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•

P II 10 • The EMily S1nUM1

.Give up 'the act'? How abOut dumping the frigid witS,
eenain household duties, sex should
be a woman's household duty in
llllll'iqe. This plea for symmetry
went over lil&lt;e a rubber erull:h. You
prompliy bashed the poor, UOSUS·
pectin&amp; slob, tellina him the whole
thing was his fauiL
I have walked in "Frustraled's"
shoes for several miles. My wife lost
interest in sex after our two children
were born. Ten years in a completely celibate marriage was too much.
We went into counseling. It dido 't .
work, so we sold the house and are
getting a divorce.
I know many men who have the
same story to tell. My single male
friends get all the sex they want
while my married male friends are .

Ann
Landers

' ly ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: A while blck,
had • survey in which husblnds
ovocrwhelminJiy slall:d they would
not be willing 10 aive up "the act•"
.Women overwhelminaty expressed
: a preference fill' merely being held
: tenderly. .
·
Now comes "Frustrated in New
: Orleans," a sexually famished hus: blind who says that just as a man has
'yo~~

desperate for il. And I don't think ing and mall:hing," but of course,
you are helping matters much by that is out of the question. Although
telling these men that it's their fault I've be~n templed, I have a strict
and that their marital duties are iron- policy of never putting together
clad and unconditional, but their readers who are interested in
wives' duties are optional. ln my romance.
view, Ann, women bave unilaterally
Dear Aim Lande!'$: My 65-yearrewritten . the marriage contract in old, widowed father remarried and
their favor and are •demanding that lived with his new wife, "Greta,"
men sign it. No soap here, sister. ·- for five years until he died. Greta
Been There and Done That in Dallas .was four years younger than Dad
Dear Dallas: If you were sitting and has seven grown children. They
in my Chair and reading my mail, were financial equals when they
you would know that the.percentage married .
of sexually "under-se..Ved" among
Dad always told me and my four
the marrieds is about SQ.. SO, male siblings that we were provided for in
and female.
his will. When he died, however, )We
I've often thought it would be learned from Greta that he had
Wonderful if I could do a little "mix· changed his will six months before

,

Tuudlly, October 21.111$

Pomeroy • Mlddleport, Ohio

World champs
are honored In
~ew York City

•

•

and left her. everything, ino::ludin1 a we have no business asking Greta Co
; ·
sizable amount of money. Although do anything unless she offel'$.
What do you say, Ann? My sibwe were startled by Dad's change of
hean, none of us thought it was linss and I are' alol adulrs . llld
appropriate to question this or dependent on this money. If you say
it's OK to talk to Greta about thi).
protest.
"
Now, five years later, Greta is how should we bring it up? •• Wontalking about remarrying. My sister .dering in Washington State
Dear Wondering: The money
wants to know if Greta will provide
for us in her will to make certain that your dad left his '!"Cond wife
Da4's money does not become min- belongs to her. Whether or not she
gled with the new husband's. She remarries has · no relevance to her
,·
also wants to be sure .that Dad's inhcrilancc.
Too bad your dad didn't make
investments are managed wisely.
I am uncomfonable asking Greta specific bequests to his children.
Send questions to AM Landtro,
about this . I think when Dad
Creaton
Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
changed his will, that was the time
to discuss future plans. Since no tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angelos,
such discussion took place, I believe Calif. 90045

'childien interested in words- at a schoot 'enrollment of wh•'te people
time when
soine experts
say chit· .droppe
' d by 14 percent, wh•'le
dren's
voeabolaries
have sl:w'unk.
An Indiana University ·study of minority enrollment increased by
. school essays by first-through 35 percent, according to statistics
eight·paders acro5s the country in from the U.S. Department of Edu·
1984 found the studenrs hid about cation Office for Civil Rights.
School enrollment for blacks
10,000 words in their vocabulary, increased by almost 4 percent; His·
C?mpared to 2S,OOO wo_rds when a panic enrollment grew by 86 per·
Slm.~lar st"'!Y was ~one In 1945..
cent.
0
The thing tha w~ ~ stnkmg.. - Spme of the reasons for this,
~is the 1111:~ of dlvemt~.or nchness says Kerry ()ruber, a statistician for
10 w~at luds wrote, says the the National Canter for Health Sia·
study s author, G~ M. Ingersoll, a tistics with the U.S. Department of
· pro~~ssor of C~tucattonal psycholo- Education, may be that .the baby
~ ~~ was very stultified and mun- boom for black people staned later
. Ch. 'ldre
h
k
.~.
and lasted longer and that recent
o cracts open
u"' H'ISpanJc
· 1mm1gmnt•
·
·
d' t' 1 n ·w
find
f
d'
are younger
11
1
1
0
0
IC l~ary .WI
. . •verse
than other Americans.
·and nch words, from atk•d? (a
In recognition of this, the new
Ja~anese self-defense te.chn•que dictionary's biographical entries
usmg no weapons) to Knshna (a .
·
.
.
mclude more Afncan"Amencans,
H1.nd u 1od and hero, worsh'1ped as L
·
· Amencans
.
t' · f y · ~ ) Th ' .
atHtos,
women, Nalive
· an 1ncarna 1on o IS,.nu . IS IS
dA ·
·
·
pan of a conscious effon to an. Slans: Welcome Yasm Arafat,
kno ICd that Arne .
Sh~rley ChiSholm, Crazy Horse and
ac w 8~
. ncan c1ass· Zhou·En-Jai.

'
·
. · but that hasn't said a
p hel'$(writersoreditOI'$ofadictiothing's cool
nary ) aIso of'•er cIcarer cxpIana· word about how anything is," she
lions of idioms (phrases or expres· says.
.
sions stood from the ordinary .
meanings 'of the words ·in ihem.
'Any dictionary writer wants to
"Hold your tongue" is an English avoid nonce words - those are
idiom meaning "keep quiet").
words that exist brieny. You don't
There are also visual nods to pui in every slang word that comes
diversity. The·photo illustration for along ...and we cenainly don't have
"astronaut" is of a black astronaut. vulgar words. Kids can learn to
The photo for "athlete" shows a look them up In their parent's dicwheelchair racer. The word tionary.
"dressy" is accompanied by a
'
photo of an ·Asian couple dressed
'We can 'I stop a kid from calling
up for a dance.
someone stupid or something else ·
Grappling with the cver-e~olv­ but they should know this is offening slang used by kids is also a sive."
' editors, who must not
· c ha11 enge .or
only sort o~t which words arc
The word "tribe," the dictioestablished enough but which are nary's usage note warns, :'is a word
palatable enough to include in a that some people object to, while
dictionary used by. elementary and other people don't. It· is wise to
middle school students.
·
.consider your sources and your
Many educators dislike or dis· audience in .choosing whether to
trust slang words because they arc use this word: If in doubt, ask.
often empty of meaning, says Pos· Other words you can usc instead
' roo;:'s h-:: mc~mgly ~ulated
In an attempt to help non-native ncr, pointing to the popular adjec· include community, people and
wltk c 1ndren ro~ non· ropean English speakers, the lexicogra- tivc "cool" as an example. "Every· sometimes nalion .
bac grou s..
, . _ _;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:,._ _ _._....;._ _ _ _ _,.
They also will lind explanations . - - - - ; __ _ _ _ _

of word origins showing that while
'most English words have Latin and
· Greek roots, others spring from
Asian, African and Native-American cultures. Barbecue, ·for example, comes from a Caribbean Indian
word meaning "a framework of
sticks."
.
· The dictionary's . editors say
they're not ll)'ing to be politically
clll'!eCt. They're trying lo stay eurn:nt "What you find is a great deal
more of the vocabulary that reflects
the changing demographics," says
.Debbie Posner, the dictionary's editorial director.
Between 1976 and 1990, public

Vocabulary Quiz
The Des Moines Register
,
Test your fiflh·grade vocabulary with some of the
harder words found in the Thorndike·Bamhan Junior
Dictionary. Match the word on the left with its definition on the right:
·
- I. Aerie A. Egyptian laborer
. -2. Componment B. A youqg woman who lives
in tile Islamic paradise
.
- 3. Cygnet C. An early·moming church service
- 4. Dactyl D. An immoral person
- S. Embrasure E. A baby swan
- 6. Feckless F.l\.n eagle's nest
- 7. Fellah G. A hole in the wall for a gun
- 8. Griot H. A sudden rise in the water level

- 9: Houri I. A cure-all
- 10. Howda.h J. The person who keeps a tribe's
oral history
- I I. Lisle K. Futile
- I 2. Matins L. Behavior
- I3. Nostrum M. A three-syllallle measure in
poetry
·
.
- 14. Rake N. A fine cotton thread
- I S: Seichc 0 . A seat for riding on an elephant

ANSWERS
Answers for the' vocabulary test:
l·F; 2-L; 3,E; 4-M; S·G; 6·K; 7-A; 8-J; 9-B; IQ..
0 ; I l·N; 12-C; I 3-1; 14-D; 15-H.

Is cataract surgery too risky for re.ader?
.

By PETER H. GO'rT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm suffering
with macular degeneration and both
my eyes have cataract&gt;. 1\iy sur~eon
wuts to remove the cataract from .
my left eye, even though my vision
is nearly gone in my right. My famiiT physician believes it's too risky
to ..:move the cataract because I
have· 1101tic stenosis. What's your
opinion on the eye surgery?
DEAR READER: Macular
dcFfl.~ration is a serious, largely
Ulllda~le eye disease that cau'"s
pwJtelsive loss of central vioion
(whit we see slraiaht ahead) as
oppoiCd to peripheral vision
(ilufeJ teen "out of the COflll'r" of
our eyes).
.
c-ac:u (cloudin&amp; of the eye's
also dim vision bul are
.allnly !VIble with suraery.
When both these conditions exist
sltli\llp&lt;~~~~ly, then: is big trouble.
_for &lt;* thins. ophtltalmolosisu
110 UlldenUndlbly reluctant to per·

ten•&gt;

fom1 cataract surgery if macular
degeneration is present, because the
cataract may be a relatively unim·
ponant contributor to the process of
progressive blindness.
Nonetheless, in some cases, the
cataract may play a major role. 'In
such instances, especially if the
macular dcge.neration is slight,
cataract extraction may preserve
sight Therefore, before proposing
surgery, the ophthalmologist must
determine •• with special vision test·
ing •• if the procedure would be
wonhwhile. This, to me, is the
essential consideration.
Other diseases, including the
sticky aonic valve you have, are not
really important factors; cataract
extraction can be performed in a
matter of minutes under local ancs·
thesia. I have many elderly patients
with aonic stenosis •• and other,
more serious chronic ailments ••
who lrave sailed through cataract
sur11el)' without a ripple.

.

Consequently, I take issue with
your family physician. If your eye
doctor believes that your sight can
be ·improved . with . surgery, I'd
PETER
unequivocally . endorse
this
GOTT, M.D.
approach. Also, you might consider
getting a second opinion from
another ophthalmologist.
To give you more in,formation, I
am sending you a copy of my Health
Repon "An Informed Approach to
Surgery. " Other readel'$ who would
DEAR READER: Fungus infcc·
like a copy should send ·52 plus a lion Qf the nails, although not dan·
long, self-addressed, stamped enve- gerous, can be an uhsightly nui·
lope to P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill sancc. The condition is common and
station, New York, NY IOIS6. Be is usually not cau~ by medicine,
sure to mention the title. .
including the cholesterol-lowering
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've devel· drug Pravachol.
oped a nail disorder caused by a fun·
Recently, a new anti-fungus dmg
gus, and my nails are pulling away (called Lamasil) has been introfrom my skin. I've tried many anti· duccd and shows great promise with
fungal cures includins LaPacho·tea. little or no risk. Asio your doctor
The problem arose when I took ·about this.
Pravachol. Would this have anything
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
to do with the disorder, or is it a ENTERPRISE ASSN.
coincidence and Is there a cure?

DR.GOTT

'

'

--~ ~·'

(}

2348

BuckeyeS:

Flu vaccine clinics for those SS
and older or disabled have hecn
scheduled .by the Meigs County
Health Dcpanment.
The first clinic will be held
Tllursday from '9 lo II a.m. and I to
3 p.m. al the Meigs•County Senior
Citizens Center.
A second clinic, for the general
public that suffer from chronic
health conditions that put them at
risk foi the nu will be held kt the
Health Depanmcnt Friday, 9 to I I·
a.m. ~nd I to 3 p:m. · .. . _
Some of· tbe risk health conditions include diabetes, hean condi·
lions and chronic lung problems.

Vol. 47, N0.12fl
.......OIIIo

v.u.r Publlalllng Comj.ny

, ByTOMAAUM

· AaiOCIIted Pntaa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - After a
night at home, Bob Dole was
. embarlcing on the final week of his
' 16-year quest for the presidency,
· brushing aside discouraging polls
and suggesting hopefully that voters
"are tuning in" IIIII coming his way.
Although national polls did not
reflect such movement; Dole predicted a historic come-from-behind
victory over President Clinton. "It's
looking better and better and better,"
be said 81 the end of a fdur-day sweep
through California:
The Republican nominee today
waa headed back to ·the South - a
region ·thJt is usually a GOP presi·

•

.

·

\

..

AGIMittCo. tiiWipiJI
\

.
Reed, who for most of.the campaign
has devised strategy from Washing·
ton headquartel'$. But with Dole's
schedule now in constant flux, Reed
was moving his operation to the candidate's campaign plane, ·
Armed with maps and continual·
ly updated polling data and making
frequent phone calls 10 ~~:ovemors and
others on the ground, Dole strategists
were scheduling, then canceling,
events and arranging new ones.
"There are inevitably adjusttnents
in the campaign," Dole spokesman
N~lson WarfJCid Uild ~poriCI'$. "The
campaign is trying 10 be very flexi·
ble, to tum on a dime."
Warfield took pains to deny a net·
work repon that Dole has told close

.•

..

friends he was resigned to losing the
race, given his IS- to 20.percentage
point defiCit in nation,al polls.
. "It's simply not accurate,"
Warfield said: He said Dole still
viewed the race as winnable.
It is not unusual for a presidential
candidate, especially a trailing one, to
improvise a schedule day by day,
even hl)llr by hour in the closing days
of a campaign. But it does make it
difficult for campaign workers on the
ground to build crowds and .deal with
other logistics, including booking
hotel rooms and putting in phone
lines.
.. ·
Dole is traveling with an
entourage of about 200, , including
news media representatives follo~ng

his Cllrilpaign.
·He was to address rallies in
Clarksville, Tenn., and New Orleans
before heading to Floridi.. He is trail·
ing in the polls in both Tennesseehome state of Vice President AI Gore
- and Louisiana.
LOuisiana, where Dole is down
about 10 percentage points, "is a
tough one," conceded senior adviser
Charles Black, But Black said the
campaign considered Tennessee,
where Clinton's lead is in the single
digits, to be within Dolfs grasp.
Former President Bush was to join
DOle at a rally on Thursday in Tarn·
pa. Recent polls in Florida- a state
with a huge prize of 2S electoral
votes - suggest the two candidates

are generally even.
Dole was beginning on the final
week of his third presidential earn,
paign. He unsuccessfully sought the
GOP presidential nomination in 1980
and 1988 and was the GOP vice:: pres·
idential candidate in 1976. . .
.
Dole, who has been calling him- .
self "the most optimistic man in •
America," was upbeat at campaign
· events on Tuesday in heavily Repub,
· lican Orange County, Calif., and in
Denver.
· "Something is happeniJig 'ICrolll
America. The people are beginning 10
focus," Dole tQld a rally at a con-.
vention center in Denver. "Th~
American people . are tuning in.
Contlnned on P81• 3

Local U.S. House race watched by nation, ·world
By JIM FREEMAN

OVP News Staff
Ohio's Sixth Congressioltat Dis·
triet has received a lot of unaccus·
IOmcd attentioo the last few wcetcs, as
evidenced by national interest in the
CQngressiona\ race between incumbent Congressman Frank Cremeans
(R.Oallipolis) and former Congress·
man Ted Strickland (D-Lucasville).
Tuesday, Cremeans visited Meigs
County's Carleton School accompa·
'
~· 1 '
'
,...,,
nied by Raben Siegel, the host of
r
.
National Public Radio's "All Things
~ .- ..... '
.~ ··~--.
Considered."
' .. - .....
The day ~fore, the NPR.tre"! had
traveled with Strickland in the westem elill of the sprawling district.
In recent weeks, the race has been
the target of national stories on CBS .
and ABC, with reporlel'$ accompa.
nying the candidates threughout the
GRANT RECIPIENT· ilhlrlay~s8y,., right, .
a gm~t· for
district.
Many major national news·
$5,000 for the Southam Local ~ool. Dletrlct Mondlty night to
pt'OI'IIOt8 college 811101111 hlgllachool eeniora. Sayre, the South- . p8pel'$ have observed the race along
with a German television station. .
ern High Schoolgulda~ counaelor, ,_.,_ the grant from
aeaoclaliJ Kenny
NATlONAL
• The Sixth Con- tillks to Malga
Cremeans, who narrowly un,seat·
State Rap. John carey 111C1 Wayne'White, [aft, dlrwc!Qr of the Ohio
Napper and S•ndy Johneon whll• baing
greealonal Dlltrlct rece between Frenk
ed Strickland !Wo years ago, has been
App.tachlan canw for Higher Education. .
meant and Ted Strickland has received plenty recorded by NPA'e Rich Raray.
targeted by Democrats hoping that
of natlo!litl, IIICI world attention. Cramean•
..
his involvement with the 1994 Contract With America will prove to be
"This is a closely watched race,"
"I think I'm doing pretty good," record, not his values ... our voting
records are open to debate."
his political undoing.
said Siegel. "We'll.he spending time Cremeans said.
He discounted negative political
The district features prominently with both camps."
Cremeans said he wanted to focus
sponsored by outside
adveniscments
in Democratic plans to'regain contrOl
Making the race even more inter-· on the national issues during the camof the U.S. House of Representatives. esting is the sheer size of the Sixth paign, and not concentra!e on what he groups on both sides.
The district is economically Congressional District which sttell:h· called "sideshows" such as arxuments . ''I did . not fund the ad calling,
depressed, making popular some es frorillhe suburbs of Ci~cinnati in concerning Strickland's Christianity. Strickland a tool of big labor," Cremeans said. The ad was funded by the
social programs embraced by the W.st.to Marietta on the Ohio Riv- Strickland is a Methodist minister.
Ohio
Republican Pany.
.
However, Cremeans commented:
. Democrats. At the same time, it is er in the east.
Meanwhile.
Cremeans
has
been·
By JIM FREEMAN
awarded funding.
hishly conservative also making the
"We are amazed by tbe size of "He is the first minister I've ever met
who supponed abonion... govern- targeted by ads paid (or by the Aft.'
Sentinel News Staff
The .grants are for activities to pro- more-liberal Strickland a target of your district," Siegel said.
CIO.
Higher education for high school mote student interest in college.
people wanting lower taxes and less ·
Siegel referred to pi&gt;lls showing ment paid abonions."
·
Continued on pqe 3
"I'm talking abo'ut his voting
students is
idea· hehind a $S,OOO
Sayre's grant application proposed . government.
the race in a dead heat.
granted awarded to the Southern "Project Opportunity" w!Uch includes
~
·
LoealSchoolDistrictMondaynight studentvisitstoareaeollegesanduni·
at the district's regular monthly ve~ities, a "college day" at the high .
.
. ·
·
.
.
school with visits from college
school board meeting.
concerned about the inmates than the lican Gov. George Voinovich and ernor strOngly endorses Frank· CreWayne While, director of the Ohio admissions officials and working in · By PAMELA BROG*N
,
prison guards during the riots, which' then-U. Gov. Mike DeWine, now a means for Congress."
Appalachian Center for Higher Edu- conjunction with Home N~tional Gannett Newt Service
DcWine's
press
secretary,
Cl!arli'e,
·'
WASHINGTON Former left one guard and 'nine prisoners U.S. senator, after the riotS.
cation, talked about the group's goal Bank of Racine and Syraet!SC to bring
BoeS:Cl,
had
no
comment
•
"I want to thank yob for the
'
to promote college for Appalachian iri a speaker on available financial Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland. dead.
Strickland called the ad a smear .
responsible
remarks you made during
"Is Ted Strickland inore constudents.
aid. Efforts will also be made to try charged Tuesday that a political ad
tactic
that "should not be pan of this
the entire Lucasville o·rdcal ,"
State Representative John Carey . to r¢uce students' fear of going to running on 1V in Huntington and cemed about coddling prisonel'$than
Voinovich wrote to Strickland. "Your campaign." He said be thinks that
Charleston, W.Va., is "a cheap shot helping victims?" tbe ad asks.
(R-Wellston) presented the grant to college.
Cremeans' campaign is behind it.
Strickland, a psychologist who words were carefully chosen, and I
Southern High School guidanc. . Carey presented the grant to the that exploits the human tragedy" of
But Cremeans' campaign manas·
counselor Shirley Sayn: who had district since the . money was the Lucasville, Ohio, prison oots in worked at.the prison for more than believe you helped the process."
er,
Barry Bennett, said thl: prison riOt
DeWine wrote: "The governor .
1993.
six years before he was elected to
applied for the grant.
approved by the State Legislature.
"isn't
being used in apy of our cam·
Strickland is running against Congress and whokne\lfsomeofthe and I are both deeply appreciative of paign materials."
In other business, the-board updat·
Of the 42 schools that submitted
·
Republican Rep. Frank Cremeans, slain inmates: ~aid he tried to help what you did .... You have a unique
applications for the'
15 were.
ContinuCII oa
3
Efforts
to
reach
the
Citizens
for
understanding and apprcciati{/n of the
the man to whom lie lost Ohio's 6th resolve the cnSIS.
the
Republic
Education
Campaiin
Congressional District seat in 1994. " "I firmly ·believe that I d~d every- dyna"""' of SOCF (Southern Ohio Fund were unsuccessful. According
Both sides concede that the race is a thing I could to help the famthes out· Correctional Facility)."
Mike Dawson, Voinovich's press to pless accounts, Lynn Nofziger, fOI''
. dead heat.
' side, and the hostages inside during
The television ad, paid for by a this trying time," said .Strickland, secretary, said the gov~rnor's leiter mer President Ronald Reagan's pulit·
ical director, sits on the education
.
group called Citi~ns for the Repub- who pl,ans to fire ba~k w1t~ h!s own "speaks for its:elf."
·
fund's
board. of directors. Nofziger
"Ted Strickland.and otbers pfayed
lie Education Fund, wbich has telev1s10n ad, to be a1red posSibly as
could
not
be reached for comment. ·
a very responsible role in what was
Republican ties, portrays Strickland early as Wednesday.
.
The education fund is an arm of
as being soft on criminals. It suggests
Stockland sa1d he rece1ved unso- •·difficult situation," Dawson silid. "I
'ror the Republi ·
·
Citizens
just
want
to
say,
though,
that
the
aov·
that the then-lawmaker was more licited letters of praise f~m Repub'

I The
.
. Sentinel. News Hotline

992 2156

dential stronghold but where he has
been having problems -· with stops
in Tennessee. and New Orleans. He
was 10 wind up iii Tampa, Aa., for the
night.
Meanwhile, Dole's camp was
keeping an eye out for the Commcn:e
Department's release today of July·
Sep!Cmber cconoinic growth figures,
poised to pounce on Clinton if the
tate showed a significant slowing of
the economy.
The econ&lt;imy grew at a robust' 4.8
percent rate in the previous April· .
June quaner, althouah it has·generally
been growing in the 2.5 pen:ent
range over the p&amp;t few years.
.
Dole was being joined on the final
push by campaign manager Scott

calendar~

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non· THURSDAY
profit groups wishing to announce
POMI;ROY ·· Preceptor Beta
meeting and special events. The Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
calendar is not designed to pro· · ity, 7 p.m. Thursday., Grace Episcomote sales or fund raisers of any pal parish house. Members to wear
type. Items are printed as space Halloween shin, 1
permits and eannot,be·guarantecd
to nan a specifiC number of days.
MONDAY
~.
TUESDAY
CARPENTER
Columbf;l
PORTLAND •· Lebanon Town· Township Board of Trustees, Monl
ship Trustees, 7 p.m Tuesd·ay at' the day, 7 p.m. allhe firehouse.
township building.

.

PartlY cloudy tonight, Iowa
In the 30s. Thuraday,
1111nny, high In 508.

28ectlona,16Pogea I S -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedne1uy, October 30, 1996

.

The .cost will be SI for seniois aged
55 and over (free with Medicare,
Pan B, on presenting card) and $2
for everyone else.
:
It was pointed out that this is no!
a live vaccine and therefore cannot
cause anyone to get the flu. Some
common side effects include sore·
ness, swelling and redness at the site
of injection, fever and achiness. last-'
ing one or two days. Anyone with a.
severe alle~gy to eggs, havin~ had
Guillain·Barrc syndrome, havmg a
current moderate to severe illness or
!hat is pregnant should not receive
the vaccine.

-Community

9-2-3-24-26-31

Sparta on Page 4

.~

To off~r · story .suggestions,
"'port late-breal\1ng news and
offer news tips ·

Elect

Mi~*

,

y

v'

.ere-.

Southern Distr·i ct
secures college
promotion grant

Canan
Sheriff

PROFESSIONAL • EXPERIENCED • EDUCATED
... "From August, 1982 until December,
1986, I held the position of Asst. U.S.
in the Columbus office for the
District of Ohi~,· During that
I_ handled a number of narcotics
lca:ses in .which the Columbus Police
was involved. As a result, I
with former Detective Mike
on ~ ~ber .of cases which
resulted in th~ successful prosecution of
narcotics traffickers in the Columbus
area. To successfully invest~gate these
cases, an investigator must
have patience~ exercise diplomacy and
able to act on his own initiative. Mike.
has all of these necessary traits
exercised them repeated!y ~n the
in which he was inyolved.

me

• . ad ' c heap s h0 '
St·r·lcklan d ·ca·II s campaign

Cremeans offers tender ~ide,. along with· flag

he

In all my dealings with Mike Canan,
performed his duties in . the utmost
professional manner. In every case, his
. rk was tho
. rough', expedient a· ...
d
11
IAiw
well done.• .As you can see, I have
respect for Mike Canan II

By JIM FREEMAN

OVP NeW8 Staff

Tue~y.

....

Robyn Jones
Former Asst. u.s. Attorney
CONQ. Frlllk c...n-t1. t.1ca wltllllllglllndultrtllllnaaJ.
... Qtwill t 1llcllna oiiYfiC"II. Ci.UI .... plld I v11Jt to carlletln lahul In trntcuee 11 u dii,L er.-na pn uMid •flag
to IIWICfiODI lind Yll*d'wlh Ita lludlnll who -1111111' llllfto
t111r 1111 .-cJ ar dll/lltlpiiMtliiiY dlHtlld.

Plld for by the Canan for Shertlf CommlttH, Sarah Glbbl, Tl'UIIInll',
·
34046 Bill Run Rd., POII'IIIOJ, Oh 45788
I

'

.

Congressman frank Cremeans (R;
Gallipolis) ~nted a more sensitive
illl8JC •• along with a new u.s. flag
•• during 1 visit to Carleton
Si:hooi/Meias lndusiJiOI in Syracuse

•
--··.-.o·' -

946
Pick 4:

Dole predicts historic come-from-behind victory

residents combat flu

Goodbye cabriolet (1: a light
two-wheeled one-horse carriaae
usually with a folding leather hood,
drawn by one horse. 2: a .convenible coupe).
·
Hello din bike and all-terrain
vehicle.
Goodbye, blancmange (a sweet
1
molded jellylike dessert made with .
starch or gelatin, milk, flavoring,
ell:.)
Hello jalapeno, sushi, tofu and
chorizo.
Welcome io the new multicul·
turally correct edition of the .
Thorndikc·Barnhan Junior Dictionary for students ages 10 to 14.
After three years of work, the
first major revision in 18 years of
the dictionary for fifth·threugl!
eighth-grade!'$ has just. hit the
bookstores.
'
There is a school version of this
same dictionary - ·retitled Scot·
!Foresman Thorndike-Barnhart ·
Intermediate Dictiontiry - that is
beina used in middle schools.
Young readers who crack open
the hard-cover dictionary, which
sells for $17, will not only find new . JUNIOR DICTIONARY • After three years of work, the first major revision In 18 years of the
words. They •n also find definitions Thorndike-Barnhart Junior Dlctionery for students ages 10 to 14 has just hit the bookstores. Young
written in more kid-friendly tan· ruders who crack open the hard-cover dictionary, which sells for $17, will not only find new words.
guage. This part of an effort to .get · ThliY'II also find definitions written In more kid-friendly language.
.

Pick 3:

..«

Jr. dictionary features words to grow on Vaccine clinic helps
ly BETSY RU.BINEA
The Dn Molnn Register

Ohio Lottery

'

Cremeans visite!l the school for
people with developmental disabili·
. 1101 and mental retudation 10 present
· a U.S. Oaa1 but wound up spending
more lime lieldina questions rrom the
scltool'a clientele.
~I ~ hero on a serious mission,"
the ·~botttCoqremun ~the
M""thlwcl crowd of cbi[Cqa, IIU·
dents ind .ad 81111lben. "A Hri&lt;M
mlaalon to Jll i 1nt Carleton School
with a nationatnaun:, a symbol of

American and a symbol of freedom."
Cremeans said he takes the presentation of a U.S. flag seriously,
adding he was a co-sponsor of le~is·
lation outlawing flag desecration,
before presenting the flag to Mike
Bissell and Angel Day, members of
the transition class at Carleton
School.
. Afterwards, Cremeans, accompa·
nied by Bissell, Day and others ProCCCI:led to the school's flaapole where
the flag was raised with Cremeans
·leadin&amp; the ·assembly in the Pledge of
Allegiance. •
. School director SieVe Beha said he
·, sent letters ,to Crcmeanl and State
.Representative John Carey seekiiJS
new U.S. and Ohio J1ap to replllie
· the school's.tattered ones. ·
·

t-l

..

