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. ~.t
.
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

'

be•

•.

'

•Y

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

on

Jones to address
Meigs Democrats

.

"'virDNntntl.
sao~~._,.......

thoc....ptJ2a..

..

botbdllyalon-,....
.limllftlwa'l..'&gt;'

:.pumTh~igh

I

wilh ·n"IOH

•
I

·Eyewitness expect~d
to appear at hearing

.

men·weie

I

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

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

Warth-Warner

w•

•-*

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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row,._

Darla,.._.

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111 Court Street
PomCJOJ, Oh!q

MARGARET LEHEW
Contro,Uer

LETI'I!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They ol¥&gt;uld be less than 300
words kma. Allleum 1re subject 10 editing and must be aigned with name,
~dina llld lelepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Leuen
abould be in &amp;ood !aile, addresaing illueJ, DOt pmonllitiu.

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. 2
The Daily Sentinel welcomes lette':l regarding th!. Nov. 8 ~eral
election. However, in the interest or rauness, no election letters will be
accepted after U DOOD on Wednesday, Nov.l.
IDdlvlduals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less, prererably typed. AU letters
ere subject to editing and and must be signed witb name, address
IIIII telephone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No ·
UDSiped letters will be published. Letters sbould be in good taste.

Language barrier at root
of Congressional disconnect
ByWALTERR.MEARS .

AP Special Correspondent

.
..
WASHINGTON - Wben Americans look at Congress, the reunng
senator said, they can't Wlderstand what's going on. "It is as if we were
speaking a fon:ign language here.''
· Sen. David Boren had been pushing for action on legislation '!&gt;overhaul tho inremal workings of the Senat' and House, both of ~htch had
voted Qllllllimously for the idea of refonr, but balked at the spectfics.
So that was added to the scrap pile, &amp;long with other refoons that once
seemed compelling - lobbying rules, nostrictions on gifiS and free tmvel,
a bill to apply employment, civil rights and other laws to the nearly
40,000 people who work for Congress.
'Jbe House voted to change iiS rules to cover its own employees, but
·. the Senate where the bill was blocked, didn't act, and isn't affected.
· Bec&amp;llle ltls a rule, not a law, House '~~&lt;Orlters wouldn,'l be able to go to
court against the boss in job righiS dispu:.es, as pnvate employees can.
Them's the lang1J88C barrier again. n.e stiffened employment laws sliD
aren't the same as those Congress applies to everybody else.
'Jbe list of dead bills was a long one: the refonn agenda; health care; a
housing bill; environmental measures, including a bill in the works for
two years to expedite and curb costs of toxic waste dump cleanups; and
muchmore.
.
.
.
Congress is coming bac!t aflel the N(!v. 8 election to deal With legislation implementing the stalled new world trade agreement, although supporters and the administration claim bipanisan majorities for it
'Jbe lame duck session could take up other legislation, including bills
blocked as the clock ran down to the weekend recess. The Wbite House is
not seeking anything but the bade bil •. "Absolutely not," said Leon
Panella the chief of staff. "We'll be ple.sed if they do GAIT."
Giv~ the likelihood that Republican will gain reinforcements in both
the House and Senate in the elections, .hey'd be even tou&amp;Mr on President Clinton in a lame duck session than they were before.
B(ftll, a Democrat who is re&gt;igning his Senate seat aftet 16 .Years to
become J)midlnt of the University of Olclahoma, said Congress IS polarizirur po6ticaUy, wben most people :ovould prefer just the opposite.
--'"'It's a maja disconnect," he saul, btcause mcreasmg numbers of voters CClilsider themselves centrisiS.
While Democratic leaders call that b calculated decision by Republicans Boren didn't spare Clinton. Bon:n said in a CNN interview that he'd
taJte'd to Clinton about reclaiming the political center. "He always seems
like he agrees with me when I'm there, but that's not what happens,"
Boren said.
. .
· Clinton said the barrier in Congres.&gt; was •:partisan gridlock by the
Republican congressional leadership.''
Palrick J. Griffin, the White House lobbyist, said Republicans simply
decided that they would oppose everything Clinton wanted done. "These
are raw political battles," he said
·
·
Not so said Sen. Alan Simpson of Wyoming, the deputy GOP leader.
He called 'it "principled oppos1tion" when they disagree on issues.
.
That is not an easy case to make whel it involves all the issues, and the
option of delay gives the Republican m1 JOrity more than enough votes to
block legislation since it takes 60 to fore action in the Senate.
Simpson said if Ointon waniS fewer filibusters, he ought to do more
talltinf, with Republicans. "We are n( : the Arkansas Legislature," he
said. • We are ready to work. Tallc to us ~aonestly." _
Clinton, of counc, insists that he alm.dy !las been.
And Paneua said that by the end, ReP.ublicans were ballcing even on
biDs that had been bipartisan, on issues like crime and lobby reform. The
end of session pileup was on measurt.s that already had passed both
branches, often by wide margins.
'Jbe bill to tightaJiobbying registmtion and gift rules, for example, got
95 votes when it first passed the Senate, but died for lack of 60 to break a
filibuster on the final, compromise version.
Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, the mimrity leader, said Republicans
switched and said no.because "we read :lie biD."

- -·

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. M~ars, vice president and columnist lor Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national polities ror more tban 30 years.

Today in history

~~·~915

l!nglish nurse Edith Cavell' W&amp;'l executed by the Germans in
·urn during World WarJ.
. oecIn 1933 ~robber John Dillinger escaped 60111 ~jail in Allen Coun. Ohio ~the help of his
wbo killed the sherilr. ·
. ; ty' In
Auorney Generil rancis Biddle announced that Italian
J~ : ~I• iii· tbe Unitell States ould no l011ger be COIISidered enemy

M2,

:1

~

• :.uc:-1960, Soviet pli:mier.Nilti!l ~ ~a U;N. General
· . ;Aaembly Jellion by potlllding his dcslt With a shoe dUring a dispute..
In 1964 the Soviet Union ~ a Voskbod space capsule wtth a
· 11uJe.IDID mw on the ftnt manned.mission involving more than one
; crew memb«. 1
•
• '
• : 1J1 1985, a Lebanese newapeper published a ~ of what was
/ ~1JOifld 10 be the lifeless 11oc1Y ot: American hosiage Wilfiam Buckley.

4( 'f

Accu-~ forecast for

vou V.WLDN'T
BEUEV~

~~

MOW

OOI'f
11\EHTI'N IT.

· DIF~KiULT IT~

BEENTaFIND
A~~

PARTNER

Defeat is the best reve~ge _ _ __
I would never argti'C that it is and compro111ise. But first must
necessary to bum down OlD' politi- come the pain.
During the past few weeks in
cal system in order to save it, but I
am beginning to think the thing the Senate, for example, the
ought to continue smoldering for a
while.
What I mean is, I think it would
be healthy for the Republicans to Republicans have done nothing but
take control of Congress in the obstruct They reasoned that since
coming elections. Let Speaker of the Democrats are in control, an
the House Newt Gingrich and Sen- igDOillllt public WDUid blame them
ate Majority Leader Bob Dole deal for the legislative logjam. At one
with Bosma and Haiti and health point, minority leader Bob Dole
was~·u gling five filibu'Sters
biDs and crime bills. Let them see desi
10 kill Democratic initiawhat it's like to have to do something instead of simply criticizing lives - including biDs to regulate
and obsttucting.
lobbyists and to refonn campaign
More than that: In order to get
across the message for once and for fi~~in~uldn ,1 DemocraiS do the
all that partisan brawls and tenni- same · $ in a Republican Senate?
nal gridlock produce nothing but Block thetr every move, filibuster
roadkill for the vultures of cyni- their favorite bills, then shrug and
cism, the minority Democrats smile and badmouth the feckless
should do unto the majority Repub- foe?
,
licans precisely what the RqJubliWhy could~ t the Democ~ats
cans have done unto them for the file formal, ethics charges agamst
past few years: Make their lives a Aifons~ D'f.mato, R-N:Y., _who
living hell. Show no ·mercy. Sack \Y?uld likelfbe the ~g eomthem. Cuff and kick and torture mJUee _chamnan, for h1s one-day
them without surcease.
.foray m .the stock market that
.Only then, perhaps, would all earne~ htm $37 ,000? Why not
parties in the political process com- expedite ~he s~xual harass~ent
prehend that the nation is best proJ?,e aP,Jnst Fmance Commtttee
served by bipartisan cooperation chalrman Robert Packwood, R-

Joseph Spear

.

'

Ore.? Investigate F&lt;reign Relations

enjoyable sport to file , ethics
chairman Jesse Helms' involve- charges against Speaker Newton
ment in the dismiSSal of a White- Leroy Gingrich?
water independent counsel?
Finding a scandal would be a
If the Democrats could bring sr ap. The most obvious potential
themselves to be as brutal as problem is Newt's political action
Republicans have been, this could committee, GOPAC, which is supbe delicious fWI.
posed to parcel out money to politiOn the House side, a vicious, cal candidates but actually spends
all-out Democratic assault on 99.6 J!!l!Cenl of its funds on its own
Republicans would be easier and expenses. It would also be amusing
certainlv more iustified. Since the to get a national discussion going
m·d 1980s R p N t G" · h on how Newton Leroy managed to
; ' e · ew mgnc '
R Ga.,.has devoted his very exis- a· oid the draft and the Vietnam
tence to petty partisan politicking. " ar. And there may be a jilted
He bas seized every political kver somewhere in his past who
opportuniiy, taken advantage of cvuld be persuaded to bring a Paula
every legislative loophole, exploit- C.&gt;rbin Jones-slyle lawsuit against.
ed every forum that would tolerate him, whatever the merits of it
him to beat the DemocraiS into a
I say let the system roast for a
bloody mass; He has actively few more years until the Republi,"
searched for "wedges" to split the . cans get theirs and we've wrung
factions in our society. He has lhe fun from it Then we can settle
cared little for anything except dis- d1 wn tO some serious management
ruption and destruction.
ot national affairs.
·
Wreaking revenge - an altoJoseph Spear is a syndkatecf
_grther honor~ble an~ ~atisfY.ing w·iter ror Newspaper Enterprise;
AssOCiation.
,
mJtive, I have always thought (For inrormatlon on how to :
o~ the Georgia Gerbil would be,
fo; ttue Democrats, as gmtifying 8 ct!Dmunicate electronically with &gt;
thing as they have ever achieved . tL1s columnist and otbers, con- ·
Bearing in mind Gingrich's assault U:ct America Online by callinll 1. :
on former Speaker Jim Wrigh~ D- !JC0-8%7,6364. exL 8317.\
T!lxas, w~uld il not be the most

or

• •
South-Central Ohio
Tonight ... Becoming cloudy.
Low 45 ID SO. Southeast winds S 1D
JOmph.
· Thursday... Mostll cloudy with a
SO percent chance o showers. Hi~

11

f.

'

1

'

•

i

Around the nation
Rain fell from Arkansas and

Ora R, Cochran, '89, New
Haven, W.Va., died Tuesday, OcL
11, 1994, at Holzer Medical Center
in Gallipolis.
Born Dec. 30, 1904, in Broad ·
Run, W.Va., daughter of the late
Adam and Isabelle Boyd Roush,
she was member of the New Haven
l}nited Methodist Church, a 1941
graduate of Marshall University
and a retired elementary school
teacher after 35 years of service.
Survivon include her husband,
Robert C. "Bob" Cochran of New
Haven and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by
three sisters, Sadie Moore, Clara .
Smith and Lola Jeffers, and by two
brothers, Ollie and Artie Roush.
Services will be held Friday at
11 a.m. at Foglesong Funeral
Home in Muon, W.Va., with the
Rev, Eldon Shingleton offtciating.
Burial will follow in Graham
Cemettzy in New Haven.
Friends may caD Thursday from
6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
·

services wiD be held
Friday at n.oori at. Rocksprings .
Continued from ...,8 1
Cemetery wtth the Rev. Woodrow
.
,...•.
Call officiating. Friends may caD at gram Manager Jentfer Kwasruewsthe funeral home one hour prior to lti
... The ageney estim. ates that up to
services.
d
d
200 properties wt!l be eeme
clean in the program s. fust year.

,,

Harold E. Hysell, 59, Pomeroy,
died Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1994, at
Pleasant VaHey Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W, Va.
Born Feb. 2, 1935, in Pomeroy,
son of the late Leopold and Alima
Dill HyseU, he was U.S. Army .veteran, attended the Enterprise
Methodist Olurch and was a member of the Forked Run Sportsmans

Club. .

He is survived by a sister,

The Daily Sentinel
(UIIN 21Ufl)

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Crodll will be ..... - - . . . .

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Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tu,sday odmis.sio~ - Ethel
Grueser, Pomeroy
Tuesday discharges - none

Conttn~ from

page 1

TP-CDistrict issues boil order

The Tuppers Plains-Chc:ster Water District has issued a ~il
order for Chester Townshtp, State Route 7 from Eastern Htgb
School south to SWIIQer Road, East Shade Road, to one mile south
of State Route 7 and New Hope Road, to one mile south of State
Route 7.
.
Samples of the w11~r will be take.n Wednescjay ,and results
should be received by Thursday late 8ltemoon, Donald C. Poole,
general manager, said.
If the sample passes, the boil order will be lifted. If the sample
does not pass requirements, the buil order will continue until a sample passes the colifonn bacteria test, acctJrding ID Poole.
.
When a boil order is in effect, those in the affected area are
asked to boil aU their drinking and cooking water for three minutes
before consuming it
1be reason for issuing the boil Older was because of'a rupture in
a line on State Route 7.below Eastern High School, Poole SB!d..

Debate set Sunday
'Jbe candidates for the 94th House District sest representing GalliB, 1~ ~ Meigs counties and eastern Lawrence Colll!ty :oviD
debate each ·other Sm1day at7:30 p.m. in the Wood Hall auditorium
at the University of Rio Grande.
.
The debate between incumbent State Rep. Mark A. Malone, DSouth Point, and his Republican challenger, WeUston Mayor.Jo~n
A. Carey Jr., is sponsored by WMGG-FM/WJEH-AM of Gallipolis
and the university.
.
·
Each candidate wiD distribute SO tickets to their own supporters,
while the remaining SO seats will be filled on a ftrst-come, ·rtrstserved basis. The doors wiD open for ticketholders at 6:45 p.m.
Non-ticketholders wiD be seated at 7:15 p.m.
1be debate will be moderated by Tim MaxweD, general manager
of WMGG/WJEH, and wiD feature a panel of John Ray; WOUBFM, Athens; Pete Wilson; the Jackson Journal-Herald; Barbara
McKinniss of the Athens Messenge&gt;; and Andrew Carter of
WMGG/WJEH.

Solid waste case motion denied
Jackson County Common Pleas Judge Leonard Holzapfel has
denied a motion for dismissal of a com~tersuit by the Athens-Hocking Solid Waste District in its dispute with iiS counterpart district
for GaUia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton com~ties.
The A-H district sought dismissal of the G-J-M-V countersuit
Holzapfel said the A-H district's dismissal arguments were ·not well
taken.
The G-J-M-V district filed tho com~tersuit in June, charging
Athens and Hocking county commissioners with fraud after they
signed an agreement to leave a former sixo(OIJII~ district, then sued
for additional funds generated by the G-j-M-V district

FIS.HTAIL

SJ79· .

.lmiiFIIU-$2.49

"Education is the most important

..
Loutsiana to the Southeast today
and stonny weather was forec~t
for Oregon and·n~m ~orrua.
. Mon: than .4 mches of ram feU
·~ Jacksonvtl_le. Fla:, Tuesday
nag~t. ~Iouds and r8ln kept the
day s bij!h temperature to only 53
degrees m Monroe, ~-· II degrees
cofder than the preVIOUs reconi for
the date.
. Storms ~ere f=ecast to move
mto.the ~ific N west, northe!"
Cahforma, and the reat Basm
!~Jd&amp;Y. Showers also were developmg across Wyomm~. Montana and
southeast l~o. Wmds guste(l up
to 46. mph m Burley. Idaho, l'uesday ~ght..
.
. F111r ski~ and nuld temperatures
reachmg the S(_)s and 60s were
expected in. the Northeast. Readings were expected to get up to the
70s in the Plains.

Property owners initially will
pay the stste $2,000 to certify the
sites. After the ftrst year, the~­
cy will develop a new fee struc
based on the program's c05ts,
.
Kwasniewski said

Rutland Council...

Local News in Brief:

ft.. , ...... i.,.d.a,

"Donating blood is very simple.

It's just a liule sting," she said.

Meigs eligible...

In other business, cOWICil:
- Thanked Bob Smith of
Cherokee Roofing for charging just
Holzer Medkal Center
Oct. 11 dllc:barJes - Michael $900 to seal aJ,l the leaking seams
Burchett, James McManis and Jen- on the civic center roof. This covered the cost of materials, not
nifer Daniels.
Oct. 11 blrlba - Mr. and Mrs. labor, Eads said. The emergency
Thomas Ruth, daughter, Oak Hill.

IDOLPB'I .
DAIRY IlLLEY

spendinf

. ••

By The Associated Press
Ohioans can say goodbye to all
of that sunshine for -a couple of
days, according to the Niuional ·
Westher Service.
Forecasters say a low pressure
system approaching from the south ·
will spread clouds across the slate
Thursday and Friday and likely will .
produce rain.
Lows tonight will be mostly in
the 40s. Highs on Thursday will be
60-65.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 84 degrees in 1928
while the record low was 27 in
1964. Sm~settonight will be at 6:57
p.m. and sWirise Thursday at 7:40
a.m.

ora R. Cochran

Harold E. Hysell

:t'

·

Dorothy Hysell, of Poincroy, and
was preceded in death by a sister,

•Iii

g

60 to6S.
Extended rnrecast
Friday... A chance of showers.
I,.ows 45 to SO and highs 60 to 65.
'· Saturday and sunday ... Fair.
Lows in the 40s and highs in the
60s.

--Area deaths--

. I

said. 1be hunull body has about12
. pinls.
'"''here are thousands of people
fighting for their lives every day,"
Black said. "It can be solved as
quickly as sharing our own blood
and good health."
About 90 percent of the public
· will require a transfusion during
some lime in their life- especially
since peopl~ are living longer and
COD;Iplicated surgery demands mon:
blood, she added.
But as a tegion, only 2.8 percent
citizens give blood, Black

nex ew ays ~~~~~:~~~nB~:~~;~

W.VA.

-----Weather----

IVIICmPTION IIATD

$340:

·

•

........,.(lllo

"As you know," reads the fu reason that the American people yt ars. Notwithstanding the presi- Panetta proudly chirps, from
from White House Chief of Staff aren't especially cbeerful about the dtnt's claim that his 1992 tax hike billion in 1992 to $274 billion in·
Leon Panetta, "President Clinton . economy. lbey know that it is not ;._ the largest in Amerir,an history 1!194. But at the same time that the :
vowed when he came to Washing- nearly as robust as Ointon and the -would mainly affect the rich, the at nual debt is coming down, the :
ton to make improving the econo' reality is that the middle-class has C inton administmtion is spending .
my the number one goal of his
Joseph Perkins b~en hit with higher marginal mJte of the taxpayers' money. :
administration."
.
income tax rates (the tax on each
In fact, federal spending ~s up ~
It is hard to quariel with the Dems suggest
.
additional dollar esrned).
$bl biUion in 1994. By 1998, under:
results, he continues. "lbe deficit
Indeed, the public's suspicions
Indeed, according ID the CBO's Caintonomics, spending will have l
is being cut virtually in half, the are corrobQrated by the Congres-· lar.est "Green Book," families with increased by a total $330 billion. i
economy has produced nearly 4.5 sional Budget Office's mid-session jmnual esrnings ~tween $20,000 T~at amounts to a 20 percent
miUion oew jobs, trade barriers in review of the Clinton economic and· $30,000 saw ~eir marginal growth in the size of the federal ,
Asia, Europe, and the rest of our policy. By 1997, the nonpartisan rate increase from 17.2 percent, govert~.menL .
,
own hemisphere are dropping, and CBO proJects, evell)' maJor eco- oofore the Clinton tax hike took
11uit explains, in large part, why :
most of the economic indicators are nomic indicator including unem- effect, to 19 percent afterward. interest rates have not come down:
heading in the right direction."
ployment, inflation and gross ' F•tmilies earning $30,000 to the way the Clinton economic team •
But as Americans pn!pare to go domestic produc~ will be worse $4.0,000 saw their rate increase Jll !dieted. In fact, the opposite has l
to the polls next month to elect a than they otherwase would. have -fr:Jm 17.8 ~tiD 18.1 percent h,.ppened. Interest rates on theJ
new Congress, there reaDy is only been if Clinton had done no tinla:r- Families bringing in $40,000 to T easury's b·ellwether 30-.year
one question on their minds with . ing with tho economy aace he lOOit $50,000 went from a 17.3 percent b~·nd, for instance, are . markedly~
respect to the economy. "Is my offtce.
·
111te to 17.5'~DL
hi~het today than they were when.
family better orr, with both a
We see abundant evidence of
Tbis mtddle-class tax hike · c :mton was inaugwated.
Democrilt in the White Houle and a this. ~Y· Look ~ the elJiplOy· ~r:Sth~ than. t!te-cut the. pr~sident
So ~ we ~· two years into
· Democrat-controlled
Con3ress, ment pacture, for tnstance. Th~ promtaed 'whde &lt;;amp81gnmg f9_r the Chnton ~dency, and we'nr
than we were two yearuao?
White House
~ 4.3·mliJ . oificc) may 1\ot seem especially seeing ancmac job growth, paying
. If\Vejudpfromthe'lateatopjn·· lion new ,jobs have ~n created · o11erous to Clinton and the higher iaxes, observing.inereasc\d
ion polls, most ·Americana ~ 't ~U:,:ft Clinton's waldl. But that's ~. But the i'ealilY is that it ~~ vernment
and W81thini
think so. .And that is wby 1hcR in
y. 1.2 milliOII )Obde- than .is llldna .tens .of billions of dollars m crest rates rise. I these are the ,
very real chance lbil yar that the .. what iiiiOIIDil darilll typicll eto- out.of'die 'POCkets of bar1J-w(lrkin&amp; ·~ iults of having both a Dcmoa'lt •
Republicans will Tnelt 0011trol of . nomice•r-ilool ·,
· ' · A:nerican families and aendins it·to in the White House and a Demo- !
the Senate for the fUll iime sinCe
In fact, under Clintonomics, W'llllbinaU!t!.
- crat-contmlle~fr.nn~ io itllllv :
. 1984 and even a remote cbance · totai-employinent is arowins at
'Jbe priniary justification for the wonder that the Amencan elec- •
that abe G~ ~ Party Will cap- only about half tbe file of normal CJintoo- tax hike·was ,that it ~d tqn11e is in the·mood for a political : ture a~ m the House for the , recoveries. Similarly, tho present. low~~ ~- federal budg~t deficit, sea-change?
, ,
~
rust time since 1954.
jobless rate or 6.1 percent actually ''t'hich,·in turn, would yJeld lower . Josepb Perkins is a columnist t
Clinton and the Democrats sim- IS a full point hiRher !han is normal in~ rates. Lower interest rates ror The San Diego Unloa~"I:rl- 1
ply can't undcnland the I'C8li~ · 'fc.~· lYJJicll cqliDsioos.
· '
w :n: then IIIJlPOSCIIto lead to bet- buae.
·
.,
'of tho .voting public. As Panetta s
For those Americilts wbo)ue ·ter thari normal ecoDOIIIic growth.
(For tnrormatlon on bow to l
CBJI!paign tract reveals, they think fortuDI.te enough tO be working, · BJtthis, ~hain Of events has not CO!IImunlcate tlel:troniclll'y with ~ .
they hav~ dqne a good~ of han· most ha':e ·seen _their take-home . cc.me IOJ••:
. , thla columnist and otllen,,®n·. j
1be iWiclt has been lowered, as tact Amerka Oitline by elllllal· ~
dling the economy But there's a ru.v decline durang the put two
•
":''.
•
·
•
'
IJOO..Bl7-'364. ext. 8317.)
1

.d
CI0 uds to h1 e
t
f
d
sun

• IColumbusl63• I

I'08niABI'Ds ..... _
............
The DIIIJ S.atlael, Ill Court 51.,
45'16!1.

