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( .
P-aa· 10-The Dally Sentinel

yomeroy-Middlepbrt, Ohio

Vitamins ·aldne do·
not fight depression

·oa.

GOTT

PETER.
GOTT,
M.D.
.
'

Reba McEntire answers question.: :
·"Is There Life Out/There?"

By SUE MANNING
Assotlated Press Writer
By PEI'ER H. GOTr, M.D.
sure to menlion the title.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CounDEAR DR. GOTI: As a long-·
l&gt;EAR DR. GOTI: PleasC elabtry singer Reba McEntire, who usu- '
lime student of nutritional theraj!y, orate on what makes someone
afiy deals with lonely cowgirls and
I wish you would' address the value crave sweets. I'm in this situation
their cheatin' men, finds herself
of vitamin Bl2 tablets, together and can't seem to control my
reckoning with the likes of E\lrlpiwith folic acid, in lceeping depres- desire.
·
~hat about the genital _herpes des, Aeschylus 8nd Sophocles in an
sion'at bay, especially for pre-teens
DE,A.R READER: Athletic per· v1rus~ Can a moth~r pass thiS to her upcoming TV movie about a smalland teens.
·
....sOns, who often exercise strenuous·- baby m breast feeding as well7
, town waitress who returns to colDBAR READER: Vi~ B12 Iy, may crave sweets 10 replace the
DEAR READER: Because gen- lege.
'
,
and folic ~id, which are present in calories they have burned for ener- ital herpes is present on the geni· McEntire stars in the CBS Sun·
well-balanced diets. are necessary gy. Also. diabetics may feel a need tats, it is not transmitted by breast day movie "Is There Life Out
for body metabolism, including the to ingeSt large quantiues of sugar- feeding. However, pregnant There?" as wife aild mothe~ Lily
fonnation of blood cells and the products.- a practice that, obvi- women wilh active genital herpes Marshal!, who seeks I~ fulfdl_an
function of nerves. A doficiency of ously. they should avoid.
can pass the virus - often with acallem1c dream desp1te family
eilher substance may lead to aneIn addiiion, healthy people may disasttous results - to their babies obligations.
mia, malaise, numbness of the feet, simply like the taste 9f sweet edi· during delivery. The infants may
Lily's borne front includes a
and other symptoms. Such a defi· bles and develop a craving for · suffer a potentially fatal general- supportive husband (Ke1th Carrathem. This may lead to obesity and ized herpes infection.
ciency is diagnosed by blood tests.
dine), two children (Kyle Hudgens
Despite'•their importance for other health problems,-including
HIV is different because the and Blair Struble), a sister who
good heal!~~. B12 and folic acid 'are diabetes.
virus. which causes AIDS. is pre- needs special attelttion (Genia
not effective treatment for depres• Therefore, someone who is oth- sent in blood, tissues and body flu- Michaela) and a dependant father
sion, for which other therapy, such erwise fit and well who. craves ids - and, therefore, can be spread (Donald Moffat).
as Prozac and other drugs, is more sweets · can overcome such a by saliva, vomit, semen, blood,
While in school, she struggles
suitable. Therefore, I do not "sweet tooth" if he substitutes diet breast milk and other secretions with her own health; her father's
cndorse_your view. that v~tamins ~ products (such as those sweetened and excretions. In order to cause death and a tutor's advancea, all the
appropnate for Ibis medical condi- with artificial substances, including AIDS, the mv virus must enter the time grappling with.guilt.
lion.
NutraSweet). Tile switch-over victim's body through a ,break in . For much of th~ movie, she
To giye you more information, I should be gradual, because synthet- the skin or in the mucus membrane. tosses, out names hke Wbarton,
atn sending you a free copy of my ic sweeteners do· not taste exactly
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA· Frost, Gf!ther, Fitz~erald and C:'!"'·
Heallh Report "Fads 1: Vitamins like the "real thing" and the body PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
mings;'and cons1ders queslloli'S
and Minerals." Other readers who must adjusL Aslc.your doctor about
(For inrormation on bow to like: "Why did Melville make the
would like .a copy should send $2 this.
communicate electronicaUy with whale white?''
plus a long, self-addressed,
DEAR DR. GOTI: I know that this columnist and others, cooThen comes those Greek guys.
Slamped envelope to P .0. Box breast feeding can pass the HIV tact America Online by ca16og 1~
"I didn't even know who
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be virus from mother to infant, but 800-827-6364, ext 8317.) .
Euripides and all that stuff was.

They schooled me for days. I
promise. ya, trying to say those
.words," McEntire said in a tele-.,
phone interview from her Nashville
home.
Altho11gh she once attended college in Oldahoma, MacEntire said
she "was kind of lost a lot of the .
time" while making the movie
because hei' literature classes
focused on ·' 'fairy tales," not
Greek tragedies.
"I lr.ind of nodded my head and
acted like I knew wbat everybody
was talldng about,'' she said of her
days on the set.
"Of course, I wasn't going to
say, 'Ya'll, I don't catch it, I don't
get iL Can •t we just talk about
something more common to the
everyday person?' ... It was over my
head drastically," she said
The 39-year-old entertainer
hopes that in spite of the movie's
academic script, her heartfelt message will get across - "Yes. there
is life out there."
·
The movie is a spinoff of McEntire's five-minute music video,
which stars rock singer Huey
Lewis as her husband.
The song "Is There Life Out
There?" is from McEntire's album
"For My Broken Heart." It was
recorded in May 1991, just two
months lifter eight members of her
band as well as two pilots were

killed in a plane crash in San
Diego; .
·.
McEntire said reaction to the
video was overw~elming - hundreds of people from all over called
or wrote to tell her they had decid'
ed ro rewm to school. Some
kids who hod dropped ouL Oth~
were women 45 arid 50 years old. ·

'

·

more likely 10 1m1tate therr mothers
than their fathers.
Confused, she resurveyed the
mothers and children, whose mean
age was 12 l(l.
Only 4 percent of girls whose
mothers didn't smoke while _pregnant had themselves smo~ed m the
last year, compared with 26 percent
of girls who were prenatally
exp~. she found. ,AD!onl! boys,
the difference wasn t s1gmficant:
14.8 peJ'C4lnt vs. 20 percent.
I
· Then Kandel turned to an ongoing national health survey of 796
IDQID.,9!'S !!!!!I !IJJli!' firs.J!!oo!, !!gain
With a mean age of 12 1/2. Five
percent of the non-exposed daugh-

·

percent·of the prenatally exposed
AJnong boys, the difference
aglllli was small: 3.2 percent vs. 7.7
percent.,
Combined, those surveys show
a fourfold risk for prenatally
exposed daughters, Kandel coneluded
That risk persisted when she
ccntrolled. for childhood exposure
10 a smolr.ing mother. In fact, pre~
natally expos~ daughters _whose
mothers had kicked the hahn were
l!lOre likely to smoke themselves,
than daughters of current, longterm ~mokers who temporarily
slOpped while plegnanL
·
"I don't know that I can prove
girl~.

. "I applaud these people, that
takes guts," McEntire said. And it
makes a difference to her. "Whel) .
you do a good }lroject, that's one
thing ~ut when you can help people'
in their lives, encourage. that's the
icing on the cake.'.'
·
"Is There Life Out There?" is
the movie's theme song. "The
Greatest Man I Never Knew,"
another McEntire hit, is used to
describe Lily.' s father in the film
and becomes her final oral exam in
English 208.
·
"In the movie, I don't want tO
be Reba McEntire the singer'
actress. I want to be Reba McEntire
the actress," she said.
This isn't her first TV movie.
Sbe's appeartld in "Tremors,"
"The Gambler Returns: The Luck
of the Draw"o;and "The Man from
Left Field." She made cameo
appearances in "North" and "The
Little Rascals."

next step IS further anunal studies
to pro~e how ni_cotine affects
developtng dopamtne· systems and
whether male hormones block the
changes.
But Pancth urged an immediate
look at other ~tabases that measure more precisely when mothers
kick the habit to ensure that Kandel
-despite 9uesti?ning mothers first
wh1le theu. ch,lld~en wer.e. very
youn~- d1dn t Sl~ply d1scover
that grrls are more likely than boys
. to imitate mother.
"I'm not dismissing this by any
means because it could be I! fasci.
nating ftnding," he said. "But this
database unfortunately wasn't so

clear."

Pesticides can increase breast cancer risk by affecting estrogen
NEW YORK (AP)- Pesticides
can increase a woman.&gt;s "bad
estrogen" and decrease her "good·
estrogen, 'l leading to a sliarp
in~ in tile risk of mast cancer, i:eaearthers say.

The researchers expose4 hlllll8ll parison, researchers said Mond!ly.
The study offers ways 10 reduce
breast cells in a test tube to DDT
and other chlorine-containing pesti- breast cancer risk, such as limiting
cides. The effect was three tO folD' exposure to such pesticides and to
times as great as that of a known fuels, plastics and natural sub·
human carcinogen used as a com- stances that have the same effects,

Retired teachers discuss health care

the researchers said.
''The lhing that's really exciting
here is we may be able to figure out ·
how to reduce the risk, even the
risk of recurrpncc in women
who've already had breast cancer,"
· said researcher ·Devra Lee Davis,
an epidemiologist with the U:S.
.Deparunent of Health and Human
Sei'vices.

The results surprised the direc·
tor of .the research, who had
expected to fmd that pesticides had
no effect on esttogen.
"I was wrol\g," said H. !,eon
Bradlow, a biochemist with the
Strang Cancer Prevention Center at
Cornell University Medical School.
The study showed that after exposure 10 pesticides, "your risk ratio

is greater than what it was before,"
Bradlow said. ·
The study builds·on Bradlow's
previous research showing that
there is a "good estrogen" that .
protects against mast cancer and a
"bad estrogen" that is associated.
with increased risk of the disease•

Health care coverage was dis- lege; talked about coverage and attended, she sai!L
The 20 members and two guests
cussed ill a recent meeting of the explained the new premium rates
were
served a baked chicken dinner
Meigs County Retired Teachers · recently adopted by the State
by
the
chulch women. All repeated
Teachers
Retirement
Board
A4ociation held at Trinity Church.
Newberry said she would like to the Pledge of Allegiance and
. June Newberry, district director
of lhe ~etired Teachers Associa- · have more retired teachers appoint· Rachel Downie repeated a Geman
tion, and Jack Frowine, of the ed to the retirement board for the . prayer.
Sonlheastem District of the Ohio benefit of such issuet as health
Retireti Teachers AssQciation and a insurance. A state meeting in
President Virginia Carson
teach« at the Shawnee State Col- Columbus on Friday should be well presided at the meeting with Maxine Whitehead introducil)g Newberry. who presented Frowine. of
The next meeting will be held at
•
Trinity Church on Oct. 15.

Quilt block contest to be .
held at Meigs Showcase

A new attraction at t"e 1994
SIIOwcaac, Meigs County, is a quilt
block contest
County residents are invited to
participate in an Ohio Star quilt
block oontest being coordinated by
Bunny Kuhl. Patterns will be
jndged on work!"8f!!hip, accuracy
and color co-ordination.
Thoae.interested in participating
in the eontest can pick up the white
fabric to be used for the backJ1101Ul(1. ~ and contest guidefines at the Meigs County Parks
District Office, 200 E. Second,
Pomeroy during business hours
Monday through Friday.
The rules are as follows:
. I) Must use ·the white fabric for
background supplied by the contest
ccmminee.
2) 100 cotton, a b~ue ca_lico
prini, must be use4. Plruds, ~s.
gingham or printed patternS (tn"ll
row) will not be acceptable.
· 3) All fabric should be washed
before piecing.
, ·
4) Finished block must meamre
9 1/2 inches square.
·
AI! entries must include a
Jabe with the natne, address, and

sl

phone number basted to one of the
white comers on the baBk side,
with name facing the wrong side of
the block.
6) All blocks become the property of Showcase, Meigs County.
7) First through third prizes .will .
• be a roll of quift batting ~&gt;fOvided
by the sponsor The Fabnc Shop,
Pomeroy.
8) Blocks must be returned by
Ocrobet 12. 1994 ro the Parks District Office.
9) There is no limit to the number of entries per person, but only
prize
person will be awllfdt

:e

r

-10/Aft participants must be reaidents of Meigs COIDity._
·
The blocks will be on display at
the Coonht6flters building during
the Showcase.
.
Additional details. are available
at the Park District Office. Quilt
blocks en~ in this year's contest
will be made Into a quilt to be Used
as a fund raiser wltb proceeds used
as money for expenses of a quilt
show in 1995. The I 995 Show will
have cash ~ and be judged by
a certified Judge. · .

UMW tell mission .stories

Mlrtha Poole teet the pledge
It was announced that reading
''Th T'thes that Bind" programs must-be completed and
~~United Methodist reported by Dec. 15 and that tile
W(IJDCI! met Sept_ 20 at tile cblirch. ABC 9\lilts ~~~ is con~nuing.
All
tOOk part in reading Undes~ gtVIDg ~ !fiscussed
aid dJacllBion ancl giving of the and contmued. In add1Uon, new
~': -,- .
. program books have been pur- ,.~ _ . from .Jerusalem, chased.
,
~ Nepal. Alabama and
Nominations co111mittee chair·
North ;CifOJi• ,recalled the wafs WOfJ!8D Florence Ann s~ prepcioplt
"bound" and influenced sen!M a slate of officers which was .
b' ·~andremiodecloftheneed . accepted by the society. Nellie ·
,
•eJ miasionlwy giving '
Parter had the prayer calendar and
for
Sbarotl Hausman ~ned c~os~ Ronald Whitla~h. ~a laity
lbe.blllineiS meeting with prayer. miSSIOnary ~n le~ve m D~nver,
Mdll-. reported 36 friendship Colo. The soc1ety Signed a birthday
-~"- ~s-·' dwell and Nellie N
c.ard
him..· Martha Elliott and
........,.
.,.,, eat
Hiefor
Parir.cr
_ .Par·k er reported on the recent
eN .
·. will be Oct 18 at
tMW ~t annual meeting durext mccung
. . :
·
1 wblch Alfred was recognized the church. Martha E~liou will!~
giving.
the program and Nellie Palter will
serve as hostess. '
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Buckeye 5:
S-10-16-26-30 ·

Page4

entine
;vot 45, NO. 101
:Copyright 111M

•

in.Meigs.

OJI&gt; ·
1 PIIIJ)

7~
By
Dave
Grate

of
Rutlttnd
Furniture

A Iuilidsome new siga now greets visitors to Harrisonville Elementary School. The sign was
baUt by Todd Jollnsoo, Harold Graham, Dave Jacks, Kevin Rousb aad J!ob Roush with materials
lloD8ted by HarrlsooviBe PTO, Scipio Alumni and Belpre Brick and Masonary Co. Here, showing
lhe new sign, are represe~tatives from the following classes: kindergarten, Jennlrer Partlow; first
grade, Rachel Gardner; secOnd grade, Kristin Barley; lhlrd grade, David Butcher; fourth grade,
·
Jay Greea; fifth grade, Tasha Green; sixth grade, Albert Steams.

A friend is someone Who
knows you and still likes you.

•••

Lots of people believe In the
two-party sysieiTH)ne on
Friday, and one on Saturday.
It's not true 'that you can't get
something for nothing. You get
fiflee!Y"Yaars . for sending
nothing to the IRS.

•• •

Effiaftlt. quiet and nmosion-mahnt "ith I'I'IOft'
.tfadMI air dtUVft)'

The Dest time to think about
retl~ment Is before your boss
does.

..
·•

GoHer to group ahead. "Do
you mind If we play through?
l'va · just heard · that · my
~uaband ., aerlously III." · ·

By KEVIN·KELLY._ -- ... - - ·-boar-d--of-el_lucation and go on
OVP News Editor
strike, a uniop spokesperson said.
GALLIPOLIS - The unions
· With Tuesday's vote, a wallcout
representing teachers and support · by the Gallia Local Education
staff in the Gallia County Local Ass()!:iation and the Gallia Local
School
Disirict
voted Suppofl Staff Association would
"overwhelmingly" Tuesday tp not occur ~ntil Oct. _17. · · .
reject a contract offer from the_
The strike vote IS not effecuve.

Gall/a authorities
hunt for suspect
IIHII# eel murder.
. QALU;PO~
are searcbillg "

~erf1in6 Mei,p/

M,.,,. &amp; Gall.ia

SERVICE .
HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES

Rutland Furniture
1t. i24, 1"'-' Cl. 742·221 I

~

-

•

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-

.

#

,.·

,,.

....

35615 OAK•HILL RD.
CHESTER, Ott 45720

1

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614-185-4222
'.

. 1«JJ.767-4223

I
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I

By JOHN McCARmY
Associated Press Writer
Gov. George Voinovich is not
running for anything other than his
own re-election on Nov. 8.
But he said in northeast Ohio on
Tuesday that it's possible he would
help a Republican national ticket in
1996.
Voinovich and Democratic
opponent Rob Burch ·held an
impromptu·news cooference after a
candidates' forum in' Willoughby.
Also on Tuesday, Democratic
Senate ' candidate Jo.el· Hy~ttt's
campaign criticized Republican
opponent Mike DcWine for
supporting a program•that helped
,prisoner'S get college educations.
De Wine shot back that the
program, which Con$ress has
outlawed, helped immals turn
their lives around an revented
them from committi
other
crimes.
And Republican attorney
general
candidate . Betty
· Montgomery released a television
ad that her campaign hopes will
raise her name recognition.
Voinovich and Burch spoke
with reporters after the forum
which The News-Herald of
Willoughby · and Lakeland
Commllnity College co-sponsored.
"I can teD you I am not running
" for vice president, I'ID not running
for president," Voinovich said.