Cremeans' ·staff called. Monday Napper who had prepared ·a list o~
saying the Congressman would stop questions and grievances.
by Tuesday 10 present the flag, he
Napper commented that the price
added.
.
·.
' of everything keeps going up, mali;.
Mterwards. Cremeans interacted ing life diftji:ult for Meigs Coun~
with the some of the school's stu- residents •· particularly farmers. ·:
dents.
_
"l don't think it's righ~ • he said;:
~ "Where do yoti live," he asked
Cn:mcans said be has su~
Charles Sloane, wh.o is an associate changes to farmins regulations
with Meigs Industries.
·
lower taxes.
:
"Syracuse," Sloane J:Wlied, strug"We did in the last two y c
gling to pronounce the name of his something former Congresses t.veo
street.
done for farmel'$," he said, citinl I&amp;
The Congressman, a forme~ relief, relaxing farm tC[!ullllitlns llllit
teacher and school SUJ!Crintendent, welfare reform.
:
looked the young man in the eyes and
Bella said the school's studeati
patiently cou.ed out the rest of the and assoc;iales ~ "CC' eotiCIIlwC:
with national issues.
! ..
answer.
,
He next fielded questions from
"Meigs Industries people liN _.j
Meigs Industries associate Kenny
Contlaued oa ~ 3

..C

�"'.
.

;t

'

Weclnuday, October 30, 1891

OHIO Weather
nunday, Oct. 3t

Cooler air-to follow
storms across. Ohio

AccuWurhe.- forecast for daytime conditio11s
MICH.

By 'llleA.Moc..ted ~'.Colder air will spread across Ohio
toni1ht behind the waves of thunderstorms lhat rumbled across the state
packing winds gusting at 60 mph.
Scattered power outages were
reported across nonhwest and westIND.
central early today from trees and
wires being blown down by the high
winds.
The National Weather Service
Columbus
said sides will clear over mosl of
· . Ohio tonight and temperatures will
plunge to below freezing in many
areas. Overnight lows will range
from the mid-20s in the nonhwest to
the mid-30s in south-cenuai .Ohio.
The record-high temperature for
this dale at the Columbus weather ·
station was 80degrees in 1927 while
the record low was 20 in 1895. Sunset tonight will be at 5:31 p.m, and
·sunrise Thursday at 7 a.m.
Across tbe nation ·
·
. Gusty winds blew across !be Mid·
west this morning while rain hit the
Oreal
Lakes and Southern California.
,, VIo-,..;Pro,.a~t
'
It was rainy in the Easl, cloudy in the
West and snowing in the .mountains
of Utah.
Rain drenched the flame-ravaged
hillsides of Southern California earBy The Associated Presa
the mid 50s.
Southeastern Ohio
, Extended ro~t
,
ly today, prompting a flood watch in
.: Today ... Pardy sunny...Windy and
Friday... A chance of rain or snow the mouQtains lining the Malibu
n,Uid. ~I)' morning higb in the low- . . showers northeast. Dry elsewhere. coast.line and leaving at leas! 7.000
.er 70s. R:eadings in the 60s this after- ·Lows 25 to 30. Highs from tile upper households temporarily withoul pownoon. West wind 15 to 25 mph. 30s nonh to the middle 40s southeast. er, authorities said.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday...Partly sunny. Lows 25
The rain triggered a rock slide thai
Tonight..Partly cloudy and cool- to 30. Highs 45 10 50.
.
er. Low 35 10 40. Winds diminishing.
Sunday.. .Achance of rain or snow
"fonhwest wind 5 to 15 mp~ .
showers. Lows in the middle 30s.
. Thursday ... Mostly sunny. High in Highs 50 to 55.
ed several policies including a student
dress policy. Unlike
Meigs Local
School District which last week
approved a policy granting the district
the option of implementing a school
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 49.00.
Sows: firm 10 mostly I .00 higher. uniform dress policy, the Southern
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Buying points Wednesday as providS11mmary of TUesday's Produc- policy does not include a uniform
ed by the ·u.s. DepnrUnent of Agri- ers Livestock Association auctions · option, said Su(ll'rintendenl James
.
at Eaton, Farmerstown, Lainc8ster, Lawrence. , ·
culture Market News:
In personnel matters,' the bo8rd
·. B&amp;ITOws and gilts: steady to firm; Wapakpneta and CaldweU:
hired
Barbara Lane and Theresa
Hogs: uneven, 1.00 lower to 2.00
demand moderate on moderate offerMiller
as substitute custodians and
ings.
·
higher,
approved
David Williams as a sub. Butcher hogs: 42.25-53.50.
· U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
stitute
bus
driyer pending cef!ificaCattle: uneven, 50 cents lower to
points 49 .00-50.()(), few at 48.50 and
tion.
50.50; plants49.50-51.00, few 51.25. 1.00 higher.
Jane Ann Hill was approved as a
· U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 43.50pan-time hearing impaired aide al

• ""·

111 Court St., F~y. Ohio
11.......a1118 • Fu: 1182-2157

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubAiher

CtWILINE HO&amp;LICH
OuWIIM

IIIF

_ _ .., _ _

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

·=-

, J _ . , . . . _ , . _. _ _ _

11/1_

_......,,._,_.,_,.......,_,_
··w.-·
, .... r.n .. I» ,. , J' ,.,_ Ll«trr llhtNIII . . frt.

.._ lfo I
?'

"-~-.........

148' I

•I

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

......

-·

Letters to the editor

~

Today'.~

~

'

weather forecast

led to the closure of Malibu CanyonLos Viraenes Road, a tWisty canyon
road connecting Malibu with Calabasas and the western San Fernando Valley, sheriff's Deputy Craig
Barnes said.
·In · the Great Lakes. strong low
pressure should bring strong winds
across Minnesota, WiscOnsin, Iowa,
Missouri and lllinois today.
Rain could drench Michigan, and
thunderstorms were forecast to strike
Pennsylvania and New York. The
storms, which should move rapidly
into northern New England, could
carry winds up to 60 mph.
Thundentorms may rumble across
the Southeast later this afternoon. ·
An an:tic fronl should hit 1he
Plains, which could drop temperatures to the 20s across western Oklahoma tonight.
It may snow in the Rockies, while
rain could fa)l across Southern California.
Partly cloudy skies should prevail
in the Pacific Northwest because of
.a high pressure system in the res ion.
A rainfall record was set Tuesday
in l.a Crosse, Wis .. which had 1.34
inches of rain, breaking its record for
the date set in 1961 al .89 inches.
Temperatures should climb into
the 30s in the nonhero Plairls and
Great Lakes region,lhe 40s in north·
ern New England and the Rockies,
the 50s in the Pacific Northwest and
New England.
I

Southern District..~ondnued~rompaset

Today's livestock report

-.

'

you think the ni~y will help our·
schools. Ohio needs to develop an
ldeq~ and e~JUilable sySiem for
11110
fundmg our pubUc schools, a system l.!!~~M~;!:!;!!,::!:!,_.-.
..:.:;:~
lhat helps Meigs County the same as
~-~.!:.,..a
.. '
Franklin . Co~nty and all other
'
wl'lllthy counues.
••
Vote no on Issue I.
Howvd c.Jdwel,
member Melp Couaty EdiiC8tioDai By J-ph Spe~~r
senator from New York and ambas- more fun when they are lively, ·but rising taxes as we do about declining·
Senlce Center Board
'f!!e most boring thing about the · sador to Great Britain, In fact, it amusement is not a constitutional · morals."
'lllppen ·I'WDI presidential campaign now drawing would be a misnomer to call it a cam- requirement. 'we are engaging in a ' , The left feels much the same about
to a clooe is reading about hoW bor- pnign. because Rufus declined lo par- democratic process to elect the per- Bill Clinton. Feminist Katha Pollitt
•e
ing it is.
son who will run the greatest coun· declared in the Nation magazine that '
Q
lVI VG G
The Pew Research Center finds
try in the world for the next four 1she will flatly re.tuse to vote for Cli~P-.
.:..~
to
.
'
.
'th
,
·
.
•
th8t
only
24
percent
of
us
are
payi~g
years,· It is a solemn exercise, and it 1ton again. Columnist Robert Kuttner.
I reu."" en•ov. 11me WI .ami1y
Dear Editor.
40
(
.
I
d I I aru· . I .
d
friends L·ke' 0 ti
e
are
any
allcnllon
...
percent
o
us
cants youNo emn u y o p crpa e 1n fsays real liberals '"will' hold their'
In 1994, we sent Frank Cremeans
.noses when they vote for Clinton"
. C:f ~ocial not name Bob [)qle's running male, ticipate.lt would hav~ been a "fruit- it.
·
. to Congras to represent our intetests, · :ncerned ~1 ~ ~t::"
But, you say, ' you are given a The liberals I know are'saying that if
and he has done just that
C,e-, Security ·and Medic~. We have Shawn Kemp ... (~usl testmg you less struggle," he said, Afterward, he .
been heartened by the rational and the£':) ... Viewer raungs of the con- said: ""It is quite worthy of remark choice between Tweedledee and they hear the phrase 'bridge to thto .
JIICIIIS has voted for a balanced bud· '
. . ·
h
ed b venbons and the debates were awful that in no preceding election, has Tweedledum, ahd you wanted Twee- 21st century' one more time, they will ;
ge~ voted tax cuts, eliminated 270 · consc~enbous approac support
Y
y.
· 1
totally turned off there been such a calm resp«ling it." dledork. The system is not providing jump off."
federal propams. aaencies; offices. . FrankdCremcans. As ex~pled . by
';::~
;o~t
vole.
Sounds like an electrifying fellow, the option you want, ergo tbe system
So jump. Or v,olc for a third-paiprojects, and fon:ed staff reductions prov! mg a se~en perce~t mcR&amp;Se m
Please lei's give it a rest, OK?
doesn't be?
is out-of-whack.'
ty candidate .. there'll be at le&amp;$1'
in 29 of39 tn¥w JOVenunenl offK:CS. Medtcare, while ens101ng the pro' the campa~,·gn IS
· bonng.
·
p·1ty 1he poor '10lks of
1 couJd argue that th'IS probabl y three bn most ballots. Or do what sen•:
,..m
will
he
there
serve
our
chilOf
course
Bored?
10
He has done eXKdy what he said he·
d;;n
and
their
children.
After all; we Most cam~a1gns are bbring. The HS· 1852, who had to choose between has somelhing to do with the mar- · sible people do and -don't vote FOR
would do. Promises rriade, promises
want
to
be
responsible
for leav- t~m IS destgned to wmnow the can- Franklin Pierce and Winfield Scott. ketplace of ideas, but I won't, Suffice anybody. Instead, vote AGAINST the,
do•'t
kept!
.
.
· ''the. burde f debt
d1datcs down to the two who have the The New York Herald pronounced it it to say this is the favorite lament of candidate who would do your )ler·
His oppunen~ Ted Strickland, is a mgF ~ ~
n has · ed hi
greatest appeal to the largeSI sector of the most "ludicrous, ridiculous and ideologues of hoth leftand right.
sonal beliefs the mosl harm.
..
proved tax-and-spend liberal.
ran be ~eans . ~rov ..
the public. The resull is rarely a clash uninteresting presidential campaign
Social conse&lt;Vatives complain lhat
My vote will be cast foroneofthC:
Remember, Strickland was the decid- seIf 1?
promiseth
theeeper.te
e
of
titanic
characters.
Indeed,
what
we
since
the
country
had
been
emanciBob
Dole
doesn't
care
about
their
a
major
candidates. I cannot imagine,
ing vote ( 1993) on the hqest tax doesn 1P1ay games WI
vo. r.
get are conunon deno1pina10rs. We' ';: paied from British rult." Think about agenda. He won't talk about abortion our nation being run by Ross Perot or'
increue in history. A tax that adverseCooper Soyder, lucky if even one of.the candidates IS trying to pay au~ntion when Ulysses · and homosexual marriages. Heck, he · Ralph Nader,·And I will till&lt;e solace;
ly iinpacled 1he hardworking citizens
former State Seoator, a Teddy Roosevelt or a John Grant ran against Horatio Seymour in even made fun ·of the party platform in the fact thai whoever wins, Clifi:.
of the Sixth District .
1868. Seymour, a former New York they worked so hard to ram tllrough. ton or Dole, the country will be in:
lllllslloro Kennedy,
After 17 yean of service in the .
·'
Your attention wanders when Bill governor. didn't even want the nom- "We find him not so much aggravat- capable hands.
Stile Senste. last March, Dorothy and
Ciinton and Bob Dole go at it? Con· ination ·and wept openly when the ing as boring," wrote Christian
See, the system does work.
Action Network president Martin
sider the campaign of 1816, Monroe Democrats forced it upon him.
Josepb Spear is a syndicated,
versus King.
Where is it written that elections Mawyer in. the Washiqgton Post. writer for Newspaper Enterprile
soil ea:osion. It was suongly suppurt;
King? Yes, Rufus King; .fonner must be entertaining? Of course, it's "We just don't care !IS much ahou! Assoclll!tion.
Dear Editor,
1bis letter is in response to numer- ed the aanculture and conservation
•1
ous stalcments by opponents that . community. He has also been an
have unfairly atiacked the environ- advocste for ~forming Superfund to
mental vodng record of Rep. Frank ensu~ that taxpayer money goes to
•
Cremeans. If these individuals had solve the problems, not finance end- By JoHph Perklna
based this on assurances from Don- .grants are innocent of the charges for fraudulent nleilns. That was the ;
resean:hed more objectively, they less litigation.
. Doris Meissner should resign. On . aid Neufeld, director of the INS's dis- which they were arrested. B111, at tbe
The common themes among all of her watch, as commissioner 'of the ,Q'edited "Citizenship USA" initiative 'very least, the INS should wajt until ,shockjng ,revelation of Jewell Elg- :
· would have found that Rep. Cre1hazali, a former.employee of Dallas· •
.means' vOting record is solidly pro- these refOrms is that they allow local U.S.Immigration and Naturalization in Los Angeles.
an immigrant's criminal record is based Naturalization Assistance Ser;
and stile governments more flexibil· Service, the agency has become a .
environment and mainstreain.
cleared up before conferring U.S. cit- VICe.·
·
~ ~
In this session of Congress, Rep. ity to design site sp«ific solutions joke. The latest evidence was prGizenship upon them.
NAS
was
one
of
a
half-dozen
pri,
!
Cremeans has supponed bipartisan while mainlaining filndsmental envi- vided last week by Kalky Bell, an
OSep
ef1unS
And the problem with criminal vare firms around the country au!hG- :
efforts to reform the Safe Drinking roamenlal goals and protections: Fur- INS clerk in Los Angeles. At pat
aliens is not confined to Los Angeles, rized by the INS to test immi..:an!S •
Water Act and the Federal Clean thermore, they encourage greater risk 10 her job security, the 31-yearBut there was a simple way for lt's a nationwide scandal.lndeed, the ,on civics and English as p8rt of the :
Act. Both bills paned with the · cost-benefit consideration and market old single mother of four publicly Melville, Rogers and Neufeld t!l dis- )NS acknowledges that roughly 10
•;
and incentive based solutions where disclosed lhat she saw cG-workers prove Bell's allegations. All they had ' J,crcenl of'lhe I ,I million immigrants naturalization proCess.
~ of Olpllizations such 11 the
·
Elghazali
disclosed
that
while
l
N.aooal Governors Asloclation, the · possible. They atlcmpt to minimize throw out live milk crates conlaining to do was produce the milk crates ·who've been granted ,U.S, citizenship
Nlli..t Leaaue of Cities, Confer- the ineffiCiencies of one-size-fits-all ihe ling~nts of 4,0001o 6,000 cit· with the fingerprints. Since they in the past year have criminal records. '&amp;radingtcsts during her live months '!
at NAS, she noticed numerous
eaeoofMayors.NIIioniJAMOCiation ·maadatcs fiom WashinJion.
izenship applicants.
have failed to do so, the ptiblic'has
Excuse me_, I know that Emma inSia~ccs in which the written
ofCountiel. Association of Stile and
As a southeastern Ohio native
Under federal law, the INS is every reason to believe thai Bell has Lazarus invited the tired, the poor, the ansWers Of diffeRnl applicants were I
]_..,.. Wiler Pollution Control who has been involved flflt-hand in required to have the FBI conduct told the uuth.
huddled masses, et at, 'to pass in •the same handwriting, She ai.O t
Adminillnllon and many other pub- each of lhese efforts. I can personal- ·criminal beckground checks of immiFurlhermore, Bell is not the only throuah 1he solden4oor of the Unit- foun4 that responses 10 multiple-: ;
, lie sectilr O!pllizations who have a· ly atlcatto Rep. Cremeans' advocaey grants applying for naturalization, INS employee to blow the whistle.on ed States. But that invil!ltion did not
respoulbility to administer and · for policy tools that will enable us lo But Bell'siNS sqpervisors decided to ·the agency. Just last month, INS · extend to criminal aliens, who've cho1ce queSiions 'Were identical, :.
including incorrect answen.
.i
enforce eevironmmtallaWJ,
meet environmental chsllen11es for bypass that process, she S.id, adding 1111ent James jiumble-Sanchez dis- .committed such offenses as ~
Moreover,
she
said,
many
of
the'
;
· Rep. Creme•• wu extcuively yean to come.
"I was kind of told to tum my head closed lhaliNS officials in L.A. knew assault, domestic violence, rape and citizenship applicants who passed the !
Adam Sllarp, and pretcild I didn't see an~thing. "
iavolwod ill dirt~ to Rform farm
lhat roughly 5,000 of the 60,000 murder.
test couldn't even apeak Enaliih'l
policy lhlt included a conacrvation
A.erlcu
Rather lhan investigate this matter . immigrants naturalized in mass cer- . . It's bad enou1h that these people when they called to check the results.'
F-Bol'uoFellu ,.,,., and fire the supervisors who ordered emonies in Ausust had concealed 1jhave even been ai.Iowed in this counAnd of course, the ability to spelk at ~.
tilllllimad
11 relll)rina - · - · protectina
Wlla' qllllity and reducing
WMhi...,..,P.C. the destruction of the fingerprints, crimi'nal records. Yet, they did noth- try. But now we learn that some have ]east
rudimentsry English is Supposed' l
~eissner's aaency is coverins up,
ing about it.
been nlluralizod by the INS. These to be one of the conditions of becom.: •
'I'm mcxe cOnvinced th1n ever,"
lnfac~theaforernentionedRogers 'criminallliena now.enjoy the same 'ina an American citizen.
.;
uys Rosemay Melville, deputy dis- defended his asency's inaction. ·He henefita of U.S. citizelllhip u law.
But while Meissner scknowledte~ •
lrict director in the INS's Los Anse- said that while the finprprinll of the abidina Alnomans.
' "there have been some ·probleme" :
les office, "that there was no impro- 5,000 in question showed they had
And here's another dirty little with fraud in the naturalization· i
lr'The ... lUI I II PI II
.
pricty
in
these
casea."
been
previously
arrested,
"in
this
secret
that Meissner and her miniona process, she oonelhtless inaisll thai :
'lbdly if w~illirday, Oct, ·30, the 304111 day of 1996. There Ire 62 dayi
·
Her
remarki
echo
those
of
society,
an
arrest
should
not
indii:alc
at
the
INS t1on 't wot the public to "Ibn is no vllldity to die IIOIIon dill. !
11ft .. the ya'.
RichardRopn,directorofiNS'sLos any kind of guilt."
know: Thousandl of immipull people are becomin1 citizens today" ;
Today't Hipljpl in HiJtoly:
·
Anteles
office.
He
insisted
Jut
week
Say
whst?
without criminal records have who would not have 10 YtlniiO.": :
011 Oct, 30, 1931. lbc llldio play dill panicked the Jillion, "The War of
that
Bell's
charJes
weR
a'fictiori.
He
Yes,
"l'yjle
some
of
these
immiobtained.
U.S. citizenship lhrou~
·lbc Worlcls,"lllnina
Welles,liied on CBS.

,Pelr Editor,

. ·
Vocen 011 elecli011 day we will be ·
·VOlin&amp; 10 decide swelaue I, which
would allow riverboll pmbling in
' Obio. You have teed by votins 'yes'
it would help pubtic schOols by the
111p 1111101111t of taxes gambling wiD .
brinl- In ll'llllt, ihll tbe moaey went
·to schools, which we bow it will nOt.
it Would only be enough Rveu to
keCp Qhio schools aoina fOlD' days.
This is not much pin for schools.
[!o not vOle for Issue I bec•nse

af9JW

_____:.,.__

The electorate is bo

cremesns represent ou'r ,·n•a-et·e

.

?

~ig ·deal·

Joseph Spear

7

Fran'-

;;;m

°

;r·

Defends Cremeans' record

INS commissioner should step down

••

t

J

h p ,,,

·wmer

I

7

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Today In history

7

ex-

l

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•

•

~eigs

EMS logs 4 calls

" Units ofthe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service record lil four
calls fot assistance Tuesday. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
! :20 p.m., Painter Ridge Road,
Netue Morris, O'Bii:ness Memorial
Hospital:
POMEROY
..
" 10:58 a.rll., Overbrook Nursing
~enter, James Spencer, Veterans

Memorial Hospilal.
RACII!IE · '
8:33 a.m., volunteer 'fire department and squad to stale Route 338,
auto fll'e, Mary Taylor, owner, transported to VMH.
RUTLAND
.
.
.
_ 12:06 p.m., Me1gs Mme 2, Randall McMillian, Holzer Medical Center.

me

Craft show oet
' The lith 'annual arts and crafts
show will be he.ld Friilay at the Senior
Citizens Center, 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m.
Area craftsmen will attend with handmade crafts, baked goods and candies, and holiday gifts and decoratiOns.
'

concerned about national issUes,
depending on their ability," Beha
said.
·
· In addition, the .Congressman's
visit proviaed many of the school's
people a glimpse into the electoral
process they have not seen before, he

Revival set. Revival services at the Hobson
Christian Fellowship CHurch, Middleport, will he held Sunday through
Nov. 10. The Rev. Joe Gwinn will
s~ on Sunday, the Rev, Clyde Ferrell, Nov. 4-9 and Rev. John Elswick, .
Nov. 10. There will be singing night- Dinner canceled
The steak dinner at the Chester
ly with Dave and Debbie Dailey to be
Fire
Department will be held Saturfeatun;d on Nov. 7. i
day, Nov. 16, 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
instead of originally planned.
Carnival. planned
· The Middleport PTO will hold a
fall carnival Saturday at the elemen- Revival slated
Revival services
be held at.th~
tary school, 4 to 7 p.m.
Fellowship Church of the Nazarene,
-·-- -·r-·. 7 p.m . nightly Sunday through
Wednesday. The Rev. and Mrs. Brett
The Daily Sentinel Layton
of Charleston Elk River
Church of the Nazarene will be min• !USPS 113·960)
istering in message and in song, The
·Publi1hed t\let)' lf1ei'noo n, Mond11y thrCJu&amp;h
church
is located on S.tate Route 124
Prlday, Ill Court St. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the ·
Ohio VaHey PubU~hing Company!OMnett Co..
across from Forked Run State Park in
Pomeroy. Ohio - 4~769, Ph. 992-21 S6. Second
Reedsville. Nunery available.
da.u postqe paid at Pomeroy. Ohio. .

will

.

sa1d.
The visit was prefaced by a brief
civics lesion on tbe role ofCongRss
·in U.S. government, he said.
"This is a very Important lellll)ing
experience."

Stocks

Am Ele Power ....................... 41'.1

Akzo ......................................64\
Aahland 011 ...................,....... 41'•
AT&amp;T ••;..................................35\

Bank One ..............................42._.
Bob Evan• ............................12\
Borg-Warner .........................37'!.
Champion ...............................20
Channing Shope ................... 4'1.
City Holdlng ..........................24'!.
Federal Mogut .......................22'~
GanneH ................................ :74'1.
Goodyear ...................... ,....... 45r
K·mart .......... ,...................... ~ •••9'/r.

Lands End............................. 21'Limlled .................................. 18~
Ohio Vallay Bank .................... 34
One Valley ............................. 31'1.
Peoplea ................................. 26\

Pram Flnl ............................... 12'h
Rockwell ............................... 55'h

RD.Shel1 ........... :....................68\
Shorley'a .................................
Star Bank ................................88
Wendy' a ..................................22

n

During a brief question-and·
answer session in his appearance
before the World Affairs Council of
Orange County, Dole was asked: "If
elected, will you pardon Bill Clinton?"
"I'm nol cenain I'm going to
answer that direclly," he said to
snickering from the largely supportive audience. "But if elected, he'll be
eligible for the (Dole 15-percenl) tax
cui if he leaves his forwarding
addreSs."

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - none.
.Tuesday discharges - Everett
Ervin, Middleport; Bet:nita lloney,
Middleport. ·
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 29 - Pearl
Leach, Kathleen Casey.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Florence, son, Crown City; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Kinnamon, son, Oak
Hill; Mr. .and Mrs. Freddie Queen,
son, Crown·City.
(Published wltb JH;r'misslon)

-·-·-

Worthlngton ........•••.••.•.•........20\

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. qucit• provided by Advell
of Gallipolis.
· ',

Brodlord
White
Hot Woter
Tank
Electric or Gos
12 gal. to
50 go/.

Me...er: "nae A1sociated Press, al'ld lhe Ohio
''

POSTMAriER: Send addm.s COrrteliOnl ta
The Daily Seatinel, Ill Court St., Pamcroy,
Ohio4~769 .

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26 -

newspaper said.
A source told the Tunes thai a
month before, Liu met with Middleton and offeRd to donate $15 million
to the president's re-election etfons
from the Taiwan~ ruling party. The
source a Taiwanese political consu. ·
tant who requested anonymity, said
he witnessed thelalks .
Liu has denied offering the money, and there is no record thai either
he or the Kuomintang Party made a
donation. U.S. election .Jaw forbids
such a contribution by prohibiting
candidates from accepting contributions from foreign residents

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A littleknown, former While House aide
from Arkansas was responsible for
arranging a conuovenial encounter
last year between President Clinton
and Liu Tai-ying, the chief financial
manager of Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang Party, the Los Angeles Times
reported today.
Mark E. Middleton's role in the
September 1995 meeting hecame
clear as White House officials
acknowledged for the fint time that
Clinton met with Liu in a brief,
unscheduled · encounter 'II a critical
moment in U.S.-Taiwan relations, the

Local race•.•

I.

Contlouedfrom page 1

Don't focus on the ads, focus on
the voting record. he said:
·
A Time magazine election supplement compared the two candidates' views on issues ranging from
the budget to Bosnia,
Cremeans supported a bill aimed
at balancing the budget by the year
2002 while Strickland said he would
not have supported il.
On Medicare, Cremeans said he
voled for a bill reducing exp«ted
Medicare spending $270 billion over
seven years while Strickland is
opposed 10 any decreases in the prGgram's gr(lwlh .
.
On abortion, Slrickland did not
respond to Time's questionnaire while
:Cremeans has staled many times
1, that he is opposed 10 abortion. ·
' Cremeans said he would not have
voted for the amendment to allow the
Pentagon to implement· its "don't ask,'
don't tell" policy concerning homGsexuals in the military, Strickland
said' he would have voted "yes".
The candidates also disagreed on
the U.S. policy concerning Bosnia
with Strickland saying he would nol
have voted on a bill to bar lhe use of
federal money for .the deployment of
U,S. troops 10 Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Cremeans supported the Nonh
American Free Trade Agreement
while Strickland opposed it.
Strickland would not have. voted
for the welfare reform bill overhauling the federal welfare system while
Cremeans supported the legislation,
· The candidates did agree on some
issues including iheir support of the
Family and Medical Leave Act, additional spending for defense including
an additional $493 million for the B2 stealth bomber program, and opposition to gun control regulations.
Bolh Strickland an~ Cremeans
·received 'A' ratings from the Nation·
al Rifle Association.
Jess Goode, press secretary for

Strickland, said the campaign has
been featured' on ABC and CBS
evening news.
He said a television from German
TV is currently following the candidates and will broadcast live on elec·
tion night.
The race has also received page
one coverage on the Wall Street Journal; the Los Angeles Times, the Dallas Morning News and the Washington Posl as well as several other publications nationwide.
As election day nean, bo~ candidates are 11ndoubtcdly keepmg a
tight schedule.
.
Chris Slagle, a Cremeans district
·.staff officer out of Portsmouth; said
the Congressman had been in Wilmington, Martinsville and Gallipolis
Monday before visiting in Syracuse.
Afterwards, he was going door-to·
door in Marietta
"We've been touring rural fire ·
departments and .participating .in
groundbreakings," Slagle satd.
"There are seven days left, we're full
every day." .

·

l '

Elect ·

!Mi~ti

.

Canan

j

I,

Sheriff

PROFESSIONAL • EXPERIENCED

• EDUCATED

Hospital news

liew"PPPU Auociotion.

By Canter er Motor Routt

·Ex-Clinton aide set up
Taiwan political connection

Dole predicts.•• continuedrrompagd

They'rebeginning 10 see what's hap·
pening."
Earlier, he told ·a breakfast gath·
ering in Irvine, Calif., that beating
Clinton would be "a piece of cake"
Bazaar and bake sale set
. _ if' only he could win California
St. Paul United Methodist Willing and its 54 electoral voies.
Workers will hold a bazaar and. bake
sale Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m

Session slated
Woodland Centers Inc. is holding
four anger managements groups for
Meigs Cou.nty children ages 6-12 at
. its Meigs Clinic on Mulberry
Heights, Pometoy beginning Nov. 6,
5-6 p.m. The group is to educa1e children on how to deal appropriately and
effectively deal with anger. For more
infonnalion call992-2192.

