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~age

14-TI\e Dally sentinel

VVednesday,October19,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'.·

Area
·football
•
prev1ews

A Pamilv _~ ownetl 11nt1
- Operated Supermarket
Ollering tlle 'best oiSerlliee .oualitv anti Priee, to tile .
People ol our eommunitv

••

·ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
643
Pick 4:

7425

- Super Lotto: 4·16-20.23-26~

Pqe5

Kicker:
929229

I

•

VoL •• N0.111

A. cno\ce Bee\
U-~-~neless Bottom

~~..!! leg!.~-~C?.i:;!?!!~~~t- _

U.S. Gov't. Insp. Pork Loin
Center Cut•Loin Chops lb. ;1.99

69

Selldllel ~ews Slllr
.
A Metgs Coudty grand JUry
Wednesday may l!ave returned
att~mpted murder -in~ictments
apmst two people earlier 8CC1ISCd
of poisoning a Pomeroy mll!l in
1989.
.
.
Tbe indic1menrs, which have~
yet .been fJ!cd, SICill from the pol·
so~mg of ~ary Snouffer. SnouffC! s ex-w1fe, S~h, and an exfnend, Danny Zukle, have been
accused of the poiaoning.
Snouffer was poisoned in
Sepfember, October andllkJvember
of 1989 with lrJC!Iic. a bcavy ~
thai accumulales m the body until a
lethal doSe is reached.
Grand juror~ apparently discou~ted an earlier swement ~y a
Racane man, Menafee Blev1ns.
Blevins told officials he poisoned
Snouffer but later recanted his

RIB PORK
CHOPS .

89

•

poisaling.

.

~~bas fueled tabl~-S;lYlc

stones m several area publicatlODS
and ~as also airal oo. the Jl!l~
tablOid news show Inside Edirwn.
This morning, Mrs. Snouffer
and her auomey, Chari~ Knight,
made •. Y!'luntary appearance
~fore . VISiliJI8 Judge Dan Favreau
m Metgs County Common Pleas
Coun..
.
Kn1ght asked if he could be present in the event the indictments
are filed and an arrest made.
Favreau advised Knight to con!Kt
special Prosecutor K. Roben Toy
of At~ens, who summoned the
gnmd Jury.
In 8J! pre-f~ing in~iew with
The Dally Stlllllft,l, ~ght presented the defendants side of f!le case:
"It is our understandinJ that
Sarah and Danny have been indict-

der," Knight !lid. "Our positioo is
that it has been a 4-year flight of
fancy of Gary Snouffer's He bas
somehow fiXIIIed 011 this ~ with
no proof and no foundation "
Knight also labeled ~ indictment as an auempt by Mr Snouffer's civil attomer, to "j~tify the
way an earlier civil C&amp;!IC was mishandled" and as a "result of a
botched investigation by a privately
hired invt:Siigator who himself bas
substantial legal problems."
.
"We will be contesting this from
day one,• he said.
Mrs. Snouffer and Zirkle have
been accused of the poisoning in
two civil suits. One suit was dismissed in -1992 because the amount
of money Snouffer sought was not
specified The other case haS not
been resoived.

Aristide blames violence·
on right-wing agitation
By LISA M. HAMM
Alloclaled l'nll Writer

PORT-~U-PRINCB, Haiti Random vio1cnce bas _Increased the
. pr~ssure __on. Prest~ent lean" ~~r-ble a government and regain-con1101·of Haiti, wbicti ~-~ under
vinual U.S. IIIICWII'dship IIUICC Sept.
19.
.
_ At h1~ first news cc?n~erence
smce hts l'eturn, ~rt~ttde _on
Wednesday blamed hu right-wmg
.f?es Co! the vio.lcnce, saring,
.The~ 1;1 a tanliJIII:gD of Jl!llliPulatiOII aunmg 10 ramislt the unage of
the gOvemmenL"
.
He added: "We condemn all
types of violence, ~engeance and
plUIIderiu£"
·
a ltick-waving mob
!hreatened 10 attack the hom~ .~f
Jose~ Neret~ •. who _was ~u s
provtS!onal presulent unmediately
f!'Uow~ the coup, for the sec_ond
lime 10 a week. U.S. soldters
rcsp!'n~ed to .Nerette's call and
prOvided secunty.

.Kraft•Ouarters•Regular or Light
.

.

PARKAY MARG-A RIN

c:

Hours-..

'"·

. WASHINGTON (AP) -The
number of 'AmeriCans without
health insurance grew by alm011t 9
million since 1987, and11101t were
not poor, ICCOiding to an analysis
of the laliCS&amp; govenunent s1alislics.
Thirty-one illituoa Americans
went without health inluianc:e in
1987, or 12.9 pcn:cnt of the population, the Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities said Wednelday.
By 1993, the JSDb or the unin-

Ap

ULTRA

gallon Jug

RINSO

c:
~ ~f.

'

Assorted Varieties
.

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12 12-ounce cans

C.oca·Cola
"Products ·
_: ~2. 39 . .
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.. SALE-DATES: OCTOBER 16 THRU OCTOBER 22, 1994. Ouant1ty nghts reserved. Not respons1ble lor lypographical or pictonal ·errors
'&gt;

I

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All items noi available mall slores..

..

I

A AA•

Uni·o ns' affirmative votes avert
school strike h1 Gallia County

'
"We bargained in good faith and salary increase - the third straight
sun:ci had grown 10 39.7 million, or percentage of the population with ByKIMNKELLY
we
have given 1he board of educa- . year Gallia Local educatoiS have
employer-related
health
cove111ge
OVPNNBEdltor
15.3 percent of the population.
tion
the opportunity to get out of gone without a raise - the
feU
from
62
perce11t
in
1988
ro
57
GALLIPOLIS -Three-year
Medicaid coverage or the JlOfJI'
the
loan
fund." said Gary Phillips. GCLEA membership wiD receive a
percent
in
1993.
(The
1987
f~gure
contracts
were
approved
by
the
and near poor grew sharply dliing
2 percent increase per year in the

those six years, with 11 million
people - mosdy young children
and pregnant women - added to
the Medicaid roDs. Twelve percent
of the population, or 32 million
people, now are 011 Medicaid. ·
· But fewer people got private
insllf8Dce ~ugh ~!t' jobs. The

.GaiUpolis day care center
told to pay minimum wage

98

Members ollbe Meip Hlgb
Sellon! welding PJ'OII'IIIII have
worked tor more thaD a week
to remove tile trulted re-bar
from tlae clemollllled Rutland
Hlg)l Scbool, weidiDa· teacher
Dick Fetty lllld. "'''tey're aet·
dog to see wltat tile real world
Is like, not In a classroom,"
Fetty said. In tile above plloto,
stadeats ,_ tile .etal after it
otr. Jllllior Jeremy Fetty,
tile re-llar

Minister Bayard Vincent was a
self-proclaimed fonner Macoute,
the terrorist squad of the Duvalier
era, while Foreign !Jfairs ~
Denise Jean-Louis, an ~iol- I ,_;:~:~~~~;~~~~~J~~a,:~~~J~ {~~=
"'o$l!t~lifole ·i\r1Stiot "rriend· · f
wtthix&gt;PQliticalCipaience.
bul
to tile vllla1e and
. On Wednesday, ArisUde said he
both lbe crew that tore don
intended to asse!D)Ile a cabinet
the structure llld tbe studealli
encompassing all classes, a diffiremoving the metal were all
cult task in a largely impoverished
being trained, he added. Tile
society that lias been dominated by
class is makin1 no money
a small elite since independence
from the metal,since most will
from France in .1804.
.
rooo~tscorat~-bTebeamms'~~lthul
be .
Haiti needs "to have rich and
~
•
"'
poor those roming from my class
sold by the viDage, Fetty said.
and .ihe wealthiest families getting
(Sentlael pbotus by George
together buildinl this image of
Abate)
reconciwdtoo through the next cabinet," he said.
Malval, a businessman appointeel by Aristide from exile, never
was the president's choice. He was
favored by U.S. diplomals who saw
him as a moderate in the long-running conflict between the riJhtwin~ miiiauy and the leftist prieStpresident toppled in 1991.

Number of uninsured in U.S. grows

Pasteurized~ftne Na_tUMJ

Powdered Lau nary Detergent•1 0 Use
16 ounce package

An angry crowd also threatened
to attack the local Red Cross,
demanding it hand out emergency
food stocks, but dispersed after
director Dr. William Fougere
refused: · · -· '·" '~The violence followsotherinci·
dents earlier lh\s week - '. ihe most
1\(ltable caking place Monday, when
. the in~ army chief's home and
· 14 other buildings were ton:hed in
the coastal town ofGOJ!8iv~. .
At the news conference, Arislide
~d he ~as "still con_suliin,·: on
·hts appomttnents for prune l1l1IIJSter
and other key posts. The Constibtlion requires the president to confer
with Parliament leaders before
naming a replacement for cai-etaker
Prime Minisl.tr Roben MaNa!.
.
Arisli~'s choices of cronii:s and
conll'!'~ ftgures for key posts
got him m trouble last time !JC was
at the helm here.
. ~ne Preval, ~s ori~ 'prime
mmtster and,a lilce-mlllded.po_P,wist, was aleft-1eanin~ bake{ wtth
little cilpericnce in polttica. Justice
'

Fresh or Shu .

'

CINCINNATI (AP)- A GalMs. Hartman !lid the business
lipolis day CII'C CCIII« is rcquilcd to em:rloys 12 people, plus herself
pay its staff at least the federal · an her claugnter. It serves more
minimum wage, a U.S. appeals than 60 children from age 6 weeks
to school age.
. •
court ruled.
She called her clients lowThe 6dl .U.S. CircUit Court of
• Appeals agreed on Wednesday income, working mothers or colw1th the govemiiiCIIt's conrcntioo lege students wbo are hard-pressed
that Miss Paula's Day Caro Cen1Cr to pay for child care. "rbc business
InC. lias to foUow fecledlllbor taw; bas remained affQI'dable by pay!DJI
which requires employees to act the staff less than the fedenll mitupaid at least$4.25 an lioiif.
- · ·IJlum wage, said Ms. Hanman, who
lani!:e Hartman, co-owner or the earn~ $13,000 in 1991 from her
.southeastem Ohio business, ugued 50 peltent shale of the business.
The center's total revenue in
that day c:uo centers were not sub)991 was $130,000, she said.
.jcctiO the wegc law.
· The busiDCSS bu been paying
. Requiring the business to pay
minimum wages, plus a govern- the staff minimum wqe since a
ment on1ct Ill pay the staff $18,147 federal mqiatrate in Columbus
.lo beet wagetlllll inteteSt, coltld ru!e4in 11ie government's favor last
force her out of baliness, Ms. Hart- year, Ms. Hartman said.
· Bu' as a result, she and her
man !lid.
.
"It's all vety ridiculous," !lid · daughter siiJilliOd drawing salaries
Ma. Hartman, who planned to from the bqsmess and now only
.IIIIJCII to the U.S. SuprancCilun. tab their livinJ c1qlenses out, ihc
•
I
Lois Zuckerman, the U.S. said;
·
"We
are·a·pivale
day
care
cenPepartment.or Labor lawyer who
.argued the government 1 cue, ter. We'-ve always operated u a
,doclitltld 10 CCIIIIIIICDt on Wedaea, small buiineu, ·' Ms. Hartman
day. Jhaclley Mitchell, a Labor said. "Ohio recognizes us as a
DepMmenl•IP"'fii!IM in Chlcltao, small business. We P•f all our
taxes as a small business.'
,
~ docliDcd 10 Cj)IDDICIIt.

was not available).
. Twenty-eight milliOn or 12 percent of those without health insurance lasl year had incomes above
the poverty line, which is almost
$15,000 for a family offour.
The number of people who are
not poor but who lli:k health insurance grew by 5.3 million.

Gallia County Local Education
Association and the Gallia Local
Suppon Staff Associ•tioo Wednes·
day, putting an end to the threat of
a strike.
The GCLBA ratified the contract 92-SO and the suppon staff
membership approved its pact 5214.

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. DRY FIRE HYDRANT- A new dry lire hydrut was reandy
lllllalleil It tile Richards &amp;: Soa IJ'IYd pit Ill Letart TO'fnlslllp by
tile R1clae Vol.ateer Fire Departmeat. Pictured from left are
Jolla Holtllu, Racble nre clllet, and Mike Dulll, Meip Soli ud
Water Couervatloit Dlstr~irector. 11te Rre departmeat appreciates tbe help of tbe Leb uoa, Lt tart ud SuHoa towasblp
trustees, tlae 1011 dlstr~ e couaty :GIIImlssioners and tile area
lalldowllen. (Pboto courtesy of tile lWclue Volun1eer Fire Department)
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Indictments awaited -Learning b doing---

ROUIO
ROASt -

16 ounce package

clear.

Zleclbw, 1• ..... 35-""
A llulllmedlalno. ....,opapu

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 20, 1994

Canrlghl1114

_·

Ia-

en tine

At The Co•ne• of
Gen. Hartinge• Pkwy.
and Pea•• st. • Middlepo•t

A Card inal - Affllialed Supermarkel

'--·toqllt

Friday, lllllliJ. HIP 1D •pper

chief negotiator for the GCLEA.
''This is as good a contraCt as we second and third years of the coo,
could have hoped for," added Carol IJiiCL
Smith, president of the support · The contract also provides for
staff group. ''The board bas given full payment of insurance coverage
for the teacheiS by the board. he
an increase we can live with."
Phillips explained that while said.
Five articles of the contraCt were
teachers will be working the fiiSt
(Continued on Page 3)
year of the contract without a

Racine Council updated
on grant applications
Racine Village Council consid-ered a slate of grants that are being
applied fll' during its regular meeting Monday.
The village will apply for a.25
percent mau:h grant for a miniature
golf course, said Village Clerk
Karen Lyons. The $12,000 course
will be built in Srar Mill Park.
A I 0 percent match Issue II
grant for street paving has also
been filed , Lyons added . The
$28,510 grant wiD pave the remaining streets' not previously finished
in earlier Issue 2 funding. .
Thc·sidewalk project has begun.
The Meigs County Commissioners
funded a $15,000 grant for the
wort that begins on Fifth Street,
she !aid. Other sidewalks will also
be completed lhrough the housing
rehabilitatioo grants. '
1
Council tabled Ill onlinancc that
would allow the Ohio D!:panrnent
of Transportation to pave State.
Route 12A. The board mllSt determine whether the village must pay
to raise the sewer manhole covers,
Lyons said.
In other ac;tion, council passed a

series of resolutions supporting
area levies.
The 4-mill renewal levy for
Southern- Local School District Was
endorsed, as were lire protection
levies for the village and Sutton,
Lebanon and Letart Township.
Each township issue is a !-mill
renewal levy. Racine has a 0.7-mill
renewal levy.
'
Street Commissioner Glenn
Rizer was authoriZed to repair the
mower. The board also allowed
Lyons 10 uansfa money within lite
general fund and the WSitr flUid.
The BMual Halloween triclc..a-treat event will be held betwecll 6-7
p.m. OcL 31. Residents who want
to participate should turn their .
porch lights on . Motori~ts are .
encouraged to steer clear of Vine
Street during the celebration
Lyons Slid.
All members were present'
except Mayor Jeff Thornton and ·
Councilman Scotl Hill, wbo 111CDded a Letan Township 1'ruslees lire
contraCt meeting.
·
The 1DCllt meeting will be at 1
p.m. Nov. 7.
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�1884

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~MS

units log
nine calls

OHIO Weather

~ally

·The

FridaJ, Oct. 21

Sentinel

GATT· a o,ne-issu·e· subject

111 Ccnut Sbeet .

· · Because both Republicalllllld
I'OIIleroJ, Oblo
Demcierats have played politics
with it, the congressional ratifica.
lion on GATT (the G~ Agree.
.t1.UMDIA,INC.
menton Tariffs and Trade) will be
the one-issue subject of a special
session
of Congress on Nov. 30
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
and Dec . .,J. This pretty well
Publisher
ensures a NAFfA-style major public flap, with anti-trade Yahoos
' from every camp - Ross Perot,
cBAiu.ENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW . Pat Buchanan, Ralph Nader, to
Genenl Mu.ger ·
name a few .,- !humping their tam·
Cantroller
bourines aimultaneously.
There are good standard reasms
ui'rn!Rs OF OPINION .,. welcome. 1bey lboulcl be lea t1w1 300 · to favor GATT. 8lld another one as
; well. Among the .standard arguwcmb lone. Alllettcn are aubjectro
llld liiUit be qood with nome.
lddrela IDd telepbooe number. No 111111
lelten will be publiabed. Letten
' ments are lhese:
lboulcl be in aoocl ....,llddmlia&amp;
DDt J*IOIIIIltiu.
America is the world's biggest
.
ell)lOittZ.
Thewas
vlllue
of U.S. exports
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. and imports
13 percentofGDP

ec::!!J

iu-.

in 1970; it was26 percent in 1993;
projections sho!l the {lite risihg
· with the ~e of GATT.
It's no acctdent that we're lhe
biggest exporter. We are a populous, wealthy counlly, with a vigorous and creative work force, using
the most advanced technology, in
tbe most industries. More exports

For Clinton, Mideast trip
a welcome diversion ·
\

B•TOMRAUM
Alsoclatecl Pral Writer

help the wutd's bjgpatelpl~W. · oppoaeniS cllim. The WTO (lllshes
· GATT opens uf, for the first .other Counlries 10 play by rufes lhat
time, coamorcia ueas whero ovenhe yCIJS too many natiou
America is J)lltlcululy Slrollg, like have often flaunted ('mcluding us).
The possible penalties are only In
the realm of COIJIIterveiling tariffs.
g Ben Wattenberg
National sovereignty is.1101 threat:
ened.
StriJllled down to its essentials,
"services,',- whieh includes banking, ronstruclion, software, IOUrism the most powerful argument
'qainst GATT boils down 10 a case
and telecommunications.
It doCends "intellectual proper- against the emerginf new global
ty" that is collered by trademarks, economy. Thus, it's 'Globalism."
copyright and patents. This will that scares Pat Buchanan most.
yield profits 10 Americans for items Let's Jll!l America ftrSt, he says.
Now, lhat might be a plausible
that were previously ripped off by
argument
for another country. A
foreigners. It also opens up new
small
and
insignificant nation
a~ulture markets for America's
m~t
justifl8bly
fear losing nationhighly productive farm scclor.
Ill
identity
In
1
growing
One World
More global trade.will raise .
American living 8IIUidarda and cre- situation. But that is not our cirate new jobs. Because it reduces euinstance, which leads 10 another
tariffs on our exports, it is also the ttought about._ the worthiness of
functional equivalent of a big free GATT.
There was extended argument
l8ll CUL It will provide American
dllring
the 1980s llbout "Who's No
consumers with goods at lower
\."" 'that issue has now been set·
prices.
.
The enfon:ement arm of GATT, tllld. Wrp are.
We are the No. l"nation, geopothe " World Trade OrKanizllion,''
li•'cally,
militarily, culturally, ideo·is not a .
.10 6e feared. as

MICH.

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IND.

