
..
.

A Multlmealo Inc.

'

~flllper

·President Clinton calls for.
new generation of leaders

twO

College-educated homeless
man ·starts small.business

.

Rain tonight. Low _,. 40.
Tbunday's hJ&amp;b tn mid 4011.

•

What's the truth about pot,

old Gamlllll'rJrm IIIII llcp · ellamination. That was not as cocmne. LSD. PCP, crack. speed
~it for lbe acn ,_-.
unusual11youthink.
and downers? "The,· Lowdown
1n cmy 1945. we wae onleilld
I had a lridt bee pop out 011 me · on Dope" luu up-to-tlle·millute
10 start waJkin&amp; -.. Before we wllile "' "'"'in&amp; in lbe mounlains ilformalion 011 drMgs. Sellll a self·
left camp, I paiiiJe1 my pCLious yean igo. As 1·111Dted in qony, addressed, lon), baslnets-sl%1
blankets and a 1111111 traasmiua my hlllbMd loeded me IIIID the car en~lope Gild a. clleck or 1ff0MY
wbicli had 11110 been s!ijipt'l iDeo · ..S c1n1w four houn to lbe IIC8RSt order for $3.65 (this IIICIKtUI
qqJ. Twenly do-MId us...W ...... ·· • I cbl!k half a boUle d wine postage llllll handling) to: UJwdowr(.
for nearly six days ill lbe eo ud .., old Beetles songs to ldD c/o Ann Landers, P.O. BoJI 11562;

.

9251
Buckeye 5:
4-12·13-17-25 .

' WASHINGTON (AP)- Presi·
dent Clinron IOday summoned the
nation to help a new generation of
· leadership "face hard uuths and
, take suong steps," vowing in his
•
inaugural address: "We will not
shrink from lhe chaUenges nor fail
to seize the opponunities.
In his address, the natjon's 42nd
president marveled at bolb the his"
toric legacy he inherits and the
daunting cballenges America faces
- at home and abroad - on the
verge of the 21~ century.
" Let us begin with energy and
hope, with faith and di!cipline, and
l~t.-ui- work until our work is
done," Clinron, a Democrat, said
in the prepared text of his address.
It was a flowery, flourishing speech
that repeated his successful cam-.
paign themes but, as is ttaditional,
contained no new initiatives.
The 46-year-old son of Hope,
Ark., paid tribute 10 his predecessor, George Bush, for a half-century of public service, then looked
forward. In a line reminiscent of
John F. Kennedy's 1961 inaugural,
ClintOn said it was time for a new
generation to accept the mande of
A.m~can and global leadership.
·
"Today, a generation raised in
the shadows of the Cold War
assumes new responsibilities in a
world warmed by the sunshine of
freedom but tilreatened still by
Interfaith prayer aervlce. CHnton was sworn iD
· ·· ARRIVES AT CHUR(ll(- Prelidmt·elect
ancieat halreds and new .plagues."
iiS1tlle ..U.ct-praldel!l' at !lOOD loday on Capitol
. Cllutw, •
117 witt 111£als, arrives ..
Clinron said These remarks under~ ' 7:·~· at 'tbii'Mittcl telllm Afrlea MethodiSt EplleO- :i. ~ . HilL (AP)
c
.
.
scored
that he was a presidency
··
pal Cliureti):Waslalngton Weduesday for an

.,..w

borne amid a handful of global
crises, as weD as the sluggish econ- .
omy at horne 'that candidate Clinron
pledged would be his lllp priority.
The riew president- untested
in foreign affairs - pledged to
uphold America's global commit·
ments, vowing:
"When our vital interests are
challenged, or the will and conscience of the international community defied, we will act- with
peaceful diplomacy when possible,
with force when necessary. The
brave A.mericans serving our nation
in the Persian Gulf, in Somalia, and
wherever else they siBJid are testa·
ment to our resolve. •'
The first Democratic president ·
elected in t2 years, Clinllln called
on Congress JO join with him ·in
answering voters' demands for ..a
government that works, and listens.
"Today, we pledge that the era
of deadlock and drift is over - a
new season of American renewal
has begun," Clinton said .in his
text. "It will not be easy; it will
require sacrifice. But it can be
done, and done fairly, not choosing
sacrifice for its own salce, but for
our own sake. We must provide for
our·nation the way a family provides for its children."
.
Acknowledgill!l the obstacles in
his way - soaring b~t deficits
and health care costs, a fragile
economy, global.competition and
even voter cynicism about theii
government, Clinron sought imme- ·

diately to put an activist but.realis·
tic slamp on his Qew administra·
lion. ,
'
" We know we have ill face hard
truths and take strong steps," Clinton declared. "But we have .not
done so. (nslead, we have drifted,
and that drifting has eroded our ·
resources, fractured our economy,
and shaken our confidence. Though
our chaUenges are fearsome, so are
our suenglhs.. A.mericans'have ever
~n a restless, questing; hopeful
people. We must. bring to our task
IOday the vision and will of those
who came before us.'' .
.
· ''While America rebuilds at
home, we will not shrink from the
challenges, nor fail to seize the
opportunities, of this new world;' '
Clio ron vowed. "T6gether with our
friends and allies, we will work ill
shape change, lest it engulf us.'' .
Clinllln urged the young people
who returned to the Democratic
party in the election to s~,a~~d by
him in governing, and as John
Kennedy did in 1960, be call~d
them ill public service as weU. ·,
"The scripture says, "And let
us not be ~ in weD-doing, for
in due seasQn, we shaU reap, if we
faint not," ' Clinton said. "From
fllis joyful mountain top of celellmlion, we hear a call to setvice in lhc
valley. We have heard the uumpelS. We have changed the guard.
And now- each in our own way,
and with God's help - we must
answer the call.''

Reporf o·n 1991 solid ·waste
data, relea~ed by Ohio EPA
COLUMBUS • Landfill disposal .capacity has increased and outof-state waste disposed in die state
has decreased, accordina to an ·
· Ohio EPA report on 1991 so.lid
waste data recently released.
"Every county in Ohio has con' tributed to this good news. Respon·.sible planning is necessary IOday,
. to protect the; environment and
: meet the disposal needs for tomorrow. A 10lid witste disposal crisis is
. being avoided by die localized
; solid waste planning proc;ess set in
· motion by House Bill 592," 'Ohio
' EPA Director Donald R. Schregar·
dus said.
Ohio's landfills have a remaining disposal capa:ity of an average
of 7.4 to 9.4 years, up from 5.1 •
. 6:5 years in 1990. Each county in

the slate is ~uired 10 demonsirate
10 y~ or disposal capacity as a
part of the solid waste plan.ning
process. Due to tile IIIIOWlt of time
needed to properly site and con·
struct a landfill, Ohio·EPA has
defmed five years or less o/ dispos·
a! capacity as serious.
.
The amount of out-pf-state
waste disposed .of in, Ohio
decreased by about 200,000 tons
from 1990 figures to I.7 million
IOns, weD.below the all time high
of 1989 (3.7 million IOns).
The total amount of solid waste
disposed of in Ohio in 1991
·(including industrial waste) was
15,892,482 tons, or approximately
1.5 tons per peniln.
The following statistics were
also included in the report, summa-

rizing the Athens-Gallia-HockingJackson-Meigs-Vinton Joint Solid
Waste Management Dislrict repon
for 1991. (In tons/year).
In-district

Asbestos waste, 25.15; gene!al
solid waste non-baled, 48,993.20;
industrial solid waste, 3.14; exempt
waste, 27,833.40. Total, 76,854.89.
Out-of-district
Asbestos waste, 2,463.48; general solid waste non-baled, 53,
62 1.06; industrial solid waste,
8,!60.66; other waste 3,065.34.
Total, 67,30().54'.
.
Out-of-state
Asbestos waste, 1,993.28; gen·
era! solid waste · non-baled.
42,7.10.82; industrial solid waste,
1,530,08; other waste, 425.78 .
Total, 46;659 .96.

Rice sworn in as Meigs S&amp;WCD supervisor
Rice joins Tom Theiss, Joe Bolin, government, soU and water conserMarCo Jeffers 111d Chuck Yost in vation districts have legal authority
administering the Meigs Soil and to assist landowners with. a wide
Water Conservation District's natu· range of soil, water, woodland, and
ral resoun:c collservation programs. wildlife c011servation objectives.
. According to Theiss, chairman
The Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts was of the Meigs SWCD Board of
organized in 1943 to further the Su\)Crvisors, non-point source polnatural resource conservation mis· ·lulton education will be a major ·
sian of the state's 88 county based objective of the district in t993.
SWCDs. As subdivisions of state Non-point source water pollution
results when rain and snQw-melt
runoff carries polluLBIUS to rivers,
.streams, and IQes. Runoff from
farm ftelds and livestock feedlots.
construCtion siteS, streets and park·.
ing lots, mined land and virtually
all other land surfaces 111nualll.
delivers millions of tons of soi ,,
fertilizers, 111imal waste, salt and
other pollutints to surface water
SUI!P,!ies.
·
f.
• Non-point source pollution
affects the majority of Ohio's river
miles and lakes," said Theiss.
"With lhe cooperation of landowners in the district and with the
· U8istance of the Ohio Department .
of Natural Reaoun:es, Ohio EPA.
Soil Conservation Service and
other county, state 111d federal
~es and orpnizatlons we can
fmd solutions to a problem that
aiTecla all Oltiolnl." .
.
TIIO&amp; lllllnding 1be' Ohio Federation of Soil and w.- eonservadOII Districts SOth annual mcetina
in Columbus were Rice, Theiss,
Jcle 111d Janet Bolin, Marco 111d
Jackie Jeffers, Chuck and Nita
NEW S1JPERVIIOR ·Job ltlct, left, of ·=~=~!II a new
Me... Soil aad 'WIIIr CCIIIIII'V8U. Dlltrlct •
He Yost, Blair Wiudon, Opal Dyer,
Court Jastle~
sworn lato omee last wtek b7 Olllo
Mike.Duhl, and Relllllll catherine
TliomMJ, MoJer.
ShenefiCIId.

John C. Rice. of Reedsville,
recently elected supervisor of the
Meigs Soil and Wa!Cr Conservation
District, was sworn into office by
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice
Thomas J. Moyer at the 50th annual meeting of die Ohio Federation
of Soil and Water Conservation
Disuicts held in Columbus last
W«k
Elected to a three year term,

)

NEW OWNER • David Bumgardner of
. Middleport has purchased this MGM Farm
City, Inc. property 011 East Mal11 Street in
Pomeroy. Plans caD for tile nearly four acres to

be partially clel!red iu preparation for some
commercial devell)pment. The Pomeroy Fire
Department i'l tentatively scbedllled to burn several of the buDdings on Sunday. .

Middleport man purchases
MGM Farm City property ·
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nen Starr
The MOM Farm City, Inc. propeny on East Main St., Pomeroy,
vacant for more than three yeats,
has been purchased by David Bumgatdner, Middleport.
.
George Hofter, president of
MOM Farm City, Inc., Tuesday
confmned lhc sale of the real estate
which includes nearly four acres
with several detc:rioratulg buildings
.and tile riverfront area across East
Main.
'
According to 111 option on file
in the Meigs County Recorder's
office, the purchase price was
$40,000 with the specification that
it be trlllsferred subjec;t to easements and rights of way of record,
and any claims rellting to Jl(lllatkln
or_, other EnVirollnentai l'rolec·
tiol! ~ maam.
it furthei' specified that tile IIO'fl
owner uaume responsibility for
any problems widllhe fuel st01age
liJlks 111d EPA reaulatlons which
miaht ar1ae u a result of the tams
on or under die popiilty.
That stipulation was also set
forth In the deed filed in the
recorder's office this morning. It
reads '"l'he ....-e ICCePII this real
eatate in u ia eonclltlon and
a110mes and qrees to Indemnify
lhc gJ'Iilllln ap1nst aU JY.blli!Y for

any hazardOus waste or other Environmental Protection A~ency prob!ems which may ex1st on the
premises."
As a pe,n of the sale agreement,
. Bank One, Athens , agreed to
release its mortgage from record.
· Bumgardner when asked about
plans for use of the propeny, said
he has no speCific plans and his
objective now· will be to get it
cleaned up. ·
He said the fmt phase of the
project will be ill remove the wood
structures and that "hopefully that
will begm IICllt week." He said that
he has applied for permits to
· remove the above ground and
underground tanks and expects
those to como through withm 30
"-ys.
'
· ··
.
"Hopefully by March I the
cleanup will be finished," said
Bumgardner.
Bunla&amp; iichedi!led
Melnwltilo, Pomeroy Flie Chief
Danny ZiJtle said this iiiDr1lin&amp; that
the PoniorOy P~ Department has
been COIIIICIDd about bumiJW IORIC
of tile buildinp and thai bas leOta·
lively been ICl for Sunday. .
· He said that a Jejieaental!ve of
tile State Fire Manhali 's of!k:e has
already been in here to chect the
situation 111d will be bact either
Saturday or early S'!'III&amp;Y IIIOnliil&amp;

*-· •

10 do some more testing.
Reportedly there are four tanks
under one of the buildings and it
will be up to the Stale Fire Marshall's office to determi!Je if there
is any explosive danger. If there is,
· Zirkle swd, the tanks will be filled ·
with carbon dioxide to eliminate
that danger.
Zirkle said that all wood build·
ings along East Main Street will be
bl!flled. That will leave only the old
service station which is concrete
Main, a four story bUilding on con~
dor Street along with anothc:i
smaller building which MOM used
for fertilizer storage.
· .•
Zirkle said that ltC 111ticipates ·11
will take about six hours te com ~
plete lhe job. He said SUuday wall '
selected becanse the file·•ceds ·td ·
be lione in the "-yligbt. More 0~
lhe volllnteer fuanen are awi(abkl
on weekends and tralllc is m• e4.I
Asked about traffic control, Zirk1C
·says that because of the pllllned
systematic burning of the bulle)~
ings, he aatic.ipete&amp; that East MaJil
Slleet will remain open.
. '
As for oilier buildings in the
area. particularly· a boule 11111 lhC
Ohio Valley Bllllt Food Sun OQ
. die west aide of the MOM bu1J4.
· lnjp, Zlitlo asslll8d dill die~
ment will pve iidcquale [IIOIICtloa. ·

on

'

�I

.

·c ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pome:roy, Oblo

.

·· DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'BI08T1J OF'I'HB IIEIGB-JIIAIION AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Pl!btlsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Theyshould be less than 300
words. Al11clters ""' subject to editing ond must be signed with name,
oddRss and telepbone number. No unsiped Jeum will be published. Letters
sbollld be in good taSte, addressing issues. not pel'IOIII!iliea.

..

Excerpts from other
papers around Ohio
.
By The Alsoclated Press
Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national issues in
newspapas across lhe state.

The (Cleveland) Plaia Dealer, Jan. 18:
Weapons of mass desa'uctioo .e not all tipped with nuclear warheads,
~ arms-control treaties must not stop at n:slraining just tbe alomic arsenals of the old Cold War advmaries. Chemical weapqns, known .as ''the
poor man's nuclear bomb" because of their cheap productiQil and easy
availability,hnve been a gruesome 20th-century inventiOn.
A new nnti-chemicaf-weapons treaty, signed last week in Paris by
more than 120 nalions, will impose tbe world's ftnt ban on an entire class
ofweaponsofmnssdesa'uclion.
·
.
The pact inCludes a realistic anti-proliferation device: Any nation that
refuses to sign tbe I!Wy faces a U.N.-irnposed embargo of the chemicals
that are lhe rnw mnterials of wenpons produclion - nnd nrc also important products for civililn induslly.
!{ the U.N. verificalion rules for this treaty can be cucnded to other
weapons - especially biological anns, which now have no globnl
resttaints- tbe Chemical Weapons Conventioo will mark a breakthrough
in arms-control enforcement, The world will be able to bn:nlhe easier now
that diplomacy bas reduced the risk of this gbaslly thrent of mass annihilation.
Akron .Beacon Jouraal, Jan.15:
Ron Brown, Bill Clinton's commerce secrelnry-designate, raised the
Sleazo level around the Clinton administrntion once again and then clirrected the problem. .
·
. Of course, the correction did not occur until after tbe New York Times
blew the whistle on a gala inaugurnl pony being planned in Brown's
hDrD" at the Kennedy Center in Washington. Some of the nalion's largest
companies, which surely would hove t&gt;nsiness with Brown's Commerce
·DeparlliiCIIt. were donaung $10,000 each to ~Y for the party.
:· Brown is a partner in one of Washington s largest and most successful
'lobbying rums, which already had raised questions about propriety ill lhe
Clinton administration. The Ron Brown gain. to be paid for by special
interests, raised more questioos.
·
· Clinton talked a ~ood game during the cam'!C about bringing a new
atmosphere to Washington. The question, as !Je
s office, is whetber he
;p.eant it. •
.
.
. The (Toledo) Blade, Jaa. 14: 1
.·
:· After Presi~t Bush's defeat in tbe November ~~lion, Iraqi dictalor
Snddnm Hussein was pictured firing a handgun from n balcony in celebra'iion. No doubt he expected to have the last laugh,' following h.\s utter
:humiliation in tbe Gulf wnr.
·
Such has not proved to be the case.
.
·• Saddam's position is fairly desperate. Iraq bas, in effect, been partitioned, with no-fly zones to protect the Shiite minority in the south and
the Kurds in the north from Iraqi air attncks. If Saddarn wns tesling the
resolve of the nlliance that foug~t the Gulf wnr, he hns been given a
definitive answer. The change of adminislrntion in Wnsliington makes no
·difference insofar ns the Iraqi aggressor is concerned;
. , The Gulf war did not pay off politically for Mr. Bush last fall; the pub·lie hnd moved on to other concerns, although there wns 11 strong feeling
"on the part of mitny ArnericaJlS that Mr. Bush should have ordered U.S.
forces to move right on to Baghdad. For Mr. Bush there will be the salis(action of knowing that Saddam got away with nothing on his watch.
: Mr. Clinton faces a far more difficult rask perhaps, but by carefully
deferring co the Bush administrntion in this instnnce, he bas preserved his
~option s and hns done much to dispel any ideas thnt he might be a
.'pushover ns fnr ns intemntional crises nrc concerned.

-

By The Associated Press . .
.
Today is Wednesday, Jnn. 20, the 20th day of 1993. There are 345
days left in the year.
·Today' s HighligHt in History:
On Jan. 20, 1942, Nazi officials held the notorious Wannsee conference in
Berlin, during which they arrived at their " final solution" calling for the
· t:xtennination of European Jews.
·: On this date:
·
· In 1801, John Marshall was appointed chief justice of the United
States.
In 1839, Chile defeated a confederation of Peru and Bolivia in the Battle of Yungay.
_
In 1841, the island of Hong Kong wns ceded to Great Britain.
In 1887, the U.S. Senate approved 1111 agreement to lease Pearl Harbor
in Hawaii as a naval base.
· In 1936, Britain's King George V died; he wns succeeded by Edward
VIII.
. . In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first chief executive to be inaugurated on Jan. 20 instead of March 4, because of the 20th
Amendment to the Constillltion.
~ In 1953, 40 years ago, Dwight D. Eisenhower took the oath of office as
~tresident of the United States; Richard M. Nixon wns sworn in as vice
president.
'
In 1981, Iran released 52 Americans it had held hostage for 444 days,
111inutes after the presidency hnd passed from Jimmy Carter to Ronald
Reagan.
. In 1986. the United States observed the fust federal holiday in honor of
Slain cjvil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.·
·
..· In 1987, Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite disappeared in Beirut,
!-ebanon, while nttempting to negotiate the release of Western hostages.
He wns finally freed in November 1991.
1
Ten ~ears llj!O: A commission studying reform of the Social Security
.~stem ISSUed Its final report, which ~mende4 gradually raising the
~tirement age from 65 to 66 and gene111ting hew revenues or reducing
;txpenses.
·
... ·
•• Five years ,ago: An Arizona House committee opened hearings on the
·:; ossible impeachl'(lent of Gov. Ev11n Mecham with testimony that
·){~ once tried to thwllll an investigaion of 1111 alleged death threat
lf!ade against a former top aide, an allegation Mecham vehemently
·denied.
:~ One year ago: A French Airbus A· 320 crashed near Strubourg, killing
Jl7 people. A GenRill court convicted two former East Gennan border
juards of the last killing at the Berlin Wall.
.
.
"'· Today's Birthdays: Comedian George Bums is 97. Movie director
;llederico Fellini is 73. Actor DeForest Kelley is 73. Bnndleader Ray
anthonr is 71. Aclress Pauicia Neal is 67. Former utronaut Edwin
~Buzz' Aldrin il 63. Comedian Arte John10n is 59. Aci!CIS Dorothy
t;Ovioe is 56. U.S. Sen. Paul Coverdell, R-Ga .. is 54. Movie director
£lavid Lynch is 47.' Actor Lorenzo Lamas is 3S.
•: Thou~t for Today: "'America is a land of wonders, in which everyll!ing_ is m constant molion and every change seems m im_provemcnt. •' Alexis de Tocqueville, French author (180S-!8S9).

.

{

.. -.

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l

'I

Page 2-lhe oauy s.:..rAnel ~
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol;1o

Wednesday, January 20.'1993 ;

By The Aaoclated Press
There is a chance of rain tonight
and Thursda)'. Rainf~ll amounts
should generally be an inch or less.
Isolated thunderstorms also are
possible Thursday.. Highs will be
nround 45. A cold front will move
across Ohio Thursday night
· A thrent of rain continues in the
forecnst Friday. Highs will be in
the40s.
.
The record high on this date in
.Columbus was 68 in 1906. The
record low was 19 belowin 1985
. Sunset tonight at 5:37 p.m. Sunrise Thursday at 7:48 n.m.