Letart Falls Elementary Sci)Ool and
Don Smith was accepted as a bus driver lrai ner.
The board also: approved a new
carrier for vision insurance, Vision
Plus, effective Jan.•l; approved discharge and pick up puints for students; accepted a list of personnel
who ruive access 10 student records
and met in executive session io discuss teacher contract negotiations.
Present were Treasurer Dennie
Hill, board Vice-president C.T. Chapmljl and board members Dave Kucsma, Bob Collins and Marty Morariry. Absent was board Pi-esident Susie'.
Grueser.
'

Cremeans offers.. ~ontinued from page 1

• anno.u. "· cemen t S
M
e1gs
'.
'

The Dally S1aUnel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

'.
'r
I•

'

... "It is my belief that Mike Canan is
a
standout
among
his ·
contemporaries. He continuously
a high level
professional competence and a
persistent desire to do more than
what was expected or required of
him. He enjoys ,a fine · reputation
among his peers, both at the
Columbus · Division of Police· and
with . . other agencies. Mlke was
involved .in long-term, complicated
itwestigations . which
yielded
substantial results ·and ~uccessful
prosecutions both in State and
Federal courts. He is discrete, wise,
'and possesses a sense of humor
that
compliments
his 1 other
attributes." •..

II

!.
l

Charles A. Tosi
Retired Agent, FBI
Paid lor by the Canan lor Shertll ~. Sarah Glbbl, T - - .
·
34048 Ball Run Rd., Pomeroy, 011 "67811

I

$56.
n · ...,....,.:...~.......... ..... SIOP.n

r

7

I

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�•

:·Sports

The Daily Sentinel.

!N~w York honors

\

..

World _Series champions with parade

•By J .. FITZGERALD
NEW YORK (AP)- An over-

sunny skies and temperatures in the ry.
. pennants before the parade even
SOs, a howl of triumph echoed for
"I've never been involved in started.
:now crowd of New York Yankees blocks uptown.
anything close to this parade, this
The Yankees assembled in the
' fans released 18 years worth of frusAs the procession rode up Broad- mass of humanity," said Torre; who morning at Yankee Stadium in the
ll'alion Tuesday in a pinstriped par- way, thick clouds of paper floated was fired last season by the SL Louis Bronx, where they had won Game 6
ty that stretched from the House that down onto the route traveled by past Cardinals. "This is absoll!tely spec- three days earlier for the team's
Ruth Built to the Canyon of Heroes. heroes from Charles Lindbergh to tacular."
record 23rd World Series champi'
The crowd was a mix of Little Nelson Mandela.
Earlier in the day, Torre rang the onship. Ten buses and a police escon
Cheers of "Let's go Yankees" opening bell at the New York Stock carried the team downtown.
Leaguers and Wall Streeters, diehard fans and bandwagon-jumpers. boomed off coJ1(:rete walls, and peo- Exchange. He appeared on a balcony
Ed Torrez. 53, arrived three hours
Virtually all were decked out in Yan- pie scaled trees ·and hung from sky- with NYS!i chairman Richard Gras- early for the parade, lugging his 5kee blue or pinstripes, turning low- scraper windows for a glimpse of the so to ring. thebell for the 9:30 a.m. year-old granddaughter Rosie on his '
, er Manhattan into an enormous blue players who ended the longest World start of trading. Torte then waved and shoulders.
and white pep rally.
Series drought in Yankees' history.
gave the thumbs-up sign amid cheers
"I lived with the Yankees in the
Mayor
Rudolph
Giuliani
The players returned the·anention. and a flurry of baseballs and caps.
'70s, I died with them in the '80s,
announced J .S million people attend- Cigar-smoking Cecil Fielder, who
''The harder you work, the luckand finally I'm alive again," Torrez
ed the city's "biggest and grandest escaped the last-place Detroit Tigers ier you get," Torre said. " ... As far said. Nearby, a Santa Claus wearing
parade" ever, an unlikely estimate earlier this season, aimed his video- as I'm concerned, I'm the luckiest a Yankees batting helmet sported a
based more on cjvic pride thlll) real· camet;~ at the screaming masses.
guy in the world."
sign reading, "Christmas in Octoity.
The shower of ticker tape- actuAs when the Yankees clinched the ber!" .
Numbers aside, it \Vas a second ally shredded phone books, comput- tide on Saturday night, the crowd
Students at the Nativity of the
chance for fans. many shut out of e• printouts and toilet paper_ gave was pumped but relatively well- Blessed Virgin Mary School in
scarce World Series seats, to cele- way to a City Hall celebration, behaved. Police made four arrests: Queens received a special dispensa1brate with players who enjoyed a where each of the team members one for purse-snatching, three for tion for the day from their principal
·season of second chances - injured received a key to the city.
/ disorderly conduct. They also passed - Sister Mary Marguerite Torre,
pitchers Jimmy Key a~d David
Torre. and Wade Boggs told the out 166 summonses for illegal peel- who also is a sister of the Yankee
Cone, recovering addicls Darryl crowd they had never seen anything dling- mainly of Yankee souvenirs manager.
Strawberry and Dwight ·Gooden, like the parade marking the first Yan- -and ano)her six for alcohol-relatBest symbolizing this season of
second chances was the appearance
kees' tide since 1978..
ed offenses.
manager Joe Torre.
"No way I would work today,"
"That was the greatest sports
The throng was packed so deeply . of Gooden, the oft-rehabbed pitcher
shouted Pauline Frawley, a Queens . spectacle in history," said Boggs, · tin spots along the narrow parade who partied too hard to make the
nurse who played hooky. "I just who was given a mounted police route- which stretches for less than New York Mets' 1986 parade·. That
wanted to &lt;;:xperie.nce the excitement . officer's helmet by police commis- a mile -that some people couldn't fete drew an "official" crowd of 2.2
of it The buzz. It's absolutely fan- ' sioner'Howard Safit in tribute to the see any of tile floats. Vendor Eddie million .
t&amp;rtic ..,
.
.
'·The bash brought out a bizarre
...,.
third baseman's hQrse ride through Dee claimed he'd peddled more.
When the parade left Battery the outfield after the Yankees' vic to- than $7,000 worth of T-shirts and · mix of .Participants. The Village
Park shortly after 11:30 a.m. under

,.Yankees' hurlers stand among all-stars

I

son, and Cleveland outfielder Albert Minnesota beat out Roberto Alomar be announced Wednesday. The AP
Belle were the only players to repeat .of Baltimore, 76-75. In another close player of the year will be named on
from 1995.
race, Juan Gon~ez of Texas fin- Thursday.
Alex Rodriguez, who led the ished ahead of Ellis Burks of ColIn a record-breaking season for .
majors in hitting at .358 in his first orado 75-73 for the third outfield offense, power dominated the all-star
full season, won selection by the spot.
team.
·
i
widest margin. In voting by a nationThe American League dominat'l!i
Mark McGwire fll&amp;de it with 52 1
wide pa~el of 175 sportS writers and the voting, which was completed home runs, the 13th player in major ·
broadcasters, 151 chose the 21-year before the playoffs began. Piazza, league history to reach the SO-homer
Seattle shortstop.
San Diego third baseman Ken mark. The Oakland first baseman got
'"This whole year has . been a Caminiti and right-handed Starter 80 votes to 33 for Frank Thomas of
learning experience," Rodriguez said John Smoltz of Atlanta were the·only the Chicago White Sox.
this week. "There are still a lot of NL players selected.
Ken Griffey Jr. hit 49 homers for .
areas in which I think I can
Paul Molitor was chosen for the Seattle, Belle had 48 and Gonzalez
improve."
'
fourth time in I 0 seasons as the des- 47. They came in ahead of Burks, ·
The closest vote was at second ignated hitter.
who hit :344 with 40 honters, 128
base, where Chuck Knoblauch of
The AP manager of the year will · RB!s and scored a major league-high
142 runs.

·Mariners
get
Fassero
in
five-player
trade
.
By RONALD BLUM
will step in nicely alongside Randy by Nov. 14.
If the deal is ratified, those 12 will
NEW YORK (AP)-AfterMoi- Johnson," Mariners generalmanagsesAiou and Mel Rojas filed for free er Woody Woodward sai~, referring be treated like the rest of the free
agency, Montreal lost another top - to his.team 's ace- who also is a for- · agents; if it isn't, they'll be eligible
for salary arbitration this winter.
player when it dealt Jeff Fassero to me~. E~po. ·
..
.
Alou
and ~ojas, who are in that
It IS no secret that startmg pttchthe Seattle Mariners as part of a five·
group,
were among 29 players who
player trade.
·
· ·
ing is our No. I priority \his winter,"
· Seattle made the deal Tuesday Woodward said. "With JeffFassero; tiled Tuesday, increasing the threeafter agreeing to a $1.3.5 million, we have ~en a huge step in filling day total to 59.
Chicago White Sox pitcher Alex ·
three-year cmitract woth Fass~ro, that need.
.
Fernandez,
also among the service•
'15-Illast seascn with a 3.30 ERA.
Fassero, 33, has a 58-48 career
·The Mariners, who also received record and was NL pitcher of the time 12, filed Tuesday.
As part of the interim agreement,
•relieiter Alex Pacheco, sent Montre- . month in June and July. His·new deal
a1 pitchers Matt Wagner and Trey calls for an $800,000 signing bon~s, . the players subject to the restriction
,Moore and catcher Chris Widger.
$3.2 nulhon next year and $4.25 nul- on repeat free agency in li five-year
" We have . liked Falisero for a lion in each of the final two seasons. span also may file conditionally. If
number of years," Mariners nianagThere was no major free agent tbe labor deal is approved, the
or Lou Pinielia said. "He was one of news Tuesday, but lawyers for play- restriction would he eliminated. If
the top starters in the National · ers and owners extended the deadline the labor deal isn't approved, their
former teams can off~r them salary
- ~gue last year an~.will be a nice . for free agent filing by f~ur days to
on Nov. 15 or 16. Those
arbitration
)lddition to our staff.
Nov. 14, allowong teams ume to con- .
not
offered
arbitration would be able
Seattle, coming off its first divi- · sider whether they will ratify the proto
file
for
free
ag0ncy anyway.
sion title in 1995, finished second to posed collective bargaining agreeBaseball's ruling executive counj Texas in the AI.. West. The Mariners ment.
cil
was set to discuss the labor deal
l had a team ERA of 5.21, the worst
As part of the interim plan, the 12
during
a telephone conference call
players who need servic~ time from
1 in the club'.s history, and pitching
today,
and
management sources said
t coach Bobby Cuellar was fired and
the 1994-95 strike to be eligible for
replaced by Nardi Contreras.
, free agency can file conditio~ally in the council would consider whether
"Fassero has been the ace of the the interim, but can 'tsign with a new · to schedule an owners meeting for
l Expos' staffihe lasttwo seasons and _..team unless the labor deal is ratified next Monday or Wednesday.

The Joe Torre Little Lcaaue from
the manager's old Brooklyn neighborhood sent a contingent, although
it included a Met fan- 12-year-old
Anthony Hohmann. ·
"OK, $0 I'm a Mets fan," he said
glumly. "They're horrible, but I'm
used to it."

People, whose "YMCA" was a staple at Yankee games, were invited.
Politicians who couldn't find the
Bronx with a road map were suddenly decked out in Yankee blue. Joe
DiMaggio, the great "Yankee Clipper,' crUised uptown in a vintage
convertible.

By The Aa•aclated ~·
entered the game with a sparkling
The Florida Panthers are still 1.47 goals-against average. "We're
unbeaten, and the New York Rangers just thinking about playing consisare still struggling.
tently. We're giving ourselves a
John Vanbiesbrouck made 34 chance to win every game."
By·contrast, the Rangers are 4-6saves as the Panthers tied the
Rangers 1-1 Tuesday night to remain 3 in their first 13 games.
the NHL's only unbeaten team.
"It's been a lot of struggles this
Florida extended its non-losing year, and tonight was no different,"
streak to II (7~4), four short of the defenseman Brian Leetch said. "We
league record at the start of a season. . had opportunities, but the puck just
The Edmonton Oil~rs opened the -isn't going in."
1984-85 season with a 15-game
The visiting Panthers took a 1-0
unbeaten streak (12-0-3). :
lead on Dave Lowry's second-peri"We're not looking at the od goal, but the Rangefl tied it on
record," said Vanbiesbrouck, who Wayne Gretzky's power-play goal

.

.

.

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~o

W;uhington ......... 3 6 0
N.Y. Islanden ...... l 4 3

6 2:'i
S 18

29
22

6

2~

9 22

N.rtitalll Df.-Won
Hanford ............... 5 2 0 10 24
Ruffalo ................. s s o 10 30

19
32

Boston ................. 4 4 I
Ouawa ..................3 ) )
PUtsburJh ·····; ...... 2 8 0

27
28

Monrreal .............. 4 4 2

HO,LIDLJll
-COOKBOOK

10 42 · 41

9 30
9 27
4 23

4~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctntral Olvlllon

»: I. I lll. !if
Dallas................... 8 2 0 16 32

lulll

Chi&lt;OJO . .............6
~trou .................6
St. Louis .............. ~
Phoenh; ................4
TQfOnto ................4

4 2
4 I

·

!i4

22
29
17
32
27
34

14 3f

6 0
~ 1

l:t 27
10- 33
9 26

6 0

8 25

' PorifkDiriolon
' Calgary ................ 7 4 I I~
Colo111do .............. 7 4 I I~
Edmonro11 ............ 6 :'i 0 12
Los AnJeles......... .5 6 I II
Sanlose ............... 4 :'i. 3 · II
Vanc::Ouvcr ...........4 :'1 0
8
Anaheim .....:........ ! 8 2 4

Included i11. the cookbook will be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Callia County residents, at no charge.
The recipe• wiU b~ categorised a. folloula: .
• Appedsen/Bevemgea • Bread/Craw
• Caua/Pies &amp; Cookie• • Pork • Poultry
• Salam &amp; Vegetable,
· •Soup• find SandUJich~•

36
44
37
33

26
28
.14
&lt;tO
3~
40
24' 28
24 • 44

· · . TuNday 1s scores

Bo11oa ~. NeW Jersey 2
'
Florida 1, N.Y. Rqm ·1 (lie)
Chicaao 2. Tampa Bay 2 (tie)
Los Anaeles :'1 , Toroaro 2

Toalpt's pmes

N.Y. l1landen 111 Hartrord, 7 p.m.
IAis Anaeleslll Ottawa. 7;:t0 p.m. .
N.Y. R11naers at New Jersey, 1 ;30

p.m.-

'

'

Philadelphia at WuhinJton , 7:30

p.m. ,

.

Chicqo 11 Aorida. UO p.m.
Montrt:~al at Decroir, 7:-"0 p.m.
8uff11kl a1 Dallas, 7:30p.m.
St. l..mlir lilt Colorado. 9 p.m.
Phoenix. ru Ed momon, P:JO p.m.

HolUlay C®hbook
c/o.The Daily Senlillel
111 Corm Street, Po~roy,.
.
.. Oh 45769
Pt.a~e, ilu:lutk your MPM and .
plume t# 111ith recipe.
Deadline for aU recipea

Calp'y!ISanJo~e, I0: 30p .m .

Vancouver at Anaheim. IO:JD p.m.

Thuraday's games
Hanford at801f0ft, 7:-"0 p.m.
TorOilO Ill N.Y. lllandm. 7:JO p.m.
Philldelphla a1 Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.

Ohio H.S. sports

il October· 31~· 1996

EDUCAnON: Gradlate ofPomeray High Sd!ool

9

18
29
42

s

Ohio H.S. football

jdettcl20 courses OII .YNS aspects of law UfOICIIItll.

cOmputer ratiligs ·
COLUMBUS . Ohio (APJ - The

I

FAMILY BACKGROUND: lo111 nd reared In Meigs Co•fJ...Marrled 44 Ye.s-FOII'
M1rr ..T11 Gr.dt.lnn
Navy Coadtat YeleraL-Mtil"' Drew Webster. Post 39...AH11d Rocksprings United
MttWst c:Hrdi...Me•ber POIIII'oy lodgl164 F&amp;AM .d
Chapter~ 186

p...,,,

siltth weeki)' toorhaU comput~~r rank.iiiJI
u rrleucd by rhe Ohio Htah School Atbleric Auocillion, by divlsfon and reaioo,
, wilflavaqc bi.tcvcl poinll per pme (lop
(our llnrM in e.:f\ .-.,iOn ldYMCt! tO JtJio...J temilinall):
.

Dlollloal

,

RqJoo I: 1-Cit. 51. lpllla 30.0766&lt;
2- 1 + wood Sl. JWwll'd 21.2777. l·BII·
olld 2S.!OOO. 4·Hudtoo 14.0$5$. l ·
Stto•IIVII .. 23 .444 • . 6·Shaker Hu.

OES- Prtsiclldt Mefgs AtWttk loostft's...Estabhslltcl D.A.R.E. Pr•• alii 1·9
Ualt..Aiways !'filly to assist atyaae II sohil1 «•plall•s...Aiways wodllg for ...
.......... of ..... Couat:.s. .
.

t7.lm.

.

a.poo l : 1·1". 51 . ........ '2.9144.

2o1'1or 31.- - l·Umo St. li ,OSll. 4Konorlq l ' t l - 1Hllll3. l -1oL St.
l'r-li 21 .6466. 6- - Hh. W111M

Pald lor by candidate: Jim Soullby, 119 Unlon Ave., ~roy

ll .,qeo.

'

CASlliR 21.6666.

lll. !if !i4
18 J6
II ~:t
II 40

New Jersey ..........4 4 I

TilE POMEROY DAlLY SENTINEL
~ill be pub.IUhinH a
.
'

EXPERIENa: 3lYe«s In Law Eaflrclllltllf-8 as SlllriH

»: I. I

Phil~lphio. .........

Bnn, your recfP• into our oJlU:.e or eend it to:

. Htyt CG

Region 3: I·Mauillon W.ashinsron
J6 .9622. 2 •Gro~e City 33.4444 . 3Brun•wick lS.SOOO. 4-Up~r Arl_ina;ton
24.0000, !i·CM!on Mckinley 22.3800. 6Malllillon Jr.cbon 21 .7122.
·
Region 4: 1-Cin. Elder 3t.OI72.1 2·
Cin . Moeller 25.7244. ~-Cin_ Anderson
2.5.0000. 4-Cin . Sycamore 24.:U33 . .5Cin. Winton Woods 22. 1666. 6-LAN-

Allantk: Dirilion

Florido ............. ,...7 0 4
Tampa 9"-Y ....... ... 5 3 I
N.Y. Rru1gen .......4 6 3

·favorite Recipe

.

New Jersey power play - and
Boston scored three times in a span
of 2:07 for its first home victory of
the season.
.
Adam Oates had a goal and two
assists for the Bruins.
:The Devils played without top
goaltender Martin Brodeur, who
returned to New Jersey to be with his
wife when she gave ·binli ·to twin
boys. ..
Bluckhawks 2, L.ightning 2
Chicago defenseman Eric We inrich scored twice, including the
tying goal at 6:50 of the third period.

The visiting Blackhawks nearly Ferraro made it 4-2 with his second
won it in overtime, but Corey goal of the game with I:44 remainSchwab stopped Eri.c Daze's point- .ing. Perreault added an empty-netter
blank rebound attempt with 30 sec- wit11 15 seconds left for the Kings,
onds left.
who outshot the Leaf&lt; 19-9 in the
Dino Ciccarelli scored two goals . third period.
for Tampa Bay. Schwab made 38 ., Nick Kypreos and Mats Sundin
saves, while Chicago goalie Ed scored for Toronto, which cante out
Bel four stopped 33 shots.
flat after winning three in a row.
Kings S, Maple Leafs 2
Eddie Olczyk, Ray Ferraro and
Yanic Perreault scored in the last .
4: 18to lift Lo• Angeles to victqry .at
Toronto.
Olczyk snapped a .2-ltie with a
(Results u ot OcL 23)
power-play goal with 4:18left, and
League - Wednesday Night
Mixed
Ttam standlllp - Tony's Carryout
(42-30), Fruth Pharmacy (40,
32),
Meigs
County Golf Course (38around the league, then you re not
gomg to won too many games. I thmk 34), J's Service Center (36-36), Capwe have to work .on that and have .~ tain, D's (34-38) and F.O.E. 2171 (3438).
httle. balan~e w&lt;th our offense,
Lemoeux saod. .
.
(' ~~m hll!h seri.,-F.O.E. 2171
19
. "Our offense os not domg so well
Team high pme- F.O.E. 2171
eother, so we have to have that bal:
ance and need to work as a team. We (693)
Men
have thre~ days to get read~ for Frolndlvldl!81 blcb....-.-Chuck
day mght s g"",'e (at Washmgton). I
alw~~s thonk II s omportant to prac- Burton (579) and Rick Little (540)
lndlvidwll bl&amp;h pme - Burton ...
lice.
.. ,
(21
S) and Little (205) ·
, . T~e .J&gt;engums offens.e was the
Women
. NHL s best last seas?n woth three of
lndividwil
bJ&amp;h·series - Polly
• the top four scorers and four on the
Hysell
(
499)
and
Margaret Eynon
top 10. .
(193)
They scored 49 goals through 10
Individual hi1b pme - Eynon
games last ~ason but have 23 thos
,(198)
and Hysell (194)
year, Defensovely, only Anaheom os
worse woth44 goals to 43 allowed by
the Pen gums.

Mason Bowling
League results

I

Scoreboard

EASTERN CONFERENCE

MEIGS COUNTY
.SHERIFF

with 4:40 left in regulation .
Florida is 4-0-2 against New
York in their last six meetings dating
back to last season.
"The players believe in thej1lselves," Panthers coach Doug
MacLean said. "It's still ·just II
games into a long season, but it's
always good to get a good start."
Jn other NHL games, ·Boston
heat New Jersey S-2, Chicago tied
Tampa Bay 2-2, and Los. Angeles
defeated Toronto S-2.
Bruins S, Devils 2
Bill Ran ford stopped 46 shotsfour after losing his stick during a

HENDERSONVD..LE, N.C. (AP) teammate Johnny Vander Mcer's
.
·
,
- Ewell "The Whip" Blackwell, 1939 feat of pitching consecutive noCANONSBURG, Pa. (AP) and now we ~e at(76.6 percent).
· who carne within two outs of pitch- hitters: Eddie Stanky ended BlackWith five days off, the Pittsburgh
. Pottsburgh s power-play opportuing consecutive no-hitters for the well's bid with a broken-bat single Penguins have plenty of time to con- miles and goals are among the
:cincinnati Reds in 1947, has died at with one out in the ninth.
template why a potential Stanley NHL's lowest. Montreal leads the
Blackwell pitched in a league- Cup team is 2-8 - their worst start power-play category at29.S percent
:his home in Hendersonville. He was
..
· record six consecutive All-Star during the Mario Lemieux era. ·
with 13 goals in 44 chances.
74
' · ·The cause ·of the death ·was not games, beginning in 1946, his secThere are a number of ideas why . ThePenguins' penalty-killing. unit
:released Tuesday.
··
ond season in the majors. He was the they are playong so ~oorly.' One idea os.also on the bottom of the standmgs.
' A native of Fresno, Calif., the 6- • National League starter in 1947, IS that the 1996 trrunmg camp was Fove teams, led by Colorado at 93.4,
' foot-6-inch Blackwell was nick- when he led the league in victories useless because of late arrivals, allow no goals on more than 90 per:named "The Whip" in 1947 for his (22), complete games (23) a~d IRJuroes_and contract holdouts. That .cent of penaltoes. The Penguons are
.dazzling side-armed delivery. That strikeouts (196). He.earned the voc- excuse IS gettong old with the season 23rd at 76.6 percent, allowong II
on~;eighth over. .
.
power-pla_y_ goals in 47 chances by
:same se..Son, Blackwell seta Nation- tory iq the 1950 game. .
;al League record for right-banders
The New York Yankees, looking
I thmk the dofference between the op~sotoon . .
.
. when he won 16 consecutive games. for pennant insurance, bo\Jght "The now and last year IS ?u~ po::'er play
M~oo Lemoeu&lt;, the only Pen· During the streak, Blackwell · Whip" from the Reds in September and . our penalty . kolhng, coach guons player in the top 25 on scor&lt;:tossed a no-hitter against the Boston 1952. He didn't disappoint them. In Eddoe Johnston saod. "We are oper- mg thos scaso~ w1th 13_pomts on five
'Bnives on June 18. Jn his ne&lt;t out- five , appearances - including two · allng at aboutl5 percent on.our pow- goals and eoght assosts, saod the
:ing, on June 22, also against the starts_ Blackwell was l-0, work- er play, and last year we. were at40 def~nse ·is weak;
&gt;Braves, he carne close to duplicating
ing 16 innings and allowing just one percent. Our penalty k&lt;llmg was 85,
When you re last m defense
'· •
earned run.

NHL standings

JAMES •

22-JUSnN DELACRUZ.TBICB
5-8, 150-pound freahm•n

lr--~B-Ia_;_c_;_kw__;_e.:._l.....;_ld_i.:._es----=at--:7-4~:..1 Penguins seek answers to 2-8 start

ACKNOWLEDGES ,ANS- New York Yankeet manager Joe Torre'
(center)lcknowltd.g el 11111 1fblr being Introduced to the crowd at·
City Hallin New York City during a paracla honoring the World Seriel
champion• TuMday. Flllnldng him are New York City U.yor Rudolph
Giuliani (left) and New York Gov•rnor G.ot-ge Patald. (AP) ·

Hockey

RE·ELEU

31-AOAM SANDERS·WBICB
5-8, 145-pound sophomore

Panthers tie. Rangers 1~1 to retain· unbeaten status in NHL'

"I really don't know. It's possi" said acting commissioner Bud :

!

60-BILL SCHULTZ-G/DE
5-10, 190-pound aophomore

11·PAT AEikER·SEIS
5-11, 155-pound Junior

12-DANIEL OTTO-SEIDE
6-1, 155 pound Ienior

'

,

The Dally S1ntlnef • P8ge s

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~----------------~Meet~eEag~s

. Plge4
Wednetday, October 30, 1811

.

_By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK (AP) -John Wet·
~ leland and Andy Pettitte once again
are part of a winning team.
Wetteland and Pettine, who
helped pitch the New York Yankees
'to the World Series champipnsbip,
1\vere part of The Associated Press
major league all-star team '
announced Thesday.
Weneland, the World Series M¥1&gt;,
was chosen as the reliever for the
,combined team and Pettitte, the AL
win leader with 21, was picked~
left-handed starter.
1t'
, Los Angeles catcher Mike Piazza, .
,selected for the fourth straight sea-

;Nedneeday, October 30, 1818

Divlslo' II

1

.Region .5: I .Col. W11ttenun 28.0977.
2· fostoria ·25. 18H. 3-Bowlin~ Green
24.JSOS. 4-Tiffin Columbian 18.• 888 . .5Defiance 17 .7777 . 6-Dublin Sciolo
16.333l
Reg ion 6 : 1-Ch.ardon 26.8888. 2·
WodJwonh 26.1111 . 3-Solon 2S.9444. 4·
Willoughby South 21 .8333. 5-Gr.afron
M id~iew 20.0555. 6-Genev.a 18.7983.
Reg ion 7: 1-Akr on Springfield
25.8888, 2-Akron Buchle1 25.5700. J.
Uniontown L11ke 22.6666. 4-AIIianu
22.6111 S·Steubenville 22.4011 . 6-VIN·

CENT WARREN 18.85(;6.
Region &amp;: 1-Green~ille 23.388ll. 2·
Wapakoaera 23 .H33. 3-WCH Miumi
Tf'tltt 21 .7183. 4-Maso~~21 . 27n. .S-Day.
Paneno•I9.62CU. 6.Sidney 1&amp;.6666.

Division VI

Region 21: 1-Moglldore 20.2777. 2·
Howard E. Knox 16.6:111 . l-Dahon Local
1(!.0000. 4-Cadi z 11 .0000, !1- lndepen·
dence ID. \666. 6-N . Jackson Jackson·
Milton 8.4444.
Recion 22 : I· Norw11lk St . Pau l
19.05-'~ - 2·Monroeville 14 . 0:'i~.5 . :l·Pan·
dora-Gilboa 12. 1666. 4-Bnscom
Hopewt!ll-Loudon 10 .4444. 5-Findlay
Libetry-Benron 10.0000. 6-Gibsonburg
9.5000.
Reaion 23: 1-Crcsrline 17.7771. 2·
Milford Center Fairbonk1 17 .5555. ~­
Bri4geporl 17 .1666 . 4-Dola Hal'din
Nonhern 15. m7 . S-NEW MATMORAS
FRONTIER l:'i. l9:'i5. 6·DeGraff River·
side 14.8J3J.
. Region 24: 1-St. Henry 18.7212. 2Cin S~o~mmit Counrry Day 17 .J288 ..1Minsttt 16.6111 . 4-Coviogron 16.()()(K). ~ ­
Sidney Lehmllrl 13.1111 . 6-S. Charleston
Soutbeosreril 12.8888.