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p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:48
By The Alscclatedl'rea
'
· Ohio wiD eot.io)' sunny and cool a.m.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Weather foreaut:
weathet ~ least tllrou&amp;h the week·
Wedi!Ciday adml~- Belly
Today .. .Pardy cloudy west 8lld Triplett, Syrac~~~e; HoUie Green,
end, tbanb to a bigh JftSSUie over
central.
Mostly cloudy east this . Pomeroy; Ocel Sears, Middlcpon;
.ihC central Uni~ States.
mooling
lhen partly cloudy. Highs Eber Lewis, Middleport.
- Clear sties are forecast for IDOIIt
651070.
of the state • 1e1st lhrougll sUnday.
Wednelday cliscillqes.-IIOIIC.
TonighL ..Mostly clear. Lows 40 HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
the Nationlll Weather Service said. .
Lows tonisht will be in the low t64S.
Dlaclaarges OeL 19 - Harry
.• .Sunny. Highs 65 to 70.
40s. Highs on Friday will be in the FridayEmaded
Hayman, Maude Crews, Dexter
foncut:
upper 60s. More of tho ume is
Fife, Caleb Jackson, Patricia
Saturday
and
Sund1y ...Fair • . Leonard, Willi1m Zorklc, Mrs.
·~for the wockl:ncl
,
· Tile record·hilb tempc:lliiiR for t.ows 40 to 45. Highs 60 to 65.
Robert Allbright and son , Mrs.
Monday .•.Fair. Low upper 301 Scott Thomas and son, Shirley
Ibis elite • the Columbus ".._
station· was 84 degrees in 1953 10 middle 40s. Highs middlo 60s 10 Wllllace, Clarenee Sheets. Derek
while:lbe record low wn 24 in lower 70s.
Rodgers, Mrs. Robert Rogers 8lld
.19'll .S~ IOIIigllt will be at 6:4S
daughter.
· (PDbllshed with perallaslon)

Unions' .affirmative. vote... ·

.(Coatbaaed rr. Pqe 1)
ty was 1pparent in the district's
remlllrider ia the buildings t~roufbout tbe day
sruile ·u lbo two-year contract because ~Ia .o ~llfC'!!!C!!I
:Ga.B,A·lllld .thll expired Gil Aug. were not
until late after·
31, Plli)lips added.
noonll ~
aarrers. : .
Support ·• llff membershl\) win
Following the YOICS. ~on
also so wilhout a pay raise m the members pieparecl to ~ve ttdns
contract's first year, Smith said, but · out and shUt cll;»vo the 5l!ikc centtz.
will receive 1 ·20-cent-per-hour
BOIId l'lesident. David Woodall
across tho board increase in the said the district had Jllade s~me
second and third years, Smith fi!IIJIICial adjustments to aubmrt-a·
CJIIIlained.
i16w oll'er over the CCJI!IIICt~
""'It~U~UM.eoverqe i1 11ao the lillie aaacilldnns rejected earlier
same as the GClBA's, she ·added.
this lllOIIlh. •
ViltiDg toot place in the atrike
1'~o _pna1ry eonce!"', he
beadqaartm irt the fanner Gillina- Qpllinod, was to oftor an ma·
111111'1 Drugs bdlding 110( up by !lie iD salary and ~fits that would
usocilti0111 1aa weet iilpepar• not forte tbe district to mllte an
lion for a wm ant p.
. -~itkwl dnw fnlm '!- liMe Ioiii
' 'Theitrike Wirto liave begun f11DCI. Oallil f:.ocal wrU ~y back
Wedlieiday, but De&amp;oti*n for the lbe two loans 1t bas liken fi'Om the
Usociati0111 and lhe boiad l'.lllelpl IIIIC next J.une.
&amp;IIIII a· ~3/4 hov 1!arPinlnl·a·
"''m aJad both unioos ~
lion Tuesday with a' tentative tbo propoAI and the ~ucauona,!
qreeinenL
'
· · · proceas won·~. be. dtsruptedl
·. Wbile students and parents Woodllll allld. We can put ~u
1) dd t .
~ Wed
,;_
beltind us and the board can contm·
rae . ..rl'l~sJr e
aetuaY,, ue ID wm on resolving its 9eriouS
classll~~ r,otmu'led . p •on unul , ___,_, -·"tion."
.
die vote 'COuld be ·liken. Aaocla- &amp;uaiiWIIl """""
dOD . • ·IwfttitiYci llid uacatabi~ ~chanied, bat. the

l'

Mktdlep.ort.mayor's court

rel;gned.

.

come at 1 "Send W1sbiliaton
1111979, the Jobn F. Kennedy Libtlr) was dedicated in BOston.
Home'' ·conference Noy. I() spon1n 1~1 fire broke oUt In 1he billa 8bove o.Idand, Calif.; the fire kill¢ sored by Empower Ameri~ lbe
iS people . . delll(wed more-~,()()()~ .
·. . Bill Be,nnett•]ack Kemp .ICtlviat
y:earngo: 11!o.Stare~~ the United States. was .tor- , J~oup that Alexa.nder recently
• ,~ redilcing die 1111111ber of Amct_i~ assiped ID the CIDbaay 111 Beirut, joined. SIJC&amp;ken will .Include, ~ ·
· •' rLeiJanOD.
'
__ .,__
NIJlCY Kasseb8um, ~~K~.:~~d

ten

4 •

New Deal, Chat Socieg·and up 10'
.the present by conlericliilt lhat the·
inclividualisue, small·govemment
idelll of Thomas Jefferson couloo'
cope witll a modern industrial
.ec111omy 8lld lhat !hero needed 10
be.l.retu.m tO ~l.e.xrder.:_~il-

it was iho atatcs' tailure to meet IIOIII1d . ~of~ IPJV,·
acceptlble national standards lhat emance tn • country, • ~~~~ 10
led to federalization in the rust II! ~~ ~mn ~=g thmgs
~IICC. Alexander says'lhat this is ng tIS JOlll&amp; to
L
,
. 'Stq12" 00 his qenda, bat it real· t1v
:::::~e Is execuly needs to be ~ liP fronL
e
.
• the llfwt. , - The federal bureau~:racy ..,.,er oiCipilol HW.) '
,•

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WtadJ lllt'L
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. Stoel nparll . . 1111.10".30 ....
quoits proYided lty AdYell o

The Daily .Sentinel

GaDipalll. ,

FARMER POETS AND ARTISTS - .Tile
rollowiDaltlldeats earned awarc11 far lbelr par·
tidpatloia Ia the COIIIIty-wlde foartll arade poster
and e&amp;SIIJ CODtall far tile Melp Soil ucl Water

HAY SHOW WINNERS - Tile wlnnera ol
tbis year's IDDual Hay Sla4nr were presented
plaqne~ at tile anaoaliDU eouervatioD diDDer.
FroiD left rare Brian w~ npervllor Marco
Jelrera and Roy Holter. 'Wll1dOa Willi flnt piKe

Local News in Brief:

co-rvitkll Diltrkt. From left ..,.. lraat row,
Roaer CluldweU 1rad T11111 Plckeu; b8ck row,
edue~tlot specialist Diana Ki-., Clada Clll·
ford, Erin Struble ucl Steplaule hlllu.

Area man aUegedly knifed
A Lolli Bottom 11)111 was llllcgedly cut 011 the ear and f~ee wilb a
knife Wednesdayln Jimmy's Bar in Pomeroy, according to the
Pomeroy Police Depm1menL
.
Jeremy Lawrence of Long Bottom was attacked at 11:03 p.m.
8lld was liken by piVIlC vehicle to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was later treated and released, records show.
A 25-inch folding pocket lmifo.was recovered after the asaailant
fled, reporll stated.
.
· 'lbe a11epc1 'lulpect, Malt 7le1lns1d of Long Bollom', Is currendy
being hunted but hils not been found, records sliow.

Rest-stop robber-begins sentence

A West Viqinia man found guilty of robbing and assenlti~ an
Athens man Ill the U.S. 33 rest stop was recently taken 10 the Orient
CorrectiOD Coalcr to begin an ·eight-year sentence, accordirig to the
Meigs County Sheriff's DeparunenL
Steven Dou~ Manhall, 31, of West Columbia, W.Va., had
escaped from i&amp;c Middleport Jail in June, and lied to authorities
about his involvement in a rest-stop robbery and his name, was
. arrested in Dlinois in September, records show.
.
· Marshall was involved In the alleged two-by-two clubbing 8lld
robbing of Athens' Danny Nmnan In June at a U.S. Route 33 rest
stop in Bedford Township, reports slated.

Bllbu_,.....
• ·
The Bashan Lldies Auxiliary of
the fire department will hold a
smorgasbord dinner between II
a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday at tbe fire
house on County Read 28. Turkey.
ham, potatoes, gravy, dressing,
slaw' baked beans, ron 8lld homemade noodles ·will be served.
.Adults
•. must
·a-.: -p1y
.. ' SS, children ~.SO.
Danc:e to lie beld
Round and squaic dancing will
be held Friday from 8 10 II p.m. at
the Legion hall in Middlepcxt. CJ.
and lbe Country Gentlemen will
provide tbe music. Tbere is no
admission charge.

~,.

... ...._....
c..

~,(til.,• •

.'

rt

--Area deaths-Delbert Ray Ours

HIGH • SCHOOl• ClASS • RINGS

ATHENA IN I OK GOLD!

s

St., .

•

2- 3 WEEKs

.

...........,- -·-·····-···..

•.

7$UM
01bOI plbt'lt,
Ill Of
12 _.... ~-- .
Od
..,W
__
_

. ..u .....,...'"...,
.........
...-........
.
M.\u.MicarrttoNS
.

No~ br

.

~

......O... c..IJ

IS w.ib....,...•...••..... --..· ·-····-··..SZI.I4

..........:.-..;:..... :......... _...•.•.....$43.16

:t~~w

52Wttb ...••.••.• l. ..., ••,.....-·-·········.$14.76

.-O.,.OW.G. . c..IJ

,

IS W-........................................., •..$23.40
~-..............................................S45JO

n'1\'-..............,............-.-~......sstoiO

OfffR ENDS DEC 2. 1994

ATLAS IN I OK GOLQ!

COUNTY

·":; '/··
··,;~ · -,: IINGLia.YPIICI
.
. . ,,, .
.
l!c- '
~,_
...
··-"· .

=~~;!&gt;,cr4'M=:"~

95

INCLUDES FREE •
QOSED IJACK
FEATURE

MEIGS

.

-' · · lllllc:m'l1ilrl UTU
.,: (\'IJCirittr.• - . . . .
.
clot -·~'--••••·•·""·•••·"··-•·-..SIM
()ie............. - ........., ••-···-···-··-S6JIS .
010 Yw'•..:..............._.:....•,....•••••..SI120

'

Gardea dub meeting set
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Tuesday at the home of
Dorothy Woodard, Langsville.

Ex-Ohioans face
forgery charges

2

DtiiF: Sntlool, Ill

Aaterican
Legion, will meet Thursday at lhe
post home. Dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. and the meeting will fol- ·
low at 7:30p.m.

Anderson's window broken

.......,,... Alia) 'Ptw.lldabe&lt;JUIJ .
Nt;aqq r
e'doa

ne

Lt~ioa to meet
R~Wi~. PQil .6Q2,

Rally Day olllet"Vance set
Dance to be beld
St. Paul United Methodist
A round and square dance will
Church, Tuppers Plains, will be held at the VFW building, TupAn $1,800 pictqre window Ill Anderson's Furniture was broken
observe rally day and homecoming pers Plains, Saturday, 8·10 11 p.m.
at 9:33 p.m. Wedliesday, accmling 10 the Pomeroy Police Depart·
Sunday. Worship will begin at 9:45 SlbJday, SS couple, $3 singles.
mmL
.
a.m. with Dee R1der and Fred
Jobn Blake, Middleport. allegedly pushed a woman iDIO the w!"·
Adkins. Carry-in dinner in basedow causing it ID break, records show. Blake was charged wtth
• ment at 12:30 p.m. A1ianoon serdesuuctim of pn~rty.
·
vices start 2 p.m. with New Vision
No iiCIIIs were .,len from the atore.
Trio from Cheshire. Also, Fred
Adkins and Roger Willford from
the local church. The Rev. Sharon ~ CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
people face forgery charges in .
Hausman invites all
Georgia and are smpected of using
stolen aovernmmt devices 10 mate
Free dothinJ day
The Glllha Meigs Community bogus bi11h certifiC&amp;ICS as pilrt of an
Action Aaency will have free interstale theft ring, police said.
clothing day Friday from 9 a.m. 10 . Gregg Loe Foshee, !19, and his
.
.
noon for low income persons at the son's girlfriend, Nancy Arrington,
Delbert Rly Ours, 76, of Ponland, died Monday, OcL 10, 1994 at Vet· old school building in Cheshire.
25, both fCll'lllerly of Akron, were
arrested in August in Riverdale,
erans Mcmorill Hoapltll.
Born June 8, 1916, iii Ublnon Township, the son of the late Rush and Haunted bouse at Rldne
.Ga., while trying ID buy $3,800 in
Esta Banin&amp;er Ours, ho - a llOIISiniCtion worker. He was a U.S. Navy
The Racine PTO will have a computen wilh a bogus check.
veteran oiWodd W• D llld a member of the 1'llRJCO Plains VFW f90!13
and the La1Kxo1 Uaioa of Marioaa and Parkasburl. W.Va.
.
He is survived by hia d•nghlrl, Freda Bays of Syracuse; daughter and
son·in-llw, Donna and Robert Fitch of Long ~: one nephew; two
niccCs; two grandcbl1drcn; . . dnc. gmrt-IJ1IIIIk;bildre.
Ho was preceded In cleatb by hia brotlier, Paul Oun; and grandsliln,
Gregory Miildlcswmth.
.
Graveside aervicel will be l I a.m. Friday at the Browrung Cemetery in
Ponland, with lhe Rev. David Dailey officiating. Amlngements are by the
EwingF~ Home.
. .

*"""' ........ .
"'*""',. eo..-r.,

haunted house Saturday at the
Racine Elementary School. The
doors will open at !I p.m. for games
and food, and the haunted house
will open at 7 p.m. Admission is
S I. The event is open to preschoolers through sixth pade.

Country anak: lllpt allted
Lottridge Commu!lity Center Community Asscdatloa
will host counlly musiC night Sat·
The Racine Area Community
urday from 7 p.m. 10 midnighL All Organization (RACO) will meet
bands are welcome. Refreshments . Tuesday at Star Mill Park, 6:30
will be a'YIIilable.
p.m. New members are welcome.

l'lldl,,
ill·c... -·
_ ,. Oblo. by .... .
N&gt;lltbod
--

,,, '*

Ia tbe catt~ory of 49 percent or lea legu~ea.
Roy Holter won rrnt pllee Ia boCia 75 percent or
more allall'a 1Dd all graaes (Sentinel pllcitol by
Georae Ab8te)

----Announcements:...·----

Oldo wr.,
W. .l!o....,.;:OIIIo 4!71141; I'll. 992·2156.
~ ............ -J.OIIio.

wJ:

1j
'·f~ . ., .=~lldy==m.rriedcmct·
alllppng. does
~,;.o;~:'f~.
-; tv~=:~oo:J.~-~:
. ~; · ~~:.:_klclli~
. ~~~~~pand
.wlth..~ fm~~ht
· · ~ Arii1at1e Onlillis Gil tlie
OfScorllio. .
·
the
lbat·fodeahFmies ty far
· ·
. ·
·• o: . ·VIlle
'ai:U!all lllbYi · •&lt; wuu. . cu.._~ -..era to :
. m1973; in tiie~ so-calJi,d '"Satwd!i&gt;' ~~ ~,'.' special W~- havo beoa doin&amp; fordocadel . . In 1~, ~&gt;'C
1111 iatellcc-! tt :':suea:::lrlinina ~cf~hoaJ':h the he11t~ · care lyltem 'thaD :
; .
· · 11tor Aldllbllil Cat - diimialid lild AttorneY Gc:nenl BDiot
AlcllJI!.dof'• f111t effort to delll . tual boo1t ID the
· 1110\'e- ~trvices that tlie federal ovem- Cungres&amp; did. . ..
·
- •
· r.R~ and Deputy Altol'lley Genelll William B. RU4elsbaus with these n1 otber ~ will . ment and to li · s ili1ougll.
tile 1 raorit has boeil P.Yin&amp; ror.ltter 1111 . . If Alexander means. to .turn 1
75

A*l..., 01

, J(imbclly.'K. Bids. R~ $!15
for '":Jeanette M. ·Ridford,
Ral;~ $53 for lpCied: Chulol A.
Stanley, Mason, W.VL, $~ for
speed: 1bomas B. Melcalf, Villtoll,
S~ for speed; Dorothy I,. Nout·
zlin1, Bidwell, $54 for speed:
ChristoPher K. Martin, AIIIUill,

,J ·

0

A11111

coos for illuderly JIIIIIIII'J'.

. Forfei!ed were:

Stocks ·

AID Bit r-r

failare to Ullllfer

thet'¢ :' ,, ..
" ,;
.
Robert)&amp;. ;t\'iD&amp;; Muon; W.VL,
$2!1 plus ~~~~ for nuintag 1 rod ··
Ii""" T,..- I,. ROdltz.
.
$1110 ......
..... for:
................
coats
dl~nor; .....
and. .
Brillll lfaxel, MiddlepOit, $!10 pia ·

:!!'!..

·!::'_: !',!'.,!!:.

.

=•~:
Wllrilot B. Hal
. fbill,
' $!10pla.allll forpiUJ

~t:':::~~=· iio~Oir:::=~.

M
.
e l i d l, a r i

..

pl~l COI!S for

.

a
· ·.
·"

Simms, Gallipolis, $!54 for.speed.
.

'

· :r'~. o4er. Rutland, $25

Do L.amar A·lexander,'s idea~s work?:

ls

·,

Dowey&gt;ltiton;'l'IDiday.

!»•··

:. •• .··

.,

In tilt MiddlepOit Ma,or'a Coalt cA

of

=_.

caa ·wae lard Ga.. $!1~ for speed; 8lld Gloria J.

· 11ie ftJllowilll

Urges support of Eastem

d . • h'·• t
: I() .ay '"· ' IS ory . . ;'

eli=

sse

.Letters to the edito.r

.... '*·

12:07 p.m., Racine Volunteer
Fire Department ID Karr Road for a
building fire, Danny Karr owner;
5:45 p.m., Third Street, Kathy
Van Meter, PVH.
RUTLAND
6:10 p.m., .Cleland Hlll Road,
Cheryl Hysell, VMH.
SALEM TOWNSIDP VFD
10:03 a.m., Hampton Hollow
ROIId, structure fire at Bill Lambert
residence.
SYRACUSE
3:40 a.m., Water&amp; Edge Apart·
merus, Betty Triplcu, VMH.

'

. 1\t''.

' ' :/.

·Usher in pleasant weekend_ Hospital news

..

:.:\:e';""'A.';'-tbeaia .

7:26 1.111., West Main Street,
Holly Green, VMH; '
S:IS ~!·;,~ RClld, Dakota
Taylor,
.RA~ Hospital.

:High pressure.system win ·

Sa••h 0 ars
· t·•aet

:=

WhiUingtoll, VMH;

•leolumbu~l65• I

It's time to get over it.

· ·:

Units of Jhe Meig1 County
Emergency MCdlcll S.ervice.
recorded rune calla for asaistuc:e
Wednesday.; Units responding
included:
MIDDit_I!I'ORT
· 4:34 p.m., Pi)o Street, Bber
Lewis, Veterlnl Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
5:34 a.m., RICe Street, Charles

logicall~. ~nomically. ~ng!Ji•.~­

cally, IClentifically, IOCIUlOiogically
ar:l educationally.
And the world is Anierlcanizing. Even with our many problems,
w~ remain the hope of the ·world.
The great ideas lhat America has
promoted are flourishing. Democracy is growing in maDy places,
and will yet bloom in the suan~
places (keep your ey~ on Cuba).
There is no longer much serious
argument against the idel of market caphalism. American-style
individualism has captured the
m'nds of young J]COIIle most everyw:•ere. Th~
· idci ol lurlllism whether diverse
can share
a piece of
-'" thO cause c.f
much friCUOII in a troubled world.
A naica has shown beat dial it CIR
wort, although even we have oUr
pJblems. . .
Americans have IIIWays ·iilld a
high view of thdr nalion. Our dolIf.: bill grandly states "l'lovus
Orduin Seclorum" - "A New
Order for the Ages." Americans,
even in lbeir current sour 'mood,
think lhat we stand for SOI;IIOthjng
iruportlnt, 4Rd it's .worth,offcnng
10 the world.
·
GATT is not oqly a bil ·step
toward a global economy, but
towa.rd an. ov~~~ glo~ cui~
ture, lllbell·wtth dutmct subcultwes. In the !140 of commllllicilions
ll&gt;'.elliloa IJid mllell!8~ ppmputCJ ilnks, In a world of &amp;lobill enter~
ta nment, publicity and idv~a
- · aU able to ICIJI countries in,a
shglc bound - it COIIld hardly be
ollei'Wisc.
When you're No. l, the only
SU!.JerpOWer, the onlv nation wilh a
gijbaJ(y appealing (dco!op, when
you want to keep Amenca first,
th It's the time 10 CIICOUI'IIIe &amp;lobal·
iSIII. GATI, the largest iiade deal
In history;doei that.
Ben WlitteaberJ, 1 Jmlor tel·
lo·w 1t tile Aaerlcrra Eaterprlle
Iutltllte,ls the liOit ol the weeld7o
ubllc televlsloa pro1ram:
P.'Tlllak
T1Dk".
(For laforaatloa oa bow to
cpmaualcate elednJDicaUJ with
, tliiS eolli.-alst aad otbeno coatac:t Amerlcl ODl1Jie by calllilll·
IM-12'7~ ext. 8317.)