Clinton set on cutting Pentagop bud~t
WASHINGTON - The ·federnl
agency that brought us the $600
toilet sent and the $4,000 coffee pot
is about to be dragged kicking and
screaming into the cost-cutting
·
·
1990s.
After 12 years of riding the Rengnn/BUsh Cold War grn:vy train
while the budget deficit spirnled
out of control, the Penragon is worried that it is about to be sncrificed
at tbe altar of .8ill Clinton's campnign promises to slash military
spending as a way to control the
ballooning budget deficit
After decades of Cold Wnr
preparations, the Pentagon now
looks like the agency that's all
dressed up with no plnce to go. Yet
it remains a faVorite haven for COn•
.gressional porkmeisters. where
huge conl!'ICts and appropriations
are still the currency of choice.
With a $4 trillion national debt,
consider some of the'items our tax
doUars~ \';ying ff'e'nse A
.
992 De
pptopnalions Bill contains $25 mill100 for
an "Arctic region supercomputer,"
added to the bodget as part of a
controversial and so far unsuccessful government effort to trap ener-

gy from·the aurora borealii in Alas·
ka.
- . $7 million to upgJBde a physical fitness center at Fon Ric'hnld-

By Jack A,nderson·
and .
Michael Binstein
son, Alaskn, ns part of $33.9 mil·
lion the government is paxing to
'!Pgrade physical fitness facililies.
- $10 million bas '-1 piedfed
in an unnuthorized $rDnt to uny
Mnrywood College m Scranton, ·
Pa home of Rep Joseph U.n..A.
th~·l'lllking minCJity niem~~ .
· House Defense Appropriations•
Committee. The grant, which
makes up roughly one-third of the
tiny school's annual budget, is for
sAtudymh
·. g mili1nry stress on fnmilics.
t t IS smn 11 Roman Catholic
school of 3,000 students, even the
recipients are ball1ed.
- $600,000 to establish two
"Post·Trnumatic Stress Disorder
Treatment Center Demonstration

i-

might help to discover m'Ore than :
$30 billion' in " unrequiretl invento- •
ry" cannot be recovered because·
the money has nlmi4Y been spcnL :
Between 1980 nnd 1990, the value•
of the Departmen.t of Derense•s:.
inventory of "secondary items" '
(~ pert.s, clothing, medical SUP:·
pl~~:s, etc.) grew from $43 billion to:
$100 billion.
.
:
The Pentagon seems to have lost·
control of its own .wnrehouses.:
When government auditors tried to·
mau:h the physical inYentory of the;
Air Force Logistics Command with;
Air Force records, they discovered·
that nearly 20 percent of the:
records were inaccurnte. BesideS'
wasting money, the Pentagon's:
inventory problems have also made;
•
'
..A
~~ber- a COld War it an idealtnrgeHor crime. Recenf
weapon in a post:Cold War era - . criminal investigations h•vi
keeps its funding, year after year, revealed organizCd·lhefts at defense
while public housing~~ depots in California, Utah, Texas
·
.
infrnstructure plans Sit on drawmg andV~.
Meanwhile,
the
Defense
Logisbolllds.
.
.
While the new propams keep tics agency has SO,OOO ~ges of
coming, the Pentagon IS silting on •'radioopaque sponges ' gathering
moo: than $40 billion of excess and dust in a warehouse - enough to ·
unneeded inventorY.,Ihe by-product last about 13 years; In the snme
of a 10-year spending binge. If the warehouse abou~ 5,100 bathrobes
threw a garage sale, it - bought between 1952 and 1967.
- nrc gathering duSL ·
:
·, . Since the Army hns· since
bought n newer iO,be, none of these
were used in Operation De'setl
Stonn. In a wnrcbouse wheie one'
fourth of the irems weie ·motc than
· 10 years old, government aildiiOI!l
· discovered a cnehe of 6,700 jnckets, of y.ohich 85 percent were dared
from 1945 to 1969. Tbe depots
issued nbout one of these jackets'
per week to soldiers. .
.
The picture painted by congres.
sional auditors su ests that if IIi
Pt;ntagon operateif on the battle•
. f~eld with the lack of coordinatioli
· nnd inefficiency that it shQws iii
. management, thC:U.S. militarY.
would be n laughingstock. In Jan;
U!l'f 1990, for exnmple, 13 Anilt
'
·divisions were sitting on exceu
spare ,nd repait """" worth $184.
million. ~ divisiqns bnd fai!ed ttl
report this InVentory to the buyin~
commlllds, which at that time were
,
..
procuring 1,669 of the very samd
11ems at a cost of $66.9 million. ·
Jack Aadersoa aad Michael
Blutela are wrlten for United
Feature Syadieate, Ine.

Projects.'' One or these to be
localed in Greensburg, Pa., because
it hu suffered the most wartime
cnsualties ot any community in the
country. The other center is ear·
marked for .Hawaii, home of the
chairman of the Defense APJI'OI)riations Commiuee, Sen. Daniel
Inouye, a Democrat.
After years of scandals nnd
countless jJI'OI1Iisca to reform, COil•
gressional auditors still rank the
Pentagon hi_gh nmong the government agencies most vulnerallle to
frnud, waste and mismanngement
~of this, the goverJ)IIICIIt says, is
Pinned on a Pen lagOn "culture"
that thrives on new progrnms, even
as the rest of the government is get.

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The !20th Generlll Assembly
will face many tough issues in
1993. Some,.pf the toughest will
deal with ed'ucation, health care,
the environment, welfare reform
and jobs in Ohio.
In 1991-92, the 119th General
Assemblr. introduced 1,299 bills.
Of the btlls introduced, only 206
were signed into or became law.
Historically, less than one fourth of
all bills introduced ever become
law.
The process by which a bill
becomes law in Ohio is filled with
checks and balances and is very
diffiCult The ftrSt step is the need
for legislation; your Legislator

~----- .Weather-·-----

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· .Foreclosure ac:tlon
· An action for foreclosure has
been filed in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas by Peoples
Bank of Marietta ~st Micflael
W. Marcum, Conme J. Marcum,
both of Long Bo110m, and others.

.
tling hi_s OPJX!nents as "bozos::
'

Bush will receive a Quaylie, a stat;.
ueue of Dan Quavle ill the net of ·
demonatratin
'
·
.
g his manegnn.
· ~ecause . Quayle has bee~
retucd, so sha'l the. Qunrlie b{
shelved. 1:tte OP contest wil go on,
ho111ever, so keep yoQr nsininity
dete.cto~s tuned. an~ keep those
nonunations commg 10.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Eateprlte
Alsoclation.
.

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Marriage llcelises l&amp;!ued
Marriage licenses bave been
·issued by Meigs County Probnte
'Court to Charles Willinm Malone,
Jr., 19, Radcliffe, and Beth Eileen
,Haning, 16, Albany; nnd Hnrold
;Preston Jones, 40, Pomeroy, nnd
;tdary Elizabeth Llewellyn, 35,
·t'omeroy,
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;:Hospital news

Veteraas Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS -

:None.
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TUESDAY DISCHARGES •

: Donna Morrison and Jeffrey Con-

C. nolly.
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The Daily Sentinel

.Berry•s World

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podlp ~
PwmG), Ohio.
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Police believe the vehicle could
have beCn parked there for nt least
two days, Myttle Beach Police
Detective Joe Velln said. It was
discovered by a Brownsville police
offiCer on a routine check, he said.
Brownsville police, U.S. Cus·
toms, the FBI nnd authorities on
both sides of the border worked
with local nuthorities on the investigalion, he said.
The car was•one of two vehicles
re11ted by Willis two days before .
his wife, Marie Willis, was s~ot to
death in the base's legal affairs
office Jan. 4, Velln said.
·
Willis is charged with murder in
his wife's death. He is accused of
wli!king .into tbe legal affairs office
and shooting his wife twice, once
in tbe head and once in the .chest,
with a 9mm pistol. ·
Autborilies say Mrs. Willis, 30,
was sitting in a conference room
waiting to be interviewed in her
husband's· abuse cnse when she
wassboL

Irene Christy

&gt;I •

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:·:~.~ue~i~~~f!=: f:l

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Lnuderdale, Fla.; nnd a brother,
Leonard Hites of Elgin, S. C., several nieces and nephews.
Besides bet parents, she wns
preceded in death by two brothers, ·
bert and John Hites.
Funernl services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Jagers
Funernl Home in ~the.ns. Pastor
Lyle Hudnall wiU officinte and
burial will be in the Cnnnanville
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Thumlay from 2 to 4
and 7to 9 p;m.

William Wright, Sr.

' Dlvor.ce eranted
'· A divorce has been grnnted to
Angela lot. Kerr and John I. Kerr in
;the Meigs County Court of Com•mon Pleas.
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Friday tbrou&amp;b Suday:
.· Friday, chnnce of min. Lows in
the mid-30s. Highs in the low to
mid·40s. Saturday, fair. Lows
nround 30. Highs 35-40. Sunday, a
chance of snow. Lows around 30.
Highs in lh\l.lllid ~ uppez 30s.

Irene Christy, 72, of Athens,
died Tuesday, Jan . 19, 1993, at
O~ Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Athens.
Born in Beaver, Pa. She was tbe
daughta' of the late Bert Jnmes and
Olive Merriam Hites. She wns a
graduate of Beaver High School.
She formerly lived at Portland
· .Mi~
in Meigs County and worked ns a
•c Semces for. Mr. Boyles will be
~ in Pomeroy. She was n
· beld Friday at 1 p.m. at Fisber member of the Meigs County
....uneral Home in Middleport with Senior Citizens, the Peoples
,Rev. .James Keesee officiating . Cburcb of C8naanville, and a life·
:Burial will be in Riverview Ceme- time member of the Modern Wood·l'ery •
men of Ohio. ·
:,, 'Friends may call at the funernt
She is survived by her husband
' orne on Thursdny from 2-4 and 7- Clifford Christy, three stepsons,
' p.m.
Tom and Robert C~risty of
'
.Cnnaanville, and James Christy of
Columbus, several svdchil(" , .
dren and great.grnndc dren; two

Sen.]an .M. Long

]osenh Spear

Extelidecl forecast:

--Area deaths·- ~barles Boyles
SurvivinJ grandchildren of
Charles Willwn Boyles, 54, Middleport, who died unexpectedly
Monday, Jan. 18, 1993 at Veterans
-~orial Hospital; should hnve
listed in Tuesday's edition of
. Dllily Sentiilel ns Bethany Ann
lloyles; Heather Renee Boyles and
7ared Williaio McKinney. a!l of

northwestern Mexico.
So fnr this month, a record 4.79
inches '!f rain have fallen in Tucson, Ariz., the .National Weather
Service said. The city' s normal
rainfall in that period is .87 inches.
In the Southeast, min feU in Littie Rock, Ark., and thundersiOrms
were likely in the lower Mississippi
Valley and the cenllal Oulf Coast
The forecast called for rain in
Georgia. western North CarOlina,
parts of Tennessee and the lower
Ohio Valley.
The forecast called for high ternperatures today ranging from the

30s to the mid-40s in the Rocky
Mountain region, the high 50s in ,
parts of the Southwes~ the high 20s .
and low 30s in the Plains and most- ~
ly in the 30s in tbe Midwest. ·
The bighs in Cal iforn ia were :
expected to range from the 50s in :
the nonh tQ the mid-60s in the .
south. Temperntwes in the 30s and :
low 40s were expected in New '
England and into the 60s and 70s in :
the Southeast
.
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The nation's high Tuesday wns •
82 degrees in McAllen, TeXns. nnd:
· Naples, Fla.
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MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP)
- Jeromy Willis, the former ·
Ohioan wanted for murder in the
shooting of his wife .at the Myrtle
Bench Air Force Base, was arrested
late Tuesday in arowns'ville,
Texas, police said today.
·
Myrtle ·Beach Police Det.
Tommy Chestnut snid Willis was
arrested by an FBI agent and a
Texas ranger without incident
about 10: 15 p.m. Tuesday. He had
no further details.
Earlier Tuesday, Texns police
found a car leased by Willis near
the Mexican border.
The white Plymouth Acclaim
was found Tuesday morning in a
Brownsville, Texas, pnrldng lot,
acc&lt;ir!U!II to infonnnllon released
by Texas authorities.

lne.

·· Dlvor~".;,.~i
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An nclion for divorce has been
liJed in' the Meigs Coun~ Court of
!=ommon Pleas by WII ma Sue
Cline, Middleport, from Earl
Joseph Dean Cline, Ann Arbor,
Mich.

for final writing, and is sent to the then .issued n section number an4
Rules Committee for review. •The win $0 into effect the day after m,
Rules Committee mny take no ing; 1f it i~ an eme.l~~l bill, it
nctioo or schedule the liill for third goes into effect imm · y.
·
consideration. If scheduled for
As you haye seen, the Legisla;
third consideration, the bill will be live process in Ohio il very dilfipresented to the legislative body cult and· full' of checks and batfor. J- vote. If tbe biD passes, it will ances, but this is all necessary to
then go to the House of Rcpresen- insure that _everyone in Ohio is reP:
the bill, and schedules tbe ftnt con- Wives nnd the PIOCCSS 'is repeated. resented fturly.
·
sideration of the bill. The bill is If the bill is pissed by tbe secbnd
~~ always, pleue feel free to
then given second consideration, house, it then goes to the Governor. · call or write me, State Senntor Jan
and referred to a standing commitThe Governor can do one of Michael Long, if you have any
tee. This committee will amend, three things, veto ihe bill, sign it questions or comments about lhese
combine, subslitute, refer to n sub, into law or table it for zen days. If or any other issues. My number is
committee, postpone or give n the Governor signs or tables the . (614) 466-8156, and my address is
favorable report. The bill then goes biU, it tben goes to lhe Secrelnry of the Statehouse, Columbus. OhiQ
back to the Senate Clerk's office State's office.for filing. The bill is 43215.

oted remnrks about blacks and
Jews and ncknowledged k~ing a
Nazi swastika arm band m her
homt but doesn't seem to compre·
' bend why this upsets people. ·
· And tbe Outrageous Personage
of tbe Year is ... George Bush. His
humane venture into Somalin
almost denied him the bonor, but
there is no· way to forgive him for
his loathsome campaign. Fonrying
to paint his opponent ns a $odless
crypto-Commie, for inveshgating
his opponent's mother, for belit·

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. Soulh·Ceatral Ohio
Toniaht, occasional min, possibly heavy 81 times. Low MOund 40.
Chance of min is near 100 I!CfCClllo
thursday, occasional rain 'with n
bigh 45-SO.Chnnce of rain is near
100 pelCCIIL
. ·,

Arollllcllhnatloa
Ice and snow settled anew today
on the Plaim and th~ Northwest
and a 13-day deluge 10 the Southwestfmally came to an end.
Freezing rain fell in parts of
Oldahomn and the forecast called
for heavy snow in parts of Nebrnska and Knnsns . Ice mixed with
snow was expected in Minnesota
and ~uth Dnkoll and the northern
Rockies.
,.
Sunny sties were forecast for
th~ We~t through Thursday after
ratn, wmd nnd tornndoes broke
Tuesday in California, Arizona and

Police arrest .
Willis in Texas
W. VA.

becomes aware of ibis need from
his conslilllents. The next step is to
draft the proposed bill, and ftle it
with the Senate or Legislative
Cleric. The Oerk's office numbers

The ballots have been counted President Dan Quayle, who misand the results certified, and we spelled potato, trashed Murphy
will reveal the winner of'the 1992 Brown and ended the year ~ith a
Outrageous Personnge of tbe Year $13,700 flight in Air Force Two
awnrd shortly. But fust an apology
and a thank you.
.
: The apology is from me to you.
.
Because I hnd to take a month of
r
medical lenve, I was unable to pro·
mote the conteSt as usual and was from Colorado to Arizonn for a
expecting most people to forget round of golf and n brief visit with
about it But you didn't Nominn· his parents.
.
lions still l!,llled in, enough to make
They arc all worthy of tbe OP
the 1992 OPs contest a very com- crown, but in this highly competipetitive event And that's tbe reo- live year they rate mere Honorable
son for the thank you - again, Mendons. The winners, ns selected
from me to you. You even rernem- by the· Spear Foundation, the tiny
bered the rules: Fools and hr,p· but influential think tank.that spon;
ocrites of all professions quabfy, sors the contest, are:
but we cnn accept no foreign
In fifth place - and we waived
nntionals (sorry, Saddam), no the no-group rule just to accommodeparted OPs (sorry, all you dead, date these wseurs - ihe Chicken
wliite European males), and no Hawk Brigade, who pummeled Bill
groups (we nrc susperiding this rule Clinton for avoiding the draft but
this year; you'll see why directly).
who managed to dod~e mililnry
You nominnted some regular service themselves with student
people: An Oregon woman who and family defcnncnts: presldcntilll
stripped her Alz)leimer's-slricken candidate Patrick Buchanan, Rep.
fntber of all identification and left Newt Gingrich, R-Oa., Sen. Phil
him at a rnce track; the Mississippi Grnmm, R·Texns and Republican
State football coach wl)o, priOr to a Party Chairman Richard Bond.
gnme with 'the Texas Longhorns, Derense SeCretary Dick Cheney
.nttempted 'to motivate his team by also sbunned military service but
having them wntch a bull cnstra- had the decency not to chide Clin·
tion.
,, ton.
You nominated some petfonn- .
Iq fourth place, Spite Lee, tbe
ers: Aboriginal talk show host, . black: ftlmmaker who nsted that
ludicrous blowhard and "remi-' only black journalists intc.Vlew
. nnzi" basher Rush Limbaugh; him about his movie, "Malcolm
· lewd, perverse, sometimes hilari· X," ,llld who avened that AIDS is
ous radio shock-jock Howard a "fovernment-engioeered dll·
Stem. ·
.
ense ' delilned to ldll biiCkl
~~t. mostly, }'OU nominated
In tbira place, tbe Rev. Pat
pohhctans: Rep. Roben Doman, Robertson, wbo lambutecl fernitbe wacto Republican from 0r1DJe nin u a ''acic:ialiJt, IDtl·famlly
County, Cafir., who convinced politicaiiiiOII-llhlt=Jiii
George Bush to challenge Blll womea to leave their hl&amp;tNDdl
Clintoll'a p81riocism becau• Clin- their children, pniCtlce wlldir.tt,
ton visited Mo1e0w as a college ~ CIP!talilm and becolne leastudent; Maryland'• mercurial blana.
·
Democratic gove[llor, Wlllia.m
In ,econd place_, Mlqe S~hott, ,
~Schaefer, who lr1ICU down the owner of.the ~.;lnclMati Reds
hts cntics and berate~ them; Vice ~- who lllmllted lllina fit:lll and bif·

I

Court news

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120th.General Assembly will face maity issues in ·'93, , ·
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GOPs*

d,

The

Rain f9recast for Ohio tonight, Thursday

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The Outrageous Personage .of 1992

_Today in history

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MASON • William E. Wright,
Sr., 58, of Mason died tuesday,
January 19, 1993 nt Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born November 12, 1934 at
Plymouth, WV. he was a son or the
late Bemnnl F. and Cora M.
(Pringle) Wright He wns an overhead cmne operator for Foote
Mineral CorPoration and attended
Salem Community Church. He was
a member of S1eel Loc81 Union
5171.
He was also preceded in death by
his step-mother, a brother and two
sisters.
- Survivors include his wife, (;irna
Wright of Mason; three sons, William E. Wright, Jr. of Columbus,
Charles H. Zuspan, Jr. of Point
Pleasant, and William K. Zuspin of
Ma$011: fi~~e daughterS, Norma J.
Asbury of Harmony, WV, Drenma
K. Ussery of Mason, Connie M.
Fields of Hartford and Debra E.
Miller of Pomeroy; two sisters,
Mamie Ruseell and Carolyn
England, both of Huntington; two
brothers, James Wright of Poca and
· Dennis Wright o{ Dunbar; 17
grnndchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Graveside service will · be held
Thlll3day, January 21, at 11 a.m. at
the Broad Run Cemetery with Rev•
Richard Boods-Krug and Rev.
Oyde F'telds officiating. There will
be no visitation.
In lieu of llowen, the fnmily.
asks donations be made to the
Mason County Chapter of the
American Cancer Society, in care
of Grnce Somerville, R:L ·1 Box
726, Point Pleailat, WV 2SSSO.
A.nangements nrc under the
direction pf the Foglesong Funeral
Home.

THEY'RE NO DUMMIES -One half or the
famous team of Vince aad Larry, the crnsh
dummies wbo emphasize motorist snfety, passed
out Safety Patrol Uterature aad other information to young members of the audience attenc!•
in2 Tuesday's bnsketbaU aame nt the University

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state ControllinB Board
· awoved loans totaling $21.7 million for two Ohio school dislricts to
repair or replace buildings, but with
a condilion.
·

fie S - - -.......

Racine man cited

~onion P. R'oac~. ~;tacine, was cited Tuesday evening by the
Metgs County Sheriff s Department to Meigs County Court for
operaling a vehicle displaying fictilious license plates.
A report from the department stated his vehicle was found
~ed on t~;te rOadway on ~ute 338 near the Ritchie Bridge. The
vehicle, which wns towed, had non-commercial ttuck tags on the
vehicle. When he nPJlCII!Cd at the sherifrs office to get a release for
his vehicle, he was c11ed ll) cowt.
.

Thefts, vandalism reported
T~my

Ottman, Route 7, Chester, reported to the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department on Tuesday that within the past few days
someo~e hnd entered her residence and took a gas stov~.
"
Kevm Barley, Carsey Road, reported that someone had broke out
two windows in his house on Route 681 .
'

Concession stand damaged
Leonard Koenig,,reported to the Meigs County Sherifrs Department on Monday, that over the weekend someone had.knocked the
lock off the concession stand at Eastern High School.
A report from the department stated nothing wns missing.

Bike reported missing
. . Tammy Frye, Deoot S&amp;ree~, reported to the Meigs County SherIffs J)epartment on Monday that she nodced her Murray mountain
bike was missing from her basement.
·

Fire attempt unsuccessful
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department was notified Saturday
evening thai someone bnd lried to set fire to a barn owned by ver.
nal Well, Route 681, Pomeroy.
.
No other details nrc available.

Juvenile shoplifter apprehended
A Pomeroy juvenile was apprehended Saturday afternoon ot Big
Wheel nfter he was caught shoplifting.
. Accofll!ng ~a report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Department, the Juvenile had taken a Chicago Buns cap. The report stated
he had it hidden under his shirt when stopped.
.
The ju~ wns mn to the sheritrs office then released to the
custody of his motber pending n hearing in Meigs Courity Juvenile
Court on a charge or petty theft
.

_Meigs announcements-VSC to meet
sale willl)e held Feb. 6 in the JackThe Meigs County Veterans son Y.M,C.A., Portsmouth Saect,
Service Commiuion will meet Jackson. kegistration of dresses
Monday 81 7:30p.m. in the Veter- and accessories for the sale·will be
ansServiceOfriCCinPomeroy.
from9-10:30a.m. Tbesalestartsat
Prom A - - •••·•
10:30 li.m. and runs until 5:30 p.m.
.,._...,.
A $1 per dreis reaillntion fee will
The Jackson Band Boosters . be charged. Ten cent of sales
"Twice Is !'JI~" UJed prom dress goes to the band
ICls. Dresses
must be clean and In &amp;Ood repalr. A
S
scnmstrell will be pre•ent (or
ndvice. Further inform8don may be
Reedsville for Klpli111 RCcd wbo obtained by calling 286-4570 or
wns taken to Veter1Z11 Memorial 286-1.599.
.