Division Ill

Baseball
A.meriam La1ut
BOSTON RED SOX : Signed LHP
Takay.a.su K1110. Sold dtc contracts of RHP ..
Mike C11mpbell 11nd INF Bill Selby to
Yokohnm11 of the Jt~pnnese Cenlrnl

Division IV

11.2222:

Dlvilloa V

Re.ion 1~ : 1-N. Lim• S. Ruae
22.7222. 1-A,voa 22. 1666. J-Orwell
Orand Valley 17.2221. 4-Sullfnn Black
River 1,~1.2777 . Ji · Bunon Berlnhire
, .•~6-Biooklyn 14.1666.
Relioft II: I•H11111er l'lllri&lt;k lle"1l'
22.l000. 2·Morion Plaa"" :W.IJJJ. J.

l're1010111 Si. Jooepb 10.2771. 4-EI""'"'

Woodmere 11.1111. S·Sht,.,..ood
- l l.- . 6-AidlbokiiS.IIII.
Reaiot 19: I ~Ama•da·Ciearcruk
21 .2222.1-COAL GROVE DAWSON·
BRY,O.Nl'l0.$000. J-Woodololol-.,
t:looond 17.- . ~WHEeLERSBURG
17.2SOIU-CIIOOKSVILU! 16.3333. 6""'r 111.111056.
ReJ]oa 20: 1-Ci•. Mariemo11

21,7lO. z.v.,oalll•• tU333. ) ·

SJttcet¥ille 17 .!Ill. 4-Col. Rudy

National Football Lcaaue
BALTIMORE RAVENS: Released
WR C~l~in William! and TE Harold
Bishop. Added CB Dorian Brew to the Derive roster.
NEW YORK JETS : Sia;ned LB
AutRy Beaven.
SAN FRANCISCO 49en : Waived
QB Gino ToNeua. Signed G Tim Hun·
shaw.'Signed LB Snm Manuel to the prnc·
tice squad.

Hockey
National Hockey Lerr1ue
BOSTON BRUINS: Recalled LW
Jeun- Yves Roy from Pro~idence of the
AHL. Sent LW 1}n1 Sweeney to Pro'li·
den~ .:.

MONTREAL CANADIENS: Trodcd
C Pimt Turteon, C Craig Conroy and D
Rory Fit l (IDtrick ro the St . Louis Bhm for
LW Shayne CorsUn. D Muffay Baron and
a li fth -round 1997 dr;~rt pick.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS: Recalled G
fyt.i\.:c IJunham hum Al bany or the A~~ · ·

Basketball
National Bukttball A.IIOC:lelion
ATLANTA HAWKS : Wni11ed F
. Zark.o Pa~polj .
·
·
DALLAS MAVERICKS : Waived F
Terry D11~i s, G Jimmy King and F Herb
Jones.
GOlDEN STATE WARRIORS :
W:Uved G Dmyl Patkcr.
NEW JERSE Y NETS: Wai vd F
Ooma BriJhl and C William Cunninp: -

Transactions

Reaion 9: 1- Mentor Luke Co1h .
28.890j:, l · Oimsted Falla 24.1666. J .
ConlllUd Lakeview 22.8888. 4-Cuy. F1lls
Walsh le~uit 22.0625. !li-B:~y Villaac Say
19.7177. 6-C~ . Benedicline 19.96lS.
Reaion 10: I·Sprinaficld Shawnee
23.4444. 2-Bt:llr:v~ 20.3333. 3-DelawDte
OlellUUIJY 17.7177. 4-Um.~~ Ba~h I ~ .6666.
-~ · Dc:lawOR Buckeye Valley I H444, 6·
St. Mary1 Memoriall4.8888.
Region II : 1-Winlenville Indian
Cra:k 2J.3JJJ . 2~You . Chancy 2U888.
3-Canfield 10.6111 . 4-THORNVIL.LE
SHERIDAN 2D..~&lt;Ul . !'i·Wooslcr Triway
20:JJ:tl. ~- Beloit Welt Branch 19.9444.
Region 12: 1-Col. DeSaJes 28.:'1000.
2-JACKSON 24.1777. 3-Ke!lerin&amp; Aller
21 .9288. 4-Hillsboro 20.88&amp;8. ~-Tren1on
Edsewood 20.8Hl6-M&lt;AR11iUR VINTON COUNTY 19.:1961 .
Reaioo 13: I·You. Mooney 28.1033.
2-Y'ou . Ursuline 18 .0177 . 3-Perry
17 ..5000. 4-Girard 15.11444'. ~ · Akron .
Manc:heuer 15.4444. · 6· Streetsboro
13.9444.
Reaion 14: 1-Tonroaan)' Oue1o
25.2m. 2-Callalia MarJ:wetra 10.2777.
l -Oillt H1rbqr 17 .5000. 4-Keruon
16.7222. 5·8dl~ille Clear FOrk 16.2222.
6 (tie), Gmoa Aru. Marion River Valley
13.7221.
. Retlon 1~ : 1-Newllfk Lickin&amp; Volley
24 .02$0. 2-Bellalre 21.4444. 3-LU·
CASVtLLE VALLEY 11.3011 . 4·
CHESAPEAKE IH400. l -PIKETON
15.))33. 6-IRONTON ROCK HILL
14.8711 , ,
1
Reaion 16: 1-0ermantown Valley
VIew 2J.5j.S5. 2-Williamaport Wettfall
18.0555. 3-Cin. Indian HIII11.12U 4Cin. Wyominl 17.2771 . .5 -Jamet~owa
Oreenv1ew IJ.81188. 6-Day. NonlllridJe

National Lealue
, CINCINNAn REDS: D«:lined ro et, ercise rheir 1997 option on RHP Mork.
Ponugut ·
.
HOUSTON ASTROS : Declined ro
e~en:isc: their 1997 option on RHP Dous
Drabek.
'
LOS ANGELES DODGERS: NIUOCd
Glenn Hoffman manager of Albuquerque
of the PCL, Clauck Ost~Xn rlit c hin~ coach
and Jon Debus ~oach
SA N FRANCISCO GIANTS : De.
dined ro txcrdlie rheir 1997 option on 28
Robby Thompson.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Named Tom
L.e Vasseur manager of Clint on of 1ht
M idwe~t League, Randy Whisler manager
of Peoria of the Arizona Rookie Lcaaue.
and Don Alc~Mder pitchin8 coDCh of Mobile of the Sou them League.

1'7.2777. 5-Biufflon 16.1666:6-Coldwatcr
16.6666.

I

h•m

ORLANDO MAGIC : W.ui ~e ll F
COtty Allen.
PHOEI'tiX SUN S: Wt~ivt~d F Mario
Bcnneu , C-F M:tn y Cunlon and C John
Coker.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS: Waived G
Elmer Bem1eU. F De~tler Bone y and F
Greg Kit ~ .
UTAH JAZZ: Wa i ~ed f ·C Srephen
Howard. G Rub en Nembh ard and C
Chill'lc:s·Cialt\00.

l.er&amp;gl&amp;C! .

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Namtd
L« MucPhnil ditec10r of scouring and
Jo&amp;h B)'Tnrs assi11nnt director of scouring.
SEATTLE MARINERS : Ac:qu'ited
LHP Jeff Fassero a,.d RHP Alu Pu~ he~o
from lhe Montreal E~pol for C Chti s
Widger, LHP Trey Moore IIOd Rttr Malt
Wasncr . Agreed 10 telll'lli with Fauero on
a three-year coalract.

VOTE

.JEFF
THORNTON
(;OMMISSIONER

Football

FINAL NOnFICATION OF NO PRACTICLE
. ALTERNAnVE TO WETLAND IMPACT ,
U.S. Departmenl of Agricunure/Rural Development (USDA/AD)
has received an application lor financial assistance from Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District (TPRSD). TPRSD has proposed to ·
use the assistance to construct a sanitary sewer system lor the
unincorporilted commt,tnity of Tuppers Plains.
USDA/AD has assessed the potential environmental impacts of .
the project and detennined the project will directly ,Impact .6 acre
ol wetland. Six hundred feel of B" gravity sewer line will cross a
wetland.
This wetland Impact will be mitigated by returning the line route
to its Original contour using excavated topsoil for backfilling the top
six Inches of the trench. In addition, no granular material will be
used to backfllllhe treneh.
Arrt written comments regarding the above should be provided
within fifteen days of this publication to: .
Linda K. Page, State Director
USDA/Rural Development
· Federal Building, Room 507
200 North High Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215-24n
USDA/AD wtll m.tte to further decisions regarding this project
dumg thll fifteen day period. F\aquests to receive a copy of, or to
revieW the USDA/AD environmental assessment upon which this
dalermlnaUon 18 based should be directed to:
John B. Rauch,
Rural Oe\i8Jopment Specialist

USDA/Rnl Development

348 Mullmgum Drive .
Marlelta, Ohio 457!iQ-1435

.

If el.ected commissioner, I pledge to
bring much needed jobs to Meigs
County throughout the United States
visiting different manufacturing
companies &amp; businesses to lure them
back to our area. We must market our
area &amp; sell it to the rest of the. U.S. Itcan be done! You can't set in the court
house or just go·to a weekly meeting,
you must be aggressive and fight hard.
for the people. As Mayor ·of Racine
Village I have been very successful as
your commissioner. I work hard for the ,
whole county and bring results to help
the people!
Paid for by candldae, Flllh St, Alclnl, 011

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In the NBA Western Conference,
1 d Po II

~laim

By -'OE MACINKA

"go free-agent shopping next summer. er Merion HS, Pa.), C Sean Rooks Anderson (free agent), G Isaiah RidDenver added ~ years of playoff ((ree agent, Hawks), F Jerome er (trade with Timberwolves). G
MilA 11111111 in the Westein Conferexperience by bringing in JacksOn. Kersey (free agent), G Rumeal Mitchell Butler (trade with Bullets),
-·
Pierce, Marciulionis · 8nd Johnson, Robin•oil (free agent), F'Ti'evor Wit- F Rasheed Wallace (trade with ButMIDWEST DIVlSION
which could help in first 100nd• if son (free agent), G Derek Fisher lets), FJason Sasser (draft. 41, Texas
Utllb Juz
Nuggets have low Seeding.
(draft. '24, Arkansas-Little Rock). Tech), C Jermaine O'Neal (draft, 17 •
LAST SeASON: 55-27, elim.iWEAKNESSES: Team hasn't LOST-F Magic Johnson (retired), C Eau Claire, S.C.), G Reggie Jordan
lilted 4-3 in conference finals by
. progressed since upsetting Seattle in Vlade Divac (traded to Hornets), F (free agent). LOST-G Rod Strickland
Seattle.
1994's first round, and Mutomho's George Lynch (traded to Grizzlies), (traded to Bullets), G James Robin. COACH: Jerry Sloan, 9th season
depanure forced it to embark on G Anthony Peeler (traded to Griz- son (iraded to Timberwolves), G
·with Jazz, 419-218. 12th season
rebuilding plan. Jackson won't make zlies), G Sedale Threatt (free agent), Rumeal Robinson (free agent), F
overall, 513-341.
up for Abdui-Rauf's 19.2 ppg, and F Fred Roberts (free agent).
Harvey Grant (traded to Bullets), F
3-ADAM CUMMINO&amp;-FBILB
CHANGES: ADDED-G Brooks
Johnson will be inadequate trying to
STRENGTHS: Stronger, snazzi- Buck Williams (free agent). F Bill
5-8, 165 .pound fnoehman
Thompson (trade with Magic). road.
replace Mutombo's 11.8 rpg and 4.49 er arid so much younger than at end Curley (traded to Timberwolves), C
LOST-C Feltoa 'Spencer (trade with
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS : blocks.
of last season, Lakers will no doubt Elmore Spencer (free agent). .
Magic), F David Bcnoit(free agent). Expect a slow start.
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS: be league's No. 2 draw (after Bulls).
STRENGTHS: Acquired Rider
., STRENGTHS: If Bulls made one
DaUas Mavericks
Whole team stands for anthem.
Top eight players can match up with (19.6 ppg) for two players (Curley
:~ng clear last icason, it's that expeLAST SEASON: 26-56, missed
Vanmuver Grizzlies
anybody's, and 60-win season is pos- and Robinson) who rode the bench
.nence counts mo~ than it used to. playoffs.
LAST SEASON: 15-67, missed sible. O' Ne~l (26.6 ppg, 11.0 rpg) last season. Have enough big men
.With Karl Malone (25.7 ppg, 9.8
COACH: Jim Cleamons, Ist sea- playoffs. , •
will get the. ball even more than he (Chris Dudley, Wallace, O'Neal) to
, ..,g), John Stockton (14.7 ppg, 11 .2 son.
·COACH: Brian Winters, 2nd sea- did in Orlando, and he should chat- spell Ardydas Sabonis (14.4 ppg, 8.1
:apg) andJeffHornacek (15.2 PP8· 47
CHANGES: ADDED-C Oliver son, 15-67.
lenge Michael Jordan for scoring rpg in 24 minutes) and keep him
percent three-point shooting) haCk, -Miller (free, agent, Raptors), C Eric
CHANGES: ADDED-F Shareef ·title.
·
healthy for the playoffs. Tradeable
j.Jtah has as valuable a Big 3 as any- Montross (trade with Celtics), F Abdur-Rahim (draft, 3, California),
WEAKNESSES: You can pay comll)odity in Clifford Robinson
one. Sloan, with longest tenure of Chris Gatling (free agent, Heat), F C Roy Rogers (draft, 22, Alabama), Shaq $120 million, but you can't (21.1 ppg). Potentially deep bench.
iny NBA coach, gets his players to Samaki Walker (draft, 9, Louisville), F Tim Breaux (trade with Rockets), give him the ball late in fourth quarWEAKNESSES: Downgraded at
pve every ouoc:e of effon. Utah was G Derek Harper (free agent, Knicks), F Pete Chilcuu (trade with Rockets), ter ofa close game. He'll get fouled. point guard by adding Anderson
~A's best shooting team last sea- G Jimmy King (trade with Raptors).
F George Lynch(trade with.Lakers), And Shaq sh0!48.7 percent from line (IS.2 ppg, 8.3 apg) and subtracting
lion.
LOST-F Popeye Jones (traded to G Anthony Peeler· (trade with Lak- last season. He's gotten worse every Strickland ( 18.7 ppg. 9.6 apg) to get
11-JASON WRJTESEL·WRICB
: WEAKNESSES: ., In odd•num- Raptors), F Cherokee Parks (traded ers), G Lee Mayberry (free agent, season. Johnson will be eligible to rid of player who feuded with Car5-11, 155-pound Junior
~ years, Jazz have horrible play- to Timberwolves). G Lucious Harris Bucks). LOST: G Byron Scoll (free return midway through season. You lesimo. Rider has his share of charoff luck. lbey reached the confer- (free agent), .G Scott Brooks (free
agent), G Gerald Wilkins (free know he's going to do it.
acter flaws, however, and some
ince finals in.l992, 1994 and 1996, agent), F Davi\1 Wood (free agent),
agent), G Eric Murdock (free agent),
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS: would say they're worse than Strick- OU's Wilson
llutsblmbled in the in-between years.. C Lorenzo Williams (free agent).
F Ashraf Amaya (free agent), p Will be fun to watch.
land's.
·
and BSU's Phelps
~toclaon's skills looked diminished
STRENGTHS: New ownership
Anthony Avent(~ agent), F Chris
Sacramento Kings
IN FIVE WORDS OR ,LESS:
get MAC honors
-,t the Olympics. Trade of Spencer and new coach have plenty of young
King (free agent).
LAST SEASON: 39-43, elimi- Could be another soap opera.
(S.6 ppg, 4.3 rpg) left lack of expe- talent with Jason Kidd (16.6 ppg, 9.7
STRENGtHS: At least it's not naled 3-1 by SuperSonics in ·first
Golden Slate Warrion
· TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) - Obio '
lienee in the middle that Greg apg, 6.8 rpg), Jimmy Jackson (19.6
samebunchthatpostedwo..Strecord round. • .
LAST SEASON: 36-46, missed University quarterback Kareem Wil- ·
0stenag (3.6 ppg, 3.1 rpg) and Greg ppg) and Jamal Mashburn (23.4
in NBA last season. At least seven
COACH: Garry St. Jean, fifth playoffs.
son and Ball State ·Jinehacker Jeff
l'loster (3.8 ppg, 2.4 rpg) will be ppg). Signing of Miller should ease
new players will be on Vancouver's season, 131-197.
COACH: Rick Adelman, ·2nd Phelps have been selected the Mid10 fill unless a trade is made. pressure on Montross, who .dido 't
opening-night roster. Most promising
CHANGES: ADDED-G Mah- season with Warriors 36-46. 8th sea- American Conference's players of
' IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS: develop with Celtics.
is 19-year-old Abdur-Rahim, who, moud Abdul-~auf (trade with son overall, 327-200.
·the week.
·
1
Clock ticking on Stockton, Malone.
WEAKNESSES: Youngsters ,left Cal after his freshman season. Nuggets), LOST-F Sarunas Marci- .
CHANGES: ADDED-G Mark
Wilson, a sophomore from Val',
Houtoa Rodlela
•'
don't always get along. especial)y
The perimeter shooting should ulionis (traded to Nuggets), F Byron · Price (free agent, Bullets), C Todd dosta, Ga., rushed for a school- I
: LAST SEASON: 48,34, elimi- Kidd and Jackson. Cleamons will
improve, Bryant Reeves (13.3 ppg, } Houston (free agent).
.
Fuller (draft, II, N.C. State), F Mar- record 282 yards on 19 carries anti ' .
tjjtled 4-0 by Seattle in second round. have to improve defense that was
7.4 rpg) should keep developing into
STRENGTHS: Having finally cus Mann (draft. 40. Mississippi Val- scored four touchdowns in a little .
bona fide NBA center, and Greg / had taste of playoffs for first time ley State). LOST-F Kevin Willis more than half of a 38-0 victory over
' COACH: Rudy Tomjanovich, 6th league's worst last season.
season, 224:-134.
FIVE WORDS OR LESS: CleaAnthony (14.0 ppg,, 6.9 apg) is . since moving from Kansas City, (free agent), F 1erome Kersey (free Bowling Green. Wilson 'set school '
: CHANGES: .ADDED-F Charies mons Will have positive effect.
decent point guard.
Kings should have desire to make.it agent), G Jon Barry (free agent). . records ·for rushing yards in a half .
Qarldey (trade ~th Suns), F Kevin
. Minnesota '{lmberwolves
WEAKNESSES: Grizzlies' aver- back. Mitch Richmond (23.1 ppg)
STRENGTHS: Joe Smith (15:3 (220) and a quaner ( 144) and also ' ·
:f!llis (free agent. Warriors), G Brent
LAST SEASON: 26-56, missed
age point differential was minus- 10, . will star bgain, and Brian Grant (l4.4 ppg. 8.7 rpg) came on strong as rook- tied the school mark .with his four •
l'lice (free agent, Bullets), G Eman- playoffs.
tied for worst in the league. Average ppg. 7.0 rpg) will quietly have a ie last season. Latrell Sprewell (18.9 touchdowns, all in the first half. His
tlal Davis (free agent), C Othel\a
COACH: Flip Saull&lt;\ers, 1st full
of 89.8 points per game was last in , good season. Billy Owensj (13.0 ppg, 4.2 apg) re-signed as a free touchdown runs Covered 40, frve , ~
~arrington (draft, 30, Georgetown), season with Wolves. 20-42 last sealeague - even woi'Se than Cleve- ppg, 6.6 rpg, 3.3 apg) comes off agent and Chris Mullin (13.3 ppg) one and 55 .yards. He also threw a •
G Randy Livingston (draft, 42, son.
land's.
·
bench.
has recovered from numerous ·19-yard iouchdown pass. Wilson's .'
~U), C Terrell Bell (draft •. SO,
CHANGES: ADDED-G Stephon
. FIVE WORDS OR LESS: Worst
WEAKNESSES: With Abdul- injuries. Should add a decent player rushing total was the most ever giv- .'
Georgia). LOST-G Sam · Cassell Marbury (draft, 4, Georgia Tech), G · team in the NBA.
Rauf in town. what becomes ofTyus once Rony Seikaly is traded.
en up by Bowling Green, which '
(jraded to Suns), G Kenny Smith James Robinson (trade with Trail
PACIFIC DIVISION
Edney(10.8ppg,6.1 apg),oneofthe
WEAKNESSES: Still in a hold- came into the game allowing just97 ·
(free agent), G Eldridge Recasner Blazers), F Bill Curley (trade with'
Seattle SuperSonlc:s
steals of. the 1995 draft? First-round ing pauern between rebuilding and yards per game rushing.
·
&lt;tree agent), F Roben Horry (traded Trail Blazers), F Cherokee Parks
LAST SEASON: 64-18, lost4-2 draft pick Stojakovic, 19-year-old sticking with the past. Small forward
Phelps, a junior from Chicago,
tQ,Suns), F Mark Bryant (traded to (trade with Mavericks), C Stojko
to Chicago in NBA .Finals.
who has played professionally since and center positions arc huge ques- recovered two fumbles at\d returned
Silns), F Chucky Brown (traded to Vrankovic (free agent), G Chris Carr
COACH: George Karl, 6th season age 15. has Greek League contract lion marks. Must play in San Jose,
one 33 yards for a touchdown in a
sUns), F Tim Breaux (traded to (free agent, Suns), G Shane .Heal
with Sonics, 266-104. lOth season this season. Depth is neglisible.
Calif.,. this season while Oakland · 24-17 victory over Cen\l'al Michidrizzties), F Pete Chilcutt (traded to . (free agent, Australia). LOST:,F lsa- overall, -385-280.
IN FIVE WORDS ·OR LESS: Coliseum Arena is refurtiished.
gan. He had 13 tackles including two
Qrizzlies). .
.
iah Rider (traded to Trail Blazers), C
CHANGE,S: ADDED-&lt;; Jim Rabid crowd helps in ·playoffs.
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS:
for
a ·loss and two sacks. He also ·"
; ST,RENGTHS: Awesome trio of .Andrew Lang (traded to Bucks), G . Mcilvaine (free agent, Bullets), G
Phoenix Suns
Still rebounding from rock bottom.
forced two fumbles, including one
SIIPCrstars in staning ' lineup with Spud Webb (free agent), G Darrick Greg Graham (trade wiJ)t Nets), G
LAST SEASON: 41-41; elimiLos Angeles Clippen
Barkley (23.2 ppg, 11.6 rpg), Clyde Manin (free agent), G Jerome Allen Craig · Ehlo (free agent), F Joseph nated 3-1 by Spurs in first round.
LAST SEASON: 29-Sl, missed on Central's final drive at the Ball
State 12 with 20 seconds remaining.
Qrexler (16,6 ppg, 7.8 rpg) and (free agent).
Blair (draft, 3S, Arizona), G Drew
COACH: Cotton Fitzsimmons, playoffs.
'
Hakeem Olajuwon (26.9 PJl8, 10.9- - STRENGTHS: In Kevin Garnett Barry (draft, 57, Georgia· Tech). third stint with Suns, 341-200. 21st
COACH: Bill Fitch, 3rd season
.;g).Mlrio E1ie (\1.\ PPB) is a valu- (10.4 ppg, 6.3 rpg) and Marbury, LOST-C Ervin Johnson (free agent), season overall, 832-767.
with Clippers, 46-118. 24th season --Sports briefs-- ..
able sixth ·man and lhe signing of Wolves have two youngsiers barely F Vincent Askew (traded to Nets), C
CHANGES: ADDED-G Sam overall, 891-995. ·
Baseball·
,,
\fillis (10.6 ppg, 8.5 rpg).could be removed from high school who are Frank Brickowski (free agent).
Cassell (trade with Rockets), F
CHANGES: ADDED-C LorenMEXICO CITY (AP) - Three
t!Je most undeq'alid . of Rockets' more mature and levelheaded than
STRENGTHS: Still Western Roben Horry (trade with Rockets), zen Wright(draf~ 7, Memphis State),
moves - if he returns 10 form he many people realize. Tom Gugliotta Conference's strongest team, one F Mark Bryant (trade with Rockets), G Darrick Manin, free agent, Tim- . Cuban baseball players~ including ,;
s4oWe&lt;J qom 1991-95. ·
(16.2 ppg; 8.8 rpg) returns after that will trap and press opponents F Chucky Brown (trade with Rock- ,berwolves). LOST-C Brian Williams · two highly regarded amateurs - •·
were suspended foi life by their i .
'· WEAKNESSES: Price(IO.Oppg, being stolen from Warriors.
relentlessly. Seallle has two' of ets), G Steve Nash (draft, 15. Santa (free agent); C · Keith tower (free
countrY's sports authority, and ·'·
5.4 apj),injuredduringmuchofpre- , WEAKNESSES: Rider :' trade NBA's best,in Gary Payton (19.3 Clara). LOST-F Charles Barkley .agent),
siason, will have large shoes ,to fill takes away 20 points per game that ppg, 7.5 apg. 2.9 spg) and Shawn (traded to Rockets), G Chris Carr
.STRENGTHS: Loy Vaught. The Cuban-American Juan Ignacio Hernandez l'!odar was arrested Aug. 12
~that Smith and Cassell are . · CurleyandRobinsondon'tfigureto temp (19.6 ppg, 11.4 rpg), along (free agent), G Terrence Rencher six-yearveteran(l6.2ppg,IO.l rpg)
at
the World Youth Baseball Cham~e. Aside from Elie, bench depth
make up. Most teams have decent
ith phalanx &lt;;&gt;f role players who (free agent).
has. improved nearly every season
pionship
on charges of trying to help
i~ woeful. The team's lax work
stoning five at very least, but not
tick to their roles. Ehlo (8.5 ppg, 37
STRENGTHS: Now that Barkley and is one of few redeeming factors
IWiits have drawn criticism from
Timberwolves.
percent thiee-point shooting) will won 't be around 10 try 10 carry team, for perpetually lousy franchise. Brent . players defect.
Banned were shonstop Gennan
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS: give the Sonics outside scoring threat some of his supporting cast will get Barry made splash last season at AUBF'dey. When someone needs t.o
take lhe final shot, wbo will it beShould be bad once agam.
( off bench thev lacked in Finals when more opponunities. Michael Finley Star slam dunk contest. Fitch should Mesa, pitcher Orlando "Duke" HerBArkley, Drexler or Olajuwon? And
Denver Nuggets
J Nate McMillan was injured.
( 15.0 ppg), Danny Manning ( 13.4 give him more playing time this sea- nandez and catcher Albeno Hernan1
dez, accused of putting at least one
hOw will the othertwo feel about it?
LAST SEASON: 35-47, missed
WEAKNESSES: Signing Mcll- ppg), Wayman Tisdale ( 10. 7), A.C. son.
__i IN FIVE W:ORDS OR Lt;5S: playoffs.
.
I vaine to $33 million contract upset Green (7.5 ppg) and John Williams
WEAKNESSES: The South Pole agent in contact with players he
Wlten healthy, a pott;ritial powerCOACH: Bernie l)ickerstaff, 3rdl\ team's salary structure, not to men- (7.3 ppg) can be expected 10 improve ofihe NBA, team.gets no respect and wanted lo lure from the .island.
I:
.
hOuse. ·
season wtth Nuggets, 55-59. 8th sea· . lion NBA's. It caused Shawn Kemp their scoring averages. Horry and
! San Antonio Spun
son overall. 257-267.
to hold out for first three weeks of Cassell wil1 want good· seasons as
•
1LAST SEASON: 59-23, elimiCHANGES: . ADDED-Q. Mark · training camp; and it will cause every they head in(o free agency.
nated 4-2 by Utah in second round.
Jackson (trade wtth Pacers), G Ricky h-foot-1 career backup to seek comWEAKNESSES: Oft-injured .
! COACH: Bob Hill, 3rd Season Pierce (trade with Pacers), GSllrunas ~ parable deal down the road. Sonics Kevin Johnson ·(l8:7 ppg, 9.2 apg)
••
with Spurs, 121-43. 7th season overMarciUhont.s (trade wtth Kmgs). C will miss toughness of Jo~nson and will stan season on injured list.JohnaQ. 254-197.
Ervin Johnson (free agent, Somes), Brickowski.
son and E!arkley were two high-ener' CHANGES: ADDED-G Vernon
C Efthimios Rentzias (draft, . 23,
IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS: gy players for last season's aging
Mix well (free agent, 76ers), F Greece), Jeff Mcinnis (draft, 37, Could've played better last June.
team. Suns aren't younger this sea• 8 hour day working for
Diominique Wilkins (free agent; Nonh Carolina). LOST: C Dikcmbe
Los Angeles Laken
son.
the people or Meigs County.
·'
Gfeece). LOST-G Doc Rivers Mutombo (free agent), F Reggte
LAST SEASON: 53-29, elimi- . IN FIVE WORDS OR LESS:
Williams (traded to Pacers), G Mah- nated 3-1 in first round by Rockets. Good - if they ·play defense.
(retired).
' STRENGTHS: Team that had moud A,bdul-Rauf (traded to Kings),
COACH: Del Harris, 3rd season,
. Portland Trail Blazon
• Work effedlvely within
LAST SEASON: 44-38, elimifrlnchise record 17-game winning · G 'Jalen Rose (traded to Pacers), F 101'63. 12th season overall, 433the budget- when money
streak returns virtually intact to try Don MacLean (free agent).
404.
nated 3-2 by Utah in 'first round.
for its third slraight division title.
STRENGTHS: Several players
. CHANGES:
ADDED-C
€0ACH: I'.J. Carlesimo, 2nd seamust be spent, spend It In
David Robinson (25.0 ppg. 12.2 are in last season of contracts, and Shaq~ille O'Neal (free.agent, Mag- . son, 44-38. .
·
the CO.!Inty when at all
rpg) again anchors the Spurs, wbo
Nuggets are settmg themselves up to ic), G Kobe Bryant (draft, 13, Low. CHANGES: ADDED-G Kenny

more.
Hitod in May to lead the Cltaf-

\ottc Horuets, Cowens spent lhe
summer prepping for his ""l" job,
but he figured that no ~ how
much work he did, he'd etid up foraetting something. In lhe first exhibition game, he found out he was
righl
1be glitch?
"Trying to figure out what to run
from out-of-bounds," he said, rolling
·his eyes. · ·
Cowens Chuckled as he recJtlled
· the sequence of events thai took
place in his mind after a timeout was
called. Would he have the right
combination of players on the floor?
Would the ·shooter be in position to
get the hall? Would his power forward be inbounding the ball or be
down low to set a pick and free up
the shooter?
·. "By lhe time I get through filtering all that," Itt said, agaiit tolling his
eyes, "I've run out of time."
So Cowens conquered the prOblem with the same verve he showed
in his I \-year playing career, when
he transformed himself from an
undersized center to a member of lhe
Hall of Fame.
..1 prattice at home,"' he said. "I
put a stopwatch on myself. I try to

•
By BETH !fARRIS
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Ten fingen. no rings.
.
~lie O'Neal. rapper, actor
aiMI IUUggling free throw shooter,
w1111110 do something about his lack
of 111 NB"' title, and where better to
wri&amp;,.:a , championship ~pt than
~ollywood?
..
··
O'Neal 'Ills a new home this season, new
and a new·future. The
Los AnJelea Lakers laVIShed $120
m.iUion onlhe 7-foot-1. 300-pound
center IIIII expect no less than anothet P!JIPle-ed-Jold championship
blnJti,r • the RIUl'll on their invcsl-

c-

tMIIl

•

O'Neal isn't bothered by expecc•o•, eapcx:ially since he uys bitt
OWD JUe "very, very high."
'
~Pieutft to me is not knowing
,.._ · your next meal is coming
from,"~ laid.."I don't believe in
PiCIIIIR· I'm 11m: to do a job."
· fk 'a got his work cut out for him.
·The l..lkm bltve been bounced out.

in the first round of the playo;&gt;ffs three NFL team in the nation's secondof the last live years and didn 'I even largest media market. lhe crosstown
qualify in 1994. Their last champi- .NB.A Clippers arc terri_!lle, Johnson
onship came in 1988. when Kareem has retired again, and Wayne GretAbdul-Jabbar was still the center, zky is ~one .
getting feeds from Magic Johnson.
"I think once 1 ,learn the plays,
learn these .guys' moves, I'm going
to be fine," O' Neal said. "It's differen~ it's a new Stan for me. It's like
I'm coming out of college, ')just got
drafted."'
·
Pan of O'Neal's enthusiasm
comes from getting to live in Los
Angeles, a place he could only visit
in the offseason.
0' Neal say• he goes out more in
Los Arigeles than he did in Orlando,
where people made a big deal when·
ever he showed up. Here, be's just
· another famous face in a city
jauuned with celebrities. ·
His profile among Soulhem California's athleteS. however, looms
large. 0 'Neal begins his Lakers
career at a time when there is no

-Gretzky owned the title of town
superstar until being traded 'by the
Kings eight months ago.
Lbs Angeles Dodgers manager
(See SHAQ on
7)

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"Shaq Ia a JUY who really wanll
to do weft. fk WIIIU to win, he likes '
10 pleuc,"
"I believe,

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BIG BEND FOODLAND
OPEN

SLBSORMORE

iet

.

