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Monda~Ckrtober10,1~

· Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

"

. l~lamic

militants take cred·it ·
t6r attack;on J·erusa.lem .m,an
L.

WORKING IN SPACE - Pilot Terrence
Wilcutt, left, and commander Mlehael Baker
looked out tbe l'ront windows from Endeavour's

'night deck Sunday. The radar mapp~g Dllsaion
Is scheduled tor· landing Tuesday In Florida.
(AP)

Endeavour's ~rew making ·
most of extra day in space

"

By GWEN ACKERMAN
not let them harm the ~ proAssoelated-Prell Writer
, cess."
JERUSALEM- The militant .: Faisal Hosseini, the PLO's
Islamic group Hamas claimed. '. spokesman on Jerusalem affain,
responsibility today for a terror condemned the ldllinas on .lsrael
· attack in which two Arabs armed radio, sayinJ the PLO wu against
with assault riflea and hand the "ldlling of civilians, whether
grenades opened fare on a street Israelis or Palestinians....
crowded with ouldoor cafes,ldlling
He called for expansion of
two peo_Pie and wounding 13 Palestine Liberation Organization
before being cut down.
authority in the West Bank as a
,_ The Palestinian auackers ldlled way 10 stop attacks and contended
an off-duty Israeli woman soldier the PLO· was doing all it could 10
and a Palestinian bystander. Police prevent violence. "We cannot have
said the woonded mcluded a U.S. .full security when we do not have
diplomat, Scott Dubstein, was hit full control," he raid The Associat·
by grenade fragments.
ed Press. .
, Police and private citizens with
Angry Israelis gathered at the
handguns reiUI1lCd lire and the two shooting site IOday ar shopkeepers
assaifants, who wore red bandannas and cafe owners swept up glass and
and carried AK-47 Kalashnikov children gathered around a tree
rifles, fell dead in the stone-paved trunk to dig ou.t a buUct. Some
Yoel Solomon Street shortly before ·.cafes reopened and served. b~midnighL
fast.
U.S; Secretary of State Warren
Youths shouted slogans against
Christopher called on PLO leader Rabin for making peace with the
Vasser Arafat.IO reaff11111 his com· Palestinians. "Rabin go home,"
miunent 10 the ~ce process by shouted a group of about 20 teen·
strongtr, denouncmg the atlllck and agen.
acting 'as fmnly aa he can against
In a leaflet sent to news agen'that kind of incidenL''
cies today, the Muallm fundamen·
"I think Chairman Arafat talist group Ham• said the attack
should respond and condemn it came in revenge for the Oct. 8,
strongly," Christopher said. "That 1990, shooting of 17 Palestinians
is~ or his.~i~nL"
.
by Israeli police during clashes outPrime Miruster Y1tzhak Rabm, · side Jerusalem's AI Aqsa Mosque.
who ~s threatened to slow the
"Our bold military operations
e_x~ston of auiOROmy ~or ~ales· will 1101 cease as tong as there is an
~~~~ns unless. ~at reii}S m. the Jsmeli soldier left on our occupied
militant~, sa1d w~ w11l ftg~t land," the Hamas leaflet said.
Hamas With all our nught and will
The leaflet identified the .
assailants as Hassan Abbas from

the Gaza Strip and lsaanl Mu~
:
•IDC1 ndio said ·Jawhari wu a . ·
PLO po~ who urived from
Egypt reccltdy. PL0 _police clenied
Jawbari was a policeman, ancj
Hamu offlciila said Jawhari, 24,
was an Egyptian national who
came 10 Oaza on a touriat visa ·in
July and l'requeoted the Sheik Rad·
wan mosque, a center of lilamic
militants.
· Abbu, who spent two yean in
jail for being a Hamu setivist, was
the former driver of lmad Aql, a
Hamas.leader killed by Ineli sol- .
diers last year, Palestinian and
Israeli sources said.
The attack Sunday coincided
with the arrivll of Christopher,
who was in the King David Hotel a
few blocks away at the time of the
shootings. A security aten V(aS.
ordered and the hotel waa sealed
otT for the rest of the night and into
tt.' morning, snarling Jerusalem.
tr..ffic at rush hour.
The gunmen 'Opened fire at
1~ :30 p.m. Sunday in a crowded
downtown pedestrian mall line:d
with restaurants. Witnesses said
.fewer people than usual were sit·
ling outside becauiiC it had rained·
earlier in the evening.
·
"It's OlD' worst nightmare come
· true," said Keith Sprague, an
immigrant from New York City,
wilo spoke to a reporter in the Ami··
g.1s Mexican restaurant littered
with broken glass and scores of·
sheD casings.
lsmlil Jawhari from Egypt.

Scientists will combine the
last April.
,
Emitting microwaves in three images, taken from slightly differ·
frequencies to give irifages three- ent angles 127 miles up, 10 produce
dimensional quality, the radar 3-D 10pographic maps accUrate in
scanned the icy Southern Ocean for elevation to within six yards. The
oceanographers examining waves best maps now are accurate .to
within I0 yards.
and currents.
The six-man shuttJe.crew has
Other wgets included Mexico's
Yucatan Peninsula for a geology kept busy by taking photographs
study and North Carolina's Duke and video to complement the radar
Forest, where ecologists are im!lges. About 14,000 frames of
attempting 10 map vegetation and fibn are aboard the space shuttle.
Some of the weelcend observadetermine seasonal changes.
·
Endeavour spent the weekend tions were lost because one of three
maneuvering to repeat its orbital radar-data recorders failed Satur·
'
path every 24 hours so mountains, day. The recorder was replaced, but
just
how
much
information
was
uted
the
reports,
saying
none
of
and
one
bullet
hole in the plastic
forests and deserts · could be
GENEVA (AP) ,... The probe. P
lost
won't
be
known
until
after
the
·
chalet
victims,
Some
of
whom
were
bag,"
he
said.
scanned from the exact same spot
in10 the deaths of 53 members of a
flight. Officials say it could range doomsday cult spread to France burned beyond recognition, have
in space on consecutive days.
from a few minutes 10 10 hours.
"Someone or a group of DCODie
and Australia, as investigators been identified.
checked reports that cult leaders ,. It is not ki\own whether the went completely berserk,'''PiOer
.
•
may have been involved in arms cult's other leader, Luc Jouret, a told repmers.
traffielling and money taunderina. . Bel$ian physician who lived in -- On Monday, -Australian Associ• •
The newest mystery was why Switzerland and Canada; was a.red Press re)XIIted that di Mambro
bved at the ~~ Coast, a popular
the passpons of Joseph di Mambro, among the dead~
a cult leader, and his wife, JoceSwitzerland has issued an inter· beach reson m Queensland state,
lyne, were delivered to the French national warmnt for the arrest of be~een ~ov~~ 1~3 and last
WASHINGTON (AP) largest wilderness area outside of five~dy delay in approving the Interior Ministry in Paris. In a Jouret and di Mambro on suspicion Apnl, while tmmt~tlOn recor~s
Among the final acts of the 103 Alaska, putting 6.6 million acres mess cost the Treasury at least statement Sunday, the ministry o( arson and premeditated homi- ~ tha~Jouret VISited Allllralia
five times SIIICC 1989.
Congress were bills to preserve under increased federal protection. · $12 million. Under a tempomry would not say if it knew who sent 'd
millions of acres of California Two new national parks would be $125 million budget passed this the passports or why they did.
ct Some of the cult members were . The ne':"s agency als~ cited .
desert, pay Gulf War veterans for a created as well as a I.S million· summer, the SEC had· been able 10
· The .bodies of 48 cult followers
· · 1
d · -ii b t s ·
unconfirme'd reports that dt Mammysterious illness, and make mak· acre national preserve in the desert collect on1y I·SOih of I pen;ent of were discovered Wednesday in the ~rfi~f~ reft'~~:r~e ~ssibtl~~; bro and 12AothcrRc~,_mtmbe.A
. rs itled
'' ' , ·
ers of dietary supplements 10 drop area of southeastern California.
the total amount of the securities rubble of fires at dlree chalell and a that llliDC took their own lives:
10 go 10. yers ....... on . ug. •13•.·
Untx!wen health clllmL
'
~ ' Most or I \he land already reg~ down llhanlly from tbe I farm in SwitzerlaDd. Pivt ollier
&lt;~-1\mons 13 vlctlma fC)Und at a .- 1993, f(l( ~ Blal:k Friday •
""'"r1
'The Sertnte approved a suing of belong! to ibe'federal govemlllelit. usliill fee of1·29di·or-t--peu::ent'' ' ' tiOcfies wete fcund in a charred farin in the western Swiss village at 'but were li!fused penniision 1iy
last-minute bills. all sent 10 Presi·
More than 10,000 Persian Gulf.,
• The Senate gave final approval chalet the cult leaders owned north of'Cheiry, some we-e shot repeat· park ra_Dfers· 'ne sne, m cen~l
dent Clinton for his signature, on veterans are expected to be~eflt.J 10 a 'bill that would require makers of Montreal.
·
. edly in the head, then hooded with ~ustral!i s _remote OUtback regton,
which unanimous agreement had from the bill granting compensa· of dietary supplements t.o s)low
Family members in Sion, plastic bags, said investlgativl! 1s ~onstd~ sacred by the coonbeen reached before adjourning lion for undiagnosed or undefmable they are safe and_drop claif!!S that Switzerland, said they identified di Judge Andre Piller.
try sa~~ people..
,
1be Pilinch connection ftrst 8111· .
Saturday. Congress plans 10 return - IUnesses reported after the war.
the products cure or prevent tUn~. Mambro, a French-Canadian who
''One person had two bullet
briefly for a special post-election
Many veterans who fought in . • The Ho11se voted 10 change tts · lived in Switzerland, among the
~n ~~.~deYt~.
holes
in the head but no holes in facederedan~Bflldatn.ay
ID elite IIICCn....,.y
VICC
session devoted 10 mtificalion of a the Persian Gulf War liav~ com· mternal rules and apply worker victims recovered fronl the Swiss
world trade pact.
·
·
plained that they are suffering from · safety, civil rights and other laws 10 chalets. Swiss media reported that the plastic.bag on the head. Anoth· at an empty viila the cult used in :
er had three bullet holes in the head southern Fmnce.
The House completed its regular a variety of illnesses linked 10 their the thousands of people it employs, his wife's body also was found.
business shortly after midnight Fri- activities dUring the war with Iraq.
• Senate Minority Leader Bob
Swiss authorities, however, disday.
In many cases, they have com· Dole, ~-Kan., voicing unspecified .-------------~-------.----~------~--.,.
A bill that would have allowed plained of de~ilitating illne!l&amp;es ~ GOP objections, ref~sed to go
~overnors 10 control ~ m:nount ~f sympiO~S With no. clear diagnosts along with an attempt · by
mterstate garbage com~g miO thett of what IS wrong w_1th them.. .
.Democmts 10 approve by unanistates feU by the waystde. Support·
In other last-mmute legtslauve mous voice vote a $1 bilhon meaers said one senaiOr had.put. a hold action:
·
sure aimed mainly at improving the
on the legtslatron, blocking Its pas• The Seflllte approved the Secu· health of minorities. Dole's move
sage.
riti~s and Exchange Commission's killed the legislation for this year.
The desert bill will create the $305J,million annual budget. A
.
By,MIKE DRAGO
Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston The radar aboard Endeavour
scanned ocean currents near the
Antarctic Circle and forests in
North Carolina today as scientists
worked to make the most of the
shuttle's extra day in space.
Endeavour was originally sehed·
uled to land in Florida today after
10 days, but NASA last week
extended the mission until Tuesday
so the radar could conduct addi·
tidnal Earth mapping.
As of Sunday, the $366 million
U.S. and European mdar had col·
leered enough data 10 fill nearly 52
miles of tape, officials said. It fust
flew in space aboard Endeavour

Info

.abOut
State Issue ·4

Tu.t u hails 'divine intervention'
for saving S. Africa from war

• of national impor· • eve~t ... a transfiguration occur·
inter-faith events
By GENE KRAMER ...........
renee ... a true mountainiOp experitance.
Associated Press Writer
Bursts of applause punctuated ence.
v,(ASHINGTON - South
"You walked into the polling
Africa, "on the verge of a ghastly the worda of the visiting Anglican
archbishop
of
Cape
Town
and
winbooth
and emerged a rotaUy differcivil war," was spared by divine
ent,
transfigured
person.
ner
of
the
1984
Nobel
Peace
Prize.
intervention and reborn as one
"A black person went in
nation seeking healing, reconcilia· He requested clapping specifically
lion and unity, says the country's for the two South African presi- remembering how his dignity was
dents, praising De Klerk for the trodden under foot for so many a
most famous churchman.
"It is God's doing," assisted by courage to free Mandela from long year. He emerged on the other
Nelson Mandela and P.W. de prison and launch reconciliation, side and said, 'Hey, I'm free, my
KICI'k, the country's fiTSl blaclt and and ilcscribing Mandela as "a dignity has been resiOred, I'm a
last white president, plus love, remarkable person ... a wonderful child of Ood."'
.
·
Whites experienced "what we
prayers and economic pressure gift 10 the world."
The first mu1tir11cial election sought 10 teU them for so long, lbat
from apartheid foes around the
world, Archbishop Desmond Tutu that installed Mandcla as president you won't be free until we are
in April marked his country's turn- free." Weighed down b "guilt for
said in a rousing sermon Sunday.
ing
point, Tutu said. Tension was all the privileges that ~ experiA predominantly white congrehigh
and the endless wailing lines enced .and enjoyed so unJustlY for
~ation of nearly 3,000 jOined Tutu
m an exuberant celebration of the of vOters ~ "a recipe for disas- sa long," he said, they emerged
collapse of apartheid. It was an · ter" and mayhem for anyone want· from the election "trusfigured,''
with a feeling of "I'm free, the
unusual service even for the lOwer· ing 10 start trouble.
But unexpectedly, he. said, the burde!l' has been lifted fr_o111 my
ing National Catbedml, seat of the
·
spiritual shoulder."
U.S. ,Episcopal Church and site of voting proved to be

An Ohio CO\Irt ruled that
Ohio's existing constittttional prohibition on food taxes
only prohibits certain retail
taxes on food. The co\lrt
ruled that wholesale taxes
· s\lch as the new wholesale
beverage tax could legally be
Imposed by the state.

What a YES Vote on
State Issue .4 Will Do
'.

I ~Cil o~.., ~lines.
P'

I

;l.

.,

• i '"'

Hidden taxes on food especlaly . ,
hun people who c•n least lfford
to !MY ~ seniors and flfitiUes with
children.

E

.'

I

m

We're
on 4: Stop Taxes on Food Committee - a committee of over 150,000 Ohloa~s from all walks of life joining '
. together to stop taxes on food. If vou'd lUre more info[mil·
tion about Issue 4, or if you'd like to join our commit~.
please s1ve us a call at 1-800-362-8611. Thankyou.

V()te YES on .lssile 4 ~

r=e

~

m vote on State Issue. 4. ·

il

Pick 4:
6226
Buckeye 5:

167937

1.-IIIILIPt Ill 401, cleU".

WedaadiJ,IIWIJ. HI&amp;Jt

apper60L

•

ell tine
'M41,N0.112
CGpvrltht tiM

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue8day, October 11,1994

1 llectlon, 10 . . . . . . _ ..
AMu1tlmeclll '!'0- ,._lp 'II

lax landlords targeted -Fire prevention week-----Middleport to step up code enforcement
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stan
. Middleport wiU tighten its grip
on negligent landlords by setting
.inspection fees and increasing
enforcement, vil~e officials said
at Monday's counctl meeting.
· Council passed the fust of ltaerequired readings of a revamped
bwlding code ordinance tsy a 4-l
:margin. Councilman Paul Gemrd
dissented.
· · The maJority of the 13-page
.document mvolves new requirementa for landklrds who refuse 10
. make improvements to rental P.TDP'
erty, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
A $2S·per-year annual permit
fee for inspection, along witli a $2S
fee each time a tenant leaves an
apartment, will be levied against all
l~dlords in ~e village, Horton

Honon $aid. "It clarifies what is nuisance ordinances and other mcl~l­
inspected. The. sinks must work. ordinances.
The commodes must work. There's
·"This ordinance does comply
no reason 10 rent a place that needs with state laws for access," Horron
glass in the windows."
·
said, adding village officials have
About 400 rental properties are spent more than nine months
located in this village, but only 70 prepating the rules.
But Gerard questioned the need
are considered substandard, said
Councilwoman Beth Stivers, the for the ordinance change.
coordinator of the rule changes.
"There's nothin$ in the law that
"This is primarily for slum· says you can't do 1t now," Gerard
lords," Stivers said.· "I think it will S81d. "I think we can use the ordiimprove the qlialit)' of buildings."
nance we have now. •
The ordinance mtends to beauti·
Council may 1&gt;e upset about lax
fy the village and keep tenants safe landlords, but Gerard asked why
- while ensuring village property landlords weren't included in the
value does not fall, she added.
· rule-writing process.
"We've got to start somewhe~e,"
"I'm against dancing III'Ound in
Stivers said. "Not 'much has been circles. We talk about domg it, but
done by the health department."
we don't fill it,• Gerard said. "Tell
The ordinance is modeled after a me how things are going to be
Lancaster ·rule, Horton said. changed."
said.
Pomeroy passed a similar law six
Councilman Nick Robinson
Meigs County firemen are
"It will make a landlord a lot months ago, he added. The old added many !n the community will
the rounds or schools
making
:more vigilant who they rent to," ordinances were scattered among
(Continued on Page 3)
this week telllag youngsters
bow to be sate from fire and .
what to do It tbey happen to
be caugbt In a burning building. "Learn aot .to bura" Is U!e
By GEORGE ABATE
"Why can't ·we apply for It now employee at $6. ~0 an hour 10 help
theme or the advice given by
Sentinel NeWI Staff
_and it give us some time to administer a Rf!cine housing grant.
tbe raremen, who telllddJ not
Middlepon will apply for a pair - decide?'' Councilman Mick Childs The village ~¥ill be reimbursed
to play wltb matches or
through a· state grant. for this
of Issue 11 projecl grants IO·pave asked.
cigarette lighters, plan an
village streets, Village Council
In other action, council will money, Mayor Dewey HollOn said.
escape route from tbelr bed·
decided Monday.
accept apl.'lications for tax abate· The housing grant program will
rooms, roll on tlte ground If
. The . first project will cost ments for Improvements completed take about 18 months and requires
their clothes caleb fire, and
$67,276:60 to pave South Second between May 14, 1984 and Oct. I, 16 hours a week of work from
encourage their famines to be
·Street ~~~tween Mill and Custer 1991: All applications are due by Lest~.
""
·
sure tbe home's s.moke detee·
streets. The 11 percent village Dec. 31 this year.
In other business, council:
tors are lh good operating
match would require the village
Council President Bob Gilmore
• urged business people and rescondition, In the top pboto,
_PIIY _$7,400, saidJean TrusiiCII, viJ. . cast the orux dislenting vote.
id~ts to attend a 7 p.m . .Thursday ,
Pomeroy firemea Jelf Sbank,
'"J11Vf1*11Mnri'initrir~ - " :_:_,.-·
"It's poltnuafl~ng&lt;a"t8D ... meeting atJ4Mqii.,W,:Va., senior
asfistant chlet, left, and Lt. new pumper, a $196,000 piece
about Sparky, tbe Fire Dog,
T c socond 'prllject wit! cost ofwonns,"Oilmoreslld '
buildina"t&lt;i discuss makingtele·
Stacey Sbank share tips on or equipment, for the youngwhicb was used in t•e pro·
$23,143.28 to' pave Nonh Second
If residents already received a phone calls have local charges on
fire prevention witb Pomeroy sters to see. At bottom,
gram
on fire prevention. (Sea·
Avenue aide streets and will tax break, the).' cannot get more communities along the Ohio River.
kindergarten students. They Michael Blaettnar 1lstens
tinel
photos
by Charlene Hoe• set a strategic planning meet·
require a $2,6ll match. The side·- fund$, Counctlman Paul Gerard
took the department's brand
nicb)
intently
as
Shank
tallls
to
him
streets are Rutland, Walnut, Coal ~aid. The applications will be ing for the village at 6 p.m. Tucs·
'
and Race.
screened to ensure the· improve- day in council chambers. All inter·
~deadline for applyiilg to this ments actually were made, he ested business people and residents
round of grant&amp; IS OcL 17, Trussell added.
·
should attend, especially from the
said. HalF the costs for these .pro·
Council also hired Brenda schools, Councilman Ntck Robinjects are due 10 curb requirements. . Leslie as a Part:~ime, telnpomry
(Continued on Page 3)
KUWAIT (AP) - U.S. and the troops are moving south rather 'l'hursday, was a routine rotation
Kuwaiti officials today disputed than moving ngrth,"