· UDl•ts respon d ·t 0 th ree caII
Uniu of &amp;be Melp Couaty
Bmeraonc}l Medical Service
reiiPOIIde!l to tlueo calli for nssisIIPII:e CIZ ru.lly.
At I:OP Lm. tile Racine unit
wen&amp; to SlzatoD HoDow Road for
Chltlel Hedt who - traiPipOrled
to "-t Valley Hoepllat
..
Tbe 1\ippora l'lOia unit, at 1:02
p.m., wont to Hudson ·strcot in

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~~olumbla

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Board approves building loans for.
Lawrenc·e, Preble County Schools ;:

' J b : f:

r----- oca

o(Rio Graixle. The dummies' appearance W1l5
sponsored by· Hol2er CliDic In cooperatloa with
AAA or Southern Ohio and occurred during the
halftime or tbe Dlen's game, wbich was sponsored by Holzer Clinic. .

Township Fire
COUDtry mul~
· 'bt
J;&gt;epartmont ud Rudand Squad
Courity Music . It the Lot·
were called at 5:S7 p.m. to the . tridge Community nter will be
!&gt;•nnr. Shasteen roaldence in Saiurday from 7 p.m. to mldnigh~
DyesvllJO on a chimney fire. Unib All bands are wolcomci. Refresh·
were on the scene far apprc&gt;xirna~e­ ments will be aVIilable.
ly 111 hOur and a half.

The districts will have to get
local voters to approve an increase
in property taxes to make sure the
loans are repaid.
Dawson Bryant LoCal District in
Ll!w,rence County ~uld get $10.2
million· and the Twm Valley Community Local District, Preble
County, $11.5 million.
·
The property tax increnses are
required by law' to q~'ify fo~ a
loan from the state Building AsSIS·
tance Fund
The board acted Tuesday on the
recommendation of the DePartment
of Education, which said the two

districts represent ~nly a frnclion ~f
needs by dislricts statewide totaling
up to $10 billion.
·:
.

The districts plan to put tnx
issues to voters in May.
.
The Dawson Brynnt district
plans to build two new buildings
and renovate a high school, and
Twin Valley plans improvements
thal include a ne:-v. elementary
school and an add11IOn to a higb
school, said Bob Franklin, 1he
department's supervisor of building
assisrance.
·

-Middleport Court news-~.
Eleven were fined and six others
forfeited bonds in ibis week's court
of Middleport Mayor (:red Hoff.
man.
Fined were Dnnnette L. See,
Middleport, $2$ and costs, no operator's license; Eric J. Hankla, Rut·
land, $10 and costs, expired tags;
Clyde E. Sayre, ll, Syracuse, $10
and costs.• expired tags; Randy E.
Wise, Middleport, $50 and costs,
driving under sus~nsion, and $10
and costs, fictitious tags; William
Dean WhittinP,ln. Pomeroy, $100
and costs, driving under suspension . $16 and costs, speeding and
$50 and costs and five days in jail,
petty thefi.
Donna Goode, Lancaster, $10
and costs, running a red light; Mar-

Stocks

vin A. Oiler, Middleport; $25 and
costs, disorderly conduct, $100 an!l
casts lind three days in jail, menacing threats; Bronson Laudennilt,
Middleport, $100 and costs, driving
under suspension; Christopher
Rayburn, Midd,leport, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner; Jeriy
Annstrong, Middleport, $25 and
costs , disorderly manner, and
James R. Brumfield, Pomeroy,
$425 and costs, physical control,
and $100 and costs, and five days
in jail driving under suspension.
Forfeiling bonds were Robert A.
Jarrell, Letart, W. Va., $60, nQ
valid registration; Mindy L. Yost,
Gallipolis, $60, running a stop
sign; Charles J. Howard, Gallipo~
Donna J. Blevins, Middleport, and
Tammy L. Pelfrey, Oak Hill, $50
each, speeding; nod John E.
Neville, Pomeroy, $60, expireif
tags.

·-

Am Ele Power....................33 1/4 Hospital news
Ashland Oil........................26 7/8
AT&amp;T.................................54 1/4
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Bank One........................... .52
Ja_n. 18 discharges - Mary
Bob Evans ......................... 19 1/2 Duncan, Dnvid Wooldndge, Emmn
Charming Shop...~ ............• .I6. 7/8
Ward, Freda Mountjoy, Jonathan
City Holdiilg.............•........ 21
Henson, Kim Canaday, Zachary
Federnl Morul.................... l8 3/4 ·Fink, Delthia McDaniel, Mr~~o.
Goodyear TlR ..................65 3/8 Melvin Sargent and son, Mrs. JefKey Centurion ...................22 1/2
frey Royster nnd daughter, Cart
L.ands Enct •••••...•................ 26 1/4
Clary, Jon Collier, Beulah Wright
Limi~ Inc...................... , 28 7/8
and William Denver.
Mullirnedin Inc.....•....•...... .33
Jal). 18 births - Mr. and Mtt.
Rax Restauranl ................. J/16
Roben Brown, daughter, Wellston.
Reliance Eleclric................22
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Chesser
Robbins.t.Myers ................ 17 1/2 daughter, Jnckson. Mr. nnd
Sboney's Inc ................. ,.... 23 1/8
David Jones, daughter, Mason ,
Sw Bank ..;l ••••••••••• •••••••• ,••• 37
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Thoma~
Wendy lnt'l........................ l3 1/8 Wheeler, son, Gallipolis.
·•
Worthington Ind. ............... 24 1/2
Stock reports ,are tbe 10:30
Lm. qaotes proVIded by Blunt
IIIII and Loewl at GaWpoUs.

Mn:

'i"~~~~~'!""~....-..

�I

Sentinel

Wednelday, January 20,1993

~ports .

Pomrroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page--S'",

•

'·

Urbana overpowers - ~edmen for 99-89 conference ,victory

.

The Quick and dte .Dea4, as his
"I guess if you want to be
fans knQw, is· the tide of a l..puis ranked, yoU have to play like it," he
L' Amour western. It could .have said. "We're very fortunate to win
aJlplied to the University of Rio against a top· notch team like Rio
Grande Redmen and Urbana Uni- Grande."
vcrsity .When the Blue Knights
"Their quictncu really bOthered
inVllded Lync Center Tuesday for a us and we put them at the free
l hrow line too much," Redmen
key Mill-Ohio Conference game.
.. Urbana, ranked lOth this week Coach John Lawhorn noted. "We ·
among the NAJA' s lOp 25 Division also miSled some opportunities on
II teams. sbruggedofflheirlack of • theone-on-oneandlitewlayups."
The Redmen enicred the zame
size and exploited Bpled and pres:
sure to hand the Redmen .a 99-89 expecting a battle from Ronai's
lou before a Holzer Oinic Night scrappy crew whole only two lossaudience, interrupting Rio es of the season have been to
Grande's three-game winning Cedarville and Michigan's Ferris
streakathorile.
State : With that in mind, the
However, Utbana mentor Bob starten stalrcd otit an early lead on
Ronai is not one to gloat when he the work of Jeff Brow and Troy
walks away with a win over the Oonaldson, who led the fust half
Rednlen on their honie court.
scoring iri double fiRures and in.
1

dominiling tberebouiiding. Urbana
relied upon the shooting prowess
Jerry ·U gon and Art JIUIICs, eacll of
whom neued 12, to ke ep Rio
Grande's margin low.
· ('&lt;s a result, the Blue Knights
trailed by four at the intennission
but.-apidly made up for it, tying at
53 with the Redmen wilhin the fJrSt
four minutes of the half. Wyau
Goins' tbree .gave the visitors the
advantage, which SJ)IIITed them to
74-62 at 12:04 for the biggest lead
of the night
·
. Th.e Redmen fought back on
hard-earned field goals by Brown,
. Donaldson, Tim Christian and
Brett Coreno, putting Rio Griride
within three (81-78) at4:46. But
while 'G oins again went in for a
three nine seconda later to put the
Blue Knights on mother run, both

or

teams pressured each other enough

•

and Donaldson's 16 fin i.&gt;hing the ton i$ht's non-contere nce hom;
big scoring._Wyatt Goins ted all meeung with W ilberforce at 7:30. .
scorers with 27, U gon foUowed up Urbana (17-2, 4-1)-lackles Walsh '
· with 25 , James notc he~ 24 and on the·Cavaliers' coon SaiUrday.
Wade Goins had 16. Wade Goins, Box score:
who currently leads Di "tsion II
RIO GRANDE (19) ..:... Waltet
nationally in assists, wa&lt; credited Stephens, 2-0-4; Jeff Brown, 6-1-3i •
with II, while James d11plicated 18; Troy Donaldaon, g..()..I6; Lyn• .
that total on the boards.
· ·dell Snyder, 2..().4; Matt PoweU, 1: •
~ Redmen w~ 48.E percent 3-1-24 ; LaMont Huris, 4-0-8;.:
on field goal shooting, canning ~9 Jawanz~ Childs, 0-1-1; Brett:
or. 80, including six of 23 from the Coreno, 1-2-0-8; Tim Christian, 3three-p.o int for 26 . 1 percent. 0-6. TOTALS 33-6·5·89.
•• ~
Urbana shot 47.6 percent (30-63),
URBANA (99)- Art James, 9; •·
but was more successful on the out- 6-:24; Wyatt Goins, 3-5-6-~7; Jen)!:
side with 33.3 percent (10-3 0). The L•gon, 3-5-4-25; Wade Goms, 4·1!·
Blue Knights were 82.9 per:ent at 16; 1ulian Embrey, 0- hl ; MarC;,
the line (29-35), with R10 Grande Bversley, 1-4-6. TOTALS l0-101
connecting on five of its 11 . Z9·99.
auempts for 45:5 percent. . .
Halltime score: Rio Grande
The toss took the Redmen to 16- 45, Urbana 41.
··:
4 and 3-2 in the MOC as it enters
·;:

to make a portion of their shots
useless.
·
"In the second half we did a bet·
ter job at rotation and in picking off
R io Grande's shots, • Rona i
remarked. ''The kids did a good job
at making the shots they wanted,
and in dance ling out shots 'that
would otherwise have gone in for
Rio."
Lawhorn was pleased his team
~ontrolled the rebounding, 41 to
Urbana's 33, wilh Bro.wn bringing
down 13 and Donaldson responsi·
ble for 10. Brown also had six
assists, but that departnlent was to ·
be dominated by senior Lyndell
Snyder's.seven.
Matt Powell rued in 24 points
for the Redmen, with Brown' s 18

Redwomen stem rally to beat Blue Knights 88-74 at home
Hamilton combined to put the Rio
ladies back onrop.
·
"We·exploited the inside. That's
our strength," ,Redwomen Coach
Dave Smalley said. "Our defense
really held, and I have to thank our
conditioning for !his. Urbana just
ran out of gas in the last few minutes."
Rio Grande controlled the
~~er ~ uriiversity T~- game's tempo in the first half, with
day in a Mid-Ohio Conference con- all members of the bench getting
test, their fli'Sl of the season ·a t Rio into the fray and ted by 18 of
Hamilton's total of 28 points for
Grande.
· N~ that it wasn't all that easy. the game. Employing its defensive
The Redwomen t~d by 11 at the skills to best effect, Rio Grande
. half but had to fight off a renewed forced Urbana to take a number or
IUue. Kn;""t offense .lhat severely ris"" shots some of them coming
stashedti:'::0mfortablecushion the ·fr;.tt former Redwoman Debbie
hosts had built in the fJrSt20 min· Fredrick, who also fired off the
.ules of play. Dogged defense, cou- bulk of the visitors' three-point
pled with getting the ball to center attempts for the ~od.
and MOC Player of the Week Lori
The Blue Knights came back in
They say you can't go home
anymore, bUt that particular adai:e
us~ehas J\ule on no application
to
lball.
.· .
For the University of Rio
Grande Redwomen, playing their
first Lyne-Center ~arne in more
,than a month, the friendly confmes
of their own floor provided the
_ ... that bel""" them to ali 88 74

~, DR. DUNKENSTEIN, also knilwn as Meip forward Trevor Har·

-thon (35) sc:ores with 1utbority durin1 Tuesday night's TVC game
;gala'* t•e host Trimble Tomcats, which saw !be Marauders win
;;7.5·58. Harrison tied Trimble's Justin Day for scoring honors with
.~8 points.
·

Meigs records 75-58
~ictory over Trimble
··,

By DAVE HARRIS
•:. Sentinel Correspoadeat
;: Meigs jumped out to a 23·14
lead at ·the end of the first period
alid roUed to a 75-58 victory over
T:(imble in Tri-Valley Conference
biiSketbaU action Tuesday evening
at Glouster.
"" Todd Dill got the Marauders (6) off. to the quick fJrSt period
pouring in fl points 1n the
r. Trevor Harrison and John
dey added fiv~ points each for
Marauders. Trimble was paced
.Justin Day with six points in the

le

f~riod.

" Aaron Drummer and Bentley
tl:ored six points· each as Meigs

..

.

~outh
p

t

.

held a 14-13 scoring advantage in
the second period. Meigs went into
the locker room with a 37-27 lead
at the half.
~son paced a balanced scoring attack for Meigs in the thinl ...
period with six points. 'The
Marauders held a 49-38 lead heading into the final · period. Rusty
Richards and Adam Irwin scored
four points for the Tomcats as
Trimble stayed within slriking distance.
•
· Harrison scored seven and
Bobby Johnson added six in the
founh period as Meigs outscored
Trimble 24-20 in the period to win
{See MARAUDERS on PageS)

Point
Eastern
. beats
.
.. . ;
Eastern hit just 20-62 overall
and a meager 9-21 at the line, while
South Point hit 36-65, including 510 three poimers, and a 5-8 night at
the line. · .
Easlem had 28 rebounds, led by
BisSell's 10 and five each by Buckley and Martin. The Eagl'es had 7 ·
assists, 17 turnovers 11 steals
(Newland four) and s~ven fouls
Eastern staners Chad Savoy and
Roben Reed did not play because
of a team rules violation.
South Point had 29 rebounds
led by Huckabay and Fletcher with
s1x each; 16 assiSts nine turnovers
10 steals and 22 fotits.
'
Roger BisseU 's Eastern reserves
won 39-31. Eric Hill led the Eagles
with 11, was followed by Jeff
Stethem 's 10, Ryan Buckley's
seven and Micah Otto's six .
Cochran led South Point with 10
and Mollineaux added nine.
'
Eastern goes to Point Pleasant
on Saturday, but does not play Friday.
{Editor's note: The score tn
the Huntington Herald-Dispatch

t

E

lb.
•

•

. ' Meigs outscored Eastern 19-2 · Maraudei'$ openCd up a 28-16 lead
i""'e second period and rolled to a and then outscored Eastern 28-8 in
SC-24 win . .
the second half to roll to a 56-24
~ Eastern jumped out to a 12-9 . win.
Balanced scoring was the key
t4d, but Mei¢s outscored Eastern
31-6 in the IDldd.le two periods for for the Marauders, as Jason Frecker
led the way with eight points.
Whitlatch led the
Shawn O'Brien and Andrew Vance
Nf'rauders with II points, and added six each. Mick Barr had five,
t¥mate Jeremy
rce had eight and Davey Anderson Matt
Williams, Clay Crow and Chad
~IS. cart McDade added seven
· ts, Scott Mitch six, Chris Hanson all chipped in with four
.
, Robert Qualls, J.R. Black- points each. Other Meigs acorers
ICORd four points CB!:h, Josh included Josh Hani.!l, AJ. Vaughan
era II added three. Nakoma and Cory Seymour with three each
and Aaron Hockman scored and Colin Roush, Brad Davenport
and Mike Wyatt with two each.
· t'f. points each.
·
~Rankin added led Eastern six
Ryan ~wley led the way for
!Mints, Baltey and Watson. added Eastern With e•ght points, Steve
~!:,,Barnhart, Casto, Dillard, Durst added five, Josh Toliver and
~ and McDaniel allded two Corey Yonker added four points
each and Robert Harris three.
·
~ In IOVenth·RUde llCtion , the
.
~ '
L

Llttl~

P
.
i
•
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I .

,

Split Chicken Breast

seedless Grapes
'
In tbeNBA •••

'

'r.. .._.......14 · 20
Wodilopm ...........11 25
Mlomi ................. IO 24
~n·'

54

Gl
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,
Lauinll1o Aqulau 51, Akmn Hoban

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17

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Douoi1. ................17 t9

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22

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Mil.................

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65;Edlociii N 52

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7.5

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' .......................11 19
· Allln~a .................11 . 11

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11.5

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13

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--·········16
Dto-.................. 10 ·:zs
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Dollll .......~ ..........3 • 30

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Nollh1Nitoii,N""'"45.

Ounllllk II, &amp;n.oc!BipL 61
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Pilat Voll. 62. M1m.Sl

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10
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LA.Ltbn ........... l9 " •
L.A. Cll- ......... 19 II
OaldotSiaoo .......... ll 19
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tlaialo69,n ·

Ooldm-

TbundaJ'" ~-

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64·0Z.

~IGlOO VIII.

Waw!J'74,u-

,_NW6t

-"A,IIa-31

.~r;s::
~.CkTc!r-,56

. WITH PRICES LIKE THIS . ..
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE-ELSE? .
15-oz. TEA~ FREE PE~T PLUS
.
FOR
0~

.

~S£\:..¥~al':.:.

a..~=fa,.:t,i;';¥-,:7 n

.

Armour . KrDISt .
·.canned Ham TDmatfiSDUP
can
10. s-oz.

'
~·

(01')

i:=!r~~~"',
i~'T'et.:..
·witit..,Jt?.rv~~~......

-·-·•:lOp.m.

orange Juice
&amp;

o

IS, Au. B. 59

~;=~Fa.:.t:..

.

- · - ,... pJll.

DONALD DUCK ~EGULA~
0~ COUNT~Y STYLE

•

-61.H-.,.5'1
T~ 7:1, Aboo B. 59

oM

·- • - 7 : ! 0 p a .
a . - a _ Y.... 7:10p.OL
Jli' ' ' l ' a 11 ...U. ?:SO p.m.
'1:30p.m.
............ Mit
I I p.at.'
lloll&amp;lo11LA. Lttlt•; lCI".lOpa.
l11alt ..
10:30 ....

.

Phllo 10, Shod41n lO
Rt_.. SE 97, a..-.;u.ll
llidlon&lt;md DtJo SE 16, Pllioton 61
Ri 's wood 70, Noawzwacwn 36
R=mr"MM91 , Mapl_am77
.•
s...... 10. !lao- Molp..,
I. W-l3. """'"""'"' W. 47
Sit,...
63, Sllootndooh,.,
s...lhin 61,~46 ·

-62.Curoll... 65

Portllall11f,
92
Dollll113.- 103
S.-121, O....ltO

•.

l'umi69,N.......y41
·
Peebl• 102; Ponrmaadl Noqe. Dime

s..-..~n.&amp;aoo-tca57 ··

.

Adi!Ul02, Chulaaa 100
.......... 6,~96

...._102.1•

Moollon Hnt B•P' 62. Mulillon Chr.

N. Cimoo 19,.o-boq Onon 10
N . - '19, ClomrloiC72
Now Alhmy 61, P..... Colh. 60

1'!1-u..................:zs ·7 .711 .

·-·-···-······:zs
l'lollllad ................~

' ·

66, Midpotlt&lt;$4
Malliu lllpL 62. Mlllillon Chr.
45
.
Mcip 75, Triml!l• n
MW:srpoa 75, Beene l.!nion 12
·:. Mm-19, E. P.t.linor61
M i l l p - 63, c,illz 40
-TI.W. I!......... 61

WI!STERN CONFERENCE ·
Tw L I'd. Gil
Soa -

.

MoC!oln 51, W. Union 40
Me~ (W.Vo.) Bwhop Donohue

bt.uo......."-······.26 11 .703
'CU!'Il!t.AND .......22 15 .595
~ .............17

'

, Map!o lllo. 60, ~ a... l3
Maplowood 61; Malhows S4 ·
Mlilinl Ptm 56, Sc Cllinvilla47

C•tral~

.

Lima Cath. 90, Part Recovery 64
Lorain Clearviow 73, Rocky River

3.!1

v-.

•

Glrll.

••

=:a..~=~..

"21-~·~54,-~

=t\t'a.'t...a~

r::rJilktl"

iE~:J~~

a

4-o-o=;s, Bobby Johnson 4-0-0=8,
Chrsi Knight 2-0-1=5, Kyle ~imp·
son 1-0-0=2. TOTALS .- 26·2·
17=75

times.
In the reserve J!&amp;me, Adam ·
Curry scored 14 pomts and Josh
McCteUand addedfl2 in leading the
Tomcats to a 47-43 win over
Meigs. Brett N~wsome led Meigs
with !8 points and Travis Grate
added tO for Meigs.
In other TVC action Alexander
rebounded from· two straight tosses
to post a 62-59 win over Vinton
County at Albany". . Wellston
slipped past Federal Hllcklng 63-52 .
and Miller defeated NelsonvilleYork 70-66. In non conference
action Belpre defeated Warren
Local63-52.
Meigs will travel to Miller on
Friday evening to tangle with the
Falcons. Trimble will travel to
Southern on Friday evening and
return home to host Athens on Sat·
urday.
.

TRQdi!LE
(14-13·11·20=58)

TOGETHER•••McDONILD'S &amp; •you• .....OIItlltd ..
over $6200 to loc•lsclloolgroupsl• 1992!
..
TOGETH.ER•••"WE" CAN DO IT IGIIII
Please continue your support of our local
educational system by asking for "McBUCKS at
.
McDONALD's of
Ripley &amp;
Spencer, WV.
Pomeroy, Oh.

MEIGS
(23·14-12-24=75)
Jac~ Stanley 1..()..()=2, Todd Dill
3-1-4=13, Jar Crerneansl-0-2=4, ,
Trevor Hamson 4- 1-7=18, John
Bentley 6-0-3=15, Aaron Drum91Cr

PBL re.sults

Nathan Angle 0-.0-3=3, Rusty
Richards 2..()..li:S, Travis Campbell
2-0-0-4, Reube" Kittle 1-2-0-8, •
Justin Day 8..()..2=18, Josh Cbalfuu.,
0-0-1=1, Chris Craig 2-1·2=9, •
Adam Irwin 4-0-2=10. TOTAL&amp;:
-19-3·11=58
.
!~

McBUCKS for EDUCATION

LolloddiDA&lt;ad.'I9,KlupA"".55

. t.."'-oW.,..12.N.wlloolcn77
Lemoa-lo!oruoe46, MU/ard 42
Liborty Chr. 14, Moow v - Aood.