• Judy Williams has the desire to work with others to
exchange ldeas ,aad the experience needed to excel as
Meigs County Conimlllloaer.
·

.

"I want to help him lead .the
leagqe in scoring, and I want him to.
help me lead. the league in usiats,''
said Van Exel, who pointed out thll
a chance to do more
O'Neal will
with the Lakers than just lhe dunking he did in Orlando. ·
· "This man's going to make us
even better," Jones said. 1"He's
already motivated. When the lights
come on, he's ready to go."
More than just )he tights of lhe
Fprum will beckon O'Neat He's
close to the studios, where he can
film commercials and movies and
cut more rap·albums if he so desires.
At the venerable Forum, O'Neal's.
anival has affected everythlns from
what people will 4rink to what the
ushers will wear. Because of
O'Neal's endorsemenl ties, concession standa will serve Pepsi. not
Coke.
1be ushen ditched their dated
blue-and-white ·checked western
wear for sn.uy sweaoer vests ·and
khaki slacks.
.
Now, all O'Neal has to do is win
a clwnpionlhip, which would
' undoubtedly cl!anae the prevliling
perception that he doesn't work

f ;l

• Work Impartially for all areas of the county, asking for
the concerns and Ideas of the villages, townships,
schools, businesses, and Individuals (teens to Jeliior
'
citizens)· through this •'spirit of cooperation~&gt; we can
mal'e Meigs County prosper!

(Continued from Page 6)
Tom Lasorda, another lonpme LA
fixture, retired three months ago following a bean attack.
Johnson is back to being petowner of the Lakers after brief stints
as head coach and comeback player.
So there's a Shaq-sized void to be
filled.
.
"Obviously, there's
lot .of
txcitementeverywhere we go. That's :
a good thing," Lakers coach Del
Harris said. "Having Magic with us
for three-eighths of a season last year
got our players into a framework to .
see how to operate with a megastar .
around.you."
As if to welcome O'Neal, who ·
spotts talloos on both arms. the notoriously straitlaced Harris got his
own tattoo during the summer - of
a basketball going throu&amp;h hoop.
. Despite. O'Neal's formidable
presence in the paint, Harris promises the Lakers won't be a one-dimensional team.
"Shaq will not be lhe No. I
option on every play,'' the coach
· said. "We have some very good .
options out.there- Eddie (Jones),
Cedric (Ceballos), Elden (Campbell)."
That's good news for Nick Van
Exel and Ceballos, the former cocaptains who are part of the smallest
returning group cif Lakers the club
has ever had.
In ordertomakeroom for O'Neal .
and his gigantic salary, the club
dumped Vlade Divac, · Sedale
Threatt, Anthony Miller, Anthony
Peeler and George Lynch. Only five
Lakers return from last season Van Exel. Ceballos, Jones, Campbell
and reserve Corie Blount
O'Neal even seems to have drawn
out Ceballos: a loner who angered
his teammales 111d management with
an u~thorized four-day vacation
·
last season.
"He's a really loving guy, understanding," said Ceballos, who shares
O'Neal interest .in making records .
"Off-court relations · are preuy
tight."
Van Exel sees O'Neal as a man of
many options, whelher it's scoring,
rebounding ,or getting a fast break

right penon." Shinn said "fie's lhe games in 1994-95 and seemed on lhe finished 41-41 IIIII hid a lq&gt;lltation
verge of joinina lhe NBA'a upper for fadina in lhe fotllth quarter. 1be
riaht fit for our orpaizalion."
6-1, 2»-powtd Mason hu sone as
After his retirement, Cowens echelon.
apea~a decade awry from the league
Gone from that team are corner- far as having "Hard Ball,"lhe Horbefore jolninJ San Antonio as 111 stones Alonzo Mourning and Larry nets' theme for the upc::oaq aeason,
wistant two seasons ago.
Johnson. They've been replaced by shaved into the back of his scalp. ·
"I'm a little surpriaed I got this Vlade Divac, Matt Geiger, Anthony
"lbete's a utwlimoua foeling in
job. I know I'm lucky 10 get this Mason and Glen Rice.
this locker room thai thil new system
opportunity,'' said Cowens, 48. "A
.. He's a no--nonsense guy," San · can· work," said Rice, who led lhe
lol of assistant coaches go for along Antonio coach Bob Hill said of his Hornets Jut year with 21.6 points a :
time and they don't get a job." ·
former assistant. "Dave will do same. "We're commilled 10 It, and
A lot of aasistants don't have what's needed. If guys challenge him when you're commilled to 110~- ,
Cowens' credentials. Now the trick on promptness or professionalism, thing, it's that much -ier for it to
will become whether he can pass his · he'll take care of it. But he'll also work."
defensive expenise on to the Hor- treat people well."
Cowens likes lhe commitment
nets, who bear almost no resemCowens promises a .. nastier" he's seen so far from his new team.'
blance to the team that won SO team than last year's Hornel$, wbo

Monday.· Saturday 8 am·· 110 p111
Sunday
8
a111
to
1
0
p111
..

a

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• Search for new jobs and
opportunities using available resources within Meigs
County and the State of Ohio.

r

a

.

Lakers .want Shaq ~o ·lead them·to title

Ill kiiiCia of diffmnt pouibilitia. I
draw 'em up llld thea I write •em
down 10 I won't fiii'JCL
"My lheory ia thlt if yoli do it
enoup. eventually it'D beeome potrt
of you."
It's that kind of thinking that
attntcted Hornets owner Oeorse
Shinn to Cowens, wbo 11 6-foot-9
estallliahed a reputation u a fiery
competitar who thrived on relentleas,
aggressive defense while playing
against bigger centers on a lliahdy
basis. 1be 1971 NBA Rookie of the
Year, Cowens went on to a pair of
league titles with the Collies and was

a seven-time NBA AII-Sc.r before
retiring in 1983.
Shinn hid a team that miued the
playoffa lut MUOn ud fiaio!w! at
or near the boaom ol many of the
. league's defe111ive cetegories. He
wanted to instill a new, touJh work
ethic.
Allan Bristow wu forced out, and
Shinn hired Cowens, whose only
experience u a.head coach in the
NBA was u a player-coach with
Boston in the \978-79 season after
a.2-12 start led to lhe firing ofSall:h
Sanders. Under Cowens, lhe Celiics
went27-4\.
"! am convinced we hired the

Shaq••.

;ked

possible~

Come liP with difforent .-.rial for

CHAJU.Ornl, N.C. (AP) - It
-the ki..S of Pioblem thlt aaid I
toe about Dave Cowenl'ld~
to becomi111 I held COICh in the
NBA. How he hutdled it aaid even

got career-best season from Sean
Elliott (20.0 ppg), Avery Johnson
(13.1 ppg, 9.6 apg) and Vinny Del
Negro (14.S ppg, 4-5 apg) last season. Wilkins, signed early in !raining.
camp, will make up for loss of
injured Chuck Person. Bench is
deep.
WEAKNESSFS: Everybody
likes to dismiss Spurs as softies. and
~an Antonio did little to dispel that
notion in last season's playoffs. Of
their lirsr 3S games, 23 are on the

Here iUMCopu•laled look at lhe

•

Hornet$ plan to play 'Hard Ball' _with new coach· at helm

.Tornadoes

titles

The o.lly Sanllnel• Page 7 ·

Pomeroy •lllddltsl ort, Ohio

Meet the

•

Aging Jazz and Sonics get nod to
IJ n.•·u :•

Wedne8day, October 30,19911

Mlddlepdrt, Ohio

,.

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�•
•

1• '
••

Wtdn11day, Oclob1r 30,

Pomeroy • Mlddlep ort, Ohio

Get some·nifty·ideas.
from reader feedback·

Public Notlc.

WednudiY, October 30,1911

Maternal _
instincts don't cof)le natural for young bride

..

become preiJWlt acci-

ev«y day? I don't want to brina a

I love my )ife the way it is, and I
don't want children to mess it up.
WileD I tell people that, they look at
me like I'm some kind of.lieak.
·Why is dlere so much prejudice
asainst couples who decide to
remain childless? I have plenty of
reasons for not wantiaf childrca.
Por starters, they're ~ncredibly
expensive. Secondly, pll'eftthood is
a lifetime responsibility. ·If your son
gets into trouble or your daughter
&amp;ell pregnaot, who picq up die tab,
emotionally and financially? And
what about the vio!ence, drugs, peer
pressure and worsening school con·
ditions that kids have to deal with

child into this kind of wcrld.
Don't get me wrong, Ann. I like
kids. 1 just don'! wllllt aay of my
own. I love the fn&gt;edom l have
because there U'e no kids in die picture. My hushand and I will never
walk die floor at night waiting for
teen:agers to come hqme, wonder·
ing if they're in trouble or dead in a
ditch somewhere.
People shouldn't look down on
those of us who have chosen not to
have children, yeti feel that they do.
Please prin1 this letter and swe your
views. -- Childless and Happy 'in Pa.
Dear Pa.: I cannot imagine a
decision that is more personal than
whether or not to have children.

11Un: I don't

Ann
Landers

for mounted bookends. Special
ite1111 U"e priced-according to size,
1ypc and desired mountiaa. Orden
take from six to eight weeks to

process.

nie O.Uy sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1995, Ut Allldel
'n.. .,...., .... 0.
llllli'IS,.tM:..

•

By ANN LANDERS
Deat Ann Landers: I am 21 years
old, have been married a y- and
have no desire to have children.
Many people have 5aid to me,
"You're too youns to kaow what
you want Later in life, you will wish
you had children." 'This makes me
mad bec•use I DO kaow whaFI
want In fact, bolll my husband and I
already have laken measures to be

Write or call "Footaotes in
11me" and dley'll send you a c.Woa
sheet. order form and l!lailina baa.
with postap to the fiiCIDiy prepaid.

dcmally.

Why m you so defensive about it?
l'lreathood is a major commianent.
While die joys are enormous, so are
the risks.' It seems to me, however,
that 21 is awfully young lo have
"taken measures" to ensure that you
don't get pregnant.
1
.
For your sake, I hope those
"measures" can be reversed should
you change your mind. In 10 years,
you will not be the same person you
· are today. Bet on it.
.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 45·
ycor-old woman of abovc-averoge
intelligence, wilh no major problems
- except one, which I am ashamed
to admit. I have absolutely zero
sense of direction.
Am I the only one afflicted this

way? Although it seems to be an llllolber planet Am I a hopeless
insignificant problem. it has cost me case, Ann? What Cllll you suggest?dearly. I have llad lo pass up job pro- - Royal Oak, Mich.
Dear Royal Oak: You aren 'I an
motions because they entailed driving to other dties or communities. ignoramus. dear. You '41'~ born wilh
I actually must be proarammed 10 go a glitch in die cranial wmng.
Make .dry runs whenever possito the mall, which is just ·S miles
away. It is extremely embarrassing ble. and take another penon wllh
to be invited somewhere and have to you if you can. I sympathize witJ!
decline because I know I would get you. My sense of direction ion 't tetlost on the way, or if.[ did make it, I rific. either. I can get lOlii in a ph~
would never find my way back. I booth.
::
should tell you that maps, compassSend queotloas to Ann~
es and written directions have
Creawn
Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceinoftentimes been of no help. I still get
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Loo Alia IIi,
lost.
.
::
When I try to explain this prob- Calif. 90045
lem to normal people who never get
•••
lost. they ldok at me like I'm from ,

..

:·

T~adition still 'dictates nan1e choice, study· shows~~

WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF COMMU·
NITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR needed . to
teach community •nd personal akllla to
adulta with' learning llmitltione In their
own home In Gallla and Meige Countl111
HOURS: AI achaduledlae na~dad; mult ba
eble to work eveninge and weekende;
muet ba able to etey , overnighte• .High
Khool dagrea; valid drlvar'1 llcanea, thraa
·yura llcanlad driving experience, good
driving racord and adequate automobile
lneurance coverage required. Salary:
$5.251yr. to ltart. Training provided. Sand
raeume to: P.O. Box 804, Jackeon,. OH
45840; ATTN: Cecilia, Deadline for
appllclnte: 11/81118. Equal OpportunitY,
Employer.

Tile Ccnm'IIIIJY c.lelldar Is
pubiJIJied M a free Hrvke to IIODproftt IJ'CIIlps willlhla to ·-ace
•• t*'111 ud opedal ewaa. Tile
calt aer 1s aot ·drrlpi'l to '""'·
.ote aleo or l'ulld ra1sen fll.uy
a,pe. lleml ire priated • lpKe
penalta ............. be par811teed
to ruaa·opeoifl( nnmber fll day~.

By.BETSY RUBINER '
•
'
·
lions, one-quarter of the women kept their birth ~umome as a middle nome.
The Des Moine• R~~gllllr
•
·
Schcuble and Johnson also studied a group of women parti~ularly likely
Rememher all the fuss over the·"Rodl)am" in Hillary Rodham Clinton's not to change their names because tJiey are well-educated and have demand·
name?
·
ingjobs. The study, ofNebraslai college faculty ~d staff, found that women
Something as simple as what last name women use when they mlll'l)' is who make unconventional last name choices were more likely to have lived
no longer very simple.
.
.
with their spouse before marriage, to have married a.t an older age, to he
U!wle Schcuble and David Johnson, two sociology professon in Nebras- from the Northeast rather than the North Central region, to have more years
ka. first got interested in doing research on married women's choice of sur- of education and to hold more liherol attirudcs about gender roles.
name when they faced the issue. When Scheublc married Johnson. she was
About 20 percent of thc;se women said they used a "situational" approach
27 and had a career. She kept her birth name.
""'using their birth name professionally and their husband's surname around
"Why islhis issue important? Because it has to .do with women's identi- family and friends. .
·
ties," says ,Scheuble, who is 40. She.asks why women have to change their
The researchers found no evidence tllat women who keep their birth
· names. "ll's traditional and tradition can be sexist. Tradition docs' not make name are less committed to the marriage- although they found 1hat this is
it righ,.. . . This is not a culrural expectation for men."
· a somewhat comm?l' assumption.
.
_
· . .
. She argues !hat there is so much f~ly disruption now- with a high
· A stndy of adult Midwesterners' attitudes found thai Demoetats we~

:
,:
.:
.;

divorce
p~n~. blended householdsthat one family often has · - - - -·- - - - - - - - ··•· -----------------------~-'!""'--------'!"'"gobs ofrate,
lastsingle
names.".
·
To gauge practices and attitudes, Scheuble and Johnson did severo! studies during the last five.years. A srudy of unmarried Nebraska college women ··
DRUG
found that 9 out of 10. planned to take the last name of their husband if they.
'
many.
.
But these female srudcnts were somewhat accepting ofwdmen who don't ·
take dleir husband's surname and of men who do take their wive's surname.
And they were more accepting than thett male counterparts or other segments of die population.
·
A srudy of two different generations of married women' showed only a 'tiny 'increase ih the percentage of married women making a "nontraditional
marital name choice" - from 1.4 percent to 4.6 percent. In both genera-

fooo &amp;.

What's in a name?

TU1i'SDAY
PORI'LAND - Lcblaon Township nustee~. 1 p.m Tuesday at the
township buildina.

. riruRSDAY
POMEROY -- Pm:eptot Beta .
" Beta~:BetaSigmii'IIi solar-··
ity, 7 p.m. Thursday.. Grace Bpisco- ·
pal puish house. Members to wear
Halloween shirt.
'· ,... " ·

~

Meics County
regular meeting, at
die Hemlock Graage hall, 7:30 p.m.

CARPENTER
Columbia .
Township Board of Thlstces, Monday. 7 p.m. at die fnbouse.
POMEROY -- DAY meetinJ,
Monday, 7 p.m. at die ball. Also
. Auxiliary.
·

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

"

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a

POMEROY

~mi&gt;na Graace.

MONDAY

.

ho111e

FRIDAY

SATUIIDAY
HARRISONVILLE -- . Har- '
. risonville Lodce·411: F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ~~ the ICI11Pie.
Refreshments. Election of officers. ·

lhunday, Oclolter 31 ·thru Saturday, Nove•ber 2 ·

.
,'

·,.

Kenmore" ·

399"

:...= ...

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.30111. (lal range

wtlh- bWne&lt;l.

OWHl w:udOw. 75111
30-ln.••• ch1c range,

193261.---Kenmore"

599"

:...~~ua:iboc6

s-.•so
I'·'

18.0 CU. l""lgeialor
wllh oeljllllallle-

proofgklu ......
gallon doOr lloroge
and meal dro-.

_.... _
AJwo lablelop stereo wtlh 3-dlsc CD chongeo,

-·

dual a u l a - CCIIMIIe. graphic~·

110411 (11111. INSJ1-V3000)

•

Public Notice

199"=.

230ilc. rnechanl¢'alooiMI-ollllle 1oo11 or
· a.. 2Q3.pc. Ml plua 27 oddltloo ICIIIOoll at no

....... of the truck 11

ESfl:tpl::a~

::,o..to ei.

A.M. 11 1111 towneillp

!nl"1Nik '*
. tu• wSiil no wamnhe or

C:ol18c1011 ltM:l. Yacloble '
JRied JCCOH lOW Will heavy-

or .

............. -

duly CCIII-ilon boll. 231116

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Tuacllliolp

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Ca ;•
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Ctulll
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01121-

The name you know
is close to honw•••

Gllllpolta luna Owned a Opl?al»d
By Babby. Vlln~lllllqncy,
430 IIIYW lltclge Plaza,.._,., N.
IIIII'*' N

.

a1unc11r 1N

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,.....,. (e14) 441-1141

(Ht . . . . tttlll; I1C

-

Diet Pepsi or

·Pepsi COla

Boneless;.Skinless
Fresh · Breast

14PI~1Jor.Qn

Clanar_.. .
$ A W l , - Of/ IMCf

Ut.,.

MS9RtEO VARETIB'

Jtldc.O ,.,.

., .., . Clb

, . . , _ ._ _ _ flldl

DllftutL__ 1kt.

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RltltOG'ItM
iUiOQW

_ _ •_

•

,,

In an effort to provide our.l'!'aderihip with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen·
tjnel will not accept weddinp after
, 60 dayl from die dB of the OWII~
All club meetlnis and other news
~Ia in !he ooc:iety section must

-~"J
.

f•
......

'

•

'-$

,'·"A

II,

.

;•!

1,·

\

I

be submitted within 30 day1
.,
occurrence.
All birthdays must be ~bmiUeil
within 42 !lays of the oc;cunwce: ·
All 1F111eria1 aubmitted for publi-•
cation is subject to editin&amp;.

,
8

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_...___News policy--.,-. &lt; --..,..-

,.,.,.._ el Cileeillr•

1nlli: jlflur tu

WAIRSl FAMlY PACJC (2-UIS. ell MOREL

. The Middleport Child Con~rvation Leacue. bold. its annual Ha!lowecn
party for members, children ·and grandchildren at the Rock SprinJS United
Methodist Olurch.
·
. ·
Games included Halloween bingo, bobbing for apples, and a fish pond .
Pizza. chips and pop w~re served. and decorated cans filled with candy were
"given to tl¥ children attending. Jason Morris won the door prize, .
.
Attcnciin&amp; were Nancy, Angie, 1ason and tyson Morris, Janet Duft'y anC!
Breanna 'Thy lor; Kathy lflld Mepn Dyer, Patti 1Jol10, Justl11 and Casi-Jonlon
Arnold; Clarice Kitchen and Scptt and Kaylec Kennedy&gt; Helea, ~!ll'imie.
Clayton and Joey Blackston; Kitty and Ginger Darst; Linda Btoderic:k; and
Maty, l!.obert and Peggy Harris.
,

_,..._
.179"

hiP 'I 111 Knor (Lanlrd
at 1.. Kreer C11t1tary .
11
d Ill
"AI

CSoeeillre

•

CCL observes Halloween

.. ,•n*-·on

exprniF!!I

By BETSY RUBINER
yes, Ginger Rogers -was easy.
The Dn Moinn Regilter
~· 1 was traditional," said KromWhen Patricia Fox married in rie, a c'ommunity college srudcnt
1966, she took her husband's sur· and retail store worker with three
name and became'Patricia McCol· children · who married six years
!om. But when she married Lew . ago. "And I was more than happy
Vierling in 1991. times had to get rid of my last name. All my
changed. She didn't take her sec- life I was teased. I was asked if I
ond husband's surname- at least ·could dance; where Fred was."
professionally.
.
·. · · Married · women who retain
"T)ie first (decision) had to do their birth • nam~: also a..e·,-mote "
with the culrure al the time - it likel~ to . be from the Noi1beast.
w&amp;S not common at all to main1ain older, mlll'l)'ing for the first' time
die birth name," says McCollom, and more liberal about gender
51, of Johnston, ·Iowa. "By the roles, the sociologists found.
time we married in 1991, we real-- - Same women, like Patricia
ly had to sit down and decide how McCollom, alternate last names
to do this."
depending on the situation. Others
She decided to remain Patricia use their birth name all the time.
McCollom in her professional life Or they combine .the two last
as an authori1y on injuries. "While names - .with or without a
I'm very married, I'm not very hyphen.
marketable by the olher name,"
"It gives me the best of my par· ,
she. explllins: "It's like Kleene~ ents'. aarn~ and . tY1Y husband's
trying to change its name."
name," says Inga . BumbaryBut when she goes to her hus- Langsto·n. 39, a Des Moines attarband's longtime church, her nome ney married 'to Republican state
badge says "Patricia Vierling." senate candidate Ron Langston. "I
She says this helps people rccog· just kind of live with the fact that
nize her linlr to her husband.
it's· a bit long and complicated and
Nebraska sociologists Laurie . people don't know · how 10 spell
Scheuble and David Johnson pre· it."
diet this "situational use" of a sur·
Ron Langston said he's not
name by. married women will bot~ered by her name choice.
become more common, especially ''I'm a spouse. I just do what I'm
when ch'ildren enter the picture. told," he says with what sounded
Scheuble and Johnson, who have like a laugh. "I don't care what
spent five years studying wornen,'s she calls herself, as long as she
choice of surname · once they ·· loves me."
·
mlll'l)', say more women are going
But using &lt;lifferent names can
to college, pursuing careers, living · cause confusion. Women- nol to
with a man before marriage and mention spouses who usc different
mlll'l)'ing later.
surnames -. tend to forget which
"All these factors increase the nome was used to reserve a restaulikelihood that women will keep · rant table ,or to drop 'off phodleir birth name." says Scheuble, a tographs to be developed. Patricia
professor at Doane College in McCollom rep6ns once having to
Crete, Neb. Johnson, her husband, produce a marriage license to
is a professor at UniveDity of prove she was a member''- along
Nebraska,
with her husband, who ~ a dif- ·
But the majority of women still Jerenl lnst name - of a private
lake - .or plan to . take - their !I!IJ'Qrt hospitality lounge:.
husbirids' names; the sociologists'
Then there's the issue of die
research shows. ·
·
telephone directory. To have a secFor ' Ginger Kromrie, 31,.' of ond name listed for the same J
Dexter, Iowa, the deCision .to·give phone number costs 15 cents a
up.her birth name of "Rogen" mondi.

exira chatQel 3 quick~ Ill 0.. JOIChlll.

..... .. ptiMic MUUDn 1M
u; •• 1,1111,IIIUIUy,
•10100

rr-

more accepting of nontraditional last name choices than were Republicans.
So were Protestants, less religious pcopl1&gt; and women who we~ more cdi(cated, higher income and younger. People were .less tolerant cf 1he coup'!' •
had children.
.
.
.
Scheuble lalked to women who reported that once the1r first chil~ went ill
kindergarten, they never used !heir 'birth name as a surname agam. Sollt,!'·
divorced women kept their ex-spouse's nam" just so they would still ha"!'
the S!UIUC lust name as their children.
•
Some women reported pressure from their husband's family if they d~4·
n't take his name. ·
.
'
.
·:
The sociologists also found some ,regional differc~s, M1dwcstl!m
women are less likely to retain their surnames after marnage. ·In the South.
it's more common for women to use their birth name as a middle name when
they malTy. However, unlike Hillary Rodham Clinton, they don't usually usc
both names in everyday life.

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PonleroY • Middleport, Ohio

...............
·'\*' •'=-Ill

••••

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Keep safety in mind when trick or treating

•

.......,.......,
Avoid costumes Ollde out of flimsy mllerials and outfits with big, beggy
lime wid! ....._ __ , -'-liu _..._ _. __ from sleeves or billowilig stirts. TheJe are more likely 10 come in coniiCt with an
..__
..
......-..,.. a...... ~ a-..
expollld fluDe or candle dllltigbt« fitting costumes. •
• door Irick~. But ~ly it il also a lime for
Do not allow cbildren to C""" knives, swords or other props unteu they
.. • • td rillt ...,be_, .
-·J
Buy or make Halloween c011umes tbal are lipt or bright enouah to make
• • J Mllda to I ""CO&amp;Cei"""'ma • &lt;U~mwnities observe tric:lt or treat ·- them more visible 10 motorisu at dusk.
'It • «111 lli&amp;bt iu Q sta, .-1 lbunday lliJbt iu Middleport. Pomeroy,
Costumes should be short enough to prevent children from tripping and
Syrt ~ It,
111111 Raciee Ill 6 to 7 p.m. ~ commllllity. will sound falling. Children should always wear well-fitting, sturdy shoes.
... lilw to bepund ead lite olnrnMCe. ·
·
Triek-''l'relldac SefetJ .
New- Toms. R.N., of the Meigs Coullty H..lth Department and the
Give trick-or-trealm flashli·••·, not only to see better, but also to be seen
. . Kids eo.tition, bu IIOIM ti.-,... for ""'¥'...
~-'n•ldds ale.
.,~
more clearly. · .
OWI--Iilod COibnnra, dart coaditions ....S arelea motorists combine 10
Decorate or trim all cost:um&lt;s willi reflective rape. Place reflective strips
~ ~ ni~ a cllaprous lime of year and-~ \8ke the fun out of on the sleeves and/or ~t bag.
ll'lelt-or-~, said ~· who encourap1 ~~~ to protoct their chitWarn children not to run out from between parked cars or cut IICrOSS
dnm from IDJ_IIIY by takiut mponant safety precautioas.
lawns and yards where tripping dangers may be present.
~he capocially waiMid ~ ~t the dangers of candy tampering.
Parents should caution ~ children to use the side walk or walk 10wlrd
Ask your cbildnlll to briua thesr treats home and not 10 eat them before oncomingllaffic. Teach childn:n to walk, n01 run, from house 10 bouse.
they aet bome, • •·ur rled the·health nurse. Then always inspect candy 10 . · Children should only cross streC!s at the corners and stop, look left right.
IIISiue 11:-1 it llfely IOa1ed and ·has not been tampered with. Inspect
then left again before crossiug.
unwnppec! treaD and duow away those that appear to be stale or spoiled,
Young children should be accompanied by their parents or other n:sponand be especi•lly caeful with liuit.
,
sible adults keeping the .children in sipl at Ill limes.
Tones wamed that many dangers face childlen on beggar's night Most
Allow trick-or-treating only in familiar neighbosltoods and lions a
.Hallow- iqjvljea iuvolve f.U. caused by environmental hazards or caused p(eestablished route. Designate a specifai lime for childRn to return home.
by c~ CIJihMM! and masks and bums from flammable costumes.
Have children restrict their hick-or-treat calls to homes with porch or
Ia _llllditioe, pd =n:iu injuries ':111 occur to children walkina iu unfwiliar · other outside lishts on as a sign of welcome. Children should alway~ use tbe
MIPborboods and from motoriSts who are unable to see YOUIIJ tnck-or- buddy system- and never trick-or-treat alone.
ll'ellln.
.
·
Warn children not to enter homes or apartments.
.
~ f-;t ~ Chit~ IIR wear!n&amp; ·c~ &amp;l!d -~ ~ waJk!ng in the
Each child should have change,for a phone C!lll in ca5e thiy have a prob~ • unt'asmlsar IICipbosboods sncreues thesr riak of InJury, ~a~d Torres. . lem away from bome.
.
.
Sbe uid that tbe local Health Depanuent in cooperalion with the ~o
Make yow' homes safer for visiting trick-or-treaters by removin1 breakOepiwllbObt of Hcahb, bu developechafety lips parents and other carepvers able items or obstacles. ~p candle-lit jack-o-lantems away from landings
.._.. follow before their youngsterS go trick-or-treatinJ this Halloweea.
and doorsteps wbere costumes might brush·aJ!&amp;inst ~ name.
.
Owtsme1
.
Parents should examine any toys or novelty items their children receive
If~~ 11 worn! cut~ eye bol_es and nose bole lqc enough to allow as treats in lieu of candy. Do not allow ~oung children to have any toy which ·
Cull Ylllbilit_Y ud unom~ breathing. '
is small enough to ~sent a choking hazard.
Be catlin tbal masks, WJgs, beards and hats are n01 cumbersome and fit
"Halloween is a time for fun for kids and parents can protect their chi I·
MCUiely. . .
..
.
.
ciren by taking .these important precautions and help take the Fright out.of
All al~ve. 10 face masks may be apptyang non-toltlc face pamt or fri ht . ht,.. he concluded.
. ·

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·PRODUCTS

. WE ·acCEPT .WIC COUPONS

DOUBLE

wigs. , g mg

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US?A CHOICE BONELESS B,E!~•
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Samantha Lynn ·Spires, daughter
of John llld AnaeJa Spires, observed
her ·fust birthday recendy.
A SnoW White theme·was Uled
for the party attended by Raymond
Lambert, Pat Hmuon, Gary and
~ Davia, Chlrles and Jennie

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Rib~::~:~~.:~.......! .....s1 ------.....-...
39

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$ 199

·Breasts ••••••••~•.••••••••••~·
SUPERIORS BONELESS TAVERNwHou Ll.