·'But ... if someone came to me Con~ess in August voted. to stop
and said, 'We think that you would giving the grants to inmates. The
help a Republican ticlcet as its vice program provides tuition to low- .
presidential candidate,' for income applicants who may receive
someone to say I wouldn't listen to as much as $2,300 a year.
"Average Ohioans whose own
that, I'd turn it down, that's
children
can't qualify for P.ell
nonsense," he said.
Voinovich and Burch also grants and who are truly struggling
challenged each other's views of to help put their kids through
college will be outraged by Mr.
the state's economic progress.
Burch said statistics from the DeWine's position," Butland said ·
Ohio ·DeparUnent of Development in a news release.
DeWine said the grants helped
gave the state an artificially !tigh
ranking in a mapzine article aboqt inmates trair for jobs once they
were released and helped keep
business CXJliiiiSIOn.
• Ohio was listed as having 689 them from .returning 10 prison.
."We try to prepare them so that
new .or expanded businesses in
we
lower the repeat offender rate,"
1993, compared with 386 for
DeWi'
ne said at. his campaign
second-place Texas.
He said the deparunent "paid office. "If we can lower it 10
people to track down every percent ilr .15 percent we're going
mstance of development" while to save the taxpayers a great deal of
other states were less exact in their money and we're going to spare a
.Jot of victims from ·being victims of
figures.
. '
"That's all nonsense," crime.''
Montgomery
and
her
Voinovich ~plied heatedl).
· "Even if we did a better .job of Democratic opponeni; incumbent
kCI'ping track of our statisticsothan bee Fisher. tried to make good
some other staies, 10 be 300 ahead impressions this week as they
-in new facilities and plant premiered television commercials.
Montgomery focused on her II
expansions is an indicatjon that we
are really l!!alcing progress," he years as a prosecutor' in Wood
County in northwest Ohio and on
said.
·
~
In Columbus, Hyatt campa1gn her fight in the state Senate for
spokCsman Dale Outland criticized tougher criminal sentencing laws.
Fisher's all, which began a fiveDeWjne for supporting the prisoner
week
run Monday. features John
grants while i:ampaign ads po~y
Walsh,
a friend of Fisher who
him as being tough on cnme .
Works to find missing children.

r

Commissioners' candidates
brief Middleport association
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News St&amp;Jr
The Middleport Community
Association listened to comm'ents
from the two candidates vying for
the Meigs County Commissioners
seat at its monthly meeting Tuesday nighL
.
· ·
Both candidates emphasized
their commitment to ereatinJ jobs
and establishing industrial s1tes in
the county.
Chrrent Commissioner Fred
Hoffman said he prides himself on
establishment of the rural enterprise zones, organization of the
county economic development
office, negotiating a contract with
the Department of Human Services, and earning more than $1
million in grants for a Racine hous- .
ing program and new water lines
for the Leading Creek Conservancy
District
.
Hoffman, a Rep~blican, 'said he
will continue to push industrial site
creation. water and sewage cover..
age to county residents and adequate housing.
"What we need are tied-down
sites," Hoffman said. "Meigs
County has no control over the
property. You have to have c~el}:·

thing there including electric and community association annoonced
sewage."
the ending bala~ce had jumped
Democratic -candidate Jack from $2,189.99 in August to
Slavin said he will push to·see the $4 ,481.67 in October. The
highways in the county developed.
~ddlepon River Festival ~ipts
"We supposedly have 17 -which are not all in- totaled
industrial sites nQlV," Slavin said_ $8,687.10. The expenses were
"We need to develop our county $6.104.13.
instead of letting it go. We need to
Expenses for the festival
do whatever we can to better Meigs included: $12 to R·iver Cities
County."
.
Times, $14.16 to Columbus
Slavin said he has. a desire to be Southern Power, $17.95 to
a c&lt;immissioner. describing himself Middleport Flower Shop, $32.18 to
as apeople person.
Columbus Southern Power $250 to
."I have lots of ideas ." Slavin WMPO, and about $600 U, Magic ·
S81d. He added he would lilce to see- ·· 101.
at least one of th~ commissioners in
The rain during the festival
the office at all ames.
made it difficult to coordinate all
The $28,000 a year job has the groups, association president
occupied between 3,0 ~ 40 h~ Tom Dooley said.
aweekofH~ff~~~:an -sum~,heS81d.
. ~·we were planning for the
Hoffman swd h1s.comm1tmen_t to b1ggest ever," Dooley said. "We
the county has been a full·t1me had a follow-up meeting and had SQ
effon. .
many positive things on ft. The rain
. Slavin, an experienced teac~er may ha~e been badebut a lot of
m the county, added he would like good things came ouf-df it. From
to see more. emphasis on education • now on we'll plan for rain."
to reduce crune.
Don Tate Motors, th e major
But Hoffman countered the sponosor, was pleased with. the
countr has one of t!Je lowest cn~e event. The car company has the
rates m the .area. Wtth a respons1ve first refusal right next year.for the
sheriff's department.
th.--ee-on-threc tournament, he said
In regular business, t.he
(Continued oD Pale 3)
.

--Democratic
open
house
Gallia Local unions ·vote.to strike

•••

7SIIOWIOOIIS.

Voinovich ~ot ruling
out run for VP in 1996

The MeiJIS Mettopolitan Housing Authonty has received additional funding of $382,660 for
rental assistance to low income
families over the next five years.
Word of the additional funding
from the U.S. Department of Housing and UJban Development came '
to Jean Trussell, the I!Uthority's
executive directa', from U.S. Rep.
Ted Stri~ldand.
The funding will allow the
authority to assist an additional 20
·households in the COIDity. ·
.
: · Currently. under the Section 8..
:rental assistance prognlni, 74 fami- .
· lie~ are bein~ assisted, Trussell
•. :said. The additional funding being
.added to the program brings the
·total annual operating income to
:$365,9654, according to the direc·
·tor.
..
.
.
: . Rental payments on behalf of
:eligible households allow these
·funds 10 be ciJculated in die coun•
• :ty. thus providing an economic
:boost to the local economy •. she
· added.
The Meigs Housing Authority
·was reactivated in 1990. The
:governing board of directors for the
authqrity Include Jo!Jn Wee~s.
president: Florence Richards! VJce
president; and Paul Reed, AQiold
· The old RudaJ!Il Hlall Sdlool Is bein&amp;IQril.down. this week.
Johnson ari(I JQily C~.
.· Tbe proJect Is ahead'ilr sdle.d!l!e and shollld&gt;be .coDJPieted -by
·'· Th'e-purpose of the program,
this week, said Bob Oavld!oli ofthe Locall18 Ohio Operating
~ng to Trussell, is to provide .
Engineers Apprentice program. Joha Brlckles of Darwin and
rental assistance to low mcome
another apprentice are working on tbe project. Brickles will nohouseholds for safe, decent,
Jsb bis fourth and final year in the apprenticeship program next
sanitary housing in Meigs County. ·- · June. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
.
(Continued oa Paee 3) .
L...................;,...,.._...;........;.................................;........, j

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2 Secllone, 12 , . . . . - A lluhlmiCIIIInc. tMw ~ 1111r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 5, _1994 ·

:'Housi~g Rutland demolition
~fund.ing
~awarded ·

P1: PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-7254

I

... ~· . ~ ......· .~·.

- Authorities

until 10 days after state agencies·
are notified, said Gary Phillips.
chief negotiator for the teachers'
association.
.
Both associations met in
separate closed meetings at the
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
(Coatioued on Page 3)

AFT finds 3.2 percent raise
in Ohio teacher salaries
,,

a suspect in the

By The Aaaoc:lated Preas
Tuesday nis'llt lllol't'mg_death of
. The average teacher salarj in Ohio
a Crown City
• f6r the 1993-94 school year was 3.2 ·
The · victim, Eddie A.
percent higherthan the previous year,
Ferguson, 41, was shot near his
the American Federation ofTeachers
-•l.O.....a and .- n - . . . t to SL
·--""'
.......,...,.said Tuesday. .
Marys Hospital in Huntington,
The average salary in Ohio .was
W.Va., where he was
$35,912, the ·sso,OOO-member reapronounced dead, Chief Deputy
era«ion said.
bennis Salisb'm' of the Gallia
-The average · salary nationwide
;~nty Sheriffs Depilrunent'
reached $35,813, a 2.3 percent inThe department deClined to
crease that was the smallest in 35
release any further information
years.
·
·
·
. until the suspeCt is~
The National Education Associa.__ _ _.;.._ _.,~-~ · tion, which has 2.2 milllon members,

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7/ee~~

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c:'fivc-JIII

Pick3:·
4-0-4
Pick 4:

-School gets-new sign----.

memben

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cSouthern VB .
team defeats
Eastern

were

~u~!!~ w~!~:. P.~~~,~,~~~~tP!:d~e~~.~-~~~~~~~J~. ~.rl!~.~J~~....

Allclclatect.l'rell Writer
·
involved with drug addiction. This . no one had ever found a hnk
WASHINGTON (AP) - The "priming" may predispose girls to between· prenatal exposure and the
tendency to smoke.
·
daughters of women who smoke smoke, Kandel contended.
during pregnancy arc much more
But smoking mothers didn't
''It 1s a very interesting and
likely to smoke themselves, sug- have that effect on their sons, rais- ~rovocative paper," said Dr. Nigel
ges'!!fi nicotine may somehow bio- ing the possibility that male hor- Paneth, an expert on pediatric epi·
logi y "prime" the. fetal brain to m~nes protect male fetuses, she demiolog.~ at ~ichigan State Unirespond years later, a new study said.
versny. If thts really happens.
conlellds.
·
.
''What this really shows is there from a biological point of view ...
b) today's American Journal of . may _be subtle effects on brain that's very in~f!guing."
PUblic Health, Dr. Denise Kandel fuacuo~ that won't become BPPII!';
But he cauuoned that the ~suits
may _mean _daught«:rs are s1mply
of Columbia University reports ~e ent unul 13, 14, 15 years later,
first documented link between chit- Kandel said. ''It's another reason copymg therr mothers, even though
dren's tendency to smoke and pre· women shouldn!t smoke."
Kandel tried to conttol for that posnatal expOsure to nicotine.
Animal.studies have shown pre- sibility. .
Sl!e theorized tbat nicotine, natal nicotine does affect certain
Cl\ildren. do imitille their smok·.
which can cross ilie pi&amp;centa barri- '. brain activity onc.e 'the animal is ing parents. But Kandel studied
er stimulates a fetus receptors for grown. But scientists never pursued 192 New York children for 19

Ohio Lottery

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estimated t!J.e average 1993-94 raise .
in the cm)ntry at 2. ?.percent.
The nation's teachers unions said
teachers are negotiating slightly bigger salary increases this year.
American Federation of Teachers
officialssaidcoiuract settlements thus . ·
far this year included raises of about 3
percent.
· The AFT's annual survey:of federal and state tlepanments of educa· ·
tion showed, tha t teachers in Con·
necticut had the highest average sal:
ary , $50,3R9,and those in Mississippi
had the lowest, $25,153 .

·Tbe Melp Couaty Democnts opeaed' their Malo Street bfadquarten in Pomeroy Tuesday.
From left'are State Sea. Jn Michael Loaa, State Rep. Mark Malone, County Commissioner
JUet Howard, Fourth District Court fl Appeals c:udidate BID Sbaw, County Commissioner en·
clldate Jaek Slavlll, Sllerlff James Soulsby ud Democntlc: Chail'woJilan Sue Malson. Tbe olflcel
will bt opeD frcllllll a.m.•S p.m. M011clay throllp Friday alld !I Lm.•llt)OII Saturday. Tbe Deao- ·
cnt dbmer Ww bolt lieuteoiot JIOVei'IIOI' C8lldldilie·Pettr La~u Jones at 6 p.m. Oct. 15. (Sea1
tioel photo by George Abate)
. •
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·-'Commentar.
rhe Daily ·s entinel

••

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
_,
'

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
. ·

.

Publisher

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEREW
Conb'oller

G-niMa.pr

LBTI1!RS OF OPINION ore welc:omc. They abould be less than 300
wonb Jooc. Alllottcn ..., mbjec:t Ill cdiliD&amp; aad mUll be aigncd wilb name,
ldcRu a telepbone number. No UDJi&amp;Jicd lotten will be publisbcd. Letlcrs
abould be in &amp;ood taste, oddreuing issues, 1101 penonalilies.

Reform remnants
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corrapciodent
·
WASHINGTON- This was supposed to' be the reform Congress. the
one that would clean up the act, slreaiTiline the system, loosen the grip of
.. big money on politics, list lobbyists and limit their favors. About all that's
.: left of that agenda is lobbying, the easiest target of all.
· 'Even that comes with a quirk: The lobbyist who wouldn't be permitted
. 10 l81ce a congressman to lunch could funnel $5,000 into his campaign
. through a political action committee.
· . "It's clearer than ever that Americans still want to change the way
: Washington woJts," President Clillton said. "And they.should."
"Reform" has been the buzzword since this Congress 'began, with
mare than 20 pen;ent of its members new to the Capitol. It had helped 10
• elect them•after a season of instituii&lt;ltlal scandals and individual ethics

. cases.

2-1118 Dally sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, OCtober 5, 1184

.

\

So much for that reform.
That leaves the lobbyist bill, which Clinton said "will go a long way
.,; toward taking Ct~ government out of the h&amp;nds of the influence :Odus~·y''
~ by f&lt;Xbidding gifts and favors and requiring disClosure of woo they work
·! for and what they're paid, begtming in 1996. That's up to the Senate; the
=t House !las passed iL
; . Cli14on called it tough. ~p. Bob Michel, the retiring House Republi·
,
• can leader,,called it self-fla~ellation.
: • "Oiu- faults," Michel srud, "lie not in our perks but in our posturing."
EDITOWS NOTE- Walter R. Mears~ vice president and colum·
. nlst for Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on W115bington and
: national politics _for more lii8D 30 years.
•

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~ Today io histor.Y

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IMansfield 164•1•
IND.

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Warming trend scheduled
to .start in Ohio THursday
By Tbe Alllocllted Prell
Warmer tc;mpcratures under
panly sunny skies are forecast for:
Ohio until the weekend. Then, a
frontal system could bring some
rain, the National Weather Scnice •
said.

It will be chilly again tonight
with patchy frost possible in the
north ..Lows wiU be in the upper
30s to the mid-40s.
Warmer air will move ta;k into
the area on Thursday. Afternoon
readings should top out \from the
mid&amp; north to the low 10s south,
thanks to a massive high pressure
covering'the eastern llilf of the
nation.
Tile,record-high ttmperablre for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 90 degrees in 19S 1
while the record low was 31 in
1968. Sunset tonight will be at 7:08

p.m. and s~ :nnll'sctAy at 7:33
a.m.
Weatller forecast:
Today ... Variable cloudiness
north .•.Bccoming partly sunny
south. A chance of morning sprinklcs _northeast. Highs in the SOs
north to lower 60s soulh..
· Tonight ... Partly•-doudy and
cool. Lows upper 30s Iii mid 40s. A
chance of patchy frost easL
Thursday ... Partly sunny ~nd
warmer. Highs from around the
mid 60s to.the low~r 70s.
. Exten(ed rorecast:
'
Friday ...Fai'r. Lows from the
mid 40s to lower SOs and highS in
the 70s.
·
' Saturday...A chance of soowers.
Lows 50 to 55 and highs in the 70s.
Sunday...A chance of showers.
Lows SO to SS and highs in the
upper 60s.
·

Commissioners' ·candidates ·
(Contlnned from Paae 1)
"We are real thankful for Don
Tate. Without the . help of
businesses in the community it
would have not been profitable,"
Dooley added. But since the event
was nol as profitable 115 in the past,
it may have an effect on the
Chrisbnas celebration. .
In other action, the assOciation
created a parking committee to
determine how the removal of
meters has affected businesses in
the last year
''There aie no concrete rules and
defmitely no enforcement," Dooley
said
The association also decided not
to buy yearbook ads but let
'

individual businesses ~upport dicse •
school dforts.
Dooley also announced Emma
l'Pugh, president of Peoples Bank
in Middleport, will be retiring
s~;on. Paugh, who has dutifully
served the commU11ity associati&lt;!f~.
will also be leaving tl)e community
group. She had Served 115 secrellll)'
for the gmup. Dooley will also be
leaving ~is., post· as president,
Dooley satd.
'th
"The bank has been great WI
.tL: ·community and she · has
espeeially," Dooley said
Bo~ Gilmore announ~ed the
pt·~l-tnck--or-treat celebration at 7
p..n. Ocl 31 in Slcepy Hollow. The
event will be S{lODSore~ by the
Middleport Amencan Legwn.

Housing funding awarded
(Con~nued

trom Paae 1)
. The new funding will mean that
20 mare families will be searching
for approved rental units In the near
future, Trussell said. Rental unit
owners who want to partitipate in

the Section 8 rental assistance
program are asked to contact
Trussell a 992-Z733;
Through the pogram an owner
Is assured of receiving the monthly
rental pa~t and a damale claim
payment, if needed, she explained.

Gallia Local unions ...
(Continned trom Page 1)
to.examine what Phillips called the
board's "final offer" on new
contracts. Both unions then voted
10 reject the offer and autho~ a
strike, be said.
·
· There was "a verl strong
showing for both unions In tams
of attendance for the meeting,
Phillips said. He dec1incli to release
the vote totals .from btrufSets of
balloting, but said there was an
"overwhelming" plurality to take
the~b action.
·
· ' Hopefully, the board wiD l81ce
the necessary steps to get back 10
the 18ble," Pllilli)is said.
resret
. "We
.. ..

But since Joseph Skipper·is
black, all we got from black leaders
was_embarrassed silence. They do
not want to acknowledge that the
biggest threats to life and propeny
in the black community are young
black predators like Ski
•
In fact, young ~k men
constiblte less than 1 pen:ent of the
U.S. WPiJlation, but commit nearly
20 percent of the nation's crimes.
Some 25,000 Americans are
111urdered each year, roughly half
of which are black.on·black
homicides, mostly committed by
yrlllllg black ,men. .•
,
·
The black leadership is always
lamenting the fact that black men
are O'l'.!represented in the nation'!
jails and prispns. And they ofien
attribute ~~ dispariiy to racism
wi.thlll the criminal justice System.
·B'tlt young black -men commit a-~!sproponionate number of the
nauon's crimes (and, again, mostly.
against other blacks). So it follows
tl!at· a disproportionate number
would be behind ban.
·
If Joseph Skippc, serves less
than 10 years in prison, be will be
getting off easY.

The Dally Sentinel

*491

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taking this action, but the board has
refused to offer us an adequate
W&amp;§e.and benefit packllse.
'We are willing to meet with the
board at any time to settle this
thin •" he added. .
~perintendent Robert Lanning
said this mornin' he had not
received official notification 0J1 the
vote and declined to mate a
statement, dcferrin~ further
comment 10 Board President David
Woodall. Woodall was not
aVailable for a statement today.
Lanning said no further
negotiations !)ave been scheduled.
Both unions have been at
impasse with the board since midsummer over economic 11nd job
security issues, .Phillips said.
Negotiations between the boar~
and the unions ~gan In April. The
s~ staff's three-yCM contract
CliPired in June and the .teachers'
two-ye&amp;rPIClendedon Aug. 31.
Officials· on both sides o(. the
contract issue were optimistic that
a bargaining session with federal
mediator Bill Lewis would yield a
settlement last · Thursday.
Followlnjl a three-hour meeting,
the boarll issued lit offer for the
union rCpreaclilativbl to take back
· to ~ the membership for
eoosideration.

Deer-car accident
re.ported to eherlff .
· A PQmero ·man's ~ truck
sustained llgbt damqe in a .
deer/vehicle collision Tuesday
night, !ICCOrdin&amp; to a report from
the Meigs C'ounty Sheriff's.

ne:~tmlre, Willow Creek

----------~- ... -'21•14 . Road, w11 wealbo"nd on Stat~
...$4~!!. ,/ ~o~e 6' 1 at Darwtn in a. 19~6
sn.r-...·-----........_____JM;.,.
OMC·pi&lt;:kup and struck a deer that

26---.. . -..,. ._. . . . .-..
13

~~... .&lt;!-'2'-40
11 ~~_ _ ____ ................... --.$4$.50
n - ......,.•_..... ~---.........$U.40
26 _

ran across tbe road_, the reP,ort
stated. The right bcldliaht and riaht
side of the.pillc were dimll&amp;cd. .

in deatltand
by
herhusblnd,J ~Folter:
brothers Oacar ud Edward R
Skinner '
.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday
in the Ewln~ Home, with
the Rev. Ro
Kuhn officiating.
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Dance to bt held
A round and ~~~~ dance will
be held Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m. a
the Tuppm Plains VFW buildin .
The Rocky Mountain Driften
play. $5 a couple, $3 singles. .