WASHINGTON- Democratic c•ndidlites apprehensive about
alll!elring with President Clintba can breathe a little easier. He'll be
So
iNCuMBeNTS,
h81fway across the.~obc most of next week.
·
Even if Clinton s lrip to lhe Middle East doesn't Jive him a boOst in
So. l.iTTLe TiMe.
the polls, it at leut provides him with a welcome foreago.policy diversion
from anlnlKJspilllblc Cllllpaigo llllil.
·
·
He won't have to worry about fUKLng .~le .wiUing 10 share plat- ·
forms with him all he atlalds lbc jlcace-w:ord ~ between lsnlcf and
Jordan, lhen visits the capitals of the tw countries and speaks to u.s.
~ in KuwaiL He may also include stop~ In BaYJlt llld Syria.
• When JRSideniS - tptJUDd down In cbnc:D; polilicS, !hey laid to
Jodi: for ways out In foleign poUcy," said Erwin Hargrove, a professor at
Vanderbilt Univa:.!t who p1li- in the presidency. "Trips abroad
help presidents 1 I" bjL Miltllr)IICUOIII help presidents a little .btL It's
the rally-around-the-fila flctor... •
.
"But the trouble Willi it is k's UJUBlly temporary, as George Busb
found out," Hargrove lllded.
CliniQI has lllld a lllring of
t foreign-policy triumplls. The ~
ICCOld between Israel and.Jordan follows hM'd on his successes in Iraq
IJid Haiti. And Thundly, he was lble t3 IIIIJIOlJJICC a pactlbat opens up
North Korea's nuclear program 10 inspection.
So DCllt week's trip could almost be a foreign-policy victory lap for
Clinton.
But CliniOn hasn't benefited much in the past from· foreign-policy
aa:omplishments or foreign 1rips. "It "'.JU!d appear lhat the man himself
is 1101 as well liked (as olht.r presidents) and lhat may allow consllllerS to
discOunt foreign policy achievemerua," said Frank Newport, direc10r of
the Gallup Poll.
GallUp Polls have shown Clinton go small boosts from bolh .his handling of the crisea in Iraq 8lld Haiti - ~ 1101 enough 10 get him 0111 of
the 40s. The bumps "seemed to dissipa~ fairly nrpidly," Newport said.
"The irony is that Clinton is sounaing more 8lld more fike George
Bush," said University of Virginia political scientist Larry SabaiO, noting
how Busli often .tried to rest on his foreiiJI-policy laurels when the going
got lOUgh for him at home.
. "I think he believes he CM do both :;ucc:essfully," White House press
, llbCICIIWY ·Doo ~&lt;)4~11id T,_.y, ~na of-fpreip_pQ!icy, vs.
. The prea.i~•t.of..tbo Ulinois•Anenda.&amp;liDs.~·of.IM •grilups Brlyiilgill''lbt of ~lui 18JDC.things.I hi,n.as.. his lllldi..,.4Jielf! *~Whaa
domestic agendas. "He's always blow;~ he had 10 do bolh. He certainly state
Senate IS Ill hot warer for say- they are so qutck to stereotype. know people my parents' age said if he told a crowd lhat ·'our white
believes he has ID do bolh."
ing lhat some minority employees Whereas IS years aao they miJht about us when we were that age, w.xkcrs just·don' t ba'le the,lime
Trips can uSually help 1 ~id~L But not always. There are good ofthe Sblle ~ent of Children have hung back out of a growmg because I overfleard lhem a time or W•llk otbic as our black employelectioo-year trips llld there have been·~ few bad ones.
llld Family Services have a lesser · ··
two.
·
ees'' and that bis white asSistant
Richard Nixon's 1972 histcltc-eleclklil-year visit 10 China was near- work ethic than white employees.
"These
kids
today
just
don't
miDIJers "won't squeal on their
11
perfect political Slllgecnft - right up to his landing his helicqlter on the He refuses 10 apologize.
1
11::11
., ""
' v
have a wort ethie," us old coots fellow Wllitea"?
'
Capi10l plaza 10 give a report to a joint Jl'.ssiOn of CongrCss en route home
" I reponed what people who
were saying. "Why, when I was
And furthermore, what if I
to' the White House.
.
. .
worked m the depanment said," racial anil ethnic consciousness, thdr age, we had to do {whalever it thought my friend's statements
Compare lhat to Bush's ill~fated ttip to Japan in early 1992, when he ·Sen. James Philip explained to The they don't believe it is necessary is lhat was expected in the wort- . irt.itnd all the white workers.in his
was fliSl ridiculed for bringing wiili him oJ.S. auto lnduslly executives and Associated Press. " I reported it as todaX.
place then) and lbese tids think conJillny by paititiJia them 1111 '(Jith
wound up becominJ J!hYsiCalfy iU as he sat next 10 Japan's prime minister how it was 10ld 10 me by employ' Hey, I'm sayin~ this from my lhat all they have 10 dO is show up. the- broad brush1 Fti'St, I'd be
at a Slate dinner.
··,
· .
ees." He then added that some own observations,' the ratlonllle 8lld w&amp;;t for a paycheck." . ·
· u such a froth he might not undercaseworkers had not done an ade- goes. "I've worked with several
We,lllld completely lost our per· sttlld what I was sayiqg, but i;d ten·
EDITOR'S N()'Jl:- Tom Jbaril huoverecJ the White Hoose ror
job because minority bosses (insert any race, gender, olhnicity .spectivo, ~d forgot~n that when hirn this'll!lyway:
ne AIIIOdlt.d ....._llllce 1M9 ~ l·• reported oa peruaent and 9.uate
' don'tlelld to squeal on !heir feJ. or age here), 8lld they've all been we ~ kids we would got aWiy
"You'~ falling iniO lbe same
aatloul polllla llllce 1973.
low minorities."
like that." It doesn't manor if there with wli8icver we could and get 0111 trap that people have fallc11 into.
lnstead of blaming one bad boss are only two or three members of the door and 1ta1t doing What con- evtt $ince 'the fliSl two cave lribes
'
who happened 10 be a membef of a that group in the person's work- stiiUied i'Cillife., us as quicldy as ran. into each other and felt the ·
minQrily, Philip f~lt the need to place ot whe.,ver it is th~e we could. Just as Philip had done rivalry of difference. Now,getover
impugn all tbe state minority drawing thdreJpcrience. For
, bued only Qn the. comments of ii." .
'·• ·.
employees. I was a little surprised one swallow 1118kes a sununer.
some employees, and In the sainc
So should we an. H y:ou .don't
that a man of Philip's position
In considering the impact of ()rJIII sweep our parents had used believe it, treat yourself to.a.lrip in ·
kl'J
wollld make such a slalement, but what Philip said, I remembered that or, ua, we wrote the )'OU1IFr people tiM othCr guy's shoes, and you wUL :
. S1i'ab Overstreet II a andiDear Editor,
. .
Wo .Oli:Jie~u.::: vote...:,:e over the last few years I've noticed 1101 long ago I caugllt myself mak· oft as infaior.
To more fully understand the ca.ted writer . for Newa{iper
· Eastom Local Scbool J)istrict ·hive . . . . r-:r.- n ,..--· a rendency for peoplc kl think it is . ing and ~ing with statements
.
.
bas placed I miOWillevy on the · ~:fY wltb poltticalbas ye~r. all risht 10 inake such statements that were JUal as o(fensive to me, · weight of what PhiliJ.I said, 1 tried E.Jterprile AalodatioD.
(JI'or lafora1tlon oe· ..ow to: .
ballot for YOIJ' IIIIPOVal on Nov. 8.
don't dirow lbe b8by oat because the speakers are simply once llllld a clilnce to think about to ~ my reiCUOn if one
A renewal lovy will keep your wilb.lbe wub. Your vote coants repeating their cxpepenc:es.
them. I was amoi!l a IJOIIP of mid- my friends, a black •
who has euaaualcate eleclr0111call"', trtlb
. The people !JI&amp;ting lbese state- die-aged people Ill disC:uSsiitg the r.:ork~d as a rn1aager fonnany tt.la C!llumalst 1Dd other.,
tiXCI the ~·.theyJ:O
1114.Will aWe I differeac:oJ:
ll)ents .IIJC not lllwiys bigots, and lack of drive, ambition and tenacity ·y~s. had white employeoa he . b..,1 ~rlaa. ~ hy ~ 1-;
111111 not nile ....... . , ..,..
lbo lCS!Ibl of)'llllr'WIIe on W
· ....:..... ....d,;,;lillsand da}'). Yoa caado •••ldl)luct of are often people who ha'Ve valued of younger employees. We were ·. be.licvcd didn't wo!k as welt for -..%7~ ext. 8317.) . ,.
,
kindnea iii thlt ~liaboolb llld
_..._ ..._ .....__.... 6uia ·~ llli.CIIIO willlalcr*- . . 101L '
· - --~. . .. . . .
·~
· CCJmmi!ge
...... 'l'lill il )'0111; C4JpQi&gt;
.
. . C"'"m
ty 1D condDOC paJatl fOi ibo 890
youncsten, eoniiJed illl)Ut Cli*lct
•. Melllli ~
There's more to L1mar AleXIn· B~ of~ Ceoler for the New !Oil•s I!Otion of a ·~•I cenJnl . ~e;ually hasn't grown mucllsince
wbo continuo to·IIOod 1 rtdo to.
DoOchb Simmms der's presidential bid than a slick Wea 8lld Alcllndcr;
~~lYemment to create a hum1ne 1!1"70, while Sllto lnd fora1 buleau11Cboo1. 1 W1rD1 clunom. bcbk, I
Dive Woci:s ·alopn lllld alow·lllking sincerity.
Then. in Docelnlla, the Hudson «ullil)rilllliD which_........ citi- cr.·-les.'. ·0· - . · much..,,_;,._,
Ofalllh6GOPcon•_,_
Aman·
Institute
wiD
liold
1
coa~eren••
•··~··
_
_
,
lillY r-.-··
-- to·
.......
.,
~
......
at.d
not
am efficient WIIO's
Reednille
· dor is lhe only oao dovelopinl a
. . ' ·
said in an .int.er¥iew · It f that bkJatcd localiCbool bo1rciJ
T.
~ political vision for the infor.
·. ' that ·~ iuat the - i t e is aeedod . "'Jl do a.._.- w. nmnl ..O.; -''--' '.
:=;uae.Thequesdoilis:Willit Morton Kqndrsqke .
·
·
. B
. esi~- c;aaJII(aninl• AI~.un· ·
·peopll! fiom dolna "tboir
1 01 · t
· 1a
14
Tile AliOCIIted ...,_ ·
·
··. ·.
: &lt;' .· . :. dct ~ chiiring tWo lliinkJ•k pro- '!ftveiling cii8PII:rS In an.Alcxander: . · ' ~· · ·
·
·
·· ·
:e :ro'fc:ZCa h w~. ~nc~b
·.
Tlliln!ilaY, Oi:f.,20, ~ mtd day of 1994; 'l'liiiR 11(72 d!il'l jeptl deliped 1,0 ~ bolh the- gner!lted boot, ."The :New . . ~ hrlvi!llt l!alf• • blllf. 'ft i~ ~IS ~ 'b:.Jnc~~:
··
· · · ' ·
·· · · '
· · . ,.,.
· . oretii:al and ~~ fran!Owoita
~m••e of .\m~racan. Ltfe,' • . :JlllY "ddztil
AICxandef . w.•tll -veramenL Ulider ... ~L'&lt;,·.
· (or'qdical clCc:cri&amp;i1liziOD ·of·the d,srgnell 10 be·tlie ~=··
~
.i®·lliin·
.,..
,._
fedetal--'....:.;, . . . . . . .
~to the. laridn)alt 1909
·. m··a lnd -ol'•- to
, ...... an· .., dr'I'I ·Dlaa.: tlao ·limO will oceur 'at•.
~~~.~~
~~ reforrin&amp; to "~~of Amcric:an Lifo,'' Jot8i ~-~~~~~ i;"'.,.; tli'~,!.vel~' widely' ~. ;..
Congress, is "cUl their pa~= inwlllcitllelbert()Qiy sctfeitlh the 10 ~ auclt.C!tlier llldk:ll ,.;..;..
· · ·-·
· ......J
, .
Mild lhem homo," bQt the
'
ease.(~ a po..,.CUHedoralgovera- _. BT.fiii IIX" llld'!bc w:"; law-. ICI vii* amd beneflt8..r!lticia-~
The~~ bec1111e rulot of Austria; H~~_..d Tmssee ~ llld"US'~·oda· aent to protect ~itize'!s against aalioital ret~ and ioiu!ve· II: problems like the oavirQnment,~
BOlllllllil ~ the deldi Of ller &amp;lher. Hdy.'llCIIIIIII BmpliiQr.. . . the cation iecretary IIClltaHY is lOoting . powllfulllltional indUStries.
.''YOiol. •
. •
· ,
'
~ llld helllth care Will~
Sixdt
"
·
· ' · ·
·
• · · ·· · · · ~..
rorwaystoeliraibato•IIIIIIY·fat: -~·!-'lbcNovember
. event,BurJess · Clinton aicloa 11y . lb.lllb~ the auratiet~~~·,
filll03,the u.s.SOIIIIC nliftod the Lollis~ PIGhiiC.· .
era1 domestic JII"OIIIIIIS • Jl""liNe WIU present a plan to .mo'le VIROUI atrnbdstralkla -._ 'puraued more · 1........., tblt
.
iDa ,
. Ill 1892, dlo City of Clli!:lr ~-· tllo. ~orld's CotumlJiaD Bxpoai: . ~d slve bQib probl,a•solvtag fede~l lgen~;y Iieadqo~ors to A:.exan4or-llko Jdeas thin' b
"""'hlie"' -~ . -.ve '
tioll.
.
· .
·
relponsibjJity and ~ for them locations out of Wasbrnatoa. iiven credit for, including widen- · to 8 ~ COIIIJI!Y ~ ~- .. '
~
. 1n 1944, the Y. . . .vcitieaofBfllgrmlillldDiibmvnilt+:"-·.libtnted . biCk 10111te18R4~li- ..
Ita""""'umisSJIOIIIIlrofl "swap" r61 tbe JK)woia ohlltcs lei run .
esMICII'IlSIRg ·~llldeat :
d!ir1DI WorliiW..::n;
:
~&lt;;
· • •.
Aa op~sod to Btll Chnton's bill to•turn federal welfue pro- nuel wetfare and Mediclid ·~ ~.:=t_~!! ~of •
'. lnl964,tbe~.. l'uil.t'cA!IIeUt¥S-Hea!JenHoodr,died ·eflortto 're-in~nt~: · . ~siUChasAjdtoFamilieswldl. inms. •. : ·. · · . ·· ; &lt; ,
' ·.
-• '7."•-CJIUer&gt;',l!S :
in.NOw.Y..,If~p~.'- ·. :,.
\' · · ·:·, .
. •.
Alexarlder·wlllts ,&amp;Odiillllan~ it: . · Depepdont CbiJ~en and food\ ... ' Among lbe 1-~l'ioliJ ~lllollis~~. • ~
1
ID~:I!Mii ":~ric:
. lid in
1Mill.; of~g lhe , One problem Uas 1n matbll ~ ·SIIDIIJI.'over to .tlie Slllel
.
·(lnd SU ·. lli.ihriiie w. ·ith,A:~ctet:a1cleas · 0~&lt;~.·_. -a.....
sho..n· tJetiod~ kif
. tltcb ·. -Ide

MarW

'

Aceu-~ forecut

DELIVERY!

..

(llfU

15

with ,_. d9llr lor
--..ionl. .

pot~

Vote For

- - - R. JOHNS, LTD:

·and Support

·FREDHO
'
.
County Commissioner
ea...,..,

---'!11

'

.Ex;ll'l•wdo
Dedicated to Prop••,.tor ALL
o1 Malp ~ Toar VOte . .d lalla•ee Appreciated

~

.. _, ......... ,................. ,...,..,.........,..0..41710

,

Pameroy

1

1

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�,.

Sent~~e)l

The Qaily

Sports

· : 1bul'lday, October 20, 11114

~ Ea_
stern prepa~ing_ _to battle Trimble in homecoming bout

Thursday, October 20,1984

.

Pig~

On the collep_e football scene,

ed 1eams tliis weekend, No. 18
Ullb (6-0) visiiJ No. 12 Colorado
Slale (7 -0) In a Wealem Athletic
Confcralce showdown.
Colorado Slate ia oil_ to ill best
Sl8rt since 1925, IIIII Ullb is trpng
to go 7-0 for the fmt lime sance

8-

H.S. sports

\

oUiiblo r.. trw·-·
l1I.ORIDA MAIWNS: Cam* Briao

OACCCpoll

D~m .

T-

pill:bor,., wtl- from tbe Lot
""'""" Doc!..... AniiOUOcecllhoy will
llOl offu 1alary trbilnlion \o lorry
B"'WWIO ud Davo Mill""· i l l f i -•
•a4 Bea.ito Saatitao, Clldltr, makina
lhrmllioilllobtrwa_,.
HOil'STON ASTROS: Aaaouncod
lhtJ will oat clfor ttltry trllilnlloa 1&lt;1
Iorio ... Milt 'J'hompclo, oudiold·

...

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, _ W _ ( . ).................I72
3-AIIIoo s-l!ati._...............,....ISI
C.O.W.Siflldl._ ......................l,l

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3-T&amp; ll.lila't (4!--------.171
:1-T&amp; II. - - - --·-----152

4-Cio. k.lCmor---·-------142

I···---------IGI .

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6-B I !'
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113
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tt-

r..btnllleBott""""47. 11 (llo)-l.aoJW.CA, Now a - :11. I+
1Waoy ~ 27. 15-Nowul Colli. Z4.

--u--..-.••
W-

Transactions

b

16._,_15.

31.1:1-Y-

A...........~ 21. I+Doblio 31. 1:1-

-:M.I6oUPI* ~:IS.
11-Cit,.. "1
119. 11-W. ~

Bar bill

~ 11. ....,....
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16.
:1001*....... ..:.... . . . . . ,,.

...

DtvWa.U
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Do- doo'-1011 ldw, l'1ull Viola

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KANSAS CITY ROY.U.S: AD·

14'
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far ,_
- Nam
· - .. Mike
Jolf
Coa olloiHo
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llltdoo1o,
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'I" of WU.bo110e of lh~ Ctroliat
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Spdolflold of olio lfid-1 LOt.... AI
PMriq11a
maua•
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tha
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doe 10 llrita ~. ODd Don Vollt,

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Milft'Citllop. .................. oli- '

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'TIIXAIRANCIIIRI: Nuoool 1 - J
Ooait-.A
,. IIIIIJwillolf• llluy IIW&amp;nd• to Toe lid-.
iollrUtr, ........

:14.

17-N. C.. ..... .21. ,1...._ :10.
I~ 11. 20 (lii)·MoooWia ·

,_ ._

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a-TORONTO
olloiHo farf:iot
-· A n
8UJB1AYI:

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...., will- . , . i i l l r J - 10

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'
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ATLANTA 8RAVBI: AiiO...a4

...., will - . . . i i l l r J - 10
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aNCINNA~ liDS : .~..
1&amp;boJ
will . . an......., tdliuolloo 10 T-

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t.......... W~Miiociol---.51

.......,

-5'1.12-~

l.aidal :11.

Billa Ill

Dual Terminal Banenes
IIOT700
Price good with exchange
Everydlv

llllllllllllJit
BIIIBflll
Prices good with exchange

Low'*'

Everymy Low Price

FROM

3497

FRDM

1375

--... ..... -

SIWIII'I
... Alii&amp; Ubi I
Price good with ucttange ·

IIIIICIWit.l'lllllll
Pnce goQd with exchange

E..._ Low Ptlco

EWfYCtlv low Priee

UFITIME WARRANTY

UFETIME WARRANTY

u (llt)ol'oaJ, Clo:lorillt 27.

··
iled'b ...,
homecomtna was spo
Y ""'
!omcaiJ• fcll !0 1~ ~ and ~2
tn the Hockmg Div111on, while
Trimble ratut3-4 and 2-0. South·
Wll led by Jamie ~valls' 28
arda on 13 CIITiOL
y On ill fint pw mion, South~
em IIJIPC8I1'd to be clole to a f1nt
down, but came up abcn 111e Torlllldoel weilt for llie fUll down, bul
came up 1 fJrction ~an inch abort,
glviDJ Trimble the bill on !be Tornac1o 35-,..tlinc. , ·
_

ollalblo ,.. trw

em

prescription Sendee
at Competitive Prices.

Quality

$1 .07 sale pnce
-SO 20 ml r's rebate per gt

We honor most third party
:prescription plans. Your Swisher
:&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chu¢k,
Ken &amp; Ron· are here to fill ' yot1r
.prescription ne~ds.
. .

870
.....

1
·1

Llmlt 1 per Customer per prescription

53.47 sale once

....

"

\ '

,

'

Vo""'"
aft~t rebate'

887 ;

lirrnl •

·I
1

I

lfAf-I(IT

237

1 1

.

I

~

GALLIPOLIS

:

'

OPEN ·SEVEN .DAYS AWEEK

•

"

,,

lo

...

'

:-

..

wJ

~«44~U

~
1 Diamond

~«44(!hiu

~

..,..

~-a•
Blue Topu &amp; Dlilmonds

1 Diamond