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MOUNTAINEER PORK

.

· ·Sausage •••••••••••••~••••• 99

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$ 189

HOUSE INS
'
COFFEE
120Z.

••••••••••••••••••••••••• .

$499

______

$2·29
Steak•••••••••••••••••••••::~. .
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-YORKTOWN BREAKFAST. •
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110

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·Studies.botanical. names

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RED OR CHILl :~·a
·HOT BEANS ~~

~BUCKET BEEF CUBED

3

Entire Inventory Is Included!
With Approved Credit You Pay
No Interest Ch
thru November 1999!

· ·II:

'

.

·~

WIDiamson. Brian. Kachie. Charlie ..
aqsd Trevor William-. Rita and
AliiUa Clarida, Darryl and Pam
McKiuney, DouJ, Shirley and
C,hriatopher Lambert, Melissa
Juanita · and Denise Lambert, Anita, Nolh and Hope ~ivan­
eli, Donna and Jessyln Bamhan,
VJCicie and 'D'eay McKinney, and the
honoree's · parents and brother,
. JOihua Spires.
.
Scndin1·lifts wcm Arlene Davis,
S«aU, Brenda, Zach, Jarrod and
Jacob. Gray.

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$ 39

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Roasts •••••••••••••••~~••••• ·1.

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First birthday c.elebrated

.$399

FRESH PORK BUTT STEAKS OR

••

§::;

. From that. botc:hed burglary a
COIII*tion was Ollde to Richard
N'IXon's re-election committee. Aud
then the White House sought · 10
cover up tbal iuvolvemenL The fall- ·
.(lilt from that, two years liter, ca11sed
Nixo6 to resip - the only American president 10 do so, .

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COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

R1b Eye Steak............ . ·

..~

,
.
"Tbe Waterpte Room," says a
brass plaque. Previously, it was just
Room 723, and many guests probebly didn't know tbal History Was
Made Here. On June 17, 1972, the
rent was $19 a nighL .

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Juat Uler midnight, you can look
.cross Virginia Aveaue into the
dlrbned windows on tbe sixth floor
of the'WMaple Office BuiklinJ aqsd
relive the·plllic Baldwin must have_
felt wbea he two pbiul:lothes
cops creeplJIJ up on five Watergate

'

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tUt illlpired "The Sllr-Spugled Lodae have refw'bished the place,
B-." a rock brouJht back from caltina it The Premier Howard JQbnlite 1110011, the Declaration tbal ignit· son Hotel, and turned Room 723
eel h
rlrouce and the theater box , ia10 a memorial. On Thunday, for
where Lincolsl wal sbot, bu a new tbe opeaiug, a velvet rope was
hiiiOric: Ale for visitors.
placed OICIOSS the doorway - juat
Not only Clll yoli see i~ you Clll up t11e one in front of the Oval

deepiu it.
.
Por $129 a nip~ modest by
Wuhlngton standards, you can bed
down in the newly designated
"Watespte Rqom," tbe very place
Where in 1972 Alfred C. Baldwin m ·
listened 10 tbe elecbonic bugs tbal
Republican operatives had placed in
the nearby .headquarters of the
DeJDO&lt;:ntic Jofationlll Committee. .

•

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 2, 1996.
'

,..
-.'
'

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, WASHINGTON (AI')- Wash- ·
The new owaers of what used to
iqlm, where y011 can see the flag be the Howard Johnson's Motor

I

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Accepts c;:redlt Car,ds

§.
....,
~.

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Ainal 1 t1 P; •• Wrbr

. 2 UTER

STORE HOURS
Modttlln S11Jiay
I AM·IO PM
291 SKOND ST•
POMEROY, OH~

g

· RE.\DY AND WAITiNG - Far Amorwlllt S.IMr, HaiOWMI'I
ranlla right up " - with Chrlatma • 1 f8vcN lilt holld8y, For
her lrlck__.,....ng trip around town, •he'll be C081umecl • 1
cowgirl, COftiP..._ with hit lnd boota, lnd, of COUI'H, I ~ CC!I1'
lltlner for goodlla. , . . . . · . .
. .
.

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PRODUas·

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Memorial to Watergate burglary

If HARRY F. ROSENTIW.

PEPlt

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of"'"-.

:t:~::=~t labe~ ~:::=ks, ~and
~;;tw~hl;gt~n attract;~:

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Wednn"ey, October 30, 1116

Wadnurrv, Ocllabtr ao, 1• -

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·BOUNTY
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POST RAISIN · · .

Bran ••••••••••••••• !!:~........

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SUNSJfiNE CHUNK

.......
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ROLL

$ ] 99

.·
$449
foo_d.··•····~·~=~....... . .

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HONEYCOMB' "
CEREAL-

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(f09f1'

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t4.5

UMIT4

1 wiTH $10 PURCHASE

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$10 PURCHASEOZ. .

,UMIT1

WITH$

14.5 0:1'. .

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59

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LIIIIIIIIIPUa;Miiiii'~W~IIiii~D~WIT'fi.:::::::=;;;~ ;:;::=;

COLUtiS

COIIIIUCTIOII
R lilt IIIII Aen odaHug

.,

·A:IIrltlw•
oNew Canatruollon
.OV.10 Yrl.

nCJIIOI.OIY

"HWMROI•pat11ft4sysl-.
Hlghelt "R Vllue"
"'-•
Blocks 99.5%
ofUV Rays

Expel...,.,.

'i.ow"-!oa

.

-e:,.. Eatll•w•

•All Work Gwlro1114 882 8810

otfaJecl Exlullvely
by

"ASJ[.tll01n'OU.R
.ROOI SPECIAL

•
••

QUALITY
· WINDOW
SYSTEMS

WOMEN TO TAIJ(

WITH YOU·UYEIU
Unforgettable

Converaattonsll
Cell this excllllllve
24 hr. hotftnell
Cai11-91J0.478 8585
Ext 3313

LUCIY J. TOWill

MID IIICOIA1IIG
.Over 15 Yean Esp.
Interior

&amp;.ll..I.AII

.,.a Ex1erlor

St.Rl124,
Rllclne, Ohio ,

Minor Repairs

W.Upaper Hlmal1111
. . !111ft

.

Raollaa

tct.aosl

•

service
AAA &amp; All State
Motor Club ·

Commm:lal
FREE

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

.

24Hr•
Towing/Rollback

aeullll

Mlaor ReaiocleiiDtl
Reoldeatllllud

REPAIR
MIKE BING
lvoolot' ....... "-'

614-949-3117

...., ....

IOIEIT BISSELL
COIInRUCIIOII

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

.INSULATION

· ~NewHomea
•Garages

137BRVAH PLACE
IIIDDU!PORT
·
' ll2·27?2
I:OO a.m.-3::10 p.m.
...... 11•1111 WWaws

•Complete

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Safe Th;·s IIalloween

Be

FREE

..... Gtngls
•5... Doors &amp;

ESnMATEES
985 4473

~year when your chlld goes trtck-or-treattng, be sure to practice these safety

Willows
L..
.:::=••::.:::AM::::tlau==---...1

. ' pret:autlons. A safer Halloween will be more enjo,Yable for everyone. '

.
,• .•
'

~

'

.

1. Your cbiJd should

cbild's v1a1on Ill not .
obstructed.by a maR

3. Make 8ure that your

child Ill able to walk freely
~
without obstruction from a
-......., - -costume.

·'

.Fruth
Pharmacy
,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
992·6491
'

4 ~ An adult should be

wear reflective strips to
· make sure they ani seen
by oncoming trafftc.

2. Make sure that your
i •i

'

RIDENO.UR
SUPPLY

·chester
985-3308

'•

• •

•••

present when a chlld is
trick-or-treating.
• •

~ ·

0 • Only take your cbJld

••••
··~ . you 1mow wen. ·
6. ~e your child's
• •

•••
"'"'

to. ~e homes of netghbors

candy. lt'a a gc;IOd idea to
take It to a local examining
stauon.

•7 •Trick-or-treat early. .

• •

•••
~

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.·

·8. Only allow your child

BAUM
TRUE
VALUE

MIDD~PORT, OHIO

.CHESTER, OHIO
98S.3301

992·5141

· DoorsOpen

9. H~d out h~thi~

4:30p.m.
Blngo6:30
Every Sunday

Halloween snacks for the
vtsiUng trick-or-treaters.

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBUC WELCOME

1 0 • ~.safe alternatl"~~e

•

• 985-3307

992·2556

,JUKEBOX
PIZZA --

is to have a Halloween
party for
child and
group or his or her friends ..

a

=

•

.

St. At. 7 &amp; 33 Pomeroy
... . Extra large 18"
. three item
I

'

DOWNING~ SWISHER·&amp;·

K&amp;C
Jewelers MULLEN·MUSSER

LUMBER·&amp;
SUPPLY .
COMPANY

POMEROY, OHIO
. 992·2955 .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-66.11

INSURANCE.

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2342

LOHSE
PHARMACY·

'

POMEROY,•OHIO
992-2955

.

'

SUGAR·RUN EWING
FLOUR
FUNERAL
. .. MILtS ·
HOME
POMEROY, OHIO
992·2115 ' .

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2121

P"'DOt OHIO

J11DDLEP01t OHIO

992·5432 .

992·2635

=
'

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=
=
=
=

Liltlt things
•rt Worth lllol

'"

'ht Cl•ssifitJ Stet ion!

=
=

$11.so·
$6.99 .
(Carry-Out Only)
992-6111

COURT ST. GRILL
HALLOWEEN ·
PARTY

=

Children

SHOP

. Adult $4.75/Ciild $3.~
Sponsored S.J.H.S. &amp; S.H.S.
11:oo-2:00.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pomeroy, OH

WAYNE'S PLACE

. 992·3345

992-2156

Primetime, Mobile OJ

All(louncements.

· MIDDLEPORT, OH.

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Costume Prizes
. DiscOunts for Alii
· All this - Ladies Night .
with OJ Brady
THEN FRIDAY NIGHT

CHARLIE LILLY
· 10PM-2AM

'
'

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

SOUTHFORK SHOWBAR
HALLOWEEN PARTY .
THURSDAY, OCT. 31
675-5955

•DLStOit 0110.
992·5020

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAY, .
NOV.3
12 NOON

Free Food, Treats for

Daily,
Sentinel

Announcements

·I

=

Cash Prizes for .
Costumes

TURKEY/HAM DINNER
Southern High School
November 3rd

.'

=

=

PRINl

=

-

·~2i.i0·

KARAOKE

••

Cllll ., .. .
mtllf

oncl ...

pu-: 114·742·

·Chl11nay Services
Du.U.. Waadttove,
FINpllce6FurN10e

C*lnlng
llcrMne • Full

Line of Acceetarlea.
24 Hour An-ng
Service
Sefery llllpecllona
Senior Cl1lzln Dlecaunt

lnDALE COUNTRY CUFfS &amp; GIFTS
'
··~~530
LOCAL CRAFTERS·featuring can, saw, slate
painflngs, oak shelves: qui~ racks; .
goose outfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in saturated fat than olive oiQ
TUPPERWARE- Some 98Sh end carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/fund raisers
Mon. lhru Sat. 10.6, Sunday 1·5

· Fuly lnauNCI

614-797-4481

110

Help wanted

CFO
MIID..rH,
I 0 YHI'I Hospital

. ........... .
lxperiMce

MallllatoryCPA
~.,,...

::o.
:,.l'llltlnt,

Send Resume To:

WV .

AAIEOE

218 below Galllpolla , 014·843·

5253.

Loar- t.mlla boxer, brindle, Oct
25, . 33 , _ $1 .. 9D2·5U3.

G&amp;W PWTICS AND SUPPLY
St. R1. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
814-985-3813 or 614-667-8484

u«&lt;ay.

Plastic Culvert • Dual wall and Regular 8' lhru 36'"

4" S&amp;D ·perf. ·.solid pipe
4" &amp; 6' Flex pipe
. 4' &amp; S' Sch 35 pipe
't.' &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/t lhru 4' Sch 40 pipe
'/." &amp; 1' 200 p.s.i. wa1er pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'It U.L. approved ConduM
S" Graveleas Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1"1hru 'Z' · fittings· Regulalors • Risers
Full aaaonment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex ftltings &amp; Water fittings
· Full line of Clstem, Sepllc &amp; Water stori!Qil tanks

·Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

LINDA'S
PAINTING

SMITH'S

Co.ST.ucno.
Custom

IITIIIOII·EmiiOR

JONES' TREE SERVICE

,...tl•t• l,lt wi llo It :
for row.

VERY IWOIIUj.l

Hl¥1 IIFIIINCIS
614-915-4110

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

B
. u

lklng &amp; R - n g

• New Homes •

FREE ESniiATES

Take ••• ,.t• HI of

All Yard Salol Mull Be Paid In
Allvonco. Dttdilna: 1 :OOpm the

day before the td lt 10 run, Sun·

day &amp; Monday edition· "OOpm

t:F:::ridly::!.:..__
· ----

• Addhlons
• New Garages

• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Palnllng

FREE ESTIMATES .

(614)992·6535

Public BaJe
1nc1 Auction

L-----~~~,~·~=·~~~ . L-~(6~14~)992~~~7~&amp;~~Ji~~~~~~~
1-33591

Owner:

Ra.L. HOLLON
tRUCKING
... DUMPTRUCK
SERVICE

Estimates

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt•Sand

PROOF

LOVE!!!
CALL
1-90().626-5050
EXT. 4500

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re·Corea
A/C Condenaeri/Hoae Aasemblys

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

DATE LINE

TIE'S GAUGE

Af1! You Sick And n~
Of Being Single 7 Days
A Week? Romance Is
Just A Heartbeat Away!

39170Rl681
off At. ;13 Ill Rl 681

_BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
. New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions.• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

• 2112/tl2/lfn

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119
,FA(.I. CI.RAN•VP

Car~

$2.119 par min.
Mull be 18 yra.

lFN

1-900-526-5050
Ext. 6218

$2.99/min, 18+
Se.v U

(619) 645-8434.

-

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN
TREASURES .
749 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport
Ceramics, Woodcrafts,
Homemade Dolls &amp;

Baskets ..
Also Children's
Plsyroom
Monday 10 am-a pni

Tues.-Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
Friday 2 pm-11 pm

.. . • 1100 En1·
II .

S..V-11-(619) 645 1134

Top dollar- IMiiqu ... furniture,
china, cJock1, gold, silvtt,
tltllel, otd IDM

whitt dllhtl, old
milk boltlet, Metal
Oaby

Darwin, Ohio

· Used Pn lifo
I &amp;hcU...
Used llrts:

• $5.00' lip
1lrt .... ' 5pil

w.c.

·Or

I Or Newer,

Wanted To Buy: Jui'lk Autos With

Or .Wilhout Motora. Call larry
Livoly. 61 .. 388-W03.
Wanted .To Buy: Wa Bt.ly Auto'l
Arrr Con&lt;idon. 814·381-110112, Or
814-·PART.

EMPI.OYMf r&lt;l
!,EfWIC E: S

YOUNG'S
WPENTER SERVIa
•Room Addhlone

·N-GIIrog•

•Eiectrlclll &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior • Ex1..tor
Pillntlng

Alao Concme WOlle
(FREE ESnMATES)

V.C. YOUNG lh
882-41215
PomeroY, Ohio

11 o Help wanted
IIDencertll need 1.111r1 :Xmat
cash, Southfork Shawbtr, Pt.
PIHstnt. WV. :114-875-5066,
· • ATTN : PDlnt · Pleallnt• Postal
PDiitions. Ptrmanen1 full tlmt tor
clerk/toners. Full Btntfita . For
exam, application and salary info
call : (701)908· 2350Exo3870.
81m-8pm.
AVON I All Areas I Shlrlt,
~·· :10&lt;-875·1429.
. Able AY.on Rtprtatnlalivtt
needed. Earn money tor Chrill-

'

I

rou Oorl'r HfWr To tao&amp;: f•
r. SP'f•h• a.sr a.,. 1n
,,. ao..l(lo&lt;lo.

, mas bile at homt~at work, 1·800992-83S8 or :104-882·2045. Ind.
Re,&gt;.

Alaaka Jo~~~ Earn Up To
130,000 In T~H Monthl Flshlng
S.lmon. Constn~ction, Carw~tritt.
Oil Floldo, Monl 7 Otya o07·87~

A NNO UNCEt.1ENTS

m2 Ext. 052eM2.

QRCI.EIII!
Head Stlrt On CMstmat.
' ·""~' Today, Start ' Tomorrow.
Wtakl~. Call liN A1

Services • Sleel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repslr Welding
• Alumlnum/Siainless • Tool Dreving • Omamental
Steps • StaiiB, ·RaiHngs, Pati.o Furnhure, Fireplace
llems, Planter'Hangers, Trellises &amp; lo1S of other s1ullll

"No Job Too Large or·Too Small"
We will work within your budget.

Ph. n3r9173
108 Potueroy Streec

FAX 773-5861
M11110n, WV

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY

GRUESER'S .

GAUGE

. ' Body work, C.r, truck
• truck Plfntlng,

s.tllnll

Four'!d :' tmall brown doo on Rt.

. 2 mMes North Silver Bridge on SR 7

l/4'2mo.

...

I

Touch-tone Pho1111
PROCALLCO •
(802)

614-992·3470

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN Aeratlo• Repair or Replactment
10% DllcMat for Stpt. ·&amp; Oct.
CLUB GUN
Evealng and YfMkend NO J.(harge
SHOOT
· FRIDAY, NOV. 1
#tcJu~ !fetal.r
Authorized AGA Dislributor
· 6P.M•
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop

Ylltey
aao
Ylltley

(,

.._... .........
.._..."""'"" MOrllhtr
........
FUIIACU

I

1 (900) 378 83881
Ext 1951
$2.911/mln. MuM.,.

Umestone,
Gravel, Send, .·
'·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

742·3212

.
Thursd~y. 9 pr:n-?
.

The

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992·5627

IIIIIIDIATE MTAUATIOIII.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

area)
Large 16" one item

QUALITY .

INGELS
.Ridenour ADOLPH'S CROWS
THE SHOE
KING
.
FURNITURE, PLACE
rv,.
&amp;
DAIRY
Fan~ily
mn!iTAR
A pp1ance
AND .
LOCKER
21.
9
HARDWARE
Restaurant
Gas Service
VALLEY
•
JEWELRY
POIEROl OHIO

Racine

(Limited free delivery

VALLEY

HAULING

"URGEMW~ml~WI'OR

Legion Poat 602

•

Chester, OH

~,

sidewalks and "fallavays.

Do not allow your child to
trick-or-treat ln.the late
hours of the nlght.

-

on

American

.

FISHER .
FUNERAL
·H

BINGO

to walk.on designated

your

WICKs ·

,...,.cata

-oN ntiiPOT
mill tl • GuAL.ND

Rill~,

l'lllDIIIqj Roofl

AUTO

IS -USI
UMUUII
GOOD FOR THIS
COUITRY?

Low Ami)

Cllll for Demonetratlon &amp; FIH Eatlmate
614-992-4119
.
1-800-291-aoG
110 Court St .
Ohio

l'llntla&amp;

liNG'S

_,..,.
........
- _......_
EITIIIA1'a

(UmtSton•

TODAY
mtnor mec:hlnlelrl
1·900.:656·5050 Tune-ups,rep~lr.
01 ChMQe,
Eli. 3998
. Wu, Buftlng
Ulllllln.18+ a.rv.u
(111U) 145 1134 .
·
111111_,.,

~o.......;.;;.;.;;;~~ .L--.-.-~~~.

;

Long St., Rutland, Oh. ·.
: 742·2t3S,.Aik for Kip
111111111

...
. -....o.-.::.:::::.:.1

1

What's on Your
Horizon?
For all the answers
talk live to one of

our metaphy•lc:al
advl•oralll
Call1..f100.5112-4000
Ext. 2301

$3.119 par min.
llual be 18 yra.
s.rv.u- (111) 145 1434

.

'

.

·We procen deer, mike hiCkory
......... nil bologna. JHtrO!'i , jarkJI, summer HUIIe-.
·Cooler ktjlo, &lt;11011, -llry. HUN•
ing IUppUta, llttnH &amp; OIIM
check
Htn-

lWnonWV.••lion.seenwn

~.~~----------

•

.I
i'
il

•

�- - ______ __,..

_,... _

,.

::-:-

-'

\_

.

•

Wecl"'idsy, Oatober 30, 1M

.

Thll o.lly Sentinel• Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·~

NBA Cr011word Puaale •
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 ....... .....
TPoejut'

d

13 Boling
obI

14Atai

320

540

Mobile Homes
tor Slle

12KGS Mobile Home 2 Bedrooms,
Ntw Hot Water Tank, Refrigerator,
Stove, Prind Very Rtuonablt,
Mull Sell Call Any lime, 61 -'·388·
0&lt;184

For Rem:
TraiSer 2 l)edrooms, Southwtilem
Sd'ool~

HOtJII For Rent, Bid',¥811 Schools,

614·378-:!SIO.

Wa111t&lt;t. Clean renters. no maida
pels, 3br, 1 ~12baths, LA. DR. eat
'" kitchen, &lt;)araQe, lenced tn
8'15--.
J'ltd. S400imo. plus S-400 dam1979 Wtndtor 14x70 new carpet age depoSit Reference• req.
&amp; vtnyl, vtnyl lklrling, ex1ra1 ' 30•-675-6573
Must sea to appre-clale. 30&lt;4 ·773·
187" f1achar 12~~:60, 2 bedrocm,
ve/r good condltton SS,OOO 304·

5840

420

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

'

Couch Wllh1 Matchtng Chatr
S300,d14~4479

Country Furniture 304·.875·8820
At 2 N, 6mlles, P1 Pleaaant, WV
Tues·5at9..S, SUn 11-S,
Fabrtc, By The Bolt, tO% Over
Wl'lolesalt No Evemngt Plnte.
61•-379-27118
GOOD USEO 'APPLIANCES
Washers , drvars, refr~gerators ,
ra nges Skaggs Appliances. 78
V1ne Street, Call 814·!1148·7388,
1·80().499·3499.

1 M1le From Ga111po111, 2 Bed· Kenmott Waaher'Waa $150 Cut
rooms, Water &amp; Trash Furnished, To 1125. Kenmore Dryer Wu
AC, Renlal Reference Requtred, 195; Cut To 175: WNrlpoal Dryer
$2201110., Plu t $150 Depoall, While US: WI&gt;IID G E Washer I
61.·446-0761 '
I
Dryer S.t S205 Each, 1 Year
Warranty, G. E. Elec:ltJC Range 36
14160 Tra11er Eiectru: W1tt't Air 2 Inch Wat $75 Cut To I 1 50 ; AI ·
Bedrooms',w &amp; 0 SMiles Oul mo'ld Caloric Eltetrlc Aanae 30
$300, 614-256·1044.
Inch, 1175; Almond Calortc Gas
Aahgt 30 Inch Vety Nice $'175;
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Traller e14-U8· Frljjldalre
Harn11 Gold Frost
0722, 614-446·7788
Fr" Aefrigeralor Was S125 Cut
2 bedroom mobile home '" To $95, SklgSJS Appltances, 715
Vine Sueat. Galhpcll&amp;, 814·44fl·
Ractne, no pets, 614·992·5858
7391, 1·800-&lt;IV-3-41111.
3 Bedroom, 14x70, Galllpll li s
Ferry, $250/mo + uttllties, must
,_lor Civlob1'8s.
Polly's New and Uaed Furmture
have references 304·675·4088
2101 Jefferson Ave , Pt PleasFor Rent Or Sale t987 t4x60 2 lnl
1997·2 &amp; 3 -oom. $995 dOwn, Bedrooms, No ~ets , Very Clean,
New Spelkar Box $35; 3 W1ndow
St9Simo Free dehverr &amp; wet-up, 614·256-6089.
Air COndnlonerl $35 Each Sew·
only It Oak Wood Homes. Nnro
Ntce 2 Bedroom Trailer No Pets lng Machtne In Wooden Srand 1
wv 304-755-5885.
1300/MO, $200 OepoStl, BU· Case $35, 814·245-5100.
For Sale'Or Rent 1989 Mobile 256·1664
Used FurntiUra 130 BuiBY'IIIe Pike,
Home Gateway 3 Bedrooms ~ 2
S2251Mo , 8 Galtlpolll. Maure11 Sell, Full
Balhs. Atl Electric, Stare Roura 7
Releren&lt;:· Waterbed ..-anretl, Full Bedroom
S. AcrOss From Dam, 7110 Acre,
614·.48· Suue Manreases, Bed, Chest,
IIH!Ii!-1510 AI!M 3 PM
VaniiJ' Bench, 1250, 814·446·
•782.
ltmtted Offer! 1~97 doublewide,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, 1279/ 440
Apartments
Used Furniture,130 Bulat~~lla Pike,
month Free de lt verr &amp; setup
tor Rent
Bunk Bed1 IManrtiStl, $150.00
OniJ at Oakwood Homes, Nttro
wv. 304·755-5685.
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom AJ)ts, low ~ant · Coucn.r High Back Cl'lausf Ono·
man $150 00. Tables, Gifts , MI MUST SELL 1981 ux70 wnh lrom $180 to $300, some utilities crowave Cart, Bedt 6H·446·
tncluded
nt
Strell
area
Pleas·
f1reptace . Need to sell last Call ani Valley Realty 304·675·4100
~782
Reg1na atl514-385·2434
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur- Washer &amp; gas dryer, S25ea. 304·
Need to sell 1mmedla1ely. Ntc.e nished
and unlutmshed, securtty 675-4558 alter 6:00pm
1985 1\¥0 bath 14x70 Call Mtke al
deposu requ~rad, no pets, 6t4992·2216
14x80 Only make 2 pay - 2 bedrpom apartment, Spr1ng
men1s &amp; move-In, no payment al· Ave., Pomeroy, St90 per month,
ter 4 years, Ire&amp; set-up &amp; dehvery
S1 00 deposit, no pets. call alter
304-755-5885
Spm 1514-667·3083.

L-

Nwf Form111 Restaurant Operung

Experlene~d Waltara, Wanre11
Hoa1111, Barlenden &amp; Cool(s.

Send Rt1um11 to: 1515 M&amp;lh St
PL Plt(Ooan\ WV 25550.

Nurlt Aldt Traintng' ProgramRadciptingl flehabiUtanon Center
will be orr.ring training classes 1n

f\a month of November. AJ)JIIte•·
IlOna art now being accepted 11
387511 Rocktprl"!!o Rd., P,moroy,
Cl111 tita 11 limited. Tflree reffwence p&amp;parl are raquued with ap.
plicarion. Apply tn person bet·
WHn 101.m &amp; 3pm M·F Studenta
lhal IUCC&amp;ilfully complele the
TCE class will be tllR1ble lor atn·
ployment. Absolute '1 no phone
colo.EOE

AD real estate adwlr1islng In
ll'iB n - I B aubjociiO

the Fecleflll Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wNcl\ makellt Illegal
to adverdsa !'any preference.
Umltatlon Of dlacltmlnatlon
based 00 race oo1or: ra~~n1on
'
"'"" '
aaxlamlialalalue
or' nallonal
origin, or anu Intention to
"'

make any IIUCI!prolerence.
limllltlon OJ ~lnltlon:

Ovtrbrook Centtf, 333 Page
Strtte. Widdleport, ha1 part- bme,
RN I LPN position, avallable, aU
tl'liftt. Plnst come in &amp; ft/1 out

ThlB RAWRnaper will not

·-··..,..
knowll~ acx:ept

applicatiOn ilrllerestltd

advertisemanta for real estate
which lain vk&gt;latlon of the law.