Public discontent will unseat -Dem-s

'

By GEORGE ABATE
a marketing specialist wbo works
Sentinel News Staff
out of the Huntington office. The
• Even ~h a w111 eould 1na1t Tri-State Regional Blood Center
out in the Mtddle East creating a · covers 33 counties and 32 hoapidemand for more blood, area hospi- tala, demanding 240 units of blood
tala battle each ~y to ~enough each day.
blood to operate, a regional Red
· . The chamber will sponsor a
Cross coordinator told the Meigs blood drive from 10 a. m.-3 p.m.
County Chamber of Commerce Oct 28 at tho Trinity Churcb. The
during its monthly meeting yest.er- goal for this session is 40 units
day.
blood.
This com~ty must produce 450
A unit of blood - a little less
piniS of blood before next July to than a pint - can be entirely
reach area goals, said Sandy Black, replaced within six weeks, Black

MICH.

sleeves, slapped baCks, loaSied hiS
hosts and generally set the.~ of
a llurricane during hi~ ~- O!ast
tcoll'. Gorbachev had already taught
A_nericans that a Jlussian leader
could be charming once he stepped
Owl from the reviewing Stand in
R~d Square. But Yeltsin went
b~yond charming to downright
vivacious.
In international diplomacy, there
is a fine line between vitality and
boorishness. Yeltsin probably
ct :&gt;ssed that line. But his archenemy, the KGB, amplified stories
about the trip to make Yeltsin look
liJ:e a fraternity boy on spring
break. Articles appeared in the government-con'trolled press which
portrayed Yeltsin's visil in the
most unflaUCrinj! light. Yet the arli- ·
cles weren't enttrely inaccurate.
Yeltsin had been rallied by jetlag on the whirlwind eight-day
tear. Unable to sleep, he once
sl.ared a quart of whiskey with five
oiJier people, after which he took
t"o sleepmg pills. 1be next morning he was groggy. It was a case of
b&lt;.d judgment for Yeltsjn, who,
sources close to him admit, has had
a problem with heavy drinlcing in ·
the past.
In one interview, YeliSin admit·
te:l that he has had problems with
al :oholln the past. But those proble.ns were limited to one break- ·
duwn and were long since ov.er; he
toid us. He has reminded us mon:
than once that his family is healthy·
and robust. "I have very good
genetics," he says, matter-of-factly. "My grandfather lived to be 96.
My mother is nonnal, healthy and
87 now."
Genetics aside, the Ireland incidr.nt should serve as a reminder to
A.nerican policymakers that
Y~ltsin's behavior can be .as mercLrial as the political tides in Russif. It should also clarify the point
tt tt a United States policy which
takes Yeltsin's fits and starts in
accoupt- and strokes other potential leaders of Russia - is beuer
th'111 one which pius au its eggs in
Yeltsin 's basket.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

ment with tanks in a bloody' showdown with rebellious hard-liners
there -leavi!:lg at least 140 people
dead. PrivQICiy, State Deparunent
officialS excuse the ugly episode as
"necessary" for YeiiSin to regain
control and bring about a more
compllilllt parliament
But Yeltsin's earliest experiences in the United States - and
the official reaclion to them reminds us of the other side of
Yeltsin, the side which may have
inadvertently shown itself on the
ai.port tarmac in Ireland
We have known Boris Yeltsin
since his days as a rebellious
refonner in the old Soviet Politburo. On a visit with him in the
Soviet Union, as Ye1tsin ' was
kooming famous as an outspoken
cr~tic of Mikhail Gorbachev, we
encouraged him to develop contacts in the United Slates, and to
learn from our democratic example. We pressed him several times
to visit America.
YeiiSin f1D8Uy came, and he hit
the American ground running. He
took off his jacket, rolled up his

T1le Dilly Sentinel Pag~ -3

Pomeroy MlddlepOI't, Ohio

Chamber told Red Cross needs more blood

Tbunday, Oct.l3

l

By Tile Alaoelated Press
· · ,Today is Wednesday, OcL 12, the 28Sth day of 1994. There are 80
· days.Jelt in the year. This is Columbus Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On OcL 12, 14n (Old Style calendar; Oct 21 New Style), Christopher
Co~bus srived with his expedition in the present-day Bahamas.
Ori this date:
.
nonh sh'
. In 1861, the Confedmlle ironclad Manassas anacJced the
ern tp
: Ricbmoncl on the Mississippi River.
In 1870 Gen. Robert E. Lee died in Lexington, Va., atage63.
,
· In 1915 in a speech in New York, former President Tbcodon: RooICVClt critkized u.s. citizens w'!O i~tified ~lves liy dual nati~­
~.aaying, "There is no ~ m this COtJJIIry for hypbenated American-

'upicdJkt

~ WASHINGTON - ,R*ssian · aUege that Yeltsin iS an alcoholic
President Boris Yeltsin won praise.· who "is incapable of governing."
(or his performance at the recent
Our own experience . with
summil here, but a little incident in · Yel!sin suggests the ~ behind
Ireland reminds us that any adula·
lion for Yeltsin should be taken
with a grain of salt.
·
On his way back 1D Russia from
the United States, Yeltsin was
scheduled to mate a brief stop in
&amp;v
Ireland for a visit with Prim~ Minister·Albert Reynolds, who had cut the Ireland incident may lie someshort a trip to New Zealand for the where between .forgetfulness and
impromptu summit with Yeltsin. alcoholic incompete~. Yeltsin is
But when Yeltsill's J?lane arrived.in , a mercurial populist, given to shifts
Ireland, and the Insh delegation in attitude and attention. Western
stood waiting on the airport tannac, analysts have long known .that he
the Russian leader was nowhere to can be undependable, subject to
missteps in Russia and abroad, yet
be found.
Almost a half hour passed while they also know he is c.apable of
the embarrassed Irishmen waited great strength and vision. So far,
for Yeltsin. Finally, a YeiiSin aide the United States is putting more
emerged from the plane to inform faith in the latter qualities, as the
the group that YeiiSin was feeling Clinton admin.istration is hitching
iU. But when the plane later arrived its Russia policy squarely to .
in Moscow, a smiling Yeltsin said YeiiSin '6 wagon.
The Clinton administration has
the miscue occurred llecause his
security guards refused to allow already shown its willingness to
anybody to wake him during the stick with Yeltsin through tough
landing. The incident prompted one times. It was only a year ago that
of YellS in's political opponeniS to Yeltsin stormed the Russian Parlia-

'.

OHIO Weather

..

"

By Jack Anderson
and
Ml"chael Bl"ns•...,·n

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publlsber

G-raJMe..ger

•.

~ne1day, ~ober 12, 1994

Irish incident puts Yeltsth under scruth1:Y

The Daily. Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.

Page · ~-The Daily Se'ntlnel
Pomeroy!....uiddleport,: Ohio
Wednesday, October 1~. 1994

squad area was sealed for SISO,
Eads said. Wiih recent hard rains,
the roof did not leak, she added.
- Announced a haunted bouse
will be held Oct 24-31, exceP.t on
Sunday. The $2 admission wtll be
used to help repair the village's
civic center. Village trick-or-treal
wiD be held from 6-7 p.m. Oct 31. ·
-Moved next month's council
meeting to 7 p.m. Nov. 15 because
of conflict with election day.
- Thanked the village of
Racine for use of a gene111tor to
ope111te the sewer plant while electricity was shut down for eight
hours to demolish the old high
school
- Met in executive session to
discuss impending legal action.

The entire process - which
includes signing forms, a quick
check-up and then monitoring after
the blood iS taken - takes only an
hour.

Many myths continue today,
especially with AIDS, she said.
Artificial blood does not exist.
AIDS eanoot be contracted by giv·
ing blood, since each needle is
thrown away after every user.
"Should you know you're going
to have surgery we suggest you
give blood for your self," Black
said. These palieniS, with approval
of thet doc:o;, car. :lonate once a
week up to five times, she added.
A blood donation •5 shelf life is
42 days, Black said. But each donation actually helps four people

Meigs board hires
substitute teachers
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News stair
1be Meigs Local Board of Education approved the hiring of four
substitute teachers during its regular meeting Tuesday night at the
school district's office in Pomeroy.
~
Hired wete Dorothy Ben!Z, Eliz~
.abeth Gee, Toni Hudson and David
Ramey. lbey wiD be used on an asneeded basis during the 1994-95
school year.
The board also authorized
Superintendent Bill Buckley to hire
tutors for two health-handicapped
students.
In other personnel matters, the
board accepted the resignations of
Melissa Stewart as a substitute
teacher and Shannon Wood as the
driver.of severe behavlonilly band!~
capped student.
The board also voted to allow
early graduation for Brian Michael
Smith and Dianna Carman and
accepted Stephanie Thomas as a

post ·secondaiy option college student.
In addition, the board:
- Appropriated money for the
foUowing grants: Rural Demonstmtion Program - $133,536; Carl
Perkins Vocational Grant $83,107.12.
Adopted a tentative
$13,291.770.87 budget for the
1995 fiscal year. The budget also
includes levy money w.hich will
start becoming availabfe in January, Buckley said. The proposed
budget must be approved by the
county budget commission.
- Granted permission to the
Meigs FFA to take an overnight
field trip to Ohio State University
for FFA training purposes.
Present were Buckley, Treasurer
Jane Fry and board members Larry
Rupe, Randy Humphreys, Roger
Abbott, John Hood and Scou Walton. The board's nexl meeting will
be Oct 25 at 7 p.m at Meigs J m1ior
High School in Middleport.

Meigs announcements
Home scbooling group meets
All parents who teach students
at home should attend a 7 p.m. Oct.
18 meetingljt28471 Bashan Road.
For more i'formafion, call 9493119.
\_j

EMS logs
'

12 calls

by the ~aciye United Methodist
Women wil be held Dec. 3, 10
a.m . to 4 p.m. at the Racine
Methodist Church. Craft tables
may be reserved for $10 'by calling
Margie West, 949-2881 or I.:ee
Lee, 949-2454.
.

Meigs roothall hosts dinner
The Meigs Marauder football Dance to be held
· Units of the Meigs County
team will host a free spaghetti dinA round and square dance will
Emergency Medical Service
ner at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, in the. be held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
recorded 12 calls for assistance
school's cafeteria.
Saturday, 8 to II p.m. $5 couples,
Monday ~nd Tuesday. Units
S3~fes.
responding mcluded:
.
Christmas bazaar planned
MIDDLEPORT
A Chrisunas bazaar sponsored Revival slated
)
11:59 a.m. Monday, Overbrook
·'
The Mt. Herman Un~
Center, llarold Hysell, Pleasant
· ed
Brethren Church (Texas c.omm iVaHey Hospital;
.
, ty) will hold a revival starting ri·
3:28p.m. Monday, ·Ratlroad
day at"7:30 p.m.. lhrough Oc . 23.
Street Hazel McHaffie, Veterans
Rev. Joe Leighton from Logan will
Memdrial HOspital;
Am Ele Power ·--·--M--.31518
be
the evangelist All invited.
8:03 a.m. Tuesday, Mill Street,
Abo ·---M--M--M--.58 118
A.sbtiDd on -M--M-----.36 J/4
Shirley Frazier, VMH;
AT&amp;T ·-----M--M--.53 3/4
6:33 p.m. Tuesday, Oliver
BIDk One--M--M-----.2!1118
Stree~ Donna Adams, Holzer MedBob EYIIIIII---M--M--M---20
ical Center;
Cbamplon IDd.--M--M-.24 Ill
9:15 p.m. Tuesday, South SecCblll'lllllll SbopM_M____M7 13116
Qlld Avenue, Martha Anderson,
City HoldltJ&amp;.M-·--M--M--33
HMC.
·
Federal Mapl-----M-.22 J/4
POMEROY
Goodyear TI&lt;R ·---M--.34 518
K-mart-M--M---M--.161/4
10:43 p.m. Monday, Main
Landll End ··-----·---1!1
Street, Thomas Baldwin, VMH;
Limited Inc.
---18 518
12:31 a.m. Tuesday, stale Route
Muhlmedla
In&lt;.
---M--.2!1
314
248, Terry Pooler, refused ueatPoint Ban•'OI'JI·---M--M-1!1
ment;
RellaJKe Electrk: -----.24 518
· 9:13p.m. Tuesday, West Main
Robbllls &amp;: Myen-----.1711l
Stree~ BiD King, VMH.
.
Sboney'siD&lt;. -M-----M---M14
RACINE
Star Bank.----M--M--M--M40
8:39 a.m. Monday, state Route
Wendy IDt'L MM--M--·--·14 Ill
124, Hazel Bearhs, treated at scene. ·
WortbbJ&amp;tolt lnd.MM--M--.22 518
RUTLAND
.
Stock nporl5 ue lbe 10:30 .....
quotes provided by Advnt o
8:12a.m. Monday, Meigs Mine
GaUl polls.
31, Kelvin JoUy, HMC;
9:39 a.m. Tuesday, stste Route
143, Kristal Norris, VMJi.
SALEM TOWNSHIP VFD
10:17 a.m. Monday, dump ftre,
Painter Ridge off stale Route 124.

Stocks

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COUPOI

FREE HEARING TESTS

w1n .. ••• a. •lt•lhiD• eo••,•• .,
HEARING liD CENIER

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FRED
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c••••••••••,
lgtricnct4. Cq'pqble ·
D•dic•d Cq prq,r., fpr AU ofMtia Cqyntyl
Your Vote OIUl lrt/fuence .4ppree,.,.d
,

•.:•:...

Friday, October 14, 1994
Ia Dr. lo Jacksoa Balles' Office
110 Mechilalc Strut, Po•eroy
9:00.1001

•
•

•

·: ,
a
• ,.
•

: Ca1Wme1-I~S26Sfll•l 1llt•••• 111. :
a lllttnb wl .. ..,.-., i lfCMsM Htallt Alii lelsl a

s,,

•lolffOM who Ml trolele hMIIIIg Of Ulldllallndng 001 NtlllMIIii lllrMtld to Q
alwv!t a FREE '-lng tell Ill - Wtil pnrblem c.n bt helped. 11J1ng . . Q
a C0t41011 will Yt111 tor your FREE ~INO TEST, a $76.00 Wi1Ue.
a
.AMICO, UAW, AHO ALL OTHER

W

. a

~-=·:-~·:·:r
1-~--:,.:.ll~•::::;.:l'llll:::n:•=c
...... =~f·:•:.:4mt::J
·
ia a a a a~ a a
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,,

since the blood is,SCilDCIIted into
plateleta, plasma, a clotting func~
lion and red ceUs. All blood ~
are needed, but "0 oegative" 11 in
111081 demand, she added.
Donors to the chamber's date
are mged to caD the chanlb« Ill lid
up an appoinunent. Walk-ins will
be accepted, Black said
In other business, the chamber
continues to seek a new location
for its offices, Chamber President
Paul Reed said
"We are not being evicted,"
Reed said. The county library's
insurance will run out Oct 31 and
if the cltamba intends to stay in the
structure il would have to assume
responsibilities, he added.
Reed urged all local business
people to attend the meeting on
malring local charges for telephone
calls between the "992" exchange
.in Ohio and the Mason and New
Haven, W.Va., area.
.
The meeting will be at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Mason Senior
Building across the street from thC
Vaughan's grocery store.
.
"It's important for all of us to be
there," Reed said. ,
In other news, the c·hamber
shoui!Hinish the year in the black,
Reed added. The group netted $766
for its annual golf outing and $420
for the P.A. Denny cruise after aU
expenses, he said.
Next month's chamba meeting
will be at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post at 7 p.m. Nov. 8. Board mem- ·
ber elections for next year will be
held. .

"

INIURANCE PAOVID£111
WALK-IHI WELCOME
a a a a a a a !II !II a ~·• , •

Q

G.

a • -•• ·-

�••
••

-

..•

•

,.
~

Sports

.

.

.rejected the players· latest proposal negotiations were immediatelY
By KEN RAPPQPORT
NEW YORK {AP)
The for a new labor contract
planned.
NHL 's opening day is almldy lost
That meant no hockey on Satur- ' "Frankly, it was the board's
Now, the 5eiSOII may be in danger, · day - the projected starting date view that the proposal was in fact a
too.
for the delayed season - and prob- step backward," Bellman said.
' 'At this point, you would have ably not for a while thereafter. · "It •s clear that the union is not
to believe it might last all year," NHL commissioner Gary Bellman interested in doing anything otJ!er
Boston Bruins general manager had hoped to open the season after !han preserving lhe status quo."
Harry S inden said of the labor postponing the original opening
Union boss Bob Goodenow,
day on Oct. 1 in hopes of wodring who made the proposal Monday,
suife dial has frozen the NHL.
Negotiators fOI' the league and out a new conlract.
said lhe owners made an "unfortuBut •all hopes of meeting the nate decision" in rejecting the
the Nffi. Players Association are
dug in for what looked like a long Saturday target date vanished Tues- offer. He predicted a fight like the
battle . following Tuesday's day when the owners slapped aside one that has l'aralyzed bas&lt;:ball
announcement that owners had the players ' proposal. No riew si.nce players tn !hat sport struck

Bruce resigns as Thunderbolts' head coach
CLEVELAND (AP) - Earle
Bruce resigned Tuesday as head
· coach of the Cleveland Thunderbolls arena fOOiball team, saying he
did not have enough time to attend
to the team and meet his other
'bililies.
~Thundelbolts were 2-10 in
their first season under Bruce, a
formerhead coach at Ohio Slate.
" The decision to ~ company
has nothing to do wtlh football,"
general manager Jeff Kuczek who {ll;ayed for Bruce at Ohio State
- S81d m a news release Tuesday.
" Earle has olher duties to which
he is ~ommitted. We feel as an
orpnization we need a co.ach who

will be here year-round, oot just
seasonal," Kuczek said.
Bruce coached the· Buckeyes
from 1979 to 1987 and now wmts
as an analyst on Ohio State football
for a Columbus radio station. He
also co-hosts a call-in show on the
Buckeyes.
Bruce was out of town Tuesday
and could not be reached for comment; his wife said.
Bruce compiled an 81-26-1
record at Ohio State. His teams
were Big Ten champions in 1979
and 1984 and were co-champions
in 1981 and 1986. He was frred in
1987.
Bruce coached at NCAA Divi-

sion i-AA Northern Iowa in 1988
before going to Colorado State,
where he coached four seasons and
recruited much of lhe team !hat is
currently ranked No. 13 and undefeated in six games.
Bruce was fired by Colorado
State after the 1992 season amid
allegations by the university that he
verbally and physically abused
players.
In Cleveland, Bruce replaced
Dave Whinham, who was fired
after a 2-10 season. Whinham was
6-26 in three seasons, including 010 wilh the expansion Columbus
Thunderbolts in 1991.
Bruce's replacement was not
immediately announcecj. .

Aug. 12. ·
"We see little reason for hope,"
Goodenow said. " The NHL is not
interested in the fans, lhe game or
the small-market clubs. They are
committed to only one thing: a
major fight with lhe players."
Asked how long that fight might
take, Goodenow said:
"It could be months or a year."
Many from management's side
believe the same thing.
"I hoped there would be hockey
by the end of October," New York 1
Range·rs general manager Neil
Smilh said. "II sure doesn't look
like it, even for someone like me
who's usually optimistic."
Bellman was obviously dis tressed by lhe situation, and especially disappointed in lhe union's
posture in the negotiations.
"The board was a little baffled
over the course of conduct of lhe

~nion _over the las~

:
;
•
;
:

ByRUSTYMILLER .
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach John Cooper said
he hasn't had time to pay attention ,
to what critics are saying.
:
"This is the ftrst time maybe in
: my coaching career I hav~'t read a
• word or heard a word stncc the
: game," Cooper said Tuesday at his ·
~ · wteldy news conference.
:
The game in qaeslioo was Saturday's 24-10 Big Ten loss at home
to Illioois.
"I got up early Sunday· and
went 10 work," he said. "I leave in
the morning before the paper
comes. ••
•' Cooper has said he lites country.

.
•

League and NHLPA negotiators digging in for long battle

•

••

•

10 days, wilh it," ChiCago Blacthawts pla¥er :

me~plicable' delaysm meetJngsand · representative Jeremy Ro.e ntct '
deIars in putting together propos- · ·S81d "They're not going to accept
als,' said Bettman, unshaven and anything players offer short of us ; ·
'
looting haggard following a ses- caving in to their demands."
sion with the union in Toronto on
Players said their proposal :
Monday and a quiet flight to New addressed the teams' staled goal of :
York for Tuesday's meeting wilh givirig more revenue to small-mar· ·
lhe board of governors.
ket franchises. Bellman said the ~
. More tha~ 50 team represenr.a- plan didn't do anything to slow the ;
l1 ~es were 10 New York for the increase in salaries.
meeting with Bettman to go over
"Until the union is willing to •
the union's proposal, which dealt address our needs and come back ;.
solely with the taxation issue to to us with a system !hat is sensible ."
raise money for small-market and allows us to grow, there is little ~
teams.
.
common ground," Bettman said. •
The lockout already has post· "We're not looking to take back, :
poned 57 games and ruined hock- we're looting to deal with salaries :
ey's chance to tate advantage of goinll forward in terms of escala- : •
the absence of baseball. The base- lion. fi
:
ball strike wiped out the World . Betllllan's language closely fol- :
Series for the first time since 1904. lowed that of Bud Selig, baseball's :
"I knew even before we offered acting commissioner.
·•
it !hat they weren't going to accep1
·:

-~·-=s::··

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NEW YOU: MBTI:- MluraOco·
zo 1nd llovJ u-, pilcb.,, md Jeff
McEaiP~ IDIIoldlr, _.,.. .. Noofclll
"' .... liooomloioaoJ ~..., Dill ......

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Oodad. bold

PITI'SBUIOH
Cloimod
_....._
_ _PIRATBS:
oil _ _
...

AD DEADLINE
TUESDAY; OCT. 18, 1994.