EASTERN CONJI'ERENCE
AU.tlo-

77.8 percent(7-9).
.
~:
The Redwomen (15-4, 4-1) piCk.
up the pace at home Thursday ;
against Malone in a 7 p.m. game.•
Urbana (14-5, 1-4) is at Walsh Sat·
urday.
..
Box score:
RIO GRANOE (88) - Gena ,
Noms, 2-2·3·13; Stacey Ritter, 6;•
1-13; Michelle Crouse, 6-2-14; TrF'
cia Collins, 5-0-10; Stephante:
Gudorf, 0-2-0-6; Lori Hamilton: ·
13 -2~28 · Ginger Smith, 2-0 -4c;!
TOTALS34-4-8-88.
•
URBANA (74)
Debbie
KoeUer 3·-4-2-20; Renee Stoops, 62-14; Debbie Fredrick, 3-4-0· 1~;
Sheri. Rogan 7-0-14· LaTonya
·Wright 0-3-3: Surena Evans 1-1·
0-5. TOTALS l0-9-7-74.
' · ,.
Halftime score: Rio GraD de
47, Urb8Da 36.
•'

_~_on_tin_ued_mm
_ _~
__
e 4_&gt;________________________________________________________
,.

-

TW L I'd.
NowY..t. ..............22 14 .611
Nowl- ......•....22 ·15 .595
. ................20 19 .513
~................ .. 16 16 .500

·~

-,

WHITE THOiiPsoN

EASTERN
{15-10·9-16=50)
Jeremy. Cline 1-1-1=6, Jer~my
Buckley 4..()..0=8, Wes Arbaugh 30-2=8, Charlie Bissell 6-0-6=18
Matt Martin 5-0-0=10. TOTALS
- 19-1-9=50 ·
__
SOUTH POINT
(21-25-16·20=82)
Gollihue 1·2·1=9, Huckabay 40·0=8, Troxler t-0-0,.2, Spurlock
5-3-0=19, McSweeney 4-0-2=10,
Casey 6-0·0=12, Fletcher 10-0·
2=22. TOTALS - 31-5·5=82

~

·

pulling away. Day scored eight scorers include Aaron Qrummer Chrii Knight and Bendey each had
nnlnts for the Tomcats (2-9, 1-9) · and Bobby Johnson With eight two blocked shots.
~ Chris Craig added six poipls.
po.ints each, Chds Knight idded · Day led the Tomcats with 18
: "It was a total team e(fort, • five, Jay Cremeans four and Kyle points, he was joined in double fig.
Simpson and Jack Stanley added ores by Craig with 10. The Tom~ coach Phil Hanim said
· artcr the game. "We had good scor- twO each. Brad Anderson and Eric cats hit 22 of 62 from the floor for
Wagner played but did not scOre.
tng off the be11ch with 21 poin!li
36..,, including three of 15 from
Meigs hit 28 of 62 from the three point ran~· !The Tomcats hit
. from the reserves."
·
t Harri10n, who led. the Maraud· floorfor45.., and hit 74.., from the 11 of 28 from the floor for an ice
~ with
points, has t,()68 ror his. line sinking 17 of 23. The Maraud· · cold 39..,.
ers pulled in 42 rebounds with Dnt
· earccr to put him just II points
Trimble pulled in 38 rebounds
trom the school record. Mike 1eading the way with eight. The with Reuben Killle and Nathan
Marauders had 14 l!Jmovers, eight Angle grabbing eight each. The
~hancef (8~) hol~s the school
steals with Bendey and Drununei' TOIIIC8IS had 13 asSists led by KitiiCcord wtlh 1,078 pomts.
: John Bentlex added IS for the · gelling iwo ~· Bentley ~ twO tle with ~even and nine steals with
of the Marauders two ass1sts and Kinte leading the way with three.
~and Todd_Din 13 for the
Mei1s was called for 22 fouls . Trimble turned the ball over 11
1111110011 and gold. Other Marauder
~

C~ADE A
WAMPLERILONGAC~E

U.S.

r.

,~d

lb.

read South Point 80, Eastern 49
the same score that was reported
to The Associated Preu)

.iunior Marauders beat Eastern

.

te

.

The Easlem Eagles drollJ)Cd an
SO non-league b_oys' b&amp;sketba!'
test to Coach R1ck Huc~bay s
oulh Po1!"t club Tuesday mght at
astern High School.
South; Point ~as led by Hank
.letcher s 22 po!Dts,Jerry Spurkx:k's 19,
Johnny Casey's
1'2 and Mau McSweeney's 10.
; · Eastern was led by Charlie BisSllll's 18 points. and 10 rebounds,
whde Matt Mai1in added 10 pomts.
• In much the same fashion that
~outh Point used earlier in the seaspn to post its vi~tory over Eastern,
l)le Pomters ullhzed a fast-breakiltll. full court game to pursue the
tin.
~ SoutJ:l Poi.nt rolled to a 21-15
arst penod VICtory by usmg a baldnced attack. Fletcher and Spurlock
~h had five, Casey and Huckab~~
fOur each and Gollihue three. B1s!!1111 had nine of his 18 points for
n in the fJrSt _qu.ane.r, hitting
of four at the line.
second-quaner explosion by
Pointers turned the game into
" early route, although Eastern
stled well throughout the contest.
tern's inablility to .putthe ball
the baslcet, coupled with Point's
tzing game plan qui4Jy moved
two clubs funher apan on the
¢oreboard . At the half, South
Ilointled 46-25. outscoring Eastern
%5-10 in.the stretch. .
J Bissell had 14 a t the half for
!!astern. Spurlock had 16 for South
Point, including three three-pointe4. while Fletcher added 10.
~ Easiern tried io counter the
Pf!inters' tempo in the second half,
"'flile the latter chose a more conSIJVative game plan. The result was
a :flot-so lopsided, 16-9 stint in the
frJme and a 62-34 score. The final
r~nd ended in the same fashion
~ th~ score 82-50.

JVin •.•

~arautlers

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the bottom half"tO cut Rio Grande's great team and to catch up with pressure Oil ourselves because we
lead by two and for a while it them takes a lot of sm:ngth. When want to win the conference, and
appeared Urbana would get the they weren't geuipg the ball to you cari't afford to lose a gamelike
upper hand as Debbie Koeller . Hamilton, we knew we had a that at home. II wasn't pretty, but I
totaled 20 points and Fredrick net· chance. We were beaten by a supe- think our play steppe41 up a notch
ted 18 poin\5, backed by 14 each rior team."
front this experience. I'm very
from Renee Stoops and Sheri
Backing Hamilton ' s perfor- comfonable with the players who
Rogan. Debbie Koeller's three at mance - which included a season went in.
11:33 rut the Blue Knights within high of 15 rebounds - were
"Urbana is very capable and
one o the Red women's margin Crouse with 14 points, Gena Norris they want to be the spoilerin the
(58-57) , but Michelle Crouse's and Stacey Riuer with 13 apiece district," he added. "That' s the way
field goa128 seconds later gave Rio (eight assists by Ritter) and 10 br, . they play~ and I'm proud of the
Gi:Mde enough juice to hang onto Tricia Collins, who had eight of way our kids handled thaL"
the lead. While the Blue Knights Rio Grande's 50 boards. For f RiohGrfande was 51.4 percent ·
threatened for a while longer- Urbana, Stoops led the rebounding
rom t e iehl {38-74, four of 16
courtesy of the hosts' 19 tumoven with eight of the team's . 30 and from the three for 25 percent) and
-the big lead didn't come Rio ~an had six assists. Urbana held netted eight of 14 at the free throw
Grande's way until the last few · Its turnovers to 15.
line for 57. 1 percent. The Blue
minutcs:
"II was one of those wins you're Knights connected on 29 of 69
"Our. motto is to play 40 min- happy to have at home," Smalley shots for 42 percent, .and canned
utes," Urbana mentor John Woods reflected. "The lcids are tired from nine of its 24 from the three for
commented. "Rio Grande has a being on the road. we put a lot of 37.5 peTCenL At the line, they were

I'

$3.00 Mi" . Purch.a.,e
lt.....~, 3131193

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK ,

•

WHAT. IS THE EARNED INCOME
CREDIT AND HOW DO I
QUAUFY FOR IT?

These are the results"of recent ·
action at the Pomeroy Bowling

•

.,

The earned Income credll Je
dealgned to help lower· lncome
working Amerle~na. In recenl rearS
lhe crocljl hal bOon lncrooMCI llld lho

Laries.

J8D.6 .
Leaaue - Early Wednesday
Mixed
.
.
Teams (In order of nntsll) Tony's Carry OUt ( 16), Hackett's
Roofmg (12), Spons &amp; Stuff (12),
Teaford Golf &amp; Trophies (12),
Banks Construction (10), Rutland
American Legion (10).
High series -Larry Dugan
(490) and Pat Corson {576)
Secood-hlallest series Dewey Smith (464) and Dollie
Will (492)
High game -Terry Seidenabel
(185) 8nd Pat Carson {212)
Seeond-bi&amp;ll game - Dewey
Smith (180) andPai Carson (195)
Team series - Tooy's Carry
Out{1860)
Team game - Tony's Carry
Out{666)

requirement• lor claiming It h•v•
chongod,loo.
You lniiJ q~allfy tor

Inc- crodlltl

ttt. ••rneci

;our od)uotocl grooo

l

Income and earned Income tar 1112 :

were leaa thin 122,370 and you lind.
wllh - of moro quolllylng chlldron tn
lhe oomo homo In tho Unltod Sbotoo'
lor rnofll lhln alx month1 of the yM;
{tho onllro yoor II tho quolllylng child
II your looter chlkl).
The amount or credll ta which you.
11re eniiUed Ia trqted •• a payment of tu that will provide you wlttl 1 llrger
refund or reduce the 1mount of til yqu would othtrwiM owe.
'

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WhMever you have queaU0n1 about how the llwa 1ffect your return, e~ll youi ~
local H&amp;R Block office. Betbtr yet. atop by the one nurwat yoU. We're ht,. to ~ •
Mip)'OU,

,I ,

.. .

H&amp;R BLOCK
618 EAST MAIN

992·6674

POMEROY '

~---------~--------------------~~---------------··.

.........

.FRIDAvI NIGHT DANCE

.,

AT THE·"RUTLAND LEGION HALL

"'

BEECH GROVE ROAD, RUTLAND

'·

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~

Featuring the Rock·A·Billy.and Country_
Music of the Whites Hill Band!
Be there lor great dGnce music lilce: Johnny B. Gool(. Amty
Brtflkey HeiiTt, Po~et Full of Gold, Heaven Can't Be FOflltfl, Sflflt
Slttets, Help Me· Malee It TluNglr ,The Ni-t, Good Hew tt4
W•• ,_,.., House, w•ln' r•~ I'll Co•e Bt4 Y•
H,., Rol•• With "'' Flow, I'll Stop Loving ,., Hei'e's
A GM tc Sweet Hqme Alabama, From A Jade To A King, 1114
IIMJ . .y IIOI'tl

a..a.,

'FRIDAY, JAN. 22

,,

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2

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~~------·--~----~--·~~~----------~, L·~·~~~~~~~·~I~SS~I:O:N:~$~3~"~·!ch:II:*:••~U:•:••:r!12~·~1~"--~~·
&lt;¥·

J. l

••

�II

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Tt1e Red ntgs At ·Food land
•
M-ean- That You_
'II Save
L ,ts Of Green!
.

IAL COUPON.

,,
..'' .
'.

SALE STARTS SUNDAY
SUII

11011

~

WID

t111J

I'll

1U

JU JAN JAN JAR .JD Jlli JD

L---- .!!!!

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:·•'

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

.•.'.

Family
Medicine

·Daughter of Pomeroy couple .
appointed vice president
rro..-

DA
NCR Calpomion
recently announced lhe appointment of Lola A. Sigaom to the
Jollll C. Wolf, D.O.
position of vice president. Wonna·
Alsocille Professor
lion Prodocts Division. Signom
•.
•
ofFamil}t Medicine
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
.
George Ziegler, Rt. 681, in
• , QIMitloa: My aunt, who lives provide the foundaiion for a.day's · l'olnqoy.
..
.
.
. ; alone, is rather frail and now is nutrition. Easy, to prepare meals, ,
In ~ new )JOSlb~, Sagnom IS
:· llavingiOIIIC diflic:ulty liking can: ' such as TV dmners, can balance '. ~ble for providing a shaml
.: 9f her own~- The family can't out the individual's daily food viSIOI'IIIId strategy 1CfC!U the IX!"'·
~: t.e wilb IICr enough houn to ensure needs.
, pany for world:c~ informauon
!•Iter safety. What can be done to
The combined cost of the VNA . producll. The IIivision:Will! CIIBII:d
•: help her scay in her home?
nurse, Meals-On-Wheels and a '!11991 to ensure that the infonna!· i Aaswer: The situation you maid are usually considerably k:ss bon COIIJII:ODCDt of NCR's producll
:• ~escribe with ·your aunt is an than the cost rl. scaylng in a nursing . and ieryu:cs exceeds customer
.; mc~ingly common problem. In ~orne. Unfortunately, the current ·expectations. .
i•the United StaleS most individuals politics of health care still gives
. NCR Ch_at!man an_d CEQ
·~ liO longer live in an exrended fami- preferential funding 10 hospital or Gil.bert P. Williamson said, ~Ia
r ly with tbree or four generations nursing home care.
has a Slrong ~-of suc:cc:ss With
· lffider the same roof or next door.
Question: How does one know start-up programs m ~ mr.emal
'l tn previous genenuions, when the when it is appropriate to put a ~ exr.emal commurucallon funcLOLA A. SIGNOM
·- ~tended family lived close togeth· loved one in a numng home?
liOnS across the company. Over the
' .er, the family members in their
Answer: This is a difficult past few years•. she has played an
·l adult yean ·shared many responsi- question. Every situation must be mtegral role m the _successful NCR •s Pacific Group. She was
&gt;·bilities. They helped each other considered individually. The launch or our. strategtc products named executive assistant, Exeeu·
, with child rearing and assisted rela- amount of support available in the and NCR ~ ~ of the New Way tive Offtee in 1988. ·
·~ lives who had health {"'?blems or home from family membe~s and ofCo,mputmg.
.
.
In 1989, Signom became assis·
;, diffiCulty with daily-hvmg tasks. from professionals is an important . Prior 10 h~r appo!Dtment: Stg- tant vice president of Public Rela': This provided a support system fer factor when considering this deci· nom was asststant ~tce ~s'"'_ent, tions and served as a member of
;. both the young and the el!lerly. sion. As long as the individual's Stateholder~e_lattons Dt_vlSlon, the AT&amp;T/NCR transition team
:: Today, most families don't have emotionat.and physical needs are wttll responstbillly fo.r al.t m~ responsible for transition commu-; several capable adults available 10 being met at home, care in a ours- and ~xr.emalined'NcomCR~uru,!' uons. ~- nications. She has held her most
10 I~9 ~an,...., . recent position since 1991.
.• help those who need assistance.
ing home may never be necessary. ' nom_ JO
·: Fortunately, there are other
Individuals that have serious t!'r m Corporate In~ustrial. Rela·
SigliCllll is a truslee for a number
:• sources of help besides family loss of their ·thiriking capacities- uons. She has~ m!I vanety of or community organizations
.: members for 'an individual who those who an: COiifused and/or bel- management post~s m develop- including The Muse Machine,
-: wants to stay in his or her own ligerent most of the time - are ~ent andd producuon, U.S. JJUU!tet· Wegerzyn Horticultural Center,
:, home. TWO importaJit areas of usually best cared for in a. nursing ·~g. an corporate commu~!•ca- The Montgomery County.Histori·
:· need are health care and proper home. Others whose health prob- b!&gt;08 • In 1986, she ~as ~Jll)ointed cat Society, Wesuninstet Presbyte·
-; nutrition. The health-care needs !ems require flequent skilled ours- dtrecto~ •. Commun.tcauons. a~d rian Church, and The Hipple Can·
:•can often be met by the nursing ing attention may also be beuer off Adverttsmp; Servt~es, Wlthm ccr Reeearch Center.
•&lt;staff of the Visiting Nurses Associ· in a nursing home.
:: ation (YNA) working in conjuncI suggest that you talk openly
: lion with the person's doctor. The with your aunt, her doctor and
~~ nurses can Dnillis~ medications, other family members about her
' check for Changes in the person's ' health-care needs. Hopefully you
WEDNESDAY
White's Hill Band. Public invited.
:· health, aSsist with bathing, and per- will be able 10 assemble a tea'm
MIDDLEPORT·
T h e
~ form other customary nursing comPosed of family members, her Middlepon Ans Council.will offer
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
~chores. And no, they don't do
ramay physician and other health· a series of dance classes on western Gospel
Chur~h in. Long .Bottom
r.l bouseoleaning. Xou will need to care providers that will make it · line dancing beginning Wednesday will have
and singing
;ihile a maid for those sezvices.
possible for her 10 stay in her own at 6:30 p.m. Dances 10 be taught Friday 11 7preaching
p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
~ Plopci nutrition is impcrtant for home as long Is she wishes 10 do include the Bles:tric Slide, Texas
invites the public. Fellowship fol1' good health 111 any age. Meal so.
_
Freeze, Achy B~, Tusl) Push, lows. Local singers.
~ preparation is often difficult for the ·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly. Boot Scootin' Boogte and ·others.
SATURDAY
elderly individual who has one or column. To submit questions, write Cost of the c'-s, per seaion, are
RU11.AND
• There will be a
more impairments. Meals-on- 10 John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- $3.50 per penon and $7 a couple. dance at the Rutland
American
lwheels is a~ that can ~v~ vers~ty College of Osteopathic ~1992-2675 or 992-1733.
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
il• hot meal once a claY to such il!di· Medlcme, Grosvenor Hall, Alhenq.
p.m. to midniJht. Music Will be by
?. vidualL. The one ·good mCl'l~ ' , Oltio4S701.
' ·
RU1LAND • Rtidand Volunteer 1'1R Couttay llanc:L Public invited.
, Fire De}Nu Ullent rmies AUihlily • •
Will nleet Wedneliiay 11 7:30 p.m:
at the Rutland rue Stllion.

: You'll notice the savings!"

.

Pag~7:

oI

Foodland.

LIMIT 3 WITH
AND
$100R MORE
ADDITIONAL
PURCHASE

Wednesday~ January 20, 199~

·

·.•'··-----------------~------------~--~~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------' po'"""i!
Therapy resumes j

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I "Watch for me
t on TV, .and on
I the shelves at

Starkist .
Tuna -

Se~tinel

.The Daily

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199

LIGHT CHUNK
WATER OR OIL PACK

.

By
The
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!.00.!. !!!,I!,S!!,U!!A,!&amp;.J,!!I!,IY.J!.;.I!!J..--._-- .J

·Corrpnunity calendar

~cifunf.Y f~c8r~r posts

~M
eig~
l~ljriJran~fers
:· . . r . '
Compiled by.~
,•
·1 ' Ea1110pae Holltebl CIJIIIO·
;, Recorder, Melp Couaty, Oldo
;: Emalene Pratt, PL Lot 103, to
':rtedina Dailey, Crenson R. Prau,
•:Midd. Vii.
·
:• William R. Barber, Rebecca
:~rene Blllber 2.5307 A. to George

Calvm Hawk, Jean L. Hawk,
R/W, to Western Reserve Tete·

pl)one

eo, Orange.

'

BOYS INSULATED

COVEULLS
AND BIBS
BOYS and GIIU

HANG TEN
(Not Spring)
MEN'S ucnc

BIBS and

COVERALLS

.

20%oFF
30%oFF
20% OFF .
\

'

. [d\ .290 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

,.m=~~~.::.:c:

·

Jason D. Black, 1/2 int. lA. to
Connie B. Black, Rutland.
Lonnie R. Black, 1/2 int. lA.
Connie Black, Rutland. .
Roben L. Black, Shelbe Grey·
~:,E.Park«,Ollve.
~aven, 1/2 int. lA . to Conme
:• John F'tsher Jr., Sarah S. FISher, Black, RIJI)and.
;.1A, to David Jessie Sayre, Gwend·
Benj~UJ!in !ranklin, Upton, Jr.,
affid, BenJBDUn Franklin Upton Sr.
, lyon Sayre, Lebanon. .
'• Henry W. Bentz, afTid of Tracts, aka B.F., Iva .P. Upton, aka Iva
; to Henry Bemz, Meip.
Pearl, Orange.
,• Raymond C. Elberfeld, Pa=l S.
James D. Louks, Sharon Louks,
~29 T-3, R-12,10 Michael R. Elber· R/W, to Colmnbus Soulhcm PQwer
~ fetd ~Co.,f::~.
'
• 1~mes McKnabb, 2.99 A.. to
William R. Oaborhe,Jean E.
:,Larry Brian Willard, Rebecca S. Spencer, 'R/W, to ~umblis So!lth·
·ICanter Columbia.
em Power Co., Olive.
'• Orli A Rousb POrothy Roush · Yvonne PersiiJger, James J.
!f&gt;rion
Roush by Gdn, Kat~ Persinger, R/W, to Columbus
~~oush, RIW.Io Southern Ohio SouRthemBa~~~ B 'le
1 Coal Co.; Salem.
oy
y, ...,..,..,y · 81 l•
Orlyn Fcllun:, R/W, to Southan R/W. to Columbus Soulhcm Pow~
ioCoaiCo.,Salem.
~o .• ~
,
.
Harold W. Fetty, Vir~ie A.
William B. Capi!lwt. ~~Jane
euy, R/W, to Southern Ohto Coal Stewart, ~1 '{;~o Wtlham B.
o., Salem.
,
Calle~ B ~·
· Alice J
Ishmail Smith, Shirley Smith, •· William ·
~
'"J(JW,' to Southern Ohio Coal Co., Stewan, Lot 78,
J::ot 77, Ahce
"Salem. .
Jane Stewart,~- Vrll.
.
·~ Mary Napper, RJW, to Southern
James E. Haw~. affid, 10 LoiS ·
:Ohio Coal Co .. Salem.
E. Hawley, Pom. Vi_ll.
- Millard M. U'artz, Wanda J.
Steve Lano, Belmda _Lane, par·
:Sw'·Tr
33
T-1
R
13
to Mil· eel, to Steve Lane, Belinda Larje, ·
m..,, ' ' .., ' ' ·
· Midd Vill.
?.anJ
M.
Swanz,
Wanda
J.
Swartz,
Ro.ben Josep1h .w'1'I son,. 10.3~7
•Salisbury
~

w:

Signom graduated magna cum
laude from Ohio University, with a
bachelor's degree in joUmalism.
NCR, an AT&amp;T Company ,
develops, manufac_tures, markets,
supports, and servtces enterpnsewide information systems for
worldwide inarlceJS.