and training exercise that did not
The U.S. ambassador· lo the threaten Kuwait
Iraq's assertions that it was pulling
ils elite Republican Guard units United Nations, Madeleine K.
Saddam Hussein's f!XCCS invad·
away from the Kuwaiti border.
Albright~ backed up that assessed Kuwait in August 1990 and
, The Iraqi news agency quoted ment
occupied it for seven months until
military sources in Baghdad as sayShe said Gen . John Sha· being driven out by U.S.-Ied (orccs.
A debate between the two candi·
Disagreements ~ween the two debate off the ground."
dates in tbe 94th House District camps surfaced thts week over
On Monday, Carey sent a letter ing the Repu~lican Guards began likashvili, chairman of the Joint
Washington considered Iraq's
race is on schedule for this week· armngements for the debate. But to Malone indicating uncertainty heading toward the Iraqi city of Chiefs of Staff, told her there is
end, bui not before both sides James said the debate waa finalized over Malone· appearing at the Basra on Monday. The report, "evidence they are still moving latest military movements to be
accused each other of trying the Mondlly night and will proceed.
debate. He said he found it "disap- monitored in Cyprus, said the with· from north to south with reinforce- another menace to Kuwait and
sabotage the evenL
.
"We have now gotten the Carey pointing that you are unable to drawal "is still going on intensive· ments, and no evidence that they warned Baghdad to back off. To
ly today."
are moving from south to north." ·
back up that warning, President
Incumbent State Rep. Mark A. campaijP! back on track, and the honor your agreemellt."
Malone, D-Solith Point, and his debate IS on," Malone said. "I am
The Carey letter acknowledged · .. However, Kuwait's foreign min . .... u,s, off.icials have said some Clinton·orderod ·54,!XXJ U.S. troops
Republican challenger, Wellston looking ·forward to discussing the that efforts 10 get the debate hosted ister of information, in an interview . 80,000 Iraqi tfoops were either to the region and put 15,!XXJ more
Mayll' John A. Carey Jr., are set 10 :issues with John on Sunday. It by the League of Women Voters this morning from Kuwait, said ·deployed in southern Iraq, just on standby.
He has also assigned more than
debate 7:30 p.m. Sundar. at the . shpuld be fun."
.
were unsuccessful, but noted !llat there was "no clear evidence" of north of the Kuwaiti border, or
heading that way. The forces were
combat aircraft, including a.
University of Rio Grande s Wood . Carey spokesman Jeff Liv· WMGG-FM of Gallipolis has an Iraqi troop withdrawal.
"On the conlrary; we are seeing backed by about 700 tanks.
and the aircraft carrier
Hall
auditorium,
Malone ingston said Carey is anxious to agreed to find a neutral replace·
a massing of troops," Sheik Saud
Baghdad has repeatedly claimed
Washington and its
spokesmjln Ian James said this proceed with the debate and would meot 10 moderate.
Nasser
ai-Sabah
iold
NBC.
"And
that
the
buildup,
whi'ch
began
....-1);~:-b'&lt;JUP 10 the re~ion.
morning.
agree to "anything to get this
(Coatinued O!J Page 3)

Council to pursue paving grants

_:..,;._·

U.S. disputes withdrawal claims

Malone-Carey debate to proceed

POINT PLEAS~. W.VL Grounll was broken Saturday for.
the $100 million expansilll.l projeCt
at Shell Chemical's Point Pleasant
Polyester Plant, the same day the
plant cele~rated its 35th _anniver·

'l (1) stop the hidden tax
o
~erages, (2) prohibit any hidden taxes on food and ,
d Ingredients, and (3) probiblt taxes on p~ckages that
c tain food . .

'·

~ Perot diseuued lnlq, Haiti and
world 'trade. He inltoduce:d .each
topic by oudininl fl!s ·ow~ VJews,

A

811

Shell launches expansion·
of Mason County facility

Needed

Fans cheer Perot,s ·radio show-~
. Perot criticized Clinton's han-, sure they don't do something .
dling of the U.S. military in Haiti, stupid with our armed forces.''
The· new radio host ~ept his
Iraq and Somalia. sa~ the country has lost respect around the · show moving quickly, hurrying
callers along to IICCOIIImodate !Je.
world.
· "The worst situation .you can quent COJJIIIICfCial breaks IIIII what
have is an inexperienCed, insecure . he said was a busy switchboard.
Several callers disagreed with
ri8lcing ~ peop~'s lives.
was ever a lime when we Perot, but most were sllpi)OJ1en.
"You've got 'em on tbe run,
needed a sti'ong· president who
undentood war, it's right now," Ross," gushed Shane ill Bakensaid Perot, an independent candi- field, Calif.
·
date for president in 1992.
Paul in Cleveland !Old Perot, a
Perot told a caller who had billionaire: "I'm getting sick of all
served in the Air Force, "You this liberal media bias. Why don't
you buy NBC?"
·
understand."
"See, you've worn the uniform.
Perot responded with a laugh,
Most of those gu):S up there "It's overpriced right now."
I
skipped ouh We've got to make
I

.

Why a YES Vote on
State Issue 4 Is

:'a

By SUSAN IUGHTOWER
Ataoclated Prell Writer
DALLAS - To a folksy, up·
tempo fiddle tunc, Ross Perot
began, l!is new weekly ndio show
Suildiy night with the words:
"Good eve11ing, this i,s Ross.
We're gonna shake em up
.. tonighL"
Durin&amp; the lint broldcast of the
nationll calt-in lliow, "Listening
10 America," Paol' spent m!l(:h of
1 his linle taking swlpet ll.PresideJ:It
Clintal. Last wcct. Paot ursed his .
~rrs to vote Republican this

ation

Pick 3:

. PageS

Authorities.eye ne·w myst~Jries ·
surrounding Swiss cult deaths

·Flurry oflast-minute bills sent
to Clinton-as session adjourns

I

Vikings
defeat
Giants

I

,to Stop Taxes on.foOd:.&gt;&gt;

~ng with the groundb~ng
ceremony, the company hosted a
cookout, as well as many activities
for Shell employees and their fami·
lies, along With invited guests.
The groundbrealdng was first
announced Friday by Gov. Gaston
CaperiOn. He said the expansion
will add about SO jobs at the 6SOemploy'!C plan~ will .
the
The expansion
mc:Je~SC
. . plant's capacity by 30 percent, and
comes four months after another
expansion increaiiCd its capacity by
3S pen:eriL .
Plant Manager Wayne Love
ga~ openina remarks prior to the
, groundbreaking. State Sen. Oshel
Craigo commended Shell for being
a great corporate citizen, ind for
contributing much to West Vir. ginia.
I
.
.
Bill Bar~er, president of the
Mason County Area Chamber of
Comm~. announced Love as the
new cham~resident f'!r next
year, and in
ecd Lucillc Jdorpn, economic development IIIII·
tanl:;~·on:Wile's
· Bobbebalf,
Wile.laYing
Morgan
the
lbanlred Sbel fer
ill vote f confidence in Welt Vir-

( .

(,'

"

.

.

ginia by ex~,l'
Several offi · took part in the
groundbreaking, includiilg Howard
Samples, an account manager for
the Goodyear plant, which later
became Shell. Samples was the
first person 10 come onto the site
· that is now Point Pleasant SheD, to
begin construction in 1958.
Others assisting in the ground·
breaking were Sadie Bailes, repre·
senting the· Mason County Com·
mission; Michael Scllarda. Pleasant
Valley Hospital administmiOr and·
member of the Governor's Office
of Economic and Community I
Development; House of Delegates
member Debbie Phillips; Rolland
Phillips, manager, Business Retcn·
lion and Expansion for West Virainia; Don Rollins, local URW
president; Terry Peninger, general
manager of Shell's polyester bus!·
ness: Jeff Black, operations center ·
manager for the expansion: Dick:
Oblath, researt:h and development
manager of Shell in Akron: Bob.
Klus, project manager for the
pxpansion; Steve Bunoo, business .
manager for Tri-State .Buildlna
Trades; and: 011 Madrid· of J6bn ·
Brown ConsiiUCdon Co,
· The expansion is nee~e.d
because the lllftet fat ita product,
polyester !Wns for food pactqes
and bevenae boulea, has a 28 per·
eent growth, according to

_tiger. .

(Continued on Pllae 3)

••

EXPANSION GROUNDJUlEAKING ..,. Gt'i!und ,_, broken
Saturday for tile $100 mDlloa eJIPI I• at Shell Chemical's Point
Plea&amp;IDt Polyester PlaaL Tbe aroudbreakinl was beld on the
35tii1Dldftl'lar1 vi tile opealnf vi die plant, ftlch was tormerly
GQ!Idyear. Amoag thoeillreiklag = d , not In order, were
MUOII Couaty Commillloner Sadie
; Mille Sellards ot tbe
Governor's Ofllee ot Ee~011lc aad Community Develop!Den~;
State Sea. Oaltel Cnlp; Ho•ae or Delegates member Debbte
Pldlllpa; Llldlle Morpa, -'c:: developmeilt 111ilta11t to U.S.

Rep. Bob Wise; BW Barker, president ~ .tbe ~ Coaatr.Aral ·
Chamber of Commerce; Rolland Pbilh_ps, ma..ger, Bltlshiess
Retention and Expaasion for West Vlr&amp;~nia; Doa Rollias, local
•
URW president; Terr:J Persln1er, Shell's leaeral maucer of
polyester buslaesa; Jeff Black, ~nshn operatiollll ce~~ter . ....,.
er; Dick Oblatb, R&amp;D ft1811118r trom Uroil; Boll KJq, expatllioa
project manqer; Steve Burton, Tri·State Bulldlq Tndes; Md Gil
Madrid, Jobn Browa Construction.

•

..

�•'·

.•.

Commentar
•

'

-

Page 2-The Dally Stntl"'l ,,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ~
Tuesday, October 11, 1994 "'

"'

··

Poll: Ohioans feel
finances will be
unchanged In year

OHIO Weather
WedDalday, Od.l2 ·
Accu-'Neltllc:l'

unveiling the secret indUstry

The Daily Sentinel

October 11, 1994

1

. · In keeping with my duty as a absurd it defaes comp!ehension by America? The shamans who hold assigned to keep the secrets ~e~
pundit tp ponder serious stuff, I rational minds. Terry Anderaon, the the secrets don't know national The Defense Department, to Cite!
often wonder what it will take to former Associated Press reporter securily from home plate. They just aie example, spends $88 mil-t
awaken the American people to the who was held hostage by Arab ter· don't really give a hoot about the lion a year to employ people ~
fact lhat the system the government
privacy rights of ferrorists. All the watch the peopl~ho guard the:
uses to protect official secrets is a
secrecy cultists care about is keep- sw~ts.
:
Joseph Spear
ing the secrets, however inane and .
pespite vows to curb govern-.
sham and an unholy waste. of
rorists for nearly seven years, is irrelevant they may be. It is the ment seaecy. the Ointon adminis-:
money.
.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
· tration has done little about iL The'
Expert after expert has said this. Writing a book on the experience. · source of their power.
Publisher
· Commission after commission has . As part' of his research, he submitAnd what has this mindset Information Security Oversight:
•
concluded this. Scand81 after scan· ted a request under the F~m of wrought? The Office of Mana~e- Office, aeated to. oversee the gov-•
da1 has shown this. Yet we conlin- Information Act for federal files ment and Budget this year das· ernment's handling of sectds,:
MARGARET
LEHEW
ue to worship al the feet of the about his captors and the govern- closed that the intelligence commu- repMCd that the bureaucrats
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
voodoo priests in the intelligence ment's efforts to sec~ his release. " nity is spendin~ ~than $16 bil· ed more than 6.4 million ne~ :
Geoenl Ma~~~gtr ·
·
Controller
Well, responded the government lion annually JUSI to protect their secrets in 1993 - roughly the :
·community who jij!gle their
amulets and chant thear never-fail - your government - the~ is this pile of secrets. Of this amount, annual average of the Bush admin· •
U!TI'EilS OP OPINION are wek:ome. They llbould be lea• than 300 · incantation "national security problem. The information Ander- nearly $14 billion is said to be istration. Both were a big improve-:
national security national security" son seeks is classified because·.the spent by defense conttactors adher- ment over the Reagan regime,:
woad&amp; Jona. All Jetlen are subject to editing and m1111 be •lgned with nome,
Ill&amp;.• IIIII bolepllooo numbei'. No uolicoed lellln will be published. Letten
and hypnotize us into believing it is . release of it might impair the ing to federal rules. The CIA and w:Uch hatched IS million secrets ~
lhould be in aood bite, addmlina iuuea, 1101 penonalitiel.
their magic powers that keep the national security. And then,there ~lated agencies estimated they are 1985 alone.
:
are the privliCy rights of the terror· spending a mere $200 million to
foe at bay.
And why are these 'nuggets of,
It is worse than a sham. In' a -. ists to think aboUL Anderson would safeguard the sec~ts. so you can kaow lodjle so preci011i lbat- the!
democratic system nourished by a have to get wriaen permission from see how utterly farcical the $16 bil- v.:ry sumval of the nadoil depends.
free flow of information, it is an his captors bef~ the government lion total~ is.
upon their preservation? Wellr
could release this information.
obscenity.
. to th OMB
there was the Anril 1917 file
A rd 10
ceo
e
• more locked in the Natfonal Archive'
Are you getting the point now,
Now comes aftother incident so
than 32,400 edera1 employees are about U.S. troop movements iii'
Em~pe. And the CIA's 1991 OpenTbe Dally Sentinel welcomes letters reprdin11 tbe Nov. 8 general
nt.ss Task Force, report conceminp
elecdoo. Downer, bllbe Iateres~ of fairoal, oo electloo letters will be I
•
ways of making infoimalioil avail,.
.accepted after 12 DOOB oo Wedoesday, Nov. 2.
·
~liWlll
able to the public, which was
IDdlvlduals sbould addresS lllsues aod )Jot penonlllties.
w lni:'IANCANN~ ~ ,...,.
stamped "Secret.:' An'd the:
Letters portly eodorslo(l caadldates wUl oot be ll!lfd.
National Reconnaissance Office.
Letters sbould be 300 words or lea, preferably typed. AD letters
which operates spy satellites ..
are aubject to edltlq aocl aad must be lipaed wllb ume, address
whose very existence was a classi-~
aocllelepboDe a umber. Telephone numbers will aot be publisbed. No
fied secret for 32 years. And the ,
alliJiped letters will be pob!Isbed. Letters should ~Ia good taste.
$310 million complex the Defense;.
Depaument and CIA were buildin~
Co: the'NRO without felling an~':'. ·
at out il
.
'"
And the 1947 Atomic Energy
· C 1mmission order that classified,. .
"Jecret" all documents relating 10 ·•
rt,diation "experiments witli'
The annual hunling and fishing
The lWLA is striving for the
h.Jmans" because they "might
day at the Izaak Walton League of purity of water, the clarity of air,
have,,adverse effect on public opin''..
u,
America was another success this and the wise stewardship of the
.Jon.
.
,.,
~~ar thanks to the many who land and its resources; to know the
beauty and understanding of
Well, whad~ya know? Another,1
~bers made it an enjoyable nature, and the value of wildlife, ~::::&gt;~7
r&lt; lSOn for keepmg 8\'oCrets.
· Joseph Spear is a syadieat~ . ,
and pleasant day for about 100 woodlands and open space; and for
· yow:aPton. Everyone bad plenty to the preservation of this heritage
" :Iter tor Nempaper Enterprise '.
eat iad drink and the youngsters and to man's sharing in il
A.isociatlon.
· ..
Thanks Sentinel for your help.
really enjoyed the entertainment of
(For ~nformatlon on bow tq .
TheiWLA
commualcate electronkally wllb :
the day. It gave them a chance to
Gary Dill, p!eSident
this columolst aod otbers, ron~"
look blclt in time and do the things
tact
America Online by ca1Uag1-:~
our ances!OfS did~
:'
800·82'7-6364, ext. 8317.)

for

MICH.

Ill COurt Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

IND.

• IColumbus !~~~r I

creat-:

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. 2

qA~~R

FEEL UK~
DA~E?

Letters to the editor
Event a success

'

.

Toda.y's Christians

-him, a proud look, a lying tongue
I would like to discuss the view and hands, that shed innocent
of today's Christians and their blood, a heart that devisethwicted
Churches: I've been through an imaginations, feet that be swift in
ordeal of my own, and I would like running to mischief, a false wimess
.to share a few scriptures to the one that speaketh lies, and he that
who destroyed our chtirch and pas- soweth discord among brethren. ,
tor whom we love very much. I
James 4:11-12- speak not evil
thought they loved him as much as one of another, brethem. He that
we do,l!otiiPJeSII I was wrong.
speaketh evil of his brother, and
Jeremiah 5:3-0 Lord, are qot judgeth his brother, speakcth evil
tl:ine eyes upon the truth. Thou has of the law, and judgeth the law. But
stricken them;' but they have not if thou judge the law. thou an not a
grieved; thou haSt consumed them, doer of the law, but a judge..... who
but they have refused to receive ·· are thou that judgest another?
correction; they have made their
May God have mercy on me.
faces harder than a rock, they have Where is the love?
·
refuSCOto relurn.
.·
God Blemi You
Ptoverbs 6: 16-19-These six
Tammy Klein
things doth the Lord hate: yea,
Pomeroy
seven, are an abomination until
Dear Editor

[)emocratic dissenter~
An AP News Analysis
By DAVID ESPO
Aaoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON - For all the woes lisited upon him by Republicans,
Presjdent Clinton toot a few big hits from Democrats, too, in the 103rd
· the mill'tary
· Congress.
When Clintal poposed endin.g the ban on homosexua1s 10
shortly after taking office, Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn, chairman of the
Aimed Services Committee, dissented. .
·
·
',
When Clinton made health care reform the centerpiece of his second
year in office, New York Sen. ~iel Patrick Moynihan, chainnan of the
Finance Committee, demurred.
/
The White House line was that there was a health care crisis; Moynihan said there was a welfare crisis. The White House outlined its financing proposals; Moynihan said they were a "fantasy." The White House
looked for swift action; Moynihan demanded a welfare reform bill be
delivered to Congress.
When Clinton sought action this fall oo GATT, the global trade accord
- and in need of a victory in Congress - South Carolina Sen. Ernest
Hollings, chairman of the Commerce Committee, delayed
I..awrnakers will be t.:k after Npv. 8 to vote.
Even in support, DemOcrats could sometimes weaken the presidenl
Sen Bob ~Y or Nebi'uka, a rival from the ·1992 campaip. cast the
deciave vote in favor of the 1993 deficit reduction plan after a day of
.stJacfiri4 .....ith. ADd aSalale apeio,ch in which he III1IOI11ICed he couldn't
brill&amp; dDMI billriead'a praillency.

·''

"

Powell helps avoid Haiti _disaster
If President Clinton converts his
Haiti policy from a pofential catastrophe to a success, more credit
ought to go to·retired Gen. Colin
Powell than to former President
Jimmy Carter, who's claiming
credit at Clinton'sexpense.
Senior White House officials
say it was Powell who convinced
Clinton in a crucial telephone call
SepL 18 to accept the terms of a
deal he and Carter wOiked out with
Haitian military leaders to let U.S.
forces occupy the country without
a fight.
According to thqse officials,
Powell told Clinton, ''The important thing is to get our troops in
here safely. Once they're here, you
can have them do anything you
want"
Indeed, U.S. troops have suecessfully begun disarming Haitian
paramilitary forces .and paving the
way for a peaceful transfer of
power .from the mililary . ~ e~ecled
Pres1~nt Jean: Bertrand Aristi~all wathout ·~ous ~.S. cas~ues.
One admimstraUon offacial who
accompanied Powell, Caner, and
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., to Haiti
says that it was Powell, "!~ than
Carter, who convinced Haiuan dietator Raoul Ccdras that Clinton
meant business when he said he
intended to invade.
"Powell and Clinton ran a
good-cop, bad-cop operation," this
official said
Whereas Carter publicly took
shots 8l Clinton after his returnannouncing at one point that he'd

told Cedras he was "ashamed'! of
U.S. policy- Powell has been circumspect despite serious doubts
about the policy. One close friend

~

uation could deteriorate.
··· '
As former ~-Bush foreign
p Jlicy official Rl&amp;hard 1\rmita~e " r
pllts it, "This isn'texacdy"Somalia"J
1992 or Lebanon 1983, but it's
Morton
KondfBckl
close. When our troops went in; '''
m~l
tt.ey were weiCClmedby 1116'~- ·n
of Powell's says, "To put it diploThe CNN/USA Today poll ti.JD. Before we left, though, we .~
matically, Powell thinks it would . showed an 8-point jump in public w~re embroiled in civil war."
be best for Carter not to be Criticiz- support for the presence of U.S.
Another Republican, Sen . .1.
ing the president."
forces in Haiti - from 46 percent R1chard Lugar (Ind.), says, "WhaH
Without advertisjng his role, to 54 percent - after it becamt tr.Jiy scares me is that a,few Ameri-·".
Powell has been an even greater clear there woulil be no immediate can deaths, given the climate that ;;
beneficiary of the Haiti agreement asualties.
prevails fight now in Washington, !~
than Carter.