....
Emtralds. Ruble s or Sapptwe s

..

,,.
7 fllamonds
1 Diamond

7~iamonds

-·

Ingels Furniture &amp;

Jewelry

106 N. 2nd Ave ..
Middleport. OH

992-2635

twohalvealJtllllblrllldiD~ ell~

lis!l ill runninsaame, like~tse

enabling the Tomadoe!l to utilll.e
Maynard's arm at quarterback.
Trimble simply ran through tbe
TCJ'IIIIdo. line last week as the Tor-

wn .or ~ ucons. 1 u..,u
backs apa~t the wall, ftnt and
four ~or !diller on the EHS four
yard line m.the final ~· Easlem
an uon curuun across the
line. Easlan had a beale on liS
ands because of mislakes but
Easrait' dominated !be game siatia· lically sparkin! some hope that
•
••
S~them has a egtlimate chance
Fn4&amp;&gt;'.
Sric Jones caughl a 23-ya~d
John Harmon,and .Travts
. • two of~ s ~ cogs.
did ~ •. ~~:Don Friday· ~ ~
~stble 1\ta=~ damage m hts
wriStGameafter. . s ~:.__,_
wne IS 1:30 in R..u....

e:

r;:·

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·.t

•

No. 23 WasbloltOI SL
(mlna 7) at Ar&amp;ooa St. '
Cougan have nation's stingiest ·
defense ... WASHINGTON ST. 217.
' .
Purdue (pia 11112)
at No.l4 Olllo SL
Boi1cmaken lie Big Ten's surpile 11e1111 ... PURDUE 24-23.
Last week: 8-8 (SIIllight}; 6-10

&lt;•s:2;..: 96-31 (straiahl); S2~5
(spread).

JUST DOn.
Calll-800-672-2231. Any Day. Any Tune.

"•

.· '

' No.l'Jl;I/Cat T•Jie

(. . . . 21.

Oraaaemo11 have betel Owls
uac1er ur DOID" 1n 1ast n1e meetlap '" S'V'ItACUSB 45-14•

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

)

Hotlelliave WOII n* strrilht
• liiOiDi ..:- VlltGINIA 11!CH 31, ''W

Selen dar-&gt; a week. 365 days a )ftl'. Now, no mauer w1131 ~ netd lU know... no lll3lter ~
}00 need to know'it,~ can pick up 1he phone and all Ohio fower's 24-llour 0Js1omer

... N. CAR0LI-

.. No.17 VJrall!ll! 11'd -

,

4
&lt;Continued from Page &gt;

No.I$ N. Canllra
(»11113 112) II No. 25 Vlrllala
Tar Hoelt have loel.sill llnl&amp;ht

Smice Phone tine. Billing~ rate infomation, questions about stu1ing or ending servia!,
energy usage lips... ~ }00 need to know, )00 can.give ll'i a call.

Mens &amp; Womens
Caldera Mid

219 N. SECOND
MIDDI.:EPORT,
OHIO
I

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•=-:,.·
~· .

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209 UIJI)er River Road
446-3807

Store H01,1re: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Frtdly, · •
· 8 a.m. to 7 p,m. 15ilurday, and 9 • •m, to 5 p.m. Sunday
'

,.

It No.J4 .vt.u
Bndna have loel five In a row ...
ARIZONA 28-7.
'
in Chai'IoUcmlle
NA24-21.

~lwb
~·
11840

·'

UCLA lDial' J/2)

.

&amp;11111llt .
Dlf 1111111 ....

f

-u

got ....... teld postlion when Evan• ha~ a.2S-y.ard
return. Paael had ~ mleiCCplion,
JMOII Barnetle I ftimble f!J'X'Ver'f,
wbilc E-. wu !be Jeacling lack1er with 11 solol ud four assists.
Edwards bad ft
three assists and
a sack; Paul~ sill, and Nick
S ith li . 'th two_,_
01
1...e WI • The T~ pia~ a great
ftnt hill ulbey did In lbe Easem
JliiRe. Soldhenulmplyneedltoput

14.
No.9 WulllDatoa
No. 28 Dllb (milia 17)
(millul) at Orep ·
It Walle Forest
Huskies have wo11o last five
Blue Devils off 10 best stan
riteelings ... WASHINGTON 27aitic:e 19S2 ... DUKB 31-10.
14.
No. 211YU (mlDIII 22) ·
CleiD• (». . 30)
atTa»-EI.._
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Coupn comins off abocking
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24-21 .
... IlLINOIS ~F1D.
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6

College football picks...

UffliME WARRANTY

111Wl10,
111W48
r6Wllll
MDIDI' 01

r~~.---~~-----~-,

I

VO&lt;KCOSI,

Umit12

172

Blacks, in the ftnt pme between series winning 12-3-1. The two
the twO .ICboOis in six yal cndod I ltains lxlilled to a lie in 1971.
two-game Meigs winning lltrell!: in
Friclay evening's game at Bob
the series. Point Pleasant 1eadJ tbc Robau F'acld begins at 7:30.

alter rebate'

petql

.

Alljle hlminmd SHS .~
Jeuc Maynard, blocking the bill
loole for • Angle I'OCOYCIY • !be
eipt. WriJbt ud Angle ~ two
touaft chantl:ten on the .Tpmble
line, Idling the ~ for a~- in
the trenches, wath.Eu!O!" • line
anchored by Cbm Bailey and
Brian Wood.
Sll!ri•jt:l!~ IIIII 011 ~· Eul·
em holds al'lir edJe. Add inlo ~
formula l_he ~act. that Eastern s
Homecomiqps Friday and F.aslem
gcll another, added booa_t. The
Tomcall can t be taken hJbiJy,
bowcvc:r.
•.
Ersterh bead coach Dt:ve
"Honey" Bart said, "Wc'.e llklrig
Ibis game seriously. We'.e bodt 2-{i
and afte~ this one, someone will
have a big -!vantage on the ~ of
the league wtth a 3-0 record. Trim·
ble hu some ball pla:yen. Wc'.e
)JICplring for a l.u1e.•
Gne lime is 7:30 with pregame
IElivilies Slarling817 p.m.

J;~=i~- ~tf:'utb':.:T::8~ :':; of~r,~scramle by Fulk set

"C:!i.oiiADO IIOCKIBS: A-octcl
...., lrill - o«.r ....., allllnlloa ..

....

The oni Jetutning 11art.er in lhe
offensive ~ckfield for l011g•time
Bia Black coadl Sieve Safford is S8, 160 pocrtder W'tll Gill. Gill 011 the
.seuon has gone to !be air '8 times
completing 12 for 185 yards.
Jermyn Queen Is the Big Blacks'
leading nuber with 4S Carries for
183 )'lids.
Poinl Pleasant hal scored Oaly 49
poinll on the season while giving up
193 points.
.On· ihc other side of !be field lbc
Meigs Marauders also played a
pretl)' sood opponent lut week in
the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes.
NelsonviDe ia illlld fifth in Division
IV in thil week's Assoc:illcd ~
poll. Meigs actuaUy played the
Butb)'ea clillc for 11101t of the fillt
half. MeiJs ICOred late in !be fUll
half to cut the Buckeye lead to 1~.
but the Buckeye'slll-Sialie t'Pic!ate
JliSlin Gail took !be ensuing kickoff
76 yards for the IIIXR llld break !be
game open. Unbeaten Nelsooville
went on to ils seventh straight
victory - a 43~ doc:isictn.
Junior qlllltelbll:k B.rent Hanson,
wbo leads the Me!t• offense, has
completed 49 of 101 pusea (46'i)
for 736 yards ud six touchdoWIII.
Hanlon has III!R*I 0111 his JliSICII for

was
od poinla, the Trimble Tome"'
expanded their B-O ba1f1ime lead,
clawing their way 10 1 31-0 abiiiOUl
victory over !be Southern Torna·
doea 81 Rope Lee Adams McmoriaiFteld in Racine, Southern whole ·

MII1IP Qul1ltr

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

.....

!lotJoa 45•• , . . _ . . ~ ~

--.·loboa

.

i-sm&amp;.

Tlk.e away a couple of mia~
and Southem 11:ft .the half • eidler
12·7 or 18-7 IIIDilar to lut week
wbea they lr8iJod Trimble jult B-0
ll the biff.l!alem fiiOk IIMDiaF
of Southern mistat~ and uled
IJIOIJiellh!m and expe!JCDce to like
the 111e1111 out ol Soulhr.rn'lllill.
Tbis line dclcribcd the fillt half
of both the Trimble and Eu&amp;cm
games versu1 Southern: NThe
clolriiC'Is.ol.thefinthllfprod~
1011lelll1 10111 moments u hanl bill
i!~d c~C~P.ti.o~l play _fro!!' both
sides hiiJIIilllted the lll:liOIL
l-ast wcdt, Trimble's main nmDing COJ Dennis Osbome IIICed the
Tomc:a&amp;a with 79' yank on 20 carrica, while garnering a five-yard
touchdC?wn run and a two-point
~versaon. Josh RusaeU ~ 4:43
With ~ toucbdowns, ~bile Bnan
Camechts wu S-23 wtth a toucdowll.
On the third play from scrimmage, Joey Wngbtand Nathan

-Au

Cltut ;!11 MZwl

OAitLAIID ATHUITJCS: Aa·

.,........, 35. 14 IMI-L• n r, Qa.

r-. ..........,16.

59!?

~,

Oillon . .
u.
HUo• 47.' 12 (lla)•AIIIItnt SIOolo,

·

With 4:39 left In the game,

Buckley got a stinaer in his
shoulder and bad to leave the
game, but Salurday wa 1 ~ 1n
good bcallh for thil week a pme.
Mike Smith came in for Buckley
and acom1 with 29 .......00. ld\ 011
a 29-)'1111 nm.
Bisscii, who led Eulem With 14
lackles, was followed by Adam
McDaniel's nine, Sheell' seven
and five-tackle etrons from Micah
Ouo Travis Cuuis and Mall
Bow~. Bowen was CRiditcd with
playing a good defen•ive game
Eric Hill had a sack.
·
Barr said wwe didn't have
many acks.'bul 1 believe their
quarterback felt our presence. We
bad a lot or people pulling
JIRIISIROIIthe lllll.ln 1enm1 I'd
lib to praise our kids lor a iOOtJ
effcn
Trimble defeated winless

Alexander IS.O.two weeb qo to
climb bact into the win cclumn. Of
47 plays ran 40 were run;:~
ola'YS, yet ~ ICORid on
·Mifler'a 79-yn IOUehdown p11110
J.R. Reynolds. Stephen Snyder
added the two-point conversion
run. Miller added 1 ooe-yii'C! run
IatcrfortbeTOIIICIII'ICCOIId ICCR.
Dennil Osborne led Trimble
with 23 carries for 95 yards, and
JosbMI:C1cllandwas8-29.Keepin
mind thai Trimble had only 132
~rushing on the nighl against a
winless team· and had 208 yards
oVCillll·77 in
Sevent)'-nine
of that came on the touchdown
connection, and the rest went for
neplive yardage.
'The two teams have a common
opponent in Southern. Trimble
defeated Southem 31-0 and Easlem
woo4S-1S.
Eastern tolllly domill8led the
slltislics against Southern with a
very controlled runoina game.

South·ern to host Miller

-.
..:.;.:--..;..-.....,-....&lt;l
0.111• ol the Am.tcu Aaociltiao.

Oollaa N - . - 44. U-contaDd

,._

OF SAV

.......,

zone.

Buckley ICCnd 011a one yanl nm
and Brian Bowen's !ddt wa aoo11
for a27-7 Eastern leld.

1he most part between three tO play well to win..
receiven. Mike Manhall bas pullecl
Point Pleasant defeated the
In 16 for 242 1,.~~~ and two Marauden 36-6 Jut year at Point
touchdowns. Paul
. has IS for Pleasant. Thai win by the Big
338 yards and tJu:ee toycbdowns,
while Cass Cleland 10 for 1S5 yards Meigs vs. Point
and one touchdown.
Pleasant-the series '
Freshman Mau Williams. leads
!be Marauden oa !be ground with
liaii:l
479 yards in voi.oto
63 carries
for
an
·
1968
.Po'
·23, u.:- 6
· - - · Grimm
.................... ..._,,ml'lo u."'
.._ 12
IVCI'IIe 0 f 7.6 ~-- .....,.
· 1ncn
has added 91 carries for 310 yards "'"...................:nm.l....., .........
and
o/. yards crrcL
1971 ......................Mc11J 8, Point 8
34
av~e k.
a fi
" 1972...................Mcip IS,Poinl 12
"lb
tey contest or us 1973
.Poin12S u.:- 18
saaordts.SBJu·d.•a ''W4
ba
led
.................
•· · • e ~e strufgg , 1974.....................1'0inll4, Mcip 1
and
nv11 oheck
ours.f 1975..................Point 14' Mcin
12
. Metgs
(C . IS like
) hasadone
cor
M!ko ~ih
a
1976....................Poinl31, Mc!p 6
a job tummJ e P~ II!"' and,. 1977 .................... .Point 14, McipO
They have picked up a .ew.wms
1978...........Poinll4, Meigs 8 (00
are &amp;robab~ playing w•th more 1979.....................Poinll4, Meigs 0
con tde~ en we ~-· The ~y 1980................... .Poinl28, ~ 0
for !be Btg Blacks to Will IWll1ling 1981 .....................1'0int 19, Mcip 7
to SaffOld is to collli'Ol the line of 1982....................Point29, Meigs 7
ICiimmajJc. "We ha1e 10 coniiOI !be 1986................... Meip 33, Poinl18
decisioo.
line ol scrimmage and IIIOIIIIl IQOie 1987 ................... .MciiJ 28, Point 6
In the atrly season bts to River
oft'enleforllltobeSIICCCSsful."
1993 ....................Poin136,Mcip 6
Valley, lbe Bia Blacks were their
M~pite their record Point
own won&amp; enemy turnina the t.ll
Pleasant is a preuy good football Meigs football team's
over eight limes in the 28-n Raider
ICaill,• Chancey lllid. "They have
win. Last week the Big Black
played a Jally 1011gb ac:bedulc, they spaghetti dinner today
offense Will onlJ Jlb1e to muster 66
have a preuy &amp;ood offensive line
· yards of IOta offense to the
ne Meigs Marauder football
and a good tight end and
team
wiD host a spaghetti dinner
powerful Indians.
qllllltClbttck. We are going to have
today.
The dinner will be held in the
high schod's cafetaia bePmiDa 81
5:30 p.m. The dinner is free, bUI a
doo81ion
towarll the Coothell po'
"
'kr 8e6Tr WOlR
Soulliem senior tackle
Steve
nadoes gamcted abig NEGATIVE gram is appieicated.
Everyone ia invited to auend,
SelltiDeJ C.-... DDIIetlt
Edwards Cllllght Osborne for I five- in the rushing column, mainly due
111e Southern TOfllldoca, who )'lid loss and SHS took over near to the sev= sacking lhll Maynard this will give the public a chance 10
lool:ed lite ~ were on their way the seven )'Wd line. A fued up S~ endwcd. Earliet in !be year when get to know membcn of the footto a fine rebualdina scaaoo, laat coach Joe _Hemsley beckoned his . Miller was bot. !be Easltm Eagles balllealll and the coacbing Iliff.
week threw all ~aron for. teal!lto build mocmenlliill off !hal dcfcud Miller 14-8 at Hemkd in
a whirl whell they
to SliU8- .. .ioalline stand, but !be momeowm a non-league game .. Eastern will
glin Trimble.
never came.
play Miller in a league bout next
week !be Tomadoe!l hope
For the accond ~gta time, an week.
to .Cgroup and clalm 1 win again• omen for the re~atnder. of t_he
In theEHS-Miller game, a Jason
Miller in the Tri-Valley Confer- evenfna••Soulh~ s offawve ~!DC Fulk, qllion play from qtlllrtelbeck
ence's hi~y coiupetili1e flockina .leaked like a ae~ ne stommg Rob Jents provic!od !be set-up play,
Division. Wf.~e of Tomcat JCIICfS lapped at as Jeremiali Browning cau.Jllla 14Millcr bowed to winless the heels-and someumes tn \he yard reception for the touchdown.
Alexandu IS-O 1fttr Falcon fon:es facea.. of !be Tornadoea Ill evaung The Jay Jones run was good and
have been 011 the 1Jrink and report- lona. Mol! of the Maynard ~d Eascem's lead was nanowed to 14- .
edly lost- 110111e of their main cop E~ ~g effaU wae In varn 8. ~ score stood until the end of
the ~t couple of weeb. Milkr durin&amp; a night !be :r~~ l'lllb- the third liamc, and 1100 to lhe end

.z•• BIG

for'"'_,.

a-

B7 DAVE HARRIS · .
Seadllel C~t ·
Two teams lookipg to brelk.
;. losing Sllelks will go bead-to-head
·.. Friday evenlaa when the Meigs
: Mtirauders J.llay host to lhe Point
· Pleasant Btg Blacks in a non: conference game at Bob Roberts
: F'acld in Pomeroy.
· Meigs lfttr polling I 3-2 record
: startina 0111 the lle8IOil on !be iOid
· the fUll live ·pma have Sllllllblcd
~ of late, lolln&amp; the last two pmca 10
&gt;WellslonancfNeJJonville-YCIIt.
Point Pleasant comes into this
week's contest with an 0.7 record,
but bas played a monstrous
S:hedulc. Among the teims lhll the
:Bia Blacks have gone against are
· Ripley, River Valley, Jackson,
Gallipolis, Hurricane, Poca and
Sissooville, the top.ranbd team in
West Vtrglnia'a 0ass AA to whom
1he Bia Blacks dropped a 56-7

liati0Dtrl)o1Saowborry,..,lfioldor.

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

· -.._lioa(l)..._____.25

. ...,.

"""""" .......... """"" .....,

-~
.....
loilw,lleto Mal........... ...

wUlaot oil• ....., llhitndon te Tun

I

-·

d.. to Dip ...... Wiolclor, ........ him
tllaiblo r.. trw._.
lAN FRANCISCO OIANTS: Aa·

I

TOioo
...
I-CAUIWI1IL(6)....- - - - - -112
I

"SZi! OIBOO PAillli!S: N.....S Dan

Warthal ~ pill:bio.l inllructor. ~­
"""""" doeJ :oiill,.. tiferutayllllilrl-

OIICAOO WHITII SOX: • ..
...., will - otr. iillrJ uloluolloa 10

(llor ·tt·
..........
..........

C,

He allo bad IS~ 011 a kickoff
return. Charlie Bissell bad 68 ~
on 16 c:arries IIIII two IDIIcllcloWns.
Ryan Bucldey bad 11 carries for S5
711rds and a touchdown. Mike
Smith'hld two carries for 44 yards
and a~·
Eastern recetven were led by
BrilliLiter (1-28) IIIII BiSicll (1-8).
Gilden CIUgbt dlree for Federal for
24 )'lids. · .
. EaslemputiDI!ttha'a 12 -play
drive downf"teld for the game's fint
score with only 29 seconds left in
the half when JMOII Sheels scored
on a lhree )'1111 run. User's 28·)'1111
reception Bel up lhaliCille.
With 8:S8 to go in lhe thiril
quarter, BisscU acorcd on a two·yard run. The two-point conveni011
was no f~ helping boost Eastern
to a 33- S mumph.
Ryan Buckley's 40-yard kick·
off return set~ the IIIXR, as East.
em pounded tt on into the end

Meigs to entertain winless Point Pleasant Friday night

DR. A. JACKSON BAILES, OPTOMETRIST, is Happy
to announce the relocation of his Meigs County Office to
224 E. MAIN STREET IN POMEROY (Formerly
. Pomeroy Health Care). The office .will be CLOSED
FlUDAY, OCTOBER 21st THROUGH 1UESDAY,
OCIDBER 25th. Emergencies during this time will be
seen at the Gallipolis office, 228 Upper River Road, 4463300. The Pomeroy office will RE-OPEN on
WEDNESDAY, OClOBER 26'Ill at .the new location
offering full~service family vision care' including glasses
and all types of contact 1-.nses. ·
..
PHONE 992-3279.

bit ..... .....,.
ANIII!LS: A.a
I
...., elfco4 ....., ulollnlloo 10
lliiiiDowlt,-.w.r.

Doo " " " " " ' - · ............ ....
bit
aJIVIILANDINDIANS: Ammmcoll
...., will - . , . iillrJ rrllllrllioo 10
Oauoltt, Wltl..r, ,..,, ...,.,
wr..-.~

i~m'i;a;:::::::::::=:ll

a.-. ...- .
OWiaJil
u.-

UlS ANoaBS llODOI!IIS: Milloino:l
Ria\~.......... of Al"'-'t
of .... Cota Loop; ... Dobiot.
_ ~of Vco Boach or lho FloridA
SiAIO
lidl.. va..o......,...of
Ytklmt llloNarlh-Letpo.NDtCI
lol:a SlloiiJJ.,... or of'Siil AiiOrilo of
tbe Taal.oop;
Rornlcb141t1111tr
of SID. Bemardiaa or lhe Califomit
Lot~ lid Jol:a SllocmtUr m1r1oprof
. Onill'tlltoflllo ....._ .....,...
Pn'l'SBUROII PIRATES: Annourlcecl
lhoJ will . . olr• ttluy trllilrtlion 1&lt;1
Ltaco Ponith, co:cbor, tnd Ztlle Smilh.
pl1ehor, mollioalhom o.liaJblo ror free

... Joo H.Uotll. plle•on, oad Tom
-

....

Al!iPo4 ""
to
of .... Plcil':cCout

.......... :10. 17-cALilWBU. 19....
c·
OeoN n. t,..w. u · '"P'"

.ca~-----------~

Huskers have won .IS 1traight
est by ihe defense in school history.
Utah leads the WAC in every over 1igers ~·NEBRASKA 38-7.
leallls their only losses of ~ sea·
Rice (plus 20) ,