:&amp;

Art dalles to bt cilrered
· ·
Beginning !ll clasles for qe 12
an_d over will be he~il at the
Middleport Arts ~unctl, &lt;;&gt;ct. 18

to Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m. Fee ts $20,
instructor is Carol Tannehill, an4
material needed is a sketch pad.
Those lntefeated in registering are
to call m :S438 or 992-2675.

Aatiqoe c..b to meet
The Big Bead Farm Antique
Cfub will meet Monday 7:30 p.ro.
at the Meigs County Fair Board
office. AU members are.asked to
attend.
Trustees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.
Betty Bi3bop to bt lulllored
An Hawaiian luau to honor
Betty BidiOp, deputy lland matton,
will be befd at tile Rarriaonville
MaSQllic Lodge ball, Saturday at
6:30 p.m Then will be potluck
refresbmcnL

An anonytiious telephoneCall 45 Mud
loaa •· uar
led to the arres~ of six people ~ville.
' .·
Tuesday by ~ties of the Meigs , . Rol!ert K. Kennedy, qa
County _S"henff's Department, u nreported, Rutland, wu cbarpcl'
Sheriff Jarpes M. Soulsby said this with theft.
morning.
•
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Cundiff, Roush, Botcher ucl
A deputy .rcspondmg to an Kennedy were rh•d on $10.000
anonymous telcJ.Ihone call early personal recognizanCe bonds allier
Tuesclay . mornmg in Salem appearing in Meigs Coanty
To!ffllhip m ref~ 10 the theft Soulsby said.
of ttems from the J&gt;!clr and ShOvel
Joseph conwrigbt• 34
Store
found
a
car
wtth
an
apparent,
c
"'lled d
th bood
.
o1urn b us, was charge•d wttb'
1.11cgall Y·"'!
eer on c
, assisling theft while Ma-garet Cox,
Soulsby Slit!- ·- . .
47, of Story's Run Road, wu
~urther tnvesugauon led to a charged with complicity in theft,'
res1dcnce on Frc~mont·~tcvens . Soulsby said: .
Road where depuua, acung on a
Meigs County Game Protector
sea~.c. h warrant, found bags of Kel'th ·"'ood said Cundiff, ,.._ _..
manJuana and deer meat, be~ RusseiiRoush, age ~-.;{
Olarg~ ~th felony cultivatiOII Middleport, were charged in
and ~f1cking were: Jeffrcy W. relation to the illegally killed derr'.
Cund1ff, 29,_ Elm Street, Charges are pending agai"at two
Middleport; Melinda R. Roush, 30, . others he added.
Frecm~nt-Stevcns
Road, :· Th~ deer and deer meat wen
Langsville, and Harry R. Butcher, confiscated, Wood said.
.

eoun.·

H~m~'f.i s~·'_l·s
· s authorl•tl•es
ptiobe
1

in the Fisher Funeral
Middleport,
with the Rev.
.,.,,
Vernagaye Sullivu officiating.
Burial will fpllow in Riverview
Cemetery in Middleport. Friends
I"'I"'
may call Thunday from 2-4111d 6--~- ·
8 p.m. a the funeral home.
By CHRISTIAN HUMBERT
1
Allloclated Prell Writer
CHEIRY, Switzerland- At
least 48 people. including children.
were found dead this morning after
festival will be beld 011 · OcL 15 at fires destroyed·a farm and three
chalets in an lipparent mass suicide
the scbool. Serving of food will by members of a religious sect,
begin • S p.m: .and the ~ and police said.
other activities will start at 6:30
Twenty-thi-ee bodies,_muy of
p.m. "'.
them with gunshot wounds and
Claun:lallellluac--. craft 111e
plalttic hap over their heads. were
The Trinity Chun:h of Pomeroy found at a ~arm in Cheiry in ~e
ill
~·d
canton of Fn!Jourl, about 45 miles
. w sponsor a 1unc.~n an .arts northeast of GeneYa, police said.
and crafts show Thursday, Friday · Seventeen more were fo811d in
. and Saturday from 11 Lm. to S:30 tluee chalets in a ski ar'ca at Les
' p.m. Pauona can ~ served at the Granges In Valais canton about 4S
chun:~ or take cany-oul Dinners, miles southeast of Geneyi,
~dwtehes, lalads and deaats are • All of the victims allhe farm
Included on the menu.
were adults, and French, Swiss arid
Canadian passports were found
Pareat vohuateen to orpaJU
among the bodies, said Albeit
An organizational meeting of T h
· hb H ld Til
rent volunteers will ·bc Htcld
ore e, a nelg or. e to
e
Associated Press the farm was
ursday at 7 p.ro. in the Rutland bought about three years 1110 by a
Elementary gym. John COSIIIIZa of gtoup that said it wanted to do ·
th e Meigs Gounty Board of llioloSi!:il~. ·
.
Education ofW:e will explain how
Police said they were assuming
the program operates knd answer the deaths were a mass suicide by a
questions which volunteers may religious secl
have. Anyone interested in doing
A d P'II
·
u· u·
volunteer work ai the school is
n re 1 er' an mves ga ng
urged to auend.

~

Stocks

PERI Cbapter to meet

Meigs -Chapter 74, Public
Employee Retirees Inc. (PHRI) will
meet thursday at 1 p.m. at the
Senior~ Center for m~ the
candidates. All citr , county and
state retirees are mvited. Meal
12: 1S p.m. Call for reservations.

EMS .units log six calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
six calls for assistance Tuesday.

accidebtJ!t State Route 7 and Wills
Hill Roait;...Woodrow Mora refused
treatmenl ' .
RurLAND
Unita~t~~_6:09 .p.m., Main Street, Carrie
.
12:38 p.m., squad and volunteer Marshall, VMH.
fire department, Stingy Creek
.
SYRACUSE
Road, oil well explosion, no
7:38 p.ro;, Pomeroy Nursing and
injuries.
Rehabilitation Center, Emma
POMEROY
Duffy, VMH.
9:08 a.m.,•Anne Street, Ruth
TUPPERS PLAINS'
Francis, Veterans Memorial Hospi6:21 p.m., State Route 124,
tal;
.
Robin Boswell, Holzer Medical
1:27 p.m., squad and volunleer Center.
fire department, motor.vehicle

Middleport mayor's court
The following cases were heard
in the Middleport Mayor's Court of
Dewey HortoD.
Fined were:
Roger M.Jordan, Letart, W.Va.,
$25 plus ~osts for litnning a red
light; Kenny Currence, Middleport,
$100 plus costs for consuming
alcohol under age of 21; Erica L.
Mollohan, Gallipolis, $1 S plus
~ for speed; Doris J. Riclunond,
Middlcpon, $10 plus costs for
improper backing; and Stanley
Wataon, Rutland, $25 plus costs for
failure to maintain control.
Forfeited were:
Joyce E. Fry, Rutland, $500 for
driving under the influence;
Emmanuel Cundiff, Middleport,

Am Ele , _
'!0 711
Abo .
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57114
AAl•llll OU - - 111 314
AT&amp;T
•
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holt One------21114
Bob Evano
10114
Clwnplon lod.
Z4 114
Cbumtttl Sllop
7 11118
City Holdlq
34
Fedel'lll MCIIIUl
J/4
Goadyear TAR33 Ill
K·IDII'I-17111
Lud&amp;Ead
· -11711
Limited IDe.
19 Ill
Multimedia Ia&lt;. ·---~ 112

=

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Polal Baacorp - - - - - - 1 9

RellaDce Eledrlc ~---.24 314

RobbiiiS II Myen..----- 1!1 314
Sbooey'slat.-----13 711
Star BanJt.___ _: __{--41
Wendy lai'L ----13 314
Worlhlap&gt;o IDd.
1111'

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Stock reporll an lbe lD-.31 LDI.

quotes provided bJ Adnll o

.._

GaDJpoiiL .

C 0 N Y E N I E :\ &lt;: E

speed.

Hosplta1 news
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Tuesday llfqJissions- none.

.Tuesday dilcblrges - Downey
Kennedy, Middleport; Blladeeile
Watson, Pomeroy; Gladys Sbort,
Reedsville.

Now you can bank by phone.
Just pick up the phone to open accounts
or receive information on existing accounts.

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judge in Cheiry, said the pegp&amp;c a
t~c farm were involved with 1
group called the Cross and Rotc,
1. 'd not provide details. Poli!:e
they believed there was a
irect connection between the
deaths at the farm and thole • the
chalets.
_
·It was unclear if the group was
related to the Rosicrucians, a 17th·
eetitury secret society with beliefs
in occult lore and power, whotc
symbols include the rose and the,
cross.
The deaths followed by ju~t •
hours a fatal fire that deStroyed a
duplex in Quebec, Canada, owned
by the leader of another religious
group that advocates stockpiling
weapons to prepare for the end of
the world. Two bodies were found
in the wreckage. ,
.
. The group leader, Luc Jouret,
described by police al founder of
the Order 'of the Solar Temple, is
believed to have· fled to
Switzerland. A Dr. Luc Jouret is
liSICCI ill die lelepllone ilirectory f&lt;W
Salvan, a village ncar the Valais
chalets, but calls by The Amciated
Press to the number were
unanswered.
Valais police said they found IS
bodies at one chalet and two. at
another. Later in the morning, they 4
found eight more bodies ill a lbird
chalet, and said it was possible tbey
would find more.

$56 for sDCCCl; Duane T. LawSOJI,
GallipoliS, $53 for speed; Randlll
Wilson, Pomeroy, $60 for expired
registration; Jlnd Victoria J.
Imboden, Middleport, $51 for

Old Fashion
REVI-VAL
October 5th - 9th
Che~ter Nazarene Chur~h
7:00p.m. Nigh~ly
6:00p.m.
Sunday
,
Evangelist
Rev. ·E. Guy Wright .
Old Fashion Preaching

••

j

annare_nt mass SUI·c,·~'~e
Ul

Fall festival platmed ·
The innual Salisbury PTO fall

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,,,e,,s·
announcemen· ts
:#'
••

• 'I "

' v

2

~~C::;-rec;eded

J OSep S

a

1
, «,

Middlem

cumulative debt of 200 years stood annual deficits. And where would
at less than $1 trillion. When he this money come from? Well, Newt
left, the national debt was $2.9 tril- &amp; Co. would cut the fat out of the
lion. He tripled the damn thing. His crime bill, deny payments to teenh
successOr added another $1 trillion . age mothers, grant tax credits ,for
pear
in debt, so by the time the Reagan- children, cut capital gains taxes and
. ----..:..-.....::....._ _,_ Bush tenures ended, the national ,generally eliminate waste.
reviving Ronald Reagan's econom· debt stood at $4 trillion and conWhat 'pitiful garbage. We are
ic and political agendas, and they sumed $300 billioq in annual inler- talking $300 billion-plus annu'at
did it'withouta flicketof shame. . esL .
deficits here, more than the total
And they want to know why
In 12 years, we the taxpayers budget of the entire g~ment,
we're cynical. AARRRRRGGGH!
forked over $2.7 triUion just to pay not counting defense. The Republi·
There may actually be a few 20- the interest on the debt these 'two can "contract" would not begin to
year-olds reading these words, so a racked up.
cover these deficits. Would not
brief review, God give me the
touch them.
strength, is in order..
Now, a bare decade later, Newt
How many times are we going
Ronald Reagan came into office Gingrich and his miijions are offer- to let the politicians feed us this
in 1981 preaching a panacea called ing us a 10-point "con~cl" tl_tat fa11ousclaptrap? How long will we
"supply side" ec,onomics. He p1etends to ~olve our fmanc1~l let the Edgars and Charlies and
could cut taxes drastically, he said, problems but m fact W!&gt;uld ma~m- Milrtimers serve up the same old
and the resulting stimulus to the . fy them. ~hree of theu 10 potnts • sl:adge? Will we ever get an honest
economy would generate such are seductive - a ~~ed-bu,d_get • public debate about deficits and
.
incredible increases in tax revenue amendment, term limtts and legal debt?
that the budget would soon balance reform_s - but the ~t of them f1£C
Pardon my cynicism, but I fear
itself. But Congress - including pathetic. They prom1se to - get never.
many conservatives - {esisted this - revive Rea&amp;a!l's SW: Wars
Joseph Spear Is a syndic~ted
drastic -cuts in domestic spending, program. Th~y say they. wtll .~ut writer for Newspaper Enterprise
.
and Reagan insisted on huge taJes on the nch, cut cap1tal gams Association.
increases in defense S)lending.
•taxes, grant tax credits for children,
(For Information on how to
The result: deficits. Deficits of and on and on.
· communicate electronically with
historical proportions, so sraggerAccording tri estimates, the pro- tbis columnist and otbers con·
ing in the aggregate that we have · posed cuts in national revenue · tad America Online by calllng 1difficulty comprehending them. would pile $120 ~i}.lion a year on 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
When Reagan assumed office, the top of the current $200 billion

Joaepb Perkins is a columillst
for Tbe . Sao Dleao Uaiaa- '
Tribune.

• IeotumllUe IIIII" I

W. VA.

budget by·the ~urn of the century.
Yes, they actually said. these
things, and they spoke openly of

·

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•

Oh, ·did you see the s'hoW·?_ _ _ _~
Did you catch t!te presentation
by Edgar Bergen and 3DO-plus
Charlie McCarlhys on the steps of
the U.S. Capitol the other day?
Actually, 1 think there were a few
Mortimer SnerdS in the crowd, but
it amounts to tile s11me thing: A
puppeteer and a gaggle of woodenbeaded politicianS·'PUI on a heck of
. a show.
Slap yourself oq the wrist if you
missed it The elixirs thai were
,peddled that day were of such pris·
tine vintage that they ought to be
hermetically sealed in breakproof
boules and put in a time capsule so
that the people of future millenni·
urns can see what politics was like
"'When snake oil was snake oil.
In case you did. miss it, what
happened was that Edgar Bergen...
excuse me, House Minority Whip
Newt Gingrich ... &lt;Wganized a buses,
bands and banners pooto op on the
Capitol grounds in which he and
more than 300 other Republicans,
whose little mechanical mouths
moved when Newl spoke, signed a
,new "Contract With America" If
they·are elected in sufficient num· bers to control the Congress, they
promised, they will cut taxes, trim
domestic programs, increase
defense spending and balance the

,-(f
68"

· "There is unquestionably a
break- we are not close," Kerrey
told us. "But the speculation that I
am gOing to ciUillenge. him .in: the
(1996 presidential) primai-ies is
completely untrue.'' When prossed
on the issue, liowever, kerrey
re.'used to rule it out absolutely: "I
Clill't ima~ne the circumstances,"
K:rrey _SBid. "I really ean'L But I
h~ove learned never 10 say never."
Jack Anderson and Mlcbael
B:nstein are writers for United
F~ture SYildkate, Inc.

fl-~0\\.D

Maria S. :Foster, 90, · of
11llnday
Pomeroy, diod Tuesday, Oct. 4, the funeral bome. ...,
l9u~~~ lloudina Houle In Ellz
. abeth_ Mourning '
.,. ..,..,....
Born July 28, 1904,1n Pomeroy,
the daughter of the lite Benjlmln
Blizabetb MourniDJ, 93 ,
and Estella Hecox Sklnner,.llbc was Micldlepm, died early Wodnelday.
a homemaker. She ·WU a member OcL 5, 1994 • Overbrook Centa
of the Pomeroy OBS i186 and was in Middleport followinl an
an cxcRegent of tbcr Return extended illnclli.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
• Born OcL 31, 1900, In Mason
DAR.
. .
County, W.VL, daushteror 1bc late
..:tu..iJ swviv.ji·by
her .........
Roben
C. and Mary Blla
Zerkle
~"':
.,
\lhl~ht......... abc
,._ _ _..__ ·
Mary Yost ef ;,ynicuse; daughters •• -·~··
w11 1 •~UJK~•..-.
and sons·in·law, Ann and T.M. and a member of the Headl United
Cottrill of Pomeroy, and Sarab and MetbodiJt Churcll-.rj..... ·
Carver Williams of M&amp;rion; sons
Surviving are a lister, Lorena
and daughte!ll-in-Iaw, Joseph and Pavis, and a niece ud buabend,
JoAnn Foster of ~...tin" Heighta, . Elizabeth and Jack Hawley, all of
Mich., and John .;;drib't Foster d
lone, Calif.; sister, Helen Brunner
Besides :J:arents, she was
by her busbtmd,
of Normlil, 111.; brothcn and sis- preceded in
tcrs~in-law, Oeorge and Pbyllis Herman J - ~in 198~;
Skinner of Pomeroy and Arthur a son, Roben Mournmg; a tw1n
and MaryS~· of MiddlePOrt; _ ~~~..;::; ~ a brother,
16 grandcblldrcn; and 18 great·
aScrvicea • be Friday

S

IToledo I 67" I

Rosa Parks attack: a lesson in crime

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MICH.