I
•
Public o11inion of Clinton's han- will lead to a massive cal! for '•
Caner, after all, is a candidatllvj dlmg Of Haiti went from 27 percent ir.unediate withdrawal. If we pull
only for a Nobel Peace Prize. Pow- · approval, 58 percent disapproval· .o11t of Haiti the way we pulled out ;~
ell is a pofential candidate for pres- on SepL 1 to 35 percent apprt&gt;val, or Somalia, it will raise questions
ident. and his role in Haiti has led 55 ~nl disapproval on Sept. 25. · e·•erywhere about our ability to"'
, to a cover story in Nell)'sweek and a
Opinion on Clinton's handling conduct a sustained policy."
Newsweek poll showmg that he'd o: foreign affairs generally went
Lugar said in an interview thllt
beat Clinton, 54 to 39 percent. if he. from 34 p_ercent pos='tiv
, 51 per- h~&gt;'s especially waned about what ;~
were the Republican nominee.
cent negauve on Sep
per- will happen when Aristide returns
Powell's political intentions cent approval, 55 percent isap- tl. power.
- .
remain a mystery, though. Winning proval on SepL 25.
"He's not a man who has : :
the 1996 GOP presidential nominaBut Clinton's overall rating as 'lliJrked to build coalitions with .
tio~ will require serious early orga- paesident improved only slighdy- omer Haitians. Is he going to be ::
nizmg that 1sn't under way. Powell frJm 39 percent posiuve, 54 pet- able to control his fellow believers· •
tells friends he's an Independent, etnt negalive on sept. 7 to 42 per- in liberation theology, or are there
and some of them think he could cent positive, SO percent negative ·going to be clashu with Ci:dras'
win the presidency as a ihird-pany on Sept. 18 and 44 percent positive. thugs, with our troops caught in·the •
· candidate, but that. too, won't hap- Sl percent negative on SepL 25.
midltle?··
,.
•• J
· pen simply by spontaneous comAnd in the meantime, Clinton
•;
bustiori.
· still has some 16.500 U.S. troops in
Indeed, that's Clinton's prob- ;.,
Powell's friends think he won't Haiti, and his fortunes as prestdent
Iem. Today's success could be ·:
accept Clinton's request to lie tee- 81e hostage to·their fate.
retary of State, if it's offered, 8nd
While the Haiti occupation is tomm:row's disaster, and Clinton ,,!
they discourage speculation that s~:ccessful enough so far that even won't have Colin Powell around to
·· ~
he'd take a GOP vice preSidential con,ressional Republicans are "bail him out.
(Morton Kondracke is execu- · :
nomination, though they don't rule IeanmJ agaiast setting a deadline
it out
for wathdrawal of U.S. troops, tive editor of Roll Call, the Dt'WII· ·~.':
.~&gt;
Mean tim~. the peaceful U.S. tt.ere's reason to worry that the sit· paper of Capitol HiD.)

I know you are, but what am I?' .

.'

I try to do my laundry at least confe~ in C&lt;lDSCI'Vative drag.
lege treshmentor smoking pot.
I've lived in a seething
1 1.,
once a month, whether I need to cr
Why were all tbese"lefties there?
What if these fears were not or' undirected rage for most or m1y .
T'llr8iqtt'"",tbelehlrdlyoutweisJatherepeatedfilibui':c~~lh noL
It's a mystery. MaJbe they were only true, but truer than we at.ultlife.(Not.totoot. mvownhom ,...
~w= u diOy IO!IIht to wouild.the ._ preai!imt.
'":"! ~
When I frequent niy local Suds- hoping that Dari Quayle would · dreamed?
'
~,
3~---· ..1 111o vote Or the
R blican ,_,.ition to u o ds 1
._...
· r
01 anythin$, but when at comes to ·
· _,
~.,. ·
•
t1II8II11I10US epl!
.v r r r- u • usually pa.... up one o .
But if the right is a~:tually left, inappropnate manifestations of
hltl!JJ.J-dtllclt!W"1ioDplln.
·
·
those free weekly newspapers so I
•an.Shoa'es
and the left actually right, who~s surlinessl'vealwaysbeenaheadof 1,
. . t11ey lt!in. 1101tedlelesa.
·
·
·
can while away the rinse cycle with
'""
II
d · th 1 dry? B ed
the
• ·
•
"ldllak die lluullle with Democrat~ is, we're all independent CODirac· a hard-hittin' expose cr two. 1 see
ung e aun
as on
.the curve.) But I m JUSl one malld- ,, ,
-.•• llid a. DeaiOCilltH: 1en110r, himldf a commiace cbUn\11!1. "Or now that thu habit may have to !Disspell "tomato," and they could p;mphlets and progreaive newspa- justed guy. My penonal philoso- ., :
• lelll we lllildl we are."
• .
change.
earn themselves a little acoopleL
pers lefl !~.!::f::'und, I'd always pliy of 1earing down without build- ; ~
Wlilelloale~·
.
craz·~ e • maybave played a role.
On my last excuraioa, the weekOr perhaps it's more sinister· lhoJUght 1
8lS were hotbeds mg uP could never have rubbed off .) .
._
1&amp;-o
·
"-:
~
·
last
than
thaL
or
radicalism.
I'd
always
•
Ita ••,.• .._
te........,
)JI a~
ly's cover story ~oncerncd an
·
ownership of washing associated
ma~:hines oo
· the psyche of a nation!
'•,:
YfM r I h'CIIIIfllaeril1s commeou ~bout
. known for bis intel- , intrepid reporter's infillration of a
Perhaps everybody there was a
'th . . · · the Republi
•
••
·lect.tw-'h
lllliJifv.
•
·
'
national
convention
of
the
Chrispinto
in
dis•rni""l
t
h
e
reliWI regastraUO!I m
can
N
·
•
be
""""laun
'
~
••,
--'o&amp;.-- do ... . The
'd
•
·~ v - ·~·_.
Party.
O,~tSj!Oito
~-·1
• ·, :
Tile tldainiatr8tioo courted HQllillp .......,..t u....
presa ent tian righl .Because atchconserva- gaous n t IS merely an invention
~ould this assumption be dry·. It s fmally comang bact to ' •
· ~4ll*d adlnnetinvilltion to the .,..-,•allome llit yec,llld the South lives are suspiciOUJ of the media, by the illage Voace staff. Dan wrong?
· . haunt us. 1can't prove it, ofcoune, .•:
Cinilina Delaw.xa• wu ~II!VCIII pnwiaiona he wanted in negt&gt;tia- she'd attended the coilference in. Quayle himself could be a double
ReCent JKius indicate that Amer- btlt I plap to avoid both Iaundro- :
tioal aan«*ldiq die GAIT le&amp;i*"'· .·. · '
· disguise. The coyet ~bowed her agent planted in tho Republican ica is dovOlvina into .a cesspool of mats inCi free newspapers .in the :
dlo South Caroliaila'a homo-,_ leltile concerns and · clutching a Bible, we.illl a wig, Party by the Weather Ullderground anger, cyolclsm, resenunent. sci(- fl;;ure. ~ a malirz of fact, call ';DC ~ ~
UWlliliM k) lieo .,._ .,.,...,., .lt'a poaible there was skirt. blouse and wdy :g le-s; sllc to make the right Win&amp; seem silly. ishneas .. and random : a.nxicty p:.a~noad; but f~om !JOW 0,11 I m ., •,
, COIIId ~ beeD done 10 ipa die Wblte House lilt embar- looted a bit like f&gt;iJia Carvey's ' _.at ~obertson coullf be secr~dy attacks. What's
wllh us7 b ·,ymg my undttwear 10 bult.
,
nlli• $1 rat
'•
·
. . ·
Ch111th Ladf.
..
married to lane Fonda. Rush Lilli- . Didll't we win the
wir'l We
(To receive a complimentary Ian , :
· .On die other '-tl, ._.!be le&amp;laJe«inlnucbecl Congress e.J!er m the
In the article; she ex~ puz: ba~ah could secretly be ·1ano have iwimming pools, convenient Shoales ~etter. ~11-8()().989- . :
yec, HoiJ!Rp would lOt bave ~~to dct:JIISI the elections, and · ziement as to why the i'igbt wasso Fonila. .
.
'·
sbopping, deep cleanse!B, tWo-car DUCK.!ll' wrue Duct s Breath, 4()8 ._
C1iD1oa may Well bavepineda leli""'W'Irium .
· afrai!Sof the left; after Ill, Ia her . If this ia true, who are the PC garages ancl'bargain JN!Iin.ees. We B~oad · St., Nevada City," CA · ~ :
BWIIi Jbou&amp;ll DMo ·~ ~ COIIIrOBed the ,
fm: all but six years opinion•.the left ham't ~ OIJI· crowd. the "BIIme America Fll'lt" can enjof Rusli Limbaugh on a 9:J9S9.)
-j
liDce the ==ila!JiNat•lltiQu, 11101t commaflee chairman have held nazed coherently sioco die '60s.
the pro-aludon ICJivilta, the dail)' buu. Wh)' then Jare we,so
· .~
power aiCnpide
· plelidenll, tnd thus1 been free to pursue their •Curi0111Iy, sho didn't seem to rec·
~ve Theooe;.worlden'l
Forest cabal, lhe fuzzy- url~ ·Could at be IOinethUI8 as · Iaa Sboales Ia a sL:dlcattd 1
·
ndler
·tbcirl.
•
OJ1!ize that her very preiCIICC in-the · thinking
Coold they, .....
• lin
Wiih CliDicn iD office, they bad the burden ofgovtming with a presi- riglit·wmg· midst'- a ldde cro. in fact. be the right=· tn ..._...,
...n eas ll8liC c I 1 '
waitedor ·Newi'paper terprile
Whe0
"'"6'
ould we be !~ding a double Ailodatloo.
I
dentoltbeitOWD'party.
·
'
'
dresslngasaChristianeonllervative ,
I wu iD co ege, it was life, biding;--our true b~liefs.
.
'
·
.; ~
Fcu1DCII yan ..,, Republicans wor. control of the Senate in Ronald · - .mi,ht serve to fuel the very fashiot)able lri my crowd or fuzzy- b!'&gt;cause we. ve been led mto a
(For laformatloa
• .,. to ;~,· =
08 0 "
~~--·•
p8linola she mocked. It didn't even thiaking ope~worlders to believe mJl'll qtii8IIUlC by a com-operated
,
=~e·lllad' lot illll it thia"praideat were going to succeed we had to sink in when ahe ran into anotiJ.er tbat the FBI was tappin1 our. ,,.:,......,;
·
· COBIIlaakale tiedroDieally wllb "tl
' ~
atidt toaedler on~·-di:bt itCml,' recllls Sen. Pete Domenici, R- dilguiaedjoumallst at the event, cr phonea, and thliJ we'd ·beeo infil- ~·... ~ COIISplDI:y?
tLis roll!llalst aod otllen; mil', :~
}!r.M., Wlao became B
~ctee chairman. . ,
Whell s!Je was ri&gt;Id that tbere. were'a trlited by narcotic~ ·agents with . I.don't see any .other explana- tact America~ bJ. clllldll· ,.
"ltWIIII~t~
· rcr .u to"'ytogelher,"
. .
Iotofrepouersthere,coveringthe nothingbetter.todO~pc)pcol- uon.
.
. ·
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·
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p o
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own...-

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

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I

area bUJioCSSI!S tbrou(lh Dec. 2. Io November,
pareolll cao fill out applications at tbe Mela
County Health Departmeut to get toys rcr tbelr
cblldreJL. Last year, the billers gave awt~y toys
to 515 children. (Sentinel photo by Georae
Abate)

Everett D. Gillilan

Sunny days, cool nights
, continue 'until .Thursday
.

By Tbe Associated Preas
this ·date 8l the Columbus weather
.. Some Ohioans found they had station was 86 degrees in 1928
tQ scrape their windshields before while the record low was 24 in
heading to wort this morni11g. 1964. Sunset tonight will be at 6:58
Cle'ar sties and light winds crtated p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
chilly conditions across tbe state 7:39 am.
·
and scattered frost in the north.
Weather forecast:
· Early morning lows ranged from
Today ... Mostly sunny. Highs
· die low 30s in the north to around from near 60 ilortheast to the mid40 in the south.
die 60s southwesL
, The clear and cold conditions
Tonight...Clear. Scartered frost
were the result of a high press~ northeast Lows from the middle
system that will continue to domi- 30s northeast to the lower 40s
n~~te Ohio's weather through .southwest
Wednesday. '
Wednesday .. .Mostly sunny.
, Sunny skies were forecast for Highs 65 to 70.
Wednesday, except in the southExtended forecast:
west, whm some high cloudiness
Thursday and Friday...A chance
will slip in during the afternoon. of showers. Lows in the 40s and
Temperatures will be a little highs in the 60s.
.
warmer, topping out in the mid to
Saturday.. .Fair. Lows in the 40s
upper 60s.
and highs in the 60s.
The record-high temperature for
.

~ax landlords targeted

Everett David Gillilan, 81, of Inverness, Fla, died SepL 19, 1994 at the
Citrus Memorial Hospital in Inverness, Fla
.
Born on June 14, 1913 near Salem Center, he was the son of the late
Otho Oliver Gillilan and Minnie Blanche Halliday Gillilan. He was a contractor and builder before his ~menl
He was preceded in death by his wife, VaHia Hawley Gillilan; his
11!8ftdparents. Alexander Laing Halliday and Mary Shaw ·Longstreth Hall·
tday of Langsville; and seveml uncles and other relatives in Meigs Coun·
ty.
'
Survivors include two sisters, Atha Margaret Wilcox and Desta
Eleanor Shaum, both of Ashland, Ohio.
Funeral services were held in Inverness, Fla., and butia1 was in Chimes ·
Terrace Memorial Gardens, Tampa., Fla

~elbert

Ray Ours

Delbert Ray Ours, 76, of Durst Ridge Road, Portland, died Monday,
0cL·l0,1994 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
lo
Born on June 8, 1916, he was the son of the late Rush Ours and ES14
Barringer Ours. He was a construction worker, a veteran of the U.S. Navy
in Wodd War II, and a member of the Tuppers Plains veterans of Foreign
Wars 9053 and the Laborers Union, Marietta and Parkersburg, W.Va
He is survived by a daughter, Freda Bays of Syracuse; a daughu;r and .
son-in-law, Donna and Robert Fitch of Long Bottom; two grandchil~~
and three great-grandchildren.
.
.
Besides bis parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Paul Ours,
and a grandson, Gregory Middieswarth,
.
.
.
.
The body will be cre.maled. The Rev. DaVId Dailey wall o.ffic•ate at
graveside services to be held at Browning Cemetery, the ume to be
announced later.

Margaret E•.Russell

AGRICULTURAL ANOMALY -Virgil Tealcrd or PODieroy
shows off two produce items (ltown on bis four-acre farm located
between Racloe aod Syracuse. Ooe stalk of com bad seveo flU'S,
wblle the tomato wei1hed tbree pounds, Teaford said. Teaford
challenged area growers to top bim. (Sentiael pboto by George
Abate)

Return ofBiennerhassets'
bodies to island requested

will be inspected. tach property
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
must. have a kitchen sink, bath- A Parkersburg funeral director
incerpret the fees ss a tax.
flilm, bathtub or shower, hot and
. is enlisting con~ressional help to
"Whatever the cost to the busi- c1.ld wafer lines,lrash storage facilMargaret Elizabeth "Mickey" Russell, 75, Pomeroy, died Monday, move the bodtes of Margaret
ness. that's going to be passed onto it.:s and means of escape to ground OcL 10 1994 in Holzer Medical Center.
'
and her son, Harthe renttr," Gerard said.
level
· ·
·
h Oct :H. 1918 in MinersvUle, daughter of the il!te 0~~? and~ Blennerhassett
mon Jr., back to their home on an
Enforcement of this ordinance
A..$100 fine will be placed on Mcintosh Hartenbach, she was a member of the Minersvtlle Umted Ohio River island
w1ll fall on the shoulders of the landlOrds who do not comply. Methodist Churcb and retired from the l'!lmeroy Water Dc~enL .
John Rockhold said he has
n•·'l'll llNiil4iog;insP.Cctor Arnold · Additionally, if within 60 days adeSurviving are a brother and sister·in·I8W, Robert C. an~ VIOla ~il­ asked for support from Sens.
Jc boson, Horton SBid
quate changes have not been made, bliCh of Pomeroy: a sisfer; Dorot!ty Ann Hartenbach of Middleport; a SIS· Robert Byrd and Jay Rockereller
Half tbc more. than a~nual owners will be fined $100 a day.
ter-in·law, Maxme Ray of Metatne, La,; a nephew, Stephen HartenbaFh . and Rep, Alan Mollohan in obtain$1 ~.000 coll~'iM in fees w!ll be
Robinson said the rule c~ange of Pomeroy; and a niece, Deborah Grueser of Pomeroy.
ing a waiver to move the bodies
p~~Jd to Johnson. 'The remamdcr - w•ll not place undue hardshap on
She was also~ in edeath by her husballd, Charles Russell. .
from
a New Yode City cemetery to
will go into the general fund. where la:ndlonls.
·
. Services wiD be 2 p.m. Wednesday in ~e E~ F~Cflll H_ome, w1th the mansion on Blennerhassett
it will be used to help tear down
"With people who have rental the Rev. Deroo NewlDID officiating. Bunal will be m the Pine Gf9ve Island. The frontier mansion has
ccndcmned buildings, Horton property there are good ones and Cemetery, Pomeroy. Fmbds may call al the funeral home Tuesday fiom been restored and is u·sed as an
added .
.
bad ones," Robinson said. "With 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
interpretive center and tourist
Topaas the penmt process own· some (landlords) no matter what
attraction.
eu li!USI ~ply w1th:
,
yilu tell them, they won't do anyA New York law prohibits the
• msect and rodent extermma- tt.ing. If we can't force their hands
disinterment or removal of bodies
tioo;
0;1 this problem, let's take care of it
without written permission from
• ~e disposal;
ouselves."
next
of kin. The Blenncrhassetts,
Garnet.E. Wise, 92, Columbus, a former Meigs County resident, died
storm doors and win·
Complaints about the ordinance
however,
have no direct descenSunday, Ocl 9, 1994 at her residence.
,
.
.
d&lt;.ows; and
will be heard by ~illage plandants.
She was preceded in death by her husband, the Rev. Aoyd W1se; and
• maintenance standards.
n:ng commission. o changes to
by
three 1daughfers and three soils.
· Foundations, exterior openings, tl&gt;e mobile home re oirements
Announcements
.
Surviving
are a daughter, Dorothy Rathburn of Columbus; sons ll!ld
suirs and porche.s, !In~ plumbing w~re included, Horton added.
daughters-in-law, Paul and Glenna W1se of Columbus, and .Dave and Smorgasbord plaaaed
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
Ellen Wise of ~hitehall; 11 grandchildren, 38 ~t-grandcht!dren and
U
five ~t-great-grandchil~; and a spet:ial granddaughter, Luctlle McK- will have a smorgasbord on Ocl
'
.
inney and ha companion, Artie Nelson, which whom she made lie~ home. 23, with serving from II a.m. ro 2
· (Cootlaued from Page 1)
s~ that you and your ~)llllgn
Friends may call at the Woodyard East Chapel, 2300 E. L1~ngston p.m.
Additionally, the letter noted . conunue to pla.y g.ames wtth the Ave.. CQ!Ull\l!!!S. on Tu!;1day from 2-4 &amp;nd 7-9 p.m., wh~ serv&amp;~es wtD
that crime was dropped~ a debate futut~ of .our d!stract :t;~aw.tng__ be ~eld ~~rat 10 a.m. The Rev. Avon Archer. wtll offic&amp;ale and Weekend services ·
There will be weekend services
topic due to time constramts. How- out lhisp~,
SBid.
burial will be m Miles Cemetery, Ru~d, at2 p.m. Wednesday.
at the Danville Church of Christ. 7
•
Couples .Issued marriage
.
p.m on Saturday, and 10:30 a.m.
"fli flopped" on crime as an issue ~eba . d was mterested m:~rThe followmg couples we~e
Rece.'vmg licenses wm. Bobby and 6 p.m on Sunday. Denver HiD,
debate
. mg c •mr as a debate topac. He issued marriage licenses recendy m Ray·Mitchell Jr., 18, and T~dy Foster, W.Va., wiD be the speaker.
10
"If you ~ ~ to .return crime added that Cll!ey "overreacted" to the Meigs County Probate Court of Renee Reese, 27, both of Rae me; The public is invited.
as a debate topic - an issue that the.~~mtor assue.
,
Judge Robert Buck.
Stephen Alai! Foulkrod Sr., 41 , and
our campaign has previously
Prior to our l~t meeung, ~ou
Angela Marie ~ucas, 38, ~oth of Missionary service set
The Hysell Run Holiness
agreed to discuss_ then please do wan~ to ~scuss JObs, ,ed'!?'tion
Pomeroy; Denms Jay Fackler, 41,
so 1 would also like to discuss this and. cnm~. Ma.l9ne satd. Mter
(Continued from Pa2e l)
and Kim Michele Fackler, 35.1x!th Church will have missionary ser·
· un· portant issue .. Carey said
our meeung, cnme was dropped
Th ·
.
as announced of Rutland; Dawn Charles Hendrix, vices on Thursday, 7:30 pm .
vM:Jone f&amp;red baCk with a Ietier from. the table. I ~ve no objections
e e~pansaon w
23, and Andrea Thein, 18, both of Speaker will be the Rev. Clyde
to Carey saying that he will debate to this, yet I do beheve that the vot· in July, but officials then did not Pomeroy; Delbert Lester Taylor, Henderson. Pastor Bob Manley
·
and is "willing to discuss any issue ers deserve to I~. where vou have ·:!'n~;~ ~J!~:o~d ~~~ 42, and Brenda Pearl Barber, 51, invites the public.
regarding
the 94th District yon· been
on the clish~ede~~~-andgardwha!,
announced both of Portland.
-----------,
'sh
haveaccomp
mu ...tre
. I . was the first ~nmnsion
-..-·
(Cootloued from Page 1)

occupation of Haiti and evidence of
active Clinton diplomliCy on ttade,
Russia, South Aliica, and the Middie Bast should be boosting Clinton's standing with the public, but
. th~ latest polls show little improve-

MEIGS TOY RUN - About 150 motOrcycles roared tbroogll Pomeroy to' collect toJS fer
dlaadvutaaed youth Ia the area Saturday, laid
Brenda Davis or lbe Melp Coaoty Bikers. ''We
did wooderlaL It was the best ooe yet," Davis
said. Toys aad dooatloas will be collected at

,_,.,;,.,_Area deaths

f.

ACHICKEN

I

W.VA.

CINCINNATI (AP)- Most
people question·ed in the ,latest
Ohio Poll said they believed their
finances would not be c.hanged
next year.
The poll, releaaed Monday, said
59 percent of respondents thought
thear economic prospecu ~uld
remain about~e· e, while 16
percont said they · xpected to be
woneoff.
.Twenty-five percent said they
thought their prospects would_
improve. That ~igure. c~;~mpar~d
with 33 percent m a slDlilar Ohio
Poll taken in May.
The University of Cincinnati's
Institute for Policy Research conducted the poll by telephone from
Sept. 14 to 23, interviewing 961
adults selected at random.
·

The idea for bringing the
Blennerhassetts back to their horne·
came trom Raymond Swick

Garnet E. Wise

•screens,

.Malone-carey de... ate set