NEW YORK (AP) - Therapy
will reswne for the adopted dauglt·
tet of Woody Allen and Mia Farrow, and Allen will again be
allowed to visit their 5-year-old son
under an agreement reached
between the warring e&gt;t-loverr,
sources say.
Allen and Farrow are in a custody fight over the two youngsters
and an adopted son, Moses, 14,·
Fanow accused Allen in Augusl
of sexually abusing· 7-year-old
daughter Dylan. ·

the junior claas at Eastern High

Schoof 00· Thlirlday • 8c30 IJ.m. in

thCcafeleria.

·

. ROCK ~S -The Middle·
port Child Conservation League .
wiU meet Thursday 11 7 p.m. 8l dtc
Roc~ _Springs United Methodist
Church. Gerald Rou,ht, Ponwoy
Chief 9f Police, will speak on
"Morals of Children · and

Teenagm."

l ·RACINE • Racine American·
IAgion Post tj02 wiU meet Thursday 817:30 p.m.l1the post home in

Racine.

POMEROY • The Democratic
Executive 'Committee will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Car·
pentcrs Hall in Pomeroy.
STIVERSVlLLE . Evangelist
Brother David · Carpenter,
Belleville, W.Va., wiU be preachin' at the Stiveriville Word of '
F81th Church on Thursday 11 7:30
p.m. ~tor David Dailey invites
the publiC.
TUPPERS PLAINS , Special
meetlllg. Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9M3, ThursdaY • 7:30 p.ni. to
elect a quartermUier. All members
urged to 8ltelld.
,