son. In last week's 47-9 victory defensive calegory and also is No.
at
No.6
Te1181 A&amp;M
1
in
scoring
and
total
offense.
Like
over Texas El Paso, tbe ·Rams
Aggies won't lose this season ...
gained 585 yards and held the Min- Colorado State, the Utes are 1-0 on
ers to 139 - the second-highesl the road vs. lhc Pac-10, beating TEXAS A&amp;M 35-17.
No. 7 Miami (minus 21)
total by the offense and tbird-low- Oregon 34-16last month.
The game looks like a tossup,
at West Vlrpla
but Colorado State is a 2 1/2-poinl
Hunicanes avenge last year's
favorite with the homefield advan- loss to Mountaineers ... MIAMI 42tage .... COLORADO ST. 20-17.
iO.
No. 19 Kaasas St.
Mississippi (plus 10)
(plus 14 112) at No. 2 Colorado
at No.8 Alabama
Wildcall haven't beaten Buffs
Jay Barker 30-1-1 as swting
since 1984 ... COLORADO 34-21. QB ... ALABAMA 27-10.
No.3 Nebraska
(See PICKS oa Prp 5)
(minus 25) at Missouri
I
at BYU and Arizona, handin those

......... - oUciblt,.,""" .....,.

a.cawo,ea•• w.
..M._...,... _.......
-tos
J.g..p....._
________
, __
JO

to._, _____________ ...
~

1947. The winner gains the inside
ttack to the Holiday Bowl and has
a chance to become the WAC's
first unbeaten 1eam since 13-0
BYU won the nalional championship in 1984.
Colorado State has already won

bell the blulc for !be
199Co4 uldTri~
- • 1 ey Confere'!ce 's

·Hocking Divisl"!c:bampkmabip?
Unleu It be'1111 10 rain for 40
clays and 40 nipiJ IIIII lhe Sblldc
~~r~Ina to rile, )'ell Friday
• the top two tcama Eastern (5:2) and Trimble (3-4)
both ol which lie undefeued after
two eli~ pma, iqUBre off in
B.astem .• ·homecomlngaame 11
7.30.
• .
1be tcamJ anuou~)' ,IIIDtlar,
but llas!em ia more polisbed. Both
get thetr bread-and-butter on the
running game, although Eastern
· has passed more throughout the
seasoo with Brian BoweD as signal
caller. Trimble usually holds the
pass for.lhe big play, two weeks
BJO ge'!lng a 79-yii'C! to~hdown
· CO!!*Uon from quartaback Zach
Miller.
La.st week •f.:!~t Federal
Hocking, Jason S
carried 24
, times foJ 106 yarc!J, one toucbdown and a two-pomt conveniM

-

Lone. oattle of.unbeatens to begin Saturday in Colorad·o
B7 RICK WARNER
lt.P Football Wrlaer
·you may need a road map to
find It, but Saturday's marq1100
game In college football takes
pllcc in Fort Collins, Colo.
In !be OD)y matdiUD of undefeat·

The D.l!y .Senllnel Hat. · 5

Pomeroy-lltldleport, Ohio

, I

·r

�1hur.dly, Ottobe( 20; 1994

M

Page 8

The Dally Sentinel

1hurtdlly, Qctober 20,1884

1Pomeroy-lllddleport, Ohio

·

NHL pla.yers keeping busy despite standstill in negotiationS ti'
B7 KEN RAPPOPORT '
AP HodleJ Writer
While ihe NHL labor silualioo
is ala81M1dstill, the lalRC(\811110l be .
said of the players. ""
Whether playillf in Burope or in
exhibition games m North Ameri·
ca. NHL pia~ are managing to
keep busy duriDg the Ioasest work
The-lockout 1110\'ed mto its 20th
day today, bringing to 110 &amp;he
number of JlOIIpOIICd pmes 10 far.
NHL spokesman Arthur Pincus
said Wednesday the league would
have an announcement aooo 011 a
league policy regarding ticket '
refunds.
Time 8llllC8I'Cd to be l'1lllllilla out

on the Nflt•s hopes of saivailng
the entire 114-pme _,!wJnle,
NHL commissioner Gary
Dettman said lhlt no matter how
many games are lolc, they will not
be made up put Juno. He also said
the lcape would need allcast a 4().
or !10-game schedule to have a
legitimate seuon leading to the
Stanley CUp. .
To play a !10-..,be echedule, the
NHL would have to stan by mid·
December. A 40-game schedule
would mcanallning II'OUIId Jm 1.
Brian Burte. the Jeaaue's direc·
tor of hockey operations who is
' touring selected NHL cities, said
from Dallas on Wednesday be
believes an agreement will be

On tM NFL scene,

.

8IOpplge in lc:aguc ~·

reac~ in time lor some hockey to
be ~yed,
'The nmna1 financial rnume

lineup tonight in Helsinki when · notice lhlt 110 wants to pia)' eJae. · ;
Jokerlt takes on IPK featuring where, presumably die Czech •
Tikkanen and Ruutlll in a Fmnisl! Republic. _
.
•
Leaguepmc.
_ . __Philldelpllla Flyera ~Eric
Torooto's Mats Sundln Is also Lindrolllk8S wiih the Onivcpity :
plaY_in4 in Sweden while others are of Western Ontario .011 Wedneiday . •
ex.,loling Buropean opti011s: Petr and hal enrolled in two busincu
•
Nedved llld Alc:under KarpoVIIIIv classes.
..
of the New York Rangers, Uwe
"I wu wutin' my time, not ·..
Krupp llld Pett6 Fcnbetg of Que· doing anything, • sa1d Lin~s • ..;
bee; Mikko Makela of Boston and whose father Carl played f+J! ·.1
Jdko Va'Vio of Dallas, .
at tbe London, .Ontario, sctiool '
"I want to do some akaling to from 1967-70. ''It never hurts to ·'
stay In ~" Krupp Slid. "And have u much school u you can ,..
in 10 days, if the Nordiqucs sal it's geL"
OK,I'U ao back 10 Gcnilany.'·
· The NHLPA is considering .·~
Karpovstev has gone bact to · charity exbibition games in non· :
Russia, Forsberg to Sweden and NHL cities.
.
Makela and Varvio lO Finland.
''It's still in .the preliminary
Nedved bas put the Rangers
on stage," MacAIIislllr said. , \
tl
.
.

reiterated iiS support Wednesday
for players to fllld work wherever
thcl can alibis ppinL
. . 'Our .stance -has been, .we're
supporting the payera in whalcvcr
they're clloos1ng to do,'' union
spolamsD Slave MacAUilacr llid.
Boston Bruins forward Josef
Stumpel is the latest to head to
Burope, returning to his German
club, the Cologne Shirks.
. Also bact 011 Buropcan M:e are
such established players u. Jari
Kurri of the Loa A,ngelcs Kings,
Teemu Selanae of the Winnipeg
Jets, Bsa Tikkanen Of the SL Louis
Bluesllld Chrislian Ruuuu of the
ChiCigO Blal:khawb.
Kurrillld Sd8me will be In the

· of a work stoppage will bring a
change," he told The Dallas Mom·
ing News. "The chec:ts are aolJII
to start goiJII out to tic:kct holdcri
And players are missing paydays.
That, hopefully, will al• the views
of botb aides u to wbal's reuco·
able.
"I think we'll get In a mcaniDg·
ful seuon, allhough with a reduced
schedule. I guess that's mosdy
hope. thouah. It's not knowledge. 1
mean. we don't havuny indianioo
tbat this is going to get solved
tbmonow or the RClll day.'~
The NHL Players Association

Unbeaten Chargers have solid shot at remaining so vs. Broncos
era, largely becauac qamy lamail
With Alllhooy Miller in Denver, and Jake Reed kept deflc:c:ting WarAP Football Writer
The Denver BroiiCOI' lniUblca tbe Chargers have become an NFC- ren M0011 passes to Pllcb:ra.
These are two different teams
started the fint week of the pes Cll, stylc 11111m - Nillone Means runs.
Sian
Humphries
staya
out
of
trou·
.
now.
when S.m. Diego came to town.
VIKINGS, 24·10
The Chargers' good fortune ble.and the defense doca the resL
One
SiJR
of
trouble
surfaced
last
HOUilOII (pi• 10 V2)
started the same time, when they
week
tn
the
36·22
win
in
New
·
at
Pblladelp•la
(Mmada;p nlpt)
came beet from a 17.0 deficit and
Orleans
John
Carney
had
five
Why
did
the
NFL
give Houston
WOII 37-34, thanb to John Elway's
bobble Into Junior Scau's banda field goals. Last Be811011, his 12 field aU those prime-time pmea?
goals II:COUilllld fer all the points In
inside the 10 in tho final minute.
IMaybe 10 people
. . .can JO to bed
So when Denver (1·!1) coca to thes~~:"
WU:spiriled ear~AGLBS, 23-7
San Diego (6-0) Sunday, do for.
after Monday night's loss, they
Dallal (_..• I V2)
tunea~?
.
have
a
sbort
week
and
"'
at~
.The ~Vm don't tbiDit 10
CHARGERS
33-1
t
.
Buddy
and
tbe 'Boys f~r the
- lhey've made the Chargers
Greea Ba7 (plaa 4)
second time in duce wctb. It Wll
se.vcn-polnt fa-vorillll 10 get to 7.0
at MlnNIOII (loal&amp;bl)
38·3 two
ago. Give
Buddy
against the soft Denver defense,
. . weets
... . ·--·
----.Another
repla~_ of an opeuing.
whicll' is allowing almost 30 po1nta
day game, WOIII~lllby the Pack·

a game.

BJ DAVE GOLDBERG

OSU fans give Jackson
ovation before Mavs'
tuneup vs. Cavaliers

•,__,.
L.A. Rams (pl111 J 1/l)
••
at New Orleanl
Jim Everett's revenge? The '
Rams don't win twO in a row,
•
SAINTS, 14-13
,

20 points for the home field anil because Brik Kramer has always
you still get ...
done 10 weU in DelroiL
COWBOYS, 18-3
LIONS, 14-12
Plttlbuql (pi• 1)
C!pcluad ~-= 10)
at N.Y. Gliuall
at Clew:
Dan Reeves hal put the fear of
Last of the patsies for tbe
Graham (Kent) in Brown (Dave). Browns.
Who knows?
BROWNS, 11-8
GIANTS,l7-1S
TIIIIJII ••, (Jihtl15)
Seattle (plul 6)
, at Saa FJaudiCO
. aJ 1t111111 CI~ .
~z.:;llplay.
~ot u easy u Jut wi!Qk for the
Chiefs.
49~.27-10
JUil kidding,
Allanta (plua 4)
at L.A. Raiders
CHIEFS. 1'?-13
(pi• 4) .. .,..,.
Jdf Hostetler is starting to take
Stew Walsh WOII dlreo in a row, 011 Jdf Ocor&amp;c's pcnonality.
so be gets !lenched. Maybe it's

.:CC.

RAIDERS, 26-21

....:

w~:,:7)

A perfect spot for a leldown by '
the C'olts. But Gus Frerottc over .,
John Friesz?
.• i .
COLTS,27~

Lut week: S.-6 (spread); ?-4 .:

-;nht

)

&lt;-~ 37-49-3 (spread); !11·38';:

ewc.o

.• 1

(saaight up)

:·,

H)

Ineligible players may make .i!
Lake sextet forfeit all its wins ':!

KC's Hamelin named
01
~:~
!c'!!!kie
!~11J!~':.~.rooDI in
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) homers, RBII, runs (64), hits (88),

auo &lt;AP&gt;-

doubles (2!1), walks (!16) and gamca
(101).
"l just knew the people who do
well get to play," iaid Hamelin.
beld out ol the ~~-- • ....;- •. pitcheis for the~~~;,'£
the seuon.
When he was called up in
Scplllmbcr 1993, Hamelin knew he
wu being counted on to take the
DH spot Brett held. Brett. now a
Royall vice president, cloaed out
his Hall ofFame ClreCI' at qe 40 in
1993, batting .266 with 19 home
nms aitd 7S RBia.
.
Hamelin, who also lllayed 24
pmca 11 fint base, rec:elwc~ 2!1 ol
28 firlt.JJIICo VClfal in IIIIJo«i" ..,.
the B•T.IlWrilllll AID:i~ ~
~ America. He ·~ot thne -ond·
place VOiel and flnlabcd 'lb 134
points.
WI
The NL rookie. award will be

The American League's rnoldc of
the year hal one over-riding hope
for 11011 SCSIOII
"To be able 10 plly," said barrel-cbeltcd Bob HaiDelin,ldlc:d like
everyone else bY. the atill·uilre·
solved player llrike. "Tbal might
be the batdcst aoai to reach.''
A runaway winDer in balloting
among blsebaD wrilen, the "Him·
mer" brolrc Bo JICkaOII's Kansas
City roolde home run recorct'and
picked DP. a niCkname lhlt'D stick

••' .

MilLBURY.
The
Lake High School yolleyball 1118111
may have to forfeit their 10 vk:IO-

·The SIIIC notified v.w~g ~~ the .·.
violati0111ast weet, she said.
.J1
"I was lhoclrcd. I couldn't fig-~j
ries thig seuon after six varsity ure out how the kids would bave.,
playcn were declared ineligible for time. We~ ftnished pia~ nine ,
playing in a local recrealioo league. matches m IS school days, • she ..,
.Lake coacb Clair Varwlt,and said. ·
:
.
'"
athletic director Malt Krift
the
~ players played on Sundays, , '
playcn would not play in post·se&amp;· she said.
.
.
';
son tournament action, which
Varw~
· and Kriftd North·· ·
begins S81Unlay.
wood Hi ~hool Cliledlbe lltaiD. · •
Two junior varsity players abel
Ken ames, NorlbWood lllhlc:tic
were Ineligible, they llid.
director, direc!ed IIUCilionl to vol- ·':
Neither Krift nor Varwi&amp; would leyball c:oach Brad Mored to com- -,
provide the names of the eight mcnL
:!
Krift said Lake athlotca were :·'
players. Varwig said three of the
six varsity playenSiarled.
told before each SCIIOII they ClOUid ·,i
: anHi'.!'_~~"'i'!,~!?,..cannotd
. plathey not play in orpnized leques. Var· ::
10
~ 111............ - - unag
~ said she reminded tier players. ' '~
seuon, according to Ohio High
' 'They lbquaht thev were. play. &gt;I;
ing pickup.".she llid."'Thcy·ineW ')
School Athlc:tic Al8ociatiOII Nles.
Krift was preJllring 1 report for (~'l· ahoulcln:L pla)l), buLthej N
the O~SAA, which will rule if dido t know the coasequences, Tile · ;
Lake must forfeit the wins. He adults should-lave Iatown."
'•
expccllld the report to be sent Fft.
Lake finished with a I 0-10 '
day. He did not know when a rul· record this ICIIOII~ '
1o.
ing would be made.

said his ex-coach had little to do
B1 RUSTY MD 1 IPD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) with the Buckeyes' decline.
The f - at St. John Areal never
To thoac critical of Ayers, be
got 10 say a~~ 10 Jim said, "I can only say, remember
. Iacklon, so Wedneaday night the time when be was national
10,982 made up for it with a 2!1• coach of the year, Bifl'en COICh of
sec:ond .....,.. OYilioa 10 greet a ~· WOII two Bill Ten cbampi·
fa-voriiCIOII'srelllnl.
· in a row and we made it to
JICkiOIIIc:d ()llio ·s late to two the IDal eight? Remember those
Big Ten ddca in hil three years, lim~~ ,!~for!..."!!" JlltlinJjobhimhe the,~ of~.~~.:..
leaving 1f1ir the 1991·92 1e1101110 on u"' ~
,..,_a great
It sa !~ ,_, honor:,l'm very
owntually lab au-year, $20 mil- '!'as domg. Just remember those . prou~ of 1t, he said. At lout
JiOII...,..ICl wldt thO Dallas Mav· umes, and remember bow .mu~h the!!, s some good ink on base·
erlcb.
applause you P,~ him. He s suU ball.
.
.
Ho returned wldl dto Mavcricb thO same peraon:
. •
Hame~ became the fint ~for • tDIIII\lltD ..-at 1 tile ·~·. 'ri1011 Mlm1qod d!Gac.q~!fli-,.: nalcd.-IUUM ,IO.earn dlo.r~kie
ClcYCiacl Cavaliera llld wu greet- cult days 10 be the lliCIIl promilltlll honor when he was a clc:ar wmncr
eel by a thundcroul ovation beCcn alumnus of Ohio SIIIC h±d.,..l
Wednesday over Cleveland out·
the~
."It's lOUgh f'1' me because ~e fi.e~der Manny Ramir~z. Lou
• It feels good " the 6-foot·6 butlt the repulllloo here of do1ng Piniella last WOII the roo1dc award •D!VliJIICed 111er1Dday
thkd·year auan1 ..ict. "It's 1 differ· everything rigbt and becoming for Kanas City io 1969, the Roy·
·
CDt atmolpbcre, IOrt cllike p~ay~na_ winners," he said.
als'Rwllelln
fint 11e11011 in dle.AL.
here : : thou&amp;b I'm war· · '11Ck1011 averaged 19.2 points a
JlartDd off quktiy and r---------------------------~--.·1"
iq a c
11111brm."
game last seuon wbilc:.ll8rtin&amp; in had 24 home nms when the llri1rc
'·
'Prior to th~=e, It was every pne, llrelddtJi hiutrelk ui ~led play. His three-run, 12th·
a.....UICed thl1 J
Wl,l aMnl all
1n Ida JliO c.eer.
!RRinl cJout apinat the Whilll Sox
Obio Slate 1 $100.000 lift to be . He said there were puallels 1n the third --~· of what tumed
"'
ll
diVidecl between the alhleiic clepirt- between will&amp; be'experienced when Into 1 14·pme winniq llRak proment and the ICbool'l bllck cubur· be CIIDIIIO Ohio Slltc and wlten be vlded Ror.ala flu widl OIIC of their.
•'
";'
a1 Center.
Joined the Mavericks. Ohio S11111 moat thrilling ~omenta since the ·
,,
1acboo'~bomecii'DiagCoojurecl had not WOIIa Bi&amp;Ten ddefortwo 1985 World Series.
.,
up n1emor1e1 b BucleyO fanS. Ho decldet before l~ekaon came to
"I dM!nght ~ iniO the sea. lfter bla ~ year aDd iown; the Mavericb have W011 just
dill I could do it. ' llid the 26"
.'
laven'l beca dielao Iince. . 20 ~ 110 pmca siDcc bC bcclme a , ~-old, who Wll called up briefly
II
Bucpyea lt8d rec:ordi of JliO.
. m September 1993.
oJ
l~I4111d 13-16 dto aOil two yc~n
"It
dtat bad to mate that
Tile fans toe* note.
wi1houl him. BeC--e ~ JeCIIiidq tranaitioo because when I came
"Niil it, Ramii!CI'," flu would
vloletjcwg UDder beld cacll RaDdy here to Ohio Stile we were in a yell• be lumbered 10 the ~ the ·
Aytn. Ohio S• W11 pul.m 011C simU. oltqedm," he said. ''Fcnl· iloyala' replacement for George
~
yiar of NCAA probation lhil Rllely for me, we lumed illmUIId Brett ll DH. ·
ilpriDI.
And the loft-hinder loabd poll· CNidit:r beca1110 you ·can do lballl
1• ·
''
i
In addidoD; an upy atring of ihe Mllep leYel. In the NBK, it's tively Rutblan when, wearing
llaQlts, dnuJk-clriviq IIRIIa and JOinS to take some time. Every- baggy, flannel, olcl-llyle uniforms,
JliDPlaY resulted in duee players thing is not gunntced 10 happen he-fio~ered In early 1\uguatand
'.c.·
~in11 kicked off thq tcllll. Two ov""''""'
.
chugged around the baaea 10 the
odten bave lllillf'aied,
-;;ii'llike,llly job- ,w've got bomechceraof "Babel"
"
1-l
prognm 10 1bo point wllere·Aopa to, work at 11 to bec:om~ the bell.
The rookie award wu Npi'Cie!ly
....
wu expected 10 Dc:p
It a &amp;OinJIO
IOIDC lime. At jje pleasin1 for aomeone wllose
•c
ou from an ·opelliryout of atu· lllliiC time, 1 m bavlng a lot of fiiD ~ to the ~ was MmMt
dciDIL
. . . . ud tryinJ to get ~ each and by a aeriel of bact mjlaiea.
h -.
Jackaon· defended Aye" and every day.',.
. "I 1114 spend quite a raw J,Can
·
.
JD the m1110r leaiiiiCI. I defiDitclyf
••
••"!
-. paid my dues,' ,.iiO- aalcl. "Titat
1

no

..

son

-·t

...

·~

_....die

IMIII-·

!ab

Gerald Wilkins ·to miss·rsst
~.~ita lillie
of season after ·tendon Injury · Hamelin cJrov:e .i!!65 runs~

'\

IIICft _....

·~AP)- Clove-

he fouled me ana roiled left," ·
WilkiDI laid. "All I felt is dW
..W Qcnld WilkiDI knew knnlaJi. tileR was nothing lhcrc."
• '!!Ill waa WRIIII w11m lie rupWilltina averaged 14.3 points
·ued·llil ·Mnlea llidlll .dlriD&amp; • ... year,lllrtina !Ill_ 82 ~ for
........ Jllll!l n.Jay.lllaiL
Clcvdand. Ho hal played in 80 cr
·· ""'ife:bew I&amp; dto . . - . it 1t1p- more games in eijbt of his nine
~.',. PntoUo Aid kfon u
NBA ICIIOIIs widi the Cav1 and
Ufiiitloa IIIDC In Col. .bQ New York Knicka, compillnaa

~Mike Pi

wlit ca.Iien

'rJ!o

w
....ppiut ._' Dilla.