~~~·,c:;ra~s ~~~ ~~:Ys~ci prot1:~ne. ~~~8 ~;s?n::
· J:;

~~c~nses

Shell expansion

Wl "However

I fmd it very trouble-

~94th District covers. Gallia.
Meags and Jackson counties and
east,ei'Jil.awrenee Countv. ... ...

since Shell toot over the•former
Goodyear plant
In addition to the new employt.
t'
I
ees
added at the time the expansion
The Dail Sen me
is complete, approximately 300 to
(IISPI ZIJ.Mil
(Cootinuedlrom Page 1)
400 people will be employed there
son said.
during peak construction time,
• thanked village Police Officer Persinger said.
Bruce Swift for lecturing on rape F=="=!O$!!;====:====•
Invention.
• learned the Middleport Com·
ood doe &lt;lllo
munity
Association has conducted Am Ele Power ---..:.31 311
N..,.,..MIOddia
''
a survey of business owners and Alqlo ,__;.__ _--57 511
one-third are dissatisfied with the Altilaud ou
314
1'0111U8TD•
Tht
Dolly St&amp;lloel, · Ill Covrt St., . current parking rules. The village
.......,.\]lllo457fll.
removed parlcinJI meters a year ago
in the downtown business district.
IWICIIIPI10N IIA1U
IJCinltr•-• announced plans for,the vil0. ~.........................................S,l~.
0. Woe~~~ ............................. ,.,........... $6.95 (..-e's co-sponsored Halloween fes0. Y* ~:................................... "Sil20
,tivities. Trick-or-treating will be
.
.
held from 6-7 p.m. Oct 31. ·From
llliK¥.i COPY PUCI
7-10
p.m., a hay ride and haunted
lieuJ,...,...;u·~'"':'"""'"'.,'"'"""'"':'" C..
hollow nents will be c:o-spons!Xed
~ lllldtlldllll,., ... - . . ,
by the American Legion post and
....... -ilhct 10 TbiOolllpclllallollJ
•

pavmg
• arants"-"'

y

Stocks

---10

-.Tho_....-·

..u--.. --

'l'ribiiiO
.. ·a - ._
Ill or
IJ _QodllwllllleP,.
_

1Ni1a. ·

-"--"··---.M

area businesses.

• will sponsor a "Save Our
Pool" band conceit from 1-6 p.m.
No ......
~,
Sunday at the LeJiion annex. All
pnx:ccds will go toward a fund to
,Joi.ur.IWI"m10NI
save tho above-ground poollbat '
..... - c . . ,
'
, was sbut down this year. About
13 .............................................Jll.l4
:lf'IVItb..................,.-........ ,.. -...143.16
$80,000 are needed· to repair the
521i'tti11L•.'•••• ,.•.,_,_.,. •• ,.,.,.• .,,...$14.76
structure. Currently, $2,&lt;448.55
--~-&lt;:.-,
have been raised, with $5,000
13 .......
..'.
~·-·'""""""'"'""""""""'"JlJM
. . ~..,..:.-4"
. ....... - ...--..........
...c.so
)6 ..,...
... ___
lAO , .. promised from tJ!e Meigs. County
.:-""'"""'"'"""..$1
Cormissloners, HMOII said. ' .

,d ..

----~o---

,2 ........... ,.....

..

nl
/1.

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428·1065

\

�.

...

The

Sports

Daily· S~ntinel~~

,~ Tuesday, OCtober 11, 1994

'

,Tuesday, OCtober 11, 1994
Pagl "4

.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.

.

'

...

-•

....

BROWN SACKED • Mmnesota VIkings rlgbt tackle Jobn
rl&amp;bt, and left tackle 11eJu7 Thomas, left, sack New York
Giants qllll1erb1Ck Dive Brown ror a seven-yard loss In tbe tblrd
qQrter of Mollllay Diabt's NFL game at Eut Rutherford. Tile
Vlkhlp woa, 27-10. (All)

Rudie,

difference between a quarterback
playing in· his 17th professional
season and one making the fifth
start of his career.
It's the mistakes they make.
Warren Moon limited his in
passing fcw 299 yards and a touchdown, while Minpepa cornerback
Anthony Parkel returned a mistake
by Dave Brown 44 yards for a
touchdown as the Vikings stole the
· momentum in the third quarter and
defeated the New Y&lt;R Giailts 2710 Monday nighL
The win kept the Vikings (4"-2)
lied for first place with Chicago in
the NFC Central with 'a bye on tap.
New Ym lost its second in a row
after opening the season with three
straight wins .
One play decided this game for
all practical purposes: Porker's
interception on the fourth play of
the third quortcr.lt snapped a 10-10
tic and really deflated the Giants
after they gained momentum by
driving 94 yards for a game-tying
touchdown on a 3-yard run by

Brown just befm iDtamission.
"That's two weeks in a row
now fcw me," said Brown, wbo bas.
been learning'the hard way the last
twogamcs.
,
He had an interception returned
fcw a touchdown by New Orleans
just before halftime last week and
then had Parker step· in front of
Mike Sherrard rn the right flat
Monday. ·
"Giants quarterbacks or any
quarterbacks can't make the mis·
takes that I've made," said Brown,
who was 19 of 36 for 226 yards
and two interceptions, both of
which led to Vikings touchdowns.
"They are always going to hurt the

whicb lried to confuse him with an 3-0 lead on a 44-yard field/0111 by
assortment of defenses.
Fuad Reveiz, who adde a· 24"He relit! everything really yardet in the fourth quarter. David
· Nell,' · Gianb defermvc end Mike Treadwell lied the score early in
Strahan said.'
the second quarter on a 22-yard
Moon downplayed his own per· fteld goal.
formance and pointed to the interVencie Glenn helped put Minception by Parker, who used to play nesota ahead 10-3 by picking off a
a1 Giants Stadium as a member of
lipped pass midway through the
the New York-New Jersey Knights second quarter. Moon hit Terry
of·the World Football LeaBUC.
Allen for 31 yards, and Allen even-·
"I think the intercep~n took tually scored from the I.
"the wind out of their sails, ' Moon
Brown, showing some of the
said.
promise of k fut.;.e sw, :..; ~~.,.,.
· The call was a quick out to York on a nine-play, 94-yard
Sherrard on a play in which the man:h just before the half, hitting
Vikings had nine men near the line six of eight paw:s for 91 yards.
of scrimmage. Parker had one-onThen came the Parker's interone coverage.
team.''
ception and Moon's scoring JliiiSS to
Moon didn't hurt his team a1 all
"We had seven guys in the box, Carter, which at fust was rulCd out
He was 23 of 34 for 299 yards, so I knew he (Bro.wn) woold have of bounds by the officials. They
including a controversial 20-yard IQ check off .to a run or quick huddled and reversed the call saytouchdown pass to Cris Caner late pass," Parker said. "He was look· , ing safety Jesse Campbell pushed
in the third quarter that put the. ing at his receiver and threw the Carter out.
Vikings in command, 24-10.
ball a little behind him, just enough
Giants coach Dan Reeves didn't
Moon did throw a late intacep- for me to step in and get iL''
blame the officials.
lion and botched a handoff on a
Parker took the pass in full
"We got beat," he said. "We
first-and-goal on the Vikings' slride and scored untouched.
got beat good. They did an excelopening drive, but fcw the most port ·
Minnesota, taking advantage of lent job. They beat us in almost
he picked apan the Giants defense, the wind in the first quarter, took a every phase you can think of."

NEW YORK (AP) - Start-up .
or lockoul'l
That was the choice facing the
NHL's P.emors today wben they
met wllh commissioner Gary
Bcttman to assess the lateSt contract proposal from the players
union.
"If we don't set SCIIIething this
wea, then we're probably loOOllg
at a shortened season," said Jack
Ferreira, general manager of the .
Anahcilll Mishty Ducks. "I tbink
this week Is crucial.''
The governors ane expected to
determine i( the NHL can open the
seasa1 on Salllrday, Beaman's w- ·
geted resllrt date; or w~ . the

season will continue to be shut
down ·as it has been fo II days
now.
Beuman has nevcrsaicl the sea·
son won't begin without a signed
colleclivc agreement by his Satur·
day deadline. He says be needs to
see significant movement in the
talks.
.
''v,'e have never been· able to
understand what Gary means by
meaningful negotiations,'' said
Toronto's Mike Gartner, president
of the NHL Players Associ8ti01t
Union head Bl1b Goodenow said
his group has made "significant
moves" thai should form the basis
~anewogreemenL

')oo..

•

players union.
"If they don't get a settlement,
"The buyer will weigh thaL i
this dispute raises all kinds of
don't think there's·any concern,"
potential problems," Baltimore
PiUSb~Jl.$h Pirates president Mark
Orioles ownef Peter Angelos said.
Sauer satd.
·
·
Jeff Smulyan, who bought the
Acting commissioner Bud SeJis, Seattle Mariners from George
however, said he didn't think any Argyros in 1989, wasn't indemnisales would be delayed.
fied b collusion damages, and his
"Each deal will have to be to group had to pay the Mariners' J.
worked out diflerently/' he said.
· 26th share of the teams' $280 milSince 1922, professional base· lim settlement, which amounted to
ball has been protected by an $10,769,000.
antitrust exemption, but the florida ·
When a group headed by .
Supreme COin ruled last week that George W. Bush and Rusty Rose
the exemption applies only to base- purchased the Texas Rangers from·
ball's reserve system. The means Eddie Chiles, the parties agreed
players may be able to file an that Chiles would be responsible
antitrust suit in that Slale against all b just $500,000 of collusion dam28teams.
ages, which resulted from the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Piqua took over as the lOp team in
Division n as the 1994 Associated
Press stale hip school football poll
!lit the halfway mark Monday.
Piqua took advantage of topranked Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Jesuit's 20-10 defeat apinat Mentor Lake Catholic to join Warren
Harding, Steubenville, Wauser n,
Versailles and McDonald as a divi·
sionalleader.

•
);

Piqua started.the wea 75 points
behind Walsh JeSuit, but moved up
with a 13-6 viclOry over archrival
Troy. The Indians lead Celina by
16 points in balloting by a state
panel of sports writers and broadcasters.
In conllast to last week - when
~~ of the lOp 60 teams, feU includmg four teams rated No.I - I 0
ranked teams IOSL Six of those 10
teams were ranked seventh'in their

division or lower.
The top two teams remained \he
same everywhere except in Divi·
sion II. Harding's lead dro~cd
. over Euc . m
'
_fromS9toS3
____ . _ pomts
Division I, Steubenville's edge
remained 73 points over HamillOD
Badin in Division Ill and
Wausem's edge shrank from 21to
seven points over Germantown
Valley View in Division IV. In
Division V, Versailles' adviiDtage

W
llulralo
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•••
illlloiiQ, Oct.17
'

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e•

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••

.·,

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·~----------------,,

~a~e.

'

Lane made it a 14-12 game with
4:42 left in the half on a one yard
nm, but Meip took a 20-121ead at
the half on the strenslh of a seven
ploy 65 yard drive that ended when
Zach Meadows hooked up with
Roush on a 39 yard scoring pass
·

Meigs spikers trip

Restkets, Raiders ·
The Meigs Mamuder volleyball
team picked up recent wins .over
River Valley and WellsiOn.
In lhe win over Wellston the
Marauden won by Sc:Ores of 15-2
and IS-6. Cynthia Couerillled the
way with nine points and 11 for 11
serving, Mandy Jones scored seven
points with nine for nine serving.
· Billie Butcher added nine poiniS
and Erica Robie had two kills and
three blocks.
In the reserve p e Meigs won
by scores of IS-3 and 15-6. Carissa
Ash and Stephanie Stewart led the
way with eight served poinls, Julie
King added five and Libby King
·four. Betsy Houdashclt, Jennifer
Husk, Stacy Novak, Candace
Miller and ~tewart weie cmlit with
good net ploy.