WI~GWm:Ciimod

r

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NMioul

-

~~~~·"'*'!'•.

MILWAUUII BUCU: ...... Ede
....,.,
....... r__,_~ .

111.....0 .. J).~- ·~

. . . . . (I) 14114 (llol ....... . . . .
12.

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'.

•

•

~~

hoga Falls Walsh Jesuit's 18-~
regular-season wmnmg streak
ended with~ 20-10 loss to ~apr
Lake Catholic m which MLC s Joe
Walland relurned a kickoff 90
y&amp;rds for a touchdown, ran for
another score and passed 33 y~
to John Kaufman for the th1rd
touchdown in the upset; Clyde, 10:. ·
0 a year ago and riding a 20-gune
winning streak, has four shutouts
and has outscored its oppo11ents
119-_13.
.
Fmally, Wellsvtlle (6·0) has
three shutou~ and has ·all&lt;_&gt;wed one
touchdown m each of us other
g&amp;mes! outscoring opponents 20519. Eric Wolfe scored touchdowns
o~ a 48-yard run, a 32-yard pass, a
4j -yard interception return ,and•i :
fumble recovery and scored on ~ • .
tv•o-point conversion in a 48 ~6 ~
rtmp over P.reviou, ly unbeaten :
1
Buckeye Trail.

•

ANNOUNCEMENt

wo:tn

1 w.......

t

81 yards and caught three passes
for47 yards. When the reserves hit
the field in lhe thir~ q~r. sophomore Brad ran s1x Urnes for 29
yards and scored three touchdowns.
PASSING GEAR: Reggie Johnson, of Huber Heights Wayne completed 18-of-27 passes for 309
yards and two touchdowns as Warriors beat Fairborn, 46-20; John
Leman completed 11-of-19 passes
for 342 yards and three touch downs and Kawambee Thomas
caught five passes for 183 yards
and a ~re m Springfield North's
58-35v•ctoryoverBeavercreet.
T-E·A-M: Riverdale was 0-5
and Colonel Crawford 5:0, but five
turnovers later the Falcons had
sbtnned the state-rantedEag~es 31 6; Van Buren scored With m seconds left in the half and·1:031eft in
the game to ~oc~ off previously
ur.beaten Arhngton 27-20; Cuya-

..

a

14AMf.61 'W14.3D:I. ·
101i1!!oo 12: I (do)-U.U• - .
,_.,;"""- tU333. 3-a.-•..
IUUJ. f.- t•=ao• tU666. 5·
-tS:tl66.. 6-lllokn13JI31

•

•

will
were

·Call"Dave .or Bob
For More Information
.99·2·2155

lool.. 9: 1-WoMor Lalto C11l1.
2ll.llft. 2-lloloil W. a..d: 16.6666. J.
CooloY 15.5133. oi-C001loiod Loltoviow
11'1000. 5•.u- SL Vioiceo-IL 1'flrY
13.6U6. '6 -CU.wloa• .W. o..i•a•
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..... II: 1-61-lloSoloo 21~ 2.--~. It•' rullll'-D». :J..111011Mll.B
,..IIWI
"-Dolo- Olla-

OIMII ....... U • - ......

WHISTLE STOPS : R1z Buckman of Dayton Stebbms returned
interception~ 15 and 4~ yards for
touchdowns m a 34-7 vtctory over
Sidney Lehman. He had a third
in1erception fa _a touchdown ~ed
back due to an madvertent whiStle.
He also had a 68-yard interception
for a touchdown called bact two
weeks ago against Versailles for
because of an inadvertent whistle.

. ''ViSiOn
D
uolle,uba/1
.
Pa 'li''ngs posted

I

Colbl. Dldp'""4 Glry Voaho,

0

48-14routofCantonSou~.

~eanwhile, Strongsville's Chad
Davtes scored on runs of 74, 46
and 6 yards:-- and all w~ wiped
out by penalbes. But he still scored
the clinching touchdown in a 21-3
victory over Medina.
Charlie.McElligott of Dayton
Oakwood mtercepted four passes
and·caught a 19-yard touchdown ·
pass in lhe Lumberjacks' first win
of the season, 20-0 over Dixie.
. McComb's Craig Aukerman ·
mtercepted three passes and teammate Andy Shoemaker scored on
three ~uns and ~ 4 7-yard punt
return m a 35-0 VICtory over Area·
dia.
FAMILY AFFAIR: Broth~rs
Bnan and Brad Laux of Cehna
comb~ed for five touchdowns _in
62-6 vtcuxy over Van Wert. SCIIIor
Brian scored twice when the reguIars were in. He rushed 10 times for

and~ ~len~ is quick.
. ,
Phillips wd the whole _team will ,
bi.ve to step up 1ts ~ffOJ'!S !"light of :
t1 e quarterback suuauon, and ~e :
expects lhe Huskers to go to hJID
more.
"You 5tart geuing into.it ll lot :
rr.ore when you carry 30 or 35 •
tines," Phillips said. "You e""' a :
·chance to wear the defense down." :

ries like the ono when the Tigers :
returned three interceptions for
toilchdowns in the fourth quarter :
against LSU.
'
I

.

1.1
'

the coliseum. But when one of his ·
ex-players, George Felton , was :
hired in 1986, McGuire returned :
and was a regular at home games.
McGuire was no stranger to :
tragedy. His son, Frank Jr., was·'
born with cerebral palsy, and his
first wife, PatriCia, died of cancer .
in 1967. Six years later, he married •
again and his wife, Margaret, :
known as Jane, survives him, as do :
two daughters, Patricia leanne and :
Carol Ann.
I

Bill Russell of the Boston
Celtics was named MVP of the
NBA five times.

~

.

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LEVOLOR

ANNUAL EVENT!
' --

•

...

'•
'•

'

I

J8,000 'Homes
In The Tri•Counfy Areal

'

PIIILADI!LPIIIA I'IIILIJI!S: -~-olfklliiiiCiper'
-:Jim ~..l!;...,..
lbiCiotrw' ...... 0...
... _
• ., .... Clouw- .
l'lillia
.

_,.or

I

Thompson i..edgen:tont's 25-20 -vic- ·
toryoverPymatunmgValley.
TIMES TWO: Adrian_ Brown hit
the 1,000-yard rushmg mart
{1,007) the fastest in Canton
McKinley history with 195 yards in
12 c3!ries in a ~8-? viftory o:-rer
Canf1eld. Louuv11le s Adnan
Brown - no relation to lhe one at
McKinley - had 203 yards on 12
carries and five touchdowns in a

0

Friday, Oct. 21, 1894
Ieath Over

IIOIIIICOCIIIIIICcqSo,...__, Uld

.

.freshmen from competing

On

ANGELES D&lt;!l)(]BRS: Aa·

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a

NCAA likely to OK plan_ to bar

Point Plaas;tnl Raglstar,
.Gall.polis Daily 'rJbuna,
and 'he Dally Sentinel

BAL11MORE ORIOLP : ............
pi!&lt;!oor, nfuood minor

LOS

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to ;lpp~ar In ,.ha_\

1hot Tom BoiiUI,

DlviiiOD D

16.

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II.
3-a.Jfcrd 16.3333. 4-Moolioca
14.0000. 5-Panaa Hll. Holy Naldo
J2.ll3l6-W.....W.IIIo. 12.3333.
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IUIIJ3. 3-c.a-16.4166. 4 - -.
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...... 7: 1-Ccl. .......... 17.3333.
2-JiyliM -~ 15.1333. J.Ccl
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12JOOQ. 6011.11. Cbldlo 9.1666.
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11.4166. oi-Doblln 11.1500. 5-Lilllo Sr.
15.0000. 6-W.....me......,. 14.6666.
......... 1.0.. Colonia 21.9166. 2Hubor Hu. Wo,.e 19.!000. 3-Cin. St.
Xa•ilr 11.5000. 4-l:a...... F1inoooo
16.2500. 5-Homillon 15.9166. 6-Cin.
Mcollorl52500.

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1 w..,.. Hudio&amp; 20.5000. 3-S...,...;tlc
11.5133. oi-N. Dlnii!Od 17.1666. f(tio)Euclid. ShlkcriiiL.I!uiiUo N. 16.3331
JtoiJioa 2: 1-Caatoa. McKi.aleJ ~
22.4166. 2-Ma11illoa · W11biiiJ1.oa
17.9166. 3-Aiuoo Ouflald 17.5133....
F - -17AJ66.l-Y-. A-·
town-Pitch 16. ~166. 6-Tol. St. Jolla 's

Ohio H.S. poll ·

&gt;

Rill• 24: 1-S&lt;IIeney 16.1666. 1·
OedoMllo 112l00. ).Cia. Coo:uy Illy
11 .6666-4-Now a,_ 11.4166. ~-T&gt;pp

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Division I

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10.1666.

Transactions

llllc - - ..,
il wilh · - bl·- poiniJ per pmo (lqo
ru ._.. ia elc:b repm ·aCivance &amp;o reJiclllll..mnoll):

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Moaday, Oct. 17 .

•

'

COLUMBUS, QUo (AP) - Tho lhinl

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~

NEW
FALL BUNTING
GUIDE

Newark Cath. t 1.5133. 4-Plymolll.h
10.4166. l-lloollovllle 10.3333. 6-H..Ih

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OI'IIN O'ATE: Olkqo, Doaail, Orela

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n.a.._......_9.n33.
Jleti• 21: I·Loioolc 12.6666. 2-AI'
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10.1333. 4 (lio)-lloll Hudia "'octhom.
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Ropa 23: l·Dinvillo 15.1333. :IPORTSMOUTH BAST 14.1666. ] .

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CNCINNA11atl'llllboqii.IJ'DL

•

Donald 10.2500. S (tie)-Dalton Local,

11-Belloire s. Jcl:all6. 12-lloalb lO. 1]. •
11o1bo1 (I) 19. 14-SU&gt;Iuoky' S..
I. 15-llollell t7. 16-Cuyal:op
Foil• (I) 15. 17 (tio)· AOfOail, Lowollvillo. MoCaDh (I) 13.

Suacla)', Oot. 16

1

DlvbiGII VI

TIPJI

··

Auburn's 'bowl -game' Saturday ag~inst Florida

~
~
~

Real011 21 : t-New Waah. 811c:keye
·C.L 11.6666. 2,.Sanduaty SL Mary' a

10.1333. J.a..

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•

'

·· ·

•

Ex-South Carolina coach McGuire dies at 80

1

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12.33314-Sup ' Outwa)' 10.9166.
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9-Doovillo (Z)(H) ................................6S
10-Columblloa(HI- ............................33

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Division V

•,

you've got to go to Pc:nn State and for a toucbdoWIL
' ~
·
win, you've got play Michipn and - "The lllinois game a Yf!P•
win, you've got to beat WISCOllSin the difference was we ~~
- you've got 10 win out and hope blocked punt in the a zoae:
somebody else loses," Cooper do that Saturday, we migk Win die ·
game.Butwedon'tdoiL" - •
said
Ohio Slilte's 110blems are not in , The sev~nth-ycar Ohio Stl!U
play calling or persoimel but .in coach said his tei!JD - ~ ill
execution of the P!'YB by the per- the first half of its two Big T~
games - must come alive. Alid
soonel, Cooper said.
soon.
" We'r~ havin6. trouble gettimr
" Hwe OOII't go to East I ..ani
big plays," he wd. "That doesnII
necessarily mean we haven't had this week and really get fired up
anybody run for a touchdown or ani! play a physical football game,
catch a long pass.... It bothers me a we're in for a long Saturday aftulittle bit tlmt, hey, we don't inter- noon," Cooper said
The game, televised regio~Y
cept a pass a!ld run it back for a
'
SCllre. We haven'! blocked a kick by ABC, will kick off at noon.

RuFF

'·

JtocjCII 17: 1-WIIIIVWo 16.6666. 1·
Aluoo MlncbOII• 13.7500. 3-W•mn
~ody U.6666. 4-S,..b. Cillo- CcnL
11.5133. 5-LilbciiAa- 9.9166. 6Colllmbilao CnoiViow 9.3331
'

bined to go 21-5, Ohio State has
yet to play an opponent that was
above .SOO at kickoff.
Asked if it crossed his mit)d that
his team equid finish with a losin6
record. Cooper said, "You don't at
here and think, 'Well, jeez, if we
lose this game, such and such is
going to happen.' I don't know of a
football coach who does that. At
least I don't"
Neither Ohio State nor Michi·
gan State (2·3) can afford another
loss in Big Ten play or any lingering Rose Bowl hopes will wilt.
"You lose two games this early
in this league, ttien that means

By JOE
to defensive back arid then wing- ready, be prepared for lhe game,"
game 45-28.
the Comhusters are C!lunting on to
LINCOLN, Ncb. (AP) - Can- back his first season. . .
Turman said.
" I wouldn't consid~ it myself lead th~ lhrough therr quarterback
didates for the quarterback position ' "I want to play, " said
The Cornhuskers will face an against Chad May," Turm~ smd. difficulu~.
. .
·are coming from all corners of the Beninger who Jed ihe COI'Dhusters undefealed Kansas State team
•'There are 21 people out m lhe
Runrung back Lawrence Ph1lli{IS
Nebraska practice field
(6-0) 10 a42-32 win over Wyoming coming off a 21 -13 · win ove~ field besides· the quarterbac_k and has rushed for_1,006 yards m SIX
· Brook Berringer and Malt Tur- with 131 yards passing 74 yards archrival Kansas
they all have a role to do. W1th the games and earned the ball a career.. man are the top two quarterbacks rushing and three touchdowns. "If
The Wildcau have Big Eight supporting cast that 1: d ha~e higb 33- ~es for a career-high 221
•or No 2 Nebraska for Saturday's !here's any way they'll let me play, standout Chad' May who last year around me on offense, I think we d yards agamst Oklahoma State. The
.
' record 489 be able to ~~e the ball." .
. I'me 1s
' b'·~ and tal ented
., ''game Saturday
at No. 16 Kansas I want to play."
, threw for a conference
of'.enstve
State {4-0).
.
.
Doctors, family and coaches yards a$11inst Nebraska on 30--forClearly, tt s the supportmg cast
: After that, the Cornhusters' will have to decide by game day 51 passtn~. Kansas State lost that
, quarterback possibilities are wing-. what is best for Berringer and what
··back Clester Johnson, safety Tony is best for the team. "Unfortunate, Veland and cornerback Barron ly, those two may not coincide,"
' Miles.
Berringer said.
.
~·. "I've bad about IS players
His- collapsed lung is damaged By PAUL NEWBERRY .
dog, Bowden.has the smug c~nfi­ team that has rallied from behind
'.come up. and _tell·mc how ~ted likcaflnger_m!&amp;htbecutand~
AUBURN, Ala. {AP)- The dence of a coach in a no-lose Situa- nine times during its winning
• they are at quarterback,' coach time to repau ttself. 11ie llmg IS X· national championship is always tion. Especially when he's got a sneak, including improbable victo,T0111 Osborne said Tuesday.
rayed every day, he said.
decided in Januaty, right? The
: ~ Berringer, who took over for
It's not life-threatening, tiut re- book isn't cloSed until some team
Tommie Frazier last week when he injuring it could lcnf~ben ~iut carries its coach off the field after a
was sidelined with a blood clot in and slow the healing ume, he
.
game named for a fruil or a plant or
his left leg, is waitin~ to hear- _ Turman, a sophomore wa -on a party.
. and that •s By PETE IACOBELU
in what many slill consider the
whether his left lung 1s healed Osboine has desc~bed as ~ pi yer
That's the way 1t' ts,
most e~citing championship game
enoup to let him play. Ifnot, Tur- · who doesn't loot_like anythmj!. but lhe way it will be as long as someCOLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) inan IS the man.
seems to get the JOb done, saad the lhing called the Bowl Coalition has Frank McGuire, who lmught style, ever. The Tar Heels beat Kansas
1
flair and big-time basketball to a and Wilt Chamberlain 54-53 in
. . "I grew·up here in Nebraska, team gained confidence in him its way.
region
that reveled in football, is triple overtime to complete a 32-0
I've lived here all my life and I've when he took over in the second
But in a year when the New
season.
always dreamed about coming to balf last week against Oklahoma Year's Day picture figures to be dead after a long illness.
McGuire :was born Nov. 8,
McGuire, 80, died at his West
Nebraska and playing. And it is State.
scrambled because of varying conkind of a dream come true,' ' TurNebraska was ahead 9~3 and ference commitments, add another Columbia home shortly after I :30 19131 lhe son ora New York police
p.m. Tuesday. Wanda McNair, a 9fficer. He began his head coachman said
Turman helped guide the Corn- variable to the mix.
deputy Lexington County coroner, ing career at his alma mater, St.
The No. 3 quarterback is John· huskers to a 32-3 win.
·
The Swamp Bowl.
11011, a second-team wingback who
Osborne hasn't said a great deal
No.6 Auburn is confident it will said McGuire suffered from com- John 's, in 1948 after senling in the
last played q~ three YCIUS to him, Turman said Tuesday.
be in control .of lhe national cham- plications of a stroke about two Navy during World War II.
In five seasons under· lhe popuago. Johnson was recruited as a
"Nothing really lite a pep talk pionship race wilh a victory Satur- years ago.
Bob Fulton, South Carolina's lar Irishman, the Redmen won 20
~uarterbact; but the junior moved ·or anything, he just told me to be
day at top-ranted florida, even
though the Tigers season will · longtime announcer, said McGuire games three times and were 102-36
I·
c0111e to an end on Nov. 19, before · fought to stay alive throug~ the overall.
He was lured away from St.
weekend until his sister could
!he bowl invitations even go out
" We can't go to a bowl, so this arrive from New York Qn Monday. John's by North Carolina and
is our Sugar Bowl," said Auburn " "His family agreed !hat it was a turned around the struggling Tar
coach Terry Bowden, whose team godsend," Fulton said. "He was in Heel program. McGuire went 16458 with the help of Dean Smith, a
;: . KANSAS ciTY, Mo.-(AP)- me~t the require~ents must pay is on NCAA probation. " If we're • so much pain the last few weeks.''
young assistant who has been
McNair
said
McGuire's
wife
the NCA'A Council probably lhCJr own way thcu: frcsh~an f.el!C going to win lhe nation!~' champi- and other family members were at North Carolina's coach for 33
··won't oppose the Presidents Com- and cannot practice wuh t eu onship without playing m January,
·years.
you have to have a No. I team on his side when he died.
•·iitission 's move to let freshmen teams.
McGuire left North Carolina in
McGuire led North Carolina to
your
schedule.
We
should
be
· )fho meet only some elij~ibility
There will be several competing
1961 for lhe NBA and lhe Philadel.
its
fust
national
basketball
champithankful
for
Ibis
coance•
, f,equirements still practice ,and proposals on ~e Janu~y age~d_a
·
Auburn has won 17 games in a onship and was the winningest phia Warriors.
' ~ive scholarships, but not com- for the NCAA s nearly 300 DtvtIn
1964,
McGuire
accepted
a
coach
in
Soulh
Carolina
history.
row. the longest' winning streak i_n
:iJ.ete during that first year.
·
sion I schools to choose from .
job
at
Soulh
Carolina,
which
had
McGuire,
a
dapper
dresser
v:ho
Division I-A, but Bowden's team IS
• The council is preparing its l,egNCAA president Joe Crowley barred
from post-season play for had a pair of alligator coachmg managed jus: two winning seasons
:,~liwon for !he January convention said last week he doubted the coonlhe
second
straight year while serv- shoes, won 724 games - 549 at in 12 years. After two losing sea_.!n San Diego, and scheduled a cil w&lt;:&gt;~ld sponsor l~gislation in ing out its NCAA
the college level - during a 41- sons, the Gamecocks won few er
sentence.
~:news conference todaY to announce oppostuon to the prestdents.
year career that ended in 1980 !han 14 games only once. They sur·
Last
year,
the
Tigers
ended
their
1ts package.
·
"Of course, the council has the season in November with an 11-0 when he · was eased out as head passed the 20-win mark six straight
• The commission voted last authority to do that," Crowley
seasons beginning in 1969.
record~ the only undefeated mark in coach at Soulh Carolina.
'inonth to push for continued use of said. ' 'But what the c~mmis~ion America
During his tenure, the playing
He
was
named
to
the
National
after the bow Is were
SAT and ACT scores as pan of the did was the result of d1scusstons
area
of the Carolina Coliseum was
Basketball
Hall
of
Fame
in
1977.
freshmen eligibility requirements.
with the Joint Policy Board, trying played. But it was only good
McGuire was 283- 142 in 16 named Frank McGuire Arena.
enough
for
No.
4
in
the
final
Asso• But the presidents_&amp;!so~ to to arrive at a Wsition ~ &lt;:OUkl be
sea5ons at South Carolina, leading S0111e called the 12,401-seat facililet the partial quallft~rs r~e1ve accepted ~Y the commiSSIOn and ciated Press rantings.
Bowden believes this year the Gamecocks to four straight ty lhe " House That Frank Built."
scholarships and pracuce wtth the the counctl. I would expect the
NCAA tournaments beginning with
But it came tumbling down after
.teani. The commission said tbat council would he willing to give would be different under the same the school's first NCAA appear- the 1979-80 season. The Gamewas a major concession to black serious consideration to that pro- circumstances.
cocks finished 16-11 and McGuire
"If we do somehow find a way ance in 1971.
'toaches and educators who claim posal." ·
·
In
1952,
McGuire
led
SL
John's
was forced ouL
the standardized tests are racially
The BlaCk Coaches Association, to win (at Florida), I think it's a to the NCAA championship game,
The school later paid McGuire a
valid
reality
that
we're
in
the
driv~fiscriminatory.
·
as expected, blasted the tnsidents' er's sea1 as far as lhe AP poll," he which lhe Redmen lost to Kansas '$400,000 settlement, but he
_. Currently, freshmen who don't proposal. The BCA threatened to
remained unhappy with how lhe
10
. boycott basketball games last year said. "I don't feel lite lhey'll give 80-63.
•
Five
years
later,
McGuire
led
university handled l!is lesving. For
1) to a team that got:s 11 -0
II
in protest over a convention vote {No.
several
years, he stayed away from
North
Carolina
to
the
NCAA
title
and doesn't play a game m Jan1
II
on scholarsbip limits. ·
uary.
But
I
do
feel
lite
they'll
give
Thc ,BCA, as well as other
I' ' II&gt; T '
coaching groups, was ~cularly it to a team that goes 22-0 and
doesn't play a ~e in January.''
opposed to the presidents' decision
Naturally, his players agree.
,
1' 1'
.
' not to let partial qualifie!S _re_g~n
"
How
can
you
overlook
a
team
:
.
,
their fourth year of ehgtblhty
that ~oes 11 -0 two times in a
··. Pairings for the Division n·sec- lhiough academic achievcmenL
.The SandY &amp; Beaver Insurance Co. has
~volleyball 10~nt, which _- Under the commission's propos- row?' asks defensive r.actle Mike
Pelton.
"I'm
not
into
the
voting
be 'held on Saturday, Oc.L ~. al, paitia1 qualifiers ,would have to thing, but if I controlled it, I would
acquired the Sutton &amp; Chester
announced Slillday. .
' sit out thcu first year -..d would
Farmers Mutual Insurance Co..
. .. &lt;' At 5:30 p.m., GaDia Acll!fcmy have only, three yean to ~pete, have voted fa us last year."
Pclton ~s vote aside, this is the
~ face the winner of the 4 P.~· no matter bow &amp;DO!' thctr classeffective Sept 15, 1994.
between Ja- 8lld Flur- room perf~ misJI' be.
. first realistic chance for Auburn to
become a serious national conto
decide
the
ur~Mr-bractct
"I
1aaow
a
fainumber
d
(RSI·
Itll.k!· At 7 p.m.; MciiJii-ICheduled dents who have supported !h.e tender: II'- · on !he road against •
'
the
best ~e~~~~YJDt the country. a team
Sutton
Chester
Policyholders who are In need of
10 fii:C River valley to decide who notion of the rl!l!!'f;l!e &lt;of e'if· that his Wo:t itiflilt five games by · ·
gCIS the 1ower-bnlc&amp;t lido. .
bility) in the put,
. cmy.o y.
pcillcy or claims Hrvlce will pl.... contact:
' The upper-bracket winner will the pn:sident of the Umvenuy of IIi averqe lcore of Sl-12, a te1111
Silly Limbert
that has
Slllight Southeastb'-t to the district ~t )t Nevada. "That hu bee~ on the em
£oilfcrence games at dreaded ·
Lambert Insurance Agency ·
Oaillicclthc oo Salunlay, O;L.29 to qencla fa five yean tu1111111g. The Florida
Field,
known
as
"The
14ke on the Lopn UpP,er:bractet last two years it was a pretty close
.115 East Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.
~tor. The lower-bracket willil9f vote. I apribute ~ to the de~op: Swamo."
That's
why,
even.
though
Phone 992-6G41
w!ll take oo the Chillicothe lower- ment of academic progress lcgisll- AubUin (6-0) is a 16-pomt under~ winner.
'
lion." .

•'

13.0000. S-Newuk Lickilla Valley

:1-llolphco Jcha'• Ci) (HI .............300
J.On. ~c., (I) 6-0 ...:..........223
oi-Coduvillo ) (HI .........................20'1
l-BooDmllo 4) (HI ..........................2112

NFL's Week 7 slate

ltq. 'f

w-

.. ....,oal•"•

Dlvl11011 VI
TPll.