By

: By The Associated Press
.
• Today is Wednesday, Oct 5, the 278th day of 1994: There are 87 days
Rosa .Parks, "the IIIOiber of the Soldier's Play." The protagoni,st damn shame when you have to be a
civil rights movement," appeared was a black sergeant, who wore the · prominent personality before your
. : left in the year.
! Today's Highlight in History:
·
· in a Detroit courtroom last week to burden of his race on his sleeve, neighbors are willing to identify
• On Oct 5, 1921, the World Series was bi'QIIdcas~ on radio for the first testify against a man who broke along with bis cheVIO)I.
your assailanl
: time with sportswriter Grantland Rice describing the action between the into her horne, beat her and robbed.
Because Skipper was dumb
:1·:New' Y~ Yankees and the New York diants (who won the-series).
her of $53.
• . Jose!'h Perkins
enough to attack a revered figure,
•
On thJS dale:
.
.
He "wanted all·my money," the
!t.
1 the Detroit court very well may
· ! In 1813, the Baule of the Thames was fought in Upper Canada during frail 81-year-old icon recounted,
During one soliloquy, the make an example of him. Instead
• the War of 1812. The British lrOOps were soundly defeated, and their Indi- " and if I didn't give it 10 him, he sergeant remembers how he and of the usual suspended sentence,
; an ally, 'Fecomseh, was kill
was going to have to hiUt me. He several other black soldiers' slit the maybe the judge will give him
; " In 1830, the 21st president of the United' States, Chester. Arthur, was
was hitting me on the face, and I throat of another black man who, to · some real time. But what about the
put my hands over my eyes, and all their minds, had conducted himself inner-city hoodlums who attack 81j born in Fairfield, Vt.
·, In 1892, the Dalton Gang, nororious for its ttain robberips, was practiI could do was jqs(_scream."
according to stereotype, and year--old pdmothers who are not
.: c8Uy wiped out while attempting 10 rob a pair of banks m Coffeyville,
The miscreant accused of thereby -Undermined the interests of public f1gures? They are still
•'Kan
.
.
assaulting the IelendarY civil rights the entire black.race.
getting away with their crimes. ·•.
r fu •.J931, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon complet€:&lt;1 the fliSt non· figure Is a 28-yCa.---old bt.:t ~.
While Skipper is not deserving
And they will CQDtinue to do so
: seop flight across the Pacific OcC~In, arriving in Washington' state some 41 Joseph Skipper. He fold pdice. that of ,such C!119e vigilante justiee, he until black leaders beCome far less
he a~kctl her; "Hey, aren't you ough~ to bC sentenced 10 I~ and empathetic to young blac_k
''bourufter leaving J~.
.
·
; .. ··In 193:7, sayillg, ' ,The epidemic of world laiYlessness is spreading," Rosa Plrks?" before he prqoeeded hard time behind bars. That 1s the · predators like Skipper and .far more
appropriate pW!ishment for the' sympathetic to their victims.
fPrctidoirt Roosevelt cllled-for a ''quarantine" of aggre~r nations.
. , to work her over. · · · ·
It is hard to imagine a-crime that young blaek predators who
lnck!ed, one wanders what Jesse
· Ia 1947, in the first'lelevised White House address, President Truman
· ~ Americans ((lltfllllll'ftom··eating meat on Tuesdays and poultry on should be more offensive to lhc . ltlfOI'ize their own communities.
Jackson or Josepll ;Lowery ..._the
. mais of black Americans than to
But \he reality is that black president of the Southern Christian
:1niulldlys to help stoctpile gnun for starving people in Europe. ·
. ~
·"' Io 19!13, Ear{ Warren was sworn in as the 14th chief JUStiee of the .. have Pf!C of their own )'011118 tnen offenders. like Skipper, w!tose Leadership Conference, or ~wcisi
.con~idilsly ~~~~~Cit the WIJ!IWI who victims usually are other bt.:ks, Mfumc, chairman of me • ,• · Sllles.succeedingFrejiM. Vinson.
"
·.
.
In INa, IIW.Beades' first hit, "Loye Me Do," was fmt rei~ ip the pr6:ipitated the civil dghtS struggle rarely have the full weight of the Congressional Black Caucus_,
..............
::....u_
'
of~ 19SOs lad 1960s; the WOman law biOUght against them.· What's would !lave said and doric if a
·.t!~A' ....... ~·
.
,
.
• In l969o" "Monty Python's' Flying Circu8" made its debut on BBC whQ defied Jini Crow.40 years ago · inote, they ofJen. get away with young white man had attacked
1; •
in Montgomcr)', .Ala., by refusing their crimes altogether.
·
Parks. They would l!ave ~n to
•
~clevision.
'
. I ,
' '
In Skipper's ciase, for instanee, the airwt~vcs to denounce the
.
Eugene Hasenfus ~as CBP.tured· by Sandimsta solr to yield her bus seai to a white
'police say the folks ,in the despicable act. Tliey would have
weapoliS plane he-was flyini in was shot down !)ver IIOIIIh· lilan. . •
When I first heatd the details neighborhood knew he was l8lcen to the streets to drunalize the
.Jallie~ULqo: ·The SJl8!:C shuule Cl!allenger, canying a crew of_fave' abOut ,the attack on Parli:s, I was responsible for other &lt;:rimes .but bt.:k .community's ftlSillve to fight
wanen •.blasted off from Cape CWvtial, Fla., on 111 eight· reminded of Charles Fuller's didn'tbother to alen the authorities bact against !hose who wOUld prey
-~
•.
. · l'ulitzer Prize.,winning drama, "A until Parks was victimized. It'~.
upon them.,
~
if .. ~
'

ThUI'IIIay, Oct. 6
Accu-Wcalbet'.

. spell ~e diff~rence between suc- · remains as It began during tho~ VItriolic speech bemoaning the
cess and failure of the. most recent primaries. Here was a broth!~(,_in budget deal as a "haJf.measure."
effort to rein in. the growth of enti- 1deals, age and political experienCe,
'fhe animus continued from
dement spendiiig.
who would seule for less to make a there, as Kerrcy desert~ his
political deal. Said Kerrey in New president on key issue' such as
JackAn""er.son
Hampshire: "Gov. Clinton wants health care. While Kcrrey the
Ul
· tO lake it short of the mark. He's candidate embraced universal
and
figured•out what it takes to get health coverage, Kerrey the ~r
elected. What I'm trying to figure was one of the first Democrats to
Michael Binstein out is how do we make America oppose the now·defunct Clinton
the greatest country on Earth." · plan. When Clinton aslced him out
Tl;le seeds of trouble between Kerrey's admonitions won him a for a jog in June to lobby him on
Kem!y and Clinton go back 10 the distant third in New Hampshire.
some pressing issues, Kerrey wore
presidential primaries in 1992.
Though Kerrey supported ·a T-shirt which read: "Hillary
Both from the same generation, and · Clinton in the general election, the K.1ows Best"
both opponents of the Vietnam strife picked up once Clinton ll&gt;Ok
.War (though Kerrey was a Navy office. Less than three months after
It is ' the. Entitlement
SEAL before turning against the inauguration, Keqe&gt;: joined th!ee Commission, however, that could '
war), they soon folll!d dlemselves other Democrats m opposmg create the next major row between
vying for the same segment of vot- C!inton's $16.3 billion ecODC?'!Iic • Ctlnton and Kerrey. In a recent
ers
stimulus _package. ~e .~stuon . interview, Kerrey expressed
it was Clinton who wound up e-:.entuany_won! dealmg Clinton ~e cautious optimism. th,at Ointon will
taking the high road_ because be · ft.s! Ieg1slattve defeat of h1s have the political will _ and
could afforq 10• Both were idealis· . presidency.
.
. strength _ to· reform costly
tic, but Clinton could abandon that
.When Kerrey dectded at the last entitlements like Medicare and
to appeal 10 specific sesn:!ents of mmute to vote m favor of the Social Security
, voters .. Clinton went for the. bud$et package, it was not without
·
lines, while Kerrey a pnce. Not only did Kerrey make
"I don't want to get enlfaged
moral soliloquies.
Clinton promise to create the with something here that's gmr.g to
strain of Kcrrey's Entitlement Commission, he also just be· a political exercise' but
tion with Clinton took the floor 6f the Senate with a doesn't have a fi~hting chance of
being successful,' Kerrey told us.
"We know it's a .risky polilical
issue - not just for us but for the
presidenL ,We can't do it unless we
have presidential leadership. But
WI\ 're not soing to get presidential
leadership if he sits there and says,
't ·m goirig to get cut off at the
Ia .ees as sooq as I go out froin on
iL .,
Kerrey has attac~ed. the
commission's mandate with the
same guts and zeal he showed as a
Navy SEAL in Vietnam. But
cutting entitlements invariably
means angering large groups of
vcters, something no politic1an is
eager to do. Kerrey also admits he
was concerned that his chemislry
w:th Clinton could interfere wilh ·
the Commission's wort.

~

-Area deaths
Authorities arrest 6
Marla S~ Foater
E~llldlfol9•.op;.ron!...~:~o:n.b ·following· -p
· hone ·tip
·Fork-

OHI O Wea ther

Problems persist betWeen Kerrey, Clinton
WASHINGTON - The great·
est threat to Bill Clinton's political
prospects may be a Jellow Democrat who saved his hide just 14
months ago: Sen. Bob Kerrey , DNeb. .
· It was Kerrey who delivered the
dramatic vote that saved the Clin·
ton budget last Augusl Since then,
the rivalry that bega~ during the
Democratic primaries has grown
into a feud that could undermine
the chances for comprchensi ve'
entidementreform next year.
While Rep. Ne,wt Gmgrich, D·
Ga., and the rest of the·Republicans
waste no opportunity to scream
about the Chnton administration,
Kerrey has quiedy grown tired of
living in the shadow of the man
who beat him for his party's 1992
presidential nomination. And Clin·
ton is tired ofKerrey assuming the
role of chief contranan on many of
the administration's top priorities.
Kerrey's record over the past
two years bespeaks a man who has
wasted little opp6rtl,lllity to, tweak
the White House at nearly every
chance. ·Next year, the feud
between Clintdl and Kerrey could

Pomeroy , ..cldleport, Ohio
,.

Pag~

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.
"Now we run the risk that this Congress will adjourn being known as
.· the no-refOI'IIIs Congress, excem for a few largely cosmetic actions," Sen.
David Boren, one of the Del!locrats leaving after this session, said when a
· · campaign finance bill was blocked by Senate Republicans.
:· Wbal refoon is, after all, depends on who is defining il Sen. Bob Dole,
: the Republican leader, said the campaign finance bill was for spending
• restraints ~ ~~gn subsidies tllat would have stacked the deck f9r the
. Demo=~~~.
: "It's only human nature to 1ry to hold on to what you do not WilDt to
. give up and, in all candor, if Republicans controlled Congress, we would
· probably be doing the same thing," Dole said.
.
That's about what happened to the reform movement when it-collided
;. with competing interests, not only between the political parties but also
. between the House and Senate, and between genera.tions, as newcomers
· grasped for the pow~rs guarded bY, seniority.
.
.: Ewn ·commlttee mrerests·gol mvolved as when Sen. Cla~bome Pell, 1&gt;R.I., said he was against an internal reform jx-opos31 because it would
• have dane away with the Joint Committee on the Library, where he is vice
~ chairman and where his father served as a congressman in the 1920s.
: More substantively, that measure sought two-year appropriations biDs,
. and another Democrat, Roben C. Byrd of West Virginia, wasn't going 10
: let his Apptopriations Committee yield that much power.
~
The proposal to slreaiTiline operations !Uld cut payrolls foundered, lind ·
· ' lillelllpts to revive it were blocked in the waning days of the session. ,
:. One vestige that may survive is a politically popular provision requir- .
: ing Congress to comply with workplace safety, job discrimination, wage
··and hour rules, along with a half-dozen other laws governing private
: employers.
·
• "That's just common se~ , and it's only fair," Clinton said, on a
point that has been a politi~ue since the 1992 campaign. That's when
the inside reform effort began; Congress voted unanimously to set up
b_ipanisan panel on reorganization. - .
Nobody was arguing so soon after episodes like the overdraft checks
drawn on the old House bank_. now abolished. Nor was there much argument about reform after the election of I 10 House newcomers, and the 19
percent vote Ross Perot got for ~sidenl ·
.
lljUSt eliminate all of the perks and pract1ces that have caused -!he
AZ~'"~~ people to lose confidence in Congress," Perot lectured at a
"
hearing early in 1993. "The White Hou$C must do the same."
.way, the refonners' thoory went, sagging confidence could' be
revit\.led as the voters saw Congress dealing with its flaws and the dollar- ·
~~n,~carnpmgn
•
the .
finance bill was hung up fo~ a year i~ a dispute
since House Democrats wanted to keep the political _
that helps them run. By the time the Democrats
that, the calendar was almost out, and there wasn't enough baclUng·
up with. the 60 votes to get the bill past Republican foes in the

Wednuday, OCtober 5, 1884

e

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-sports

)The:.~ally -· S·e~tinel.

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SoutherrfVarsity spikers beat Eastern Btter three ga!l'es
By SCOIT WOLFE .
l).ces and was 2-3 spiking. Weaver
Sentinel Correspondent"
hit seven points in a row to help
In a game that took nearly an erase a 13-4 Eastern1ead in !he
hour and a half to determine a win· final game.
.
ner, Sou!hern, at ooe point ttailing
Jess Codn.er enjoyed a good
134, c~e bac~ to defeat J?astern night wi!h ~ 8-11 serying night
16· 14 m the fm ale to cla1m the an~ seven pomts, two lcills and an
match during a Tri-Valley Confer· ace, Andrea Moot;e had a 4-4 servencc volleyball match at. Eastern ing night with an ace and 11-16
High School Tuesday night
spikin g night with four kills.
Southern (9· 7 overall and 7-5 in Sammi Sisson, who .served up the
the Tri· Valley Conference) was led game-winning J!Oint was 6-12 scrvby Amy Weaver, who turned in an ing with four aces and five front
exceptional performance, especial· line lc.ills, while going 16-22 in setly when the game was on !he line ting wiJh four assists.
111 1hc rubber ma1ch. Weaver hitl9·
Jenny Cummins was 5·8 serving
~' serves for 19 points, had si x with rive points, an ace and 6-11

,·I.

,l.

\

\

front -line night whh two kills.
Jonna Manuel was S·7 sJlWIIg wi!h
Jwo kills and a block, wlille Renee
Turley was 6-9 spiklns widl two
kills and Jhrec blocks. Kendra Norris was 1-1 servinJ as were Brian~
Proffitt and Amber Thomas, while
Bea Lisle scored three poin!S on
two aces and a kill. Thomas was 46 selling with two assists, while
Proffitt had five ~ Us and a key
block.
Eastern was led by Brandi
Reeves, who was 8-10 serving wi!h
eigh! points and tmc aces; Jessica
Radford was 11-11 serving wi!h six
points, an ace 7 clinks and was 34·
45 setting widl nine sets for kills.
She also had a kill. ~
Sophomore ~tsy Aeiker was
10-12 scrvmg wtdl four aces, seven
~ints .and was ~ 1-1 S on the ~t
lme w1Jh Jhrec.ldlls..Bec:9 ~
was 7-12 SCM~~j With SIX ~mts;
two aces, four clinks, one ldll and
two b~oc:ts. R~ Evans was 911 wuh four pomts, was 14-16

' .r''
Ohio Universily
College of Osleopalhic Medicine

. Wedneiday, acto• 5, 1 •
hgl . .4

Family
..

Medicine

spiking with two kills and one but Eastern tell apart alter Jess !he Telhi"adoes.
.
block. Jessica Karr liad three Codner and Moore made back-toTrailing 11-S, Southern came to •
poin!S 1 was 4-4 spiking wi!h two back s~ikes, then Weaver settled, life on !be c:oattails of sophomore =
kills and two blocks. Michelle down m a groove· that saw her Brianne Proffiu. who made a great :·
Caldwell had two points.
. · seore eight straig~t. poin!S before diving ,save, then rebounded to
·The first game, won by Eal!~ Eas.tern called !tuec~ tiJ!te out . make !he point scoring spike.
at IS-9 was close and competitive dunng her servmg slri!Jg. Wt!h die;
Caldwell took back some of !hat
throughout the ftrst few minutes. score 13-3";-Weaver-added ano!her momentum, when she made a great
The see-saw battle went 2..() East· (nirie sttaight) for a 1!1·3 score. On over the shoulder save for !he
em, Jhen 3-1, 3-3, 44 and fmally. !he next play, Martie Holler made a Eagles. Karr put Eas!em ahead 12·
S-4 Southern before Eastern great save· and Mindy Sampson 6.
regained the lead at 8-5 on four ripped it over the ,net to give
· Things looked hopeless for
sttaight Aeilcer serves.
Elosrem new life. Holter had a great Sou!hem but about this time an
Jessica Radford went on a scor- floor game for die Eagles.
omen dampered !he Eagles' spiriiS.
ing binge to puSh Eastern up 10-6,
Freshman Michelle Caldwell As SHS fans battled wiJh Eagle ·
!hen Jenn"y Cummins marched scored two points fot Eastern, but fans in die sllnds, "Pluck, pluck !he
Southern right back to a 10·9 SHS recovered IS Bea Lisle sent Eagles" came across loud and
deficit 8$ Bea Lisle made a great, across Jbc game-winning poinL
clear. About this same time four
diving, one-handed save Jo help .
The finale was wild aldlough fcsdlers fell from die ceiling (from
secure !he SH_S point. ~ving one .Eas~ totally dominated t11e fmt a bird's n~st ~n the gym), and a
of her best mghts, semor Becky IS m·.allleS of die game. The c:lllc:h? feeling of cenam dea!h fell over !he
Drigg~ scored five P,Oints in a IOVI The Eagles Jllst could~'t get ov~r EHS.~p./ .
a~ . Aeiket .leaped h1gh above ';he Jhe hump as .Jenm Roush s · EHS went up 13-6, then after a
mg'ht 10 bring down the gamc-wm- Sou!hern crew gained ~w life and · good volley that could have carried
Ding spilce.
scored th~· dramauc: ·16-14 EHS to .within game-point status,
The ~econd game sJa~ted out ccmeback wm.
Sisson made a huge save with a
close:_ w1dl S&lt;;!u.t!Jem lead_ing .5· 3, . Se~eral great, lengdly Vllllcys, Proffitt· spike !hat secured, Jhe serve
mcluding one volley that sa~ both for·oneofSouthem'saceservers. e
clubs handle the ball 16 Urnes,
· · Weaver !hen took command and
highlighted die. contest. Radford · the score slid to 13· 8 as EHS
and Ev.ans put EHS up 4-.0 wit mentOr Don Jackson called lime.
great spikes and a save by Aeiker.
Proffitt went on a tear as Weaver
Ano!her:
~oe
volley
saw
W~ver
put Jhe ball in play, and ihe Eagles
said. "We are conc:erried Jhai it has
make
a
d1vmg
save,
then
Lute
started to panic: leuing several
reformed wilbout any trauma or spiked to give SH~ ·a serve that balls
fall at dlei~ feet. After SHS
reason to reform. It's been an
!hey
squandered.
Driggs
ga~
pulled
10 wi!hin 13-12 EHS c:alled
unusual situation."
a. S-0 lead, tile S~S c~led U'!le. time. Weaver delivered an
"It's very weird," said team Karr aded two pomts WI~ .a dink. onJouched ace. Then EHS regained
by Radford" and .a sp1ke· by Jhe serve and Reeves served up an
trainer "George Sullivan, a 42-year Caldwell.
A momentum saver for ontoucbed ace.
·
veteran of tending to Nebraska
Sou!hern
may,
have
been
a
great
A
good
volley
ensued,
but
a!hletes. "I've been here a couple
double,
bi!JC!t
l:iy
R,e~ee
Turle
and
Southern
regained
the
serve
and
of years and· I've never seen
1 the Sisson delivered an untouched ac:eanything like this ·happen before. Sl!lllml Stsson at Jh1s
ga'!le.
SHSlost
J~e
ervc,
nd that locked the game at 14-14.
Ws different because it doesn'J Ae1ker got the pomt or a 8-0
Sisson made it 15-14 and Eastern
appear 10 be a traumatic tiling. We
called its final time out. Sisson
don't know if it is a genetic: tiling EHS lead.
Codner put Southern on the ·however, served up a hard serie;
or a disease process. For a healdly
young man to have this type of board 8-2, the!l a Radford serve hit by one EHS player but wi!h a
thing develop really has us and an Evans spike made it 9·2. spin that allowed-the~ to carom
TurleY, had anoth~r great block an4 10 !be right, just out of reach for a
stumped.' '
Weaver added pomts thnle and four SHS win.
Results of the junio high and
Frazier was in intensive care, to m~ die score 9-4 . .Caldwell
ar.d
S1sson
exchanged
pomts,
10-5,
reserve
matches will come in ;
where 'he was put back on po!ent
lidded
another
before
Thursday's
issue of" The Daily ·
Radford
blood-thinners, Sullivan .J!!i!l.
aLother
SHS
l~me
out
reg~uped
Sentinel.
Intensive care is tyJ!ical for
someone undergoing th1s type of
ueaunent in order "10 make sure
. -nodling breaks up too failt," he .
said.
Frazier was -cleared 10 return 10
practice this week, but indicated his
The Meigs Manuder..volleyball
leg .was still sore. Tests Tuesday team split two recent matches. The kills each and Fackler six assists.
The Meigs freshman reserve
revealed !he new c:lot.
Lady Marauders droilllcd · an excit· team defeated Alexander IS·S, 15·
ing tmc game lhlltdi ·to once.beat· 7, wi!h !he reserve team picking up
Ga1lia Academy Qll ~ 19 anc1 a 16-14,15-lOwin.
picked··up a vlbtoey' over' Alexander.
·In Jhe match against _die Blue
6-S. (b•d TCISb.14-l ..... __ ,.,_..,Jl .
Angels, the Manuders drOpped !he
7·WIIIdha (!) 1:1-2 .... - ...... ............ .42
a.R. .._. 10.1...........................35
first
match 5-15, won die second
. ~ !4-1 .-...:............. ... ~
I
S-13
before dropping the dlird
10-J-C..llr 12-! ......._ ....:: •....32
game 10-IS.
.. · · ·
- l t 1 II·Now Wub. locbya
·Meigs
fell
behind
8-1 in the
Ca. 32. JUI..bury 2J.. 13 (lia)-W.
l)llily llilllop, IWraa
~ :14.
third game, bu( behind the serving
~~- s. CoaaaJ 2116-l!doa 2:1.
of April Halley and net play df
17-NowlllaaviUe 11. Ja.p,_..,, So.
Erica Robie Meigs came back to
! ..... 16. I9-ltalida !!. :~0-Ca!~aboq
II.
take a 10-8 lead by scoring eight in
a row. The Blue Angles !hen reeled
Transactions
off seven unanswered points to
post a lS-10 win and Jake the

Sllte.