. NowY-~IILoa~-.
2

yard touchdown nm't~~ tic the game
at the 3:58 mark.
·
Gallipolis dove to the Marauder
36 y.ord line but Grant Abbott
picked off to end tbe threat. Once
again it didn't take lo11g for ;Meigs
to score·, three plays later 11 was
Roush once again from 66 yards
out. John Hill added the extra
points to give Meigs a 14-6 advan-

~a

Dudley in

trouble .again
. •~COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ohio State foolball and ,_stet!laD
iplayer Rickey Dudley CouJd·f~~:e
six months· in jail for .clrivina IIi
violation of a six-month license
suspension, The (Cimllind).Piaiil
Dealer reported tuday.
.
The newilpNJer laid One of its
reportOn nw Dudley c1rivlng to
football ~ on Monday. Dud·
ley has done this ''periodically
thrqyghout the past .duee weeks,''
the]tawspaper said.
y'l license suspension for
driv lllldtzrthe Influence ends on
Ocl

.

----

~·

Meigs picked up•an excitins win
in three mall:hes against River Val·
ley Meigs lost the first game 4-15,
and then picked up wins by scores
of 15-9 and 16·14. in the third
game River Valley had a 14-9 lead
and had three maKh point serves,
but Meigs was able to hold off the
Raiders and score seven unanswered points IQ post the win.
Emily Facldcr; Couai1l and Bil·
lie Butcher led the way with eisht
points eaeh. Coaerill was IS for IS
serving with nine assists, F~klei
was 12 for 12 serving with IS
assists and Butcher added seven
kills. A,P,ril Halley scored five
points w1th 10 of 1J ~·
Other Mci~sfatislics mcluded
Mandy Jones
10 for 10 serving, Bobbie Bu
with nine kills,
vanessa Compston added· six kills
and Eric Robie added three kills
and three kills. One of Robie's kills
was a lightni!)g bolt for match
~int.
.
In the reserve pmc Meip lost
4-15, 16-14 and 1S-ll, Jenny Clif.
ford led the way with.11 poinll. .

Officiating course
Is being offered
i

"The Mountain I Won't Have to Angels will bring you on this you
Climb"
can bet
Forgive me dear Lord I never A journey I'm sure you will never
meatit to complain
· forget
But sometimes this old bQdy is so There my record will be opened,
wracked with pain
Checked every line
·. from the valleys I've walked in the answer wiD tell what I've done
lime after time
with my lime
and all of the mountains that I've If I' ve been loyal and faithful
· · had to climb
always
. . But one glorious morning come to a fertile green valley I'll fly
daybreak
away.
· to a savion voice I'll come awake
to hear him say now its your time,
There I will see beyond any doubt
to come tu the mountain, but you · thai holy city John talked aboul
won't have to climb.
Jts walls are jasper its streets are

'Sounds of Praise' to
·entertain,at bureau dinner

By

The "Sounds of Praise" will be
· ·the feature entertainment during the ·
annual Meigs County Farm
Bureau's dinner meeting at 7:12
p.m. Tuesday (tonight) at the East·
em High Scllool auditorium.
.. The "Sounds of Praise" group is
. composed of 13 young women
. from grades nine through 12 at the
Ohio Valley Quistian Academy in
Gallipolis. The RfOUP - which is

Dave

Grate
of
Rutl..t
Funiture ~...;....._-=;;;;....,~
Our !ri8nd got i promotion at
the WMihlll' Bureau. He waa
moved up to Third Aealstant
Guesser.

: · The Community C~lendar is
· published as a tree servtce to non: profit lfOUPS wishing to announce
: meetings and special events. The
· cal~dar is not designed to promote
: sales or fundraisers of any ty~.
: Items ane printed as space penmts
. and cannot be tpJ811Uireed to run a
. specific number of days.

• ••

If you don't take change by the
hend, It will take yoy by .th•
throat.
•••
Aunt: "How do
echool?"
Neloe: "CCoeed.*

: ·The IICCOIId ~classes 81 Rut·
' Ia ld Elementary School recently
; ....~-'-" a fri~dshlp lime capsule on

'

_
•

·'I

.,
-··- -- -·--- .- ... .. . -

· ----· ·- .. . .____ .....

supervised.by Sandy Mock- ~ve
appeared at numerous funcnons
including the state recorder's meet·
ing. The choir has attained SUJlCrior
ratings at both state and nauonal
meets.
al
th
Tickets will be on .s e at e
door for the steak diniler at $5.50
for adults and $3.50 for ·Children.
b th
The dinner will be served Y e
Eastern Band Boost,ers.

RU1LAND- Ruiland Council
will meet at 7 _p.m Tuesday at the
Rutland Civic Center.

students to the students of the
futQre who open the capsule.
.
• ParticipaUng in the project were
•.,........ -·n~•
the !ccond graders of Jo Ann Hays,
· the schoOl., .....- .
·
B.·.ll Hess, Johnny Ratliff, Gary
! The project was an JXtenSIOn
B
J R Ell'
' ll(:tlvity for tho theme T.be,. ~e_!lt Kauff, Kelvy rown; . . IS,
~ Friondl' Club", the students . ~ew Daniel Thornton, Adam Snowcse-n,
I, literature baaed rcadin,g senes.
Danny Mullins, Ryan Varian,
h11 or her . Shawn Canterliury, Jodi Chaffee,
• Bach student wrote
Melinda . Chapman, Christine
; name, qc, and aomcthing ~ IW ~ P~ey, Courtney Rife, Joann Den~ llbs IQ do OJ) JliPCf to go mto e ney, Michael McDonal~, ~hal!e
: caps,:!~ of the lime capsule will C'Jllins, Amanda TQbin, Natasbta
_ i ~ to pr~vlde i!lli&amp;ht on ~~!

'

1(

o,..,,

continuous membcrshi,P were
Frances Young, Ruby D1ehl and
Stella Atkins, 1921, Pauline
Atkins, 1923, Frances Alkire, 1933,
C Cfmpbell, 1941, and Dena
Welsh, 1947.
There was a vocal solo by
Kenny Napper dedicated to his
grandfather, Kenny Welsh, remarlcs
bv several former members who
rtturn for the celebration, the
A_&gt;ostlcs Creed to close led by
Blllnie Sue Napper. More than 130
n:~bers and guests attended the
service and program with each one
being JRSented a printed history of
thecburch.

don't panic, just call Bob
he will fly you pronto to liS Veter·
ans Memorial !mob.
They will treat you kindly and take
away your pain
BJ d fly you by copter safely to your
htme again.

Did you fear that someday they
your nest might torch,
.
is that the reaSon you moved from S{J to you now Robin Darling I
m.1St say adieu .
.
her lovely front porch?
Now Robin dear I've been praying BJ.d so glad you like the Beyers, as
we sure like 'ern too.
for you,
"Donna's Robin"
Good evening Mrs. Robin Red- and that you'll have no more lripes
by Alpha L. Douglas
j
!1~ ~!JY to hear you've been so . !!00 1!!!11. YW lR !!appily setlkd in
Veterans
Extended
Hospital
the Beyers water pipes.
·
upset,
Care
.
No you don 'I know, until now
Pomeroy
And shoold y~u have an accident,
we've never met,

Now can'i you just see us living
there
·
with riches untold and we are the
heirs
remember he told us these things
would occur,
,
an gifts or lhe master ~nter · ,
There with our loved ones, spend

A reception for ·the speaker will
EXIDBITS
The Dairy Bam Southeastern take place at 3:30p.m. in 417
.
Ohio Cultural Arts Center will dis- Porter Hall.
play sculpture and drawings by
Harry Hoitink. from Ohio State
·American artist Rita' Blitt from . University, will present his lecture
Sept. 30 to Nov. 6. Hours are II on the Soppression of Plant.
·a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Pathogens by Composts OtL 21.
Sunday: open until 8 p.m. ThursBrian C. McCarthy, from Ohio
day. Free admission for Dairy Bam University, will present his lecture,
members,
students
·and "Valuation of Old-Growth. Forests
faculty/staff.
for Preservation: A Case Study of
"In the Flesh," an exhibit of Crabtree Woods, Western Marymixed media and photo works by land," OcL 28.
Aileen Bassis, will be on display in
Seigfred Gallery from Oct. 17 to
Nov. 4. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 4
THEATER
p.m. Monday through Friday.
The School of Theater will preAdmission is free.
.
sent the play "Waiting For Godot",
bv Samuel Beckett. Evening perMUSIC
Kimo Furumoto will direct the
Ohio Univenity Orchestra in the
Templeton-Blackburn Alumni
Memorial Auditorium 8 p.m. Oct.
Have a hot news ttp
19. Admission is free.
.
or
The School of Music will present a J;fom Ensemble, directed by
story .suggestion?
C. Scott Smith, 8 p.m. Ocio\ler 20
in the Music Building Recital Hall.
Call
the
- .. · Admission ·i!t free;·
The School of Music will pre·
sent a Faculty Recital featuring
Allyn Reilly on suophone 8 p.m.
Oct. 21 in the Music Building
Recital Hall. Admission is free.
Tribune 446-2342
There will be a Jazz Ensemble
Sentinel 992-2155
. performance, directed by Ernesi
Bastin, and a Percussion Ensemble
performance, directed by Guy
Remonko, 8 p.m. Oct. 26 in the
Baker Center Ballroom. Admis- .
sion is free .

.

__

fonnanccs will be 8 p.m. Oct. 192:&lt;.. There will be a matinee 2 p.m.
· O.:t 22. All tickets will cost $5 for
st.Jdrnts Sid' senior citiz.ens and $7
· for othen. All performances will
take place in the Elizabeth Evans
Baker Theater in Kantner Hall. Call
SD-4800 for more infonnalion.
DANCE
The Perfonning Arts Series will
p-=sent "Ballet Hispanico" OcL 27
m the Templeton-Blackburn Alumni Memorial Auditorium. Directed
by Tina Ramirez, "Ballet Hispani.co" performs with the rhythms and
movements of Latino Heritage.
Tickets range from $10 • $12. Call
593-1780 for more information.

News Hotlin
,

News Hotline

· THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange, 8 p.m. Thursday at the
hall.

Templeton, Justin CoUlman, and Ail~~~Graham.
taking put were the second
graders of Sheila Hahil' class!An
McKnight, Matthew Smith, H:l
N:lson, Betb Williams, Zach
FUill; Madison King, Renee Bai·
It 1, Adam Hicks, 11en Hatfield,
B ~andon Goble\ Ashley .Baylor,
Jorrid Eskew, Do!Javan Richmond,
B .:lh Kauff, Courtni Van Meter,
Iv.icbael Davia, Tyler Graham,
Shawn Biu,tprner, Kimberly Tayb', ~ MiiWida Simpkina.
.,

•

___ I

··-

SPECIAL EVENTS
The Indian Summer Run will
take place I :30 p.m. OcL 23 a1 the
A,hens Recreation Center. Call
3l:5-80\0 for more information.
LECTURES
Leon Lederman, winner of the
1988 Nobel Prize in Physics, will
begin the Frontien in Science lee·
ture series Nov. I with his presentation ~'Brief History of Science The Search for the God Panicle."
The lecture will begin 8 p.m. in the
Templeton-Blackburn Alumni
Memorial Auditorium. Admission
is free and o'pen to the public.

The following spcali:ers are Jl8ll
of the Fall Speakers Program of the
Department of Environmental and
Plant Biology. The lectures will
take place ill 104 l"orrci' Hall4 p.m.

Lay-Away ·Now
For Christmas
'

* Special ~Oo/o off Regular Retail on
aU in."1tock Pulmki Curios!

Large

Curios

selection of

Available in

•
cun.os

Cherry.

Best Prices

Oak. Maple
&amp; Pecan.

Ever.
Stale Auto ·s already
1~ premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
and home with Ihe Sl\ltll
Aulo Companies.
lei us tell you jusl
how much your savings
can be.

ScfrOofburi8s friendship time Cflpsule

•

.

the church by the Rev Thomas
Welsh in 1849 was siven by his
grcat·grcat·l!llllddaugllter, Carolyn
Welsh Collins. There was a solo,"It
is No Secret" by Esther Harden.
Descendants of nine of the
fLunds were present and introduced.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Warne'
(Dec and Dallas) and David Worne1 was presented.
Norma Lee, 92, was recognized
ar the olden member. Sbe has
Wshl Sunday school for more than

by Alpha L. Douglas
Veterans Extended Hospital
Care
Pomeroy

EAST MEIGS -Eastern Local
School District levy committee, 7
RACINE - Southern High
p.m. Tuesday at the high school.
, School Athletic Boosten, Thursday, 7 p.m at the high school.
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
POMERO~
Revival
RACINE - Fellowship Olurcb
TUPPERS PLAINS -;- T~e Wednesday t'1rough Sundlly, Lau· in Racine, Friday, Saturday and
Tuppers Plains Sewer Dlstnet will · rei qiff Free Methodist Church, 7 Sunday, 7 p.m. David Crowell of.
meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday at t~e p.m. each day except Sunday, Michigan, evangelist. G::arlcs
l'uppCrs Plains-Chester Water Dis· 10:30 a.m. Rev. Gene Gill. Mus1c Bush, pastor, invites public.
· trict office.
by Sunrise.

The trouble with air travel Ia
that It allows Congress
m1mbera to pealer their
constituents
between
elections.

Ph. 9,9,2-63()0
.
.

1811$ the "New Jerusalem Medley",

IPid the history of the founding of

the rest of our lime
But Donna keeps us posted when
and praise be to God there will be . we meet to sing on Donna sings on
no "more mountains to climb
Friday nights
praise God there will be no more and so sorry to you didn't like her
mountains to clim6."
electric lights

J!Dre gold
and one day I will walk there in the
Bible I'm told
God-made it for us said one day he
would bring it down, to his chosen
peop~e in the New Jerusalem, his
favonte town.

...;._,..---Community calendar----

•• ••

wi

Appliance Recycle Day
Wednesday, Oct•. 12 .
· at Meigs&gt;Co. Litter
Control Parking ·Lot
Unio~ Aven~~~ Pomeroy

SOUNDS OF PRAJSE

We'Va finally reached ·the fifty
percent bracket. We make
about half of what we spend •

The Jackson Basketball Offi·
cials Association is conducting an
Adult Education Class for aU those
interested in becoming a high
scbool basketball official. The successful COfllpletion or the class will
allow those officials to offk:ialc all
I~· •cis .or basketball except (or: varSJI" this season.
, ~.'be fust class will be Tbunday,
OtiL ber 13 at 7 p.m. at Meip Hish
Scho Jt The location of other classes 'I be diclalcd by the .-ca that
the II. ajority of clus participants
live in. ·
·
·
For more information contact
Dove Jenkins at 614-'?2-6534.

of their aexaal nceda. 11'1 10
m)'M'Y dut 10 1illny ...._. bl¥e
cold, Ulii'CIJ)Onsive wlvea. Tbcj
CJelled us. - SLEBPING WElL IN
KANSAS
are ""'JWMre. T1wy're
easy 10 •"· 1111110,.. tllld , _
easter 10 get ~footed Oll. f/ )VIIittne
qiiUtiotu abotlt drMg1, yo1utetdAM
Ltutdm'#Jookkt, "Titd..owdowf~Oil
Dope." Setldue(-addruud, toq,
bUiilleu-llu t11Wklpellllll11 t:W
or _., order jtK S3.6.5 (IIU fit.
clllde1 po114ge tllld lttMdliltl) 10:
Lowdmwt, clo AM l..mtder1, P.O. ·
Bo:~ 11562, Clrie~~go, Ill. 60611·
0562. (111 Ctiii/IIJQ, •tid $-05.)

Ohio University Campus Calendar of events

•••

'

and

111011 mea OWl' 60 'belierve WCA v
pu1 on this vrt11 to •
._

corner-----__,...._____

---~---------Poet's

with 2:14left in the half.
Meigs increased the lead to 2612 81 the end of third period when
Roush fued a 21 yard sc&lt;Win$ lOSS
to Abboll. Gallipolis scored the
games la~t 10 points in the fin~l
The poll is likely to underBo
1:55. Me1gs had the ball at,the1r
more
of a shalc:eup next wea, wtth
own three yard line facing a fourth
and 15, Marauder coach Carson several critical matchups between
Crow decided to take a safety, teams that arc or have been tanked.
instead on taking the chance of a
blocked punt to make it a 26-14
game. Two plays later Lane broke
free on a 34 yard DID on a reverse.
Kelly Painter added the ext.ra
points to close out the scaing w1th
I :28 lefl
.
Roush as usual led Meigs .011 the
ground with 12 carries for 174

air for 39 yards a touchdowt;J to
Roush and a interception, while
Roush was one for one for 21 yards
a touChdown to AbboiL Aaron Van
Iwagcp went to the air once and did
not complete il

abanlda)"lwark.Aftrnll.lbconly
bad 10 spend tbe day cootiDJ
huabanda' ncccb. I'm nrc there · cleaalaa c1o1aa die laundry
would be a lot leu cheating takiq ~ of the tid&amp;. He Wll
if men were well cared for always 100 tired., 10 Ill&amp;, but lbe
at home. •• FRUSTRATED IN wuncwrallowed 10 be too tired II
PHILADELPHIA
"do brr duly. •
DEAR PHIL: I hope you reid the
Well, Ann, tbo day be ftlCiJed from
leaer above this one. If 10, maybe his job, so did 1 •• 10 1110ther
you'd better read it apin. Here's lJedroont. After 40 JCIIS of "doins
more.
my duty," my tired old body IIIII I

church building and the 14~th year Rev. Kay Puckett aricf the sermon _
since the church's organization was "What About My Faith" by the
'observcdrecentlyattbechurch.
Rev. Mrs. Robinson. The Symcuse
Syracuse and Middleport con- c:turch sang "God Of Our
gregations joined with the Har- Fathers". altar cloths, gift of Mr.
risonville group for a II a.m. ser- and Mrs. Cotterill, were dedicated
vice. The Rev. Kris Robinson gave and the Rev. James Hanna ci Oak
the call to worship with Pauline Hill had the benediction.
Atkins exten!fing the welcome and
A baslcet dinner was served at
Paul McCalla, vice moderator' of n~on. and the afternoon program
the Presbytery bringi~ greetings.
included~ call to worship with a
Betty Lowezy sans 'Savior Like piano solo by Clotine Blackwood,
a Shepherd", Paul and Josie Cotter- remarts by the Rev. Ernest Strick·
ill
reaffirmed their faith and · ined lin, former pastor, and Mary Ellen
Manuel, Kevin and Donette Dugan,
the
church, and the Middfe'port Stricklin, oo the church history and
Bob Wingett, Sandy, Saralt and
ChlJl.'cb
choir sang ''Previous Mern, the hopes for the future. Mr. and
Alex Hawley, Brenda, Tyler, Adam
and Dustyn Johnson and Rusty.

Alysia Noel Talbott, daughter
of Daniel and Teresa Talbott,
recently celebrated her tl)ird birth·
day with a pool party at the home
of her cousin, Bob Wingett.
Attending were her parents,
grandpanents, Charles and Emmagene Hamilton, Paul and Barbru:a
Roush, great-grandmother, Laura
Magee, great aunts, Eleanor
Wingett, Elma Weese) Eliza~eth
hright: Maryanne Wnght, D1ane
Riclcey, Diana, Mandy, Amber and
Gmett Mills, Sid. Denise and Joey

teams' conspiracy against free
agents following the 1985, 1986
and 1987 seasons.
Former Ballimore Orioles presi- .
dentl..any. Lucchino, involved in
purchase talks with both the Padres
and Pirates, acknowledged the
strike could slow sale talks.
''I really dQn ': want to comment
on any matters that are pending,''
he said.
A's chairman Walter Hass said
that in his team's case, potential
purchasers were talking with the
board of the Oakland-Alameda
Country Coliseum.
"We're not having conversations per se with buyers, so it
hasn't come up," he said.