t-M&lt;DoaoU (15l lHI ........................m

an AII.UiDI

Noollll, Atl .......... A6

•

....

DIWioaV

•

Big Bend Pony League Tonrnama111e11~ 1994 Big
Bend Youth League Champs and posting an
undefeated 18.0 regular-season record. In tbe
front rqw are {L-R) Chad Burton, Robert Qulls,
Brad Whitlatch, Eric Dillard and Caleb Shuler.
Standing are coach Steve Wood, players Rick
Jfciover, Mike Barnett, Cbrls Roush, Chris Bailey,
Tim Peavley, Jason Mullen and DJ. Blanks and
,~ches Dave Dodson and Pat Mullen.

•

:Osborne hav·ing to weed through candidates t_
o f1nd quarterback

.

TOURNAMENT CHAMPION -The Middlepor.t A's-Meigs County Chiropractic Clinic Pony
League squad posted a 25·1 overall record this
past season, losmg to Mason 4-3 during tbe league
tournament in Syracuse. Middleport picked up
three wins via forfeit, mercy-ruled opponents in
14 of 23 games and outscored opponents 322-58.
The team averaged 12.38 runs per game while glv·
lug up an ·average or 2.23 runs per opponent..
Team accomplishments were winning the 1994

-

;. In Nebraska's football camp,

•"
•

H

llrtiaa ll.9166.

:rwo

touchdowns in_ 50-6 victory.over
National Tra1l; Shawn Retd of
Dayton Patt~rson had_the third
highest rushmg total tn Dayton
~ program. .
City League history with 313 yards I,
; . Griswold carried the ball 47 on 38 carries and tour touchdowns
: limes in 'Keystone's 21-20 loss at in a 28-25 victory over Cine~
· Oberlin Friday. His 47 attempts Loveland· Brian Adams of Tn•. were 22 more than the entire Ober- County N~rth ran nine times for
~ lin team I
226 yards and two touchdowns
: Gris~old totaled 206 yards and while playing only the first half of
:'scored all three touchdowns. His a63-0victoryoverBradfad;
• longest run was 10 yards (twice) ·
Bloom-Garroll's Matt Barbee
" and he was thrown for minus g&amp;ined 245 yards on 21 carries and
, yardage just once, and that was for . scored four times against Teays
• onlyaooe-yardloss
Valley· Kansas Lali:ota's Steve
: Griswold also plliyed linebacker Bishop'had a school-record 237
, on defense and leads the team in yards on 1~ carries a~d scored
. rushing tackles and interceptions three times in a 54-7 vtctory over
~ -two d which he has returned for Gibsonburg; Canton GlenOak's
touchdowns.
· Adrian Culler picked up 2SS yards
RUSH WEEK: Freshman Ange- in a 42-20 victory over Timten;
, Jo Davis of Twin Valley South ran Paul Bozit gained 273 y~ on ~9
; 19 times for 249 yards and four carries .and scored three ttmes m
:··By RUSTY MILLER
•· APSportsWrlter
•- Don Griswold would get-his
• money's worth in a pay-for-play

.••

12.2500. 6-lloaaibol JUvw J1.7lOD.
...... 16: 1-Ccl. ...., 16.6666. :1.Volley v-- 14.9166. :J.W,
Jeffenoa 14.5000. 4-Cia. Wlomina
14.0000. 5-B....t•W• 13.9 66. 6ea.:-. Mlooall!oot 10.7500.

WIII'ELI!IISBUIO

~.u.U:C..: Jlcot~~!~

•;:u AII.UiDI
62 5

!!IlK

13.91'66. 6-Ck. 8

•

!Griswold shines in Keystone's one-point loss to Obe·rli_
n -;.

Scorel1oard
Football

.

music -on the radio, and rarely poll.
.
encounters a discouraging word
Cooper has s~=t the early
about Ohio State football in the mornings - and . evenings midst of the Wynonas, Rebas and trying to devise a way for his team
Merles.
'
. to (I) mate big plays and, (2) stop
Had he listened to call-in sportS allowing big plays. Both figure to
programs around the state, be be critical aspects as !he Buckeyes
W'ould not have been pleased.
prepare to play at Michigan State
Columbus radio call• in s~ows Satuniay.
'
Monday night were filled ·with · That game ""' off a treacherangry and disappointed Buckeye ous second half.nf the season that
fans. A recent Cincipnati call-in includes games at home against
show was notable fOI' how vitriolic Purdue (4-1), at third-ranked Penn
State (S-0), home against No.23
someofthecallswere.
All because Ohio State dropped Wisconsin (3-2), at Indiana (S· I)
to 4-2 (1-1 in the Big Ten) and out and at Ohio Stadium against fifth·
of the Top 25 poll for tl)e fust time ranted Miehigan {4-1)..
since the ninth week of the 1992
While those teams have com·

: Scholastic sidelight

....
•

DlviiiODIV

"" Dally Serillhll

I

.

••

.

I

:.;:Cooper ignores critics while readying for M1ch1gan State.,

•

In the NHL lsbor dispute,

'

On Ohio State's football -scene,

Wednesday,
October 12;
1~
.
.
Page ·c

· ·

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, OhiO

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:: Wldnesday, October 12, t994

The Daily Sentinelj
·

0

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r

FREE VALANCE
With Each Vertical Blind
Purchase
,

FREE MEASURING :
!
FREE INSTALLATION •
l S,le Ends Oct. 31 , 1994
WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

.•

~
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••
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SAT. 9·5:30,"SUN. 12-4 ,,
•
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428-1065
.
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I,

�. ..

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&amp;--the Dally Sentinel

.'. Page

'

/

. PoinerOy-LMiddlePoj. Ohio

· Wedneaday, OCtober 12, 1814

'

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~

.• Wedne~;oetober
12, 1994 '
~
.
.
. '

Pomeroy,-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The Dally Senti,.. · , . , 7

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:Page · ~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort.·Ohio

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l ·!W~Id~n~e~ecla~~~··!:Oct=ober~
-~21!2,~1~99~94~~-....""'!"-.......,...,...,

Wedneeday, October 12,1884

,

Emer~ylooms are not arenas for spectator viewing pleasure
are siUing with another palien\, and
when they see some action, they
came over and wai.Ch the show.
Medicine is not a spcclawr sport.
Ann, please ask them how they
would feel about a tolal stranger
watching their mother's bare chest
being defibrillated? Besides
violating that patient's right to .
confidentiality and privacy, the
gawkers may aciUally be inlerfering
with the patient's care by getting in
the way of docwrs and nurses who
are trying to perform lifesaving
procedures.
Please tell those who are in
emergency rooms, either u visiwrs
ot as minimally ill patients, to slay
at their assigned beds and let lhc
professionals do their already

Ann
Landers
Dear Au LaDders: Will you
plcuc help ed•M:ale the public about

common courtesy and simple
decency when visiting an emergaiC)'
room?
My husband is an emergencyroom physician. r can't tell you how
many limes he has had to ask
someone to get out of his way while
ttying to II'Cil a critically ill patient
These inttuden are not people
who stumble into the emergency
room by miSlike. Invariably, they

difficult jobs. .. HAVE HAD screams. Last weetcod,l had to ask come out wben she is able to
ENOUGH OF IT IN NORTH him. to leave because Belly w~ c:onchict herself JI'OIICI'Iy. Don\ let
CAROI.JNA.
getling on my IICIIVel.
bcr wear ycu down. Let her scam
DEAR NORTH CAROLINA:
Ann, I have lried everything from for 811'hour, if nece'"'''Y· This is one•
You told them, and very talking to Ibis child to puuing bcr in battle you mus.t win or you are
emphalically. I don\ know how I her room and liSialing to bcr IIClellll IUIIlc.
can improve on the messaae, but I for 40 minutes straigliL Nothing
Dear Aaa Laaden: J read
can pus the wool, and II= it is.
works. The tanttums continue. Her IDIIICwbere i!lat if you mt ••e lhe
Dear An Landen: I im the father doesn't know what to do wid! clim!W! between die m•Jder and
clivoR:cd mother of two boys, ages her, either. I really want our elbow whea I cliild ila!Oddler, and
8 and 14. I met a really great guy relaliooship 10 wlrt, but I feci as if multiply by a cestain number, you
about 10 months ago. We've talkod Betsy is succeeding at destroying iL wiD get I C:Joee lpiiiODmldon d Jhe
about gating lllllried. He also has Please tell me what to do. . cbild'l adulll!ei&amp;bl
two 'children - a boy, age 7, and a -- BEDEVILED AND BEMUSED
Our dughler and 1011-in-law girl, s.
IN MICHIGAN
newly ldopdve parenU and Iince
The problem is his daughter.
DEAR MICHIGAN: Betsy has they're quite tall. lhey are cariool tO
"Betsy" is extremely high-&amp;lrUJig and teamed how to conlrnl lhe flmily. boiV how lalllbeir 1011 illibly fD
has frequent temper lilnttums. When A new Sll'llegy must be ~ at be. Clll you or )'0111' ftllden belp.111
she doesl\'t get her way, she ties .once. The moment the tantruni outl-NBW~A IN INDIANA
down on the noor, kicks and begins, she should be laken to bcr
DEAR NONNA: Ac:cclrdi@g tD
..
room and told c:almly that she c:111 Dr. Robert Rosenfield, an

jt~rooper

!named
~ officer of
!month

endoCriDOiolilt ll Wyler Clliidlea'a

IIDD.:

Holpilll ill~. tlllft
to prec:ilcty pRidict a toddle~'•
t·
height from IUCb ~- Aldie .
age of 2, the aver~&amp;e beiabt for both ,
boya and girls i1 34 1/2 lnc:bel. A:
child who ia 110ticeably ahorter·
should be eumincd by a pbylidan. ·
Wlllu Clll ~~~ give Ute fiii'IIM wiJo:
has t~~trythillg? AM LlwJm' book·,
Itt, "Gem&amp;, • is tdul.(or uJrlttrttwl,
or coffee Ulblt. "Gt1111" i.J a coli«·•
lio11 of AMlAitderr' 111011 req»Uted
f10t"U tutd ways. Stll4 a •V-tJd..
drtiWl.folll, buiiiUNUt fll'ldopt;
tutd a clttck or lffDMY order for.
$4.85 (litis illclfl4u polUIII IJIIII;
lttuldlillgJ 10: Gurl, clo AM LIM·
dN1, P.O. ~11562, Clicafo,1U.
60611-0562. (/11 Ca11ada, 1e11d

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: ~ The following land transfers
• were recorded recently in the office
: of Meigs County Recorder Emmo: gene Hamilton:
: . Deed, Paul A. Childs to Joyce
, Childs, Columbia ttacts;
: · Deed, Robert and Mennice B.
· Hampion to Steven and Kelly Lam: bert, Rutland; 53.72 acres;
·
. Deed, Marilyn S. Burke to
• Michael T1Burke, Chester;
: Right of way, Ernest aud Patti•' .cia Calaway to Tuppers Plains~ Chester Water District, Orange,
·"97.75 acres;
· Right of way, Everett Calaway
~ 10 TPCWD, Orange, 56.9318 acres;
Right or way, Richard L. and .
June A. Bearhs to TPCWD,
'Chester, 44.11 acres;
. ' Right of way, The&lt;xlorc P. and
Carol J. Sauber to TPCWD, Eedford, 160.50 acres;
Right of way, Michl A. and

·League lays plans for Hallo-ween party

CLASSIFIEDS

Grandparents fight for your rights
By ANNE B. ADAMS &amp;lid
.
NANCY NASH•CUMfdiNGS
· DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Woul4 you ple,aae send me the
address of the pandparents ri&amp;hts
organization? I had tlie.lllldress but
have lost it and now I need it. I
know it was out of state. -DORA.
TUCKER, Ocala, Fla.
DEAR DORA: We talked to
spokespersons for two organiza·
. uons that focus on ~andparents
rights. Bolh are based mMichigan.
The first is Grandparents
Anon~ which wu fC)URded in
1977 by Luella M. Davidson, who
cmtinues 10 be ~etive in lhe organi.zation. lt',for grandparents who
are denied legal visitauon of grandARTHUR ARNOLD
children as a result of divorce,
death of a son or daughter, custody .
married to the former K~lli Chad- disputes or a breakdown in family
wick of Wayne Cou~ty, W.Va. communications. They have a 1011They have three children, James, free number: 1-800-4-ACHILD.
Melissa and Jennifer.
When you call, be specific in

··r~- - - - - - - -.Meigs

"Honoring the Past and Looking cial gift prizes will be awarded.
Windows", a transparency, for
to the Future" will be the theme
Tbe classes in the adult division judges only.
.
Showcase Meigs County to be are "Movin£ on the River", showIn the junior division, there for
SlaSed Sarurday and Sunday ilt die ing motion , "The Bam Dance", "Wading m the Creek,", including
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
something colorful, a novice class: a rock; and horticulture: "Fall TreaAccording to the rules, any type "Log Cabin in the Woods", sures" for pumpkins, gourds, or .
of plant material may be used, arrangements including wood; squash, the best display; "Housefresh, dried, or treated, and anyone "Pomeroy's Coal and Salt Mines", plants, blooming or foliage"
can enter. Having membership in a black and white;' "Welcome chrysanthemums (one bloom or .
garden club is not a requirement
Home", a wreath or swag for hang- . spray) and dahlias.
Judging will be by the public ing with fresh or dried materials in
.There is an invitational class for
with the most popular arrange- two categories, herbal materials, local flower shops, called a fall
. mems to win best of show in both and 1other lhan h~ materials.
design of choice.
. the senior and junior division. SpeThere is also a class "Isinglass

Lead to Ohio," and the prog'ram Bag Lady" because of her unique
featured a workshop "I Am Child collection of totes.
- . Who is Parent?" The luncheon · Does of $6.50 are payable this
speaker was Liz Curtis Higgs, month .
author of "Does Dinner in a Bucket
· Plans were discussed for a
Count?" She also wrote "One Size Cnristmu project to include toys
and clothing for a needY. child, and
Fits all and Other Fables."
Dinner speaker was Jeanene dinner for an entire farmly.
P~fer. known as Toledo's Other

.

Senior Trooper Arthur H.
: Arnold of the Huntington, W.Va.,
: detachmen~ of the West Virginia
• State Pohce was . named the
l Sepl,embcr law enforcement officer
U&gt;f the mondl.
: · Arnold .wu cited for his consis; kot performance. He was also hon: bred for his actions earlier this year
: In the captute of a Kentucky man
• Y,.ho was accused of mlll'de{ing his
: wife. Although the suspect had a
~ shotgun, Arnold subdued him with
;pepper spray r11ther than using
!deadly force.
: ~ Arnold, a Pomeroy native, is

·Theme established for flower show

Plans for a Halloween party for
·the children of members were
made when the Mjddleport Child
.Conservation League met recently
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
Kiuy Darst, president, led in the
.pledge of allegiance and the mother's prayer. The resignation of
Tammie Muh was accepted . She
· has moved out of slate. Program·
ming for the year was discussed
. with the theme "You Are My Sun- ·
shine" to be carried ouL
' A letter was read from Jean
.Wallace, state president, about the
slate convention held last weekend
in Lima. Theme was "All Roa!ls

.

RECEIVE mGHEST MASONIC DEGitEE
- James Clatworthy of .Middleport, plctnred
third from left, was one of four Ohle MIISOIIS to
receive the highest honor of Scottish Rite
Freemasonry at the annual meetln11 of the
Supreme Council of Scottish Rite held I leveland recently ror the 15 northeastern an
western states. A total of 138 tblrty-thlr

degrees were awarded for "outstanding ·servk:e
to Freemasonry or for slplfkui contributions
· to humanity, reflecting credit •JIOII the fratmli· .
ty". Pictured lert to right are the Ohio recipients Geor11e Austin, Columbus: .Kenneth E.
B
n, Dayton, Clatwortby, and Walter A.
erd, MarysviUe.

Teresa M. King to TPCWD,
Chester, 3.05 acres:
Right of way, Dana Kelly Fick
to TPCWD, CheSfer, 33 acres;
Right of way, Gerald W. and
Joyce A. Burke 10 TPCWD,
Oran~e. 4.25 acres;
Raght of way, Nancy L. and
Mark Findling 10 TPCWD, Orange,
I 02.51 acres;
.·
Right of way, ~oyce A. and
Lucille Newell to TPCWD, Olive,
15.962 acres;
..
Certificate, Georgia Pauline
Rose, deceased, to Scott Allen
Ours and Marvin Edwards Biclcers,
Suuon, 6.1084 'acres;
·Deed, Home National· Bank to
Robert and Hyllia Eblin, Racine
parcels;
Deed, Edgar and Vica J. Abbott,
Foreman and Abbott, to Paul and
Mary K. Rice, Middleport parcels;
Deed, Ellsworth J. and Ann F.

SAVERS. ••

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

~

Gill to, conduct

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LL~~~--------~servtces

Question: I've had water coming from my right nipple, and I'm
not pregnant (I'm S1 years old),
and I'm not takin$ any hormones.
•My surgeon cxammed me and had
a mammogram done. That test
showed fibrocystic changes. What
are "fibrocystic changes" and why
does it cause water to COIDC from
IDY breut?
Answer: Fibrocystic changes of
the breast - which produce
"lumps" of fibrous connective lissue- are very common and affect
about one-third of women in this
country. The normal breast glands
are somewhat "lumpy" to the
f,Oitch, but fibrocystic lumps are
"""'er and they are often render.
: By themselves, fibrocystic
::(!hanges eause no serious problems.
· And,
· forturiately, this condition does not
·increase the risk of breut cancer.
Fibrocystic changes do make it a
bit more difficult for a woman 10
confidently interpret findings from
her breast self-elUIIIlination. Fibro·
c'yslic changes feel much like normal breast tissue, except that they
!ICC a bit larger and "lumpier."
• Cancer lumps, the terrible disease that strikes one out of every
eight women, is the most important
· ~ for performing breut selfexami~. I think it may help to
review the signs that distinguish
the feel of normal breast tissue with or without fibrocyslic changes
-+ from cancer. They are as followa:
·
CANCER TIS~UE
: "..:...Jump is
·
·:-lump is rou
, irregular;
: ...:.. lump can' b moved very
IIIIJCih;
.
·' -no other lump feels like~

mammography - a spe&lt;:ialtype of
X-ray of the breast that is good at
finding cancer while it is still
small. Unfortunately, it isn't very
good at
finding cancer in reprnduclive-age
women because their breasts are
filled with dense-appearing milk ·
glands. T~e number of glands
decrease with increasing age so
that by age SO a yearly mammogram as. advisable for all women.
The benefit in younger women is a
, topic of mucll debate in the medical, insurance, legal and political
arenas.
However, since you are 57 and
were having breast problems, the
mammogram you had was most
appropriate. The fibrocystic
chooges that were identifie~ are
qune common, and not senous.
They are also not the cause of your
breut discharge.
The presence of a discharge
from the breast is normal late in
pregnancy and during lactation.
Since you are ~,I don't think that
is the cause in your cue. Breast
tumors, such as.cancer, can pro·
duce a discharge that is usually
blood-tinged rather than clear or
milk-colored.
Mammography is particularly good
at identifying these types of
growths, so I think it is unlikely
that this is your problem.
Many abnormalities of the hormone-producing system can cause
breast discharge. Low thyroid funclion is certainly a consideration as
is

=

ttloRMAL BREAST
' - lump iii soft and compressible;
·
-lump is smooth atd regular;
. -lump is easily pujhcd about;
- many lumps feel about the

same· aod
'
· _:these lumps are always here.

: It's important for every woman.
tdpactice breast aelf-eumination
e.:h month. {II the ,teproduclive
~· it ;is usually IleA done after
.. .
·
.lllenllrual ~ bec:auae the norIJI'al .._ ~ are leu swoUen
· --·"' -- - and a .:... ump WUIIICl
- • •-w
~ ·For older 'II'OIIICD, I recdll..a.d doiD&amp; it each month when .
~ ~ bilf .mvea. (The pboDe
~· aewr foqetsto·I!CIId its

-w

·

~· . Adolber important method for

~tina ~ abnormalitids is
"'t\

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The Rev. Gene Gill of
Sarahsville, former pastor of the
Laurel Cliff ·Free Methodist
Church, will be conducting revival
services at the church Wednesday
through Sunday.
Topic will be "Holiness and
Healing of the Mind". "Sunrise"
will be providing special music for
the services to be ~eld at 7 p.m.
Wednesday through Saturday, and
atl0:30a.m. Sunday.
The minister has served in the
Free Methodist Olurch for 37 years
and often holds revival services. He
has served the Ohio conference of
the Free Methodist Church in many
capacities and presently is a member of the Board of Ministerial
E®ca!ion and Gui!laltce, .. ... ,
The Rev. Peter Tn:mbley, pas-..
lOr, invites the public 10 attend.

THE TASTE TEST - Karen Rouh wu one 61 many who
eojoyecl tastina foods flavored with llerbs it Saturday's herb fest
held in Pomeroy's mtnJ-park-en Sternwbeel Festival weekend.
Amon11 the exhibiting herbalists were Bobble Karr, Iert, and
Doooa Nease, pietured here amODg wreaths and swags made from
berb plant materials.
·

This Is Your Invitation To Sel.l Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise it FREE.
.
Simply Clip This Coupon' (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad- and
' Mall .It To. Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
·
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.
l ....

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: . . BEAUTIFUL DAHLIAS -The more Ibm 30 d•bll11 of vary·
·Ina sizes and colon dlapiAyed at the Stemwheel Feldival ftower
show staaed at the .Melaa County Library wOD the horticulture
·rosette for Bob aud Addalou Lewis. Here Judy Hauerty aud ber
sou, Coe,left, aud Cole, Middleport, iol* ewer the fliiwen. Others.
wi!Qien In the show were Alice TbompiiOII, Pomeroy, best Ill show
for her ''Loll Cabin ID the WOods" arraqement, ud Ben Crane,
Middlepclrt, best Ill
for 1111 exhibit In "Wadin&amp; In the .Creek"
arranpment In
diYIIIon.

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mechanisms, and occasion.ally Ibis can result in a breut discluqe.
It is also possible that lour
breast discharge is the result o
medication you lake for other coriditions. Atenolol, a medication
used for
blood ~ssure and heart disease;
along With a number .of medication
used to treat anlliety and other
emotio~al disorders can c~use
breast diacllarge.
I suaeat that youreturilto your
clocbfclramorccompdlllllsive
evalulllon of your blellt dilclllqe.
·The ~:~a.......-;c chinges you have
"""""Iire not the cause.
,
"11..0, Medidlle" II a weekly
col•••·. To aubalt qaeatlo••·
write to Job C. Wolf, D.O.,
0~ Unlmslty CoJiete Ill Ottenpaddc Meclldne, GniiiYeDOI' Hall,
Atbelll, Ohio 45701.

. SUSIE FISHER

••'

ONE ITEM- ONE FRE~ AD PER WEEK

'

99th birthday
ceJebrated
Susie Fisher, eldest member of
the Sy.racuse First Presbyterian ·
Church, was honored by the chun:h
on her 99dl birthday Wedoesday Itt
her Racine home.
Ftowors, a birthday cake, hal·
loon and Cllfds were PreSented to
. her ljy the cbwcb peopiC. The ~v.
Kris kobin!on, IIIISibr. aerved Holy
.Communion to'the~.
.Mieu!t~ lllow_out 'ibt! can.dles
.
on her .cake, the group sang
"Happy Birthday" 10 her. Cilke and
ice cream were aerved. Attending
were Jeff and lho Rev. Mrs. Robin~
son, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harde~
Co trill H
D'ddl
.....,.,.aret t , ~1en . 1 e,
Naomi London, Dons Wilt, and
· Della Starkey.

'

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOE$ NOT APPLY·TO YARD.SALES)

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NAME:~--~~--~----------------~.~

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PHONE:----~~/~.~--~~~--~··· --~-------

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MAILTO: ______._.___~'n_
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The Duily Sentinel
, 1·

111 Court Streit, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Explr~s November ts, 1994)

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ANNE. NAN.

P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048. ..