Ml rt&gt;• 'Hii ~ 11!1, ~ ..t
.t61;1J ~-~

worda, . It I

A!;Qr" '"

•) • .

a7

.

!&gt;w1111a1. 111811iq ~ wJ11
. . . . . . IIJI'Itr)' PJi!lay •ilornln(

•

....llliladleNil~illll 1 • .
He 10re lbe...,.
die
.~......
: ' oraa·ulalbttioa

dirln'

~·

aa

at
CIIDic. oaWeclnca.. :

directOr

Cavaliers slip past
Mavericks 1~107

. t~.

1

'

can,'' Flllello Uid. "It's a crilical points.

1

·'
:

I

I

'·

•'

.IOIIUY dilfeaau UghL

1

But a 12-foot TeneU ·~
jumper and dieD a ... an41ayup
by B.-. palled CleliEII Ml CYC11
all06 with 36 seccwlllell
Jamal Malbburn, who had 2!1
points, bit the aeconcl of two me
throwl with 19 ~ loft to give
Dallal ill final lead.
Brandon hid 23 polnli, wbile ·
Bobb)'Philllhad 16fortheCava.

account
We_ekly,_biweekJYormon,th!Y,'

'

•

....'

"'
' !.,;

.~i

11

~.

.·

'v

lol

TlnMSyndicotoand

my window. I mUll get out of~ The fust Jhing you see is a bloody
go outside and chase the cats away · . stain and a dead bird or squirrel lelt
10 I can get a clei;CIIl night's lleq).
there by a neighbor's cat
The patio fumilure gets damaged,
My acntimcnt is Jhis: If you want
and the SIOml doors get ~yed. ~ to have a cat, 1rcep it on your own
far,lhaven'tfoundlllytbingthatwill prcnliaes 11 all times. There should
get rid of the odor. The flower beds ' be a leash law enfm:ed for Call as
and shrubs have been destroyed well as dogs. Thank you for
after being used u a litter box.

c-...s,M~co~o·

O.·Au LaDders: Your notion
thai call make aood pets tw:ausc
they dOn't annoy the neighbors
miaae4 the point completely.
Ulllkiubtediy, you have lived your
entire li{e in Ill apartment buildin
~·- you would sec cats ing.a
""""'"""'•

Ohio University
College of Osteopalhic Medicine

Family
Medicine

.

' .

.

; • .

I

I"

,l "

,_

"·•
.,

.

'

:

.'

•
ty
0
c
I
e
S
scrapb00 k
SHOWER ·

MJry Stewart and Joy Stewart

entertained recendy with a layetlll
shower for Joyce Stewart Fox.
Attending were Blc:anor BlaetI
John C. Wolf, D.O.
tnar, Pam Roush, Mary Hysell,
Associate Professor
Tonya Stobart, Mary Walburn,
of Family Medicine
TClKSI Rusaell, Milcbd Nub, Sue
11!:,..._....;~._~------:-----.,1. Stewart, Shasta Amos, Becky
.
.
. .
Guinther and N'ICk, Pat and Mary
SURGEaY MAY GIVE KICK TO thetr physical CII8RiiJI:ItiODS of Y~ Bet Stein, Abby Stewart, Mary
MORTON'S NEUR01M'S FOOT foot aJKI the hislory Of your P8J!I· • Stewart and ~IeVen, and Joy StewPAIN
·
X-rays, ultruound and magneuc an.
Question: I've been to several resonance imaging may be ncces·
Others presenting gifts we~
doctors because of foot pain. They sary in som~ cases to a~curately Ethel Lowery, Zora Raw10n Lori
have all told me that I have a "defmethecauacoffootpam.
Rawson Jane Stewart Gloria
benign IUmOr called Morton's neu~orion's ne!lfO'Da can be treat· Smith, Alma Goodnite: Bonnie
roma. One doctor wants to operate ed II! several diffe~nt wa~s. Non· Barton, Cathy Johnson, Debbie
on my foot, bot he said that after. surg~cal ~tmcnt ~ncludmg ~oot Rawson, Mra ..Harold Fitch, Pam
w_ards,l ,would have numbness in maRJpulauon, ":a~1ous phys1cal SeUera, and Hilda Stewart.
the area where I now bave pain. theraJ?y modahues, and foot
My foot onl;v hurts when I've been orthoucs gi.Sea relief in about 40
ARTHIIrn~ fllOGRAM
on it for qwtc a while, walk bare- percent of those witb relatively
A 0_;-J·se~lOn of the irthritis
foot in the house, or if I step on a mild symptoms. More severe .,.,..,;,.
will be . OcL 2!1
roc1t that hits the nerve. Is swgcry symptoms require surgical treat- -~~esorL IIU1 .
·
for Jhls Morton's neuroma advis· ment. as do milder symptoms like
The nrogram _ mnnsored .bv
able? ·
·
yours, when conservative care fails
r ~
-.1
Answer: Morton's neuroma is a . 10 bring impovcmcnt
the Oh1o University College of
relatively commoo cause of pain in
Surgery for Morton's neuroma 8hu,~!-~~~~
the foot It is actuaUy a tumor of involves removal of the fibrous
"'"'~'...
the nerve !hat runs between Jhe 10es nerve growth from between the lion and Rorat Oak - features
and, as you have indicated, is non· -toolS. This is usuaUy done by ·malt· geode exerc1ses in tbe pool. All
cancerous. This nnnor can start as a ing an incision on the top of the community members witb arthritis ·
consequence of a single injury. ·foot, not on tbe bottom. The are invillld to allend. 'Participants
More commonly, however, it IS the offending growth is then removed do not need to know how to swim.
result of repeated minor injuries or "clipped," as your doctor said.
All instructor will c:onduct SCI· '
from improperly fitted shoes or This "cfipped" nerve is no longer sions between 1().;11 a.m. Tuesdays
other foot problems such as flat connected to the toe, so the &amp;oe and ThursdaJ';sRegislratioo can be
feeL
il«elf will be numb after the done at,the
sessions. .
The foot Jl&lt;!in of Morton's neu· sugcry. The important issue is that . . Res1d~nts may .obtam more .
roma is much like what you expeii- tbe foot pain is also gone.
mfonnauon by calhng 992-315_8
ence wbcn you are walking bare· E;;sentially every patient agrees between 8 a.m.-5 p.m. The fee IS
· foot and step on a sJone - espc· that the resulting roc numbness is $20 but tho~ unable to pay may
cially if the stone presses on the ~K.ceptable as a "bade" to replace get scholarships.
joint just behind one of tbe roes. the foot pain.
. .
When this happens to me, it usually
There bave been many sctentifiC
COUNSELORS MEETING
produces an ungraceful dance studies over the past few ~ ~
Area psychological counselors
accompanied by a string of colorful show the high rate of patient sallS· can Jearn abo&amp;¢ qcw "Brief Thera·
explcnvcs.l know l!Ciier than iO -be · faction with surgery Cor Morton's py" techniques in a two-day work· .
WII!IWI&amp;liiOUllllJIIrefootl Individu· ne.tr011111. Over 90 percent .of indi- shcJp-Ool. Ur27•at the Holiday Inn
als.witb Morton's neuroma have viduals who lu!d surgery for Mor· in Gallipolis.
this experience wilhout Slqlpinll on ron's neuroma at least four years
The workshop will cost $84
a stone. In the worst cases, JUSt P'·aviously reported continued prior to the conference, $94 for onstanding is enough to do iL ·
re..ief·of symptoms. Some studies site ~tiOII.
·
Not all foot pain is due 10 Mor- - -showed a success ralC of over 95
Bnef Therapy is a solutionron's neuroma however. Fractures Jlf'rtenL Of those who failed 10 get based therapeutic method that
of tbe foot llonCs ofien cause a very sHisfactory relief from t~e fi~st allows the client to take a larger
s1milar pain. StresS' ·fractures- sL:gery, 80 percent had relief with role in their own treatment. Longhairline spiraling breaks without a ~~procedure.
.
.
term. based treatment is shifting
significant separatlon ·of the two
So, if you have suffic!ent d1s· toward shorter-term treatment in
pieces of bone - most closely ct mfort ~-your Morton s neuro- the era of managJ:d-carc treatmcnL
mimic Morton •s neuroma. Pro- m.110 be willmg to have .surgeryDr. Barbara McFarland and Jim
Icinged marching or joggi~g are ~ .d '!ft~Y _you C811 decide Ibis.- it . Heisel of the Brief Therapy Center
cQmmon causes. Also, bruising of IS qwte l~y .~ surgery_Wll! be .in Cincinnati will lead the work·
die foot bone, a condition called Sl ccessfulm gtvmg you reltef.
shop. For more information, restmetatarsalgia, and the thinning of
''FamUy Medicine" Is a weekly dents may call Bob Ziglar at 592the fat pad on the bottom of the euluma. TJobsubcmiWtqu.,eat Io us, 5192.
foOt can produce symptoms.similar wril.e to o n • o1 , 0 •0 .,
to' Morton's neuroma. So, I hope Ohio University College ofO.teoHARVEST FAIR
that your doc:tors bave done SODie palllic Medici*, .Gmsvenor Hall,
Zion Christian School near
telts to supplement the finding of Athens, Ohio 45701.
Albany is sponsoring a harvest fun •
fair to be held Oct. 22 at tbe
•· y, school's 81--acrc complex.
The school will showcase the
colora of Autumn due to acres of
hardwoods surrounding tbe area.
Games, music and food will also be
Ray and . Mandy ~edman
offered.
arinounce the birth of a daughter,
, Various game booths will be
M,ilc;lrcnzee Rae, on OcL 3, at the
held along with wncessions. Other
Holzer Medical tenter. She
activities include hayrides, a foot·
w&amp;ghed four pounds Jhree ounces
ball tl!row, fishing pond, horse·
aqr wu 19 inches long.
shoes, flea·market items, special
;Matcmal grandparents are Ron
m~s .
· ·'
arid Nancy R,_u. Maternal great.
from ihe Harvest Fun
grandparents arc Russell aiKf Ber·
Fair will benefit Zion Christian
nice Roush and Roben and Alice
School The fair will open al 11:30
RUsseU.
a.m. and admission and paridng ·is
)Paternal grandparents are Ray
free. Call 1-698-5400 for more
Bf1!1 Joyce Redman. Pltcmal great·
information.
grindparenll are Dorothy Lona and
MACKENZEE REDMAN
Eljlah Redman.

Redman birth
announced

AGELESS CLASSMATES

The Ageless Classmates met
recently at the Ponderosa in
;
HALLIDAY .
. Chelyl, Pomeroy.
Athens.
•The annual A. L. Halliday and
Tliere were letters from Mar·
· After the dinner a busineu scs·
~ LOIJ~. Halliday reunioo guerite Tracy and Atha Wilcox.
sion was conducted by Peggy
held recendyt al the Firemen's The deatb of Douglas H. Canny · Edwards. Next meeting will be al
.,.... in Rutland. A basket dinner was noted.
.
Seyler's House oftremures. Secret
~·held lliiOOii.
VOORHEES
. pals were discussed.
lBileen Carter presided at the
The Voorhees family recendy .
Carol Ewing Roush shared
m~ with Raymond Furbee giv· celebrated ill annual reunion at "memory" pictures with the group
and Aline Halliday Jhe Fated Rill S!ale PIR.
and the remainder of the evening
's report.
·
Vehna WiDiand wu recognized was spent socializing. Attending
'Rccognizcd and awanlcd prizes as the old~st fimily 111 ember were Connie Smith, Carol Roush;
were Anna Halliday, the oldest: ~
.
Marjorie Walburn. Sylvia Sayre,
Rlymond F~. the ol.dell man · Others there were Bob and Charlene Fry, Carol Workman,
~t: AMI Hallidaf the oldest Hazel Dudding Troy and Michcllc: P~ Edwards, Sue AllC:OSworth•
~ preaent; Chery Jewell, the Dudding Sue Rlce ~oooie Rice
Shirley Tucker, Hazel SDUth, Mary
yQID&amp;Jfer·alrllbeR: r. ~~ ,' Tod4 ..Jr ~ Rice, Billie and _. Je~, Anna SkldweU, and Bonnie
~younptt boy~ W :Ollilys ' Michiiol Cunningblm, 1amea and ~ Smith.
arid Arnold Fisher, the OIICIIiavd· Tara Hunnell, Tammy Hunnell; ;'
AUXILIARY
m, the farthest. Bllc:en
woo, Joab and John Hunnell, Velelfl
A Ouislmasdlnncrwu planned
til;
PICDU, Jordlll ind Doma Stobait, tor oCc 3 when the Ladies Allllil·
JeWell; ,era·=~~
Donnie Stobart, ~~j'l~ iary of ·~he Olive Township Fire
~ Furbee,
=~=
Wlljie Sallla =:ent met recently at tbe
s..,r.111d Anlll Halliday, aecre •. and Allee
~ Srobll!t 1 The president th•nked the ftre
~uendin wen Blleen eaner;
Amber RousiJ I,Dd oltn 1fuD:' departm~t. its alll!iliarJ.. aDCI the
G~pol~: Grace Ucl Raymond , Out of toWn villiron included. comm~ty for the success of 1be
Flit*. Ra:lne: Gladys llld Amold, Jim and Bllea Voorhees, Lh recent~ badlecue.
..ed
.Flibir. Sabilll' Paullae Atkins. v.....,..-· Violet Voorhpea ,~.
Pauline Brewer also than..
R...-1· Annlliawdu. IYIID Hall · \lUI,_,
d 'sllari thole who sent flowers or other·
i~ Alan Hallidiy,
:::!:u:':A.!:~:clt r , wise remember the family during
Robert and Sliaroa Jewell~ and
·
· · ·
the de,ath of her husbtnd.

was

c.-

&amp;fi:·

Vi\i ..:Widenl:

.

1=:trea:

:g·

1

•

0 1Q94 BANC ONE CC&gt;RPC&gt;AATION Preauflo'IZed withdrawal&amp; ate ptOtliDilea, Me Bank One "Account Aul9s lhj ~llais" IOf &amp;pecWIC
inl~liq'I .APY in effect as of 11)-1·94. Mlnimun deposit ol $H) 10 open tc(XU!t .
·
1
•
r
lf

-

'
':

-your money will earn a
. competitjve.variable interest .
rate from the date it's
deposite!i into your Holiday
Savings account
·

'

..

•:,

'

,

'

l

·I

..

ateamountfrllmyour~
One~hecking

wb~ehmlrY\)U prefer.

··:

· To slart your l1oliday,
.Savings Plan, slop by Bank
One today in Galllpoliti,
·, Pom~roy or Rutla~d. lt's the
l!est way we know&amp;.ostook up
on paper lor hoiK)ay gilt
giving next year1•

WilltaHoli&lt;;laySavingsPian. ,
from Bank One,you won'thave
to wony abOut having enough
moneyforholidaytravel; ·
enlertainmentorgi(t-giving .
next season.
Just decide how much you
· wantto save and we11 autc). ,
mati~lly del;iuct the ~pri­

, Replacing tbem is useless and

Ann
I live in one of the nicest expensive..
Landers subdivfsions In the East. lam aic:!t A most distwbing experience is
andtindofmy_~bots'cstsbeilfll to have aomconc ring your dOOibcU
.
·
BVf:tYD!P.I. on. ~ Sllftllay ~ore you have
. ,*· Ar9,lll . tlmedlooseafterdlrt.
ram awakened by a.Cal f,glit uDder . bad time to check the front porch.

'JJ:::·

·

., "

R aderbelieves
a
gOod
fiJ/ineis
a
contained
feline·
·

Family reunions

eom~~:nJ:n~= =.as~ ·

of player penonnel Gary Fitzsim· points for die Mavcric:ka in his fint
mons was llrcady worltin1 the pme blck al Ohio SIIIID aiDecleav·
phones to try toJXliiiC up with Oilier mg lifter his jUnlclr ~In 1992.

deciaion."
Nata~ bcrcn the start~
liaining ea!p beclmiiC of hil Imee,
wbk:ll hal been llqically tqllired.
Dauaherty hal. nqt played' In the
preseuon because dte ~ beck
thai forced him 10 mia 1bo ~ 29
pmca and dto playoffs lait ·aeuon
Oared up apin about a IIIOI1Ih 511J.

.,

f ~~

~
~=== ~·re doinl oarbomeYout 10 left.~C:U.,~~C:~:~
b1111perecl by Brad Dauaherty's make u ~ a dcciai"'l u we points as 1ackaon acored four ,

back ~~ lid dto retiJiDenl of
L1nY! .
·
''We JJMIO liiCM 011, we have
to reJilHIP," Fralello lllid. "We
'~~ave 10 . . up for ... painll and
sreals. It waa a very tough tiling
collccdveiJ for dto lleiDL..
· .WiWtll burt die leDdDD as be
. was· aettlaa 1!!10· drive on the
' Celdcl' Bli!OiidWads. ·
•• ~- , !~IpalbedaiJmyifaiJtfoouftet

!~ ~~
~

COLUMBUS, Olilo (Ait) Michael Cqe'• lhort bank 111ot
with five IICODda loft pve the
Cleveland Cavalien a 108·107
esbibitloa vlclory. cner dto D1J111
· Maveticka Wecfneiday ialJbt a&amp;
OhioS•'aSt.lf,IIIDAiena., - ·
c.eera~ofl4.4poinlll.
. ~·•· ~~~at, a« a hll1ft'P· Bobby' Pl1illa Ia the JJMll( likely froiD Tyrone HID, kept lite Civa·
Cllldip'IC ~ repiKO Wilkins in the lien pafec&amp; il44ia die fn . JPii.
Cava lliKliD&amp; lineup,
The Mmrlck'l dJiUied 10 0.2.
~·1 woald. have prefened to abotAII~
. oftJ::.sKidd
. e,~a'P~
-~-Ipia
.•
COIDC off the tieocb sad back up·
~
"1 fllr·
,Clellld bnow,'' Pllil1a said. ''Bta · mer lo Slate 118rJim d1011
lbal'anota~.ldoll'tloOt•it both m!eseclln die fiDa1 two ace:·
al beiD
_ g so tclugh. I 1taned 57 Ollda for Dal1aa. · ' .
·

= ~·Rr::::.
Celtlcic! ·. ~,':i·~Valien
cumin~
ftmted
the Ciev

'

The Dilly Sentinel Plgt 7

De-.

.B=
J.::ph,

•·

listening. ··NO CAT LOVBR
1 ~ 6 f~ 6 and ~ve Jried all 1ll:ceptcd u I ~ - minul dle·dtin1
DEAR N.C.L.: I can understand mylifeiO~Justafacemthecrowd. degree. Printing my_leu~.:.:r.t.
why you are red up with Call, and I BuJ Jhcre ~ always ·someaiC who belp. - oz~. VEtmJRA.
•.
don't blame you. Too many Cal makes a pomt of how JaU I am llld
DBAR D.Z.: _Don't bet the 1111t. ·
ownera.faiiJo i!UP the imJI(Xt8Dce . asks endless questions. Ycs,l~u Most~ ~Y the fint lhlqdtlt
of tiav1ng thetr pets spayed or 1811 as Michael Jotdin. No. I dOn't comes m10 their held. Tall:c W1lb1
neutered, which 1J the only humane play basketball. No, my girlfriend is in knowing that given a cbolcc,
~y to c:onlrOI the Cal popnlalion. only S foot 2, but that is not a almost evcryooe would prerer to be
This procedure also _makes a Cal problem.
too taB rather dian too sbort. .
. .
more welcome since 1t reduces the
When I buy clothes, I have 10 JnUt
Gem of the Day: All old~ II
howling and spraying.
.
a calalog, go 10 a JaU men's llll!fC ~ man wh? baa bad a lot~~lfcaloWnerswouldkeepJhcirpciS ~pay a lot more or be c:ontent mg cxpenencea- some of which
indoors and adequa!Ciy fed, tbe w1Jh a poor fit. I have to sleep may even be JrUe.
hunting instinct would also be diagonally in a queen-lized bed, let F~rget 10 saw t/ ,o~ fa·
sharply cwtailc:d. Please, folks, no my feet bang over the end cr lleep vorue AM l..aNier6 collllfiiiS? 'NNf·
more cal lct~era. There are at least curled up in a ball.
reu IJild Doozie,. il tilt ~~~~~Wr.
40 miUion Cal owners in tho Uni!ed
At any !'lie, rm uacd to my bcight . Serut a selj-Mdlultd, lors,, btui·
S!aleS and Canada, and I think I have and haveleamed to deal all day long ness-size t11velope Oltd a clltck or
heard from allc:ast half of them.
wil!l people who are sboncr. I bave moMJ onkr for $5 (tlrU iN:llldea
Dear Ann Landera: ·May I say paliiiiWCI'I 10 alllbeir questions posiiJge IJild haNiliiiB) 10: N111ge111
SOJll~ng to your pint-sized reader ~·ae I've beard them dozens of clo AM l..aNiers, P.O. &amp;n 11S62,
who was complaining about how tunes. . .
.
Chicago. IU. 60611.{1562. (Irs em..
tough it is to be shon?
It certainly would be nM:e to be ada, serut $6.)

FALL
l/f80IC 8 CARP£11'
If . . · ~ SALE
I

•Sculptures, Trackless, Level
loops, Berhers, Commerdal
SRLES
Carpets
·
OH
•Expert lastallation
SALE
•We 1se heavy "Uie of the
Carpet warranty padding
•
~
. •Free, NO Obligation Quotes
~ SATISfACTION ~ •Free Removal of old carpet &amp;
~

-

~d

GUARANTEED
.- ,.,

REG . $19.00

REG. $14.00

SAXONY CARPET

LEVEL LOOP CARPET