Ann, please teD the wivea who
read your a&gt;IUIIID to !hink lboul their

tiD DOW JO to llocp in JIC*lC.l'l bet

H...~~i~~!!~i~e-~~~~ :~~~!'.:~-2b_:;;.~:~fi""' ,~

·birthday
.Celeb. ted

Tbe biggest move in the poll
was Avon Lake's·moving up three
spots to seventh in Division Ill.
Falling the farthest were Walsh
Jesuit and Warren Champion in
Division IV, both of whom
dropped five spots. Youngstown
Mooney in Division IV and
Steubenville Catholic in Division V
each fell four slots.

~:so~ir:J~im~~r:san°~v~
age of20.7 yards a carry. Meadows
~~~{~~nc:,~e~'fC::l~ar~
Meadows was one for two in the

of aual delilc, lbc eold me it wu
.,... Au •.laden: Well 10011,
none of ber docf«slllll"e• wbat you .Uy 111ew it this time. 'm bet
weclo«doll'ldoln ourbcdroolll.
you • p~eaty from women over
Scverat of my male friendl wbo 60 about "FForida,• the old ptraarc allo in their eaity SO. have told Jibo has been married for 40 yars
me ~ 8lC thins II true in their llldlld wifa ia'l inteml!d in aex.
marrilges, lo I know I'm not the
LCit me a- tbo icealrio: oit
only one who has 10 live like this if their weddin&amp; oipt. be ini'JIDM'd bcr
I want to ktqJ the JNWI'iage IOielher. dill it wu bcr duly llld 1111 c1ae llftt:r

'

over Cincinnati Mariemont, which
had been 78 points, fell to 56 and in
Division VI, McDonald led by 12
points (down from 19) over
Deiphos St. John's.
Making their first appearances
in the top 10 were Massillon Wash,
it)gtoll in Div,isjoql p!IJ!lJlv·pe,
and Columbiana iri Division VI.

Meigs seventh graders edge Gallipolis
Meigs spoiled Gallipolis an
early 6-0 lead and went on to
defeat the Blue Devils 26-22 in
seventh grade football action last
week at Middleport. The Little
Marauders are now 4-0 on the season and will put their undefeated
record on the line Wedncsday
evening when they host Wellston
in Middleport. The loss was the
first of the season for the Blue
Devils.
Cody Lane put the Blue Devils
on top early with S:28 left in the
first period on a 24 yard yard
touchdown. But it took Mei8' just
three plays to lie t!Je game when
J ustiii Roush broke loose on a 67

Hone moonirig husband gets a W~e~up call tfom WOf!len readers ,

Third

Piqua tops Division II poll; Big. Red ·heads Division Ul

Scoreboard

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

•

My husbancl inaislcd on acx tmc ~ llllijcc:l:
limes a week for 29 years. I tried
.,._ Au Luders: The man
very hard to enjoy it but never qfdte from P1ori41a w11o ~aboul
made the grade. Meanwhile, he 11!1 ·IIIOIIwomen'alackofinterclllaa
his satisfaction, but he lcept tclliDg hit it rip! on the noae. For )'1*'1.
me how lousy I was in bed•.His the most often repeated phraiC
problem was that be was impatient around our house has been "Pleue,
Dear A.aa Landen: I couldn't and inconsidcnitc. It never occuncd boncy, not fOIIiahL"
· believe the incredible insensitivity to him that Ire might be at fauiL
My wife ia llwaya 100 tired, 100
· of that Florida man who said he
So now, my . mid-life crisis worried about other thinp «jolt
· lalcw on bis boncymoon that his . husband is out there trying to fmd not in the mood. She aaya that abc
wife was never go1ns to give him somebody who is 'm«e skilled" has bad bcr children llld 1ee1 no
greauex.lf IUs first experience bad than ln. I just hope and pray that need for us 10 do 'that lluff'
.been disappointing llld painful, he what he lloesn't find is AIDS. anymore.
might have enjoyed it less himself. •• TATn;REDEGOINCAURlRI really do not want to cheat on
He nurried a vir&amp;in for heaven's N1A
her, but whal e1ae il there to do? I
sake.
'
DEAR ,CALIFORNIA: Do mm find myself achins ~affection •.and
. Myfustexperiencewasdamnear than pray. Make aure you proma I blow I'm not gomsto get II at
ripe (and it never sot much better). yourself.'Here's another leaeron the home.. Wbcn I sugplled that abc
talk wtth her doclor about her lack

NHL restart still
Sale o.t baseball teams may be delayed
big questionmark
NEW YORK (AP) - Even
though the Pittsburgh Pirates, Oak·
land Athletics and San Diego
Padres are for sale, lawyers for
owners and. 'players predict no
teams will change owners until
there is a new labor agreemenL
Two management lawyers, both
speaking on condition of anonYJDi·
ty, said Monday they couldn't fcxesee any deals closing.
Tom Reich, an agent for many
players, said, "Anyone who buys a
teaJil until there's dn 118fCement is a
miWOII unless there's an indemnification.··
Reich said no buyer would close
a deal unless he is protected against
damages from lawsuits flied by the

jo

Ann
Landers

Vikings roll over Giants 27-10
(AP)- ThUe's usually an obvious

'

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY ,

992·6687

* Every Item In Our Store
·'

Is Now On Sale!

. Recliners................................................starting ati$289.00
Solid Oak Barstools ................................ starting $99.00
Dinettes ....... ~ ...:.................. :.................. starting at $250.00 ·
Sofa's......................................................starting at $450.00
Cedar Cbest.......~ ................................... starting at $259.00
Glider Rockers ...................................... starting at $299.00
Sleeper Sofas .......................................... slaring at $589~00

at

•FIMI'Mdntl
•FIMDeiwly

HOURS .

VIM

DAILY

l.tullnlllll

ITO&amp;
FRIDAY

a-

ORUSEOUR
EASY CREDIT
TERMS.

1•1:30

------

•

�,.

.PIG• 6

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

,•'

:CONCERNc
.

. Onemlleout

~FE

{

· ~~LEARN

TO

~

PREVENT.,

•Toya

:1 451'68

·IERVICE-

COMME~CIAL and

Wt Mit Mrvlce at the lOp ......,.. It hllliwliyl been our
INI priority! In fiiCI, 'Mit W. .-Nice 110 ~. .,. may

1111-t,.

.

on"" ~r..=t,;:ro·-

Startng Ill $7.86/monlh lor 13 ci1Mnela on up ID u

your heart delir...

Phone: 992-6926

RESIDENTIAL

.FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

mMy u

(No Suncllly C1ll1)

-ULEI·
Dllhei ranging In liD !rom 10 IHI dNrclown to 181nch...

.
-PAYIIENTPUIHYea, we cu laM cuhl -or- 110 daye·u Cjllh -or·
peymenl81or48 monfll ulow u ~.
-SERVICE·
youa wsfAimoN &amp; Our s-11 beglne &amp; endo with
•rvlcel So, when your atelllte .-n•t working ...._,~ we'rw
herw to ~I By phone or
wl*! you coil,

New Mason
Family Restaurant

•

•· New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wln4ows
Room Additions • Roofing · ·

11....4310

701 Art Lewls·St.
Middleport, Ohio

oQaftaman Toola

KANAUGA, OHIO •
Every Wed. &amp; thur.
All New Games. Games $40 &amp;
$50 and Overall $300.
Begins at 6:45

1......1..111 .

Rlverbencl Travel
Adventures

143fromRt 7
TuM.-Wed.-Frl.-s.t.
1-41

BISSELl IUiliEiS, IIC.

...,.

AGENCY

Ill

In...,_.-.,,.,.,.,

Horne Cooked Meals
Daily Specials
Steaks, Sandwiches .
Open Daily 7 am-8 pm
Sundays 7 am-5 pm
New Owners

0

·m

·Let us take
the worry

out of

0

Pubic Notice

.Jn Case Of
FIRE •••
c
m

,.
••
.. I

',('

. ~· ~

'
·,

, ..,
.. '

r.;

"1!

FIRE SAFJETY WEEK- OCTOBER 9 • 15, 1994

•

. ,o

4. In heavy smoke conditions, 'cover your
nose and mouth with a doth and get
down on your hands and knees.

''
,.

.. ,·;. l!'l
··~?"'lll~ f1:J ."''!l:Jr. l.!to' ·~
,,

5; If you're caught inside during a fire,
never enter a dosed room unless the
door
. is .cool· to the touch.

This important message appears courtesy of:

' • ') L

f

12 v-r

'

MIDDUPORT, OHIO

992-6611

The Shoe Place and Locker 21
MIDDUPORT, OHIO

992·5627

I&amp;C ·Jewelers
99~3715

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

' MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Uglit .Hauilng,

1111 Slick .

992·2121
•

Pellet Stoves
3111 State Rt. 180
wJNatlonwlde Ina.
Gllllpolla, Oh. .

992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Fisher Funer.-1 Ho•e.
..DDUPORT, OHIO

.H••• National Bank

.SYUCUSI

0

Veterans Memorial

Rose's -xcavating.
Mt~H93

.

J .

Swisher &amp; Lohse

'

UCINE, OHIO

'I

·J

'·

' r

8

.

...,...

• .Custom ••d•

- - Cal Oecar E.

~·-··

• Soild Ylltyl •
replacement
windows
i Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

Giveaway
1 . . - Houto Dot. lila

,.
•

-c;

,.,

·4

· i rtor, IM-361-«112.

T•

! 2 Full Bloodocl lltlt _,..,
'. Spitz. 11 Montho Old, 114-441I o02•.
,

"VVSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court Sl POI't!9rcy, Ohio -

~

....•

Public Sale

I Auction

3 pnny k1Utn1.

'oLook for. die Red and White Awning"

304-112-2188

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

::992::..t:i;1;9:AI:l:ra:•:•:Ow::iler::l:·•:o:o-:2::9:1·::S6:::'oo:::~· ~~ ':.: 0:.: '!c"'e.r.

ERRAND

-••1

81 ..1102-4215.
1 Chock« Olonl Ancllllrlllrod
RobbHo, I illorllho Old, IM-3677047.
7
0

Complete Une of Errand Service.

linllryani"11112·2772
Olllco Houri: Mon.·Frl.
1:00-_,:30 pm
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

. .OHIO . ·,

Lool: 2 _ , . lilt Torrtor
SchOo
_
_
oloo, _old,
Wohomt

•moo.

Roofing, VInyl
R.placemant
Window., Blown

F_Ea..,_

WindoW., Glragu.

";

Orondo, Picking -~~~:'o,

gr~~:l:J ~'erA

Nu-. """ .....

Uconto Ploll
porltnll C o i l l - -

7

•IDDUPORT,

.

.,.
'

Fruth ·PharmatJ

Remodeling
StaplCompal"l

FREE ESTIMATES

MIDDUPORI,

915....7~

' . ~.

'

I

WE NEED YOUA.LISTINGSI
· GJve.UaA Call, ToUyl

.........

Birchfield ·funeral·

Howard L. Wrltesel
.ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

••Mr IIFFL!

GUHer Cleaning
Painting

llt'9tNI40 .

FRE_E EStiMATES

Co11le's0•it
livtrltrllall.

EYeitatlll11
614-247--4035
Now open for Fall
Season

Wed. thru Sal 9-5
Spfc/allz/ng:
Dried Materials
,pot pourri auppllea
. Helbal Cralta

~t-2168
1111/M 1fN

v

'

'!

TTW871.
111nn1 onor.dl ..-tna For A
Lilt Model SU.w AM liocll
FO!d~..Y!" ·Truck With Piptl On
Tho ..-L I Alto Hoi A Sian
On Tho Bock "AoiiNd." I W"to
SMn On R - U, Wool 01 Rio

lneulalkln, Storm
DOaro, Stann

POMEROY, OHIO . 742·233~

992·391$"

Uc,. No. 0182-27

IR~~hp ort

H2·2t75 · .,.,.

"YOUR BANK FOR (JIE"

Insurance

949·2038
949-2749

CaD 1·800..806-9482
er992-S710

GUVELY JUCT.OI;;·.
SAUS &amp; SAEIYICE•·

Far•ers Ban.k ··.

Williams &amp;Associates

FREE .CARD

...

' ..•

992·5020

992·2955

Slllrtlng Sun. Oct.
. tth Racine Legion
Post 1602 1:45 pm
Thla ld good for 1

Factory Only

King.Hardware
'.

&amp;14-~180

Are Yl!ll Too Busy few Running &amp;rands?
Let &amp;rand loy Do the
for You.

POIIEIOY, ·~~'

992·6491

992·2104

,,

I

•

rMIIIgL

At&amp;rlp.m.

BINGO

Announcements

Umestone
Gravel &amp; ·Coal

Craw's Family Restauront ·.

.

'

I

SYSTEM

Adolph's Dairy Valley

F1118Eati111Na

Beforelp.m.INve

12 Gauge

446-7400 '
800-757-PELLET
7366

-·-

OHIO· 992·2432.

992·2342

•

I

GRAVELY

Downing·Childs·Mullen•Musser
Insurance
•

!llllntlng. ._., • do II f
you. V.,. not aMble.

IIOW STAITIIIG
Forked Ru1
Sport••••
Gu1 Clult
Gu1 s•oot
Every Su1day
1:00 P.M.

HAULING

Weedeaters &amp;
chain saw.

Eaterlor

, ...... ,..,. out

CHESTER, .

~THE

POMEROY, OHIO

"

Heating, Inc.

-

Baum
Luml-er Co.
...

Ewing Funeral Home

,.... , ,., - ·

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

614-742·2i38

985·3301

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

l1terior &amp;

7131191 TFN

SAYRE rJtUCKING

Prevention Week :· ·~·
·Oct. 9- 1994 ·

Mf.o• -

Frame Repelr
NEW AUSED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAICES AIIODELS
ti2·71U OR
·ti2·55U OR
TOLL.fREE 1..11-141·1111
DARWIN, OHIO

I

Gllllpalla, Oh.
Or Call u. AJ 44MD7hnd

Mower Clinic

Fire Safety eek
Sugar Run Flour·~ills
POMEROY, OHIO
Oct. 9-15 1994 · 992·2115 .
Valley Lu111ber &amp; Supply Ingels Furniture and Jewelry

LINDA'S
Specl•llzlngln Cuellom I PAINTING &amp; CO•

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Joel. S.J.N

SPONSOR

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

~\

adory -e
Basllal

992·2269

' ... ,,!5 t

1

CARPENTER SERVI~E

GUN SHOOTS
sa'l' 6 30 P.M.

a

•,':&lt;'

renting
.,
,a car.
Come see
•
us at ...

YOUNG'S

··.

ioTICEOF ELECTION ON November, · 1994,
the
oRoo111Addltlona
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF question of levying e tax, In
oNew Glragea
THE TEN MILL UMITAnON excooa of the lin mill
-Electrical &amp; Pluinblng
'lloviMcl Cocto, Sectlono
llmHotlon, 'lor the bonotlt of
1101.11(0), 5'1ilt.19, 5705.25 Letort Townehlp lor the
:,Rooflolng&amp; Exterl
·Notice Ia hereby given purpoHoiF)reprotoc11on.
.,nter r
or
lllot In purauenco of o
Sold lox bolng: A renewal
AI., :
•
P1lnllngaleo concrete
utlon of the Boord of , of en existing tax of 1 mill ot
~
k
ahlp TrutiHo of tho 1 rete not exctocllng 1 (ono)
wor
_·
ehlp of Scipio, mlllofor eoeh one dollar of
(L-L. Q.lv
(FREE ESTIMATES)
evllle, Ohio, pootocl on · veluatlon, which omounto to
•r
V.C. YOUNG Bl
lth day of July 111M ten cent• ($0.10) lor eoch
BIILIIIG2-6215
1- B
will bo eu"-111~ to 1 ono hundred , doll oro of
p
Ohl
ftto of the poop~ of nld vtluetlon, lor live yttre (5). ...__ _ _ _..:1112MM=::;~ L _ _
oma-ra_v_
• .,:w~1~=.11~:U"
itllldlvlalon at 1 General
The Polla lor nld El~ctlon .,.,
llecnon to bo held In the will open at &amp;:30 o clock
'lllwnahlp of Scipio Ohio et . A.M. end remtln opon until
,._ place• of voting 7:30 o'clock P.M. of told
on the 8th dey of doy. 0 oc1· Se 1 26 1994
1114
I hi
at
p. •
!liitatton of levying tax, In
By order of tho
lt.:lllne111; Cliatom
exc••• of the ton mill • .
Board of Ellcllona,
liMitation for tho boneftt of
of Melga County, Ohio.
s . t.Coveral Carpel
lclplo Town'ehlp tor the
Henry L. Hunter, Cholrmon
Shrubs Shapped
Convertible Tops.
llfHpoM of llolntalnlng end
BHI D. Smith, Director.
· Antique Care,
-~ comoteritt.
(10!11, 18,25 (11) 1; 4TC
and Removed
80111 Seata
· S.ld tubolng: A,._, - -·- ' - - - - - Mls. Jobs.
ef on exlllllng tax of .5 mill
Public Notice
Ol'lrllOYtn~
it • rate not exctocllng .5
· 41484 surchlt Ail.
lliltla for aach one dollor of NOTICE OF ELECnON ON
Pawoy, Oh. 457U
•uatton, whiCh tmounta to TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
114-11112-7587
::: c:::::d~·,o:r:r!"'~~ THE TEN ·MILL LlllrTAnON
•ullllon, lor live 151 yHra.
Aovltocl Code, Sections
Polla lor llld Election 3501.11(0), 5705.19, l5705.25
. .......
,.,.
Notice Ia hereby given
Will open 11 1:30 o'clock that In pureuance ·or a .
BINGO •
• •· and remoln open until Resolution of tho Boord 111
EVERY THURSDAY
't='O o'clock P.M. of 11ld Township fruoteoo of the
!illY. ·
TownohiP of orange,
EAGLES
liai1ld SopL :It, 11114
Tuppers Plaine, Ohio ,
CLUB
By order oltht pooood on lht 11th doy of
llollrd of Elootlone, July, 1994 there will bo
IN POMEROY
·
o1 lhlel County, O!Uo. submlt,tod lo • vote of. the
6:45p.m.
lilitenn L. 1Mi1ar, Chlllrman · people of iald aubdlvlslon ltiiOII.Ie Rates
· ii - llltii D. Smith, DI1'8Ctor. at a Oenerel Election to bo
Special Early Bird
.~ tt, 11, 21, (11) t; 4TC
held In the Townehlp ot
$100 Payoff .
01'1111111, Ohio, at the regular
Thlald good lor 1
plocla o1 ~otlng therein, on
Pubic Nollce
the 8th dey of· November,
FREE card.
1184, the qu11t1on of
Lie. No•.0051-342
revylng I tax, In oXColt of
11t:Wt21fn
tho ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Orange
Townohlp lor the purpo10 of
Fire prvlectlon.
RACINE
Said tex bolng: A renewal
of on exlotlng lox of 2 mlllo
ot o rote not exceeding 2
mills tor each one dollar of
949-2804 .
valuation, which omounte to·
twenty cents ($0.20) for
Complete Chain
each one hundred dolloro of
valuation, tor live (5) yoara.
Saw Service &amp; Parts
The Polio lor ttld Election
Echo Saw's in ,stock
will open ot 1:30 o'clock
A.M. and· remain open until
Christmas Layaway
7:30 o'clock P.M. of told
Avail!lble on '
doy.

e

You may not have much· time to
decide what to do~ so it's important
to know these basic fire safety tips.
They could save your lifel

1. Keep fresh batteries in your home
smoke detectors to maximize potential
escape time.
· 2. AlWays' make note of where fire exits are
locaterl when entering any building.
3. If your dothing catches on fire, roll back
and form ori the floor to put it out.

RACINE 1fiRE D£1117
l"lo

Public Notice

,,

'

I

•

Yard Sale · ·

Employment Serv1:es

..

__
--w·-.•
-11

Help Wanted

.......,

AVON I AI -

!

...

I -.;:

All_. AVON Qlrtol- .....

~~:::~~

AVON CHRISTIIAIIALEI •.,.

A-INM

lioou

1 " •

Houotv-""""'

T........,

Oplonol lf

A-. I '-W- Ulot To lol Ann,
441'W

whliii:

�••, r

.

,•

Pomeroy-Middleport,.Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 - St. Laurent
5 Actr811 Goldie
9 Ac:tor Sliver
12 S.nyard

oouncl

BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie

u

COUNTRY FURNITURE

ATZ. NOATH
IIFI.EY~LEAIANT
Ir....to,7JIC.-r
.,.._ oullo, toblolohiiN

_A ...

10·11-114

10 52

•Q 3
J 62
o!oA 3 2
EAST
•7 3
IJI0742
t K

"""p.

SMkll.
- - ... W.
HouNi llon-loiN,I'rr.
0000 UIID APPUAHCEI
-

+Q 7
olo9765

4W.!. .... ..... :

1'110

-..
. . .010;
. . . .1...........
- . . . ."""'
. 011

SOUTH

- -llplll.
.... 010; ... f14.lll.
11117

•A Q 9 8 6
18 6
tA 53
o~oK

IIICKEHI RIANITUAE
Ho•11ood
No IIIPMnnr r, Hot n hold fw.
~ w ............. Rd. Pt.
PIIMIIill, WY, 111 104471-1410,

f

Vulnerable: Neith~r
. Dealer: West
South
West North East
Pass Pass
Pass
1 "'
Pass 3 •
Pass
4 "'
Pass
Pass
Pass

BARNEY

I GOT YOU A NEW
OUTFIT FER YORE
BIRFDAY, MAW

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

Q4

GOODY II

t3 C8pllln of The
Poquocl
14 Anglo-Saxon
money

15 --poly
t6 Adherent of a
king
18 1nvent01
WIIHney
t9 Secret - " '
20 Hand lotfon
Ingredient
21 Actreaa
Mooroi\!Oad
23 Baeeball stat
· 25 Anesthetic
26 Parachute
delivery
30 Word lor word
32 Eggs
33 Wopden tub
. 34 Eatrangod
' 36 Actreoa-

DOWN
1 Antiquity
2 Brooking ol'the
law
3 Edlly
4 Firmament
5 Stringed

6
7
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9
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Monner
881ketbell org.
Agllllo
ApproxlmiiBIY
(2 wds.)

Opening lead: • K

NOW WE

CAN GIT

What's it
all about?

MARRIED
AG'IN II