POMEROY • Poultry SuiH:om.tmittee, Thursday, 7 p.m .. Mei's
~~~~io~nt of County Extension Office m
....__._if
"-tz
• Donni Bentz , 5 Pomeroy.
,~...,
.IKill ,

: Gale Roland Heiney, Plwcels, 10
J~n L. Walka', Kathy
L. Walker,
&lt;ll.tve.
•
: He~be!t.D.Rollins,am~~ · ~~~~~~~~~ Ctty Bapdst Otun:h, Inc., . 'Mildred M. G,_te, parcels, to

~• Dale . Cochran,
~oclnll

R/W

.
10 Buckeye Rwal

Ramona

~leclrici:oop_inc,,'Saiem.

Mildnl Grate TrUit, Rutbnll
J., K
Linda~
lmCS .,_ -- eeaee,

~

IICC

•

,6.14 A. 813, T-6, R-14,1ames E.
: Wanettaiadltiti, R/W, to Buclt· Koeaee D, Rtttlaad:. ]lye RIIJ'I( Electric Cooperative,
. Steven ·Oigho, Tracu, to
Inc., Columbia.
Richanl D.. ~. Karen S. Hat·
"' Blellda L. Upton, T. 11; S. 22, field, Salem.
~ R·l2N, to' IJenjamin

EASTMAN'S.

Btrdla
~C:;~lll\u. io
1lertlta P. Joltrt1011, Roy H. John·
'101, Slltklll.
l ~!•leea Anthony, dec'd, to
~ L. Alllli!IDY. Milld. ViU.
Carolya K. Utile, Sidtley E. Ut·
to Sidney E. Little,

ODLA

tw.rarc:et.
t_:ifharcl.

~~0:::.:: :Un~::;

•OHIO VALLEY • GALLIPOLIS • PT. PLEASANT •twiN RIYEIS
•BIG BEND • WELLSTON • BURR Oll FOODUIDS

h, SllliOtt.

Your Community-Minded, Low-Priced Supermarkets
We reserve the right to im~ quantities.Not responsible for typographical Of pict0na1 errors.

aa;ept lood slampa and WIC coupon~.
f

C. Eblin; Reta Eblin

•

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Carrie 1. Rauah, Corrective
to Bnerly S. Roush,

.'
.

L.Roush.....,.

.·Fre~

LANG,SVILLE • The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
ollice.

.'

.

POMEROY • Tbe J&gt;omeroy
Group of AA will rnee1 Thursday at
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-S763 for infor·
matlon. _

clothing set

MIDDLEPORT • The. first
meeting for the 1993 Soapbox
The Oallia-MeiD Community Derby wlli'Je Tbwsda): • 7 p.m. •
Action Aaency will hold Its free lite Blue Slrelk Cab Ollic:e ill Mid·
clothing day for low·lucome per· dlepon. Anyone Interested tilly
aona on ~rlday, Ian. 22, from 9 tlald.
FRIDAY-· ' •
·a.m. to 12 noon. The •a•llcy'a
MIDDLEPORT • Bosworth .
bMt illot:alllll iD the old COuncil No. 46 R.S.J4 will ba'IIO
blli 4ooJ buildi"' • Olelblle. annual illlliCCtion, Royal Muter
Prliiay 11 7:30 p.m. 11 tile
1eport Ma3onic Temple.
·
MILLFIELD • Round and
1q11are dance Saturday, 8-11 p.m. at
RU11.AND • There will be 1
1M RUIIOilltul= Mllltleld. dance
at the Rutland American '
Millie Mil be
by Oat of
the Bla 1a1tn U.U will be lhe 1ea4m IWl on FridaY ftum 8 p.m.
to 111idniaht. Muaic will be by_
Clllllr.
.;

&gt;

=·

clcMh:t

••

i

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�•

The

·ChildreQ should accept moth~r's i
·ne~ relationship ana go on · ·1

COCA-COLA
PRODUOS
'

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

Ann

24 PAK, 12 OZ. CANS

ss19

-· 8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH . . t
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . '
PRICES GOOD SUN., JAN. 17 THRU JAN. 23, .1993

Landers

'GOLD MEDAL'

FLOUR
5 LB• .BAG :

99(
•

.

49

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOnOM $'

2

Round SteaL.......;........LB.
USDA CHOia BONELESS BEEF . '

··chuck·Roast.~.........~..La.

$.] .69.

MOUNTAINEER .10 OZ. LINKS or 1·L8. ROL

Sausage...~......~.!~·················
CHICKEN

.

.

·

Fryers. . .·-···-··-·--..-~~. 59

C SU(;AR .CREEK BACON

$2 29
Steaks..............................~.. $ . 9.
5
Y.t Pork Loin. . . . . . . . 1
Ch~::~:___. . ______~. s1 .89
PORK CUBED . , ·

Ends &amp;

Pieces.~. . 3 Las.

·zESTA
SALTINES
•

1 LB. BOX

S]59

•

..

.

:
Rosalie S!or)o, lectw:er. presentPatty Dyer, legislative represen;: ed the program "A New Begin- tative, discussed the need for Liv:; nin~" at lhe recent meeting of lhe ing Wills. She recommeilded COR·
· Me1gs' County Pomona Grange at suiting an attorney . She urged
:; the Reick Springs Grange Hall. members to become acquainted
;::: ArthiD' Crabtree presided.
wilh. county officials and be aware
t-· Readings included ''New Year's of county and state iS$Ues.
::; Refleetions" by Sylvia Midkiff,
Opal Dyet announced lhe state
: "Voice~.'of the New Year" by ~ng c~~IS "Ch~late Brown- Agnes Dixon· "Everyone Needs · 1es ·for JWUOI'S and Heath Coffee
; : Someone" by 'Opal Dyer, a ques· Cake" ~or subordinate mem~ers,
. ..., tionnaire on President's powers by w•ll be Judged .at ~e Max meeu,ng.
Ro~alie Story ·"The Nation'
Kathryn Millers qu1lt rece1ved
Strenglh" by siena Atkins; and honora~?le '!'ention at lhe national
'The Amerielln Creed• by Batbara · grange Judgmg.
Fry.
•
The annual banquet was set for

April 16 at the senior citizens
building with Salisbury PTO to
serve.
The July meeting will be the
annual inspection exemplifying lhe
degt:ee of Pomona.
,
A bake sale will all subordinate
granges participating will be held
April 3 at Big Wheel.
The deputies are to contact
Alhens County Pomona in regards
to exchanging visilations.
Star Grange will be host for lhe
March meeting.
Following the closing, refresh·
ments were served by ·Rock

you

F

crg~~ooMIZi: 1 suggest~~ . -·-

. .·

·. . $ .. 59.

Navel Oranges.;._"..... ··1
BR~UG~TO~S . ·. .. . . ·
$· -8.~
.2 %. Mllk~. . ;,.....-.. . GAL 1·.
SU~~y _pEliGHT .'
•
(
~1tru$ .Punch............,.64 oz. 99 ·
RUFFLES REG. ·$2.89 .•

.

Pota.to Ch1ps. . . . . . . .~. . . .

FINAL TOUCH

·

•
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f
.
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'
Fabr1c So tner
.......
64 ·oz.
-...... . --.,..,
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.

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BATHROOM TISSUE 111
C ·nou !n

89

PAK

·~Only At PoW.U'e Super Velue
Olfw Good .len. 171hru .len. 23, 11113
Llmll1 p., eu..•

,

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II

·$ 49
s·

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.

.

CAT. FOOD' .

5 $1· U·U

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1

Offer

,

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Pizza . Rolls~.......6oz.:~~- 99
I

Slp.RE HOURS ·.
Moftday tlnu Sunday
8

AM~ 10

6

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Ice Cream. . . . . . . . . . . . .sGr.
.

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WHITE BREAD

.10.75 OZ. CAN ..

24 PAl, 12 OZ. CANS

20 OZ. LOAF

GAY 90's

2 $1

aWTEit BLEND COfFEE

$2''···

a'!".:l .-..
At Powel'• Iuper V.lue .
t 7 thru J.n. 23 t813

Goocl

Offer

Lllllll1 Per Cullllmer

460Z.
0 '

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·FRESH

BAKERY DONUTS 1

COTTAGE CHEESE
'

DOZEN

24 OZ. CARTON

$109

GROUND
.
.

BEEF .

\

$1''
BALLARD'S HOTDOGS
_.or BOLOGNA .
4
12 ·oz.
PIG.
.

••

69
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CHUCK ·

·We Will Redee• Up Yo 5· Vendor Coupons
(Ma~. soc·, ..... ~ No. ClgareHe Co~pons) : J. RIP~E VE"'DOB COU~ON }
. With
TRIPLE VE.DOR COU~N At Right~ I .· Good ThursdaJ January 21 1993 Only . I

10 LB. PACKAGE

t••
(You •It lrl11 T•• Triple Y••••r Coupon at Right..

SJ 590

Per F••Ry.)

lie

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BROUGHTON'S

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79

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20 OZ. CAN

GROUND

. TOMATO JUICE;·

,

BEEF STEW

s2·.99

STOKELY

.

PRICES GOOD THURSDAY, JANUARY 21 ONLY

7·UP, DIET 7·UP
DR. PEPPER or DIET DR. PEPPER

.

I

'

CAMPBELL'S ·
-.·cHICKEN
NOODLE 'SOUP

BRAWN'
PAPER
TOWELS

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loan CQrder presented a game Holiday Inn in
on AJlljl
on cities and lllwns in Ohio at lhe 29. Members
are to
recent meeting of the Preceptor represent Nonh and
Amer(Beta ~eta Chapler, Beta Sigma J!'hi .ca
·
. ~~~~~~~da·l·
Soronty, held at lhe home of Maida
The next meeting
Mora.
the .home of Eleanor ..
A Valentine party by lhe social There will be a soup slipper.
COII!mittee will be held in February.
Attending were Ele1m\tr
indeedroad
~~here down ~
The combined sororities cards Thomas, Velma Rue, An1nn ,;1:~1:
• WI
w
.
. • ·. and games party will be Tuesday at Jane Walton, Reva au
Dar Aaa Landen: I syrnJllll)lize the senior citizens center in Donna Jones Normaa :;:~f~~
with the mo~er of "Ava," the \ Pomeroy. .
· Clarice Krautier a~d n
22-year-old gJtl who had ,let her
Founder's Day will be at the Elberfeld.
·

PRICE
.
.

PM

..
298 SECONp ST..
POMEROY. OH.

'

&amp;C.

Good

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paste yoW"SClves IOgelher and accept ,
yciur modier's relatiOnship, whatever
il is.
·
As 8 divorced woman, yo~r
mother is free to go with any
Unmarried man of her cboice lf
lhe Jali-oh"' ~
~ 8he ~ys,
, rc -::-.... '

JIIORT~N

CALIFO~NIA 4-LB•.B~G

requt:stedpoemsandtssays, ~ndtJ
self-addrts~d. long, 'blubless-.ri'F
envelope and a check or mo"!!
order for $4.85 (t~is inclu.def
postage and lrmulliniJ tb: Genq,
clo Att~t/.,tJNlers,'P.O: B~ 1156'1,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 ~0562. (~
Canada, send $5lfl.) 1 '
·;

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[
o~n er s ay p ans ·

·. $ 89

.

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I

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Recipe For A 1'opullr Funerai :
Take one naJUtal born fool,
:
Two drinks of beer or whiskey, ·
Mix in a high-powered au!OIDObile.
When the fool is weD soaked, 1
Place his fOOt on the gas,•rtle&amp;lt
brakes.
·
'
l
Remove the fool frQm the wreck;
G8lhcr up die ltilled and~.
Place the fool in a silk-linilcl boJI1
Garnish with Oowm and IIIOIICY)
Use a popular pracber. ·
1
Thousands will allaid.
1
Is that A1111 I..an«r~ collUM yow
eli~ yeaTS 12go "/low willa age?
For a copy of her mht /regut:fll/j

BLEACH
GALLON ··.

·

Salute to Cblldren performance at the JOhn F •
Kennedy Center for tbe Performing Arts in
Wasbillgton, Tuesday. (AP photo)

mother's lrUDk. lt's at least 60
years old. l hope you11 print iL ;.
ALEXANDRIA, LA., FAN ·. ~
DEAR ALEX: lt's u 6ue today
u it wu 60 yatll ago. Thlnll: you
for sending it on:
•

ClOROX

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LB.

•

SING ALONG - Prelidellt-elect CliatoD slllgs
along with Kermit the Frog, Hilliary Clinton
and a dress Markle Post, ri&amp;bt, durin&amp; the

~ Meigs .County Pomona Grange 11:1:eets

.

LB.

SLICED

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99(

9(

Dar Au l•ade": My pareniS,
who have been . married for 31
years, are in lhe proctSS of g~g
a divcri:e. Though my sislers llld
I arc srown, this is extremely
upsetting IO' us.
.
ANI'O I.ANIJt:IIS
To make matters worse, my
"I'IIIZ,I.·~ ""•'I"
mother is now seeing my father's
·nonr.&lt;Syndk ulr and
best friend, "Mr. E,. who divorted
t:n·ul"" Synd kal&lt;"
his wife two years ago. They had
been my p&amp;~e~~IB' best friends for 25 fmgemails grow 10 about 6 inches
~Our families have always been in length. She complained that A~a
close.
looked like a freak and lhe upkeep
My father and Mrs. E know on those nails was asaonomical.
about lhis relationship. ll is very
My son is 18 )'Cid old and plays
disturbing to them both. Mr. E's .guilll' with a rock band. His hair is
da!ighru has called me tWice 10 say almost 10 lhe middle of his lrlck. He
she is now certain that her father is 'hasn't had a haircut since he was 14.
serious about my mother.
He's a good ldd, lives at home, pays
Mother insists that she and Mr. E 1'0CJI!l and board and washes his hair
an: just friends, aldlough she admit· four times a week. ·
· ted lhat IIIey have ~o,ne «;m ~
His falher hales lhe kid's hair so
.trips together 10 VISit hiS relatives. ' much that he went 10 a counselor 10
She has hiilted that the relationship discuss iL The counselor said, "Keep
may "go somewhere" down the · qweL It's not importanL"' Wbat do
road. She is aware of how evayone
say Ann? -- LONG ISLAND
feels about lhis and has gone for MOM '
·
c~ling. The counselor 10ld her 1 .DEAR MOM: I say your husband
~ ~lucky 10 h\lve fOIJ!III S9IJICOr!C got excellent advice. I hope he ta1ces
safe at ller age (Sbe's 51) sipce 1 iL ,
:"lOS and heaven kl)ows w!lat else
i:lear Ann Landers: 1 found
ts out there.
lhis newspaper clipping in my
What do you think, Ann?·This is ,
tearing us up. - MISERABLE IN

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One Triple Vendor Coupon Per Customer.
lr·r a

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10-The Dlllly Sentinel

Study: Life really does deal moody
adolescents more raw deals
.

WOLFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

.

and bad day·to-day mood probably . felt "down" abou(23 percent of
promote each other, as when a dis· the time they were beeped, versus
tressed student gets into fights. '
about 13 percent for younger stuHe and Ham studied 483 stu- dents.
dents in fifth through ninth grades.
Perhaps ad!)lescents arc m·ore
They were drawn from four pre- affected by a pileup of bad events .
dominantly white neighborhoods in because they worry ~ut the ~t
two Chicago suburbs that Larson and the future and thmgs outstde
declined to identify.
·
their immediate environment, while
The students wore a beeper for a younger children Jive ~~e in the
week. When it beeped at random here and now, Larson satd m )l teleti me~. they recorded ,their moods phone interview.
. .
'
Brooks-Gunn satd tf a youn g
on scales ranging from happy to
unhappy, ~ri_e ndly to angry and a~o lesce nt bec o~ e s irritable. or
cheerful to UTttable. ·
wtthdrawn from friends and.farmly,
Researchers recorded the per- parents should t~lk to the child
centage of times each child's over- about how life is going, If the proball mood was negative, and com· !em goes on for months, and teach·
pared that to the nu.mber of "nega- ers say the child is troubled in
tive life events" each kid ·had school as well, the child should be
reP.orted experienc ing over the gi~en counseling, she said.
p~r six months.
Negative events included things
like worsenin~ relationships with . .·
parents and Siblings, being SUS·
pended or otherwise disciplined in
·
school, changing schools, breaking
up with a boyfriend or girlfriend
.
·
·
and falling out with a close friend ·
NEW YO~l{ (AP) - Mayor
or group of friends.
David
Dinkins' atdes are talking
Adolescents - defined -as sev- with producers
of David Letter. enth through ninth 'graders - were
man's
nighttime
ta11c
shaw in hopes
· more likely than younger students . of keeping the program
in the city.
to have dealt with seven or more
Letterman,
who
recently
negative events, 35 percent to 24 announced his show would
move
percent. And among all students in.
·" excellent,.
from
NBC
to CBS in August, said
Larson said distressing events this hard-luck group, adolescents he wanted to remain in New York
but would consider moving production to the West CoasL
Robert Morton, Letterman's
executive producer, ·said he was
contacted by Richard Brick, the
head of the mayor's Offtee of Film,
Theater and Broadcasting, accord·
CINCINNATI (AP) - Eggs
Komodo dragons ·are an endan- ing to a New York PQst story Tuesday .
. from a Komodo dragon livin~ at gered species.
"I made an 'o ffer to help,"
the Cincinnati Zoo are bemg
They are considered the world's
"shipped to the National Zoo in largest breed of lizard and can Brick told the Post. "1, as a city
Washington, D.C.
grow up to 10 feet The female at official, am deeply concerned
• Zoo officials said the mother, a the Cincinnati Zoo, Sabot, is 6 feet. about the decision the Letterman
lizard native to the Komodo Island long. The father, Naga, is 7 1(2 feet people still have'to make.
"David Letterman is New ·
in Indonesia, buried the. eggs early long . Cincinnati obtained him in
.
York," he said. "His show is the
:.Tuesday about two feet under- 1990. Sabot is on loan to Cincinnati · quintessential New York show.~'
·ground.
' Keepers reuieved the 24 eggs · from the National Zoo for breedBriel: said they' ll meet again
.
. and expected to ship them to Wash- ing.
Wednesday, but would not discuss
Females of the species instinc- any proposals offered to keep the
ington today because tile National
: Zoo has SPecial incubation equip- tively bury their eggs and leave show in the city:
_;_.:_
them. The baby lizards dig out of
··menL
Wll.USTON, Vt. (AP) c,..... Jerry
: When the eggs haich in eight the ground and survive on their
· months, half of the baby lizards own. ·
(as in Btlll &amp; Jerry's ice cream)
~ will be returned to ·the Cincinnati
Sabot previously laid eggs at the wants to enter politics.
; zoo and half will remain at the National Zoo. Last year, 13 of the
Jerry Greenfield said he plans to
·: National Zoo, Cincinnati Zoo lizards were hatched for the first run for a seat on the Williston
time in the Western Hemisphere.
·spokeswoman Cathy Hitz said.
Board of Selectmen in March.
Town
elections in Williston, a sub. .
urb of 4,800 peQple east of
Burlington, are nonpartisan.
" I've been very active in the
town and have been going to gobs
of select board meetings, and I
thought if I'm that interested I
ought to tiy to run," Greenfield
The future of the Portland Ele- ed to Letan for indoor games and said this-week.
, mentary PTO was discussed when outdoor equipment
Greenfield and partner Ben
; that group met recently at the
Canned food items left from the Cohen parlayed their -ice cream
spring carnival were donated to the shop in an abandoned Burlington
· school.
gas station into a huge ice cream
~
Portland will become a school athletic committee.
Game prizes were· !livided manufacturing enterprise that now
:~ for grades 4:6 while Letart Falls
- Elementary wtll become a school between Portland and Letart ele- boasts annual sales of about $100
mentaries to be used as incentives million.
for grades 1-3.
.
Greenfield is a member of
The organization is still collect· for the.srudents.
It was agreed to give a balance Williston Citizens for Responsible
ing Campbell labels l)ut the contest
. for February was canceled . All in the account back to the students Growth, which has fought plans for
-: equipment received from the labels who are presently at Portland. Gift a shopping mall and a Wai-Mart
certificates from McDonald's will store, both of which would have
·• wtll go to Portland Elementary.
·
· A donation of $40 was present- be purchased and each student will been built on farm fields.
receive a book of certifiCates.
Greenfteld said if he wins a seat
Five students will be sponsored in the March 2 electiqn, he will
resign from the group. .
to. attend the academic baitquet in
. A surprise open house for the the spring. .
.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bill
.. 8Sth birthday of Marcia KeUer will ..
~s of Fnday all the o~ft c~rs
and pro.golfer Tommy Bolt
Clinton
:: be held Satlirday from 2-4 p.m. at ~estg~ed ~akmg the orgamzanon
have
been
linked since the eorly
.; the home of Mr. 'and Mrs. Roger . macti~e wtth mem~rs only. The
1960s,
when
the future president
:: Keller, 34856 Route 7. It is athletic departmentts sttll sponwas
a
teen-ager
in Arkansas.
lrequested that gif~ be omitted. sored by the PTO and must follow
"I
probably
met him way back
; Everyone welcome.
the by-laws·of the PTO.
when he was a kid, because he told
me that he caddied in the same
group with me in the Hot Springs
Open," Bolt said Monday at Riviera Country Club.
.
"That's why I voted for him,
because he was a caddy." ·
The·two were playing parmers a
couple of times in recent years at the Tommy Bolt lnvitational.and
in the Phil\ips Pro Celebrity Tournament in 1991 Arkansas. .
"He plays every chance he gets
and he' s about a 10 or 12-handicapper," said Bolt, the 19S8 U.S.
. Open champion. "He played most
every weekend when he was ga_ver-

By MALCOLM RllTER
AP Science Writer
NE W YORK - Memo to
moody adolescents: If you think
everything has been going wrong
lately, you may be on to something.
· Researchers have found new
.evidence that one reason life is so
urthiP~JY for many young adolescents 11 that the y face a bumper
crop of distressing events.
What's more, adolescents seem
to bC thrown more by a pileup of
bad events than younger kids are.
Evidence for this double-whammy in early adolescence is presented in January's issue of the journal
Developmental Psychology by
Reed Larson of the University of
Illinois in Urbana and Mark Ham
of lhe Human Development Center
in Duluth, Minn.
, The work supports earlier stud; ies, commented child development
·expert Jeanne Brooks-Gunn of
Columbia University in New York,
·adding that even positive events
'may contribute to an adolescent's
·emotional tunnoil.
·Puberty and the transition to
jupior high also generally con·
tribute, noted Dr. Daniel Offer,
.director of a®lescetit research at
·Northwestern Medical School. He
:Called the Larson-Ham study

1-ac•J

Call992-2156
MoN.

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)
- Alan Arkin stars in the madefor-TV movie "Cooperstown" as a
mediqcre ex-baseball player who
dreams of being immortalized in
the Hall of Fame anyway.
Any local flavor in the film will
be purely Hollywood magic,
though.
·
The story is set in the upstate
New York village that is home to
the National Baseball Hall of
Fame, but it was shot entirely in
Los Angeles, said Jeff Matteson, a
spokesman for Turner Network
Television.
.
Hall of Fame associate director
William Guilfoile said he read an
early version of the script and
relayed some comments to the pro-

ducen.

RED CROSS DIANA • Princess Diana Inspects a display while
vllldDg a Brttillt Red C.-- nrebouse In Loudon, Tuesday. Tbe
PrbK:ell Is patron of lbe Red Cross and will •lslt Nepal ln. March
to 1apect rerupe ceaters. (~P photo)
.
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thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES

........--·lor

•pilrol'"-

• l'riao J od f... oU
to ..,...., prie&lt;l of od • 1 pololliao typo ooly .....!
• S.tiDilio - ,.poooll.lo for ....,n ""- flnt cloy (olooc:k

f o r - tint doy od .-- Ia ,.,...). c.aw- 2:00 P·•·
doy .iftor pohlleodoo 10 _ . . ....O.Iioa
• Ado .......... pold Ia """'"" ... ,
. Card c"l\uluo
Happy Ado
lo M-orluo
Yon! SoJoo
0 A eJuolflod odl&amp; be . IDl ploeod Ia tho .c.tlipolio Doily
TriiMiao (.....,. Cluolllod Dtoplay, 8 - c...J or Lopl

-.,a,..._

No-) will oloo . , _ .. 1bo Polal
tho IJ.ily S..tloel, noc:lobrt Oftr 18,000 ..._

'

Harrisonville Eastern Star g'athers
Several announcements were
made at the recent meeting of the
Harrisonville Eastern Star. Wonhy
Matron .Pauline Atkills and Associate Patron Rpberl Reed presided.
The School of Inspection at
McConnelsville was announced for
Wednesday, January 27. The registration is at 3 p.m. with district
meeting at 4 p.m. and School of
Instruction at 7 p.m. The Worthy
Grand Mauon Neva Moreland and
Grand Officers will present the
school.
Inspection for Harrisonville
Chapter will he May 20 with Worthy Grand Pauon Joe Blazer being
the inspecting officer. .
Communication from Cora
Gardner, bean representative, will
be visiting at the March meeting.
The degree work will be.given

to candidates at the February meeting.
·
The Land Marks were read by
Harold Riee.
. .
Betty Bishop, associate D)8tr0n,
discussed the menu to be served bv
'the Eastern Star for the 6 p.m. din•
ner for Masonic Inspection on Feb.
20.
.
Norma Will was elected truStee
to fill the unexpired term of Golda
Reed, secretary.
Bernice Nelson ;md Letha Cotterill were remembered on the sick
list
·
Binhday observed were Mar'
jorie and Harold Rice.
. The worthy mauon closed with
a \)Oem, "The Chain of Friend·
shtp." Robert Reed had the bene·
diction.
RefreshmeniS for the social hour

Past Councilors Club
installs new officers

Melp COW1ly M__, Co., 'IVV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 ANa Code 304
. Gallla C-ty

446-Goll....
3674 ....
388-VI.toa

245 lloG...._
;156-G.yu .Oiot.
6U-AnWo Oiot.

When
you're in .
need of '
hardware

........

32- Mobile

PICKENS ..~

Bob Byer, director of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser- .
vices, will speak Feb. 12 at the
Burlingham Modern Woodman
Hall.
He will be speaking on how to
organize a volunteer fire department Bedford Township is in need
of such a department. Everyone in
· the township is urged to attend.

"I dlinl: they contaCted as out of
courtesy, and probably to check .
some factual cootent, but actually I
don't have a very· good idea of .
what the final product will be
like," Guilfoile said.
The two-hour film, directed by
Charles Haid of " Hill Street
Blues" acting fame, wiU be broad·
cast on :rNT San.

H-• for Sale

34- Bul- Bulldiap

,....__ ,__

Seed

Graia

,f

~

•

• woukl"lln to thank
evwyCIM lor their
love and auppott
during hla I'ICIIll
lllneu and dHth.

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE' OWNERS ,
THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1992
COlLECTION OF THE REAl ESTATE 'TAlES, ALSO
FOR DELINQUENT TAlES.
. CLOSING DATE IS FEBRUARY 12~ 1993
TRAILER TAX DEADLINE ·1s JANUARY-31, 1993.

Thlnka tor your

•

prayera,no-,
.carda, food and acte

,of lclnclniH. Special
· lhlnka to Mlnleter
O..kStump,
. Bradford ctuch of
Chlllt, Ewing Funeral
Home, Home HHHh

.· c-,,..., ......

...:n.lblryant, HUtten, Brlln

•

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'

' ttollilen, Ollrllnl
Bltlland
M8rtlla Nelacin.
Slncetely,

ChlldNn,
Gri!MIOIIIIdran lfld
•Greet· GraudchllctNn
'

Holen Floa
Slrlckland,
Exoculrlx
ol tho
Eotate ol
DecHoed.
ESTI\TE ,No. 2&amp;&amp;10- Final
ond Dlolrlbullvo Account of
Arthur
B.
Smith,
Admlnlsllator wRh the Will
Annexed ol lha Estate ol
Genevieve Uelnhlrl,
Deceuecl.
ESTATE NO . 26782 Final and Dlolrlbullva
Account of Chart• E. Hall,
hecutor ol tho Estate of
Elole C. Shall•, Dece•ad.
ESTATE NO. 25338 Sixth Annual Accounl ol
!lobby Arnold, TruotM ol
lho Truat c,_tad by ITEM I
of lha · La•t Will and
Too ..mont ol Margarat Ella

o. ......

ESTATE NO. 2l212 .
Final and Dlo.l rlbullvo
-~~ ~

·'

In
In Loving Memoty Of
. ·EARL SHAFFER
· 1180
JAhNI. 201, 1 onCIII
Oft

biCIBHd ue here;
10 long he welklld ·
bHide ua
Shirring -IY emile
andiNr;

'

thll loY tha p..t
hullrought ••
c•n never be
tllan •way;
thank Th
0
" • ur
F..U..r,
for
the
biiHinge thlt .,.
lllljn.

POMEROY

·Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only ·

Tru11

•TRUCKING

t.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING.
(614)
667·00:1
KEVIN'S LAWJI
MAINTENANCE .
949·2391 or

1-800·137·1460
t-n-ng,
Forlllfzlng, W-ng, and

Seeding.
Shrub and TrH Trimming
&amp; RMnoVal
' AoA..,•..,,•.,nuat

a

Cofnmetcllt

FrMEat.iiMt•

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
6-26-"02-1

HELP THE EFFORT TO BUilD A PROSPEROUS
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUR ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOR
MEIGS COUNTY ·
WANTED: Slo 6 ACRES OF RELATIVELY FLAT LAND:

L.------..::

Topping. Trlnvnlng,
Removal

Fund

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER

10.19-92

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

(I) No -••'- 611••. - . • olnatloa

121 Willi s.w.- .(3) Aatl Wat•

PHONE: Pctttr or Rar Pickens
H-e: 915-4231 or Pattr'1

TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS

Public Notice

992·2549

{S1D,OOO)

~=======::t=======:::
AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COM..ANY

Meig'
tondent'o
a County
Office
Superin·
on ll1
1 13

Application• may be
obtained at the Meigo

::~~!'lu~n : ;..A,f:to•::
~"!~~~~~- th• otato :.by

County Superintendent'•

olflce and muol be
aubmlltad 1o the- plllce
by 4:30 P.M. on JMuary 2$,

John Riobel,
Membor ot Melil• CTF
Aclvioory Boord

1883.

A public moallng lo
rovlew appllcallono will . be
held. at 4:00 P.M. •I the

Life • Medicare • CancBr • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

JAN. 20, 1tc

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. ~ Agent
Box 189

Real Estate General

Middleport,.,Ditio 45760
(614) 843·5264

-==;::=============:;-!
Rea.I Estate Genera.I

1120193/lfn

I

r

POOR BOY TIRES

OFFICE 992·2886

'

MASON, WV. ~cro11 fr- the Post Office
We Specialize I•

nres •

lila•••••• .Ex•a•sts

Check our Price or We Both Lose

3rd LOCAIIOI TO SERVE YOU BmER
205 Norlh Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
.
SYRACUSE • Locking lor a llttll.. r or IIIUAMnent home
then you need ID - INa ~... H hu two good-oizecl
bodrooma, large living 100m, 1&gt;I botha, huge main bath
dqna in -and rad maibla wilh lllnkon lllb, a1ep 1avar
kilehen Willi cinlng 100m, new lumaoe with central air,
·vinylllidlng and QIIIIQIIIIIing on a lal 100X71 lol and a
nice nOV&gt;bortiOOd.
PriCed to oollat $35,100.

~

REDUCED - I floor lrame home in Middloporl an 2 lots,
IMtuNs 2-3 bay C8lport. patio, 3-4 bedrooms, li18placa,

'

FANG. pavad slrMI, f.....:! yard, st.,.ge llhecl, insula·.

lion, cable . NOW $27,000.

NEW USD«l - Brick SL - 1 floor lrama home with 2
bodroomo, 1 belh, gu '-~ one car QIIOQII, galdon
· apace. lruit llltH, on · pevad . -. lot of 66x160.
Appliance• includadl ASKING $10 ,100.

.

HAPP'I HOLLOW ROAO • l!cOicing lor a place to build
that cnom homo or • place to pari( lhal mobile home?

AVE.- I ~ olory home, 3-4 bodrooms, caf110'1&amp;
-cr ftoorlng, •....-. good nelghbcimooct, clooe 1o
ohapping. ONLY Stt·,IOO.
WE NEED UBnNGSI CALL TQDAY IF vOU WANT TO
'E LL! WE HAVE IU'IERII

••1

.,::.:=.:.:.=-...::::.
lANDY IUTCHER--- ---..MI-Im

.riiiRY IPIWIUIICI.--:.-...;....(114)111
1
_•
__
• __

Chun:h, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto

and Ollice S..tlng

UCINI, OHIO
614·949·2202 ' ·.

.

~It

B'IRACUIE • eoitlge llrHI - 2 bedroom horne wil!1
vinyl oldng, oorne hoiiMood nco,., and baaamont HY'"'
need mON room. Hila 70x295 lot, 1 car garage with
opanor. hoat '"'""'· and chHp utilllill. ·