Questions of general interest wiD
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors
or "Ask Aane &amp; Nan" (Wilet·

~~:&gt;r,:;;»;:o~::.~~~:~

Share Tbeir Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, call1-800.888-1Z:ZO•
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, en 8317.)

land transfers---------

Holden to Don V. and Bonnie G.
Burke, Salem parcels;
Deed, Ruth A. Smith to Rebecca
Ann Ward, Pomeroy_parcels;
Deed, Harold L. llagle to Clay1£'1 P. and Karen M. Conklin, Olive
parcels;
Deed, Robert C. Kautz, et al., to
Mary C. Mora Kautz, Chester;
Deed, Roland E. and Sherry S.
Goodwin to Matthew T. and
Angela C. Huxley. Middleport parcel;
Affidavit, Mary L. Kauff,
deceased, to George W. Kauff,
PoiJlerny parcel;
Deed, Wilma G. Well to Eileen
Agnes Welker, Pomeroy lots;
Right of way, Vanessa
Kaukoneen to Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Bedford, 65 acres;
· Right of way, Brian and Davina
Willis to BREC, Rutland, 1.7972

Right of way, Ronald E. and
Carole A. Phillips, Salem, 28 acres;
Right of way, Mike and Tracy
Chapman to BREC, Columbia, 2
acres;
.
Right or'way, Southern Ohio
Coal Company to BREC, Salem,
11.72 acres;
Right of way, Roger D. Wamsley to BREC, Rutland, 74.34 and
4.9 acres;
Deed, Robert L. and Theresa
Ellen Dixon and Linda L. and
Robert Whitlatch to David G. and
Madhu B. Gritham, Pomeroy parcel;
Right of way, Wanda and Donald H. Wyeth and Robert and Tana
S. Welbnan to Columbus Southern
Power, Scipio parcels;
Right of way, Stanley Reese and
Arleen Schwalbauch to CSP, Sci·
pio parcels;
·
Right of way, Glennis and

acres:

Dolores Hoffman to CSP, Chester,
Right of way, Harold P. and
4. '35 acres;
l'v.. ary Jones to CSP, Columbia
Right of way, Henry and Mary pld'Cels;
Hanter to CSP, Chester, .5 acre;
Right of way, Mark W. and ')
Right of w.ay, Roy Jr. and Gwen A. Hall to CSP, Chester,
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Eunice L. Jones to CSP, 42.10 1.84 acres;
acres;
Right of way, Clifford Scott Jr.
Right of way, Stephen M. and and Patricia Ellen Scott to CSP,
Janice R. Weber IQ CSP, Chester, Chester, 4.7064 acres;
3.262 acres;
.
Right of way, Donald W. and
. Right of way; Roger W. and Bubara J. Crabtree to CSP,
Daisy V. Frecker 10 CSP, Chester, Columbia parcels;
go acres;
Right of way, John W. and
Right of way, Ross Junior and Mary L. Donaldson to CSP,
Gertrude M. Stewart 10 CSP, Rut- Columbia, 5.01 acres;
' land, 22.45 acres;
Deed, Charles and Martha Kay
Right of way, Edith M. Welch . Wheeler 10 Charles K. and Angela
to CSP, Scipio, 20.54 acres;
•
K Hall, Sunon, 1.004 acres;
Right of way, Clarence and
Deed, Ronald and Cecelia
Mary A. Mullins 10 CSP, Letart, I C ;&gt;ugan 10 Scott E D 0 and Ellen
acre:
Smith. Columbia parcels;
Right of way, Eugene R. and
Deed, Terry Stobart to Hobert
Dennis Facemyer to CSP. m.d Lorena Goggins, Pomeroy lots.
Columbia, 98.3 acres;

"We'll all be waiting here, the lottery were better than having
praying and hoping, until it's her be a good match," Mendez
over," said Curlee's.sister, Brenda said.
Curlee. She called her new sister- • Wearing their patient ID
in-law's gift "just the most incredi- bracelets, the two were married in a
ble, romantic thing."
small hospital ghapel filled with
The couple, who live in the Los flowers.
Angeles suburb of Laguna Hills,
When the minister talked about
got engaged in February. Shortly the importance of giving, Ingram,
afterward, Curlee learned that his in a long white off-the:shoulder
lifelong diabetes had damaged his dress, smiled. But Curlee, looking
k~!fs ,$Q exten$ively that he tired in his black tusedo, could not
n
tlanspbmL
.
hold back tears.
Ingram offered to be a donor,
After they sealed their union
and doctors were "shocked, but with a long kiss, die bride reached
pleasantly shocked" when tests out to wipe her new husband ' s
indicated she wu a good match, eyes.
said the couple's surgeon, Dr.
Ingram, 45, said she is doing
Robert Mendez. Blood relatives are nothing more lhan anyone would.
far more likely to match.
"If someone was in need, wouldn't
"I'd say the chances of winning you give your kidney? He's my

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• The Community Calendar Is
:publ11hed aa a free 1ervtc:e to .
.a oa-proftt aroup1 wl1hlng to .
:·a aaolnee aeetlnp aad 1peclal
;,fvent1. Ttie, eale1dar Ia not
'Ciea.taned to proaote 1alt1 or
.f lladrallen of anJ type. Items
.are priDted • 8p11Ce periaill ud
;eaaaot be paraJiteecl to ran a
,pedflc: aumber Ill days.
•
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WEDNESDAY
: POMEROY · Revival
'Wednesday through Sunday, Lau'tel Cliff Free Meihodist Church, 7
,P.'m. eacb day except Sundaf,
.I0:30 a.m. Rev. Gene .Gill. MUPc:
by sunrise.
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THURSDAY

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MASON - Public hearinll to
change lq distaiiCe to local calls
in Big~ area, 7 p.m. Thunday,
Mason Senior Building•
TUPPER
.
' S P~S _ ·~
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Plains Postll90!1 meeting, :30
p.m. Thuraday, II pOst.
POMEROY - 'Rock ~prings
Grange, 8 p.m. Thursda)l at the
hall.
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RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Soolten, Thunday, 7 p.m at the hiatuchool.l ·
CHESTER - S,hade 'River
.....__..., """
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, ..,,-·
u 11.m .

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pal. It' s our life," the bride said as
she toasted her new husband, surroun~ by family and frien!ls.
In offering a kidney, Ingram
probably is saving her husband
from blindness, dainage to his heart
and blood vessels and circula10ry
problems in his legs.
She may also be saving his life.
About 23 percent of all diabetics at
Curlee's age who go on kidney
dialysis die within three to four
years - the normal waitin2 oeriod
for a new kidney.
The couple, he a marketing
direciOr and she a real estate agent,
also hope their wedding and
surgery will encourage other
donors. About 26,000 people in the
United State are on waiting lists for
kidneys, but only about 8,000 kidneys are donated each year.

Long underwear made from recycled plastic bottles
I

By HILLARY CHURA.
Associated Press Writer
· WOLFEBORO, N.H. (AP) ~
That bottle of MOuntain Dew that
cooled you off in the summer may
keep you warm six months later.
Wickers Sportswear Inc. is
working to lessen both winter's
cold and Alnerica's landfill use by
making thcrml!l underwear and
other products front recycled plastic.
·
Wickers is among a growing

'
number of U.S. companies
turning
recycled plaslic into underwear, Tshirts, backpacks and other products.
Navy blue and Mountain Dew
green are the only colors available•
for its thermals - green becauSe of
the bottles. color and blue because
that is the only environmentally
safe dye the company has found,
said quality control manager Carol
Melivier.
In November, the mail-order

company Lands' End will begin
selling 100 percent recycled underwear made by Wickers.
Wickers president and owner
Anthon)' Mazzenga hopes to have
the underwear in specialty shops by
August and September. Tops and
bottoms, for men and women, will
sell for $22 each, the same as comparable thermal anderwear made of
nonrecycled material.
The Commack, N.Y.-based
company makes ii.S thermals at a

LOS ANGELES (AP) - In a
union of Hollywood power bro·
kers, filmmaker Steven Spielberg
will form a new movie studio with
former Disney chief Jeffrey
Katzenberg and m~ia mogul
David Geffen accordmg to publishedreportsUxtay.
Katzenberg was to announce
plans for the joint venture today in
Beverly HillS unidentified aomces
told the LOs Angeles Times and the
e'ntertainment newspaper Daily
Variety.
The new company will both
produce and distribute movies, and
will make animation a priority, the
newspapers $aid.
Katzenberg, who will run the
firm, was the tenacious head of
Walt Disney Studios until last
montll. He is aedited with helping
revive Disney's animation urut tD

create blockbusters such as "The
Little Mermaid" and "The Lion
King."
It wu unclear what management role Spielberg and Geffen
:ovill play, but both could be
mvestors, sources speculated. Gef· fen is said to have a net wonh of
nearly $1 billion and SP!C!berg's is
put at m01e lhan $600 million.
Other potential backers include
Bill Gates of Microsoft Inc. !'"d
John Malo~ of the ~le TV gumt
TCI, according 10 Vanety.
Katzenberg recent!~ return.ed
from a !ou~d of m~etmgs wtth
prospective mvestors m New York,
the Ti!Jies ~Sp.elberg s ~e on the letter~ would be. an unponan~ draw.
HiS films roUUnely make tremen-

dous profits. He directed 1993's
l{IOSt popular and most honored
movies. res~tively - "Jurassic
Parle" and' Schindler's List"
He also has produced animated
films, including the hits "Who
Framed Roger Rabbit?" and "An
American Tail."
Geffen, a record industty legend
for his deals with everyone from
John Lennon 10 Nirvana, has been
moving iniO Hollywood. He has a
' deal with Warner Bros. and will
release the upcoming Tom Cruise
film "Interview With the Yampire."

Katzenberg has been searching
for his next venture since August,
when he was forced out of Disney
after a biuer falling out with Walt
Disney Co. Chairman

._:..·---Community calendar----

...•,

...

.

I .

'
•
..
'.••

f

u.-

----- ·-·

DEAR SALLY: We searched
gourmet shops u well and finally
found the zappered plastic putry
bag in the Miles Kimball catalog.
It's called the Zippy Piecrust
Maker and one is .for 9- to 9-1flinch pies (item 574061, $2.98) and
the other is for 10- 10 14-inch pies
(item 574079, $3.29). To receive a
catalog, call: 1-800-546-2255.
STUMPE.D·: PRODUCT TO
SETTLE WA'IER IN A CISTERN
-James Gregg of Coal Center,
Pa., writes, "We live in a rural area
where there is no city water and
everyone has a cistern to catch
water from our roof... When it rains
hard fpr a while die water going
into the cistern stirs up the sculings
and makes the water dirty. Years
ago there was a product called 'Old
Settle,' but we can't find it or a
replacement." Neither can we.
Dear Readers, can you?
. Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at

Spielberg, Kat~enberg, Geffen to form
new entertainment movie studio

•.

abnormal function of the pituitary
gland. Hodgkin's disease, lung cancer
and other illness can produce hor·
m.&gt;nes that don't respond to the

~-it's new, nev~ felt it befcn.

liiJIJ} · .'

·

sss·s.

BySALLYSTREFFBUZBEE
· Associated Press Writer
SA~ DIEGO (AP) - They
Jli:Omised to love and ·honor, cherISh and comfort, give and receive.
Today, Randall Curlee and Victoria Ingram will begin living out
· their wedding vows - heading. 10
surgery together so she can gave ·
~im a kidney that could save his ·
life;, . ·
,
. .,
I Just cant express at, Curlee,
46 1 S81d after die couple's mpriage
~-"What It ~eans to meii's reii!Iy too much.
~couple were spending their
wed~ng mg~t .next door to each
other 10 hospata: rooms. More tests
were sche~luled before: the'! J~int
surgery Ibis afternoon !'I a4JOmmg
operaiUig rooms.
•

Ohio University
College of Oste~pathic Medicine

REV. GENE GILL

descrlbiilg your needs. ·
Grandparents Rights Orianiza·
lion is non-profit and was founded
in 1984. They conduct educational
and advocacy activities aililed at
preserving and fos~ the childgrandparent relationshap in cakes
where £andparents have been
denied
right to visit panclchil·
dren. For m01e informauon, write
10 diem at
Woodward Av~..
Ste. 600, Birmingham, M148009.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
have searched in vain in all the
local "gourmet" shops and have
been·unable to fmd a piecrust form
- this beinf a round, zippered,
plasticl!lag,l inchesindiameter(I
ihink i comes in other sizes also)
in which one puts pie dough. and is
able to roll out a perfect carcle. I
bought some years ago but have
given diem all away -would yoo
know or a source? - SALLy
TRUE, Oiai, Calif.

AS~

.,._Festival wrap-up---. ·New wife .to donate a kidney to her ·husband

REAL TIME

"I
Fam1y
Medicine

The Dally $enUnel Pelle 8

PomtrO)· . Middleport, Ohio

FRIDAY .
RACINE - Fellowship Church
in Racine, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, 7 p.m. David Crowell of.
Michigan,_evangelist. Charles
Bush, pasui, invites public.
' SATURDAY
DANVILLE - Weekend service, 'Danville Church of Cltrisl, 7
p.in. Saturday; 10:30 a.m. and 6
pill. Sunday. Denver,Hill, Foster,
W. Yi.. speaker. · ,

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl
INSUUNCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUIIIDEPEIDEII
AGEITS SEIVIIG
IIEIGS COUIR .
SliCE 1161

STOVE
PIPE
STRAIGHT OR
ELBOWS
GALVANIZED
BLACK or BLUE

STOVE.
CEMENT
STOVE
BOARDS

Thilrsday. Refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT - Hyse.ll Run
Holiness Church, miasionary services, Tbursday, 7:30 p.m. Rev .
Clyde Henderson• speaker. ·

Wolfeboro factory where most of
its 75 employees work. It expects
to sell about $400,000 worth of
thermals this year. '
Overall sales at Wickers have
nearly doubled since 1991 and
sales this year are projected at $20
million , Mazzenga said. He
declined to disclose profit figures
for the privately held company.
The fabric Wickers uses for its
thermals comes from the fiber Fortrel -EcoSpun, made by Wellman Inc ."
·

Choose any term from
29 to 59 months.

Minimum deposit: $500.00

·Minimum-deposit: $2,500.00

FURNACE
FILTERS .
'PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

�Wedneeday, October 12, 1894

.#

Wedne1day, OctOber 12,1914

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

r

CBS back in
first ,place

COPYRIGHT 19M • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SONDAY,
OCTOBER II, THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT.15, 19M IN POMEROY.
,

Bj LYNN ELBER
AP Televilloa Writer

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANmiES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

.

Public Notice

LOS ANGELES (AP) -

CBS

fought its war to the Jql of the ratmgs ~as 1ts new senes "ChicaflO Hope ' picked up steam, helped

.

m part by a revamped schedule that

ensured the medical drama
wouldn't face NBC's "ER."
ABC had held the top spol for
the first two weeks ci the 1994-95
season. It had lhe No. I show in
"Home Improvement," but fell to
third in overall ratings for the week
of0cL3.
~
CBS' decision
w "Chicago

Hope" to a safer

unday.harbor,

away from NBC's hot "ER," paid
off. "Chicago Hope" jumped to
No. 31 from !he prior week's 59thplace showing.
·
"ER" continued its impressive
ratings climb, hitting !he No. 4 spot
. and pwnping more life into NBC's
successful effort to shed its chronic
· third-place status.
"Frasier" also did its bit for
NB~. closing the ratings gap
agamst the ~owerhouse "Home
Improvement • and rising to No. 8 •
from No. 19 lhe week before.
Among news shows, ABC celebrated its fiflh anniversary at lhe
top wilh a 9.5 average rating and
20 share. Except for two weeks,
"World News Tonight" has been
No. I since October l989,1he net·

See store for details.

MR. AND MRS. ROGER MANLEY, SR.

Manleys to mark 30th

work said.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manley, Sr.
"The CBS Evening News" was will celebrate !heir 301h wedding
second wilh an 8.4 rating and I R anniversary with an open house
share. "The NBC Nightly News" reception at !heir home, 1047 Soulh
was third wilh an 8.1 rating and 17 Second Ave.. Middlepon. Saturday
share.
from 2 to 4 p.m.
NBC earned a 12.0 average rat·
The reception is being hosled by
ing for Oct. 3-9, just edged by !heir children.
CBS' 12.1 rating, according to
Mr. and Mrs. Manley wen: mar·
Nielsen Media Research figures ricd on Oct 25, 1964 in Middleport
released Tuesday. Bolh networks

',

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Frozen
Turkey Breast

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REGUUIR, HOMESTYLE OR OO.CIUM FOilTIFIED

FRESH "SILVER PLATTER" WHOLE

Kroger
Juice

Boston~ Butt

Pork Roast

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IN THE DAIRY CASE.

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HIGH IN VITAMIN C, LOW IN CALORIES

Green

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Cabbage

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1 Ruffles

i Potato Chlps......6-0z.

2/ft5f.Te'i~~Eaoltl

IJiftt render rwlst
;;'I

White Breat1"..."..20-&lt;Jz.

SJfiS

. Ice ~ream. . .112-aatton

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CAGLE, INDIVIOUALLY QIJIOC FROZEN

-·· . Kroger
Tomato soup
10.75-0Z.

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·Boneless
Chicken
4-Lb.Ba(l

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With Cheese $1.49

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acrea, more or leaa.

~

employ~es

for the purpose of Fire

unto Gr1nton, Kenneth

Wallbrown and Charlene
Wallbrown, all rights to
royoltleo, production and
!roo houothold gas from the
exlotlng 'gao well located
upon the •bove described

l

,.,

'

"

••

By order of the

lloerdof~.

of Mllgo County, Ohio.
Henry a.. Huntar, Clllirmln

.Rita 0. Smith, Dlrtclor.

(10) 12, 19, 26, (11) 2; 4TC
PubliC Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
· Sooted blda will bt
receiv e d
by
the
undersigned unttl11 :00 1.m.
October 28th, 1994, tl tho
olllco" ol Crow and erow, P.
0 . Box &amp;68, 110 Wtat
Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
lor the sale ol the home and
real estate owned by Morvla
Kerr at the lima ol her
deceaae. Sold property Ia
located at 2111 Karr St.,
Syracuse, Ohio.
Said real estate lholl not
be sold for Iota th1n
$25,000 .00. If offer It
accepted, the lull purchaae

1 Mem

2

r-===n===o=ry==~

In

,..........

Excepting end reserving

unto the Grantors, their

heirs and aulgns a gas line
right of way and gas line
!rom the oil and gas wall

unto the grantors, K.C.

n•••
.......

'• f

11

Being 12.5 acrea out ol a protection.
14.00 acre tract;, being .17
Said tax being: A renewal
acrlt out ol a 1.00 aero olan exloting tax ol 0.7 mill
·tract; and 11 .36 acres out ol at a rate not exceeding 0.7
1 40.30 aero trect described
milia lor tach one dollar ol
In detdo recorded in vtluation, which emounts to price will be due on or
Volume 304, Page 473; otven cento ($0.07) lor oach before November 28, 19M,
Volume 283, Page 811; one hundred dollen of
Volume 298, Page 349 and vsluotion, for live (5) yoaro. The Executrix reoerveo tht
The Polls lor oald right to reject any and all
Volume 286, P1ge 87 of the Election will open at 6:30 bids.
Meigs County Deed o'clock A.M. and rema,ln Fred W Crow, attorney for
Aecordo. Being 1.54 acres open until 7:30 o'clock P.llt. the estate
out ol26.7 acreo.
of ••ld day.
(614) 992-5132
Excepting and rttervlng Dated Sept. 26, 1994
(10) 5. 9, 12, 16, t9, 23; 6TC

selected for honor roll

c.

Pial

Pubic~

Notice

fill; 1htnca oouth 190 1111; NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
thence wtst 535 fttt ; TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
thence north 190 lett to tht THE TEN MILL UMITAT10N
northwnt comer of • 1 aero
Rtvloed Coda, Stc11ono
troct . daocrlbad In Volume
5705.111,5705.25
283, Pego 811 of tho Molgo
given
County Dead Recorda, to
of •
Townohlp
Road
30 1~::~~:~~~~~~
VIllage
(Barringer Ridge Rood); I c
VIllage of
thence
weal
along Racine , Racine, Ohio,
Townohlp
Rood
30 paaatd on the tat day ol
(Berringer Ridge Road) 1225 August, 1994 there will be
fott; thence aouth to the oubmltltd to 1 vote ol the
eouth Uno ol 100 acre lot people ol aald oubdlvlalon
No. 165; thence east 10 the 11 1 General Election to bt
aouthtaot comer olen 8.60 held In the VIllage ol
acre troct ducrlbed In deed Racine, Ohio, at tho reguler
pltcoo of voting thortln, on
recorded In Volume 304, the 8th day of November,
Ptgt 473 ol the Melgo 1994, tho quealion ol
County Deed RljCordo; levying • tax, In oxcuo ol
thtnco North to tht pltco o!A tho ltn mill llm"otlon , lor
beginning, containing 32.57 the benelit of Racine VIllage

1

I

: ASSORTED FLAVORS

Public

Excepting and reserving aeroaa the above described
reol oatate along with the
Wsllbrown aka Kenner C. right to repair, replace and
Wallbrown and Helen molntoln some. Grantors
Wallbrown, any Interest they will pay lor any damagee
may have in end to the oil, caused to cropo which
gas and coal beneeth the occur aa a result of
real estate described In malnltflance of the gas line.
The Grantors, however,
Parcels 1 and 2 above.
Being a portion ol the rell Intent with thlo deed to
had a 20 share.
eattte deacribed In deed convey all other minerals or
recorded In Volume 213, mineral rights not reserved
Page 619, Deed Records of above that they own
beneath the real eatato
Molgo County, Ohio
presented gifts were Charlotte
Plans for inspection to be held (};borne is hospilalized in ParlcersParcel 3: An undivided without warranting the
Grant and Joann Baum. members one·thlrd (1/3) or any aame. It being their Intent to
o; Oct. 18 at 7 p.m. were made burg and Barbara Sargent is a
were reminded to send cards to Interest the grtntora, K.C. Quit claim the same to the
w~en Chesler Council 323, Daughpatient at University Hospilal.
Grantees.
Ada Morris on her Oct. 21 birth· Wallbrown tka Kenner C.
ters of America, met recently at lhe
Eslher Smilh read a leuer from
Atleren~ e Deeds: Volume
Wallbrown
and
Holen
day. She is at lhe Pomeroy Nwsing
Elsie Swisher, state council,
haD.
Wollbrown, may have in and 304, Page •1~ Volume 283,
and Rehabilitation Center.
Mary Barringer, councilor, regarding !he commission of Erma
to the oil, gas and coal Page 811 ; Volume 298, Page
Others attending were Elizabeth beneath the .following 349 and Volume 286, Page
presided at the meeting which C eland as council deputy. Cleland
87 of the Meigs County
Hayes, Jean Frederick, Goldie described real estate:
opened wilh pledges to lhe flags, w!S escorted to the altar by lhe
Situated In the Township Deed Reoorda, . 1
Frederick, Everett Grant, Penny
suipture, lhe Lord's Prayer, and flQ.gbearers and Dresented a gifl,
The real estate above
Elam, Faye Kirkhart, Ada Bissell, ol Lebanon, County of
rtll call. Practice for receiving readings were by Opal Hollon,
Meigs and State ol Ohio . described Ia subject to all
Mae
l'y1cPeek,
Marcia
Keller,
Thelnational and state officers was held. Betty Young, and Bamnger.
Being 94 aeret of land, leases, etsements and
ma While, Elhel Orr, Mary Holter, more
It was reported that Doris
Also escorted to lhe altar and
or Ieos, viz. Lot 165, rights of way of record.
~nd Laura Nice.
2. Situated In the State of
Grueser is not well, that Ella
Town 2, Range II, adjoining
fractional Section 11 In tho Ohio, County or Meigs ,
aforesaid range and Township of Lebanon, in
Township In the Ohio 100 acre lot No. 165, Town 2
Company's Purchase. For a North, tnd Range 11 West.
Beginning at 1 point In
more particular description
'
wnohlp
Road
30
• Thirty-nine employees and vololoald lot, rele&lt;tnce may bo
untecrs at VeiCrans Mcmaial Hoshad to the plana and (Barringer Rldgo Road),