.I

'

By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS

I CAN'T PLA'f FOOTeALL

DON'T WORRI{ ABOVT IT,

IN TilE RAIN, SIR ... M~
6LA5SES ARE F066ED UP..
I CAN'T SEE A :r'JIIN6 .. .

MARCIE ..TACKLE AN'I'BODI(

WIIO COMES HEAR '(OLJ ..

54 Mlecellanloul
Mercha~lee

FRANK &amp; ERNt:ll'l'

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WATER LINE IPECIAL: 1141noh
200 Pll $11.11; 1 Inch liDO Pll

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spade jack. losing to West's king. Back
came another club. South drew the re·
maining trumps, cashed the diamond
ace and finessed dummy's jack. But
East produced the queen: one down.
"Boy, how unlucky can I get"" said

,.

~~:::;;~~\ending his question to sound

~

"Actually you were lucky," observed
Nbrth . "But you didn'vbenefit from

good"fortune."
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" West had already produced the A·

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Freddie North is a well·known author and player in England. He used
to wrile stories about a fictional Aunt
Agatha, which I didn 't enjoy. But for
the last two or three years he has
been writing an excellent series in
Bridge Magazine entitled " What' s it
all about?" Arguably, he has left the
best to last: counting. Today 's deal
from his article is easy lor some, im·
possible for others.
North uses a limit raise, showing a ,
maximum pass with at least four
trumps. ,In North America , North
might respond two clubs, the Drury
convention, giving the same message,
except tl!at he may hold only three
trumps . Drury has the advantage of
keeping the auction lower, permitting
extra investigation .
West cashed two top hearts before
switching to the club jack. Declarer
won with dummy's ace and ra n the

for Sale

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rof'oe} TO

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·~TAAT

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K of hearts, the club jack and th e
spade king. Yet he passed as dealer,
so how could he possibly hold the diamond queen as well ? You should have
cashed your two top diamonds . And
East did have the doubleton queen ."
Count those points to turn guesses
into certainties.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeleOrJIVCrpner cryptograms are crea1eo !rom quorarrons by famous people. past and presen1
Each teuer rn me c1pher stands ror another Today"s clue F equals K

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People always tell me I'm very stubborn and they
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because in !'(lost cases I'M RIGHT.

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your reason ~ welt enough. you may not

SAGfTIARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) Have .win their support.
!he courage of your convictions to.day · GEMINI (May 2t -June 20) Persons w11 h
where your ideas are concerned. Don't be

f.lcrcn.mdlse

Houllhold
Goodl

win the debate in the opening round .
you-could end up alienat•ng your pals.
to state your zodiac sign .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) From your
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You might vanlage po•nlloday. you may see ways to
have a short fuse today: Woe unto those help 'your fami ly by mak •ng some
who anger you! The probabtlities for mis- charrges . However. tl you don·t expl at n

whom you're involved might have better

ontomodaled by a know-ll·all who moght try

ideas lhan you do today. Convincing you

to discount your perfectly valid ideas in

of that. however. could prove an imposs1·

fronl of others . ·
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Instead
ol using fuods ,for new endeavors or merchandise. it might be wise.. at this time to
use some of your money to pay off old
obligaiions.
'
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) It'll be easy
Wednesday. Oct 12. 1994
. to get along well wtth almost everyone
Those who. are in 'a posilion to improve i' tqday except tor ,, someone you've
your lot on hie may confide tn y~u more !n. exchanged cross W&lt;&gt;rds woth rece~tly . If
the )'ear ah~ad than they have 1n the past you sense storm sognals. ayood this perCdnfid!!ntial information you receove can son like the plague.
be used profitably. .
. . .
PISCES (Feb. ZO.March 20) ~ YoU expect
liBRA (Sept. 23:(lct. 23) Socoahzong and others 10 dQ thongs fOr you loday Ihal you
bejng around olheos could be fun today as ' can easily do for yoursell. you could be
lo.ng as you don't' spend too much tome ., .disappoonled. 'I' our fnen
. ds aren I goong to
-.volh them. Your soctal graces moght not be '" lhe mood lobe used .
last long. ~ibra, treat yourseH to a borthday ARIES (March 21-Aprll II) In conversagift. S.Od tor yQUr Astr~Graph pt'edtctoons . tions wilh frtends today. be car~lul not to
tor the year ehe'ad by mailing ~1 .25 to : impose your voews on them . You mighl

ble task. Don't let you1 ego cloud your
judgment.
' fiANCER (June 2t-July 22) Vou will . ·

;"':"\..

.....

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have very constructive advice on the ways

someone else shovld manage his/her/
aff~irs today , yet. in your own dealings,
you moght no1 draw upon your own wis·
dom.
.
.
.. LEO (~uly 23·Aug. 221 Beware of the
inclination today lo treat liQhl situations
solemnly . Try not to take yoursell or the
world too serious ly. You don 't need
tummy trouble or headaches.
· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 T ake•care of
tasks that require know·how and concan-.
tralion early in the day. Time mighl not be
, on your side today, and •• the clock ticks
on , temperament and talenls cou ld
1
become dulled.
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I'IG1 1~ Dally Sentinel

TUesd&amp;Y,October11,1994

Poineroy.-.Middlepcirt, Ohio

TaylOr

Sla~e'&amp;uction re~enactment quells ·some ~ritics ·

celebrates
birth·day
Joshi~~ Taylor, son of Steve and

Brenda Mill« Taylor, was honored
on his fifth birthday with a pany
during his kindergarten class.
. Attending were his mother, his
teacher, Debra McCall, Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Andrea Bartrum,
Alisba Compson, Michael Duvall,
Rene Edmonds, Kelsey Gibbs, Linsey Gibbs, Nikki Ginther, Joshua
~.• Jesse Hanson, Larry Hess,
Michael Hudson, Corey Jarvis,
Bethany King, Dustin Knapp,.
Adam Lamben, Nicholas McKni_sht, Samantha Raines, Michael
Richmond, Randi Searles, Timothy

JOSHUA TAYLOR
Spires, Brittany Variail, and Morgan Wolfe.
A Power Ranger cake and
koolaid were served and treats
.were given to each child.

By ALISON FREEHLING
Assoc:latecl Press Wrher
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. {AP)
- An NAACP official shouted
angrily, protesters sang "We Shall
Ov.crcome" and boos and claps
rippled through the restless, nervous crowd. A weeping black
woman pleaded for people to keep
an open mind.
The slave aucpon was about to
start.
·
·
But after Monday's poignant
dramatization of the real-life 1773
sale of four black people in
Williarnsburg, it was the NAACP
official, Jack Gravely, who was
wiping tears from his eyes.
"I would be lying if I said I
didn't come out with a different
view. The presentation was passionate, moving and educational,"
said Gravely, political action direc•

I

NHL's
future
at stake

tor for the SUite National Associa- clothes like those worn by slaves of · ened history and dealt with· an .
tion for the Advancement of Col- the period.
e isode 100 painful to liandlc in a
, ored People.
·
One woman playing a pregnant
The mock auction was part of a house slave named Lucy begged to
"This is P\llC and simple enter·
re-enactment of a day in the life of be bought ·by the same man who tainment, matins money off peoColonial Williamsburg, now a' 'had just purchased her husband ple's qppression," said Andrew
tourist town of restored 18th centu- Daniel for 62 British poimds.
Highsmith, a white student from
ry houses and shops. •
"Please, please don 'I do this. Cincinnati. "It's not showing the
More than 2,000 people, mostly Please, Mr. Taylor, buy me 100," true history of what it was like 10
white, watched the drama from a the sobbing WOIJ!an SBid. But Mr. be a slave. Where Is the story of
cobblestone street. Some were Taylor did not top a bid of 50 people whq fought back?"
weeping when it fmished.
pounds and Lucy, still wj:eping, · But Larry E'arl, a black actor
Others were 'still angry.
was led away from her husband.
who has taken pan in several re"If you want to show slavery,
Another slave, a carpenter, enactments, said one recent sbow
don't do it with some watere4- fetched a high price of 70 pounds depicted a slave killing his abusive
down version where people clap at - his tools were included in the master. "There were two forms of
the end;" said Jelani Roper, a black sale. A woman whose master had resistance apinst slavery - active
senior at the College of William ·recently died was bought by her and p,assi ve - and we showed
and Mary.
husband, a free black, for 42 both, ' he said.
The re-enactment was based on pounds.
\
Cunis Harris of the Southern
historical records of four slaves
Organizers said these scenes Christian Leadership Conference
who were sold in 1773. Four actors dramatized the horrors of slavery, remained unconvinced that the porwere led out unchained, in simple Protestets complained they cheap- trayal was educational.

=-like ~lion.

A cruise-in has been planned as
of Saturday afternoOn's Saturday at Showcase, Meigs County, at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
· The event is being sponsored by
the Oldies but Goodies Car Club.
Reglslralion lime rrom noon to
2 p.m. and awards will be presented at 3 p.m. The regislllllion fee is
· $5 and trophies will be awarded to
:.the Tq~20, Best of Show Original
and Best of Show Modified.
Music from the SO's and 60's
~will be featured ,during the after·noon so residents are invited to
·dust off their blue suede shoes, put
'on their poodle skirts and bobby ·

made rugs. The emphasis of the Senior Citizens Center will be
There will be a variety of enter- exhibits is on showing the creative making apple buuer on Saturday
tainmerit on both days. ranging Ullents of Meifs County folk.
afternoon, the Meigs County His·
from country and western 10 gospel
A flower show carrying out the torical Society will be serving soup
and contemporary, in the tent theme., "!75th Anniversary of beans and combresd in the cabin
which will be set upon the midway. Meigs County - Honorin¥ the on both days, the Herbalists will be
The tent has been provided by Past, Looking to the Future' w.ill there with samples ilf foods made
Bank One, Farmers Bank, Home be held in the junior fair building with herbs, and several booths will
National Bank, and Peoples Bank. under tile direction or Janet Bolin be serving sandwiches and soft
There is no admission charge and .of Rutland, past president of the · drinks;
the public invited to auend.
Ohio Association of Garden Club!l.
For the kids there will be a pet·
All of the arts and crafts exhibits
The Mei~.s Division of the ting zoo operated by Meigs 4-H
will be Meigs Countians. Booths Southeast Oh10 Railroad Club will clubs and the Southern FFA in one
will feature handcrafted wooden have a model ttain layouL
of the buildings in the barn area. .
items, floral designs, baskets,
There will be plenty to eat and
Hours of the Showcase are Sat·
ceramics, food items and hand- sample at the Showcase. The . urday, 10 a.m. to fi :30 p.m. and
Sunday, noon to 5:30p.m.

ley Publishing Co. which co-spon·
sors the contest with the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation DistricL
FALL CARNIVAL
Annual fall carnival of the
Chester Elementary Scliool wil! be
held Saturday at the school. The 50
cent admission charge entitles participants to the games, door prizes,
cakewalk, and refreshments. A
haunted house will be a feature

.VoL 41, NO. 111
. CapyrW!t 1114

.

Encourage yourself 1n the Lord
By PASTOR LAWRENCE
FOREMAN
Rejolcillg Life Cburdlill Middle·
port
.

David staying distressed he encouraged (hazoked) himself in the Lord.
He went before the Lord and asked
what he should do. In limes when
we are depressed or distressed do
we go before our Lord or do we
concentrate on howC't
is?
.
We can encourage
ok) our
self just as David · . vid wrote
in the book of Psalms, "Yea though
I walk through the valley of shadow of death I will fear no eviL"
. Psalms 27:1-'- ''The Lord is my
light and mySalvation; whom shall
I fear?"
Psalm 27:10- "Though my
mother and father, forsake me the
LOrd will take me up."
Romans 8:37 - "We are more
than conguerors lhrqtigh him that
lov_ed us..
· .
This scripture says we are
MORE than, not just conquerors.
To be a conqueror is to recover
what you,have lost but, to lie more
than a cpnqueror is to n-:cover more
than what you started wtth.
David·did just that, God told
him to go an ftght the battle and he
ended up with more than what he
started with. When we get discouraged do we,HAZOK our self in the
Lord? There will always bC billies
to fight as long as we are on this
earth. Glory to God we can come
out of the battle being 11\Dre than a
conqueror.

Researchers
develop cancer
diagnostic test

'

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•.

'

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Meigs County health director
.s.u pports tougher code rulings

on

Jones to address
Meigs Democrats

.

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·Eyewitness expect~d
to appear at hearing

.

men·weie

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Mei s. eligible
for 25,000 in
state pto.g/ram

.: :supreme Court
.denies Southern
-,Coal's appeal .

Warth-Warner

w•

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21eotlane, 11 ......
A llultiiMdlllne. ,_.,.,.

than 300 homes and house more
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) than 800 clients, Wymer said.
More
than
400
mentally
retarded
•' By GEORGE ABATE
Local agencies send workers
adults
will
be
able
to
live
more
;: Sentinel News Staff
·
into
the homes, which house up to
independently
under
a
$7
million
,,, Rutland officials continued to
four
adults,
to periodically check in
program
the
state
Controlling
:' push a 2.S-mill equipment levy at
on
the
residents
and provide help
Board
has
approved.
· :·· ttuegular COIDICil meeting Tuesday
The
board
on
Tuesday
approved
wben
needed.
: 'nigbL
a request to release the money so
The Controlling Board, made up
; ·' The five-year levy will raise
the
Department
·
o
f
MenUII
Retardaof
six legislators and. a president
$6,000 a. year to buy a new back·
tion
can
begin
giving
it
to
local
who
represents Gov. George
: .. hoe and truck, Rutland Mayor.
governments
interested
in
particiVoinoviCh,
also gave the go-ahead
: .JoAnn Eads said. The money will
pating
in
the
supported living pro- to Ohio EnvironrnenUII Protec:tion
: ' be set aside strictly for these purgram.
Agency to borrow nearly $1.5 mil' chases and not be spent on salaries
The
money
will
be
used
to
buy
lion
to stan a voluntary environ: or other eipenses, she addecL
an
estimated
163
home$
in
69
menUII
cleanup prognun.
: · In other action, council decided
colinties
and
adapt
them
for
menThe
money, from the Hazardous
; unanimously to apply for an Issue
IIJ'IIder at Rlwrvlew, t:;ourtney, 4, mil ill l'rant,
UIIly
retarded
or
developmentally
Waste
Facility
Management Fund,
EASTERN
LEVY
PREPARATION· II grant that would replace abow
Caadace, 3. Cuale createcllhe plctu!e for Ibis
disabled
adults,
said
Rick
Wymer,
will
cover
initial
expenses and the
Eastern
Local
Schools
are
preparina
ror
lhelr
· ·800 feet of line to the village water
"l'ntest oo her own lime as the retil l!lf the stuassistant
deputy
direciOr.
.
ftrSI
year's
operating
costs of the
levy
reuewal
tor
lhli
November's
elecdoD.
A
dlatank and the water tank.
..
dents in tbe ditllrlct, Mluid said. The 4.4-mUI
Counties can apply for grants, Voluntary Action Program which
lricl-wlde
studeDt
poster CODtesl will be judpd
:
Both the lines and the tank are
matched by local money, to reim- the so-called "brownfields" bill
at 7 ·p.m. Od. 19 at the next levy committee renewal levy will not IIICI'USI! taxes, be said. The
' ·now 40 years old, Councilman
levy w111 pay geoeratlng operating expenses,
burse
local agencies for the costs of enacted this year.
. ·
meeting,
Superillteodent
Roo
Millafd
said.
Pic. Steve Jenkins said. If the lines
salaries and buy some new boob, :ie added.
the
homes
and
improvements,
The
law
allows
owners
of conlured
from
left
are
lhe
ColliDs'
sislers
Cllaril,
: .failed, the village would lose its
Wymer said.
taminated. propeny to voluntarily
a seco'!d IJ'ader at Riverview, Cassie, a ftrst (Sentinel photo Georee Abate)
to protect itself in a fire, he
The lnaxlmum amount of·the ·clean i!P tlie sites In exchange ror a
grants varies with the number of promise they won't be sued later if
A YCIIf 1180, the project was esticlients in the program. Small coun- the state orders further cleanups.
mated to cost S2n.ooo and the
ties, such as Morgan, Meigs, Harri- Property owners also have the right
. 'IQCallO percent match would ml"M
son, Hocking and Vinton, are eligi- to sue previous owners to recoup
a $27,500 village bill.
ble for up to $25,000. Cuyahoga the cost of the cleanup.
• · The Local 18 Ohio Operating
and Franklin counties could see as
The money will be repayed to
· E~ineers Apprentice program
much as $767,000.
·
tiie hazardous waste facility fund
: P ~out its equipment ,..Y 87GEORGE.UATE
To investigate a property, the thejiCIInits, Horton said.
Since the program began in withiJt three years with money the .
, mom!~~ Eads added. The J"!UC Sea...,UiewsSDif
· health department must have a