P,art•Tlmt Help Needed In Busy
UphoiJitrJ Shop, S9Wing Exper1ence ReqUited Call For An Ap·
pomtment614-448·3438

Our readerS are hereby
infomlld that all ctnelltiiQI

lldvertl&amp;edlnthle~

.. _••____..,
ara avallai:*J on an equal

People Ia work during deer season No e1penence necessar,.
AppiJ' at Crawford's, Henderson
WV. 3)4-IIJS.$404
Posllion IVIIIIble·The MI!Cir'J
Counry Public Sarwtct Otstnct,
which provkla• wallr sarvlce 10
the rural areas of Mason Count~.
wv, It oeoklno o gen""' monagllf for Its water 1ystem, wttlch
covera molt of the Clh.lnty, w•th
.om. 300 mil •• 01 m.l" II".
lltYing 2,850 customers. Re·
lponstbllllitl tnclude ov81all op·
eration, IU,PIH'VISIDn and admlntltnltiOn.

Etpenence In water sy1tem

manaaernenr 11 preferred. At
JIUI five years or expertenc:e ,,

oppotlutUCy ba&amp;ll.

· ...,. - • ~ · '

310

Homes tor Sale

•br.

•

Starl $12.881hr, plus benel111 For
aJ)phcaUon a11d exam tnlo, Call
wv 1 27
"9 2 70
·
1·800 · 2• · 4 · ext·

month wilh only $770 down Call
Rvss81t ·800·837·323S.

Chrt.ty'a F.mWy llvln9

In Autttnd: a 4 bedroom house,
recently renovated, CIA. new car·
poft, doora, f'I8W siding, outbu11d
lnSJ, $28,000 OBO, e14·992·4514

2 Bedroom apt, Galltpolls Ferry
304-675-25-18

2bdrm apts , tatal electrtc, ap ·
NEW I Bank Repo's, only 3 left , phances lumished, laundry room
11111 under warran1y. free delivery taciimes. close to school 1n town
&amp; lei·Up. 304·755-7191
AJ)J)hcatJons available a1 Village
Green
Apt! 149 or call 614·992·
N1ce Uabtle Home lA 15113 Ad·
dilton On 1 Acre Lt/C land Tra1l· 3711.EOH
er Part1al Remodeled, Close To 3 Bedrooms, 5 Courl Street, Galli·
H.M.C $23,00061-r-441.0449
J)OIIS. K1tchen W1th Slave, Relttg·
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
era tor, No Pels, Depos11, Reier·
ences, $360/Mo, 614·446-4926
3·5 Acre Tracts Left $500 Down
$150/Mo, Counly Water On State 3 Room t Bedroom Apartmenl ,
R
60 N - 6 669 3 2
Wtth Stove &amp; Refngerator FurOUI8 1
Onu, 14·
· 46
I"HShed, 614·446·2583
3 64 Acres On Graham School
rent in Pt Pleasant, 1 &amp;
Read, t6JC24 Barn Water, Electnc
304-675-2174 "'et•Available, Cleared Ott Green
Sctlool OistriC~ 614-446·1 778.

2 Bedroom, 6 miles lrom Pt
Pleasant oil Sandhtll Rd. on
Bethel Ad Aakin'g $35,000. 30487~7946.
3 Bedroom Ranch Wtlh Full
BuemlnL Vinyl Siding. 2720 Sq
FL Anachtd Gara,.,a. Atr CorKII·
"
IIDnlng, Gaa Heat. 2 Flrepclaces
(WIIh WDOd Burnet"). •n-Ground For Rent·Now accepting appl1ca·
Paol. La,....t.ot Nice Locnon, t1o11s. all size homes accepted
City
Unill,
RIMo 588, Cily
So:llool co~.tnlry Lane "mObtle Home p ark,
Ottlrlcl.
SU,SOO.
114_448 . 7438
(E
GaMtpohs, F8fry. 3J•-67!t-5421
venings).
New r 1etopment- Rtverbend Es·
3 Bedroom, efficient home, new
roof, vtnyt ltdin,.,, convltnl loca- tall
en1c lo ts, under~round
"'
Ullin..• 3-2 m1les, !tom.273-30
Raven!MIOOd,
1Ji0n.
304 2 1 97730 304
52
2 Bedroom. new wmdowa, vmyt
siding, close to actlOOl, priCed to Parcels on Rayburn Rd Water,
sefl.304.fSJ5.5182
paved road, reasonable rt&amp;lr!C·
lions. 3D4·675·5253 (no s 1nQie·
Nice 1 112 S1ary House, Wtth w•de fnqu~res please)
Butldmg, 32 0 Acre•. location 1-::-::-''-:::-'-7~~--S1a1e Routt 7 South 814·256· 360
8878

admini!ltratlon ls desuable Neeeuaru skills mclucle personnel
•
llldtrship
and the abtlity lo
commun1ea11 and work with the
pubhc. The lndrvidual muat have
a broad k11owledge of civ1ilenvironmtnlll engineering 1n the wa·
1er ultli ly field , 1II wen as knowl·
edge of applicable saletyltnvironmtntal regulattons, FederaiJ
State wa1er quelhy and destgn
regulanon11nd ltchnical arandardt. A d~rH tn eng1neering.
rec:hniCII lraimng Of business
ldminittraponlldeiU'ed
Send resume to: Mason Counry
Public Serv•c:e District, tOt
Camden Awe., PI Pleasant WV 3-4 bedroom, heat puf1'4'. kitchen
25550 Atll'ntton Vtrus Hartley, appliances, 1 car garqge, mce
Jr, Chairman.
netgtlborhood, 614·882· 3119 or
l14·892-e•s1
POSTAL JOBS
Statt S12 ee /Hr. Plus Benerns. Beautiful vtew, 3 91 acres, 2 J'rs
For Apphcalan And Exam Into, old.
2 1/2 balhl, large lutchCal 1·801).~2470, EJIL OHSO&amp;, an, 30• ·675· 3929 Rtdgewood
UM -IP.II 70nys
Et!Oies
N)STAL JOBS

New homes starting at $170 J)er

·-·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from 124• to 1315, Walle 10 shop
&amp; mov1es. Call 8t4·-446-2588.
Equal Hou11ng Oppor~mty.
Duplex 648 Second Avenue, Gal·
ltJ)Ohl, 3 Bedrooms, L R , D R ,
$345/Mo , One Year lease, Ref·
Rtq~~lred, 1345 Depot!~
Avatlable, Tope's Furniture,
614·-0332.

I,-:,-:--::::-:----:--.,-:;-::,..,-

. level
Ui
Etliciency All Ulilitltl
Wtlhm
Mtles Of GalllpoBath S1451Mo., Sl19
Pasture Reqwed, Pond
Avenue, GaU1p0l11 814 ·
i I W1ll Pay To Survey
Split Would Cons1der Land Con
Hact Can 614·846·8328 Ahet 5 GraCIOUS ltv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
P.M Or Weekends
apar1men1s at Vtllage Uanor and
R1verslde Apartmen11 1n Mtddle·
pori. From S232·S355 . Call •814·
RENTALS
992·5084 Equal Houstng Oppor·
tunlles
410 Houses tor Rent

I!~~~]~~~~~~

81.m-9pm7daJ'I
Exc locahon , 809 30th St.,
Bedroom
Sl . house
P1 Pleasant,
lor rent WV
9t1
1 t &amp; relerences
Ra~tdent
A
..
ittant·
applicationsl~;;~~~]l~a~or~,~cl~a~an!.~Sca:•
~~l:~o;;~•0epos
ere now bllng ltC8Pftd for Rest1:
728 or 304 675-4677
7791
dent A1111tanra. Benefits tnclude
lor Ed Russell
&amp; refer·
paid wac•tion, wholeule food 3bedroom, bath, living room w/
purchlltl, i~tntivt bonus pro- hardwood floors, kitChen &amp; dtn1ng
house, no pets, refer·
0111m, mlldic:al tlpenlll at cast, araa together, new root, garage,
304 ·675-4558
all applicant• may lppiJ' M·Sun, on R1 2. 30-4 ·675·4 139 or 304·
• ·• . Aawenswood Care Center, 875·7328alter8:30
1113 Wnhington St, Raven·
WV.
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes
For Penmes On St Delinquent
Seektng Registered long Term Tax. Repo·s. REO's. Your Area
Care Hurling AIMUinlt b lnllf· Toll Free (1) 800·898·977 8 Ext
mediall Long T«m Care Nursing H·2814 For Currenr lttbr'IQS
Facilily. Rotaltng shitta, pari
ume Must have Well Vlrgtnia
Houu And Lol ForSaa.·
certtftcauon Contacl Jtli Bum- 2 Bedroom1, One Bath, $600
gardener, RN. DON, Poml Ptft1· Down, WAC. Easy Term,, 1·800·
ant Nu11ing &amp; Rehabilitatton 446908, A&amp;k For Dav1d
Cent.,, State Rol'lt 62. Roulf 1,
Box 32&amp;, Point Phta~anl, Well Houte lor sale, MWIJ remodeled,
Vlrglnlo, 25550. (30•l&amp;7S-3q05. $88,000 304·882 3839
tC:Ienmltk·Multicare facility) .
log HolM 3-4 bedroom, 2 baths,
Tw1n Rtvetl Tower. now accepting
hellt pump, 2 car garage, 3 1 acr- -----------lapp!ICitlonslor 1br. HUO subatd·
es, 3 112 m11es lrom town 304·
1zed aJ)t lor elderly and
1
Chrisly's Family Living
Wl.lli.FEICONSERVATION
675-fl8119.
JOBS
In AU1J•nd : a 4 bedroom ttouse. capped . EOH 304·675-6679
tecendy renovaled, CIA, new cat- 450
Furnished
Now l'llrinp Game Warden•. Se- NICe large -4 bedroom, rwo ba th,
pet, doors, new sidtng, oulbutld·
c:urily, Matntenance. Pattt Aanv· new roo!, smgle car gatage wnh
mg. s.oo p~uo -~~ .... &amp;
Rooms
ttl. Ho exptrience necesurr loh at&gt;owe for SIGrage Nye Ave ·
thiklren are welcome, availabkl
For appltcarion and inlo call 1· nue. Pomeroy, Ot11o Pr1ced 1n
N-1
..07· 33&amp;-1100, ext WVt35c:, Sam· S30"a, 304·422·8941 or aher 6pm
In Pomeroy· 12.1t 121urnished
814-247·2012.
lpm, 7dirl
room. accns b appliances.
ll.ilehefl. bath, laundrr &amp; al utili·
RIVER
FRONT
PROPERTY,
WLillFEICONSERVATION
ues, weeki)' or monmly raret.
WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVE·
JOBS
modem I roach lrH, call 814·
NUE,
GALLIPOLIS
,
161,500,
Now Hiring- Woo-dona, Soweek or monlh
992-•5t4 8am·11pm
11......7112.
curny, - ....... 1'11111 RangGatlia Holtl.
ers. No Exp. t' " ,. For ApSttt room home In Racme, w/11re·
pli:o,_ And Info Cll407·33&amp;place, new v1nyl sidmg and root.
eul0, Ell. CK\te&lt;:, 11m -llpm. 1
fronr porch, back deck, garage,
doyL
114·9.tl9·2213 days or 814 ·37922110 """''"01 a 'IOOOIIendo
180 WlrlledTo Do
ThrH bedroom houn in Syra·
Any odd jobp, painting, D""'" eiJto,lt-1-11112-6315.
claaMd, lhrub tri,.,mtng, home
N1ce, Clean, 3 B..:troom,
wealherizauon, lean• raked, Un1on Avenut. Pomeroy, two ences &amp; OtpGtil No ,.,• .
compltle IIWn care. etc: :.u.e 75- bedrooms, B room• cenlral heat 615·5162
7112.
and U, carpe1.ct throuohout. one
car gara91. bllsemenl Must au Potneroy- two
Bobl'tining llr Homo All lto•ra 10 _
.._61-&lt;9G2-5322
temoc.t.ttd. stove
~-114-317-78....
furntlhlld, wuherl
call 614-992-6888
GoorgM Por ...... S.WIIIIft, don'! 320 Mobile Homes
1:00pm,
noul , _ '"'' ,. .,. mil Jy01 call
Appliances
Reconditioned
:JIM-1175-1 157.
Two hdtoom nome In
12111!0 2 Stdrooms, f Blth, E.xcel· br tenl wtlh opdon Ia buJ' on
Wuhefl, Dryer~, RlngH, Re'n·
Wil 0o 8obyolni~ llondoy TIYu ltn! Condlloon, S3.500 , 30•·730·
no ln1ldl pttl. dtpoltl rt· 11ra1ors, 110 oa,. Guarantetl
Friday, e A.M. To e P.M. In lly '12115.
French CIIJ Mayllg, eu,•ote·
S1....-a..7244
- · I n - ArM. CIII81-I7715.
.UI.(IIOl!AIIIr8P.M. •
11101 UrlO SkJIWit, ""' bodn&gt;om, Two bedroom hOUII, IIOYe and
IWO bllh. 101.11 oloc:lric, $t6,000, rtfr1Qitr8101, no inside pets, e 14- C"PI' &amp; V""l In SIOCI&lt; 18.00 Yd
llollolw1Cirpo!s, 81~7.....
11112·~81-I-DD2-2817.
Fall Or Wll Oo - · OMot
75«12Jt.

1

ror sale

.,o.. ,., .....

520

Antiques

Buy or ull Rlvenne Anttques,
112• E Matn Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy. Hours U TW. 10:00
a.m to e·oo p m., Sunday 1 oo to
e ·oo p.m. 814·992·2528, Russ
Moore owner.

540

5

Painted slates· stmtlar to those
hanging on Pomeroy parking met·
ers, 6,4·742·1306

Used Stor)' &amp; Clark Conaole P1a·
no E1ctllen1 Cond•tton, 90 Day
GUarantea, Fret Tun1no. $850,
Call Grubb's Plano TunlnQ ServICII, 61-1-o\48·4525.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equlpmenl

'78 John Deere 2a•o. 82 hp,
,657 1'11'1 with 14fl JO tndl011det'
bucke- and lorkt, $13,500, Clll
61-4·902·7421

••

Nor&amp;lt

48 ChiYY 2 dr. Sadan, good
lhllpe, 12,400; 18 Grand Prix, 2-;1
dr., •uto, n1ce, t3,0SO, 2 lerge' ~
show casts, good thape, 814-- ; 1
M1·20450f81·-\ ·'

10·!61111
•AI09732

•

,,

•

CARS FOR $1001 Truck&amp;, boa II, t ·
4·wheelers, mo1or hamel, lurnt· ;
rurt, tle&lt;:tl'(lniCI, computers tit.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Avatiable yaur
area now Call 1 800·5 13·4343
Ert5-11368

Welt
•
•
•
•

CheYtllt Diesel ,1182 5, Mtlts I
Gallon $475 Or Best Offer. fl14 ·
245-5100.

458-1541 after 8:30pm

DOC tl 01..' BULI.fl"S SO
JEALOUS OF MY NEW
PUPPY HE'S
FIDZ.N

PUT

HIM

ON TH'

TABLe AN' I'll
GIVE HIM A

(home)

liE'S ACRO~S Till:

RERUN! WllAT
ARE '{OIJ
DOIN61-1ERE ~ , - ....

KNOGKIN6
01&gt;1 DOORS TEU.IN6
5TR£ET

PEOPLE ASOUT iiiE
"6REAT PUMPKIN"

11M STANDIN6 Mit

0

IIERE SO NO ONE WILL
KNOW I'M WITH I-IlM ..

T~IS SAY~ Ttl~ STOG~
•••
Block, bric.k, sewer pipes, w1nd·
ows, hnlela, tiC . Claude W1nters,
~~~ ~rande , OH C~ll 814· 245

1

/

,MA,ICtT
· . IS 60ING TO

.
'

. s~eA~ 6.ooo !

'

ftNAtf(l#
NfWf ..

-

~ viONl&gt;~f(
~tto rtte

Go Carl 2 5 Bnggs And StratGn t
•Vear Old Excl4llent Cond11lon
S400, 61.tl·441o1 832.
Goad 318 Engtne. Ooe1 Not
Smoke t 100, 15 Min. From Galli·
poUt,814~78 · 260t

Grubb's Piano· honing &amp; repairs
Problems1 NHd luned? Call tht
pitno Or 151-4...440·4525

e····

litl'fr dul,- )HiiiiJ' traUe:r,
btd, 2'sldes. sohd metal w/
ramps, 5 lug Wheels. 1500. 3011!o·
e75-e34e.

IBU 388 compultr, monl!or &amp;
mowM, t4g5, SS.-44 magl"'lm De·
earl E1glt pistol 1900, m~r con.
-ltlldt, e••·W2-e1S.

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Aopojred, Now &amp; Rtl&gt;ulh In Sn&gt;cl&lt;
Coli Ron E'""" t -100·537-V5211

.

OT~ef( _ ·s,999·

'

".
-

A'~?

.
.A-ND 00
UP WIT\\
::&gt;WIMEKS E.NZ.!

~ N'l'tE&gt; 1\T 1\

""

1-\~m:TY...

PuWY Palece l&lt;ennels, BoardlriQ,
Stud Servu:e Pupptts, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade , All Breeds
Payments Welcome, · 614·388·

35FurlouS
311 Hllr ringlet
37 Dlatancas
311 Certain

9

CC'
"" . :. knoW

w...-.

10 Boek talk (II.)
• 11 AulhOr

12Fender-be-

convict

.'

.....

tax on
23 SIIIAIIJd

19Lagal-

24~falth

21 TraWling beg
221m~·

25 Hlyl
28 WhHe troot
27 t.atronout
Solly- •
2t Bllndoo-30 Old form at

""'

North

Pass
PllBS

Pass
Pass

I •

3NT

Pass

31 Surla..

==-

31 Orlnk IIIII I

Ebl
2.

2.
Pass

Pass

15 Cows &amp; He1fers 1 Polled CharOI&amp;!S ,BuU, 1 Whne 8 Mon.th Old
Col!,l514·245·5812.

2

45 Ooom
46 Wonltol

U-·
e11ndlng

47 Hlghwey
ehoutdor
49 Hindu
cymbtla

50 Ending for

~
52-Vogas
53 SuDOIIIIIYO

.,

.

•

..
.,.

'

.

.•I'

.'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

lule Campos

~c-._....,,.,_,...,...,...._.,......,

_ _.,.....,__.

EKII ~in 1M~ ltlnck for another Toc:Yy•ct.· 8~ K

'ULG:rFLU

811

SI

CPODYH

•
JSUZ

GW

HDYPHWTN

KGZ

ULSII

'I

PIH

,•

-q

S M

JGIIIYDIIPUSGI
PNHGTII

LTVNYZ,

TIBIGIII

01

NGM

PIFYNYII

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A Conservative: One who is opposed 10 lhe lhlnga
he is In favor ol."- Elbert Hubbard.-

•

r::~:::~' ·'0@\\~~-~f.~S&amp;

WOlD
IAMI

- - - - - _ _ ; IIIItH ~y CLAY I. POllAN
Reorrange "nen of
0 four
scrambled words

low

to form four

·.
-J

..

the

ba·
limple wordt

KOTDEC

..
FETBI

I Ir

..

l
.
t I II _
0 U RMT

-,
I

Aulo Parts &amp;
Accessories

•'

oufllx

1995 Honda 300, 4·Wd, less lhan

760

,.

41 llloll •
42 Old atr"• gad
!natrument
430ft t h e - n

20 hours. exc cond $4,400 304

57ll·2971

'

concerned

Pass

II you go loa major international
bridge tournarpenl. normally there
will be a Vu-Graph presentat1on. You
sit in a tbeater and watch the action at
one table The lull deal is put up on a
screen while the bidding and play are
relayed through from the playingroom. Commentators interpret the
bidding and predict the likely lme of
play.
In Ibis deal from the European
Junior Championship. the soothsayers
fell. that three no-lrump would succeed because or the lucky lie or the
spade su1t However. the Norwegian
pair of Boye Brogeland cWesll and
Oyvind Saur defeated the contract
•
• First, Brogeland didn 'tlead a heart.
after which Soulh would have ca•hed
a quick nine tricks: six spades. two
hearts and one ihamond Instead , he
led the diamond two: three. king, seven.
Recogmzing--the importance ol the
10, Saur returned the diamond SIX .
Declarer ducked this Irick and the
next, when West led another diamond.
Now Saur round the only kdting play: a
spade, leavmg declarer unable to do
better than cash out lor one down.
How did the commentators react?
Nol like B.F Skinner, who wrote, "I
remember the rage I used to reel
when a prediction went awry. I could
have shouted at the subjects of my experiments, 'Behave, damn you, be·
have as you ought!' Eventually I real·
! ized that the subjects were always
right. II was I who was wrong. I had
made a bad prediction." They just
complimented the Norwegians . Then
they pointed out that if declarer had
won trick two and run his spades, he
could have made the contract.

.'

ntiiOUfH

By Phillip Alder · ·

Suburtuin coal &amp; 1~ood burntng
s~ove wlthermoslal &amp; blower
$150. 304·173·5666

3404

arwopooa--

34-Hawldt•
Oay .

With all13 cards

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprighl, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackson, Ohio. 1:S00·537·9528

KC_A.;;;;;:;;;---;iii,;l,;';;;; .I Stmmental
Bulls For Sale, Etcel·
lent Bloo&lt;tine, Call 6,4-258-e-402

Freez., bHI, gratn led, 1200 per
quatttr, cui, wrapped and froze.
814·ii2·2143 or 614 ·892·6:173

West

Opening l~ad : •

II

3725.

Poodle J)uppiltl , lin)' ttacupa
wtllte, At&lt;C, shots &amp; wormed , also
mtniarure Schnauzers, 614 ·667-

•KJ972
• K , I011....__
•AJ
J

South

S·H·O·T

STIFF II

Ashier Wood insen, heavy duty
automat1c thtfmostat blower, one
set ol glaas &amp; sleel doors, 1250,
6t4-742-2050

For salt· Stga CO SrSiem wtth
appro•tmatetr 30 games, S300 ,
30&lt;-773·5305 ak"' 5pm

• 8 5 t

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Shop the Pomeroy Thrtlt ShOP. we
buy &amp; aell Je&amp;na, bab-f tlemt ol all
k1nds, toys &amp; lurn~ture , 614-992·

Pets Plus, Stiver BMOe Plaza
(10% 011 Every Thing, Ever)' Day I)
flt4 44t ·0110

5 .Pan u

8 Aoundld lump
7 certidn l n -

•AQB53 .
• J 7
• 10 8 3 2

All is Chalmers tractor 8·45, wilt!
5 II tide mower, runs good. 304-

ftelngeralors, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Recond ttloned
And Gauranteedt $100 And Up,
Will 0ei!V8f. 8 14~9· 8441

look Beaunlui Pupptes. Purebred
Stber~an Husk ttl, Some Snow
While, Some Black &amp; Stiver Has
Had tsl ShoiS, And Wormed,
GreatBuySt00,614·25e·6444 ,

-of
20 Dish cotlecllon
21 -Harper 3 Actor Bruco 4 Airline Info
25 Wonl ........

• K6

:GIL:&lt; YOU WJU) (:f) e£l6BI~

FtreWOOd· seasoned mtxed hard·
wood, appro• 2·3 uuckJoed 1tack,
mu111akt all, make olfer. 814 ·
992-8115

Q J
10 8 4
Q I 52
Q 8 7 5

1 Gou,t
2 Towordthe

a.-rmenl
18 Yorkohlro rt-

33 Shut out

East

Soullo

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Firewood. Muted Hardwood Full
Cord (3 Stacks 1e• Average, 4'
H~h 8' Long) 614·368-6679.

DOWN

28--City
32 DlriiM

A 8 4 3

• K I 4

Relngeralor lo r sale, 81-4 ·992·
6315

At&lt;C RegiStered Male Cocker
SJ)Intels, Both Adults, t Black &amp;
•s.s
Whtte, t Buff &amp; Wt'llle. Wilh
Boots By Redwlng, Ch1ppewa. ChamJ)tOn BIOOdltne, 614·379·
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed , _27 28
lowest Prices At Shoe Cafe, Gal· At&lt;C Registered
lipohs.
Schnauzer Female Sal!
Call Meows Col! ecto r Houses, $150,6 14·446·9419Aoers~~- ··''' "
$15 Each , And Acc:eaaortes S5 AKC FIEJ9istered, male, Maltese,
AH Aelired From 1987 ·1992 614
3 months old, house broken, wtll
446-JS;MJO.. 614·446-3210 '
malt.tre at 5·6 lbs, t st shoJs &amp;
wormed $250 614·992·3965
Combat boots, armr camouflage
clolhiAg, tnsulated coveralls by AKC S1ber~an P.ups Rare Colors
Sandyv ille Posl Olflce Sam Blue Eyes Very lnrelhgent Pet
Somervtl!e's
Fr 1day -Sunday. Pnce St50 To $275 , 6t4 &lt;146
NDon·S OOJ)fl'l 304·273-5fl55
11627
Concrete &amp; Plasttc Septic Tanks.
CHRISTY'S PETS
30J] Tttru 2,000 Gallons Ron
271 N. Second Avenue
Eva11s Enterprtses, Jackson, OH
. ~lld4~~:51c:.'
1·800-537-95?8
Monday·Saturday t2am·8pm
Etectrontc programmable Leslo Grooming, kennel, pets, supplies.
Concept Cycle, l1ke new, $40 , AKC regttter~d dogs : male
Caviness Feather brand boar Dachshund, male Cocker Spaniel,
oars. used once. S50. 614·949 · puJ)ples, repttles, sptders, f1sh,
2709.
miCe, Will honor schOol d1scounts.
FALL SPECIAL
10% dlscounl wtlh,S25 order
92%. Htgh Etftc 1ency Furnace,
Thank you, Cht'1sry
60.000 BTU -$785, 80,000 BTU .
Co•pon
$885, 100.000 BTU ·S995 The F
Above Prlce&amp; Are For Furnace
lea S!oppers Carpet Powder 1
Only Free EstJmate To lnslall Year 100% Guaranteed, Sare For
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. S Vear Humans, Pel!l , Emmonmentally
Sale, 614-245·5747
Warranty All Pans ltlet1me War·
ranty On Heal Exchanger 614 · HAPPY JACK MANGE MEDI·
448·6308, 1•800·29HXI98
CINE Promoles Healing And Ha1r
Growth To Severe Mange, Hoi
Fall Sp&amp;c1ai : New SeptiC Tank
&amp; Funoi on Oog1 &amp;
AeratDrs Moton Compete $399 1 ~:~~~~~ WtlhOut Sterotds J 0
plus talC. lnstallabon t3S plua ma· I' I
PRODUCE 814· 448·
tenal814·448-4782
1933

~Thlnk~ot

Morocirl
Item

Prom gown, stze·8, pttrae &amp; ear·
nng110 match. 304·882-3146

Babybed, 1wmg, htgh-chatr, car
seat, stroller &amp; walker. 304·87S..

Sll=hollday

17 Tonn ot ·

. '

EAGREL

Or614·446·1158 Alter 5:30P.M
640 Hay'&amp; Grain

o:,'

a

The mother of
toddler
complained that her child fighls
nolto get into lhe tub lhen fighls

..' .
.-

lnollo- . . . . . .

l---r::..,ri;-.;;1....:..;,-TI;,..;;;;r:-;
G Complole
_
•
.
_
_
by fllhng

"'• chuckle
in the
L....I-...1.-.J...-L.......I.-.J you develop from step No.

Al!alla Hay Rolls· Storage and de·
ltvery avatlab'1e Morgan Farm
304·937·2018

BIG NATE

GREETINGS,

TRANSPORTATION

EARTHLING!

71 o

Autos tor Sale

SCII~LITS

~.

1973 Carvel, red , good cond,
350 cu In, 4spd, I-1GJlt, L·48,
movtng. must sell. Make oller.
304·675·7791 ,
..

-·

Intact - Musty -Furor- Stanza • CAUTIOUS

· Fsmous author "Old men do not grow wise,

are prone to grow CAUTIOUS ."

1981 Dodge LeBaron Clean, Ga·
rage Kepi, Good Cond1t1on, Great
Work Car, 614·446·8778

•

t98S Aud• SOOOS Clean Car
Needs Motor Wo rk 5 Cylindtr
Auto S750. 814·446·8 795

_I

t985 Cadtlac Fleetwood Well
Matntatned, loaded, Runs Great,
Over tOOK Miles, Good For 100
Mo re Sacraltct At $1,800, 814 ·
448·8795
1986 Chrysler Ftllh Avenue, 318
V·B, wirh all exrras, 61•·949-2692,
606 Mam Scrett, Ractne

1988 Black Regal Cullom 2
Doors. FWD Auto, 2 8 Mulu Port
Sl 59K $2,995: 1988 VW For 2
Ooora, BUK Like New Condttton,
$1,895; 1991 Red Z-24 Cook MoIOrs, ti14-4.48·0t03

Home Matn ·
1 1 . vtn)'l Sldtng,
, \1111"\dOWS, bSittiS,
reptM and more For
call Chat, flt4·992·

1988 Camara, white, black and
grar tnlertor, V-e automatic, ai'N.
tm casseut, .a;'c, good condltton,
$2500, 814-1112·5544.
1988 troc Z·28 , 305 TPt, Sspd,
4 10 potl, ale, J)Oiished aium1·
num wheelt, lint, great lhapel
Allclng $8,900 304-61'5·5335.

bU1ld1ng_ and
OYer 10 rears eXPftt·
ence Free tSllmates. eu.g92·
9Q10

tGSI!J Njnan 300ZX Turbo TTopt, 5 Speed, Loaded Wilh Er·
trat, Good Condltionl1114·448·
341.

DRYWALL
Hang, Mlsh. repa1r
Cetltngs teJtured, plasttt repatr
Call Tom 304·675·-tt&amp;e 20 y..-s
experlenct
.

1

1089 lsuza 1-Uark 1&amp; Valve AS
Wllh LOIYI Handling Packogt Ron·s TV Serv1ct spectall:tlng m
::-'~--:----..,..--• ·1 71,000 Mlie1, Haa R.. r Wmg &amp; :Zentth also servietng ma111 other
Rabblll for lilt, ~Satin breed, 4 Ground EtttCtl PacktQe, Spon brands HOUle CIIIS, 1·800-787•
monlhs old, 814-992·5275
WhHia, Aunt Grut NHda A ltl· OOt, WV304·576-2398
tie Mainlenanc• Boo/Is For
1
Ra1 'Ternef!Jack Runell puJ)s, S4.000 Wdl Sac:rallce for 11,800. 840 EleC1rlcal and '
1st a holt I wormed . tatll 814·448 ..715.
Ratrlgerauon
dDckt&lt;l. S7S&amp;a 304·875- 794fl
1181 Ntw Yorktr V·e Auto,
RS£S OERTIFIEO DEALER
Roll We tler PuJ)I, AKC Reg1s· 110,000 Mile1 ~aadad St,800,
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
ltred, Champ1on Sloodhnl', OF._ 080: 1N8 Sundlncl 4 Cylinder, Heat PumQ&amp;, Ait C:ondl!IOI'll"" It
Cer1tl1ed S~tt 111 Sholl &amp; Automatic, toadtd, 120,000 Vou Don't Call Us We Bolh LoN!
Wormed , Readr t1 ft l96, S350, Miln $1,300 080 l14oS12S3.
Free Elltmaltl, 1·800-291 ·0018
814-245-0433 Ahtt 5 ~M
' .,,1 I:
t 1112 Ford F•tlva. 55,000 mil•, 81•-·e:!OB, wv 0029-15.
~ ,r~
Sh!h·Tzu pUJ)PIII, AKC fiQll- 4cyl , .t5mpg, 2dr, Sapd, exc Rnldt;nli.al or commercial wirtne,
rertd, call after 5pm. 304·175· cond. Aaklne t:t,OOO. 30•·ags. new aerv~te or repa 11s Mnllt' U· 1 l lf'IV
7•111.
31181.
censed tiiC:Irltlln Ridenour
Eltculcal, WV00030&amp;, 304-875- ;· !'~~~
Marqutt.
1112
Orand
570
MusiCal
1188.
low mtlet. 304·
~~~·f"
Instrument&amp;
Retldenltal Or Cornmtrc111 W"· I \1,411.{ •
ong, Now St!Yico 0. Ropllro ~1- I ,,.,;t\
Technlc1 Organ, double ktJ'·
contH Eloc:triclan.
bolrd, multt·tltlronlc ltlfUrtl I
,..~ "n
- . 30H75-S1111!
'
lrle 8H·•4e·IIIO, Ollli))OIIt,
01*1.
•

•
·--

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

w- eioc:.