-18Colors
-Scolchgord
-Continuous Filamenl Nylon

-1 00% Amoco Continuous Filament Olefin
-12Ft. Widths
-24 Colors

SALEsg;~

..

SALE $16~~,
REG. $19.00

REG. $19.00

TRACKLESS CARPEl
-100% Nylon
-Scotchgard Stain Release
-24 Colors

SCULPTURED CARPET
.

~Colors

-tlealset Nylon
-Anti Sialic

SALE$16~~

SALE $1 699

REG. $22.00

REG. $15.00

w/Pod

•

-Olefin/Nylon Blend
-X ~on-Protedion Plus
-lBColors

-Ouponl Slainmaster
-1Holors
-FHA Approved

$18~
.

w/PM

2/Pid

BERBER·

SAXONY CARPET

SAlE

SQ. VD.
INSTAllED

Sill
'

$12~

111(rlelft01( ~

STOREHOUIS
....., 9:30-8:30

....,.Swt...,

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FlOOR COVERING

9-JO-S:GO

992·3671

DOWIITOWI POIIIIOY, 0110·

f•

';

,,

I

~ .

�&gt;),·

~

...

..

ll.

. ~. OclobW 20,1894

Ohio

,

cracking bones may suggest arthritis .
am ICiidin&amp; you a free copy of my
Health Re~ort ' 'Understanding
oa-rtbrias." Other readers wbo
would like a copy should send $2
plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure 10 menlion the lille.
DEAR DR. OO'IT: At
of 34 I was diqnoled with
tumor cerebri. Over the coune of
three years, I've bad numerous
spinal lipS to relieve the pi'OIIure
!bat wu lffecling my eyesigbL I've
been told clocrors don't know what
CIIIJIOS the condilion and dill tbcrc
is no known cure, but it eventually
will go away. Can you elabonle?
DEAR READER: Pleudolumor
cerebri (benign intraclllllial hyPCII'·
ten~ion) means that there 1s an
increase in the pressure of the
spinal fluid !bat bilthes your brain.
Elevated spinal fluid pi'OIIure can
result from wmors lbat block the
flow of spinal fluid.
However, in JlBiicnts with pseudocumor cerebri, no such growlhs

BJ Pili&amp; H.GO'IT, M.P.
DEAR DR. GOTJ': I'm in relalively ~ beallb at 61, but walt
like I m 100. My bones crack
wbcnewr lllllld or set out of bed.
· ll'a liot jull my knees - it's my ·
elbow1, shoulden,lllkles, every·
th · • I'm 10 emblmsscd bY Ibis
~·ve lklpped going to cbiucb
beciiUIO of the noise I make. Am I
showing early signs ci lrollble?
DEAR R2ADER; Yes. you are.
Your symptoms suggest lbat 1ou
are developing a form of anbritis.
As you know, tbcrc are many~
df anbrilis, the most common being
OSICQirlbrilis. In lhis condition, the
joint surfaces gradually wesr down,
causing pain llld sliffness,
You should be examined by
your family physician, who will be
able to suggest lhcrapy or medica·
lion 10 prevent further detmaralion
of your joints. Customarily, aspirin
and similar drugs. in conjunclion
with physicallherapy, should provide relief.
To give you more Information. I

==

are .present, u judged by special
t.estJng, such as MRJ or X-ray SIUdies. The cause is unknown.
·

WASHINGTON ~AP) - New
government guidelines suggest
women make sure the labs where
they set mammogmms are certified
b the Food and Drug Administraand provide resufts in no more
than 10 days.
.
"This empowers women,"
Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala said.Wednesday. "This guide willliteraUy SIVC
lives."
.
Mammopams are the best way
10 find breast c:ancer early enough
to cure iL 1bey can dctcl:t tumorS
two ~ears before they're big
enough to feel but miss 10 pen:eot
of breut cancers because of what
critics maintain is inadequate

J.,.

. ·G~t · back to

•

DR ,' GOTT

The condition, which develops
slowly and causes headache and
visual disturbances, is -diagnosed·
by a lumbar plliiCIUie (spin81 tap),
showing a higb pressure.
Treatment includes Diamox, a
diuretic lbat lowers spinal fluid
pressurc, or- in ~Iaiit casesneurosurgery (employing a type of
shunt) to relieve the pressure.
Repeated spinal tapS are generally
ineffective as lhcnlpy,
Bcc:ause pseudotumor cerebri
does tend to dissppear ~ith lime,
many authorities recommend
"watchful
waiting"
and
painklUen. However, if vision is
sevmly affecled, more aggressive
treallllent is warranted.
DEAR DR. GOTI: I've developed a great fear of drinking icecold water because someone told
me that a senior citizen could die
froin lhis. Reasoning tells me they
are wrong, but my mind won't

PETER.

·

GOTT,M.D. ·

unlil I gain more
knowledge to convince me I'm
right in my thinking.
DEAR READER: It's all right
to drink cold water, regardless of
your age. Such a prohibilion is an
old wives' ~· .Like anything else,
of course, drinlcinl very cold Ouids
should be done only in moderatioa.
Copyrl1ht 1994 NEWSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For luformatloa oa how to
commuDICite electroniCilly with
this columnist aad others, cootad AmeriCI OuUne by ca1Ung I·
800-827-'lU, ext. 8317.)
accept that ttuth

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
Executive,
V-8,
Climate Control, · PS,
PW, PDL, PWR Sell,
Cruise, AM/FM cast, More.

1994 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR .

Signature SeriU, V-8
Cllmat..Cqntrol, PS,
PW, PDL, Pwr Mamory
Tilt, Cruise, Ete.
'SAVE

SAVE OVER

OV~R~

$10I 000:..

$101000

CARLETON SCHOOLERS - Studalll rrc. Carletoa School
enJoyed • cnlle oa the PA.. DeuJ receutiJ. frlelldllroaa Cllester
uid llln• wlew elelllo~~ ror tile cnlle. Tile bip wu
IIHJiliOftd •J tile Melp
ror Rellrded Cltlleas.

such complications as breast
implants.
•
For individual women, they
advise:
- Use only FDA-cenified centers. If llle center can't produce its
cenificalion, leave.
·
-Schedule an appoinbnent at a
time of the mensttual tytle when
breasls aren't tender, 90 the techni·
ciancan~yproperpressurc.

-Don t use deodorant, lotions
or powders because they can block
the picture.
.
-Provide your address and
phone number as weD as your doc·
tor's 90 both Cllll be told the results.
F'md out wbom to caU if you don't
.receive results.

1993 MERCURY
COUGAR XR·7

V-8, Auto, Air Concl., Tilt,

CruiH, AM!1'M CIH, PS, PB, ·
' PW, PDL, Pwr. Seat, Low ·· · •
Miles.

=

l::

1993 FORD
T-BIRD LX
V-8, Auto, A/C, Tilt, Crultu

AM/FM C1111, PS, PB,PDL, Pwr Seat, More.

3 To Choose From.

Starting At

I

1994 FORD
RANGER XLT

4 c:yl., 5 1pd, Air

AMJFM Caaa, PS, PB,
Alum Wheela, More.
Mlln.

·s

11,249

c:C!t-ri:

smoking themselves green. .
Why spoil such a meal with a
lot of big, smelly ciprs?
"Anyone who asks THAT is
ignoraut about cigar dinners,"
huffed Marvin s~. ~blisher
ot Cigar AfiCionado mapzine and
host of the dinner.
''An evening built around ci~
is a wondelful thing," he explained
after regaining his ccimaosure.
" There's lhis feeling of rrkOdshiu
and freedom." Freedom to puff:
"Nobody's going 10 come over and
say, 'Put that cigar ouL" • .
Not these cigars, provided specially for the occasion by Cubalobacco, Cuba's state cigar mater.
They will include The Trinidad,

RetiredJe~chers
Nineteen retired tesehers met
and were served dinner at Trinity
Churdl, Pomeroy, on OcL IS. The
P1edae of Allcgiallce Will reocat.ed
and the group, led by Maxine
Whitehead, ssng the Doxology.
Two new members were preseilt,
Jean Alkire and Betty Hutchison,
and a guest, Rita Lewis, of the
AthenS School System.
The program consisted .o f .

whiCh Cuban President Fidel Css-

tro presents as gills to visiling dig-

nitaries and are not for sale any·
where.
Also set for lighting are two
new Cohiba shar,:s: the Torpedo
and the !l-inch 'A," neilher of
which, Shankcn ssys, hu ever been
produced before.
The cigars will be smoked during the reception, which feaiUres a
magnum of Dom Perignon 1982;
after the fllSt course (fricassee of
lobster and crepes with walnut oil);
after the main course (hen ~t
breast with blac~ truffles); and
after dessert (chocolate ganachc, a
French pastry - with cognac, of

There will be IS-minute smot-,
ing breaks between courses. The
guests - all men, save a few
spouses - will use the occasion to
stand, adjust their dinner jackets
and offer testaments to the glory of
cigan.
We all know enough to match
chicken and fiSh with while wine,
but what kind of food goes best
with cigars? "Strongly flavored .
food," Shanlcen said.
That should not be a problem.
The food will be prepared by Alain
Ducasse, the youngest che.f ever
given the top three-sw raung by
France's Michelin Guide, and Joel
Robuchon, another dlree-star chef.

course).

report on state conference

reportS from memben who atterKied recent ORTA and STRS state
meetings in Columbus. b was
reported that teacher ~tirement
funds arc not state property but
belong 10 teachers and should noc
be taxed. Also, mvesbnents that are
being made pay interest and fro!D
that interest the 13th check m
December is I)OISible.

There are' 77,000 retired teach- be niailed to Senator Jan Long 10
ers in Ohio. Tbc ORTA remains encourage him to favor SB207.
strong but Senate Bill 207 is a
Business included plauning a
must. It has been proposed to memorial fund in order to place
include one more retired teacher, each year a book in the library for
one university professor, one board those decea.lled during the year.
of education member and one Several cards were signed for ill
school administrator on the itate members. •
retirement board along with the
The next meeting wUI be held
present members. A teu.er was pre- Nov. 12 at Trinity Church.
jlared and signed by all present 10

-----Community calendar-----.
· Tile C-•••IIJ Calellllar II
p•bllalaed 11 a free aenlce to
aoa·proflt 1roap1 wlalll•l to
•••once aeellap aDd ~pec:lal
. enatl.' Tile caleadar 11 Dot
diiiiDtd to promote aalea or
lltadraiRrl of IDJ 1J(It. Ite••
are po lilted • l!piiCe ,...ltlllld
uuot be paraDteed to n• a
t

1,

ipedftc · - - ~ .,..
TH1JIISDAY

· ROCKSPRINGS-~

LOTIRIDGE - i.ourldgc
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Community
Center country music
. Chapter 1 parent meeting Thurs- · Junior High Combined Boosten
night
Saturday,
7-12 p.~ An bauds
day, 6 p.m. at Salisbury Blemea- meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. In the welcome. Refreshmenll
available.
school
Cafeteria.
Parents,
teachen
tary, Parenta of Chapter 1 ltudenls
and
concerned
adults
are
encourinvitbd.
ALBANY - Zion Christian
aged 10 au.end.
·
School Harvest F!~~ Fair Saturday.
. POMEROY - f'llmeroy' Group
COOL VILLE - Revival at 11:30 a.m. featurmg pnes, miiSIC
of AA will meet Thlnday at 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic White's Olapel Wesleyan Churdl, and food. Admission IIIII partiq is
. Thursday tbOrugh Sunday, 7 p.m. free.
Church.
except Sunday, 10:30 a.m and 7
SUNDAY .
· RACINE - Southern Local p.m. Bud A11Jnan, evangelisL
POMEROY
- Victor RoUih U,
Chapter ~ introduction meeting, 7
minisiCrial stlldentll God'• Bible
·
SATVRDAY
~ldc:f~e . southern
RACINE ..:.. ~ Brush Church School in Cincinnati, preachinl
of Christ on Bashan ROlli meeting. 10:45 a.m., Sunday at Calva')' Pif.
.. POMEROY - Boating stills 7 p.m..Siitllday, aiCJIII with 10 a.m. grim Clil~ lllte Route 143,
Victor Routh Sr.
elasl spolllored by the u.s. Cout and 6 p.m. Sunday. DenY« Hill of .Pomuoy.
invites
public.
Gua'd Aulliary Thursday, 7 p.m. Foster; W.Va., will lead services.
at SL Paul Luthermi Church. Call
POMEROY - Pomeroy 12 i:
Bill Quickel at 992-6677 or Jim
MIDDLEPORT - Spcc:ial
12
meeting SundaJ• 7 p.m at die
G·ooclricb at 949-3301 for more singing Saturday, 7:30 , .m•. at the
Believers
Fellowship ChuldL
,
iriformation or to register.
·
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Chun:h.
I
True Gospel Sounds, Wheelers·
TUPPERS PLAINS - SL Plul
RACINE - Racine Post 602, blq, will be the featured sinps.
J)nired
Methodist Olurdl Jllly dly
~ Legion. 7 p;m. Thursday Pas!or Lei Ha)'llllll invites the puband
bom
ecoming Sunday belliD·
1
atthehall
. lic to au.end.
.
ning at9:4S a.m. Specill mualc and
carry-in dinper,
.
'
"

lock Spriup United Methodist
Cllurc:ll.
:ltACINi:..... So11tbem LOc:al
metinl. 7
. Jb:Jburaclay, Southeru Hi11b
.
•:a' tllria.
~ 1 ii!tnidaclioa

··RU'ILAND- Leicllaa Creek

~IIIey ~ repla' meet-

S

. lli~~Y· f.·DI, It of~Cf·
'.
'

.. ·

' .

.. ··12I 949
.

1994 MURCURY ·
COUGAR XR7
2dr, V-8, Auto, Air Cond,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, P.wr
.
Tilt, CruiH, AM/FM C.u,
Etc.

Save
Over

'·

volume o~::lerfiODal replia
cannotbe
.
.
A8De B. Ada•• IDd Nalley·
Nuii.C•!D•I•p 1re co-autllon·
or "Aik ADDe lc NaD" (WIIet.:
lltolle) ud "Dar Aue ud Na::
Two Prize Pro"e•-SoiYera·
Share Tllelr Secreta" (Buta•).'
To order, a1111-IOO !II Inti.
Cop)Tiaht1994 NEWSPAPER :
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
;
(For lurormatloa ou llow to .
com•ualcate electronleaUJ with :
tbiJ columuiJt and others, co•- ·
lad America 01111ue by caiUng 1· ·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

4

s91 649

6

Cond., Tilt, CruiH, AMIFII
Cln, PS, PB, PW,
Pwr Seat, China Blue.

Get your tree gift for
ChriStmas '94 and extra

AMJfM C.11, PS, PB, C.at .
Alum ~11, Tonneau .
Cover, Etc:.

Save · $
Over .

1993 FORD
CROWN VIOORIA
LX Sedan, V-8, Auto,

·1993 FORD
RANGER XL1
cyl., 5 1pd, Air Cond.,

cash for Christmas '95.

Open a Christmas Club now and receive a FREE Antique
Photograph Frame. The Christmas Club is so convenient!
Your Christmas check arrives when you want it most-just in
time for Christmas shopping.·Christmas Club is so easy to ·
join- and so easy to keep up because you choose the amount
of your regular deposits.
Join the Christmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest
on the daily balance in your account. Corne in today- it's
never too early to save for Christmas!

1993 LINCOLN'
CONTINENTAl
Signature SeriU, V-8, Auto,
Climate
Control,
Tilt,
Crulw, AMJFII C.H, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, l.Hther, Etc.

$15,949

Marleua

I

"

Alhens

Belpre

Lowell

Mlddlepon

37HI55
593·7761 42H 516 8%-2369
992-6661
Nelsotm11e
Newark
The Plains TDD only
753·1955 788-8820 797-4547, 376·7123
'

-

FDIC

,.
I

I

GUN
CABINETS
AND

CURIOS!
Great !llllctlon Of

ISIJ,..And Flnllhell
lAyllwlly Nowl

BEAN

BAG.S .

'r.ed b

·

·

s~me 81
Y Huffmgton quos-·
lloned
"consultants
that one
•
· will
·'

:r:·

anoth~~~o!~~=p=iv~

adverustng," Jeffe said
But lhey tend to • 'de liUI
-· -; .
provl
e
subs!llnUve mf!lrma~i!ln about a:
candidateili
•
or the1r JlOSlllOD on spe- :
1
c .~ ~·.experts say. ·
.. . ·
Fe~n - a career polillellll
811.....:-g 10 otav
wbo
in
offiwill "doblor say ,......
_,
ce, ustcrs one HuflingloD
ad...
·
· ·
Con~s~ H~;~ffington _
the !exas o~ milli~ CllifOilli~Just can t Jrust, spouts a Fein-:
stem commercial
.

RECYCLE DAY

\

Saturday, October 22, 9 am until Noon
Sponsored by: Meigs High School V.I.C.A Club
Location: Meigs High parking lot- Rocksprings
Donated items accepted: (All Lids/Caps re~oved)
• CANS (All kinds)
• No. 2 PLASTIC (Colors)
• GLASS CONTAINERS
• MAGAZ!NllS
(Ail Colors)
• PHONE BOOKS
• CARDBOARD (Flat &amp;
•CATALOGS
corrugated)
• CAR BA"ITFRIFS ·
· • NEWSPAPERS (wliaats)
! POll. TRAYS
• No. 1 PLASTIC (lila')
• COMPUIERIOFFICE PAPER
No. 2 PLASTIC (Milk Jugs)
MEIGS COUNTY LITTER CONmOL... ;............. Tclcpbouc 992-6360

$6·1 000
.

. I

-,

issues~~~·

V-8, 1uto., air eondltlc!nlng,
4.3L, Auto, Air Concl, Tilt,
Crulae, AII/FM C1u, PS,
AM/FM CIIHttl, PS,
PB, Topper, Tahoe PICQ., .. PW, PDL, Pwr Seat,
LowMIIea
Crulae, More.

... , fl

I •·

Californians "
And
· . .
lhe
m&amp;J0111y
voters
bue their ·ud mentofofthose
candidates
and
" We really
arc a med1a-condiuoned state, a
media-oriented state .. ssys Sherri
- ··
' - - -- ·
Bebitch J~~e
of
Claremon~
~u~Schoocy 5 Centtt fa Polilles and
c ·d' .
.
. an I dates can create .the If
unage and slant
percepliOil
of
opponents
Forvocer
a candidate
wilh
scant bli ·
..
ha pu c recognJIJOn, alf!ICk ads
ve proven the most ~ffecbve way
to snare VOles, Jeffe S81d
~lthough lhese ads are often
dended - and the accuracy of

1994 FORD
TAURUS GL

1993 CHEV. 5·1 0
EXTENDED CAB

chud eon.mdoD T-lllllllll fiQ;
~
fot~ · and
~~Urlday, 6 p.m. at

ASK .AliNE • RAil

Tcf

in!

oo

Cigar the centerpiece of 'Dinner of the Century'
BJ RICK HAMPSON
Allocillted Prell Writer
NBW YORK (AP)- On Salur·'
day night, ISO people from IIIOUIIII
the world will gather for what the
menu calla ' 'The Dinner of the
Century."
The recipe: A softly-lit dining
room in an old Paris mansion.
Wines of the rarest vinlqe. Elabonte dishes prepared by two great
chefs.
And clouds of cigar smoke,
The dinner of the century is a
cigar dinner. Aficionados, includ·
ing Rush Limbaugh, Francis Ford
COppola and Plene Salinger, have
paid $1,000 for the privilege of eatme and drinking the best while

FEEDBACK: ·' HOMEMADE
CARPEr STAIN REMOVERS _
For Mrs. B.T. Martin of Baton
Rouge La. froin Nancy ·Mcanix of
Dowoingro'wn Pa. Nauc
ve us
the following '"recipe"
homemade carpet stain removal: Com·
bine .1/4 cup lemon-ICCIIICd 8lllJDOo
nia with I cup warm water. Dip
s~uge and ~ueeze almost d'7.
• Rub in one direction and then m
anoth'er. Works beautifully and
smells nice " she IIOfcs.
Betty M. May of Topeka, Kan.,
shared her recipe for carpet sllin
cleaner that was given to her by a
carpet-cleaning company· Fill 8
one-quart Sjrly boule with i
Dawn li id
( Do
~
4 tables~~mdex :de~ii'up
with water. " Spray spot and
sponge out ·with tQwel. Then spny
that spot with s hgard
the carpet," she~~s
to(I'Oleet
Write to "Art ·
..
P.O. Box 240, ~ ~~
Questions of general irtcrest wili
appear in the column. ..&gt;ue to the

• d"Inner
' p,anned
E,ectlOn

$13,.249