· $44,100.

·····...J•I

.

"Helping You To' Recover Yo11r lrrvrsiiMnl"

BISSELL

HAARISQNVIUE - Vacant gruundl 28.289 ac,.. local·
ac1 on SR 814. Aoking Ste,ooo ..

Waft, hoN~io.Approx.t~acNowllh_!:lxl8buildng.
.
MreeclyloryouetjuaU12,000.

1
DOT111 i J!R.Da.llolilar--·~•

~
· Snodgrass Upholstery

NEW usnNG • MIDDLEPO~T - Ranch style home with.
3 bodrooma, 2 bollia. bar. built~n ohalving. newer haat
wmplcentntl oir, 2411110 includes large Nar pon:h, and
storage .shid. a...tlocationl $29,900.

CHESTER - Tn• Road - The,.'a mo111 · to it than a
diM by wiU 1111. lnllcle the hCOIM lflero i1 3 bodJoomo, 2
betla, aauna. fJI!IIIIy lOOm, firoplaco, lkylighl, and
Moxican clay tile in lho kilchen. Outoido ia a gazebo bor,
inQIIIUnd J!OOI, and privacy r.nc:., wt&gt;lch a1 would bo
grullor """'llaining poll.
$711,000.

~

.

NEW LISnNG - Flinn o1i T - Ad. .- Two atory homo
wil!1 3-4 - · · TPC+ waH watar, 23+ acl8s or
lanceclltillabl.,.,.llulll. Includes bilr. lhedo. crib, oulbuild·
ingo, lruitl,..a. S75,0QO

EAGLE RIOGE ROAO • Approx: 7 ac111a o1 vacant land.
Mootlo hay lend and h11 a g111at buHding oibl. w...r and
elactric· available. Owner will finance wilh reaaoni!Jie
down paymonl.
$10,SOO.

81::1
L.-------•nci--IF--~~~--a-~--~-·.---..-.-.-...-----.-----._-_·_11_
Sadly miHid
\Yife, G11y

CLUB
· SUNDAYS,
12:00 NOON

•

Account ol Pandora Colllno,

I

Children's

••ld ac:counl1 or to

PubliC NotJce

2

SPORTSMAN

....

mlt111a. pertalnlnll" lo the
oxocutlon of the lluol not
luo lhan fivo dayo prlo1 to
tho dalo oel fo• hearing. ·
Ro'*l E. Buck, Judge
Common Pie• Court
. Probelll.Dlvlalon
Molga Counly, Ohio·
(1)20, 1tc

•

Lewia.

FORKED RUN

NOnCE OF
APPUCAnONS FOR
~
Fully ln•u•ed
CHit.DREN'S TRUST
742·2360
RJND MONIES
The Melga Counly CTF
Advloory Board Ia now
accepting appllcatlono for - - - - - - - -

lrom day to day until finally
diopooedol.
·
Any ·p•r•on inler••ted
file wriDen exception•

Pl . Pleasant, WV.

The Family Of
S. G. PICKENS

GUN SHOOT

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

moniao lo• program• d•
olgnad to roduc e child
abuoo and noglect .

State or Out

S &amp;L
TRUCKING
992·5380

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
. S1 00 Payoff
Thlalid good for 1

Public Notice

PH. 614·992-5591
1

Of State.

Happy Ads

conaidered and cOntinued

1102 Viand, St.

. 1 card of Thanks

5

ESTATE NO. 27412 Final and Diairlbullve
Account ol L•wrence 0 .
Whilo, Elocutor ol . the
Eo tate · ol Clinton E.
Douglaa, DocUnlt~ea ••ceptione •r•
flied lhllolo, •Hkl account•
will bo lor haa1ing bolore
ollid Court on lhe 22nd clay
ol FebrUary, 18t3, at whiCh
lima oald acoounia will be

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE of GIFTS

.'

In

USED RAILROAD TIES

992-6215 .

72

LUMBEI,or
FlATBED . WORK

EAGLES

Uphoblory

LICENSED ond BONDED

LOG HAULING,

EVERY THURSDAY ·

Geoeral Houlinr
Mot.ilo Hoao Repair

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

HAULING

8

Ann Willi.wna, Dea11eed:

ALL UPSTAIRS
MERCHANDISE
MONDAY,, JAN. 18 THRU
SUNDAY, JAN. 24 ·

- . Scott Lucas, Adininistrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy,
announces the opening of the offices of
Dr. GeorgeA. Kusnir, M.D.,
in the Meigs Medical Building
adjacent to the hospital.
Dr. Kusnir
is both an Internist and
'
a Nephrologist.
For appointm~nts or. infonn(ltion,
please call
992-7463 or 992-7579

614-949·

2-7·92-lftt

Account of Phyllla Gil ...y,
Exoculllx ol lila Eohlta of

20% - 60% OFF

. Public Notice
'I.'
TtE
.
t
. I"'
f" l
COMMON PLEAS COURT
~
PROBATE DIVISION
' MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
,: IN THE MATTER OF
, ' SETTLEMENT OF
' • ACCOUNTS
•·.PROBATE COURT
: MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
. ' Accounta •nd voucher•
; ol lhe following named
. llduclariH have been flied
In lho Probele Court, lllolgo
: County, Ohlo, for approval
"flld ooltlom.,L
ESTATE NO. 288&amp;7 :Final and Dlatrlbullvo

•Ventleu Heaters

992-2269

IN

,,.,

.Rt. 124, Rachta .

CLUB

SALE

.' '

oR.V."o

oGH Grill Tankl

BILL SlACK

s.a,... Tralaint: ·

a..,.

•100 lb. Cylindero

•FIREWOOD

985·4473
667·6179

PONDS

J and I Gal Service

•LIGHT HAULING

Remotleli•g
Stop &amp; Co•pare

a Fertlllaer

BULLDOZING

New haler

. TRIM and
REMOVAL

ea.,
....
•CoMplete

RIC EXCAVATING.

fenellgas

&amp; TREE

aHewHOIMI

· 6181'1211 mo.

--

614·9U·7144

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Autoof.. S.Ie
Tr.... forSalo

52- Sporllacj c..do
53-Anliq54- Mbo. Mon: ....dloe
55- Btdilli,. Suppn..

992-3838

~

HI!NR'I E. CLELAH0........................................-1111
TRACY IRINAGIR ............................._ ..........1 .. 14H
JEAN TRltiiELL.................................................. .
Omc:E:......~--··..- ...•..- ·..- ···-·-·-:····-....

..11. SF.

..

'&gt;-

FREE ESTIMATES

OH.

7131f91/tln

41for Rm1
VaM &amp; 4 WD'•
42- Mobile
for Reat
7~Mo10rc,..t..
4Sfor
Boall A Moton for Sale
~ Apa,._t for B•t
Auto Porll A Acee_n,.l
4$-- Furalohod Roo..
46- Spoce for Renl

15- Sclooolo a l01tructioa
1,..:. Rodlo, TV A CB Repoir
17- MYcolloneo111
18--'IVulodTo Do

-992·7553

$25.00 Per Ho.r

319M I.Htlllnt
CrHk load
Midtllaport, Dlllo

FlEE ESTIMATES

ao ....
a...
r.,.. a....

RWOIIAILI UTES

DEliVERY SERVICE
S•oll Doz., Work

;a

1·100·141·0070
DIIWII, OHIO

qap
WutodtoBuy
Li-tock

1(1\1\l'-

DEADLI'E
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE ·

YOUR
.
.ATTENTION PLEASE!

NO EXTENSION WILL BE GUNTED ON TUlLER TilES.
.
.
HOWAD E. FIANI
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

937-lldolo

ufi

nv~JIIIIil

Frm. RBPGir
NEW &amp;. USEQ PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MOORS

I 11:11 'I 1'1'111"
,\ I I I I ' I I 1I k

Public Notice

Call Today at 992·2849
Or Stop By at
. 333 Mechanic St., Po111eroy

Byer to speak

SptdallziiiJIIn Custom

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULUDDZER, BACKHOE .
and TRACKHOE WOI!K
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LAHDCLEARtNG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING

PLUMBING

Ohio

Lift your spirits and
increase you, ,
.
energy at
BIG BEND HEALTH &amp; FITNESS
.Do so•ething good for yourself! ·

Dorothy Myers and Erma Cleland conducted the games.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses. ,
Attending were Ada Bissell ,
Mae McPeek, Alta Ballard, JoAnn .

G.....

773-11882-N.w u....
195-Lo&amp;ort

ck

POMEIOY, OHIO

13- IDiur&amp;DC:e

AueUon .
9- 'IVutod ..

614-992-7523

SMALL DOZER
· WORK ·
.
DRIVEWAY WoU
and liMEnONE

......... , _ Offlco
217 L S.CHol St.

47- Wulod to R•t ·

a- Puhtic s.r. a

ALSO.

CHARLIE'S

992-5335 or
915·2561

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Petafor SDi
MUiical lutnunenll
Frui" a: v.,.tableo
For Sail or Trodo

35-Loo.aAo..... .
,..----~ 36- aoo~ Lt. .. wUt.ct

EXERCISE THE WINTER BLUES.AWAY·

.

·

~Gi.-woy

·MASON, WV.

.

742-RIIIIoa&lt;l

33- r .... for Salo

HARDWARE.

prize.

,.,..

2l- Prof,..lollaiS........

2-laM.,.ory
3- Aanou..::...enll

..

..

57~...

ll-t3-PortloM
247-l..tut Folio

21- Bu'- Oppor!uaity
22- Moaey to Lou ,

supplies•• e

Officers were installed at the Baum, Opal Hollon, Erma Gleland,
recent meeting of the Past Coun- Charlotte Grant, Lora Damewood,
cilors Club of Chester Council No. Ethel Orr, Pauline Ridenour, Inzy
323, Daughters of America, held at · Newell, Thelma White, Mary K.
the home of Marcia Keller. JoAnn Holter, 'Marcia Keller, Margaret
Baum and Laura Mae Nice were Amberger, Dorothy Myers, Leda
Mae Kraeuter, Jean Fiederick, Elizco-hostesses.
Officers are Laura Mae Nice, abeth Hayes, Goldie Frederick·,
president; Elizabeth Hayes, vice- Laura Mae Nice and a guest, San.'
president; 1oAnn Baum, secretary; dra White.
and Goldie Frederick, treasurer.
Inzy NeweU installed the officers.
Inzy Newell presided at the
meeting. She read from Acts. The
Lord's Prayer and the 'Pledge to the
American Rag were given. Mem.
'
bers answered roll call by saying
what they lilr.ed about JanU¥.Y.
It was reported that Betty Roush
is in University Hospital in Columbus. Esther Smith is home from lhe
hospilal.
·
Leda Mae Kraeuter was taken
into the club..
· The secretary read a thanlc:you
card from Esther Smith for their
cards, prayers, phone calls and visits.
.
, '
Erm a Cleland read a poem
.
"New Year' s Can Begin A New
Year in Our Lives."
~e.&lt;I~!,.Aii~,.c-c,..&lt;li"ii!.Ai"&lt;C!:...;"~4'o&lt;!..O~tAi:-.t.""~-~~~
· Elizabeth Hayes, Jean Frederick
and Pauline'kidenour won the door

.

....

9854' ....

11\1\&lt;111

GET REStJi!I'S •

5-HopPfAd.
6-o Loo1 ud Foued .
7-LootudFouad

NEW LOANS

St. Rt. 7
Cllesllire,

KEN'S APP lANCE
SERVICE

12/31192/ifn

667-C..mtle

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for "1ch day ~ separate ads.

:

AND/OR
CONSOUDATE.

Call 614·992·
6637

lrl~tlaOrW.

(614) 992·5449

6711-,Pl. .......
. -~
Po•8toJ
. 4S8 Leoa ..

,~

...t

Rate Over 15 Words
$ 4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ 30
$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day $.05/day

Days · Words
15
1
15
3
15
6
15
10
••.
Monthly 15

SITUATION .
REDUCE

SIZED liMESTONE
FOR SALE

. AllMAIES

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

'

were ·served by Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will, Mr. and Mrs: Harold
Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson.

Quall2
Stone o.

MICROWAVE OVIII
11.-IVCR UPAIR

·tt2·70Uor
. 992·5553
Or lOLL FlEE

See us first!

'

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

·Cltu.ified page• eooer tlae
fo~ tel~Jphone esclatJnp• ...

... so~o,. ..........

ing Center In Andover, Ma., Tuesday. GiUette is
introducing tbe shave eel into tbeh' line or prod·
ucts. (AP pboto)

. DAY IIERlRl! PUBLICATION
1:00 p.J!L Saturday
1:00 p.m. MGIIday
1:00 pJII. r-elay
1:00 pJII. Wedneoday
100 p.m. lhunday
. 1:00 pJII. Friday

COPY DEADLINI!
Manday Paper
-ru.ioy Paper
Wednolday l'lper
Thundly Paper
Friday Piper
Sunday Poper

• Ada oulolrlo 1M •ouoiJ your'ad . . - • -·bo·pnpoid
ado poW Ia o d - .
•FrooAdo1 Gi-woy...tF.....todo..-..15wonLrwWbo

GILLETTE SHAVE GJJ;L - Paul McCarthy,
35, inspeclts bunclreds· or GDiette shave gel cans
at the GUiette Company Ando•er Manuractar·

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE

1-11·"13

To place an ad

.

nor: ·

614-742-2138

n.

113i'i W. SlCOIID

t he news

; 0 pen house Set

992-6193

-BoakhiPing

.Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
ond BUSINESSES

r

Portland PTO continues
l despite school changes

POMEROY, 011. 45769
1n... 1o11 ...... .

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates ·
JOE N,SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

olni:omo T• Proporallon

p e0 n l e ln.
•

:Eggs from Komodo dragon
.:going to National Zoo

HAULING

61

IU~LDERS,

IIIC•

New Homaa • VInyl Siding

New Garages~ ReDI8cement WJnctqws
Room Ackltlons • Roofing
. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FUE ESTDIATIS I

'

614-949·21t1 • 949·28.0
er911·3•39

llol••••rCIIsl

�-.
Page 12-The

Sentinel

Ohio

•
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

A !lllc1UilC~ lllc'll!S

.·

Weclnelday,

1993

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by IMry Wript

Sentlnei-Page-13

The

••

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

The World AJm•n•c 111 Cro•IWord Puzzle

.
1~i foot&gt; IN Tli1&gt;

t'l-~'j; I? o'f.AY

ftl~ ~VICf;

PHILLIP
ALDER

Bur
75 Boata &amp; Motora

.T

rorSare

. . . . . .

I

I

. . .

Auto Pana &amp;

78

WI!SI'

- '

COcllloo

.BARNEY
·7

Yard sale

Nw..

3.

Pass

U"'-lor

65 COIIIi: ....

...
c:=r.....

IIIPince-

(Iliff.)

llor0(2wt)

.._...,

111-SL

70 Jo,tul
llcllmiUGn

.

·=~

S Thli min
SCIII--

....,
the.,••
OThr...

Put .. office

7So
8 Of

1 Proprr,1or
2 One (Scot.)

41Sh.-tne

VIIIDerable: Both
Deall!l': South
Pus
Pus

PICifto

14 ......,

.,=.=~liT

•uu
-

11 =~'to
83 lctor-

23 PeNinlnt to

u

•K742

I'NT
3 NT

58 CNIIId

,.,..

•u
• ... Jt

Soo!G

Pnplal
57 ..... -hour

30!..
3211ellretMnt·

SOOl'll

p.rto. Col · -. - Allior I ,
P.ll.

hulltbugl
li5 TY'o-

27=::::
,_ ....

.Q Ul
.QH .

II Dorodo For

50 53

.....

•Ktn

10.

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

u ,... . ocher

•Hu

105

41Loolt.....
41=.c-

~~

11-CMtury
13102,......,

type (ellllt.)

EAST

Q 18152
Jtl5

AcCIIIOrlaS
1m

we.n

tAU
+I.H2

'IIi,
ouddv Olblft. llllllrd'. . . I 1rd,
Y... Col 'Mioir I::!Opon. 104oe71o .
11171.
,

.......,....
15 An. lion.
11 lllooitll
11 Quldld
20 I .IRdwlch

?iiNI'S.
'" NCIRTB
+I.Qt72

ACIIOII 1 43 addl'l 211d
lllllblnd
1 Grllft .
'
44 Allow to

toed

3 Elllllollve

llotlla

•
Eat

Pus
Pass

Openinli lead: • ~

TELL HIM I GOT

ME A BllDKIN
~llM II

the enemy

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
II" Lv. 8tGO; GE -hor
·8'120; OIIIIJidtbDud 1221i ml.a.
houlahold ·bma. 114 Ut 181111,
44UZ11.

Serv1ces

.. ALL Y a n l - - le Poid In

-y
Poo--

Advonoe. DEADUNE: 1:00 p.lll.

111o dor ....... 1ho od It 1o NIL
!!UndiJ • 2:00 p.m.
F -;
od111on • 2:00

J.m. Sanordoy.

a

••

·

PEANUTS

Public sale
&amp;Auction

Alclc
Compony,
lui 1m. oU011onoor, complolt
tuollon
-.
Uctntod
III,Cllllo l Wool Vlrglnll, 304T/W711.

TELL TI-lE
BVS To HORR!I
· UP .. I'M
F"REEZING
TO DEATH!

-r-

COIIT:- ......._.
belilo.
.,.
BELLER PAYS ALL CLOIIING

--...

-~...
.,t dining; - - . .

I

1 THINK
1

1M IN I-IERE
SOMEPLACE ..

.... punga. d1t1DfNid 2'- CIIF
....~40-,SII,IOO. •tM­

'

.

...

1'wD lledrDDIII houN on tfX'IlO
lat, S1G.OOO cw Wll oon1'cler IMd
contiC( with doWn p&amp;JiiWil,

'HIHAWLIH

IZIRD

R L

ALGX

CAL

AND ERNEST
W.ntod To BU)': JW1k Autoo
Wllh Or Wll- IIID1!1111. c.u
Lany Uwly. ,14 3M. 1101.

QO DDOODQ.O
g Qo.ao o op ., .

14

Business

"aoOIIDD ' D o

'. oe&gt;:s:®®:; ,

Training

!"''
Pold: Al1 Old u.s.
CDIIIO,Oaldlllnao.-Colne,

~

-~ /

IT MY f

'

Employment Serv1ces

Fumlahecl

HelpWantld

1110

'AVON" ALL ARiAS! lharo your
time with ue. You'll 5ove the

-y.l-1001112 13541.
AVOH I An Arooo I Shirley
Sptoro, 304-1"111-14211. ·
·
Eaoy Work! E-lon1 Pori .u.
_,l&gt;lt Producto A1 Homo. Call
TOll Frot,
113.

~.

bl.

a...-

Rldgo, 3bnlm., 1

112
- · -aH
Nfrlaontor.L

0

1 ,.,. of lond. luot 81111Nn. I lA, I

UW Portlllll SlwmiiL don't
to tho mlu

Clll-1117.

=::-• IIC::.ti!:'uolnd~~
ranclt. M.OO Por Hour. 114-ZU.
11441

'-ltl

bullcllngo. let 1W

rum-

our.

iho"P:

FOSTER PARENTS ARE:
• Slnglt Pooplt or llmtod
Coupllo
t P111W1t1 u wei •• lnchkh.llla
whD hlw Mnr had ahlldren of

1holr """
Iongo
Dl..tng
toi
ohlldl•o' Pooplo
·1ho .
_
.
.
...
"""'lholr
llmllltt
• T - """*""".,....,,.,. OOIMIItted to

!!'Oidnl•
·portnlt
... -

llko
you.
Contocl:
TRV.AOAIN
HOliES, 1~21-1055 OR 1145-

KIDS.
Pilei
Gauranlood
W.goo.
1114-4*7207.
Holro1yllo1

Noodod:

- --

- · Ot&gt;onlngo Avolllblo
For Ctnlfttd Nuroo Aklo. Sllrl·
"" ..... Ptr Hour. •
On

.....

..... WII- ADCH,

':.':'.!

Applo Rd. ~~~=
.
Troo lopping l 1~mmlng U· oopllotonlo;teooo.
- - frtt ........... 304- aftor IPIII.
1115-3411.
11011111Aoutel54,
Homo Loll,
For8143.
-·
State
114 381
SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
...... CcMinty, · - lWp.
Will caN lor olllo~y In my h - , IIIGI ocro. IIOmot1, beoulllul
I'IWIIIZ-INI.
1onc1:
Coli ...... ~:~1""'"'"
mop. •..M-113WID Oo CoriiOnlrY Wolle Now 11141,A1h0no.
Bullcllna. RorilacWng, Fromlng,
Illy W'oll, ~nllng,

..., ......

8

~

Rak::cw

C...

Eto.
,

Rentals

: Hovt

Fmanc1al

Conlor, 1'IU , . _ Dltvo, CJII.

41 HoUIII for Rtnt

l1pollt, OH 411Q1. 1*-7112.

. llldlcll Pro' 111 lane

21

r.::r.J."t'lp ,':.~He.'=.~\':
3 ··- -

Business
Opponunlty

utua.

INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
.......,.ndo thol you do bull. _ wllh- you k,_, ond
NOT 1o
lhrCHJgn 1ho
moll until you hlvt 1.-~V~Iod

IOnd""'""'

1110-..a.

-Ina

•

.. Kolloy

.

,

....... ·~ ~~;a.llulllno, For
Dlllilt: I
1/IZU.

IIUidno,

114-44&amp;-2831 or 441 2112

Dlltw8CI 140 ,..,..., I.Mcl,

~--

For- • ~~-- lui
-

·

..........
---·
·.....
no;
.
_
.
.
.
.
__
.
.
,
.
.
_
.......
r·.11m
.S.

~Li'illils

L1Vr~&lt;

l'Jr k

81 Farm Equlp!Mnt

jective PREDICATORY I "PRED-ib·

Want to: PIN ao~nEXTRA

W.nlod lei ilont Trollw Lot Ntor
Clly Umla. 114-4HoOOU
for
rd' fulr .,cl ~ 11d
...._
lnllor, 112
W.ntod To - : Homt 1124111.

•*

kub-tor-ee"'). You'll be in a
predicament if :YOU forget to speU tbe
start of PREDICATORY like
PREDICAMENT.

CA~H?H

To Iouth

IOIIci,CoiiPOI~

.'
.

. MY

.

Sl .

TAK lt-le' 'Tl-U5 CMRieTM&lt;Ie
DeC'ORATIClN9 !X7NN OFf=

"THe ROO=.

J

Good llrl, t : rhDnt
... ...., ' loil~ ..... turlto

GoOds

~

All C.rlltl l VInyl In - k On
8111. llollcohln Carpott, 1117 N.
1*-11144.
.

=~~

VI"RA FURNITURE AND AP•
PUANCES
'
114-441-4411 OR fM.441.:3111"

1112-24111.

Hond--· ......-

Eni------Or = lpm.

w-.,
....

Clraon ., pel
on, 104-m.l411
.,..,
.

Ono ..,., Ono • lptod
II,_ SIO For loth, . _

'!"lor

rldgo Pluo
Dr 4 lollloo Oul 141 On Uncoln

...._.

Plko.

• .

Coiol, M1 A T• 8lokor
~ A Tcon -...r, IM-.

_. . m::h. .....
.

.

-

$1.12 w~;::-••..,.
lng Pt.U; ..
tliii"L.!of"
Atid Chloro Or -.a
- ; Co11ot And End Wllh

-.o:

HE:6 NE:\Sl ~EEI-I !i5:f. ~

eA'i'5

~ L.AUFlEL..
.AND~.

.lfllr.
....................

Household

Chllra
Drrtro, ~;

~D

HE:

Merchandise

$310 ~~· Dopotll Roqul-'
l14-112
•-.

Ono .. IOIIoohnn1o.
••• .......,, . . . limo,
104..711-1721.
•

.

==i~;;~i\iiii;;;:Jih
• loclooon• On R..or, 2 lllloo No llopotl1 On Atni-2-0wn;
Rotrlgoni•L ~ Soulh Of Galllootltil1 .. ,.,ElY Nothing E- p,......r.

--~1111.

Schoolt,MIIO.tlo. 1Uih..t.

Reo-

To describe preaching, use the ad-

~~:..-~=
2421.

2111, NJIIII ., .,, '" _. "'"

W-.r T""

THIFARSIDI

l 2

•

I

, _ and ..,.._..........
I"M-ta IJ7I,Iilva m1111gt

-

l.

Utod W - k traitor, 304 Ill

63

LIYtatock

~-=;::,::::::~=

~--.fM.W.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

For- o.odiiiOCI Hoy, a.oo
---1104.

.

I

~

.

. Thm your clutter into caah,
Stil it Uae laO' ~My... by phoM,
no need to leave your home •
Plgce your cWni&amp;d gd todgxl ·.
15 1110rd. or le,, 3 dan, . .
31lQ8D!, $$,4Q paid in. GdiPGJIIC8o "

By GARY.Lt&gt;.RSQtol

. '

1--~--~-----------

Real Estate

ASTRO-GRAPH

2,, _ _ _ _- : - - - - - ;J •. _~_ _..:.....___ ___..._ _

'

C111103 tii•21S.

-

4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,

5. _ _ _

~

_

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
.

_;__ __

' 6~-----------------~
1

~--~~----~

B·--~-----9 •......,._ _ _......,._ _ ____

= :ar-·· ...........
.,. 1

'* to help taU ..,. of

10~--~---~~---11...._
___;.________
12-----:--------~
18...__
_ _ _ _ __;__ _
14_ _ _ _ ____,;._ __

ClMllfiED ADl

FilTH£

15 ___~~~~---___.;.

446-2342

I .

,.

(

•

...

~-

'-'

.·-

-

.

. .. ... ...

\

.

......

21,1. . .

' year atuead you mlghlttecomelnln~ne

'

voMid In an.,,.,... or.,...., ....

or g1a1110111 or Ill}•'*•·
YOu lhould dO will In lhll rellm,- N

.lUll • - • •

=llkollhll.

-

uaco~~n.•M.11tfll•••
... 111111y In IIIII II*' lor good
deoda 11ua1 you'w l*fOmlld In llle
IroniCally.· , _ . , ...., ntllhl

'*'
ortgtftate rrorn ottter aourca.

1333

I.

..

'

I

you have- btiOill \IIIII llCII a1od to

9J2~2156
·~

By Jelhy Mt:Ciui•

--.

lldlil oli~ ........ - -

For

JLIH

·

....

1ho
bt.

-~

law to form four -do.

LANGUAGE ·

r:::~-

I~=~

......
~

fZtt;

Aftw7~.11.

t' d. d:IO~Toloet
w.laht. No Wll POwer tllld d
'IOO!Io NOIUIO~- o..- .

.

~€All. R1611T! Wlf.T All£
..00 c.a,NC:&gt;

'I'OU 'CAII"r

;:.For=· •"'•,.....,•"'•"'"•-m-,'""il""
·..-lt""'cl,-tt

U; -

Bthlnd llcaura'o R.tou-.

-rio

•

_ , AIIIMdwlldalpll

- . , o111co oulltln ButlI Prol to..r llidldlng , _

3 Bod,_ IIIII J l - . P111o,

:
Fum- 13110 Pluo
~ iulll111 with • ......, Ullllltt, 3 BR, t11 l'ourfll
Avenue,
Oolllpotl1,
114
441 4411
l!lith lncomt. 1-.11--.

Call HoiDrCUriC'aAMitlant PT

46 SpaceforRent

ovollablt. Coli

ZIO

I 111 Fl
I! t I ly t I
I1rI I
I'
'
I
1

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT:

33 . Fanni for Sale

N R

IH

HASNOL

only. *"'111-117f oftor I:WPIII.

If You Aro w;w~ For A
PI- For A
II Lovod Ono, UA.I-.,Irlftllonchl
2 lllllo, 3 F l - - Full
Try Ut Flrotl Bttullful Prlvlfo IR,
Buomtn1, I 11ornt. Wolle
- . 24 Hour' c...~ Tllo Crib Wtth Shed. 111 Ul 2310
Elclor1Y, y..,. Of
....
With £xc111nt Retw.nc:N. 81435 Lots &amp; Acreage
256-1011.
Mlea Pauaa't Dev C.t~~. Center 1 1 acN ·113 acre under roof, eu
Blocll Wtll 01 HIIC On Jlckoon lor !ood lot (100 IDn olio) or
Plko lloF I A.ll. -1:30 P.M. H (10ll100 ..........
Qulllly And ~~ .. ~ or--.alg~hlor
11 COnolm For Your Child 1 • ;iitCibldg: A~ ttt,DOO.
Coro. Coli Ut For A Vloft. lnlanl Ton mlltt ODU1h ol Pl.l&gt;ft. on AI.
" .....,. 111141 1227. p,_. 2, 30W71-2114.
Dhaa11ra JlctloNAp I~
1.873 ocrto, 21111. from Roelno,
1224.

IN R P

learrango lo1t.n of
0 lou~
ocrornblod WO&lt;do

Roomi .,_h.
_..., ___

con L1111t

~

YHGZFDH

Nlto4 loy ClAY I . I'OUAN

i

•

botho, lllllly
· dining
-.
bem. 3Plrllv
311&amp;40
gorogo.

F C

N R • D

tiAI NILY d fi'Q ~ .ih, ' _ I) 'C /h,Q.. e ....
PIIIUI \:)~ 1.'&lt;1\l ~)..
'b I.J({";J lAIII

i

pump,mt_IOO;
...... 810ftlna
11~8RO
. .. - - -10,

114 f43.13n or 1114-812
hoUI , . . -

·

VJ W

ANEPR?

NR , "
Zl8
TZEBFDLI .. .
,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ''The more our knowledge lncr-. the more aiJr :
lgnor.,.,. unloldo." - JOlin f . KMnedy.

ro rtte FLu.

:---_ Ttti '8UILY ·~~f~l&gt;
GtTS Ttlf Gt~MI:

V ~iz

E A HI

tMS SttOwH TttAT

,..-;.?-- OVt~\t&gt;'tiGttT (,OMPUTf~ P,OG~AMMfiS
/.
r · ·
I ;.__AFt tfPfGfAI.L~ SUSGfPTII"t

Oold Colno. II.U. Coin lhap,
111 - A -.... Gllllpoh.

' 11

lfStA~Gtl

DR Z A,

z

V H

114-1121101

"

. .'

Try~ng

to

patch up a broken romanoe? The AoiroGrapll M•tchmlli&lt;er can help 1'001 10 un·
dent1nd - • lo do lo make lhe reratlonlhip - · M81112 ptua a long, aelf•
addrNMtl, llemped envelope · to
Mafcllinllcw, P.O. llpx 91428, ~
land. OH -44101-3428.
f'IIQI (l'ell. »lllan:li JD) Put old
projecll on the back burnllr' IOdey end
dovolo your ellortelnd ~lalo rur1hlrln0 y001r - t lntorest. Thlal1 the
atMIIIat 1111)1 to oller 1'001 the graalat
~.
•
AMI (lllaNII 21·Aprll 111 Toc1ay opportunlllla mlght devlllp lOr you frOm
d r - aouree.. So att..tlve lo , _
- .don't dllmllllheli'i merely bellloy hl_,.t bttn tried belore.
TAURUI (April :II M1» JD) Outwwd
- c o u l d bit dtclptlve today.
~ with lllhoutu you're negollltlng
mlght-atronger lhln you, but tn,.
= · r e llue ~lne the-.

==-

IMar .,........ ., Mep In rnllld

tOIIay

orecl a

lions. ·
LEO (.luJr 23-Aug. Zl) Your grMieet

_.today Is your ablllly lo funcllon •
a clllmpion olloat - :i'ou"l k lns11nci1Voly how t o - erideavao 1
thai appur lobe defunct or llclnlw\1.
'IIRQO (Atlg. Doltpl Z1J Don't lgncn
your ooclll obligMiclna toar. .,..UOU.
larly II U.. II a po IIM!Iy ol mI INzog
new plloplo. Chance ~ could
produce belllflci4Il,.....a.
,
UIIIIA (...,._ II Chit. Z1J Today you
could boo • biiW......., .,_II-*!
wMn a-tUng·out olllle ~­

fl._ -

·lng -

· ........- . In ..........

ailellnO cotunhiiiiOnl.,_llil begluoollug.
SCOJIIIIO (OoL 14 lin lit n be-

1'001 to try lo ljlorud • ·
lime • poNible IOdar wllli hndl
whom you baJie!ltr... profound ......
*'· Ylllulllll illation ~ ,_.
lrom

-•lui

-...rona.

SAGITTAIIIUI (re.tr. II II* 11) y .Ml II I today . . be P'l
I _..,.
lhe •r you pe:Cillwallllnga. I you7

r1t11tt
can..be COMkl·
lhe 1an1e u lelllnO IIIII to -gnn~uot~a . . _ _ _

rllfhl Cln. Imprint tllllllmple axiom up- only crabgraa, you'D be....,. illuat1l ol
parmoal In your lluought1: "A penny Ihe cro ' '
MWd II a penny -..d."
.
CAI'IICOM (IIIIo. Zl r. tl) In Oldw
OUICIII (..... 11-- Ill Your to be an lfllaiM leadar ...,.,, ,...
Irllle'IICIMa mlgllt bt IIUperlor to.,...... tnt 1111111i1e ., ...... .., . _
todayr-o• dlooga111111
. erol""""-!·oon- _. .... PIOI*.....,... Dowllll'a.._.
cern. " " ' - i p 11 not lhll17p9111nt. andotllernllll1eatbaotwdtoyourltano
What really matter. II eflectMI reoolu- 1)11".
'•

Q- Where &lt;lo we get the eq&gt;reS&amp;ion
FEET OF CLAY from? It's being
often.
A. FEET OF CLAY refers to a
aeter Haw or fault that is not .... nv I
detected. Whenever somebody's
is revealed 1,!1 have a welbeas, that
hero is said to bave FEET OF CLAY.
This expression has been used in English for more than a centlll)", but its
source is m~h older. In fact, the biblical book ol Daniel describes an
image of gold and sliver, with "his feel
part or iron and part of dly."

D

B 0 Y B H . ~.

.•
A fellow I know believes

5
there is plenty of money in thiS
L==~~~~:._, country. Hethinkslheontyreal

.....

problem is that everyone owes
to :-····- else.
.

S ANU y E
~-,.:,:._:,1;.,.7.;1.:;_;,11,.:,1~ Q

Campl•hl !h~ chuck le quofed
•
•
•
• '
b,y filling in ttle missing words
L.-L-..L..--L-.L....L......J y01:1 develop from step No. 3 below.

olllo PRINT NUMBERED
V LETTERS IN SQUARES

SQUM LETS ANSWERS
Ooaque • Frock • Vicar·· Hopper · PRICE goes UP
two old timers were talking about the past. "I believe
the worst thing about history; one old timer said. "is
lhal every time it repaats itself the PRICE goes UP.•

-"

'·

....
•

�1893

Ohio Lottery

.Bucks
lose tilt
to Badgers
·

Pick 3:

071

Pick 4;
9726

Super Lotto:
1-S-8-10.37-42
Kicker:

Page4

500755
r

•

STEVEN WEEKS

Bee winner

'

Steven Weeks, son of David and
Jeanie Weeks, a fifth grader at
Tuppers Plains Elemenlafy, is the
winner of the fust Geography Bee
at the school. The bee is sponsored
by Nati~ Geo!!f3phic Society.
· Weeks was giVen a wntten test
of 70 questions to determine his
lcnowled~ about geography facts.
Other participants are Matthew
Boyles, Jeremy Gillilan, Sheena
Gilmore, Jessica Bartram, Jaymie
Osborne, Amanda Upton, Jeremy
Coleman, Crystal Bennett. "Mrs.
• Bonnie Kibble conducted the contest.

'I
Vol. 43, No. 180
ea..,rlglnllll 11113

.fires on
Iraqi radar

Tbe Ohio Chamber of Commerce will hold its IOOth annual
meeting and legislative conference
March 10 from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at
the Hyatt Regency in Columbus.
More than 1,000 business leaders and legislators from throughout
Ohio will be altellding this conference.
The featured luncheon speaker ·
win be Ivan W. Gorr. He is mcoming chairman of the board of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce and he
serves as chairman and CEO of
Cooper Tire and Rubbez Company
based in Findlay.
He will addreSs the changes and
challenges business can expect in
light of new leadership in Wash. ington, the recovering national
econo'!lr and increasing global
compe11uon.
Gorr will emphasize the goals of
the U.S. Chamber to meet the challenge of working with the new
administration to stimulate continued economic grqwth.
.
Paula Thacker, executive director for the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce, encourages business
leaders and individuals to attend
this conference.
Further information regarding
the legislative conference may \lC
obtained by calling the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Office at 992-5005. The deadline
for reservations in Feb. 12.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
U.S. F-4G Wild Weasel fired on an
Iraqi air defense radar site today
after !he Iraqi installation turned its
radar on, a Pallligon source said. •
The incident was the tim blatdown in Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's supposed "cease-fire"
in honor of President Clinton's
inauguiation.
The inci~ occurred within the
pastJ2 hours ID the lUthem no-fly .
ZO!Ie, said the source, who spoke
on condition of amnymity.
The source said the U.S. warplane . was escorting a Frenc:h
Mil8&amp;e aimaft that was mgbrling
a reconnaiiBice niiasion.
The radar was located about 10
iniles IOUih of the IOMl of Mosul in
northern lnlq, the toUitc said.
The F.:4Cf fired a HARM missile
at the radar, burtbere was no
. immediale JepOrt whether 811).' damage ltld been done the missile site,
.the source IBid.

U.S. No. 1 New Crop

USDA ·choice Beef Chuck
Blade .or 7 Bone

Red or White

Russet·
•
Seedless
Ia 1ng
Grapes
Potatoes

Chuc

'

Roa.s t

· - • ·
..
·
·
·
WASIUNGTON (AP) -On
he told one. "/lfle
the first working day of hiS clean- yon a ~hoolieac~er7 I've heard
s1are pe.Piency, Bill Ointon threw good things about yotir school sysopen the doors of his new home tern"
·
ioday io along stream of fellow
'~I wish you godspeed," said
citizens who ICCCIJted his invitation one citizen in an Air Force officer's
to drop by. "Glad you're here," he · uniform.
.
_
...
_
...
_you
from?"
.
"God
bless
you,
Mr.
Presiden•
told ...
......, ,._,
.,
Hundreds of ordinary citizens we're glad to have you bere in
· wboae IIIIIICS were drawn in a post Washington,'' a Catholic priest
· c:ard loltery lined up for ihe chance told him. "We're thrilled to have
ARRAIGNED - Aln~a•
to meet the new.president and Vice you here."
Pr ''mt Al _Gole,IIIBDI!ing before
As for the work of giving shape
Jei'OII)' Wlllll - unlped
011 a ~~turder dw'Je WedHsa CtiCklina file in the White House to a new presidency. Clinton
dllyla BJ&amp;wa'tllle, Tea~, and
Diplomalic Reception Room.
arranged to meet with domestic and
will bt lleld wlthcNliiRd utll
· Clinton had a handshake for foreign policY · advisers and,
he cu he eldl Jldited to Soath
everyone. and a greetins. a ques- according to a congressman, w.,
CllrOiillll. WUlla II accused of
lion, a COIIIDICIIt for CIK:h one. too.
preparing to move swiftly on fulfatally sllootlq bls wire at 1
An aide introduced C3:h visitor to
filling a campaign prom1se- to
·SOuth Canillna Air Po« base.
Ointoo and he welcomed them by
~~~bait
. .· on homosexuals in the
(AP)
name.
•
..~ 1
II 1
•
lY.6. Q10ne
/0