REACHING _UP to stop die progress or the ball is the objective or
tbe unidentified Eastern player (righl) as two Southern players try to
hit it across during Tuesday night's TVC HOCjking DivisiOn volleyball
match·at Eastern High School, where the Tornadoes won in three
g1mes_. (Scott Wolfe photo)

After news "IM4he second c:lot,
Osborne said, "He will apparently
slay on blood-thinners for Jhree 10
six months, which means !he rest
of the season is in jeopardy and
doubt for him. I doubt if he will
play any more !his year."
Osborne was concerned about
the circumstances of the clot's
rerum.
"The clot should dissolve, but
!he disturping tiling is !hat Tommie
is on blood-thinners,' • Osborne

Scoreboard
Brool&lt;fiold 14.400o. 4·Poirvlow Padt Fairview 14.3000. :I·Youn1. Mooaey
13.6000. 6 (lio)-Peay, - ·
8,9000,
' ""'""
-R•&amp;Ion 14: 1-Wa.,._ 15.1000. 1·
New Condon 13.6000. 3-Jtoa. . 13.l000.
~ 11.20011. 5-llollvillt.Cieufodt
9.7000. 6-ML IJIIood 9.$000.
R¥n ll: I·Cciaboa'"' 16.3000. ~
Amando~ 16.21100. 3-llanoibol
Rivor 13.4000. 4 (lio)-PROCI"ORYILLJ!
FAIRLAND,
WHEBLBISBURO
10.1000. 6·Nowark Ucklaa Valley

Football

OHSAA ratings

9.4000.
-

.

16: I.C.U. Roady

17.1000. ~

Cin. Wrom'inat4.2000. 3-Gormantown

Vallo)' View 13.7000. 4·Brootville
· 12.5000. S-W. Joflonon, 12.3000. 6- .
IIRlCIIk!Wn On•wviow 10.6000.

Division V

5

u1Ji1~~!r:.:!. CoL &lt;nw·

DIYIIIonl

I'll.
I·Maaallolo!'51'.1!!1'U --.115
2--yllnw
(6) IS.I •• !69

~=OJ
,tf_~~====~.ir
5-W, ~,J.okda (!) !1).1._ ~.... ,• .14

6-EIJda 1!·1 ...................................66
7·W •n&gt; 14-0 ........................ ....65
a.a.. llllllllilo Acad.'(I) 12-2.............60
9-l'lqua t0.1 ---~---··--·- ...... JJ

Jl).~ (2) 13-J ......................... JO

IlL--

m8ldl:

DIWIODD

. CallinoW-a-1.6000.

t~rt~~l.!.
~ ::::~.=
5-Tallmo4pi:I,J ,.._..: .......................76
$ - ( I ) 11·3
-------........70
1·-11).3 ____,......... ....61

Roalon 19: I· Woodllllld Monroe
Ccnral 13.1000. ~BalAbdd&amp;o l'lial Val·
loy 10.0)11. ,.......
\1aioal
10.2000. 4-SU..- Oanway 9.9000.
5·Howard B. Jtaoa 9.1000. 6-Lcn Ciy
Bucko!" TraU'9.7000.~- .
11op1110: I·Cin, -&lt;&gt;1116.0000.

a.-,._

· I'AIIIIa._.JW, ocod 10.J ... . ... ... J4
9-Sallm 11).3 ................................... .42
Jl).lloaloy 12,2................................ ..40

2.Yc:nlilloll3.3000. 3-Dclphot Jtft'enon
12.7000. 4·Cbrklvillo Cfuuon-Maaie
1!1.4000. l·Lowilbura Trl~ NOIIII

It: ll ·Colo. lflrdoy (2) 31.
1:1-0~ T/, ·~ 30. 14-0AWA
-

9.7000.6-Um&amp;C..LCllh. 7,

n:

fk.!.~!i. 120.Jt=...~
16. 19-J..Ioaa !lallll4. uo...
~13.

•

lo&amp;loa 21: I·Sudooky SL Mary'a
11.6000. 2·Now Wuh. Bucbyo_C•L
10.2000. 3·Dalloa Lo&lt;:ai!O.OOOO. 4C~oaa Hu. I. 7000. 5-lolcDonold
7.
'-Nornll: St. Paul6.1000,
RoJi'"' 22: I' Atlinaton 11 .4000. :1,
Lolpo10 1!.0000. 3·Dolphoa SL lclu!'a
10.01100. ..~. 9.0000. 5·1lolo Hardia
Nonberq 1.1000; 6-Columbut Grove

T-

Dlvlllonm

I'll.
loCo!umbiona Cnolviow (II) 14-0•• .211

Natlaall !=+:efh1 .Arrln1Le
DENYBR NUOOBTS: Sipod Dalo
BW., forwtN, eDd AWal Po&amp;, pud.

w~•~=~
r
I
:_
Sip&lt;!lfulo
_

Blio,

~~~~&lt;~~.ooa_,_

LOS~CllPPERI: S~

Bob Mania,_., .... IAiah Manli ..t

~~'ft~ SPURS: Wahed

lJoyd-. pin!.

Foolbd

_,_~

C!NC!NNAD BBHOALS: - Kevio ,.__ Uasht-,'flom tbl . .
..._..... "~""' · w~...a 1o1m JoJm.

-.liDibecl..

'

~:=.,c;JI ~~-~~~-~~~::l~

4-Ardlbakl OJ IU ·-..···-----lOP
5-Predorid&lt;loooa (!) 14-0----.....95
6--I!Mtwcod!O.l
----.10
Adoao 11-2...•.______
.64
..~ ltoalaa Jidso 12-3.-..;.63
(I) !2,2.~-----.43
IO;Balnbridso l'lial Vllloy 1·3.... -......32

""""" 10.9000. 4-lllllb 9.1000. s.sr.u.
b'iCitnaldU. 1.4000. 6·B01IIo•ill•

.

sac..4 U•

Jto:i• :14: I·SL .J ianry 11.7000. ~
CeduwWe 10.9000. 3-Ntw Bromca
UlfiOOO. 4-0oL a...r, Day Io.5000, $.
Bethel 9.~. 6-Mianer

II·Smioh•Ul• 3!.

_fi:Lfit'

12·

Other H.S. sports

773~5583

.. ' &gt;t

am

t ~ ··

-

'

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•

112 Mulberiy A~ue; Pomeroy, Ohio.

•

'

,I

.,

t• .

I

,J

"

•t •

"

r

·~ &gt;.':, !fo"CHOOSE FROM ~T OVB
t·

'

• '

!

NEW RATE!

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Choose any lerm from
29 10 59 months.

13 Month CD

6:18%

5~55.%

.

Annual Per~n1ag~ Yield
Minimum deposit: $500_00

""'·1'

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Annual Pe;cent.aae Yield
Mini111um deposit: $2,500.00

Cal• your nearest OVB office or
ask your local car dealer about
this limited time. offer!

Ohio Valley Bank
Equal Opportunity Lender

Ohio Valley Bank

Member FDIC

•Annual Percenlage Rate (A. P.R.) is based on a 60 monlh. $20,000.00 loan,
al 7.85% interest rate wilh customer fi nanci ng the $50.00 loan fee.

Member FDIC

, .80()..468·6682
Thfte CO's are automatically 1cmewablo.
P enalty tor eafty wilhdlawal. T hses ollefl w1ll expires on 10-7-94

'

•

0

•

our anniversary
.

12

~~~

Thursday, Friday,
Saturda

-.
'."
"

I

FRIDAY
,
• POMEROY - Return Jonalban
Meigs Cbapter, ~ughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30 p.m.
Friday at 'Episcopal Church parish

~

HOUR MARATHON SALe
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7

-~~~

- Live - Remote ~

10 A'.M.-2 P.M.
Magic 101

'

..

$AVE $AVE. $AVE
-INSTANT CREDIT** To Qualified Buyers

.

Register To Win Several Do.or Prizes
To
Away Oct. 31 ,

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 Ladies AWJiliatf meet- .
ill$ Thursday, 7:30p.m. at post
home. Members urged 10 auend.
RACINE ...:._ Racine Po$t 602,
American Legion, Thursday at die ·
post home. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Meeting at 7:30p.m. ·

/

.

.

October
6. 7. 8
.

CHAPMAN ·SHOES
Pomeroy~i

I ,

!•

•
- I

1~': "·1NOW YOU HAVE TWO GREAT
i"'J· ' . ' ' .CD SPECI:ALS ~- .

RACINE - Organizational
meeting of !he Racine Christmas in
the Park Commiuee Thursday, 7
p.m. ·at Sllir Mill Park. ~.interest·
ed persons invited 10 pan!CJpllle.

You may also register at 0111' ~t branch/ location: Meigs Collilty Ub~ .
.. · . ..
"· ';l;
··~
;.a,·..u - '
..
HOiftbdlC~ ·,
:
,.
'·
Monday lblu Frldaf..
9:00 1111 tiD 9:00 pn
'
Salunlay
· '.
9:00 im 1ii1 S:OO pn

rep~t~jpjpounty.
B
oo~o~ile.
~
::::to~
For any.addili~~rilwion; cali 992-2697, or stop.by' our office at

SATURDAY
BURLINGH..-.M - Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp 7230,
Halloween pany Saturday, 6:30
p.m a! the Burlingham Modern
.Woodmen Hall. Refreshments.
Members and families invited. •

CHESTER - First meeting
Chesler Basketball Association
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at Chester Ele·
menJary gymnasium. People mler·
ested in coaching urged !0 attend .

,·. ·. . •.

Also

NEW CAR?

.

AA, Thursday, 7 .p.m. Sac:red Heart
• Catholi~ Church.

· The Board of Blecliori is o~n Mon'day lhru Fti~y. 8;30'a.m. to 12,noon, and 1:00
pm till4:30. The Board Oft"tce will,be open On Monday, October 10, 1994, Columbus
._Day regular office hours.TIJe bollf'd will-be.open 011 ;rue,sctay. OctOber 11, 1994.from
9:()()
till9:00 pm. 11ie close~o{ybter regiStration in order to vote on November 8,
1994 is ThCsday, October 11,1994. ..•

.'.

.

hall. Rae Reynolds 10 speak.

RU1LAND - Rutlaiid Township Trustees will meet in regular
session Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Rut·
land Fire Station. Bids will be
opened on the truc:k

1------vr.te-at your-own-precincrand-avqjd-Iorrg-lines at _lhc! Boll'd on Election Day by
' changing your address (if y~u bave moved Within lhe county) or if you have changed
your Dime, by updating your_registradQil by OctO~ 11. 1994. ·

.

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News stair
Plans have 'been completed for
die fifth annual Big Bend Stern·
wheel Festival to be held Thursday,
Friday - and Saturday· on the
Pomeroy levee.
·
New 10 the event this year is a
masquerade contest Saturday from
8 to 9:30 p.m. and a fireworks
cruise Sa!urday night aboard die
stcrnwheeler P.A. Denny.
Meanwhile, wor~eis have
cleared brush from the&lt; Pomeroy
riVerfront and spread sand in prepa·
· ration for the arrival of die more
dian 20 steqtwheelers expected to
attend die annual fete.
·
The festival kicks off Thursday
afnoon..widl a senior citizens cruise
on the P.A. Denny, The Meigs
County Chamlier of Commerce
Cruise will follow at 7:30. p.m. Dee
and Dallas will entertain on !he
parking lo! from 8 to 11 p.m.
Boarding time on all P.A.
Denny cruises will one-half hour
before cruise time.
. A bonfrre will be held on the
levee Thursday, Friday and Satur·
day.
.
The Meigs High School B~d
and Flag Corps will perform F~y
from 1 10 2 p.m. wi!h a P.A. Denny
cruise following from 2 10 ~ P..m.
The Order of tlw Arrow Dancers
will perlorm from 6:30 to 7 p.m.
widl musical entertainmen! from
Ricochet from 8to II p.m.
Saturday y.oill be !he big day of
die event and starts wi!h an open·
ing ceremony and flag raising at 9
a.m. widl a fire Jruck parade at 9:30
a.m.
.-,
The Satin 'n ' Lace Porn Porn
and Baton Corp will perform from

THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Free
clo!hing from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m
Thursday at Harrisonville Commu•
nity Church, located next _10 Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
nlent . ·

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.

CHESTER - Chester Nazarene
Church revival Wednesday Jhrough
Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly except Sunday,6p.m.

you must be regiStered by Tuesday, October 11, 1994.

c. :IIi.

'J'iaoD II. 17.Jiaimow t6. ·
_ II-Omilld5.J. l.-Wolliapla_J2,_211)..W._
Mil. . MiJioa.U.U..JJ.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
Mason, WV

me. 1eemy bu been c:laaifiell u Ploue aive ~~ some help. •·
muki-handicappecl and hypeqctive SmBSSEDOUTINNJ.
Uld 1111 been on heavy !lledic:ation.
Ann
NJ.: It should be IPI&amp;CUI
Since he came to live widl us, he to DBAR
all thole pofeaaionals !hat Dilnc
Landers
ha1 Improved so much, his is dclusionel Too t.d sbe refute~ to
medlcalioa has been sharply cut ICXCpt pro{essional help. .
"
bac:k. Jcn:my hu no respect or
Should
Diane bec:omc vbsllqJ«·
COIICflll for his mocller ""anse of
0111, I p&amp;lmt or I sibling' llliJIIl
her behavior IOWird his falhcr. The commit bcr. Mcanwbilc, you and
younger child, aae 6, is also yow fiance should spend as much liOCial life and wbell lbc !IIOI!Ient ·
beJiinninl to shy away from bcr lime as p!mible wi!h !he c:hildrcn. c:cmes 10 reYCil his ~· [. wbi:ll
modler.
Ifhe could get sole c11810dy, it would he 1111111 do before becoming
· My filllce and I have spoken 10 a be a godsend for them;
irlli!J!MC, a wordly fi llim
.
doctor and aevenl ocher llpeci•lists,
wiD
ICoepl his iiJnea U I J*l of •
Dear Ann Landen: I read the
but Diane refuses 10 get any help. leuer ~ "Ruined and Lonely in the toW porhv. I will always tiP: She has cliaiJI*id all our lives llld Ontario, Canada, • who felt no JI'CCilfe my , IMNiwv!'s hollelly. 11
C8Uied us 10 ~ a gJQt deal of WOOI8II would ever dale him because made me respea l!ld admire him 10
much bec:IIJI!C I know how difficult
money on lawyers and doctors . he has herpes.
it
must have been for him to pve
I met my husband in 1982 and
knew rigb! away be was special. He me such news. I'm sure it lllllde me
was kind. COIISiderate, kwing and fun love him more. ·· WISCONSIN
10 be wi!h. He bad a good job and WOMAN
DEAR WOMAN: 'I1w1t you for
was heading for a productive fuJUre.
a·
lelia'
!hat is Jlft 10 help odlen
•
I
One night, afJcr a great evening
who
share
.your dilemma. Ya.n
10 10 10:30 a.m.
out, he qui&amp;ly informed me !hat be
sounds
like
a marriage made· ia.
Eleven a.m. marts !he start of had herpes. My initiai~QC~ion was
bcaven.
,
the ann~ chili cook off and the devumtion. since I didn't know
Oem of !he Day: You blow, if il
whistle blowing contest The chili much about !he disease Ill !he time.
cook off ends at 4 p.m. and chili
1 was, frankly, horrified. But I wasn't for !bose two wcnls, •you
cook-off t·shir!S will be availablc.
know," I lot of people wouldn't be
Denver Rice and his Toilet Seat Jally Cll'ed for him and dcc:idcd 10 able 10 carry on a c:onvenalion.
Gui!ar will perform at noon. O!her accept his affiictioo as a handiclll
f s thai AM Ltwlers col1111111 JOII
entertainment includes Dee and We could work around. It was the c~d -,-.s ago ytUow tllitlt •?
Dallas from 4 to 6:30 p.m., the beat dcc:ision I ever made.
For a copy of her most freqwlllly
We have now been married for reqt~t!IU potrrU alld usays, IINI41
Mark Wood Fun Show from S to
6:30 p.m., the Dazzling Dolls 12 years and have tmc beautiful
Baton Q)rp from 6:4S to 7 p.m., daughters. No, I have not c:onln!Cted t~tlf-oddreued, lollf, btuilleu·lize
. the Midnight Cloggers from 7 10 8 !be diseaSe, because we are not _ eiiWiope alld a check: or TIIIJM1 or·
p.m, and the Crossover Band from in!imate during my husband's der for $4.85 (litis illcllldes pollilft
alld IJOIIdlillrJ to: Ge1111, clo AM
810 Hp.m.
oulbrcaks, which arc: becoming more
l..aNiers,
P.O. Box;JJS62, Clactlp,
Boarding on the P.A. Denny b
~uentas !he years go by.
·IU.
606Jl.{)S62.
(!11 C4lllllla, lltllll
the race cruise will "start at 1 p.m.
Tell "Ruined" !hal be COli have a $S.B7.)
with the stemwhecl boat parade
following at 1:30 p.m. The stemwheel boat race and following
awards ceremony will be held from'
2 to 4 p.m. The captains' dinner
will follow at 5:30p.m.
In the masquerade ~Jest, winners will be awarded cash prizes of
$10, $5 and $3 in Jhrec categories:
pre!tiest, ugliest and most original.
Participants should c:ontac:t Mary
Donna Davis !he day of !he event
for registration information. The
event is Cree and open to the public:.
The P.A. Denny Fireworks
Cruise new for !his year, will be
(rom 8'10 10 p.m. Fireworks will be
9:30p.m. · . , .
· .. ··
Other events mc:lude !he Tnmty
Church Loncl\eon and Craft Show
Thursday, Friday and Saturday; a
herb fest in the Court Street Mini·
Park Saturday from 10 10 4 p.m.
and a-flower show at the Meigs ·
Coonty Public Library Saturday.
No cans or bottles will be
allowed on !he parlcing lot during
die festival.