pilal"were named to the "I Done
records ol the Ohio which Is 130 feet west of the
Northeast corner ol an 8.60
Good at VMH" honor roD during
Company.
The
prIor
lot described in deed
lhe lhird quarJcr of 1994.
grantors expressly reserve
from this conveyance the 6 recorded In Volume 304,
The program is designed to give
acres conveyed to Ruth Page 473 ol the Meigs
recognition to employees and vol- _
Browning lrom this Lot No. County Dead Records ;
unteers who have gone a step
165, by a deed from the thence South 190 !eel;
prior grantoro to the said thence West 535 leal;
beyond !he call of duty in handling
thence North 190 feet to the
patient and visitors relations or
Ruth Browning.
k
The prior grantors northwest cOrner of a 1.00
w h o have done outstandi ng wor
expressly reserve !rom tho acre tract described In
on a project
conveyance and operation Volume 283, Page 811 of the
Those named to the ron during
ol thlt deed the 1/2 of tho Meigs County Deed
the lhird quariCr include Rhonda
usual 1/8th ol the proceeds Recprds; thence beginning,
Dailey, Karen Clark, Doris lhle,
ol all oil, gas and coal when containing 2.33 acres, more
BemJ Weaver, Ron Vance. Nancy
produced, but the grantees or leaa.
Excepting any rentals and
· ·
MeG ·
C
shall have the right and
Gn'f I'lh • Chnstma
wre, arprivilege to lease and re· roytrtlll or tree gas rights
olyn Roush, Ruth Spaun, Julia
leaae and draw all rentals which are due !rom the
Wil~ George Hoffman, Selma Can,.
derived !rom tho elorould exlatlng oil and gas well
Connie Adkins, Teresa Wilson.
tract or land . The located on real eatato which
Theresa Bing, Misti PoweU, Julia
reservation Is made to Ia adjacent to the roal eatate
Qualls, Linda Jones, Karen Hudcover the reservation made doacrlbed tbove said well
· R sh T
H Iter
by Thomas . F. Cox and wea drilled punuant to an
Josie Cox In their deed to oil and gas leue recorded
son, Sherne 00 • anya 0
•
Karen Roush, Sharon Vickers, Jan·
J.M. Cox, dated 17th day or In Volume 70, Ptge 349 ol
ice Fetty, Cecelia Lisle, Margaret
February, 1921, recorded in the Meigs County Laue
Corsi, Helen Corsi, Lorene GogDeed Book No. 121. Page Records.
Reference Deed: Volume
gins, Mary Ann Allen, Jennifer
566, Meigs County, Ohio,
304, Page 473 and Volume
Thla deed is made subject 283, Page ~11 of the Meigs
ChasiCen, Sharon Pratt, Loraine
Veripy, Betty Sa""", Jessie While,
to a reservaJion held by
r•
Charles F Rllcnie for a County Deed Records.
Said real estate Ia subject
Jeanette Lawrence, Don Beegle,
graveyard on the south line
. Ralph Fisher,Jack Lyons and Bob
WINS PRIZE- Tanya Holter of the SkBled Nursln1 FaclHty at
olthe said 100 acre lot. Said to all leases, easements and
Hoeflich. Wiming a $50 cash prize
Veterans Memorial Hospital reeelves a $50 prize from Hospital
graveyard containing t /6th rights of way ol record.
Said real estate was
selected from !hose named to lhe
Administrator Scott Lucas as winner of the quarterly "I Don
olan acre .
appraised at: S 5,000.00
roH via lottery was Tanya Holler.
Good at VMH" program.
Deed Reference: Volume
Torma ol Sale: Cash
The real estate cannot be
3,
Page
619,
Meigs
: = = = = = = = = = r : : : : : - : : ; - : ; : : ; J = = ; : : : : : = = = = = =========i166, Page 15 11nd Volume sold lor le11 than two·thlrds
'ol November, t994, at WhlC!i
p bll
County Deed Records.
_ _P_u..,b:..ll_c_N_ot_lce_...-_ time said accounti will be
U C Notice
__..,P..,u..,b..,ll:..:c:..:N..:.o:..:t:.:.lce:.:...._ _ , Excepting the real estate oltht appraised value.
Jamea M. Soulsby
1considered and continued Recorda ol Molga County;
1described In Volume 283,
Sheriff ol Melgo County,
IN THE COMMON PLEAS from day to day unlllllnally thence oouth 65' 13' o11t
IN THE COURT OF
Page 811, ol the Deed
., Ohio
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION dloposed ol
110.5 loot along the center
COMMON PLEAS OF
Records ol Meigs County, (10) 12, 19, 26; 3TC
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Any poraon intereotod ol Road No. T. 31; thence
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Ohio,
IN THE MATTER OF
may lilt written exception• south 54' 4~' ttat 113.5 leet
TELMARK,INC.
Excepting and reserving
SETTLEMENT OF
to aald accounta or to along the center of ·oald
Pltlntlll,
unto tho grantors , K.C. 2
In Memory
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
matters pertaining to the rood; thence south 45' 21'
v.
Wtllbrown aka Kenner C. ;:::::::::::::::::::;
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
execution ol the truot, not east 183 lett along the
Cue No. 93-CV-280
Wallbrown and Helen
OHIO
In Loving Memory
iell tiTan live dayo prior to center ol uld road; thence
KENNETH WALLBROWN,
Wallbrown, the right to
Account~ ond vouchers
date ott lor hearing.
- aouth 42' 44' west 91 feet to
et. al
reside in tho residence
Of
of the following named
Robert E. Buck; Judge the .center of a creek;
Defendants.
located on said real estate
llduclarleo hove bttn llltd
TV
WESLEY
Common Pleu Court, thenca north ~4' SD' west
NOTICE OF SALE
lor and during their lives.
In tho Probete Court, Malgo
By virtue ol an Order ol Excepting and reserving
Probate Dlvlalon, Molgo 105 loti to 1 point In the
EWOTT
County, Ohio, lor opproval
County, Ohio canter ol uld creek; thence Sale loaued out ol tho unlo the grantors, K.C.
tnd oettloment:
12; 1TC
who passed away
north 51 ' 42' weal 225 feet Common Pleas Court ol Wellbrown aka Kenner C.
ESTATE NO. 27561 - Flnll ---------·~along oald creek, to a point · Melgo County, Ohio, In the Wall brown and Helen
Oct. 12,1993.
Account ol Richard D.
PUbliC
Notice
10
feet
north
ol
the
center
cue
ol
Telmark
,
Inc.,
Wollbrown,
the
right
to
A
mlNion
tlmea we've
Carter, Guardian ' of the _ _..;;;;;;...;........;...____, and to the west line ol C. Plaintiff, tgalnot Konnoth , rectlvo any rentol or royony
I'ICICided you,
Eatato ol Arthur Heiney, an
SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
Htrrloon an~ Bertht E. Wall brown ,
et
al., peymento realized !rom the
lncompentent Peroon.
Amllion timea we've
ESTATE
Horoman form; thence north Deltndanto, upon 1 oxploltatlon ol tha oil, gas
ESTATE NO. 27060 · Firat
cried.
CASE NUMBER 93-CV-275 ol the canter and to the judgment therein rendered, and coal lor and during
Account of Jennllar L.
If
LOVE
eould have
AMERICA'S
MORTGAGE
wool
Uno
ol
C.
Herrloon
and
being
Cllt
No.
93-CV,280
In
their
noturol
llvta.
Sheeto, Guardltn ol the
SERVICING, INC.,
Bertha' E. Hortman form; aold Court, I will olltr lor
Sold real eatato io oubject
aaved you,
Eottlf of Mabel Bonner
Plalntlll,
thence north 107 I tel along sola, at the front door oltht to oil legal rlghto ol way and
You never would
Plckeno, an Incompetent
v.
the ·aald waot line to the Courthouae In Pomeroy, 111 outotondlng ·oll tnd gu
have died.
Pereon. ·~
Wtsley K. Coch1an, at al., piece or beginning , Ohio, on tht ' 14th day ol '"""·
. ESTATE NO. 27777 - Firat
In
life
we loved you
Dtltndanto.
cont1lnlng .111 acre, except November, 1994, at 1D:30
Reltranct Doed: Volumo
Annual Accounty ol Alberto
dearly,
COURT OF COMMON
allltgtl rlghlo-ol·way.
a.m. the following 285, Page 697, Molgo
Hewoe, Guordfan of the
In death we love
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
Property
Improved
With
and
tenemonta,
to-wit:
County
Ott&lt;;!
Records.
Eotote of Glonno Rummel,
OHIO
Current Owner'o Name:
1: Situate In
Tho real eatote above
you lliU.
an lncomptltnt Poroon.
In
pureutnce
ol
on
Order
Wtalty
K.
Cochran,
Jennifer
I~:;~~~~~~
Township,
Melgt
deacrlbtd
Ia subject to all
In our hHIIa you
ESTATE NO. 26134 • Third
lc
State ol Ohio, and lea111, e11emtnto and
hold apse.,
and Current Account of of Salt to me dlrtcltd !rom K. Cochron
llld
Court
In
tht
.above
Prop~rty Addreoa: 31817
100 Aero Lot 165, rlghto olwoy olrtcord.
Eothtr Moore, Guardian of
TIMttno-elee
Rood
1187,
2 North, Range 11
Excepting tho· following
tho Poroon and Eltoto ol antltlod action, I wllloxpooo Public
can fl.
to.
alit
at
public
auction
at
Llngovllle,
OH
45741
of
tho
Ohio
out-convayoncts:
Tony Brower, a Minor.
H
broke
our hearts to
the
door
of
the
Courthouot
•
Approloed
at:
$8,500.00
Purchott
and
1.
Situated
In
the
State
ol
ESTATE No. 23e78 • Final
Term• ol aelt: IC!% of
•• followa:
Ohio, County or Molga,
1oM you,
ond Dlotrlbutlvo Account of on October 14, 1llt4, 11
at a point Townohlp · of Lebanon, In
But you did not go
. Carolyn L. Prlc.. Exo~utor 10:00 a.m. of llld doy, tho 'purchatt price d1y of eele,
Weal ol tht 100.tcre lot No. 165, town 2
alone.
of tht Eitoto of Hubert M. lollo10fing dtocrlbtd real b1lonce caah or ctrtllltd
'HUitt:--:- check within 30 daya of
corntr· of oold North, and Range11 Wtst.
Price, Dectaatd.
For part ol ua went
SITUATED In tho Stott of conflnnatlon.
Acre Lot 185, oald point
Beginning
at the
ESTATE NO. 21138 • Final
db you
Ohio,
County
of
Melgo,
J1mt1
M.
Souloby,
Shtrlll
lltglnnlng
being
In
the
Northeast
comer
of
an 8.60
and Dlotrlbutive Account ol
The
day God took you
Townahlp
ol
Salt11J,
and
Mtlgo
County,
Ohio
of
Townohll!
Road
T·
acro
lot
daocrlbtd
In
d11d
Billy Rathburn, Executor of·
home;
(Barringer Road) 1nd recorded In Volume 304,
tho Eotott of Fronceo J . beginning In tht ctntor of Emtreon A. Ktck .ooo&amp;23e
Road
No.
T.
31
on
tht
wool
Attorney
lor
Plolntill
tho
point
ol
beglnnhig
Page
473
ol
the
Mtlgo
Dlvldoon, Dtctloed.
.
Slldly
by
lint 01
lf.arloon end
311 Wool Fourth Strttt
tht raol utata 11 County Dotd Rocordo ;
Unltoa~ oxctptlono are
~
Doyfon, OH 45402 dtocrlbtd In deed recordod
ct
wut elona
filed 1horoto, oold occounto Bertha E. Hersman, d••d
Debbie Whllllttch •
(513) 223-5200 In Volume 283.' Pogtl11 of TO~~n11nlp
llood
30
will bt' lor hearing btlort recorded In Ottd Book No.
DHd Recorda of Mtlga (Barrlng1r Ridge Road) 130
oeld Court on the 14th d1y 111, Page 123, Dltd (10) 12, It, 26; 3TC
'
' '

VMH

•

•••

acrea, more or less.

Public Notice

Chester D of A prepare for inspection

coca Cola
Classic
"2-Liter

POU(.Id

••
•

.

CAFFEINE F/?EE DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE CLASSIC, DIET COKE OR

(4-7-LB. AVG.) U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE

r

by lhe laiC Rev. Guy Sayre. They
have a son and daughter-in-law,
Roger and Margie Manley. and a
daughiCr, Donna Meadows, all of
Middleport, and a son-in-law,
Kevin Meadows, Syracuse.
Manley is lhe owner-operat« of
Manley's Trash Service and Recycling Center of Middleport.
The couple requests lhat gifts be
omitted.

County, Ohio; thence South
tlong tht meandering• ol
the Eaet boundtry lint ol
1ht retl tttltl 11 dtacrlbtd
In Volume 283, Ptqt 811 ol
the Deed Recorda ol Melgo
County, Ohlo to the
Southall! corner of tht
Ianda deocrlbed In Volume
283, Page 111 ol the Dead
Recorda of Molgo County,
Ohio; thence South to the
South line ol t 00 Aero Lot
165; thence Eoet 470 feet lo
the Weal Uno ol 6 acreo
oxcopltd and doacrlbod In
Volume 213, Page 619 ol the
Dttd Recorda ol Molgo
County, Ohio; thence North
olona tho oald Wool line 800
feet to the center of
Townohlp Road T30
(Berringer Road); thence
Wtat olong the center or
oeld road to the pltce ol
beginning, containing 8.6
acrea, more or leas.
Fl.arctl 2: Situated In
Lebanon Townohlp, Mtlgt
County, State ol Ohio, and
being In 100 Acre Lot 165,
Town 2 North, Range 11
Wut
of the Ohio
Company'• Purch11t and
being daocrlbed aolollowo:
Beginning at a point on
the South tine ol 100 Aero
Lot 105, 798.57 loot w..t ol
the Southeast corner ol Lot
. 165 at the Southwest corner
of Parcel 1 described
obove; thence North 206
lett; thence Weal 1142 loot;
thence South 206 loot to tho
South line ol 100 Acre Lot
165; thence East along tho
South line of 100 Acre Lot
165 to the place of
beginning, containing 5.4

The Dally Stnullll

God knew how we ell
dearly loved her,
We thought ahe waa
luet the beet,
So. God look her to
her Heavenly home
A pllice al pace and
resL
We can't uy her life

II over,

once waa a
proeesalon of children
marching In Heaven .
Each held a lighted
candle, and •• 1hay
marched, they aan,g.
Their faces ahone with
happineaa. But onelltlla
boy stood alone.
"Why don't you join
ua, little boy?' ot)a
h'appy child aaked. ·
•1 can·r, he replitd.
"Every time I light rrrt
candle, rrrt mother pull
hut with her tam.• :

But a new life ahe Ilea
luet begun,
For today ehe'e In
Heaven ~nloylng
The preeence ~•

God'e'O..Son.
Sedly mined by
her children,

....,riM

In loving
ol "'I beeutlful
baby boy,

TYWESLEY
ELUOTT.
Born Aprii1B,111113
Pa11edAwrr/
October 12, 111113

grandchlldnan,

Jrlend8 end relatlvH.
8

(Mother)
Nikki Whklatch

Public Sale

&amp;AuctiOn

ESTATE
AUCTION.
SAT. OCT. 15, 1994
10:00A.M.
Located at the Auctco~ Center on At. 33 in Mason,
W V Due to parktng the estate of Howard Price has
been moved and well lie sold at the auctcon center.
Antique Furniture
Most of lhe furniture is early &amp; late 1800's,
b~aut1ful 2 pc . walnut &amp; cherry secretary, walnut
&amp; tiger ·m a ple Drop leaf table, cherry table
w/tiger maple drawer, 5 pc. Walnut Queen Anne
B. A. Suite one drawer washstand w/towel
bars, cherry t'iope leg Banquel table, 4 drawer
che,rry chest &amp; mirror, 3 drawer cherry chest, pr.
matching t 830-40 pine chests, pr. matching
cherry &amp; Burl Walnut Banquel tables, set of 4
Viet. chairs, early 1 &amp; 2 drawer cherry &amp;
walnut stands, Chippendale &amp; Queen Anne
Wing back chairs, pr matching maple twm
beds, cedar chests, set of 4 cain chai[s , early
side chairs, Hclchcock chair, pr. signed thatcher
wheeling early chairs, fireside cha11 w/ wnt1ng
surface, early rocker, mah . booksland , 1Wos1de
chairs Vf/Strecher bases. early hallarrow
backrocker, small round walnut hutch table
duncan fife table, nesl of tables . ,
'
Glassware ,
Fenton , Paltern glass , Depresston , set of
stafford sh1re dishes , master salts , 8 pi s e lling
J.c Louise Ba~~aria dishes w/serving pc ., Amber
Alladin Lamp, milk glass lamp &amp; oil lamps .
Collectablas
Painting B. Jean Haber, O .G . Mirrors, Several
Sets of Brass candle sticks , copper &amp; pewter
coffee pot, copper bowls , sterling spoons,
knifes, butterknifes, forks , pair point &amp; other pc".
of silver, silver plate bottom cake plale; '
bookends , duck decoys , wooden ~tools.
baskets, books , fine lg. wooden bowl,
Christmas Decorations &amp; more
Houaehold
Maple Chest Humidifier. sm-d kitchen
Applicances, G .E . Refrigerator, Chest Freezer,
Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer. hedgetnmmers, yard
&amp; hand tools plus much more .

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auctjon Co .

Lunch
Masori, w.v.· 773-5785
Auctioneer: Rick Pearson
E xeculor: David C. Pnce
Terms: Cash or check w/ lD
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property
&amp; bonded in
&amp; W V 166

.,

�I

..

Pea•

12-The Dally Sentinel

.!

.

,

-----

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---------------------------------- --~
~
Daily Special In Our
Bakery

Wednelday, October

..

;

. ..

.

.

..

12, 1914~

-RC CilLA
PRODUaS

10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 27$1.00·
with sauce 3~1.00 plain
.

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

'

. UNDI'S
PIINniG &amp; CO.

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10PM

l•terlor I
EJ:terlor

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

COUPONS

614-185-41110-

1 PM till?Fun For all Ages!
Perfonning bands include:
C1'0810Yer, Clark Family, The

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

s

Afr.rlp.m.

American legion Annex In
Middleport •

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

Clasaica, Middle Branch • C.J.
and the Counlry Gentlemen.
Tlcketa on Sale at Noon.

89

IIIIIIIL

FrM EatlmatN °
Belol'll I_p.m. leave
m1111ge.

Oct. 16, 1994

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD OCT. 9 THRU OCT. 15, 1994.

WE NOW ACCE

,_...,,

16.00 lor edult8, $3.00 lor
lddl12 yra. and under.
Kldl under 5 yra.
old are admitted lrae.
Fun lor Alii

$

$

U.S.D.A CHOICE·BONELESS BEEF

NOW SfAITIIIG

Starting Sun. Oct.
lith Racine Legion
Post 1602 6:45 pm
Thll lid good foi' 1

SportSMil

949·2038
949·2749

· EverySii•••r
1:00 P.M.

Jess' Complete
Upholstery

A"''

Headllnel'll, Cuetom
Sell Cover. &amp; C.rpet
Convertible Top8,

Anllqllll Ctl...
Boets.ta
01111'20 y..,. &amp;p.l- 41484 sweller Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45768

\.-:.

;•

•

WHITNEY
PINK SALMON

$ 19

1· '

-~ hook-up,
IIOxiOO+ lot. tiome hu wlririg, ~*"'
1"·''·r·"Cable
fillnt potdl ol7x24. IJx:aiOd on piiV8d
·
ASKING S28,500

Public Notice

iiOTICE OF ELECTION ON
(Ax LEVY IN EXCESS OF
;JHE TEN MILL LIMITATION

November.
1994, the
queotiorr of l'vylng a tax, In

t Aevised Code, Sections

limitation, lor lhe banelll of
Pomeroy Village for the
purpose of Fire protection.
Said tax being: A renewal
of an existing tax of 1 mill at
a rate not exceeding 1 (one)
mills tor each ona dollar of
valuation, which amounta to
ten cents ($0.1 0) for each
one hundred dollars of
valuallon, lor live (5) years.
The Polls · lor oald
Elecllon will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
.
Dated Sept. 26, 1994 ( --........,
By order of the /
Board of Election a,
ot Meigs County, Ohio. .
Henry L. Hunter, Chairman
Rita D. Smith. Director.
(10) 12, 19, 26, (11) 2 ; 4TC

:iiot.11(GJ, 5705.19, s1o_s.2s

COTTONELLE

IOat in pursuance of a
R.esolutlon of the VIllage
9ouncll of the Village of
R)ltland , Rutland, Ohio,
ppsaed on the 9th day of
0\\.gust, 199~ there will be
o~bmiHed to a vote of the
poople of oald subdlvlolon
ot a General Election to be
~ld In the Vllloge of
Rutland, Ohio, ot lht regular
places of voting therein, on
tiie 8th day of November.
\ 884, the queslion of
l~lng a tax, In e•ceoo of
ttle ten mill limitation , tor
tiie btnelll of Rutland
\IIIIJIII for lht purpose of

I

GAL

•

TOILET TISSUE

KRAFT AMERICAN IND. SLICES

:
$
149
Cheese •••••••• Jl:~••-••••••••.

_MORTON,

:'

- .

.(

• I

' =~

COUPON

:

I

_ : .s~1 2,
. I' 51#

COUPON

I

GREAlLAKES :: ::
:: GRA"ULATED SUGAR: : :

'

' .

:::1

:1 I I

• • .• • •

~

'

.....

~

I

r·-·- - -~·

:: ::

SWEET MORSELS

:: ::

~ ~s- J--2'

1202.

'

GROUND

. 9UVES
.

I

1 I

--------------------· 1

COUPON

.

:; :

•I l.s.soz.

'

I I
'
.
II
'
I I
'
; I ·I 1
Good Only AI Powell'a =;Iuper Valu
o 1 1 Ollar Good0cl.9 thru OCt15,111M
_,I I'· _ • • • Uilii\.S~P,t.C.l'I.IQIIlfi'_ • •• •
I
I
I

·~ · · ~ ·

'I I

.'I
I
II
o
!I
~~

FREE card.
Lie. No. ~~~
· ,111 ••'loli!J

MILK

::

I

.

. ·, r

··

,,
. if

F.-.&amp;......
7121AIII

,

Announce ments

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
Galllpolle, Oh.

Or Cell Ua At 446-1971 •nd

..W:.. Ueu•
I
V1rg1n1o, 77W7II. -

...._

-.Cillo

.....-.,... ..........
•• , .. _

,.....

....,.

o.c. E. Clell.

CCII.

Joe II. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

2· s·1· :: · .-S
'1:

~I

'

RACINE

Mower Clinic

·90

'I

I
•

Bill Slack
99&gt;2·2269

C~ristmas Layaway

Available on

mill

Wl!lldQ!ItQtt l
. chain saw.

.RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS

SAT., 6:30 P.M.
12Gawge
Factory Choke Oily
Bas~ B•illl119
11121114

•

••

UCINE
GUN CLUB
· GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

6:30P.M.
12 Gaige O.ly
Ullllted: 740
WIMire, 680 Fro11

DU'I
IPPLIIICI
SERVICE
For All•ior
lr••u

Used Applia•c••

..•
•..
•

L~

l

...

';!'-

c.~

. .......,..

.....
ond

1nd dr • wu.l.

_ __

1114-112-4215.

.....

whlto

clot

molt

~--,.-.-.
6 Lost&amp; Found

- to ""' . .ndlng ,.._
orplnoan_.,
.....
..... 1'14-10--7110. -

10

,

"Look !or the Red and White Awning"
~

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

.

'='~

ERRAND BOY

AMBERWOOD
KENNEL

=·l:z"l'
1

Employment Serv;ces

-------_11_.;..H.:.etp.::....w...;a,...nt.:.:ed:.:..._

1
1
4 Family: Frl .sa~. Cloln, Kkla AVON
... - ·
Clol~ Nlc-Moca,
1 IIIIo ,._,_, _
__

Are You Too Busy for Ranning &amp;rancls?
Let Errand Boy Do the
for You.

1o~

South.

~= :0~\::

CaD I·IOG-806-9482
•571 0
or 992

":C:-::

~:."! ~~~

~~m~:ze~4s~..~~'!!~

iip.m;;;·~
9atu~rdll~y
;. --;;;;w;;;;i;;;;;
, a.Solo:
l!oltlriMI- =~::.~---:.:'"
· - ::.:::'·=~'"'"omcory...,--:-~---t-.
,
__ ,
5
~::::Ga:l:ll•::l:At:h:•n:•:Co=.::::-=====::=~~
Roecl; lot POOl S o - ~·-· EVERY SUNDAY · o.tve, ThuraDooU,
.SOC, Blcycio, ~-~~U:...IIe:-To-:
o-::Soii,.-_A~•oo::=o,__:IM'.=_
·:
J&amp;L INSULATION
Clolhlnfl ~· 3 51
1111

112·2772
Olllca Houn: Mon.-fri.
1:00 .-.3:30pm
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Roofing, Vinyl

,...,..,

...

Co.

1

,- ..&gt;rl-1'1• '·

f .J irgrc\tJI)d S

VIIIIgo.

~

~ Solo: 4 P.,,

·· ; \
Un d. r 12 fr•

H'.j •1-&gt;l•l'll 8. H.lr-h..llL&gt;('
t

1 1 ~
: Yml Solll Oct 14th 1~
·11th, 1645 SA 511, Aodnoy :.:.:.=-=:~---­

S~wct.lt')r

Howard

:-::.

1:30 p.m. or t..v. M

R.K lfHJ S!rtH ! tit'

Window., Ger~~gea.

Excavating

p.1n
Ra cl's .: t ] pIll
C ::~

r'l l P. \SS S6. lJIH1i•l t S.1

NO FEE TO r; ,\ ,--:[•
Q'12-77 1 1 n r

~-Ll -.}Hi~S

--------,1
ROBERT BISSEU

OneDoyOniy,Aoor141Socond

CONSTRUCTION

Pomeroy,

i.

!o

tl ·,

;,

Tru,

,·

r

•,

,- •

.·: •

I

~riHI

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

•,

IW.. _
W - AI
The Addi8on ~ 114 4tl 1711
Or AIIIIIJ In " - -

lOOT REPAIR 11A11 Ell· '
PEAIENCED, i1Wp--. .
,,

~...

~

d! [') •! 1, ·I' ..:.,, or I

~~. r· ·n.lt'l•·

n ~~­

t. 1·'1• d•.

~'''·)-

_,H .It'

' Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING

N~·REPAIR

utters
'
Downspouts
Gutter Clean1ng

Palnttpg

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
V14IIO TFN

II

.. .

:

.. " - '
~II. Llldn, WY. llooll ...

~
-.......... • - ..............
.,_.,_ ro...,_

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=··
·

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~~? tt.n-

....- 1

.

'

third,.,., ..........

Ascl •

, . _ , .......... P a l d l n - - ~
Advance. DMciiM: 1 :ODpm tM ut. 20 Of' 24, IMI 4Pift. .......,..
d a y - .... ool Ia to ..... larbldSundar oolliton- 1:GIIpll Ffldoy,
lllondoy
oollloft
10,__m. Dolry F._ tlolpof 11oo11 1o

Remodeling

.

,
•
•

""*,. \

•
,....,.,_
FOIIIlllar Will Fll"" ...
l.lrgo garago -,~14115, Evanlnfp,lt4-2 4S.11041
•
w , billy - .
- . Dopw' No lady MOdldto _, ;

Stop &amp; Compa~

OI&amp;'JES

,.5-··J• .

FREE ESTI-

0, I

Thonplot 10 -

=-=~ot..:.J
r.:~~..:
111111or ..,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

\

l':.J · l._lloiHl

,I'• ·

A.-o, F. .y 14th.

I•NieWHOIMI

Tr 1•i• r Sri··~
['tr -, • . r·, · ..::,, I' !1,
~--\

Not. WILI!or
Tobio,
4
Ciloi,.,
lutloi
lllc..,..vo
Cort,
Dnomo,
Orlontal Rup. . _ lniorlor,
Dolio, ~ '10 ,..,_h
L.Uor, eon- 018, Fla-. 3
112 lllie F.- Por111, "Wh.t0n
Ad, 4ih 14th,
0.. Loll - ·
10113111,

VI•'•_

H.)lJ .•

3

--Col.....,

Hot L :-~ps .1t 2

tkr: l(n·_. A:lrn rr1ct

~

llluch 11-1
~- "" , Young Chlohft
~ 2 Family Yaod Solo, In IIJ bo I flolillolo
Tlllildoy 131h, 131 Third - · . .h Own lloilobto '
A -.
Tr.,_tOiion.

GO·KART RACES
r.lclgS

Replecemant
Windon, Blown
lneu'-tlon, Storm
Doors, Stonn
F.-.&amp;llmllla

-po...

AFTERNOON

53111ry8n " ' -

IIIIIIIFDrt