Propeny o.wners must comply 1991, the depanment has spent program's users generate, said pro, ~demohs ed the .old ~utland Hig. .
Meigs Count:w, Health Director signed ~..J.;nt- which 90 per· with insect and rodent extermina- about $13.5 million to buy more
COntinued
p&amp;ge·3
' ~Jar·
• .,,. ~ .... ". -'"' :- .. · Jon Jilcobs ~ MiddlepOn cllif iif tlie'~ ~rue to do, he tion, garli'age disposal, screens;
~ EadsW.!i:C VllfY thankful for It, and other villa8es to make stronger, added. People ilo not nnderstand storm doors and windows and
! Once debris is removed,.the liP more enforceable law~ for ~egli- the complaints are confidential maintenance standards.
Foundations, exterior openings,
; will become a parking lot for the .gent lan~lor~, he s.11d durms. a ~C:ff;! ~ forces someone to
stairs
and porches, and plumbing
• civic center and baseball fields_ Tu~y mtcrview wtth The Daily
.
will
be
inspected. Each property
·, behind the hill, she said.
-5enunel.
.
_
Second, the ~plaint needs to
On Monday Middleport Coun be a valid violation of health or must have a kitchen sink, bath·
Vil!/:la
cth residents
should be
•· of three readings
.
·
trash burn' 15
· cil. passed the first
safety, Jacobs said.
· room, bathtub or shower, hot and
"Peter Lawson Jones is known
remm
at no
.
mg
of a new ordinance to make buildOnce these steps are taken, the cold water lli)es, trash siOillge facilPe~r Lawson Jones, Democratic
throughout the state as a dynamic
allowed,
she
added.
I
.
ode
ru1
iri
'
ularl
.
I
'
h
h
I
h
candidate
for
lieutenant
governor,
ities
and
means
of
escape
to
ground
"We try to ~I against ftres IDj! c
es s cter, JIIIIUC
y case IS no on11er 10 t e ea t
·
will deliver the keynote address at speaker," Maison said. "He has a
h
.
" With landlordt. Pomeroy passed a ddcf!ftments' JUrisdiction, he level.
.,
, ·an d 11 ~ a1so or t e nuisance,
similar measure~ months ago.
a
. Then, the county prosecutor
In other council business Mon- the Meigs County Democratic . tremendous ability to build enthusiParty's annual fall dinner Saturday asm and to direct our effons, as a
' Eadslndi~~d a! tae.kin
liu'cal
' With previous laws, the health will press cltaraes onl:y if no effort day, the board:
• •
• VI u s
g up .po
deparunents' hands remained tied is made to resofve the problem.
- Reported monthly balance at the Meigs County Multipurpose party, on behalf of our Democratic
candidates."
.. Sl~s m ~wn must pay a S2S fee,
when enforcing and investigating
Middleport has had few housing statements for September. The gen· Senior Center.
"This year's elections provide
whic~ will be refunded wh~n ~ complaints about lax landlords, complaints, Jacobs added.
Jones is an attorney from Shaker
era! funds' balance is $31,600.97.
us
with an unprecedented opportu• . the s1gns are tom downl v~e Jacobs said.
·
\ "Most (complaints) have been Deficit balances were listed in the Heights. He graduated magna cum
nity
to initiate a real change in govClerk-Treasurer Sandy Smtth
·
"We wish (the villages) would for trash or prbage," he said. "Our following funds: miniature golf, · laude from Harvard with a degree
ernment
- from the county court·
COntinued on page 3
exert more authority," Jacobs said. basic dtiloSOJJhy 1$ to treat every- ftre truck, economic development, in business, as well as Harvard
house
to
the Statehouse in Colum"We've done everything we can in body l'airly. We have 10 giw every- public transportation, recreation, . Law School.
He has served as a prosecuting bus," Maison said.
the past to wort with them. We'll one due process."
cemetery, arts council and Issue n.
"Our candidate for governor,
c:Ontinue to do everything we can."
Under the new MiddlepM ordi· The following funds were in the attorney, councilman and vice
Rob
Burch, and Peter Lawson
mayor, as well as in several other
The health department does the nance, landlords must pay a $25 black: street maintenance, fire
Jones
will return the state of Ohio
best it possibly can to cover the annual permit fee for inspection,. equipment, tree planting, water sys- positions in local, state, and nationto
the
people. In fact, our slate of
475 square miles in the COUJ)ty with along with a $25 fee each time a tem improvement, water, sanitary al government. In 1976, he was a
state
candidates
promise new and
spe~:cbwritcr
and
spokeS!Dl!!!
fgr
.
sewer, water meter trusts, ODNR
only .two ipve$li&amp;alhtg offic11r~. ~eDAAtJCllv~ !Ill ~enL
Jacobs said. In addition to villages'
About 400 ~e~~UII properties are waierways, revolving loan and the successfulfJimmy Carter-Wal- exciting lesdership. Our legiSlative
, :By The Associated Preis
ter Mondale presidential campaign. candidates, State Rep. Mark Malcomplaints abo11t garbage nui- located in this village, but only 70 refuse.
'
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld sances and unsafe buildinJs. tbe are considered substandard, said
Jones currently serves as vice one, State Sen. Jan Michael Long
- Announced the Middlepon
; the power of federal regulatory deparunent is maildated to mspect Councilwoman Beth Stivers, the Volunteer Fire Department made chairman of the Cuyahoga County and Congressman Ted Strickland,
: agencies in a dispute over the food services, the schools and coordinata of the rule changes.
54 calls in September, including Community Mental Health Board have outstanding records which we
: pumping of iron-tainted water from sewage sites.
seven fue and 47 emergency crew. and sits on the board of trustees are sure will take them through
; a flooded coal mine in southeastern
and executive committee of the election day with flying colors. We
Enforcement of current law is
"This is primarily for slum- A total of 165 manhours in fire,
Ohio.
· ,
Cuyahoga
Community College · have the opportunity to put Joel
EMS
and
rescue
training,
while
based on fairness - even with lords," Slivers had said.
:. The justices on 'I'uesdily denied repeat offenders, Jacobs said.
The a'dinance intends to beauti- 149 hours were logged in equip- Foundation. He is also an active Hyatt in the U.S. Sen,te, where he
; Southern Ohio Coal's appeal of a
volunteer with the United Negro will continue Howard Metzen"Our fust step ~ to get people to fy the village and keep tenants' ment maintenance.
: lower co!Ut ruling in favor of feder- try to cooperate. We don'tlike to safe, wbile protec:ting Jllopelly valCollege
Fund:
· baum's tradition or service to
- Learned the Middleport
' "a! agencies that tried to stop the throw people on ~ street because ues, she added.
For
his
community
work,
Jones
Ohio's working men ·and women.
Police Department made 40 arrests,
Locally, Jack Slavin is set :o
was
inducted
into
the
Shaker
they have a trashy yard," Jacobs
Building inspector Arnold John- served 357 meals and investigated
court's action came said.
Heights
Alumni
Association's
Hall
become our next county commis10
accidents
in
September.
son will grant the ~ owners
of Fame in 1987, and has been hon- siJner, and put a Democratic
100 late to affect the pumping. The
ored several times by the ·Jaycees, mlljority on that board for the fll'St
· work was finished and the mine
having earned the Outstanding time in years."
reopened Feb. 2S.
Young Clevelanders Public Service . "Because of this outstanding
However, the coal comp•ny
Award, as well as an award from ur ket and the Democratic tradition
.;could face federal fines because the
' the U.S. Department of Housing . o: progressive leadership, it is a
. authority of the agencies was
and Urban Development for meri- great year to be a Democmt, and 1
·· teSIOred.
torious service.
;.. The mine, abou' 100 miles
anticipate that this year's dinner
Jones' wife, Lisa, is the registrar will be a big success."
.)outheast of Columbus near
,
for Shaker Heights City School
'Wilkesville, was flooded with
A social hour will begin at 5
District. They have two children, p.m., and Jones will lead the pro·about I billion gallons of Walt.r in
and are members of the Mount gram, beginning at 6 p.m. Tickets
•july 1993.
:
Zion Congregational Church.
, . About 300 miners were forced
for the event are $10.00 per peisorl
Party Chairman Sue Maison and are available at the door, or
outofW&lt;d.
anticipates a large crowd for the from members of the Democratic
Several weeks later, Southern
annual evenl
::Ohio Coal began pumping the
Executive Committee.
·.watet from the mine and into a
•pearby crcdt.
... . But the U.S. EnvironmenUII Pro~~ction Asency and the Interior
~t&gt;epartment'a Office of Surface
•Mining ~plaiDed that the water
'
I
'
··had bish acid and iron contenl ,
i : The agencies abo Slid the COD·
The pR*.'CUtion is planning to call an eyewitness to the stand
: taminated water was. t!lllng fish
Friday·
m the preliminary hearing of a Huntington. W.Va., man
·•111d other wildlife and could' be a
accused of murder. ·
_
"
lhealth hazard. Tho qenci~ said
Prosecuting AtiOrney B~e~~t Saunders said this
. the wit!tbe coal company was illegally
ness may be called Friday at the hearing for Micheel~olfe, 38.
i~ the Will« and tried 10 stqJ
SHS HOMECOMIN(J CANDU)ATEs- Lew1a ud lady Pickett, Letart raus; lrudy
He dii:l not me- the 1WIIC of the witness. Soluvien added that the
Fift &amp;&gt;Gillett 1 uw.· 8ealan w11 'fie r. 111e ddt Roa11t, d1111tter of Gar7 aad Terl Rnslll,
WW4JOG used in the murdcr has not yet been found.
._.
Rad-e, aad C.ra.tJ R_,., dnpta' rl Mar·
~ 'lbe':t:=n~t=
Wolfe allegedly shill Eddie A. Ferguson, 41, Crown City, in the
r119N Soadtlra H•••~•lq Q- ,.ulll tile •IIIII aad De,,le Roulll, Raclae. Atteadaaa
head.with a ~ on Oct. 4. He thel. fled to Huntington, where
wbuaer to lie j:IOWII. at .SaMJioera'lltlo•-'=&amp;..±-, ,.,.._ 11911', frca ~"""wan A1kia
he turned himself m to the city police.
· ,
1111 p11t ....... 'fltla~ CUMd,._-, lep - - ...,.._
·
lela:~ ..... dlap• r1 Slllrley Mallord, daiP"r rl M•ty ~ aod Calh7
Wolfe was UlnsporiCd 10 the Gallia eow.y Jail last Thmtday,
'tlllorla rlllldae; topll.-ort Allber
D1111 -•d tile 18te·Darrell D11a1, Raelae;
where he awaits the ~ on a $250,1XXJ cilsh bond. His helring
Kadra Norrll, di-..ter
r1
G•rw
lid
Dona
'
.a
rl
S~
is
set for 2 p.m. lit the Gallipolis Municipal Court of J~· Willianl·
..,...
-•
ud
,Jad'erC...... daqllta'riTodd
S. Medley.
I.
Norris, Raclae; Tray Pickett, daailllter ~r ·· aad
Cmmi•rllacble. .
, ·

·'.=

{

va. .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 12,1994

,,evy

~

There are times when Christians
get discouraged and downhearted.
Yes, this does happen to,Cbristians.
It is not a sin to gel discouraged or
attmction.
BIRTHDAYS RECOGNIZED
Dinner wiU be served rrom 5 to
Thirty-six students at the even depressed, but it is a sin to
stay there. We need to eileourage
8:30 p.m. and other activities will Chester Elementary School with
ourselves in the LOrd.
be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. The August and September birthdays
· There was a man in the Bible
public is invited.
were given special recognition
who ,got discollflll(ed, his name was
recently at the school. They
Dav1d. David did not wait for
received certificates, stickers, a
someone
else to encourage him he
CARD SHOWER'
pencil and a cupcalce for lunch. The
sang songs to himself and to God.
Relatives and friends have party was paid for with funding
The word Hazok in Hebrew means
planned a card shower for Jack Sar- from Rural Demonstration Grant
to encourage, make strong, stabigent, Box 236, Racine, in obser- Monies,
lize.
·
vanc~ of his birthday.
!!! I S~my~l C!tJI~I 30 .~av.ill
and his men went to Ziklag, but the
Amalekites had already raided Zitlag and had taken the women and
children captive. When David got
'1:1 at the church.
Pickens and Sherry Smith. They there the citY. had been burned with
It was announced that the Ladies used "Neighbors" as the title and fire. David and his men lifted up
Fellowship wiU meet at the church scripture from .Mark 12, along with there voice and wept untfl there
on Dec. I with Bradford to have readings "A Home Town Witness" was no strength left in them.
charg~ of the program.
and "The Man Next Door and David's two wives had been taken
captive.
·
A church hayride was planned Today",
Verse 6 in Chapter 30 ,says tl)al
for 5:30 p.m. at the home of Dave
Paula Pickens and Sherry Smith
and Cberie ,WU1ial1110n. The fruit· &gt;&lt; sened refreshments to Kariita ~ David was sreitly diatressed
sunshine basket will be given to Stump, Cathy Dyer. Becky because the people were talking
Jim Spencer. Becky Amberger will Amberger, Diana Bing, Jane . about stoning htm because they
have charge of communion in Hysell, Charlotte Haning, Suzie were bitter. It says that instead of
October, and Nancy Morris will be Will, aild Gerry Lightfoot.
hostess and have devotions in ,-)--------:----'j~~··~;;jj~~~~~~;;~--------:1
October at the church.
I 1
Next meeting will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the church with
.
Cathy Dyer and Karlita Stump to
be hostesses. ·
Devotions were given by Paula

BALTIMORE "(AP)
Researchers have developed a new
test for cancer that they.hope wiU
save lives by detec:ting. the deadly
disease in ns earliest and most
treatable stages.
The test identifies replication
errors in DNA, known as clonal
markers, that occqr frequently in
cancer, the researchers reported in
today' s issue of Proceedings of the
. National Academy of Science.
The researchers compared markers from several types of cancer
with cells found in tissue, body fluids or secretiOns from a suspected
cancer site. If the markers match,
they said, there is a strong indication that the patient has cane«.
Researchm believe they will be able to identify cancers before they
are detecta~le using X-rays or
direct examinations, the study's
principal in~estigator, Dr. David
Sidransky of the Johns Hopkins
Oncology Center, ~din today's
New York Times.
People at high risk of ~ladder .
and cervical cancer could begin
using the test within a year, SidranJAMIE AND ArKi WARNER
sky said. He said the test also could
be used to detect lung, breast,
colon, prostate and oth« cancera.
'·
However, Sidransky 'said 'the
Amy' Lynn ~ar~b and_Jamie son, cousin ()f the bride, acolyte.
test
is still in its experimenUII phase
Cotterill, Amy Rouse
Wernet were united m lll8lfl88!; on · andCynthia
and
must 119 validated through a
Frankie Hunnel, aunt of the
June 26 at the Enterprise United
series of lat'ger trials, which could
bride,
were
the
lioloists
with
Becky
Methodist Church, Pomeroy. the
take years to ~plete. Further triRev. Keith Rider off.ciated.
· Baer as the pianist. .
als
also are needed 1Q verify that
Erica Robie and Mindy Hester
· The 'bride is the daughter of
the
test can identify cancc:r earlier
¢hades and Jennifer Warth, registered the guests.
than
standard methods.
.
A reception wasJJeld folloWing
PomfJO)' IIJid the groom is the SOD
,
T
he
~
tcBted
urine,
tisof Jolll dd Bobbi Pauley, Darwin .the ceremony .at the home of Don . sue arid sputum samples from
tiiiCf Jlin and Judy warner. 01ester. and Franlde Hunilel, uncle and aunt patients who bad been diagnosed
of the bride. Tracy Smith served
~
'
· with three types of cancer - li!Dg.
· The maid d. honor
·Heather cake andwnch.
· The bride is a 1991 graduate of bladder, :and l!ead and neck Pamey, sisur of lbc gr&lt;JOm. bridesusing standard (llethods.
olaidl 'Were Dlrd Wolfe and Kris- Meigs High School and attended . "Although we have demonstrat• Slaw!«, 'junior 1Jridesma!d was Ohio University. She i6 emplo~ · ed the error ill only tluee types of
Brenna 'S illon and flower gtrl was by Don Richards AssociateS'of· cancer, we firmly believe tliat all
Clare SilsQD, 'bOih cousins of the Richmond, Va. The groom is a different kinds of cancer can be
1988 graduate of Meigs HIJb
School
employed as facility screened by this test," Sidransli:y
·~st,mlra was JJriBjl Warner, managerandfor isCarbonic
told the Times.
91 the ~· and. grooms· Mechanicsville, Va. IJ!dustries in · Sidransky Slid the test is expect·
DarTin Wlllll. tirolher of
Following the wedding trip to ed to cost about $50.
dle·l!rido, Christian HarveU and ·
Dr. Samuel Broder, head of the
·Rand)' King, CDU,Iin of the ~­ Virgiilia Beach, the newlyweds are National Cancer Institute, called
Jaco'b,Warner, ~q of the groo.m making their•home in Richmond, the development "science at its
was. 1M ·ring bearer, ~ Nae Su- Va.
very.besl" ·

2-10-13~17-27

~ Council .
~pushes

Lydia Circle discusses upcoming holiday activities
· Holiday activities were planned announced for Dec. 12 at 7 p.m. at'
when Lydia Circle of the Bradford the Lewls Family Restaurant in
Church of Christ met recently at 1 Jackson. There will be.an ornament
the church.
exchange. Names for Christmas
Karlita Stump, president, gifts will be exchanged at the·Octoopened the meetin~ with prayer ber meeting. For the trip to Jackson
and reports were gtven by Paula members will car pool from the
Picltetia, ICCtlltaJy; ,)!)Jl!qa Bil!g, &gt;cbllfll!l-y
, ,.
.
..
treasurer, and Jane Hysell, missionOtner holiday activities include
ary secretary.
. Christmas gifts for missionaries;
The annual Christmas party was ~d a live nativity on Dec. 21 and

Pick 4:
5037
BuckeyeS:

·-, Rutland

- - - - -· Society scrapbook----MYSTERY FARM
Keith Dorst of Route 3,
Pomeroy, was the winner of the
•myatmy farm in the Ocl 2 Sunday
Times-Sentinel. He correctly identified the farm as ihat of Rodney
· Keller, located on Route 248 near
·Chester. Dorst was of five to identify the farm and his name as winner was selected in a drawing. He
will receive $5 from the Ohio Va!-

309

en tine

socks, and join in the fun.

.

Pick 3:

Pqe4 .

Showcase cruise-in planned for ·Saturday
part

Ohio Lottery

Serrill8 MeiBt, MellOn &amp; ~·· .
SERVICE '
HIGH EFFICIENCY.HEAT PUMPS &amp;'FURNACES
35615 OAK HILL RD.

•

CHESTER, Ott 45720
61C88H~

PT. PLEASANt WV 25550
30W'7S-72M

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