Bend Sternwhee_l
Festival begins Thursday

"'

REEDSVILLE - Olive TownWEDNESDAY
ship
Board of·Trustees meeting 8
RACINE - Red Brush Church
a.m
.
Saturday at Shade River
-of Christ, revival, Wednesday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. each Forestry Office.
evening except Sunday, 10 a.m.
and6p.m.

In order to vqte in the November.8, 1994 General Election

'""-..ltidso 2S.Js:w- 20. 16llolloooo
""""' (I) 29. !S.hriaa. Colli.

April Halley led the way widl
10 points ol),'·t4-of-14 serving,
Mandy Jones Scored six points and
was 12-for-12 serving. Bobbie
·Butcher had"scven kills, Emily
Fackler nine,assisll. Cynthia Coiterill was 6-for-6 serving wi!h six"
assists -and Vanessa Compston and
Erica Robie has dlree blocks each.
Meigs lost the reserve game 155, 14-16, 8-lS. SJephanie Stewart
led Meigs wi!h nine service pOin!S. :
Meigs picked up a 15-9, IS-8
win over Alexandel' •
Cotterill scot'cd eight points,
was 12-for"l2 serving and had six
assists. Halley scored nine points
on 11-of-13 serving, Jones scored
five points~ was nine ·for nine
serving. C
ston .had four kills,
~obie dlree ."lis•and two bl~.
Billie and BObbi.e. B11!d!er had ,five

The Community Calendar is
published 1s a free service to
non ."profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The cal,ndar Is not
designed to promote sales or
rundralsers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits aud
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

~ig

,: .

Community calendar

ARE YOU A RESiliENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?

1·-...
,. idiiGa

. •-00110. '
Reale. 23: l·Dtarille J 3.0000. 2PORnUOIT!ll BAST 1:1.00110: 3-Plr·

Empire
Ventless
Gas Stove
Natur-al &amp;
Aroin Electric
-Heater
Kero-Sun
Kerosene
Heaters ·

82-

StCDIMIIII ll •DIJ. o..=ec!e.Jvll.
oaao 46; 12-!toyooldobufl 31. 13·

TI'll.
J.aa. II. Ullula 1)4) ·~·----..212
2-Muloa .... v.u., 12) ·~ -·-..201

12.7000. 3-JiucyM WJn1011112.20110. 4Caroy 9.1000. 5-SmilbviUa 9.5000. 6-

I.

Meigs varsity falls to GAHS
befote beating Alexander

a•

ford ·2.9000. Z..Elntoro Woodmoro

Dlvlllon VI

. . . . - ):

T-

!ffiS

·
ta.a..
11. 1
5 -:11.
- rl.
16-llalllnd SlllloudWd
(I) :IIi. 17·V22. ll-Til St.
Unula II. 19-lllooap&gt;l!lo 17. :111-C-.
McKlaJoy t4,

Ro,;.., 17: I·WoiJayillo 12.9000. :1,
Lllbon O . v i 4 - fl.lOOO. ).s...b,
Calli. c.... 11.1000. 4 - - ......_.,..
10.1000, l ·W-Ioonady 10.7000. 6•

wook!y Oblo HIJJI&gt;.School Voll,:t~

g

(Editor's note: October 9 disciplines of family ll)edic:ine,
throuah ·15 Is National genera-l internal medicine and
Osteopathic Medicine Week.)
general pediatrics. A 1993 study
Question: I've noticed the letters found that that 57 percent of D.O.s
"D.O." after your name in my local arc: in primary c:arc: (;OIIIpared 10 30
paper and that you work at an pc:rc:ent of M.D.s. The jnctic:e gap
os!eOpllthic medic:al school. Could widens further with regard to
you explain die meaning of these family medicine. Forty-ei$ht
terms?
·
percent of D.O.s are· famtly
Answer: Ostcopadlic medicine doc!Ors, compared 10 11 percent of
is a distinct discipline widlin die M.D.s. The osJeOpathic profession
healing arts. Doc:Jors of osteopathy, is serving as a national model for
or D.O.s, arc trained to use all hCIIIdl-care refonn because of its
accepted methods of treatment and track record of training primary
diagnosis - including surgery, care doctors and becouse tl)cse
drugs, radiation and magnetic doctors serve disproponionately in
imaging. There are about 35,000 of rumi and o!her underserved areas.
!hem nationwide.
·
Question: What kind of !raining
Andrew Taylor Still, a S!J111(!9n do doctors of osteoJllllhy have?
· in !he Union army during the Civil Answer: Before being admitted 10 a
War, founded the osteopathic college of osteopathic medicine,
profession . He be$an the first" s!Uden!S arc: required to compleJe a
ostcopadlic college m Kirksville, four-r,car bachelor's degree, with
· Mo., over I 00 years ago - .iri spectfic training in biology, .
1892. Today, there are 16 chemistry, physics and behavioral
ostcopadlic colleges in die United sciences. Once in osteopathic
States. Many of these are sJafe medic:al school, it Jakes four mor'e
supported, including schools at years of intensive study to ob!ain a
Michigan Slate, Nor!h Texas and D.O. degree.
•
Oklahoma Slate universities and
In our program at Ohio
here at Ohio University. ·
University, students spend !heir
Queslion: Are . there any fi &amp;l two years studyinj! such
differences between what you do subjects as microbtology,
and what an M.D, would do?
pharmacology, immunology,
Answer: M.D.s and D.O.s are · biochemistry_, endoc~inot~·· .
similar in many ways, but !here 1ft human anatomy and ':'anous.
Y
some important differences. The systems as well as bavmg !hell" ftrst
ostcopadlic philosophy says thlll • patient c:onJaets. In !heir final.two
the doctor is not a healer, but a years, studen!S work m hosp!llls
fac:iliJator, ausmenting die body's and doct~rs· !'ffi~es wh~re dle.y
natural abilny to heal itself. refine their sldlls m ~ ~osts ·
Ostcopa!hic medicine is based on and trea!Jnent .or a wtde vanety of
the philosophy that !he body is an medic:al problems. ~ fall a group
inJerrelated whole that no one part of about 20 students will embark .
of die body can become diseased on a ."continuum c;urriculum"
wi!hout dis!Urbing other pans. The fe~ng s~all-group case.study.
D.O. feels it's necessary 10 bEat fhe !his IDIIOvauve lilt&gt;~ will also
person as a whole\ not just the m'&lt;:gra!e the bas1c ·SCience and
specific: organ tliat may be climcal areas of s!udy-:- starung m
malfonctioning at !he lime. .
!he fJrs~¥ell!" and extel)ding dlrough
One of !he differences 'between tile mte.msh!p ~d.reside~cy years.
M.D.s and D.O.s is that an
AfJer rec:etvm~ ,h1s or her
osteopathic: physician's trai11ing fldegree, the .D.O. w~lcomp!ete .a
puts more emphasis on· the one-year mternshtp . . Th1s IS
ibJetrelationships between different followed by two to fiVe more years
body systems. The muscles and of (!:Sidenc:y training- most often
bones together are known as the in a primary care specialty.
musculoskcleJal system, a!ld the Ho~ver, D.O.s c:an be foun~ in all
role it plays in healdl and Illness ,med1c:al fields - from pedtatr1cs
underscore osteopathic precepts. and internal medicine 10 psychiatry
D.O.s use.osleotlathic manipulative and newosurgery.
tteaJment, or OMT, as a means of
''Family M~' is a weekly
improving the functioning of die colu111n. 'ro·submit questions,
musculoskeletal system and, write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
indirec:tly odler body systems.
Oblo University College of
Ano!h~r important difference is Osteopathic
Medlcin~,
the degree to which D.O.s and - Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Oh1o
M.D.s go into 'Jfle primary care 45701.

en

CoacbN AuoctMiaa poll. wi&amp;b
,
. - ......... poiall~-la

'·

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Frazier's blood clot in knee
still keeping him out of action
ByTOMVINT
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - The
hope that !he blood clot in Tommie
Frazier's right leg would dissolve,
allowing him to return as
quarterback for Nebraska, is
growin~ dimmer.
·
· ·
FrazJer was readmitted 10 Bryan
Memorial Hospital Tuesday for
treatment of die clot !hat formed
again in the same location as a clot
discovered behind his right knee
Sept 26, sP~ool officials said.
· Hours earlier, Nebraslca coach
Tom Osborne ruled his junior sJar
out of this week's Big Eigh!
Conference opener wi!h Oklahoma

i"

Dar U. ••-..: Tllis ii II
retpOnae to "lceatucty," whoae
dau&amp;btcr tbouibt lbe wu being
followed by her u-I!UIIIand.
·
My fWK:C'I ex-wife, "l&gt;laue,"
1llilb sbe is beiDa followed." ' spie&amp;
Sbc is CGDvinl:cd dull a doctor wbo
lives nearby loves her and thll be is
following bcr 10 tee if abe is "wife .
11181erial."
Diane belie~ bcr conCio and cir
are bugged and is certain that peq~le
in ston:a and other public places are
spying on her. She abo be~ the
doctor has a twin brolher who is
having her followed.
Diane's oldest 11011, "Jcrc:my," who
. is II, is living .widl his falbcr llld

Quality Shoe Store ,

KENNY'S A'UTO CENTER
264 Upper River Rd.

446-9971

Gallipolis, OH
.t .

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Plaa.. &amp;

The Dally sentinel

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Pomero~ddteport, Ohio

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Weclne.day, October s, 1894;

Pomeroy--MiddlepOrt, Ohio

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The Deity sentinel Page ,7

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aM.·

COPYRIGHT\
THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ~ND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,'
OCTOBER 21r ROUOH SATURDAY, OCT. I, 1tt4 IN POMEROY.
'
WE RESE"'fl fE RIGHT TO LIMrr

•'

It l=_llmiiV o.,netf·""" ,
·. Dperlltell Superm'llrket
o,ering· tile best a1 ser11iee,
·ou11litv llltii·Price, to tile
People of Our eommu11itv ·

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,_.,. _.. and PeaPI. St.-• Middlep~pt

A Cardinal· Affiliated Supermarket

. U.S.D.A. Choice

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See store for detaHs.

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POT ROAST

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GOLDEN

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orange Juice."

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BlgK
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Soft Drinks ... ..24-Pack 12-0z. ca~. . _

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1/2-Gal.

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Limit 1 With Coupon Inside
Cereal•15 ounce package

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1/31/95. AdlltiOIIal PUtt/11$8 Requild. Rella II Foml
ana oelliiS InSide AJilASSIC MRKe VIOEOCASSETTE.

An.Atlventure -. ·Years tn The

'•'

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(Seestoreforcoupon)

''
..,.' -

c-

99

suggested Retail Price...... $24.98
KrogerRetall....~ ...................,.$17.99
Less Mr,oger coupon...........~ $3.00

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l;.iquidoRegular
.128 ounce jug

KELLOGG'S
AP:PLE JACKS .

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j· .

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9·9

FLOUR

valleydale _
Bacon.·
1.-l.b. Packclge

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Frozen Crinkle Cut Potatoes
32 ounce package

· UMIT ONE 25-La BAC WITH $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE.
COUPON GOOD THROUGH OCT. B, 1994

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·ULTRA TIDE~~ . SHURFINE
DETERGENT·
FR·E-NCH FRIES

SALE DAl'ES: OCTOBER 2 THRU OCTOBER 8,

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s oa
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Powdered Laundry~Reg., With Bleach or
Unscentedo42 Uses•98-110 oz. pkg. .

.

nl-&lt;.1;

tiiii••CMIO • ......... C ... O

CUI or French Stvte Green Beans, Creamed or Whole
Kernel Com, Peas or Mixedo14.5·15.25 oz:can

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FOR

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.POUnd
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· -~City sfudlos. Inc..and .
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SURROUND

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cassette ffJt delliiS.

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cost
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'see
hide

Amblln Entertainment; Inc. All Rights ReserVed.

;p(;.J:tl ~:.
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.49

IIS$ELL IUiliEU, RIC.

Ger.-•

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPON.$·

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onRt.

29

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. k••••••••• ~...
S•1rIo1n

$
3· .

19

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Steak ••••••••••••••••••••~·•• 2
s199

. BUCKET CUBE

U.S.D.A. ~HOICE

3 DIAMOND
MUSHROOMS

$ 19

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LB. .

KITCHEN PRIDE SLICED .·

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btertallae11
~ Rtsa"Yatloa

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(11992·2403

BOUNTY
,TOWELS
ROLL

. CORN KING BRAND SMOKED

LB.

.9
549
R1b Eye Steo ••••.•~~... ·

· u.~.D.A.

CHOICE BONELESS

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TOILET JISSUE

s
139
White Potatoes .~ ••••!':'•
us #1

'.A

V4LLEY BELL

2o/o Milk •••••••••••••••~..

PAR~AY

oz.1 o.· . s1

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8.
~.............
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3 DIAMOND. · .
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$ 89

1$
Margarme •••a•••••••• 2 ··..1

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LDin~E RkAINBOW

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KIEMPS(

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P-17·10-16010928;1300

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FREE

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Good Only AI Powlll't Super Vlllu
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HAMB. HELPER OR TUNA
HELPER

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DOG FOOD

$1''

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PH-10-10011092843
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OlferOoociOcL2 thru0ct. 8,19M

79( :•

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I: 4.5-6 oz.
FREE
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12'-0IIy
Uafi.C 740

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TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

•owsrm•••

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Ferke•b•

Starting Sun. Oct.
8th Racine Legion
P9111602 1:~ pm
Thlalld good for 1
FREE CARD .

G•• Slloot
IY!rJ SH• .Y

949·2038
949-2749
Uc. No. 018.2-27

the district in obtaining mese prioriticsandgoals.
Those attending the meeting
included SupervisOI'll Joe Bolin,
Marco Jeffers, Thomas Theiss,
John !Uce, Chlrlcs Yost; Educalioo
Specialist Diana Kimes; District

Program ·Administrmr Opal Dyer;

Delivered
Locally

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992·3838

11

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7'

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-

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&amp;VICinity

._
..;, 0.. w,'""" 'Jiio..
u...._OUI~Laloot-

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c....

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- -Gftlowy
· - · llol&amp;_, WY. AuoNMilo -

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AJI. -4:011 P.ll llao!owli 9ninP
AEDUCE: llum all Ill wllll J!IU ~·
•1 To .....,
--.tt~oa 0111111111111 • E-YiiP - -.....
DloiNIIo. Art'l FNto - . 1t1o: .1unc11on
211 WI
0111 - . A!MI
-·

RIIIIOdellng
Stop I Compara
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4471

==J:::o=.~ r"':.~

-Mo· Frulh

~

- ··

=·l'*'""'*'
..._-. N. 1 ~~,

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------·1_""_ . . . . . . . -"-"____._,. ;_
71221M

...,.....

J&amp;LINSUJATION

-"'- .....
.... or ........_ -

Pomeroy,

'Wllo
-

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

lloll104. ..._ ' " -

lldilhpoll
112-2772
Oflloe Houra: llon.-Fii.
1:00 --'""Pill

VInyl a Alum. Siding,
Rooftng, VInyl
Repl8cement
Windows, Bldwn
lneullllon, Storm

Doore, Stonn
Windows, GangeL

F,_Ea...,_

I:OOP.&amp;
12Gauge

.

Factory Only

'

ties. Accurate thermometers must
be on hand for monitaing hot and
cold food teinperatures. Cold foods
must be held below 4S degrees and
hot foods must be held above 14
degrees. Food must not be stoml in
ice which is intended for consumption.
The cost of a temporary license
is SIS. Applications mlist be fillCd
out at lhe Meigs County" Health
Deparlment

er Randy Wachter; Meigs County
Park Office Mary Powell; Meigs
County Schools John Costanzo;

WHALEY"!i AUTO
PARTS
SpeclaUzlngln Cultom
FrameR.-Jr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKES &amp; IIODELS

112·7112 OR
IIZ·55530R
TOLL FRE~ 14114414171
DARWIN, OHIO

ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

-

------- ...

--Oil.~~"""' .
.&amp; Lost &amp; Found·
lloi1nli Ao'io. .....,.. 11o1. 11o111
"-;;;;;;;bii;;H;;;;i;;;t: ...... -..~,..
•

I.Gal:·---·-.

lltlloy Run/ ~ Run, llouolcoi Oct. 1-l . . . IIIII ICIIIIIo IW, I .
,Joh,_,,l14-ft2-IIU.
.... all .......... ,.....

FREE ESTIMATES

.,....,_

849-2168

......

7

Yard Sale

rnld•._ lllldiaa 1 -

~

wl

aaiait I :a,::; .

----~
All
I , 1 I ..

. llllt"' ..... .,...

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

12 c;.ge
·Factory a.b o.ly

.........

Ohio~~of~nOuM

Janet Bolin; local farmer Thereon
Johnson; Meigs County LiuerControl and Rccyi:Jin&amp; Kenny Wigins;
Olive Township Clerk Martha ·
Dunt; Meigs ASCS Office Dave
Fox and Gene Jcffen; ODNR Division of W'aldlife Larry Johnson; and
Meigs County Extension Office
Hal Kneen. .

Comm~- ina=~~~ld· ~·

Howard L. Wrlfesel

. 1121114

AGENcY

...

tl• r ••• w ._....., TfV.M&amp;L Ani..._ .,. a ·
..--c..~~-.~,~ ..........
On M. 211. ..,. a lllln. 0111
••!~....: "*' -. :
, . . . .. ............
111..,... '
~lall:41'11

••· LeteCII - - - . - . , M I . '

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,_,nu. "'-,.,::,-=:

11a111o1,

ed
It Tick
t
hr lerlll •IHI
8
PubllcSale
'!.
ty Baptist Olun:h. .
Rlv....... . Tr•vtl
Enrlal..ll
.a
Auction
and san.
,
.
Duane. ~i'ld Hazel Stanley a weekend in Allleville, N. . as
114-247-4035
Ill 'lila 8iiiiWIII. 1 1111.
'
Nellie Lowe ~dy visited her recently VUltcd. Lorene Scou and
of his lister and husband,
111
eo...
.....
t:
sister, Helen, and husband in West son, Georae of Nelsonville, and
11111 R!,'~~-... at' her
Art Llwll St.
Now open for Fll
-~ - ol!dlon ...... u
701
Vir&amp;inia_
. .
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Stanley of
- z _,.._.....
W-"' SeMothN,.'~_. "·"
- . . lllo: Ill . . . . . - .
¥lqjlolll. . . :
: Mn. Durham recently hosted a. ~y,;
.
.. hUme die OJde of Helpin&amp; Hands
Ohl
· ~..uw..-, __family reunion of 75 relatives at
:Ieff an~ ~e111 Bole, I;Io~~r of Zion Chon:~ of Christ flit its · Middleport,
0
...,.__• ..,.
-Aile . 11our.."""
.
her home.
·
Hill Rold, apelll aevml days VISit· Seplember meet•.. .. ·
. ' , 45788
Dried M•lllll
~
. ....
-a.......
_ . ..
1111
Louise B,ihelnlan rnd Bud4y . , ....,.., for T,..t:...• " The
of i JMIIliqls In invent --w.
Ph
,. 9
~l!'g;:'
~ ....,.~·
.. . --=~ :
Edwards. vtsite~ he~ daughter. . ·. u~· ....."'::.!.:. • ~ ,............ FI:.-CIO --'dcnL ... ....- ' ~-= 99£-6 26
.--NIIIC)' PriCe, in Otwa~ and attend· ' I UC?ft to~"' aue........,. - ...... ~...- na·.,.
..- ' .
.______.J ..._ _ _ _ __ . 1 -=~----rec:cddy·visited Louise Eshelman

90
..