Graph Matchmaker 1natant1y reveals
~----"---.,.. -which oigllo are romanllcally pe~ecl lor
you. Mall $2.15 10 liolalc:llrnak". c/o tills
MWIPI!Mir. P..O. Box 1758, Murra~ Holl
•
Slalion, New YOII&lt;, NY 10158.
BERNICE
SIIGITTIIIIIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21} A
BEDEOSOL friend who ,. a poor credit rill&lt; mighl ask
you 10 underwrlle a shaky endeavor
loclay. If you keep lllls person's &lt;I(X)rtl '"
mind,
he will be easier 10 resist
.
CIIPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22·Jtn. 10) Help
. olhere when you can loclay. but don'l feel
obllgale4 10 do somelhlng lor someone
who can do 1t u IUII!I u you can.
AQUARIUS (Jon• . ,•• 18) You can
odliev1
your goals IOday, bul you must
Thu..ay, Oct. 31 , tllll8 .
focus all your -rgy on o single aim .
ln ·the y•or ahead, you mlghl o1umbia You wll~ bl SOffy if you don't lry your
onto a ncondary source o! Income. bell.
Carafully eumfnt 'oil 1nvu1men1 and Fll Cl!l(rtb. 20 Ill ell 20} Uaually, you
buolnen proposals bro•Qhl 10 you by ..joy rubbing shauldert wllh lhe crowd ,
bul today ~ou mlghl feel more oomlon·
flllndo,
ICOIIPIO (Oo1. 24 Mil"· 22) If you pul -In I tmOI group.
your fool In your mouth today, you ew1 , . . . (JMrciii1-Aptll1t) If' you~-­
mil.iiiJC"' dlmlgl by IWIIIIiMng lillnl. !Milt your pilot ~. 1'119 your guest
one Wi&gt;ong .......,
DG not dnlw ent more -IliOn 10 ya&lt;lr 1111 ....tuly, flul pu. Know whare to look for could """' your - l l l l l r.
........,.,. lnd you'll lind 11 . The Allro· TAUIIUI (llprll20 lily 20) You mty not

'

0..21.

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15

Pya~~

:::..

18 Pel pi~., lltiCk

Sporting
Goods

Mod. 700 Remington, 308 cahber,
m1nt condition Padded cammo
sUng w1th qutck ralease sw1vels,
Redfield 3x9x40 KOJ)I Wtth fhj&gt;up
caps, 3 bous ammo, padded
cammo case. as new. $450. call
614·992· 7967188Y8 message.

530

Marlin 30·30, S1BS; 22 Boll Ac·
tlan, 159, 20 gauge 11ngle, 162
12 gauge alnglt, $59 95, Auget
10·22, I 11 S, Remtng!Cn 22 VIPf!',
$79 SO; 4Hl pump, $172: StSVJins
12 gauge pump, $99.50; Remmg
ton 870 E1press, $179, 12
Mossberg wnh 2· barrets.
12 gauge Winchester avtomat1c ~
$199 SO , 20 gauge J)ump,
$t39 95. 30..()8 Boh, $249; Hat top
gutlar, ApQlauae, $139 , IOOIS,
toys Dave's Swap Shol), Ftve
Potnts, ct&gt;~ner ol Flatwoods Fld
and SA 7. Tt.tt , Wed., Frt., Sat t-

•

10gs Neon Sport Coop I.-ow 1'
Mites, EJCceltent Condillon, Secrl·!'=~
lice For SIJ,{K)Q Undat Loan V•l·. ,
... 114-317·50«
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tlltcl (2 wdo.)

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Ludwig Slllrt Orum UMd 6
Weeki With Stand And Boo~&amp;.
614-381·8193 '

rJ 11f

41 Or lllnclo't 11.
44 Gl'l acldllll

. ..

Q)~

\i

be on the same wavel6nglh ae your aud•·
• - loday. so select~· IQpics caretul·
ly. You woll no1 wantlo o~'!!)d a lialltner.
GEMINI (Mey 21.June 20lln order IO
conlrol You• budget loday. you mus1 no&lt;
be penny-w1se and pound·fooliah You
muSI be pruden!. but don'l hesolale IO pay
lop dollar lor a quallly llem.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Today you
mlghl hav'a lo contend wolh an auocla1e
who faels thai hos opinion Is always nghl.
Do nol try to defend !his person in a
mee11ng.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) When you make
a promose, you usually lolloW lhrough on·
ot. Today. however, vou mlghl not live up
10 your higtl Slandards.
YIIIGO (Aug. 23-a.pt. 22) Adhere lo
your orlglnol social schedule lodoy, so
lhat you don'l disappoint ywr triendt. It
ian 'I nice IO switch partners In IIMI middlll

of a dance.

.
LIIII/I (lopt. 23·0ct. 13) If you do

thlnglln s hlltfheaflld fUhlon IOCioy, you
cannot oxpect ,blnor than hatfhHrtod
""""'· You muet takl pl1cle In 1llhlt you
do.

WEDNESDAY

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but they

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OCTOBER30 I

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�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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•

WtdnUdiY, ~ 30, 118t:

Ohio Lottery

Purchasing power gives consume certain rights

If II Ctrf IIAIR

bow to 111C the object safely 1111c1
The RiJht to Be Heard • If you come responsibilities. ill order to
jMoperly, wb1t feMurel ve iacluded, are not happy about. a produc~ let . exercise lhe right to be informed, Mcds.
..t bow 10 till&gt; for it.
the ~Y know. A letter to the you have to evaluaJe ads before buyIt is up to you to be safe in the use
Tile RiP! to Cboole. ~buy- president of a corporation can do ing, read 111d understand care
of
your
product. You .-1 to exam·
i111111 object, there sbould be a wide some I~·
.
instructions, keep informed about inc the lrticle for safety, follow the
seleclion of several bnnds ud mod· . The Right to Redress or Sllllfac- new merchandise and product fea.
cia from which to choose. You will ~~~ · If you have a justifiable com- lUres, and look for additional infor- correct use and care instructions
w111t to choose the item tbat bcsl fits plaint wotb a ~uct, you are enti- mation (if needed) to malce a wise included with the product, and
report unsafe objccu.
your needs.
ded to sallsfacllon. You should be choice.
purcbuinJ 111 ilem. Store displays,
Tile Right to Safely • All products able _to have the problem corrected, . Yo~ are responsible for comparYou should ex~ your comld\'IIIIJemellts, packacing, labelins. shjluld be safe to use under normal lhe otem replaced, or_a 'refund of ong different products • lheir reaplaints
and satisfactions. If you arc
or 1118 owner's muuat should be conditions. Warnings should be yo~ money (dependong on store lures, durabilily, costs, and care.
dissatisfied
with a product, but don't
aw iMe when buyU., a product. given in lhe instructional manual polocy).
·
Afier weighing these considerations do anything about it, you are not
This information should tell ~~~~~!.:unsar.:!:~e!:;use~o~f!the!!aru~·~cl~e~. . However, along with these rights make the best seleCtion for y~ exercising your iight to be heard.
I .. ·- .

Mlllufao:tunn need 10 know wllll
problems there are so they Clll cor·
rect lhem in order to CODstrucl qual·
ity merchandise. Likcwite they need
to know what fcatun:s should be
continued because of their useful·.

'I

Col It) I!II!JdwdiMIIIaann Aalnl
F•allt end Can1U1111r lkl~nan/ Community Dn1lap
lftlnl
We have c:enain riabta as con~. These rilhb include:
The RiJhtto Be Informed • Infor- .
mation should be available when

II

Ohio Univcnily
College of Osteopathic Medicine

ness.

Area grid
previews for
season finales i

Pick 3:
582
Pick 4:
0259
Super Lotto:

4-8-18-21-25-41

Spo!U on Pages 4-5-8

Kicker:

218157

In order to get the most out of
your purchases, it is your obligation
as a consumer to be aware of your
rights and to act responsibly when
making and using those purchases.

•

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Ask any . township trustee or public
official. ·J ohn Lentes Is committed to
providing prompt and effJclent service
to other public o.fflclals, unequaled by
his predecessors~ John Lentes realizes
how difficult public service can be, and
has fulfilled a commlttment to help
other elected officials do their jobs
more effectively.
.
·

Family
Medicine
John c. Wolf, D.O.
·Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

JOHN R. LENTES
Paid for

~ White

House declines

...

.

By DAVID KINNEY
Wednesday night .near the end of a
Maoclated Prell Writer
speech at the University of Penosyl·
PHILADELPHIA - Ross Perot vania. "The ArncriG"" people deserve
saved the punch line for last. After to know the truth."
delivering his standard attack on
The White · House quickly
·President Clinton's record,.the Texan declined.
. ·challengedCiintontoanelectioneve
"We'll be doing our eventS, not
face-off on national TV.
. Mr.. Perot's. The president set his
"This will give l:tim an opportu· . · schedule for lhe balance of tile camnity to clear his name: setllle record paign," presidential spokesman Mike
straight and could assure him of a McCurry·said.
·
Jandslide if he will do it," Perot said
Perot said he spent $1 million for

Promises Made, Promises Kept... .

r---Safety firsf---

Ohio 45789, Brian J. Reed, Treasurer

.,

Do Something.
· Wonderful
For Yourself And
Vour Family.
Schedule A
Mammogram. ·

Breast cancer has killed millions
of American ~omen. Probably
.someone you know. Regular mam,
mography at our fully accreAited
mammography facility is one of
lhe best things you can do to 1?1'0tect your liealth. ·
A mammogram, !hough;
depends greatly on .the Pl'9fessionals wbo perfonn it and those who
interpret it. That's why we offer
you only certified technologists and
board certified radiologists
our
mammography slllff at 0 'Bieness

on

Hospital. Talk to your doctor about
a referral to O'Bieness.
Even if you show no sip15 of
breast .cancet, The American Cancer
Society recommends a screening·
mammogram every ooe or two
years after age 40 and every year
after age 50.
·
Now is lhe time to take charge
of your health. Do something wonderful for yourself and your family.
Schedule a mammogram at the
·mammography facility at O'Bieness
Hospital.•

A Gannett Co. Nita apap If

.

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Perot ctJallenges Clinton to a debate

•

the Committee to Re-elect John Laniel, 117 West

2 Soctloo-. 12 P1lpa 3 1 -

Pomeroy·Midc:lleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 31, 1996

;01816, Ohio YII'-Y Publlahlng Compllly

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Prosecuting Attorney

:voa. 47, N0. 127

...

an hour on ABC Monday ni~ht.
He 'II also be appearing for a half·
hour on CBS and NBC.
The Texas billionaire said be
wanted to ask Clinton to explain
alleged foreign contributions to the
Democratic Party - now under
intense scrutiny by Republicans and
campaign finance reform groups for .
its fund-raising.
,
P11rot said he also wanted to know
whether lhe president would pardon

111yone associated with Whitewater.
Ciinton says he has not considered
pardons; his opponents make a point
of noting he has not ruled them out.
"I want to spend an hour candid·
ly discussing with lhe president the
criminal and ethical cluu'ges pending
against him, his wife, his associates
and other members of his administration," Perot said to a standing ovalion from a few thousand people on
hand, most of them students. .

"I don't want to be rude or abu- nent, I will be surprised," Perot said.
Perot's challenge came at the end.
. sive, but I !lo want you to have the
facts before you go to the polls the of his traditional stump speech, in
whii:h he blamed both parties for failnext day," he said.
ing to shrink the national debt, reform
. He made no mention of inviting campaign finance and protect Amer·
GOP nominee Bob Dole. who insist· ican jobs. He lambasted lhe Clinton
ed that ·Perot be excluded ~rom tbe campaign for all~gedly accepting
foreign contributions and.for what he
presidential debates.
,
"If you can ever find anybody called "the criminal misuse of mil·
running a. political campaign who lions of d. . in ,campaign funds."
offered to give that time to an oppo-

Dole says Clinton isn't telling
By CURT ANDERSON
A11oclated Prell Wrlblr
TAMPA, Fla. - Bob Dole, sug- ·
gesting that President Clinton may
have committed illegal acts in lhe
White House, said in must-win Florida today that the president wasn't
telling the truth on Medicllll or any
other issue. "How low will ·this
White House go?" he asked. ·
Dole appealed to the area's big
elderly population not ·to believe a
barrage of Democratic ads claiming
that Dole and other Republicans
intend to slash Medicare spending.
"I call it irresponsible. Tile White
House shouldn't be in the business of
distorting the truth and scaring
seniors," Dole said, speaking at lhe
ornate Tampa Theatre.
Dole irilisti ·thai his plans to cut
taxes and baiiiiCC lhe budget will still
mean a 39 percent increase in
Medicare spending over lhe next six
years.
"This is the Clinton record on

seniors: He ignores their real problems. He raises their taxes. And then
he plays on their fears with millions
and millions in negative advertising,"
Dole said.
"Every day we have anolher reason to wonder. How low will lllis
White House go? How low will this
White House go? Is the~ any trust
they won't violate?" he added. ·
Former President Bush. joined
Dole at the rally, saying he believed
the integrity of the White House was
at stake in next Tuesday's election.
"I believe in keeping the White
House above partisan politics, and
away from these puny, terrible disputes we're seeing. And I know that
Bob and Elizabeth (Dole) can restore
this decency and this' respect," said
B..Sh. w.ho nlll'fOwly caitied Florida
in 1992.
.
·
In an interview with David Frost
to be broadcast Friday night on PBS,
Dole insisted his effort to beat Clinton was "geuing better" and that he

tru~h

still has a chance to win next Tues·
day despite polls showing the presi·
dent ahead in all parts of lhe country.
"I'd say the underdog is nota bad
place to be right now," Dole said. "I
mean, we feel good about our race,
I'm optinlistic."
He said he was convinced the
president "knew about" some of the
allegedly improper foreign campaign
contributions, but declined to respond
directly when Frost asked whelher
they might be "impeachable offens·
es.,.

·

"We don't know how many illeg'at · things happened, but I tllink
there's a preny good indication that
some were," said Dole.
He went on to talk about how
many people initially thought Water·
gate was a short-term story that
would fade · away, but ·said he
"wouldn't want to make a judgment"
about whether there Is a parallel with
the growing spate of news stories
about the Clinton campaign activities.

on issues
Asked what he would do if the
polls arc right and his four-decade '
political career comes to an abrupt
end, Dole said he would .find some·
thing meaningful to dOl
"I'm not suggesting it's going to
happen, but if it should happen, I'll
probably find work," Dole said. "I'll
work with those with disabilities and
do other !hings that arc fulfilling, but
I'm not going to stop and go off and
say, 'Well, it's lilt over."'
Dole's renewed attacks pn Clinton 's integrity come just five days
before Election Day as be tries to pull
allead in Florida. a normally reliable
Republican state with 2S electoral
votes that is now .considered a virtu·
\al tossup.
.
· Dole planned a rally later \oday in
Miami before hcadina north to Georgia and Columbus, Ohio.
Campaigning outside New
Orleans Wednesday night, Dole told
a rally, "Not much time left, but
cnough.
11

•

Consumer spending up mere 0.1 percent
"

Smithsonian Institution cuts
deal with Hollywood
•

By KAREN THOMAS
said: "My God, there's a CD-RO~
USA TODAY
in all the images lhere."
'Illlk about odd couplings. WashPut the hat Abraham Lincoln
ington's revered Smithsonian lnsti- wore when he was assassinated "in
tution has just made a pact with Hot- the hands of a great storyteller and
lywood.
from that comes a powerful motion
· A team of nine agents f(Om lhe picture," the agent said.
Creative Artists Agency will work
Every year, lhe Smithsonian sees
with the Smithsonian to get its 28 million people visit its Washing·
museums and artifacts into movies ton, D.C., museums. But Smithsonand onto TV and the Internet
ian secretsry' I. Michael Heyman
Already, CAA's Bruce Vinokour wants to reach a global population
said Monday, TV networks are call· by "taking the Smithsonian off the
ing wi,lh thrilled interest Take the Mall," said spokesman David J.
National Portrait Gallery alone, he_ _u~ansky.

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THIS

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WEEK~S SPECIALS

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•'

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il •

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Ptne
Cleaner
Downy

•·

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870z.

•

••
•t

s 99
30 Fl. Oz.

..

Halloween Decorations
&amp; Costumes

.~

••''

•

f
O'BLENESS

SUPER SUNDRY
Pomeroy

•
OMJ-

M I by .... Collrte otRodiolot)&lt; ...
.... Food 1111! Drill Ad!niftltlrooio.
. ;

'

Memorial Hospital
55 Hotpital Drive, Aobens, OH 4570l
6t+59J-sm

A ltolpi/lll.,, ca;a aU
bf proud of."

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The Mlddlepon P!lllce Department hila taken ,111 extra
atep In protecting children during Hll~n 'Trlck-or·rr.t ICtlvhlel thla year, with thla week's dlatributlon of H i l l - Safety
candy baga to atudlnta at Middleport Elementary, Brld!:lury Elemenblry, and Rejoicing Ufe ~ool. The bap.trl tlllde from a
r1IIIK:Uve material to tellel;t motorlatl heedllghtl, lnd featur1 hill·
t o - ..fety tlpa, according to Middleport Pollee C.p!, BNc:e
Swift. Ollplaylng one of the baga Ia lotlddlepon E~ ltuclent Lien ttotrm.n, dllughter of David and Kathy llofln... With
Hoffman era Middleport Klnclergllrten ~II' Marshll Redebaugh
lind !&gt;wlft. (Tom Hun~/Sentlnel. photo) ·

Open burning
itt·egal in Ohio

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
Interest rates fell in lhe inflation·
sumer spending rose a mere 0.1 per- sensitive bond market lifter the concent in September•.lhe weakest show· sumer spending figures were
ing in three months and further evi· released, then bounced back up to
levels just before the report. Yields on
dence of a moderating economy.
· The Commerce. Department said 30-year Treasury bonds had slipped
today spending totaled $5.18 trillion to 6.68 percent this morning from
at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, .6.70 percent late Wednesday.
The latest data .supported a gov- ·
up from $5.17 triltion in August when
emment
repOrt Wednesday that conit rose 0.5 percent. Thc advance was
sumer
spending
inched up just 0.4
the smallest since spending actually
percent at an annual rate from July
fell 0.5 percent in June.
With five days until the election, through September after surging 3.5
Republican presidential candidate percent and 3.4 percent in the prior
Bob Dole is making lhe slowing two quarters.
It was the smallest quarterly
economy a major issue in his campaign, saying it could lead to a r~ces­ increase in nearly five years and
sion. The Clinton administration helped slow overall economic growth
denies any recession threat, contend· to a 2.2 percent annual rate, less than
ing the moderation would prolong half the 4.7 percent growth rate dur·
'
what is already the third-longest ing lhe April-June period.
recovery since World War II. .
Analysts had predicted spending ,

would slacken because of heavy debt
burdening many consumers. ·
Consumer spending represents
about two-thirds of the nation's economic activily.
,
The anemic spending gain c~e
despite a 0.6 percent increase in personal incomes to $6.54 trillion from
$6.5 trillion in August when it rose
0.5 percent.
In anolher report suggesting a
slowing economy,lhe Labor Depart·
mcnt said new claims for jobless ben·
efits shot up last week by 23,000 to
342,000. Many analysts had expected a smaller 15,000 increase.
Private wages and salaries jumped
$30.7 billion to $3.7 trillion. compared with a $29.4 billion increase a
month earlier.
. Disposable income rose 0.6 per·
cent, slightly more than the 0.5 ,per·

cent advance in August.
. The combination of incomes and
spending meant that Americans' saving rate was 5.7 percent. highest since
.a6.3 percent rate in December 1993.
Spending on durable goods fell ' ·
1.4 percent after posting a 3 percent '
.gain in August. Slack automobile · ,
demand accounted for most of the 'i
decrease. Durabie goods spending
!had declined 1.2 percent in July.
; Spending on nondurable goods
1such as food and fuel rose 0.4 per;
!ceo~ erasing a 0.2 percent decline the
iprevious month. Spending on ser; ·!
• vices increased 0.2 percent, just half' •
the 0.4 percent advance a month car: · :
lie'r. ·
• ·, ·
The income and spending figures ~;:
were not adjusted for in nation. When :,.
adjusted, disposable incomes were up : l'
0.4 percent. the same
as in August: : :
.

._,
._,

School bans·violent themes in Halloween celebrations .. .
.I

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i

Until this year, students were per· scavenger hunt. Khight roasted.: 1;
MEDINA (AP) - ·An elementary tivities planned on Friday, the day
milled
to dress up in scary costumes marshmallows for the students ovc( : i
sehoul principal says be became fed after Halloween. But students must
up with violent \hemcs in Halloween dress up as a farmer. scarecrow. farm and parade through lhe school on a small fire near the playground • •
Halloween. But Knight said too many · Wednesday.
celebrations. So this year his school implement or animal.
of
the costumes carried violent
He also eliminated the tradition of
Dann
Bruno,
II,
said
he
was
dis·
is doing without.the terror.
themes.
.
a
haunted
house during lhe Week of
"We still want to 'have a memo- appointed that he would no longer he
"They'd
buy
an
eilpensive
mask
Halloween.
He said the haunted
rable event, but "''e want to change able to wear the costume of his
with a knife or a hatchet sticking out house similarly carried overtones of
Ohio EPA is reminding commu· 1,000 to 10,000, and a one-mile the focus and get away from the vio- choice.
of
their head," Knight said. Other violence. Instead, students will par."You
can't
be
as
many
things,"
nities that open burning is illegal in boundary around cities with a popu- lence," said David Knight, 45. the fifth-grader said of the limited costumes featured phony hlood or ticipate in a "mystic maze" that has
"We've eliminated the violent con·
restricted areas and that it can release . lation of 10,000 or more.
severed limbs, he said. ·
been set up in the school.
choice of costumes allowed.
tent."
· toxic fumes and cause harmful health
Outside of these bou!'daries, open
Knight saod that in years past, he
At an afternoon assembly Friday,
Nick Robson, 10, offered a diploKnight, principal of Sidney Fenn
effects. ·
burning of land clearing materials
unsuccessfully tned to discourage students will be encouraged to par-:.:~
matic response to the change.
Elementary
School,
has
replaced
tra·
When plant material and leaves requires a written permit and the usc
"There· are advantages for both," such outfits.
. ticipate in line dancing, a hog-calling : •
are burned, mold spores, aitbome of an air pollution curtain. which ditional Halloween activities with a he said. "Last year, it was more fun
The
school's
675
stude~ts
are
contest and a group sing-a-long. :::.
organic compounds, particulaleS, car· reduces smoke, as w~ll as several oth· weeldong celebration of the fall har- because you could wear what you participating in various festivities
"I like it," said Kerry Morse. 10: · •· ·
bon monoxide and other gases are er controls. Agricultural waste and , vest in northeast Ohio.
wanted. But this year, it lasts longer." this week, including hayrides and a "You do a lot mo~ than justlhe Hat-&lt;·.
·
Costumes
'!'ill
belllrt
of
the
fesresidential waste do 'not need a perreleased.
loween party."
Open burning is only pcnnitted for mit and are not required to notify
certain purposes under Ohio's open, Ohio EPA. However, a fire may not
burning .regulations. Burning Of be set within I ,000 feet of an inhabgarbage, tireS', plastics and any form ited building located off lhe proper·
A competing measure, Proposition sures make
provosoons for
SACRAMENTo, Calif. (AP) participation" in politics, said John
(/f petroleum product is prohibited ty where the fore is se~ nor may waste
208,
sponsored
by
California
Com"bundling" small contributions to
anywhere in the sta~e. ·
be moved off-site for the purpose of California and Maine are leading a Dieffenbacher-Krall of the Maine ·
mon
Cause,
establishes
mandatory
·allow
small groups of donors to give
movement
for
camPeople's
Alliance.
cross-country
Willi few exceptions, open bum· bumina.
contribution
limits
and
voluntary
more
than
lhe limits.
paign
finance
reform,
l!ut
the
proOpponents
say
lhe
proposal
will
ing is not permitted within a municSince the adoption of lhe state's
The
ceiling
on
conspending
limits.
Three
olher
states - Colorado,
ipal corporation, a I;()(J().feet bound· · regulations in 1972, several commu· posals are as different as the two be too cosily and too complicated.
tributions$100
for
individuals
in
Nevada
and
Arkansas
- also have
coasts.
And lhey point to U.S. Supreme
ary around cities with a population of
Coadaued on p~~~e 3
The ·measures - a pair of com- Court rulings that say limits on con- small districts, $250 in larger districts •ballot proposals to limit campaign •
!
petins initiatives in California and a tributions and expenditures restrict and $SOO in statewide races - would contributions.
be
doubled
for
candidaleS
who
agreed
But
none
are
as
sweeping
as
:
single, hotly debated proposal in freedoms of speech and association.
Maine,
where
a
publicly
financed
to
'the
voluntary
spending
limits.
Maine - impose severe new limill
The same court rulings arc being
· "We wanted a measure that·would ,Clean Election Fund would be set up. ••
on the influence or money in elec- challenged by Proposition 212 in CaJ.
tion1.
ifornia. which would set mandatory go into effect immediately," said 'for candidates who refuse private
But the Maine mcume divCiJes limits on contributions and spending. · Ruth Holton, executive director of contributions. Tiley must also agree . ·,
The bridge
be in•pectcd .
Motorists using the PomeroyMuon Bridge should expect delay&amp; Monday throush Nov. IS and traffic from California by supestin1 that .The measure, sponsored by Ralph California Common Cause. "We to spending caps and a shortened · · •
wllen one lane of the span is closed will be restricted to one lane. con- taxpayen subsidize candidate&amp; who Nader's Public Interest Research were not interested in $ending a campaign season. The fund would ;
·
Group. would set contribution limits message and ·challenging Supreme cost about $2.4 million annually, put &lt; :
to traffic next week for iu annual trolled by flagcn, durinl the houn tcfuse priviiC contributiona.
of which would come from a $3· •
"It will be VOf'J helpful in ~tor- for individuals at $200 in statewide Cow1 rulings."
' inspection, accordins to Muon, of 8 a.m. to 5 p.111., 'liylor said.
in1 failh in aovomment and increase race' and SI00 in most other races.
The California and Maine mea· chcck·off on state income taxes. · ' •
W.Va. Mayor Fred Taylor.
.,
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Campaign finance reform a hot issue across nation

Bridge traffic restricted
for annual inspection
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---

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