Program may send
guard doctors to
help Americans
COLUMBUS (AP) -Ohio's
National Guard could join a fedetal
program and put its doctors to work
in poor areas of the United States
instead of other countries.
The Medical Readiness Training
Exercise would allow some Gwlrd
medical units to do annual two. week training missi9ns at home
i~slead of abrOad, said U.S. Rep.·
John Kasich.
"Before we help everyone else
in the world, why not try to help
ourselves a little bit?" he said.
Kasich led the move in
Congress to allow the Guard to use
a total' of $5 million for the domestic training operation.
Ohio has applied to use $1 million. About $800,000 would be
spent in Franklin County, and the
rest would go to seven unspecified
rural coooties. The Army National Guard's
1121h Medical Brigade, headquartered in Columbus, would organize
the units.
A typical· medical team in the
· program might consist of 20 people, including dootors, dentists,
nurses and administrators. They
would work to immunize children
against measles, mumps and rubella, check people for dental disease
and perform physicals, said Capt.
Jim Boling, a spokesman for the
Ohio National Guard.
They also would refer ')leople to
eltbting medical $CfVices.
."We hope to build on this and
QPCfllte it statewide," Boling sl!id.

Officers elected
Officers elected for the Bedford
Township Trustees are: Elmer F.
Bailey, president; Robert F. Hawk,
vice-presiden~ and Virgil C. King,
chairman of the board.
The regular monthly meetings
will be held .the second Monday or
each month at the townhall.

Bag

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BIG BEAR/BIG BEAR PLUS COUPON
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18 01.
Box ·

·orange

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Limit 1 With Coupon Per Familv Please

Borden Elsie

Airman Willis R en.
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-Ice.

Juice

arraigned on
murder charge

Ctn.

Cream

Bathroom Tissue ·

Blue Bonnet Spread

Angel Soft

Onelb_$ ,

Prego

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4 Roll

Pkg.

atrs.

tghettl
2 1
Regular or Thin

San Giorgio

Onelb.
Boxes

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2 27~ta
30 oz.
Jars

Frozen

Frozen

Michelina's
Mcltai'O!Ii &amp; Cheese or
Shells with Cheese and
Peppers Entrees

9to.10oz. Box

Birdseye
'\

Cut.C:J Green Peas
orM· ~'

. 16 oz. Bog

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annoznte
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s~ Rqiresentative Mark Malone (D.94tb District) has been ·
appointed to serve as chairman of
the House Veteran Affairs Committee as the I 20th Ohio General
BROWNSViLLE, Texas (AP} Assembly 1e11 underway.
- A 23-year-old former Ohioan
In addnjon to lhe Veteran
says he murdered his wife - as Affairs Committee, Rep. Malone
she tried to repon abuse accusa- was named to Elections and Towntions to military officials ships. State Government and Comlw:JMJSC he loved her.
mm:e and Labor Committees.
Jeromy Willis, a South Carolina
He said his committee assignairman formerly of Ironton, Ohio, ments are impclf!llllt to the people
made the statement to reporters of the 94th District which includes
Wednesday in South Texas as he Meigs, GaJii• Jackson and pan of
was led away 10 a jail cell.
LaWJeDCC County.
Asked by reporters if he shot
"I am very pleased with the
her, Willis answered frankly: Committees I bave been •ssiped",
"Yes', I did."
said Rep. Malone. ''They wilfallow
Why? .
me to have a voice pn issues SIICh
. "I loved her."
as jobs and local government that
"It's sort of ironic, isn't it," he directly touch the 94th, as well as
said.
'
iSSJIIS, that concern OhiOIIIS across
. A few seconds later be had dis-· the State."
.
.
~F into the Cameron County

1/2 Gal.
Ctn.

64 oz.

Regular or Light

,2

Your Ch~ice .~f Regular Flavors

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From Concentrate
. Tropicana

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. ..J

According to koberts, as the
plan starids now, he will not be provided with an access road to his
business due to regulations that call
for a safety fence along the new
roadway. This fence would run in
front of Five Points Express to the
new intersection beyond his business.
Wolff iJid. Eldabaja stated providing an access for Roberts in
front of his business would create a
traffic conflict. They suggested to
Roberts to plitehase land adjacent
to his present .locatioo and build a
new facility. At this new proposed
location they stated an access road
could be provided. Roberts' objeclion to that is.that it would move
him into another township causing
hiJ:n to lose Sunday sales. Roberts
also stated his feeling thai such amove would not be financially
effective in that the cosJ for such a
venture would be quite higb.
Commissiimer Manning Roush
stated his feeling that·the plan, as it
stands now, could "put this man
(Roberts} out of business." Roush

I

cttizens at Whzte
House ·'·
-.,Hi G8ill"

10 lb.
lb.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr ·
Victor Wolff and Saleb Eldaba·
ja, engineers for District 10 of the
Ohio Department of Transporta·
tion, updated the Meigs _,:::ounty
Commtssioners .regardmg the
progress of the ftrst phase of the
Ravenswood Connector Road from
Rock Springs to Five Points, at
Wednesday's regular meeting.
Studies for die fll'st phase have
been completed and copies Of this
plan were left with the commissioners. Wolff and Eldabaja stated
there is now a toll-free number for
ODOT, DistrictiO, in Marietta for
anyone who may have questions
resanfing the project. That num~
is l-800-84S-0226.
Mike Roberts, owner of Five
Points Expess, attended the meetinJ in an effon to inform the commtssioners of and speak with the
engineers about the effect the first
phase· will have on bis business.
Roberts hal! been worting cooperatively with ODOT in an effon to
find a resolution to this problem.
•

told Roberts, "I will do anything I
can to belp you." It was note&lt;t
liowever, that ODOT makes every
attempt to pay fair compensation
for damage which a business may
incur.
.
Roberts stated he will continue
to work With ODOT to solve thi$ ·
problem. He stated he has spoken
with State Representative Mari
Malone regarding the matter an4
that Malone feels there should be
an easier solution. Roberts asked
the commissioners to investigaiCIU
possibilities in an attempt to solVe
the problem.
.
::
Wolff and Eldaba.1a stated th~
purchase or properties involvejl
with the project sbould begin by
fall.
·•
In other matters of the comm,;.
sionen, the sale of dog tags
beC!I extended until January 30. :•
Attending were CommissionetS
Manning Roush, Robert Harten~
bach and Janet Howard, Glorit
Kloes, Meigs County Engineer
Robert Eason, Mike Roberts, Saleli :·
E;!dabaja and Victor Wolfe. .
•

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if.J'fi•
·
Gran
. .d Jury c e· a·~~ 0 zcer
7
p~~~zdent Clzn!on greet~ in Dec 6 shooting death
.PRESD)ENTIAL wAL¥: • President Clinton gestures wblle
Wlllldnl cknnt Pe•nsylvaula Avenue In W111hington WedDesday
aRe..- daring the pmldenUal laaupral parade. Clinton Will
SWOI'IIin at
as the 4lnd pralde:t or the l,Jnlted s'ta~ (AP)
•

•

Reception slated
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Diddle
and Mr. and Mrs. Corbet Cleek,
Racine, announce the marriage of
their son, Chad Diddle, and daughter, Rachelle Davis, on Jan. 6 in
Pensicola, Fla.
There will be a reception for the
couple on Friday at the Racine
American Le$ion Hall at 7:30 p.m.
The public is mvited.

Commission gets update
o·n -bridge connector road

U.S. aircraft

Conference set

2 Sec:tlona, 12 Paga 25 ...,Ia
A lluldmllllla Inc. He npeper

Pomeroy-:-Middl~port, O~lo Thursday, January 21, ,1993

J There he wln await extradition
· to South Carolina to face charges
he sbot Marie Willis to death J111. 4
111 she waited in a Mynle BC3:h
Air Force Bale lept att.in offiCC.
Mrs. Willis, 30, had come from
Rhode Island to P.reas abuse

f!:r'

apin•~ her Clll'lllged bus-

. She was sitting in a conferellee
room waiting to be interviewed
when she Will shoe in the held
c:helt with a 9mm pistol,llltborities
said.
. :Willis llcd after the lhoc"Cing.
He wu urested Tueaday ililht
at a BfO'NitlvUie 'lliptclub by the
FBI and T - Rlilaen. ICCOlllilll

ana

f'l~

.

11101'0

. .

'

dm llld I would

bave been ....... W'tlllwllid.
. But be never aot t1101e three
dayl.

. And Wedllelday mornina he
wu amlped belen a m..UCipll
. ~ ana o~dered held without

..,
.•
•J,

pOSt

Pomeroy Police Wednesilay and

~s:::wedneaday, police

.

.

followed' the vehicle, which slowed
and accelerated whHt weaving, the
release said.
·
Carter-pulled Lamm over at
Johnson's Mobile Home Park on
Stale Route ·7 and the two men
exited their vehicles simulraneous'
ly. Caner s~ke with Lamm and
~uestioned im about his driver's
hcense, aflel which the of(icer
asked him 10 return to his car.
Lamm reportedly threatened to
claw the officer's eyes out. grabbed
him and threw him to the ground.
The two .struggled on the
ground, with Lamm silting on top
of Carter. Lamm allegedly went for
the officer's 9mm semiautomatic
handgun and pulled it free of the
holster.
While the two men struggled
with the gun. it went olf .two time~
After the second shot, Lamm
stopped struggling and went limp,
the release said.
Carter called the dispatcher at
2:49 a.m. 8fld advised the department of the situation. Lamm died
about one hour later at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis with a

,

·,

. gunshot wound between the ribs .
and ill the left ·hip.
The office~ was also taken to
~!d9 wher~ 'he was treated for
IDJUflCS to his eye, face, knees and
handS. He was later released. .
Lamm has had several tangles
with local authorities, includi_'ng a
Jan. 29, 1991 , anest fro m which he
flied suit, claiming two Gallipolis
police officers and two Galli a
Coimty sheriff's deputies arrested
him withont cause, handcuffed him
and kicked him and beat him about
the face, head and body with nightsticks, flashlights and ftsts.
According to the Gallia County
Jail ~r, Lamm was arrested in
the incident for disorderly conduct,
driving under ·the influence, resisting airest, assault, menacing, reck•
less operation, fleeing and eluding
andnooperator'slicense.
.Carter was not named in the
swt.
Carter, who has been on the
department for I 1/2 years, was
placed on paid administrative leave
while the incident was under invesligation.

The job of committees is to
decide what proposals should. be
sent to the run House fer consideration to become laws. The committees can also amend proposals
before sending them to the full
House or a committee can decide ,
not to recommend a poposal.
Committees also provide a key
opponunity fQr citizens to provide
. WASHINGTON (AP) - One
inpilt on poposed laws and to parMadigan predicted th.at public Senate Agriculture Committee has
of the items the next agriculture pressure would force acceptance of actively promoted efforts to overtic. Ill in the political
secretary will find on his desk is a all efforts to cut the department's ' haul the department
rep. Malone said,
recommendation
to trim the fat in bureaucracY· The ~hip of the
allow the legislation 10 thoroughly
the
·department's
behemoth
bureauresearch biDs, and do whatever fine
cracy.
tunins is necessary 10 come up with
Outgoing Agriculture Secretary
laws that bave the most positive
Edward
Madigan said Tuesday the
affect on the people across the
department
can do its work with
SUlle." '
fewer
Washington
positions and
The new General Assembly will
·
fewer
field
offiCeS
nationwide.
be considering issues ranging from
.education and jobs to bealth care,
the .environment and law enforceU.S. Department of Alrlc:nlment,~ said. .
ture offteea tar&amp;eted for elosln&amp;
ia Ohio by tbe outgoing Bush

Ohio to lose 22 farm offices

·'C::ttees

No one hurt in·two accident$,
Two aa:ideniS involving light to
inodende dafOa&amp;e to four vehicles
but no injuries were investigated by

•

By .DM FREEMAN
OVPNeww Statf .
A Gallia County grand jury
Wednesday nigbt cle&amp;Jed an offJ.CCr
involved m a fatal shooting incident with a suspected drUnk driver
in December.
.
Uoyd Joseph Carter, age unreported
. , was nam ed as the offitcer
mvolved in the incident in which
Donald Lamm, 37, of Gallipolis,
died from a gunshot inflicted by the
officer's weapon d'uring a traffic
stop.
According to a press release
issued by the police department
shordy after the shooting'. the Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Police Depart·
ment informed a Gallipolis Police
Department dispatcher early Sunday, Dec. 6, 1992, that a possible
drunk driver in an older model a
blue Chevrolet Chevetle had
crossed the Silver memorial Bridge
and might have been headed for
Gallipofis.
The police dispatcher informed
all pattol ooits of the suspect, and
Carter S{JOtled a vehicle fitting the
descripuon on State Route 7. He

.

43, Pomeroy. The collision resulted
in light damage to the front end of
the folmson vehicle, and light dam·
age to the )JIIIISellger side rear of the
Hartuna truck. HartunJ wu ~ited
for failure. to yidd die nghl of way.

admlllistradoa:
-Farmers Home Admlnistra·

tion ollkes in New PIIUadelpbla,
Woodsfield,
Xenia
.. d
ZIIMivllle.
-Soli Consenation Servic:e

orrieea In Caldwell, Iron ton,
MeArtllur, McC,o anelnille, St.
investipted aa accident on West
Claluvllle, Sandusky, Valley
Main. According to the repon,
View and WoodlllelcL
John Edwards, !53, or Mason; w.
-A&amp;rlcultaral Stabilization
Va. had albpped his 1980 Dodge ·
and Cotiaervatlon Senlc:e ollkes
Sever81 mailbollel on Route 124 in Cadiz, Caldwell, Ironton,
truck 111 he oreo.rect to tum onto
and
Route 338 below Portland to McArthur, Mc:Coanelavllle,
the Pomeroy-MUon Bridp. Kca·
the
Ritchie
Briel~ ~ damaged 'Lonll, PomeroyJ_~t. Clllnvllle,
neth Clark, 7!1, also of ~aaon ;
fa4ed 10 IIOp hia vehic:le IJid struck Wednesday evellllli·
Wiitenviiie and woodllleld. .
According to a tepOrt from the
the rear or the truck. There wu
moderate damaao to Bdwarda' , Meigs County Sheriff's Depantruck and Ji&amp;h&amp; ..... 10 the front mA Jim Proffitt mortlld that he
'-II a noise llound'7:30 p.m. and
He liliiOIIlKlCd a sligbtly Jailedo1 the au .mtc~e.
.1'1!e _ , accidm~ oecurred at noticed damaae to his box . He back JIIOPOsal to close unn6eded
vdticle liglltl fann ufllc:es, including 22 in Ohio:
8: 1!5 1.111. dill mamiDg. Brian John- tepOrted tltat llo
son, 37, of Muon, W. Va. Will JOinltow•dl the Rildtle BfidF,
four Farmers Home Admlnlatrltion
Anyone with informlllioll con- offices,~ht Soil Conservation
~well 111 W01t Main Street
. . . hil1990 Fold WllllniCit by c:ernin&amp; the mailbox vandllllam Service
ces and 10 Agritultural
• 1m truc:t pulllna from Uberty should contact the sheriff's olfice Sllbilization' and Counation Ser·
Main driven by Donald Hartung, cr the poa CJftlce.
vice officea.
" ...

.

Mailboxes damaged

•w

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