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1

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-·-

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........ 610 ,_

114-~1·-

CCII

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=

Athr•••••

5

I I I .C f u l n e l l

8 :,

•

6:30P.M.

Education· tops agenda at meeting

~aul Cast~. Wolf Pen Road,

• · • • li • • , . • •

,· ,P

(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG II
882-6215
Pom.oy, ~!g...

-NEW. -TRA_VE
__L......

Good

• • • • •. •

GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

f!iac
aoen1...;:;;,

loNtiW Ho!M8

work

---Harrisonville news notes·-- . ..

.•.. 1QPOUND

s

.o£1ectrfcal a Plumbing
oRooflng
olnteflor.a Exterior .
Palnt11111•1aa concrete

UCINE
GUN CLUI

m••••l&amp;

CONSTR•anuw
IA.IJVn

OfloomAddltlone

oNew Garagee

' .. Af&amp;tl p.m.

=..Will ......:r;:

nn,oiik;ib.11111.

CAAPENTERSEiMCE

chalnaaw.

F,.. Eallllllllll
Beroral p.m. leiiVe

~

· YardSele

7

3 Announcement•

_ _Y_OUN_a-·s---. ...--IOI....,ERT...,_
·II""'SS""'Ell---""il ~~~~~_:.";:,..,•,'!!

Waadealara l

or

A1111 o1111 ~erne 111;

41710-.IQIIRcl.
R8clne,Oh
11t ltt4417

Available on

paolnllng. Let .. do • for
,.._ Vwy n11an•l••

District Conservationist Mike
· Duhl; Meigs ..countr ,Auditor
Nancy Campbell; Ohio ~~
ProgramJ and projects were di8- of Natural Resources (ODNR)
cussed and ideas pre~e~~ted on how Division of Reclamation Barb
.they and lhcir agencies oould ,assist Flowers; Forked Run Park Mlllag-

GROUND

Stud •.WC. &amp;~
youngGIIIalor
. ..

Chdatmu Layaway

BINGO

Education WMS ihe top priority
for 1995 as a result of the recent.
·Meigs Soil and Water Conversallon
Dism" Annuai .Pianning Meeting
heldattheMeigaSWCDOftice. .
· Other priorities for 1995 include
Envlronmental Issues, Rural Aban·
doned Mineland Programs.Reswn:c Conservation and De~lopment Programs, Land Usc and
Income Opportunilics,

..

··BETTY:CROCKER ·
. POTATOES

. I 11
' !I I
1 · I•

..

20 LB.

out

_.....ring

Echo Saw'a in lloc:k

J

"LOOk tor. the Red iiiid Wwte AwnJDI"

992-4119 .,..._ 0WIIerl-ao.291-56ll0

lor lhDw and Clliif*olollt.

Complete Ciulla
~ Senke &amp;: Partl

•••••, &amp;

r• .. ,.m

Quality llld

Food servers must have TB test

3 .SJ
\l .

•

.,."OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court Sl Pome.':CY, Ohio

T.,.,erament
In Pllt-GIIola

·849-2804

UNDI'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

,; Fr11 EathR~~~~
• $200 lnat1lled
C1ll For Det1ll1

. Bredfor

Mower·CIInlc

SAYRE 1RUCKJNG
614·7•2·2131

window~

· AMBERWOOD
··. IENNE~
Cocklr Splnlell

RACINE

...............
,.. . ..,..
-·.......

All food pre~ers and servers gOO(Is are not required to Obtain a
must possess evtdcnce of a current temporary food seryice licensed
negative TIJ skin test or chest X- through the health department and
Ray, Keith Little of the Meigs are not subject to health dcpenment
County Heallh Department remind- inspections.
¢ those area residents who plan to
Three tubs and hot water must
serve food at lhe Pomeroy Stem- 0 be on site for washing, rinsing and
wheel Festival on October 7 and 8.' sanitizing serving utensils and ·
All foods, except baked. goods, equipment and an lpp!'OVed sanilizmust be prepared eilhet on-site or er must be used. Employees of
in a licensed food service opera-. food boolhs must have access to
lion. OperalOI'S who sen only baked resuooms and handwashing facili-

·
,
· 'IIi
. I
I
O"ly ...IPoweiiiSOiperVIIu
'•
fl8rcuetomtr ' . '
· : I•
~erGoodOct.2thruOct.1,19M
•
-------- -- "-- • - •• - ••••I 11- • • ~ .UIJIIt2• ..,_C..IIIJCif!ltr• • _ ••• 1 1'- •••• !J!!'I!. 1_ ~8f~U!I!!"!"! _ _.~I •
Good Only AI Powefl't Super Vllu
ontrGOOCIOCI '2 ·lhru0cti19M
i· Umlt 2

PUBUC NOTICE
Sealed bide will be
rocelvad o. by
the
undo,.lgned un11111 :00 a.m.
October 28th, 1994, ot tho
office ot Crow and Crow, P.
o . Box 6&amp;8, 110 Weal
Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
tor tho oala of tho home 'nd
real eetato owned by Ma~ela
Karr at the time of her
daceoeo. Said property -Ia
loc1led ot 2188 Kerr St.,
Syracuoe, Ohio.
Stld reel 111111 ehatl not
be aold ·r or lolt· than
$25,000 .00. It o~ter Ia
accoptod, tho full purchaoo
prlc!l will be due o~~r
before November 28,
.
Tho Exe.J&gt;utrlx reserve• the
right to reject any end all
bldo.
.
Fred w. Crow, enornoy tor
the eotete '
(614) 992-5132
(10) 5, 9, 12, 16, 19, 23; &amp;TC

ISA
WANT AD

14.5 oz

• ..I! .!1.1!! .!1.1!! .
• • .!1.1!! .!1.1!! .PI •r"!. !'."!. !'."!. • •
• • • • • • P. I! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• • • • • • . •
•':
, couPoN
:1 •
couPoN·-----•• ~ ----··couPoN·- :---- -~.- ;--. ------cou'PoN------,1 .

I' .

. PUBUC NOncE
~ Notice It hareDy given
. lllal .the_VIIIagl of Syrecuu .
jlwlll accept ....ad bide until
:l'huredey, Oct. 8,1984, tt12
jl'clock noon, tor a 11181
[nternatlonal dump truck.
.~e truck can bt viewed at
jhe Municipal Building
parking lot. VIllage of ·
Svracutt reurv.. the right
to rejec~ any or all blda
;:ubmiHed. Further, the
41b0ve vehicle will bt eold In
lila condition It le·ln with no
~xprettad 01 Implied
~arnntllt given. Bid In a
Mtled envelope marked
"DUMP TRUCK BID" ere to
1M malltd or aubmltled In
tieraon to J~nlce Llweon,
J;llrkTreuurer, VIllage or
llyracult, Third St.,
Syracuaa, OH.
·
Janice LlwiOn, ·
CLERK·TREASURER
19) 21,,28 (10)5; 3TC

THE BEST

_
··swEETSUE
CHICKEN OR BEEF
-IROTH

--

Umestoae
Gravel&amp; Coal

• Cuato• ll1d1
e Solid vinyl
rlplictlltnt

for

OrC.UUeAJ

Buy-Sell-Trade

HAULING

"-i:~~Ji~~~

KENNY'S AUTO CINTIR

oGJunrara .
l.olldl of llllc.

~~-·

lbu'U build II big nesl!fi wloell
rw SCM wllh 11oe dtJUifltds

us at ...

Onemlleout
143 from At. 7
Tllla.·Wid•.frl.-&amp;ll
1-41
oCrlftamll'l Toola
•Toya

.CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:45p.m. .
Special Early Bird
$1110 PIYotf
Thlllld good for 1
FREECMI.
Lie. No. 11051-342

Public Notice

12 ROLL PK

•

EAGLES

PubliC Notice
:

FAR~ FRESH BUDGET PAK

· .

TOOl

renting
. a car.
Come.- .,

DAVE'S .
SWAP SHOP

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

HIGH SCHOOL
AUDITOII.
StlakDIIIer
SSJOIIIIIIts.

$ 99

Let us take
the worry
out of

992·2269

MER ARliE... ·
liSI WANT
AHANDY

umu

40Z.

l (. Bacon ••··•••··~····•····:~~ 3 ·
Ch1cken.Parts •••••••••L~. 69
$ 29.
1
~~~sage ••~·················
$ . S9

Shrubs Shapped
and Re1110ved
Mia. Jobs.

. 1994, 7:12 , ...

.

Round Steak.............

TREE TRIUING
AND REMOVAL
4SII't Hauling,

1111 S..ck
PllliC IOTICE
IIEIGS COUIIY
FAIIIIUIUU
DIUIL.PIIG
OCIOIEIII,

(No Sundly Calls)

wiNatlonwlde 1M.
GaHipolle, Oh.
"'-7.COO

· ·

Announcement~

614-992·7643

318._RL1to

YARD SALE
PAUL HILL RESIDENCE
.LETART FALLS
. OCTOBER 7-1 Oth
,.,..,...,.,..;.10 A.M.-?

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Pellet Stoves

FREE Hot Spiced Cld~r.
FREE Tlcl&lt;ets f01 Drawing.
SUNDAY: Free Tomahawk Th1owing
Demo. by National Champion.
4\t, mi. past Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant

SEVEN UP
PRODUCTS

• · New Homtl • VInyl Siding New
Replacement WindOwS
.Room Additlon8 • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL . •
F:REE ESTIMATES

Heating, Inc.

"N-0-T-1-C-E"
This is the weekend to visit
the ShawllEle Indian Park.
Mu~eum &amp; Trade Post

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

:'t

•

.Wedntldly, OCtober 5, 1994

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Monday thru Sunday
· BAM·lOPM

viE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO Ll~IT QUAJ(TiriES
PRICES GOOD OCT. 2.THRU OCT. 8, 1994.

.

RC COLA .·
PRODUOS ·

STORE.HOURS

Pork Chops •••••~••••••'!-.

~

'

~
Wednesday, October 5, 1994 .

j

Daily Special hi Our Bakery
. 10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
· Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3fS1.00 plain

FAMILY _P~K ASSORTED . _ · . . : ·.

.

-.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

'

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'

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=........

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.. .
.

·.

Page 10-The Dally SenUnel

~lday, Octobers, 1994

Pomer~...;..alddleport, Ohio

!

·Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
BEATTIE BLVD,TM by Bruce Beattie:

"

KIT 'N' CARLRD by Un'y Wrtpt
10.5·M

!I

Wanted to Buy

Cloen uto Uodol Coro Or

~~· 1~.~~,....~

-___ ........,ll.a
.................
..................
......- .....

Eaotom Avonuo, 0.111

1

~

51

HoulthOid
Goocll
Lau11...

11

110 7 4

19 8 3
~OUTH

.e=t..~,.
r.1e rc11.111d se

Employment Serv1ces

•J -8
•10 Q 4 2

...... ~~

2121. WobuyHtatol.

- . Calll-'111.

.6 2

=:=....~,...

Deccntod 11..-ro, well • •
phoowo, old llmpo old '"""
IIIOI!IIIirl, old Ciiiduo, antique
. MI!Mift. Rlvtrf,. Antlq. R.,. Moore, owner. e14-tt2~

Old cigarillo tlglltlnl,' milk bal. 1111, fOuntain po,., lllniWIN,
...-., 11-ro, IIIIGIZI..e;
Star Wm ond Star Troli •-;
Ooby lllitln, 114-4111:1·11141.
W.nlod To Buy: Junk Autoe
With Or Wlthoul Moton. Coli
Larry Uvoly. 814 318 11303.
Top PrieN Paid: All Old U.l.
' Colno, Qotd Ringo, Sltvw Colno,
Qotd Colna. II.T.S. Coin 8hop,
1St - . 1 Avonuo, Wlpotlo.
Wonlod ·To lur: Uaod lllolollo

EAST
18 7 2
•K Q 54

•KQJI05

Help Wanted
OVoltllook Coaior hoi. tuil limo

and poll limo LPN IIOIItlono

=~~~~8=

Would LIM 11omoat11 To .byalt
In My - · 814-.111 ''"·

13 · •

AIIEAICAII

NATIONAL

SUAAHCI!

.

_..,.,..._,
-·---to-

...

lnaurance

IN-

V1CKIE CAS'IO, ACIENT
-EOWIIERS l AUTO DISCOUNT$
UFElHEALTH
304-4211

=

u

-.,..~

--vr-

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
We&amp;l Not1b East
Pass I •
Pass
I •
21
Pass 2 • ·
Pass
3•
Pass 4 •
Pass
5•
Pass 6 + . All pass
Opening lead: • K

.Itt

BARNEY

Wllut~

PAW'S PLAYIN'
· A GAME
WITH TATER,
PARSON

I RECKON
SNUFFY'S NOT
ALL BAD!!

MAW ! I I L'ARNT TATER
HOW TO DEAL OFF
TH' BOTTOM OF
TH' O.ECK II

The impossible
takes longer

!'a,-··

- 4 1. . -- l'ltlh

By Phillip Alder
A reader from Puyallup, Wash., sent
me today's deal, which she played in a
club duplicate. She had reached the
reasonable six-diamond contract, but
had gone down when both heart fi·
nesses lost. At the end of the evening,
she checked the other results and noticed that two declarers had won 12
tricks. "How?" she asks. "I don't believe the other two pairs are that
much more astute than I."
Well, do you see how,.it is possible to
make a slam in diamonds alter West
has led the spade king? &lt;Tru!', a heart
lead .would be fatal.l
Two SP!Ides vias fourth•suit foreing, ·
showing game Vflues and asking for
more information . I~instead North
~ad jumped to thr
diamonds, it
would have been invi ti01 •.U, not fore·
in g.
The exact sequence can vary, but it' ,
goes ·aloiiglhese lines: Declarer wins ·
the first trick with dummy's spade
ace, ruffs a low spade in hand, plays a
club to dummy's jack and ruffs anoth·~ low spade. A club to the queen i~
followed by three rounds of trumps,
ending in hand. South cashes the A·K
of clubs, throwing the heart three and
spade six from the dummy. Left with
9-8· 7 of hearts opposite A-J-10, declarer leads a heart to the 10 for a text·
book endplay. East wins with the
queen but has tp lead back into dum·
my's remaining tenace.
However, if East started with lour
spades and only one heart honor, this
line of play wouldn't work too well . I
have a feeling that the successful declarers &lt;both of whom were actually
only in game) were helped by a spade
bid from West.

.

llmhlllon or tiiW•••lllllcWI
- o n raco, color. rolglon.

OIIgln. .. ..,

'
8 7

tAK532
•A K 7 5

1 Ill oom AIM 111•1t Fully
Fumllhod,
Eloo. Wlllrtaocillo.
• Qarlllilo ,_

- - lor Ill · - For ......

847Z.ECE

19

:i1 Followr of
{lull.)
1 Rock otar
32 tme or NIPICI
- Pop
33 Uncltrground
5 Marah
worker
8 By the 1111)8- 35 Gloomy leelfng
- to Phoenix 38 Alma 12 Englllh
39 VaQ!Ibond
,.,_.r
41 Schiel. abbr.
13 Long 42 Pull'
14- -China
46 Wld#ahoe olze
15 Family member 47 Weatorn moroh
16 Deteriorate
pllnt
17 C~~Jracter In
49 - culpa
·othello
50 Minutea of
181mlblte
court
19 Sit lor a
51 Llko the Sahara
portrait
52 Mal de · 'lcO-f-=-+7
21 ltumorlat
53 Shopper's aid
22 Alllrmationa
54 Poland' a 24 Walkl
Walata
unataadlly ·
55 Morsel
26 Slrlp of leather 56 Dregs
28 Actorconcern
DOWN
P.atlnkln
2 Wine lruita
29 Roman 1,051
3 Moat
30 Female sheep 1 To whom-courageous

·PEANUTS

..

mike qlldl Pi.......
lmiiiUOn or

ciW•••--··

Help Wanted

j
'l

'FRANK &amp; ERNEST ·

I drill Suppltfs
&amp; LIV•'SIOC~
·BORN LOSER

't FINISIED Flu.t~ IJ' ~'(

~T~ COLI.£C.TION N..BOM.!

4110 .... 4 ........,,

~~~~~tiF~~
75 Boalla Molora
for Sale .
118oooi--IX

CELEBRITY-CIPHER
by L.ula Campos

Cellbritv ~ cryptograms •re createalrom QVOtaiiOf\5 by famous people. past lnd present
e.ch teuer in !he ciphl( .-ands tor anolhef . Taday's clue: P equalS f

"ZAT

.PAKXC08XD

TSXZ

F S·F FE

FVBUDI
SF

VHATKSAZX

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mo.

B W.

TAKISOA

BOL

MABO

FZBNNE

. AS A.'

- · 11-B U I . Q. A F D T•' A K X z ,E . .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It is respectable to have no illusions, and sale, and
profitable- and dull.' - Joseph Conrad.
.

'=~~~, S©\\~lA-l£t.tfs·
14tto.l
CLAY I . POlLAN
~y

.

Reorra,nge letters of
0 fou'
scrambled words

....
WOlD

the
be·

low to form four words

I':

,-...,....,.,....,.....,......,....__,"
NY AN0
·.1-""""TI~,,...,-.,....6-,lr-1 ':~
. . . 1
. . ._

My husband knew when
our son had matured a little.
He had slopped asking us
, . . . - - - - - - - - - . for a bigger allowance and
--.G...-U~R_E,_..D...,....T...,..~~ ~-a_d_e_. ~ _;;~uest for a

I
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.
. , _ ..............
- · Mor..y
u
~
liMa-

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e

Comp lete the cl'ludcle quoted
by f.tl ,ng 1n the m1U1ng wor(b

you develo p from step No. 3 below .

PRI NT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUA RES

6 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Aghast- Ruler- Bevel- Wallet· AVERAC3E

-

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

21' Tioga ...... RY. ..... .

llll'ffd,-~

loW - . .
1011.

...,000, .,.._

Serv tces
Rent als

~Wv:i.

Buatneaa ··
Opponunlty
INCmCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.

-"YOU=-

roconunonclo

thlll

rou

OCTOBERS I

.,

=.=-~~

2 ...._, 141 Filii A... 171-4112, t:tN.'GOpill • OI"Jala, llova. IWtlgliaiiW, . _ _ ......
~ DooaiL NO .Poll; 11oe 4 'd aa• Ala-~ In

UJMID..,....

symposium. We all laughed when he smiled and said,
"If at first you don't succeed you're running about AVERAGE•"

-----------------'

Hud

- - - - - : - - - -... .~- ..... 1111'............ air

A1 ttouaestOrRem

IWEDNESDAY

A famous motivational speaker appeared at a local

=:..._o.g:a.=:r=

.t

LAIIOl~CoNoo

(

3Dit•l1t-llt2.

BLEEPI ..111. IKI IH-IKI

lEtT LOCATION 011
IIOUNTUII
. . . . . . .7727

M
THE

do - .