~~~

=\,..C:::::,:
., . .
r------.. . _____. . ;.__....-------.1-..-

Ret.
.

SNrter

the day bolorw tho ld II 10 nm.
AVON CHRISTIIAS SALES
Sunday ldiiiCII • 2:110 p.m. A-~ Hourly Pi~a ,._
frkiiY. _ , ldftlon • 2:1111 tOOIIc lllocouoiloi Soli • Weft. ·

........

•

L - - - - -·l;.:,;n21;;M;;...~I

Co••le's OW.

~
Ctlllo- ............
'-"' loaf - . Cion- - , .

::,

liver ...... •••
Everlutl..s

Yn -

_..._ •

•

:::~ ~ ~

rocll•, towncort, 1111r. ~ • , 1_ ,
rocllor, , _ , I ta.OIMw~ ' ; :
at - • ~ a'*'*
. -11-t\ • • ' . I
~ 114.. "'- "' "' wv

.i ili.ll: '

S:::...

Thurooloy • .......,,

r- .,

to aiiii!L,. .._.

~

::J,t,r,r ,'tC.!:'., ::..,. ~-;:...:- •

614-247-4035

------Pt. PINSent
&amp; VICinity

"'
Now open for ~~~
Season

Wad. lhru Sat. H
Sptcilliling:

Dried Materiaia
Pot pounl auppllaa
· ~tbal Crefta
·.·.~

\,

~-Ch·~::~ ~~.:=:

F--. Sloroo Bor so-.
.~~~
Chlidron And Ad&lt;* Cla4hlng,
Oulio.

_ ~ _l
-C
•
ompIete Une of Errand Serv~ee.

c...

DAVE'S
SWIPSHOP

Yard .Sale

7

992-4119 AI Tro- 0wlti'1·80G-291·5600

forS.Ie

..stld tax bolng : An
614-992·5515
atfdltlonel iax of 2.5 mlllo at
11121114 .
10111/lfn
(; rate not eKctedlng 2.5
milia tor each ono dollar ot
wluatlon. which omountl to
t"enty-llve canto ($0.25) lor
Public Notice
. each one hundred dollar• of
veluallon, tor live (51 yearo.
.wsJLL!
"•The Polio tor uld
&amp;iectlon will open 11 6:30
11011 IIPIOVUIENT
al'c iock A.M. and •remain
PUBLIC NOTICE
One mile out
Roofina, Siding
n until 7:30 o'clock P.M. !.aturdl y, October 15,
143
from Rt. 7
Room
Additona
·
·
aid day.
1994 · at 10:00 a.m.. the
Siding
.
Tuu.-Wed.-Frl.-s.t.
Hom~ Notional Bank, Third
ed Sopt. 26, .1 994
Concrete, Etc.
-·
By order of the Street, Racine , Ohio, will
1-6
. ,
Boord of Election a, otter for sale at public
·
Fal Special
oCratllm4ln Tools
C bl Meigs County, Ohio. auction , on the Blnk Get 2~ shiljJI8$ for
•Toys
~onry L Hunter, Cholrman parking lofthatollowlng:
the
d20year
G
M
C
S
SL
,. Rile D. Sf!llth, Director.
oGiauwal'll
1 98 7
' (\!') 12,1t, :K, (11) 2; 4TC
Conversion van, Serial
LOIIds of Misc.
·~
Number
·
Buy-Sell·
TraS! _
.l N I
· tGKDM15Zohb514793
BIMI~ Oh 45814
,
lli
Pub l C 01 C8
·Plymouth
VOF
Van,
1 84
0 r I1 I
n'ce·OF ELECTION 0!1 S2P4FH51G2ER222205
N u m b or
El(
,_~~=~~~"
LEVY .IN CESS OF_
11188 Oldmobllt Cutlts
NEW TRAVEL
E TEN MILL UMITATION C I
a
.• S N
· ~ Coclt,Stctlons
3 • s i R2J8311235t
• :11(0), 5701.1t,.570U5 . 2
s of the aale aro
·
~
•. AGENCY
otfca Ia ho~oby glvtn · ·
r .
,
•
Cocker ..._•nlala
Rlverllend Travel
1 t In ' purouanco of o cal ·
k
"'~"'
lli!tolutlon of tho VUftgo
Tho Homo National Bllll
llr1ld for
uilcll of tho Vllltgo of roeervoa tho right to rojoct
Clulflly lfld
A.yenture·s
i!imarat. Po"'eroy, Ohio, any or all blda o.r to ramovo . T..,.,_ramenl
lid on tht 1111 dtY of . any unit from tho ..It at any 8p 1 wq In F'lllkolcn
701 Art Lewis St.
I
uet, 1114 lhtrt will bo time.
·
·
lor show end campllliona.
ftbm!Hod lo a voto of lht
In order 10 lnepect any of
8UI
upp1ee
Middleport, Ohio
1~·
Pfopl. .or etld oubdlvlalon tht above nem•d property
_.., a-ral Eltctlon to bo
I0.
to
the ;. ula
yautlg8CI.IIIalor. .
. 45768
ld In tho Townahlp of Pr r
·
41710
Ohio 11 , tho r arrengomanlo·!"•Y bo modo .
. Alaine, (lh
·
'
10
992~6926
ullr
'ptectl
!ol
voting
by
ceiling
M&amp;-22 •
l-.!11~t!l~tl~ll~oW7~-J
ralll, on tho llh dey ol .(10) 4, 7, 9, 10, 12. 1~; &amp;TC

....•... ,,:
..

• Custom lade
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For ails

Now Setvlng Melgl,

Phne:

• I

.,

Echo Saw's.in stock

=

1

I•

Ugtit Hauling,

~

Good Only At POMII'a Super Vllu
1
1 •· Olf~rGoodOcti~)hru Oct.15,111M ol
1, t_; . _ • .'!il!!'l!t ~1!:C!.U!12fll'! ~ ••• ~I
. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ... \ • • • .• .

'·'

949-2804
Complete Chain

i

~~

'I
I '
'I

.

exceas of the ten

TREE TRIMMING ·
AND REMOVAl

110 Court St Poi!!9~Cr, Ohig

t

·'10 POIJND

r

'

.us at ...

•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'

(6~~-~:,ss

•

BEEF

'

.::

120L

I '
'

'

. C4RNATION EvAP.

CAT JOOD . ' :: :

: : - · -s·; s1·.-:::

• • • • • • • • • • • • • .• •. II! .. .. . .

JI

COUPQ~

••

·NESTLE SEMI.

;I I
'
I
'
I
I I
P·17-1()-155•11RV0050
•
I
I , Good Only AI Powell'a Super Vatu
o
I ' Good Only At Powell'a Super llllu
1 1 OlflrGoodOot.tttwu Oct. 15,1184
ol 1 1 OlflrGoodOot.l thru Oct.15,1184
I 1. __ • • 1:!'!!H.1_"!"~0!!'!.". _ _ • _ ~I I : _ _, _ • JU,." '!'! ~"! ~ _ • __
I
I
I

•'

TPO~BSTONE 12" '

· · ··· · · ·1

1182-20116
550 hga a, llllldo~llllooopcpcortrt

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

Mls. Jobs.

•
ii

a.s-1ooz.

IZZa
••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
···········••I!• -·············
.................................
.
r· ··· ··· ·
· ·---- -"I

a car.

Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal

$100 Payoff

MANLEY'S

•

·-···

Qlrrent expana11.

12 PK'

2
$1
··
·:69
Tv D·lnner •••••••••••••••••
Yams ......................
6
9
(
s
199
.Tomato Juice•••••••:t:~~.... . . ·
......... .

D. GEARY'S
AnOIODY

HAULING

Special Early Bird

Saw Service &amp; Parts

PubliC Notice

CRISCO
SHORTENING

Pumpkins.~•••••••••••••~.) Oc
VALLEY BELL
$ 189
2tA).l10 M.lk
I •••••••••••••••••••

•

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

Come see
.

Shrubs Shapped
and Removed

Thla lid good for 1

HOPE RD.· Niot I floor frame horne tlllllnc:IOO. 2-3
t.t:::::"'~ 1 be.,, 2 ..., u-go, oulbuilcinga, loncod yard,
[1
1181, blindl. AIC, penaling, CIIIJII~ llec. IMIIII puq»
eelar.
.
ASKING 135,000

~

CLUB

IN POMEROY
8:45p.m.

lfil~~~~~~: 2 iilory frame home ... 2 bedroomo, Nih,

14.75 oz.

ASST. SIZE

,

.......

BINGO
. EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

•Notice is hereby g1ven

·STOKELY

...,,....,.

D

OFRCE---------------·IIJ.-2251

. 16. oz.

()ilheo ranging in oiz8flvm 10 1Ht c:leer down to 18 inchea.
- PA1'MENT PLANYea, we can lake cult! -or· 80 deya aeme as cult -orpeymenta for 48 monfla ealow u S35/ltlondl,
-SERVICE. youR SADSFACDQN &amp; Our Succeeo boglno &amp; onda with
~ioel So, when your oatelli.. i.,'l woilling righ~ ...,.
'*-to helpl Ett phone or In pereon- when you cell,

aloap, ialra 01111•- I E·ftp
Dlurlllc. Anllobto FMit -

HENRY E. CLELAHD-----------~--.112..1tl
TRACY BRINAOEIL---··----•·M·24311
•EARl HAAT------ ·-------·742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 1L----- -----·IIft..1tl
KATHY CU:LAHD------------IIft..1tl

PRINCELLA

(No Sundlty Calls)

- BAl£8-

REDUCE: llum all Jot -

114-llft-7517

4
9
(
Qu·arters •••••••••••••••••~~

'•

614-992·7643

Sti1CW:2 tfn

I

CHICKEN LEG

_lb____
'
Baeon ••••••••••••••••••.
;...

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy, Ohio

$119

ARMOUR STAR SLICED ·

. Garages • Replacement Windows . ·
Room Additions • Rooting

a~~-t"on ... ~y==ra-

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-e215

'

'

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Stal1ing II $7.85/monlh for 13 clw1nafa on 141 to II IMIIY U
your ltNrl desires.

ofnterlor &amp; Exterior
P•lntlng elaci concrete
work

-

Breasts ••••••••••••••••••LJ-.

-IERYICE-

-Roofing

6.50Z.

1=~~·

W. Nat l8rvicl 11 the lop baCiii101 it hM alwlya •
our
lrst priorilylln lid. 'I'N tab •tvit» ., Mriouo, ,.. may

-Electrical &amp; Plumbing

lB. lOX

_

Factory Only

-Room Addltlone
oNewQa,.gn

- . LB.

SPLIT CHICKEN

12Gauge .

IISSELL IUilDEIS, INt.

....