.,_with
athe
nd
NOT to aolld nlonir I
mall 111'1111 you IIIVIIInVIII od
till ..........

.

,_.,..,.,

........

............ \'M. ...

Cll . . . . . .

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
~

Real Est&lt;Jte

e

"

-,.,..._f

"

'

\

c

'
'

seek out an old trusted lriend with whom
you've excl)anged conlidences previous·
ly. You must be '!ble to open up without
fear or restrictiOfl.
TAURtiS (April ,20-Moy 20) Becau se
you'll be cooperative'and make hard con·
cessions. so wili persons with Whom you
deal today. You're the one who'll wrote
the scnpt they'll fOllOw .
G_EIIINI (May 21.June 20) Unity ol pur· ,
pose and total dedication to your objec·
tives today could tie the teasons you'll

. . . . . . . . . . . . . _..,.,. . . . . .~

.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jen . • 19) sibletolkJ. ·.
Desirable results are likely today, even CANCER (June 21.July 22) You're nol
when work"g on new endeavors. It'll likely. to feel comfortable and effective
_
.• _ .
. .
. . s.eilm like e$c~ time yoy ne~d ex_pe'!.. 1\)day ~round _Individuals whose plliloso·
'
Oct 1994
. guidance, help will be at your disposal.
J)/ly and standa!IIS don't match your own.
6
Th~raday.
· '
. l AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftlb. 11) Interesting However, where there is parity, outstand·
Past experiences, bOth bitter and. sweet, · ~ trends are presently stirri'lQ and it looks ing results are possible.
.
might aid you Immensely In the year as though you will finally be properly LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A longstanding
ahead. You've learned your lessons W!llll l acknowledged and compensated lor personal matter may finally be put to rest
and, IIley will be filsted in the new cycle. , something you've earned the herd.~~Y·.
today . It should be concluded iri ·your
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) There aren t PISCES (fib. zo.March 20) Seeing t~e Javor with a valuabllrtesson as a bonus.
' any lree rides being offered today, b~t lor what " realty is can be a big help IO VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sipl. 22) K you ask IJ&gt;r
that dOesn't mean your powers ol1acqu1- ¥OU today. You'll not be intimidated' or advice today, yoo might have to be pre• sitiori are restricted. Hard work is the tick· take things too seriously, yet you'll be pared to swallow some bittersweet counet to gains and succeas. TfYing 10 patch able to be practical when necessafY.
set. Heed it, however, because the rnedi·
up 8 brOken romance? The Aatro-Graph ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) ll _you're in cine wJI make you welL '
MatchmaNer cAn ltelp you to understand need of someone tQ confide tn today,
, .

£Vry1

·.

I

what to do to make the relationship work.
Mail $2 to Matchmaker, P.O. Box 4465,
New York, N.Y. 10163.
·.
St:roRPIO ·(Oct.
24·Nov.
22)
Involvements with old.lriends can give .
you a tift today in ways only yoo can truly '
appreciate. What occurs should be just
wllatthe doc1or ordered.
'·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Qec' ·21). .
Successful end results are vefY probable
today, provided you are persiStent and
tenacious . Early setbacks can be

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'Birt)Miay

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Page-12-The Dally sentloel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EASTMAN'S

Wednesday, OCtober 5,

•

Area
football

t's A Beef Stampede!

FOOD LAND

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LB.

Whole
B~neless

Rib Eye

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Whole stick Mt. Brand Bologna lb . 69c

t

11b.
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loaves

99

LB.

Bob Evans Farms
Pork_Sausage
1 LB. Roll $199
Assorted Colors

·Pum

$

99

1

Eastman's Foodland Valuable Coupon

Herr's Potato
Chips

150! 1''
bag

Asst. Flavors
Velvet Natural
:Roun_ds
Ice Cream

Fried Chickep
Buy 8 pes. Get-.
4 pieces FREE

Where
Available

.
89

Asst. Flav-ors
Coca Cola'\
Produds·

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andWIC

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funding
clears
Senate

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BIG BEND

HUNTING'It&gt;N, W.Va. (AP)
A U.S. Anny Corps of Eogi\neers revtsed reorgamzauon ·
;plan eliminates .the need. f&lt;l!' job
·cuts in the HuntiDgton .DiSII'lelo a
;spokesman says.
• The latest plan announced
:wednesday instead will give tho
:district more control over the
_projects it designs, Steve Wright
, said. In facl, because of an
:increase in wort, district hu
-added 10 jobs 'recently, giving it
'952, he said.
• Two years ago, the corps
;!!roJK*d a restructuring plan
that would have cut more than
350 jobs in the Hunlington District That plan died following
'Criticism from corps workers
;and c:ongreSSionalleaden.
..!!.
t

&lt;\;'

ODLAN
to lim~

' '

Ridding Haiti of its guns is a
key element to the plan to stabilize
the country in preparation for Aristicje's return, expctCted in just nine

days.
• of paramil'tary
"The elisarmmg
•
groups, namely FRAPH and their
'
. stalling
...
attaches. is indispensable for peace
: There were no weapons seized to~ ~~t the country,"
· Wednesday, and the confiscated Anstide said m a speech to the
· gun count is stagnating at about United Nati,ons Wednesday, refer.: 4,000. A gun buy-bact program ring to the gunmen of the Front fll'
hasght in about 300 weapons tile Advancement and Progress of
· at
rangin from 550 to $300, Haiti.
.
· but ost of tlosc arc tear gas
"Weapons bavo to be silenced
for us to have peace,'· he said.
and not guns.
Aristidc's lawyer, Ira Kurzban,
•'The cash for g'lns program
· hasn't b&amp;gJed that many weapons stressed that, ·'The two most
: or explosiVes," acknowledged· imponani issues during the tranSi: anny spokesman Col. Barry Wil- tion is disarming the teiJOrists and
. - Icy.
gaining civiliail control of the mili- Early successes in the seizure tary.
· program came mostly from raids
""lt'you don't have those two
on military caches. Raids now are things, you don't have democraless succeSSful. Willey -noted that cy."ilteir success depends on the qualiKurzban said that if Lt. Gen.
ty .of iniCUigence repotiS rcccived Raoul Ccdras, leader of tile military
- by the military.
government that overthrew Aristide
"We haven't seized a lot in the three years ago, believes the gun. past 24 to 48 hours ... he said. not- men who suppon him have been
tilg that two anny raids Tuesday disarmed, "he will leave the counnetted only a. rifle, a pistol and a try."
machete.
(Continued on Page 3)

Revised corps
plan eliminates
-ifob cut need

21iter
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By JEFFREY ULBRICH
Associated Press Wrher
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti The American program to disarm
Haiti's violent factions and malce
the streets safe for the return of
l&gt;resident Jcan-Bertnind Aristidc is

• OApc!CiiDg
&amp;'2 · ' an
most ecooomisu wcrc
increase of about S,OOO.,
The inCreale fOUOwecl an bnex·
pcctedly slwp drop of 11,000 in
.the week ended Sepc. 24, wHen the
number of.weck:fusclaims fell to
their lowest level
year. The Labor DePartment ¥id its
four-week moving average nf ini·
tia1 claims feU to the lowest level in
more than five years. The average

COLUMBUS (AP) - If anyone under a system of voluntary limits.
knows about campai$0 fl1181lCC, it's
The proposal also would
Gov. George VoinovJCh.
increase fmancial disclosure rules,
- After all, he's raised upwards of eliminate contributions from one
$8 million in his re-election bid campaign to another and bar ofticeholders from raising money Wring
against Democrat Rob Burch.
And in his mind, that puts him theftnlhalfoftheirterms.
in ·a prime position to help reform·
"Unlimited campaign spending
the system.
as we have today favors those canOn Wednesday, he teamed up didates who can raise the most
with Secretary of State Bob Taft to mone):'." Voinovich said. "Our
outline a proposal to instiwtc elec- plan Would put-reasonable limits on
lion spending caps and limits on the amount of money candidates
campaign contributions. ·
can SJlend for political advertising
"I diinlc the voteiS will take this and mailings,"
·
·
•
proposal very seriously - particuThat lrind of talk is hypocritical
larly from somebody who has coming from Voinovicb, countered
taken advanta~c of the current Bun:h, who has vol111tarily limited
campaign fmance
laws,'' c~ntributiOII$ to $1,000 from indiVoinovich said.
vtd.uals and ~MOO from politilfal
Under that ~. gubemato-. action commtttees.
rial candidates would be limited to
"George Voinovich as railed
spending $4 ~oil for adVCf!ising _ over $25 million over the last six
and mi!SS matling - expenditures years an~ he spent the last four'
taft wd IICCOU!'t for up to 80 per- Y~ paymg off!"&lt;* CUitribu~
cent ofa cam1J8!811 budget.
.
wuh taxpayers dollars," sa1d
Those seeking lower offtces Burch, 1&gt;-Dover.
. ·
would be allowed to spend less
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~
i\ndt.lp

:weapons begin;flagging

Sternwheel festival begins- School

By CAROLE FELDMAN
AP F..dllCIIIioll Wrlttr
WASHINGTON - With fmal
congressional approval of a $13
billion education package, Prcsi-~
d&amp;Jt Clinton crowed that an of his
administratioo's Mncation Jiropus.
als - from the Goals 2000 education reform bill to national and
community service and direct 1111·
dent loans .- 1iad passed the
Congress.
"Future generatiou wiD loot
ba:k oo this period as yem ,of historic accomplishment that began
the task of renewing cu ll8lioo by
investing in our people," Clinton
said.
- · The Senate turned aside a
Rcpublican .Jed filibuster over
school prayer and tbco VOIC4
Weilnesday to reauthorize for five
years the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, wbich
expired Friday. The measure
passed the House last .week and
now goes to Clinton for his signature.

n-w

Padcllewlleelers IIepa lloiDt up on the Pomeroy levee Wednesday in preparation for tbe nrth
aooual Bill BeDel Stern-.Hel Festival which ·aot underway at noon today. Here, Thursday morn·
log's fog shrouds the eUiy arril'llll. The festival continues through Saturday nillh1, culminating
with a llreworks display at 10 p.m. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

•
• • 3.250 ahead of -"'the September
·
was 318,750,
down a healthy
empl~yfrom 322,000 the previous week. ment Jeport. Investors worncd
Not since May 20, 1989, had the about inflation eroding the value of
figure been that low.
theil- investments have been anx·
Economists consider the four- · iously awaiting the unemployment
week average a'better gauge of hir- • figun:s and fears that it may show ·
ing trends than the more volatile strong. gains in the nation's job
weekly number because it smooths market have helped push down
out fluctuations.
prices on the New York stock and
The repon was released a day bond markets this week.

High-rolling Voinovich unveils
campaign spending proposal

Plastic Gallon

Assorted Sizes

.u.s. effort to seize militia

" '.W ASHINGroN
- (AP)- - F'llllttime claims for state unem~:
ment benefits rose 7,fX» last
_
the government reported today. It
was the fust increase in five weeks. The Labor Department said the
number of initial jobless claims
totaled a seasonally adjusted
317,000 in the week ended OcL 1,
pp from the previous week's
310,000. In adviiiiCC of the report,

$ 99 -

all Mums

"Raids stall

A ....,ttdlalno....,tfiiL

Jobless cl.a,i·m$ post _first rise in five weeks ~%~~~d~~El

Fresh
Tamarack Farms
Apple Oder

I

211DIIM,11 ...... _...

\ PcSmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ThUrsday, October &amp;, 1994

'[$

f

KaKn's Hillshire Farms --. Smoked Saus~ge &amp; Keilbasa

'Vol. 41, NO. 1•

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a1
Cap~ 11M

-~

$399

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CHUCK ROAST

KiCker:
154841

.
ent1ne
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:t u.S.D.A CHOICE
BONELESS -

4

Page4

'"V"'E~R.

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Pick3:
595
Pick4:
5433
Super Lotto:
4-5-24-41-46-47

•

!BIGGEST

SA

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previews ~

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Join us as we
sa-lute' the)savings
with a Western
Dress-up Days!

Ohio Lottery

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The ~urn ber o f ~ee k1 Y c1atms
has not mcrcased smce Aug . 27.
when the end of summer Jobs
he.lped. push the number up by
10 ~ Labor Dcnortment said
14
states and territo~~ted ~
es in claims in the week ended
Sept
while
had increases
39
· 24 •
.
·
S~ figures lag a week behind the
national ones.

Herb fest in mini-park

"What he'S'talking about would
have vinually no impact on big ··
money contributors in Ohio."
· "This is not campaign finance
reform. This is a smokescreen,''
said Janet Lewis, e~eeutive director
of the citizen's group Common
Cause. .
Common Cause is part of the
rival Ohioans for Campaign
Refonn which started an initiative
petitiQ~ drive l~st ~onth to limit
campaign contnbuuons to $1,000
for both individuals and PACs.
Lewis said the Taft/Voinovich
plan would stiU allow special inter·
est groups to contribute up to
$25 000 to campaigns, and doesn't
cou~t expenses such as polling,
Pomeroy wUI offer a variety or weekend activities in conjuncconsultants and printing toward the
tion with the Big Bend Sterowheel Festival. One wiD be an berb
spending cap.
fest in the mini-part Saturday froiD 9:30 a.m. tn 3 p.m. nere
As Voinovich described the
wiD be a sampling table wbere visitors can taste foods flavored
plan, candidates who accept spendwith herbs, a display -ot varieties or dried berbal Dowell for use
' mg limits could get contributions
on wreaths and swags, and llolshed decorations and folk-art
from individuals of $5,000 per year
, items ror sale. Here Bobble Karr, left, and Diana Lawson of the
in statewide races, $3,000 in Senate
Herbal Harvesters Society display some of tbe items to~ fea.
races and $2,000 in House races.
tured at the herb rest.

May primary, the Dayton Daily
•
"It is·IUegal and ill8pPfq!liate,"
said Probate Judge Robert Hagler,
who oversees the juvenile court
and is conducting an investigation.
Hutcheson told the newspaper
that he did not learn about the alle~atioos lDitil several days ago, and
IS letting Hagler handle IL
·
"I shouldn' t be held account·

NR~s reported today,

wiD be disttibuted .to ed~y
disadvanraged students.
_ A
_ !though scnator.s differed on
wh~ch states WQuld lose money and
whtch would gam und~ the new
formula forth~ so-called !itle 1
program, on~ thing was ceruun: For
the ftrst two years, state allocations
undet; the SIKalled Title prognun
1
would not drop.

a~~T=un~0~~k.h~~.!~e~~

1;;-J-:~~~~:~ oncontentious
some of the most
Ill
social

DeWine, .bench candidate face campaign investigation
XENIA (AP) - Greeilc County
officials-are reviewing allegations
of illegal campaign practices by
RepubflCID U.S. Senate canclidate
Mike DeWine and a CIU'didale for a
local judg~ip.
One allegation is that a canlpaign worker for Bob Hutcheson,
who is running for juvenile c~
judge, improperly used juvenile
,dclinqucnis and a c;ounty 111111 Jo
pick up campaign signs af~ the .

- which states would benefit the
most from changes in the wa aiel _

able because I dido 't know about it
anil ' in fact , discouraged it,"
Hutcheson said.
"I don •t think you can ignore
this complaint," said Prosecutor
Bill Schenck, who has endorsed
Hutcheson in the race. "lt deserves
further analysis and review.' '
Schenck also has agreed to look
into charges by Dennis Geehan that
DeWine improperly used county

'.

vehicles and law enforcement officas in campaign commercials.
Geehan made the allegation earlier this year, but didn't make a formal complaint until this week. . •
"Campaigns use shenff s
employees in coll)mercials all the
time," DcWine spokesman Berry
Bennett said. "I 'th'tnk Mr. Geehan
j\tst docs11 't like Republicans too
much. He's a well-known Democratic activisL"

issues and that's the way it should
be," Education Secretary Richard
Riley said ''Otildrcn are not learn·
ing as Democrats or Republicans.
They are learning as Americans
who are the future of the COWltry."
Senators were quiet to claim
credit. "This will be the educatioo
C'lngress," said Sen. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass.
A filibuster over school prayer
provisions in the bill, led by Sen.
Jesse Helms; R-N.C.. was broten
by a vote of 75-24. Sen. Richard
Shelby of Alabama was the' only
Democrat to vote against clotwe.
Helms painted the prayer fi"ht
as one for the "soul of America. '
The legislatioo protects the right
of swdents to-participate in voluntary , constitutionally protected
prayer and cuts off federal education funds to school distticts found
to have' "willfully violated" a
court order that they allo'w the
prayer.
He preferred school prayer language that had been passed by the
House but dropped when Senate
and House negotiators settled dif·
ferences between their separate
version of the bilL
The legislation authorizes S12.7
biUion for fiscal 1995; $11 billion
has been appropriated.
The act's biggest program aids
educationally ·disadvantaged children - those who, because of
poverty or other reasons , are
behind other students. Even to the
end. senators fought bitterly about
the formula for aHocating nearly $7
billion in those so-called Title I
fun~,?

· The bill would!

• Require local scl!ool districts
to adopt a one-year expulsion poli·
cy for students who take guns to·
I
school. Local officials could modi- _1
fy the punishments·on a case-bycase basis.
at the head of Eddie A. Ferguson,
• Authorize $455 million in fiS41 Crown City. during a domestic cal 1995 for Safe and Drug-Free
di;putc Tuesday night, Salisbury Schools programs.
said. He then fled and authon~es .
• Bar the use of federal educasearched thrQugh the night for hun. _ tion money -for ~s that pro,
The shooting occured in front of mote sexual activity, whether
the residence of Terri Thomas, homosexual or heterosexual, or for
Vine Sireet. Ferguson was trans- disttibuting condoms ·in !IChools
'
ported by am~e to SL Mary'f • Exptind programs fdr tr.acbCn•
Hospital in Hunungton, where he ptllfcssional developm~nt tel all
was pronounced d~.
subjects, not just math and science~

-Suspect surrenders lil alleged Gallia County murder

GALLIPOLIS -The PtlflC!:I m
a Crown City shooting death was.
arrested Wednesday morning in ·
Huntington, W. VL
.
Micliael B. Wolfe, 38, of Huntington, was placed In the Cabell
County Jail io await an extradition
hearing scheduied for this mClrllina.
Chief l)eputy Dennis Salis~
of the Gallia County Shenff's
DcJIIIlmeDt said WQ!fe was on his
'

way 10 Crown City to tum himself
arrested by Hunt·

!D wbea ¥ lll&amp;lQII police.

·

SaiUbtay llid be lllked-on the
phone with Wolfe Wednesday
momloa and lriiQieCl a urender
at lhe· f'taee ~ 1 n11111Dp north
of th!: villap. ·
·'
Ho,,ev11r, The (HIIIUin'aton)
Heru/d-DIIpatcll Jeported Wolfe
surrendered Ill tl!e HPI&gt; bcca~sc

'·

the victim' s brot~cr-in- law is a
Gallia County sheriff's deputy.
Salisbury said he does not know
why 'wolfe fled to Huntington
before turning himself in. He verilied that FergUSon is the bruher-in·
- law of Deputy Howard Mullins,
who is al!IO the manhal of Crown
City and was the ftrSt on the scene
after the murder. '
•
Wolfe allegedly ftred a handgun

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