2

~~~.!

GuC...
611 S~oot

KY.BORDER

.

lilki.Lijd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

59c
(
Weiners.................... 79 ZESTA
6'
9
(
CRACKERS .
s
1
59
Bacon.......................
Pork Chops ••••••••••••••
CAROLINA BRAND SLICED

For•••h•

FREE CARD

149
Chuck Roast ••••••••••••• ·

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

71.1t.ll1 TfN

Real Estate General

STAR KIST
TUNA

239
Bottom Round Steak.. -

NEW l USED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKES liiODELS
112·71U OR
112·55U OR
TOLL FREE 1.. 1~1-1171
JIARWIN, 0

BINGO

Uc. No. 0182-27

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF - ·

Specializing In CUatom

- Fr11me R~lr

Tlb lie paoln out
paolnllllg. 1M 111 do II for

"SAVE OUR POOL
BENEFIT SHOW"

~I AUTO
PARTS

(

;.wJi, ·

; . ,;

�..
Wecll"'llday, October 12,1894

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

... . ..

.

f

· · Wed"flday, OCtober 12,1994

Ottlo

5

lbeDIIIy

,ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
I

cinw:ti-

ACROSS

PHILLIP

111gnol'nle

ALDER

7 Bueblll'a'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;bt

... .

old ........ lllm,~-Ft~lt IMG-

w~&gt; tJe~r&gt; tt~•~t"

.:;,._1 foOl)

Rentals

.......

During

·· ~

•K62

........... T - II Thol All-

.7 54
• 7 6 4 3
. •Q 10 6 5

192
•J 9 2

SOUTH

SWtlna 11 t1201n1o. 011.. Holll.
114 ...1110.

•J 7 6
•A J 9 8

. . . . Ftlday, .011. 14, lp.?l.-

Thlo

EAST
•Q 9

•K10853

41 HOUift for Rent
Aooma
11144 Ill., llltilna !10om. lloornll far IIIII· Will&lt; or -II.
I •n•ll. ca.r..-. ,......_ 11M
1f.l.4 IR., 1 l!olh, 101-. LR.

7 4 3

WEST

QBVIOU.S..
....__

Furnished

'!liE . NA110N

•a

ITS 13E(OMt~

DI~I:41JS.

t0·1U4

•A t 2
•Q 10 3
lA Q J

~";'EEK A MEEK

- -... M

TO Ptontall Their Praducte In
...... OuiWa TtiiiCIUQHOUT

43~llghlly

44 A6tronllilt'a
ferry

Lou13 Blbllcll
mounllln

45~=ol

.~deer

15 Utlllllll

NORTH

,-.-~

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

Twins.

14T....m.Hng

........

MAKE IIOHEY PLAYING
VIDIIOQAIIII
NIHTENDO ·lo ~ For Eft.

..., No longlr In
tile work force
(8bbr.)

7p.m.

1K1085

1A K

16Smllll ........
17EtlquMtt

48 Ruaalln um
51 Worldwldl

21 Crony

SSin noway
56o..wlnga
57 Kicked the

-

548-

II Mellow
20T-rlalcaaM

. loolbllll
58 SpeciHgroupo

23Jeautl

2&amp;

:;:t':."'!'ote

DOWN

27-,.,.,.

21 8-ahepecl
m-ng

1 &amp;-.It jOke-writer
2 Publlahlng
blunders ·
3 For the moat

.

30Fimlltrutl
31 Wtlllhltr

33 Varbll nDWI

311 Mountain on

church

8 Roman road
7 Long flllh
8 S.ma In vaiiNI

pori
4 Gaddoaa of

c....

37 E1111 cell
311HorM

g Drooped
10 Capital of North

sr.~.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Sooth
West North East
I NT
Pass 3 NT
All pass

Opening lead: • 5

The road
is blocked
By Phillip Alder

-- --- .,._

...,

Olfrool.flw~.·

oulllo

r.lerch""d 1s0

-------1
51

, . . Chovrlruall,- -..~~:.

304-171-*1 atilt ....., 111M11-

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

....... ii.iDol

Cllofto . . -

~

Anyone who drives in a metropolitan area is used to road repairs causing delays. And if I may be permitted
lo paraphrase T.S. Eliot: "Here were
decent people. their only monument
the asphalt road and a thousand lost

'

trickst"

For:n Supp l1 es
&amp; L1 vrs tock

1112 Fonl.!!."':r!..I!;! ..........

..... -

::.r~

= ='I:.

73 va.. &amp;4WD'a .

81 Fann Equipment

In bridge, it is frustraling being.unable to cash winners, either because
you have no entry to those winners, or
because the suit is blocked.
In today's deal, West led his fourth ·
highest spade against three no-trump.
Hoping this was away from the K-Q.
declarer played low from the dummy.
But East won with the CjUeen and returned the nine. South withheld his
jack, bltt West carefully overtook with
his 10. South ducked in the dummy,
won the next spade, played a heart to
.his ace and a second heart. However,
West won with lhe king and cashed
two spade tricks to defeat the game.
" T~at was unlucky, partner," said

FG;Itf.~!""

:; FRANK &amp; ERNEST

17.-.,..,,..,.~

II

MA~ICET

PICKENS RIRNINIIE
.......... d

)!
0
-

~out&gt; A

Ul &lt;1
~.,. i!.m
~
"

ss.oo

,._ wv.... 304-171-1411,
114 4tl iue

Q=· -· ...

I WAIN
AUC110N I RIRNINRE. 12

•

a.
W01klloOILiiH'4Ni...

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

...................
au..
1

•

••• I# ,
~:Qiikic~~=======
..•·._
LOSER ~-----,

. Vl'AA RIRNITUIII!
4 IIIIM 0.. Ill. 141

r

Quality lloi.Mhold , ........... ....
And 'AIIPIII!- ...._ .... .

•·• \oJfeE m
• &lt; )'OJ f'CADED '2'

181.00; Dlnlllel • t14UO:
Living " - .... ~,:.:::
100m1
IL
•
•

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

,1
2 ~.

. ..

' .. .

.

S.olllh._

~ ~

(,~ffS~

No IPIIIf• en, Hall uhold ,_.
!'llfllt\8. Vol mi. .Jenloho Rd. Pl.

~
•

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&gt;'

f_ ~

•

...

~;:::::::::;::=::=::::============::....;. _~g~JJ

-..

..,.

·

OFF TO 00 /fo..V PAA.T
TO f.IQP 6IWW TH€

_·

I'M GOit-IG
5f10Pf&gt;IN6

1

&amp;J)NOII\Y ·

~
Wufiln~

-Mon.·loi.Hw.d.H;
Don, """"' Our 111!1'0. tlon.

"A little," was North's terse reply.
- "But I make the contract if - ."
"Yes, I know, " interrupted North .
" Yet as you were missing both the
nine and 10 of spades, how likely is it
that West has underled the K-Q?
Surely il is more likely that East has
one of these honors. And if he does.
you should play dummy's spade ace at
trick one."
"Yes, I see," said South after a short
1
pause. " f the spades break 4-3. 1 cannot go down. Whereas if East has a
doubleton honor, lhe suit is blocked.
Sorry."
, If yod~ go down in a contract. don't
tmme tate 1y assume you were un·
lucky. Ask yourself if there was a better line of play available thai· would
have been more successful.

I

a-, .. -

-...
,

4111,- too: Cldo.

~

...... -

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,...,.
,.,

1

Pfnot'\1 r

ie~

.

~lor

11

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ra.n ~ we 'v t. qo
, fi&gt;r..C.I ;n ion • ; ...

of tke \.tOri ·
ad"" irf'd wof'f\ "!
'- ·

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......

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X'll ,,,.-.F, hi&lt;# a loHI•
ac.k P~t'lon~llh.

-I" vt s P~" t +ne las
d-a'ls ~riif,ciall'f
nnt e$,zinQ tn@.

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Feu M= Oaadrtell~
33111UO, 11", llrind ....

1121-MGO. ...

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AI M i l - •"'*''I In
II* MUUIIJIPII' IIIUIJIICI to
thiFalniFIIrHoullng Ad
oi'188I'OIIIcllmololel ......

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loloolr, 14l10aq., R.
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-or
to-·~~~~~

lmlllllonot .............
biNd on,.., oolclr, NIQIDn.

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Tr&lt;msport at 10 n

ASTRO·ORAPH

....

OIIgln, ., ·~~~~~-to

cllc:lfmNililn.'

. lNoM I"'O¥ . . nat
llnott411PtiiDCipl

.............
..,.... ......
-·111-ol. . . .
Ow _ _ . . . ,

Fla a od

--lhllllelbb~lgll

,_

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f'rel

Dlllwwr, t40 A Ia&amp; t41 I

IIM1klllln ..... ·~

'bar ·

....... Clll11 ......

. . . .01111'1 aqulll
~balll.

'Birthday

l'umlllwd AI*!-= 1 llo!n!o.
...... All Uti- Paid;
D
tn
IW
loNntl
- , *·w, It, 12!1111o.

........

Real Es L'Ir:

:1.

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

.

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'

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=.!..:!:.~f;

."'

'I

·'

•

d

ur~ ,ay.

Oct

~events.
~IBRA (S.pt. '23-0ct. 23) 11.' th is cycle

•

h.f==-II UUf'l

Th

13 1994
· ··.
.
· &lt;Even though outside laclors might 1nflu•. ~nee the pace ol your progress in lhe
.. year ahead . worthwhile endea~ors are
;;still doable . Be pat ient and flow with

....__
•···•· ......
ID44JI.tJII.

w

Y VL N Z

y s

ZLLX

p

DFRZ

G J YZ

YIZLM , '

-

P

G Y W

O .L . MFWZ

G J P Z :Y X F M ,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Whenever you ge11o where 1 was •t's a maHer oiiHe
and death _" - (Recovering alcoholic) MICkey Mantle .
'

SCC\'t~lA-J&amp;t.trs·
- - - - - - ldlood
CLAY I, POlLAN
.
TUTIIAILY

PUIZLII

WOlD
lAM I

~y

Rearrano• letttrs of
0 f01rr
tcromblod warda

I

&amp;ow

to form four words

the

be·
·

NIREEP

,__.__PIL.....J.IL.....J41'---J~

~5- ~P;-L"T'"I_M,--E'T""'-flf
1
.~

Along life's highway the pessimist may often be right I have
.--------___,noticed however, that the trip is
T 0 NK Y T
!enjoyed more by the------- -.
6

I

I

· ·your !inanc1al tndtcators could change
radically .rToday lhe direction may. be
• downward, so don't lreat your funds lnvo·
_.lously . Trying to patch up a brokl!n
.ir!JII18nce?. The. Aslro· Graph Malchmak~r
"'Can ·1\elp you understand whal to dQ Ia
I

make the relationshrp work . Matl $2 Ia
Malchmaker. P.O. Box 4465 . New York ,
N.Y. t 0t63.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Allend to
your bas1c respons1billt1eS firslloday . This
way lhe boss m1ghl nol mind rl you lake
the rest of lhe day lo do whatever you
deem Slgni!Jcant. .
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc:. 211 Avoid
inclinations today to niake~ more out of
minor mishaps· than you should . It's when
you blow things oul of. proponion lhal
· problems arise.
.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If there
1S somelhing material you hope 10
pcquire today. it's likely lo stem lrom a

ARIES (Mor~h 21-Aprll 19) Acce pl oth·
. ers for whal they are today and no t for
whal you hope lhey can do for you If you
want lhell support . you·u have lo deal
wilh lhem smcerely.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) For lhe sake
· ol harmon1ous relat1on sh1ps. don't lake
lull credil today for things you had help •n
acco mpllshmg . It could be the last time
you 'll gel asSistance from the ·overlooked
party.
GEMINIIMay 21-June 20) The plans you
, conce1ve today are likely .to be feasible .
I However. avoid delegating incolhpelent
persons 1o.1mplement them.
·
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) In tin impor· tant 1uilder.laking today . 11 cou.ld prove

!

I

' logical se·quence of st~ps . Chance isn't wts~ to i~vestigate th_ing~ for vour~elf .
1
· ap1 to shorten lhe process.
· Don t believe somelh~ng 1s factual JUSt
1 AQUARIUS (Jin. :zci.Feb. 1!1) The objec· · because someone claims it is .
lives you establish tor youroe~ today are LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 Partnership
apl to be both realis~ic and attainable . arrangements m1ghl hold a spe.c lal
However. 11 you think lhey ar,e. foregone appeal tor you today. Unlortunat~. they
cqncl~s1on . you m~y be seve[ ely disap- may prove unprod~ctive. Be.sure !he
potnled.
, •1
.
aH1es you select areo I dead weight
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 2_gl Charity VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do nol pen1l1t
should begin at home today: or at least yourself to become Involved 1n peny poll·
within your own intimate ci(Cie .ol friends . . tics w~h friends today. You orlh8 person
Help persons you know before a1ding you endotse could be very unpopular
strangers.
r
· candidates.

j

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

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Celeboly C1pher cryprogrflms are crcareo I rom QuOiilll()ns Dy lamous Pi:'Opl{&gt; 'pasr and present
Each lei1Pr 1n 11'\e crpnm srands lor anoln('r TOO,ly , c/111' J equ&lt;ils H

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75 Boala &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Tile lll~valltr 01 Rio QAil ODonlna For A
~ I To n. Eiocutl..
....... 01 Tile "-elonol
lc a•llo DevalaprMIIt . .

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

You'll be floating onro cloud-with
the buys you'll find in the
c/assifleds. ·

IWEDNESDAY

Obtuse - L_lama · Hilly- Frisky- FAILS
I had joined a community volunteer organization.
They gave me a needlepoint that read "Kindness is an
investment that never FAILS."
........._

..

OCTOBER 121

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. Page 16-The De'lly sentinel

Ohio Lottery ·

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Pulp mi·ll perm·:it
hearings begin
October 20

~~~~~~

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events to
start at 10
Saturday

Opponents of the proposed attorneys representing ACT, 'said
Apple Grove Pulp and Paper mill that Pat 0 'Malley of New I ersey
will begin appeals of two Sllle per- . will present expert witnesS restimomits OI:L 20 in front of the five- ny again • he did at the DEP pubmember Environmental.Qul!lity lie hearing earlier this year in Point
Board.
Plc:asanL
According to The Herald-DisBernheim said the board is relitpatch, the h~ng . will start at 9 ing additionalspa~:C in die building
a.m. at 1615 Washington Street, in for the hearings because a large
a building that houses the state crowd is eipected.
~ncy's offices just west of the
Charles Lanham, president of
U!f.itol Complex.
the Mason County Economic
'We've spent a great deal of Development Authori~y, said he
money trying to get the facts out knows of no organized effort that
about this project." Steven White wiD attend the hearing in support of
of the Affiliated Construction the mill.
Trades (ACI') Foundation told the
''This is a technical appeal, and
Herald-Dispatch. "And we'll have we feel we have no expertise to
our expert witness there to testify" address these issues,M Lanham said.
again."
"We have confidence in the state
ACT filed appeals SepL 13 on agencies to render a decision in
both the water discharge and indus- conformity to stall: regulatioos .•
triallandfiU permits for the plant,
The imtial hearing is expected
issued Aug. S to Apple Grove Pulp to continue through Oct. 21. The
and Paper by the state Division of second hearing, on the water disEnvironmental Protection. charge -permit, iS scliellillecl ill the
The board considers appeals of same location on Nov. 17 and 18,
DEP actions. Its verdicts, in'l'!um, and may be carried over to Dec. 2
can be appealed to circuit court and if necessary. A third permit,

I I

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75TH FARM BUREAU MEETING- The
Melp County Farm Bllftllu celellrattd Ill 75tll
annual meeting with a dinner Tuesct:~!ht !It
Eutem Higb School; Nume..- poU
lllid
regional farm represenlldlva allcnded the meet•
ing. Board member Norman Will, at left, pre-

;:;~~:s=r::· ~~~~=t~c=~~
~
IJllt !lnly, claiming the mill would

\..8.

pc;rmits.

~=~~n~~-R?v::'n?!- of-~-=~lte~~a:::!':

citizens are Roa4lDia Foul of Cabell tour the plant there, belonging to
County, Billlt111ette of Lincoln Parsons and Whittemore. parent
COunty and Gregory Heaberlin of coinpany rl Apple Grove Pulp and
Mason ~ty.
.
Paper. · .
· .
OVEC ~tor Diane Bady tol~-. Also making thf. tnp were
the Hemld-Dilplltch that the group · -n-;,ty Diri!ctor Eli McCoy enviwill be monitoring the
on ;;;;:;;;ental advocate :Wendy Radthe landfill penniL She
the cliff, air quality mrecaor Dale Fargrou~ should have appealed both ley air office pennit"Cxpert Karl
permits, but we1C linliled since they Detiinser and Mart Scott. chief of
use volunteer legal,help.
the agency •s- Office of Water
Stuart Calefwell, one_~f the Resoun:es.

':.1:

sents Bureau Presldeat Aaroll Sayre with a COlli·
mendatlon from State Sen. Jan Mk:bel Loat.
Will acted In Loot's absence. Seniol members
· were ·abo recopized. (Sentinel photo b7 Georat
Abate)

•e,·gs r.
J:!'a •llJ Bu r.eau
ta"11es p' ·r·Ui61 ,·n I-,~:.th ¥ear
'

lhenn:~~m:~~~o:ntal =~:~a::!asbllldards.
lw
•
. DEP Director Dav~!l Callaghan llffj

Coalition (OVEC) and a trio of

I

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· ·
.
.
·
·
By GEORGE ABATE
. Recent stlldies of Ohio ptoperty
Sentinel News Stair .
tax laws shows a modest reliance
Despite sprawling development on this l!IOney-maker, Lackey said.
of fann lands and increasing regu··But taxes are not too fav0111ble
lations.
in Ohio continliC'$ toward agriculture," he said. "Agrie fo the future culrural property tax has declined
10· h0 ld
promts
r
' becau$e they've taken farming
speakers at the ?!5th annual Farm ground out of the tax base."
B~o':en:!'f:~:t:!~bets
State law issues include the 99
and area dignitaries learned about Fann Bill, endangered species act,
the latest legislative action, region- health~ and Sunday hunting.
al and state farm efforts and the
''The largest issues facing agrisuccess r1 the Ohio Farm BureaiL
culture today is what is agriculture

fannin'

. •
sCh00I Unlon·s UY an:te~~~em~hed:;: ~~Je:::!~J::./~~~r=
salary not only iss~e ~=~!iil~i·:;:c :!f~::m::~~:r:~~:
1·'

Hunts • :L

99 I

150Z.

ManWICn Can

FREE

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Super Pretzel
Umil: onefrte 13oz. .a count Only

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-•-ped
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records with
~ top be prevtous
President I&gt;aVid Woodall 358
Board
KELLY
B~KEVIN
0 P News Kdltor
'
said Tuesdar&amp; the adrninjsttation is . r:~C:·American Free Trade
GALLIPOLIS - More issues looking at mancial adj\lSbliCnts 10 A ~ment seems to be an asset fa
than salary are at stake in the dis- make an offer
.. _ tof th!)
· unions,
· the "6'~
American fanners, Lackty added.
putc over new conttac,ts between "something Snu• 0 gomg 1010
In the last six "'onths. U.S: exports
the Gallia County Local School loan fund."
. · the · .
to Mexico are up 11 percent, while
District, its teachers and its staff, a
,In t!'e meanf:UDC.
UnlODS fi!'C . u s ··
f
· hb ·
spokesman for the Gallia County prepanng a sn:lk~ headq~ m
.:s. Imports rom our netg or
Local Education Alsociation said.
the former Gillingham s Drugs increased just 6 percenL This wiD
Those issues, said Gary PhillipS, . building at t~e comer o.f Second mean a $1.2 billion ttade surplus
GCLEA's chief negotiator include Avenue and Pine StreeL ·
for?a~~ra:ro~ts for this year
insunince, severance pay,'contract
While all sides in ~e
should total $48.9 billion. U.S.
duration and establishing the over !'Ow contracts remam 'hfill
farmen are shipping feed, grain,
school year and day.
a stn~e can~ ave~ted. P~ 1.1PS ·
b
d' numerous other
"S•'•~
an. Mexicans have
_ , t's not the only c:omnn..
,.... remamed cautious. m predt::r.tm . soy
... cans
cts Wht'le
nent in the puzzle," Phillips said. !hat Tuesday's SCSSIOD wollld
t !;:.uganis in coffee, tea and snack
"Buically, we want the public tQ 10 ~. seale~nL
.
.
foods Lacke ·d
understand that there are other
I find tt ~to unagme we can
··t'oday !gS::c~lture is much
issues on the table.
settle som, ethmg at t!'e lith hour
th
tt' g food on your
Phillips could not discuss that we ve been wo~g ~ f~ the more an pu m
ul~
specifics of the issues before a last- past several m~li:Js· he said. · 'We
:!:':'~~~.::1
ditch bargaining session betw~n ~ve to be t;alistiC, but we would ethanol and soy ink.
the board of education. the GO.EA like to seale.
and the Gallia Local Support Staff
Phillips said . the contract
AssOciation is held next Tuesday. .request1 from the teachers and supAs of this miXIIing, no officialiiQti- port staff have been ''reasonable."
fication of the session had been
"I !)ope the ~ h~ another
CINCINNATI (AP)- Republireceived by the unions, Phillips offer that looks positive, .he added. can Senate candidate Mike De'Wille
said.
Woodall was unavatlable for
showed a ~ of voting against
Phillips• comments were made further comment this morning.
federal edUCilion funcling when he
in the wake of a special board
Teachers 11nd support staff asso- was a congressman in ihe 1980s.
mecting Tuesday ntght i~ which elation mem~rs. voted to s!fi.ke Democratic QPponentioel Hyatt
tbe board decided that tf both OI:L 4 after re,JeCU~~g what Phillips
unions strike on Oct. 19, the called the board's "finaiM offer.
schools will be closed for a four- Notification of intent to strike was
Week period.
·
flied by the unions with the state
The board also- adopted mea- and the district administration on
sores ro reopen the schools -' the OcL 7.
end of dial period to allow fa the
, All sides io the negotiations
required days of classes to be have been It impaSie over economobtained, as well as other Jl'lllec- ic and job s'ecurity issues since
.live actions.
m.d-SIIIIllller.

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--··- Local briefs., -;.....
·
Trick or treat schedule slaUd
Middleporl, Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland 8lld S~ llld Hart~' '
ford MMoD and New Haven in West v~ will C1Cb hold trick
or~ on Moaci!Y. Oc.t.: 31 flom 6-7 p.m. with diG~ o(
~which wiD ,be &amp;olll6:30-7:30, SynJCuse Mayor I m Plpd.

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development includes the increase
of the rewani ••01' .damage to ••ann
property from $!500 10$1,500.
Other l!cnefits to fann bureau
members include $500 cash back
on qualifying Dodge pickup trucks,
a legislative representative and discounts ·at local optOmeUists, Warner added.
Dale Arnold, regional supervisor for lhe bureau, said urban residents moving near fanns must be

educated.
"They don't understand the
dust, the machinery· running or
even haulin~t manure. My dad
always told me that was the smell
of money," Arnold said.
Emineat domain appeals can be
made for when water and sewer
lines are forced onto farmers·
lands, he added.
Elizabeth Cooperrider, the new

state trustee for the area. congratulated the area JVOIIICII who helped
Jhe state wombn's league win one
of only three national awards.
"If you want something done
and you want somethin$ done now,
send the women 10 do 11," Cooperrider said
Key concerns for the board
include property rights, crime prevention, clean water, health care
and women fanner's issues.
State women's rallies will be
held in Columbus April 7 and 8
next year. There will be no regional
rallies.
The state fann bureau meeting
will be Dec. 5-7 in Cincinnati. The
national fann bureau meeting will
be Jan. 8-12 in St. Louis, Mo.
The farm bureau also recogruzed exceptional members. Members with ye&amp;JS of service included:
Pauline Atkins and Helen Nease,
75 years; W.S. Michael, George
and Harry Holter, ~9 years; Bank
One of Athens, Mary Easterday,
Donald Mora and the Poole and
Parker Farm, 58 years; C.E.
Humphrey, Virgil Hamm, Eloise
White and Rowland Dais, 57 years;
C.E. and Daisy Blakeslee, J.M. and
Mildred Gaul, and Ziba Midkiff, !56
years; Thereon Johnson. Robert
L.:e, Raymond Furbee and Howard
Nolan, 55 years; Mary Kay Yost.
54 years; Jo!m T. Holliday, Lettie
McCain, Ruth Morris. Howard
P.rker and Lillian Pickens, 52
years; and Alfred Frank and Wayne
and Uoyd Roush, 51 yean.

Hyatt blasts DeWin,e's education votes

•

211te~

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OODLAND

,I

We

."'

Zllol-. 12 . . . . . . . . . . .
Alllu ... otloiM...., J rn .'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 13, 18M

Studio Quality Portraits·

fpll Mums
3

entine

You Pay Oaly

~

Choice
Bone In

•

4 5x7 .
4 3x5
48 Wallets

•

.

said.
..To say he cut education is an
absolute lie . These things are
wrought with distortions,'' DeWine
campaign spoltesmu Barry Bennett responded on Wednesday.

Hyatt said Wednesday thllt if
elected to the Senate, he would
support loan and grant r-ogtams to
help young people attend college.
expand the Head Start program for
preschool students and suppon
after-school programs that would
help keep youngsters from joining
street gangs.
Hyatt r~le~sed a list of five
votes DeWtnc ~~ as a congressmill between 'March 1983 and May
1989, which H~ said show that
DeWine was no friend of education.

Showcase Meigs Cotmty, scheduled for this weekend Ill the Rocl
Springs Fairgrounds north of
Pomeroy, will get underway Satur•
day with a ribbon cutting cae~~·
at lOam.
.
· Several local and state offici.llf..
are expected to be oa lulld to ~· '
ticipate in the ceremony which Wilt
kickoff the weekend of ac:tivitiel
wh~re over 40 exhibitors are:
expected to be on hand.
. :
The event is open 10 the public •
and free of-charge.
·
Hours of the Showcase are Sat"
urday 10:00 a.m. to S:30 p.m., and
Sunday, noon 10 S:30f.m .
A wide vari~y o exhibits 1re
planned including a flower show:
celebrating the 17Sth 111niverury:
of Meigs County. This flower !!bowis open to the general public and a:
copy of the schedule is available at
the Extension Office cir Parts Dil•
trlei Office~ The flOwer -shOw Will
be held in the Junia Fair builcllnc· '
~exhibits in the Junior Fair.
buildfng will include Southern,;
Eastern and Meigs County School·
Districts, local businesses and'
youth groups.
Commercial buildings behind
the food stands on the fairgrounds
will feature twelve local artists
with displays llld iiCIIIS fa£ sde IIIII
a miniature train display by the
Meigs Division of the Southeast
Ohio Railroad Club.
The Meigs CoUnty Museum will
have displays and exhibits in ~
log cabin. Senior Citizens will be
making apple buuer on SaiWday
near the log cabin display RL
Other exhibits will include a
petting zoo sponsored by Meigs ·
County 4-H Clubs and Soutbena ·
FFA in the barn area near the liCYoi
· metal building. .
_
A rent-a-camp display will be
.sponsored by Forked Run State
Park. This-is a feature offered by .
Forked Run to make planning easl· '
er for family who want a camping '
experience.
Entertainment will be scheclnled
throughout the weekend. Fc:aiUred
acts inc! ude Mary and Roser ·
Gilmore at the ribbon cutting, Joy ·
Singer.~, Denver Rice and Middle Branch on Saturday. Sunday•s '
entertainers will include studentS of
~haron Hawley, Dec and Dallas, :
Sharon Stewart and the youth choir ·
from the Middleport Church of
Christ and the Boy Scout Indian
~rli.

A Cruise-In sponsored by the :
Oldies But Goodies Car Club wiU :
be held on Saturday afternoon with
registration from noon to 2 p. m.
and prizes awarded at 4 p.m.
Food booths sponsored by the
Senior Citizens, Meigs County
Museum and Historical Society,
Sweet Greetings and Dominoes
will be open foc the weekend.

· who~ale

priclis,drop .

,·n Se1""11
n•ember
, :
.

1

WASIJINGTON (AP)- Prices.at the wholesale level plunged O.S .
percent in Septanbet, their bigest
drop in more than a year, the govenunent said today in a ~ cer- ·
lain to calm pre-election mflation :
anxieties on Wall Street.
:
The Labc!r Deputment said the .
decline in its Producer Price Index, : ·
which measures inflatiOIIII')' pressures before they reach the con-.
sumer, ,reflected big dec:lines in the ~
price of gasoline llld other energy ,
prod~ts and a rec:onl drop in cof- : .
tee pnces.
· •

He said the votes wae against a
totil of more than $12 biDion in
propcised federal funding for pro- · The decreaie followed iwo grams. including job tnining; lou straight months when wholesale:
ud grant programs fa collcge stu- prices had risen sharply,.., 0.6 per-·
dents; the Head Start program for 'cent in August, the biual jump in' ,
preschool students; programs to nearly four yean, and up 0.5 per- :
tmprovc math and ~e~ence cduca- cent in July.
.
lion, and the Follow Throu&amp;b PoThe 0.5 percent Septelllber ·.
gram for disadvantaged children, decrease, the biiiJCSl since a 0.8 :
desipecl as a follow-up to Head percent decrease m Auauat 1993, ·
Start.
took analysts by surprise. Many 0[
One example HYJil cil!ed was a them had been forecasting that
DeWine vote ~a~- prices wo.uld modente but noae
propoled edncatioo ~bge..
expected such I sharp retreat.

'

,.

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>roush</name>
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