The Meigs Local School Dislrict ·.

.._I"OJb.r:"L

By ANNE B. ADAMS ud
(Holt, R~nebart and Win1ton,
NANCYNASH-ctJMMINGS
1975).
D8AR ANNE AND NAN: I
pEAR ANNEAND~AN: lam
have a blldr::pmmon pmc that is try1nJ to locate the Macrowave
old but in llood condilion. I need CookiJ111 Utensil~ by Micro-eue of
directiall to play~ J1111C. Do ~ the Republic Mo~ding Corp.,
lmow wbae I mi&amp;bt .obtaln tbele? . . ~. !0· The Miao-Ctte ccU•
- MARION DALLMANN, Buf- mg con~ Soup 'a Sauce 4f!2
f'alo CJrove, IlL
wodal CI(ICC,iaiiY well for cooks Ul
DEAR MARION: ~o to yo!~' a wheelchair. It bu 1 v~ large
h'bnry IIIII we're certain t!Jey :MD ~.~container, the
bave aeven1 boob with dilectllliil lid ba I aide, balldle, llld 11 can be
for blct&amp;ammon.
a separate dish or pau. Can you
Our favorite ·~~rce is ''The help me find au addreu for this
G.ames Treasul}: · · by Mer~yn company? - MARGE KESNER,
Sunoncls Mohr ((.llapCers Publilh- Frostburg, Mel.
DEAR MARGE: According to
ing, 1993). This clearly written
~ompeud1um of more t~an 300 the "Gale 'Jrade Name Directory
indoor and outdoor games IS a must of Comparuea and Their Brands"
for tho~ who l!ke to play. Irs (Galeltesean:h,lnc.,l992), Microfilled With sttategJCS, rules and 1!ls- eu.e Jl!'Oducts are made by Republic
!Of)'. The llactgaimnon explanalion Mol'!ing, but the company bad J!OI
JS supelb.
provided the Gale Directory w1th
. Aile!~ book with good direc· any addi~ional.lnformation. We
uons 11 Games of the World: called Chicago directory assistance
How to PI~r Them! How They ~ ~Y have no Republic Mold:
Came to Be by Fred V. Gnmfeld . ~ted. We are stumped. Dear
• Please help.

- " " ' "8

Effective
Schools
team meet

~taat u!lJ:~rdlnator ~ Effective Schools ror
· . ,.UI!'KCTIVE .&amp;CHOOLU'LUI..-.M~&amp;p
Loc•I Effective Scllooll tea• members met • Melp Loca1; rear -1Jr. Mlcbael Rhoades;
Katby Haley, PomeroJi Paula Wbltt, Middle·
naildJ to . _ plluu for tile Clii'RIIt ecllool
port; Sblrley Vaa Meter, SaleiD Ceater; Saun;rear. Pkhred an, , _ left: lroat - Debra
dn Tlllll, Rutland; Karea Walter, Sallabuey;
LowerJ,
Dewllunt, Bradbiii'Jj
Jolm.Redovlau, coordlilator ~ Medlve Schools
Debra Mlak IDd,
BW"!!If~Melp Jr.
ror Meigs Couuty; Judy McCarthy; ud Pam
HIP, ud WeDdJ Halar, actml•ldrallve aullCrow, Salisbury Elemeutary.
,

backgammon basics

The conservative Republican lllC'VItable m modem camj)IIIJPllllg.
venuy of Soutbcm California pro"We can't be criticized for fessor "The problem is when the
· candidate's TV spending spree also
has renewed debate abou't the PllIaymg
• -~--''"8
- ·
- • to •Lu"' rules •L·•
u- on1Y TV. expo~~~re IS• !bat ~based
. ~~f=f:~
~~r~ :~~~Tc:l ~ ~: .~~etr over a gener- ~~.';allY manipulated by a
Oinsu knives
lli ·'--'· lhe c that il
help · beu.er
'
.
.
·U
or c:u c ........._
~'A literal unlmowton L'-- ':1:
. t . In pan. atten~on is be!ng JNUd . Even fellow ~epubhcans ven· .S. Senate hopeful from Califor,...,
s1mply because of the mmd-bog- ture meaiured cntic1sm
. nia is being marketed mostly on his way very, very close to e · ping amount Huflington is invest- . "1 have no preble~ with the
ldevisioo.
largest electorate in the United mg in his job hunt, a sum that fact he's spending a lot of money "
A political novice elected to Slates, outside of the p-esiclency," already exceeds the record $10 mil- said Steven Mcrksemer, a Rcpubll:Congress in 1992, Huffington is said analysa Lany ~the JCSIJC lion with which Gov. Jay Rocke- can campaip stralegist who served
a ---' $10 =~
M. Unruh lnsli'"~of · ·
&lt; Uer D-W v
of 1taff,.or .ormer
,
Cal'ifor· ........- . '""""u
•
·
"""'
,e.
•
• a., indulged his cam· ~ .L:ef
wu
·of his own monc:y on a
Democratic sour grapes, Keu jllllgn.
rua Gov. George Deutmejian.
TV ad campaisn against Democrat· Khachigian, a senior Huffington
It's been reported that Huff'mg"Jack Kennedy was mostly
ic incumbent Dianne FeinltdiJ.
strategist and former Roiwd Res- ton is fre.Pared to invest up 10 a funded by his father. Whether we
The 8lllll'OICh has been effeclive gan specc:hwriter, says of such third 0 hiS estiJnated $7S million like it or not, lhis is a part of the
so far. lfuffington has risen to complaints.
Texan oil fortune. Feinstein's cam· American tradilion," Mcrtsemcr
.within 7 points of Feinstein, a new
The we41thy • well-fiuanced paign hu spent about $!1 million so ssid. "I am concerned with camLos Angeles Times poD says; a Feinstein is not without her own far, said lll8ll&amp;gCl Cam Kuwata, but paigns lhat are sole~~ven
year ago, another voter survey resources, Khachigian, said, and a expects 10 cloae the gap somewhat and in which there
't seem to
found a 26-point gap.
costly television dependency is in the final weeks.
. · •
be a lot of in~Uaclion with lhe pub'I
I
But rich populist candidates and lie." .
TV-heavy campaigns are nolhing
That has changed in recent
new. It'~ Huffington' s airtiJht weeks, be noted, as Huffington
An Election Day dinner was
Devotions wae given with·read- focus on broadcast ads, which increased his personal appearances
pllnned atlbc monthly meeting of ings by Louise Bearhs, Virginia began before the pimary nee, !bat throughout the state. He and Feinhas made some observers especill- stein also appeared to(lether on
the Rock Springs UniiCd Methodist Wears and Dorothy Jeffers. ·
CNN's "Larry King L1ve" in a
Women, bcld Oc:L 11 in the cbli'Ch
For the pro_sram. a report was lyuneasy.
Until
recently,
HuffinJton's
version of a debate.
fellowshiD room.
given by Iris Collins and Dorothy
public
appearances
were
bmited
A;fthovgh Hulf~'s visibility
Tbe liusineas meeting was Jeffers after au.ending the Athens
and appeared desianed to evade 1!11 tll!;rea!!Od, I§IOV!II!O!I &lt;lOIII!IIct·
opeaed with prayer by the presi- District UMW Annuli Day held at
dent, Rita Rlldford. Praise songs Hamden on Sept. 17. Discussions media sc:rutiny. Political reporters ci~s remain the dominant camwere ~by the poup: "Kneee at on the reading ~gram. channels still com~ about lhe campaign's pugn element. That's with good
chronic 101bility to supply dally reason, experts say.
the CroU and M'Tis so Sweet to of undesignated giving, member"The three most important
Trust In 1CIUI."
ship, world thank you off~ and campalan schedules.
The-approach
is
troublesome,
things
in a campaign arc No. 1,
The~·· can, secretary's and ·literature 10 support each was presane
say.
television.
No. 2. television and
treasurer s reports were read and · sented.
"I think it is possible for televi- No. 3, television," said Democmlic
. llpJI'Oved. Plana were alao made to
The "purpose" was read in uni·
bave a bako talo al the Pamida son by the_lfOUJI. ~ next meeling sion to be extraotdinarlly educa- ~litical c:onaultant Joe Cenell.
lional," said Randall Lab, a Uni- 'That's bow you reach 32 million
=::!r}~~~:~!•_OcL ,22 at 10 =.~tat~t•
PlaY Cripe pve the~ for meeiing Was dismissed with prayer
d_Je s!Cf-of our conununity. Scvmi by Virginia Wears.
sick calls reported.
.
By LYNN ELDER
APTelmllaaWrlter
LOS ANGELES (AP)
.

- Never assume the mammagram is normal just because you
aon't receive the results. After 10
days calllhe center or your doctor
and demand the informalion.
·
For a copy of the guide, write:
AHCPR Publications Clearinghouse, P.O. Box 8547, Silver
Spring, Md. ~0907, or calf 800·
358-9295weekdays.

Effective Schools teams met
rcc:ently the local's office to discuss their plans for the 1994-95
school year.
Meeting with the teams were
Dr. MiChael Rhnadt.s, profCSSII' at
Rio Grande College aud Judy
McCarthy, teach at Meigs High
School who wiD complete the statistical analysis for the projecL
• Rhoades reviewed the criteria to
be used 10 measure the goals !bat
each school had planned 10 achieve
for the school year. The teams plan
10 use the lnfonnatlon given at lhe
meeling as a form of docume111a·
lion of their inlllvldual granL Elich
school looked one or more 111bject
areas to sttess for the school year
as well as increased parental
involvement and a variety of olher
different components depending
which area they stressed.

The Dally Senunel Page e

Hey big spender: Senate hop~f~l Mic~~el ~uffington wages costly TV campaigo

Guide tells how to get a good mammogram
supervision of die exams' quality.
The Food and Drug Allminislration, part of the Department of
Health and Hwnan Services, began
certifying the nation's 11,000
mammography centers two weeks
ago to ensure they use properly
. trained workers and modem equipmenL
The· HHS guidelines issued
Wednesday are intended to build
on the certification program by
telling clinics, doctors and women
every step needed for the best possible mami!IQgram.
The doctor and clinic guides
include t.echnical advice on bow to
,perform the exam with specific
equipment and on women with

PomaraJ-Mddleport, Ohio

I

MAVTAG
APPLIANCES!
WASHERS, DRYERS

ALL ON
SALE!

DON'T MISS THIS SAI.E!
,.

�•'

'litis 1D-The o.uy sentinel

.

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Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Mill's reopening sparks

'

AMOCo!eH'Preil Wrtler

WEIRTON, W.VL - Mc1a1 is
apill rolliag lhrough a Weirton
Sled Corp. mill six moodls after it
was raVIIlX! by fiR, rencwin8 optimism In ihe ~ployee-owoed comJ*IY diM's lr)'in&amp; to rcvi-vc its for·
tunes.

The ~of die No. 9 1811·
dcm mill u good news for 6,000
steelworkers and a community
whose livelihood depends on the
nation's seveniii-Iargest Integrated
steel-miter.
. ·~One dling about llle people In
this town and the people in this
mill: When faced willl adversity,
IIIey puiiiDgetber as nowhere else
1'-vc ever aeca," said Weirton Steel
spokesman Rick Garan. "We did it
In 1982111d we've done it again."
Coils of steel began rolling
through llle mill last weekend as
crews tested die rebuilt mill moodls
before officials expected to. Full
produc:ti011. is expected to resume
by early Novanllcr.
•'That was a hell of a l!ling to
sce dial first roll go lhrou~." said
Micllael Klug, mill supmntendenl
"It's just unbcUcvablc that we've
dOne lllls much In six months."
Aft« srruggling with poor martel conditions and a cosdy, prolonged modernization program,

o_
le lot .o f pumpkin

..
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'-~~)"..

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~

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio
Supreme Coun has reinstated a
$13.3 million judp1CIIlln favor 11
a man IICCidentally shot by an Erie
COUIIty sheriff's dcpuly.
1n 1 s-2 decision on Wcdneaday,
the coun overturned an appeals
cohn decillion and ruled that an
~ policy llllltbaed by the
Erie County Boin1 of Commission·
ers'covered sheriffs dcpartmCnt
em loyces.
~gene A. Leber was accidcatally shot and paralyzed from the
waist down when Deputy Sheriff
s~ A. Smith SUlPPcd his c.- in
19'79. Smith's gun went.off when

he slipped on a ll8lCh or icc as he
Dissenting "were Chief Justice
~as ajJjJroaclting ~ber'scar.
11Kimas J. Moyer and Justice Claig
Leber and h1s parents sued WrighL
Smith, the sheriff's deplrtmcnt and
Wright said the geDellllliability
the county commiSSioners. Ulti· section cif the insurance policy did
matetr, the Lcbers dropped their not cover the sheriff's dcpartm~L
lawsw~ against the sherill's depart· And he said lllerc was no evidence
ment's inslftiiCC company.
lllat the commissioners had ~e
Buckeye Union Insurance Co., ri~tiO control the ·sheriff or any of
which insured the county, argued .his~
that its policy did not cover sher·
iff's department employees.
But the court said the Buckeye
Union policy based its niCs on 421
employees, a figure that inclulled
die sheriff's dqwtmcnL

Two indicted in killings
_of Fairfield County teens
LANCAS11IR (AP)- A.,...,. carry a sentence of life In priuL
jl.l')' bas indicted two women l;;jj;
The two women, along with
dtatha 11two I6-~-old girls dis~ Sheets' son, Bobby, 15, and Rob
cbvmd In a burning bam.
Daniels, 16, were atrcsted OcL 10
The Fairfield ~ panel .
In connection willl the deaths of

on Wed11esday indicted Ei~
Sheeu, S4, and Sonya Haw.tins,
19, both 11 Baltimore, Ohio. ED
faces tine coun11 of complicity 10 colnmit auravalled·mur-

c~tr.

They 1110 were indicted on

chqa 11 pull aiJulc 11a corpse.
' 1 with cvicleacc, obllruct-

.:=

11111111011. Mn. Shecta
al10 faces a count of receiving
sdeD pcpelty. MI. Hawkiu abo
Wll c1ltqal willl.lbtft.

The complicity charges, which
inclllcled a weapons ~~.

Abby Worrcll and Jamie Kelley.
Audlorities ha-vc refused ID discuss
a motive in ~ case.
The &amp;iris disappeared s~
after aaending a party. Their
·
were found in a burning barn about
l·I72 miles away from Mrs.
Sheds' llome.
Both women will be arraigned
in Common Pleas Court. No date

.,

The'i ollowing actions to end

Dissolutions asked .:_ ¥art

' Divon:Ctastcd - BrendaN. C~~U, Stratsburg.
Divon:cs granted - Rickie A.
Stites. Dexter, from Stc_Ve!' !·
'Stites Pomeroy; Reba V1rg1n1a_ Porter .and Janet Porter; ·Ali sa
Tjllil: Middleport. from Dennis . Renee Bonecull« from Terry Lee
Tillis, Rutland: T~ A. Reffitt; Bonecutter Jr.; Joseph Bryant from
Middleport. from Gene C. Reffiit Helen I, BfyanL
1
Sr, Rock Camp; Michelle R. · Dissolutions granted - Nancy
1uj11, Tupper~ ,Piajnli, frpm J. Yoacham and Mart A.
RiChard C. B~U~Jr•• Put Ogden, Yoa'cbarn; David Allen Lipscomb
flL· William -G. Anderson, Rut- and Georgina Ray Lipscomb;
from Aay Nicole Andmoa, Andrea K. Banks .an!l Robert L.
~::ic, Wash.; Kim~~ Banks; M. Healll Richmond and
·
from 0u1r1es E.
Paula R. Richmond; Charles Roy
bo111 of Racine; leale_E. Slawltr. Aciker Sr.,, and Faye RO&amp;C Aeittz;
'l'lte~PIIinl, 1rom Bei!DY J, Slawter, ~lhryn frice and Stephen
~

J..d.

ji

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•

JobD Eaton ltnlgles Co heJ•ace .-ee paapklal as lie pta rad7 to llad ud earr;t tllem to
bis truck. Ealon wu driRI&amp; past a farm IIWVt Itt S.da B~ IIIII dedded to pther tile .
pumpkins to COIIIplete Ills OWD autwu yard dlsplaJ. For one price, be wu allowcd to bve all of
tbe pampldns be toUid Clll1'1· (AP)
.

Insurers told·to make disclosure
Shield of Ohio have warned that Dealer said.
premiums would riae if the disThe newspaper said if a Blue
counts were applied to co-pay- Cross OIISlOineC bas a $1,000 ~­
ments and .deductibles. Company cal poccdtae, &amp;be patient scen bill
spokesman William Silverman for $1,000 and pays $200 as a 20
today said Blue Cross will work ~nt co-paymenL Under Blue
with the Insurance commissioner
ross' typical contracts in northon the discount issue.
.
east Ohio, &amp;be bolpital ml&amp;ht ep:c
Blue Cross has negotiated dis- to accept $750 as ._-yment in full,
counts for years, but tho savings and Blue Cross wruca a c:bccll: for
arc not rcflected on die billa of has- · $5SO,the ncWIIJII)er said.
pital J1!11ieots. the new~f~PCJ said.
The patient pays 11101e dian 20
And, m tiiOIIl cases, palients ~ . percent of the COil- around 7 perco-payments and ~y clcducti~ CC!It or $SO more, The Plain Desler
IIISUiliJICC.
based on the full pncc, The Plain · said.
·-RegullltorHho---coasider---- · -' ·• _ _ ,..
·· ·
•
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mg foo:ing ~to pass die a- ~.--~,,.....,P.,.~JW~,'fWW,_,:g
~on to individual subscribers. ~ .:
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CLEVELAND (AP) - State
regulators will begin requiring
health insurers to tell consumers
they arc not receiving bo,qlital discounts the insurers arc negotiating,
The Plai11 Dtaltr reported
Wednesday.
However, the decision will not
affect previous actions by ~
the ne~ said.
··
••we 1hink the current practice
is improper and · should be
changed." said David Randall, die
~tate' s deputy superintendent of

~.:;;r::,cec:cuts.'"'s,
Officials of Blue Cross and Blue

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Stop!
Before running to the MaU
W'ath those Christmas Club~
Do Yourself a Favor.
See Acquisitions Woru:!erful
. , jewelry sekf;tion and prices
.
before you buy.

Why?
Hundreds of our cwtomers
W'.U teU you!
• 10K &amp;14K gold...:.......SO% • 70% ell Evarydayl
1
• Seiko &amp; Pulsar Walches ......,.30% ell EV.ydayl .
• Diamonda.. :~ ................HtJU,8 Savings Everyday!
• $.-Jing Silver............. 30% • 50% ell Evarydayl '
• Crola Pen &amp; Pencla .............30% ell Evarydayl
• Crylltal &amp;Brau Gi11Ware...,...20% ell Everyday!

9fl,w Cliristmas !Mercfuuulise

· Friday _and
Saturday
October 21st
and 22nd

&gt;Irriving 'Daily!
New 1994 Chrlstnuu SUver Rounds
,, , in bttlutiful 01711llfUIIt: luu~:gers ..
,. (Many new Styles).'·
_,
hltl••• ncelwe ••

s..,...........
•r ......."' .....,.......
~

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J«quisitions !Fuu Jewe!rg

CaAPMAN SHOES
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store·

. •In sto1npuln ·
· ' O•lp+ St. •J11aneino Mllblt

1

81. Mill St.

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DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. ~
Ge&amp;
Fall Harvest of Savings
9
LO.OK FOR .GREAT SELECTIONS
AND PRICES ALL MONTH
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Hughes to Gerald L. and Dorothy

. The .. follow.ing land transfers. C. Anthony, Middleport pt lot;

wm recordecf-rccently In the office
of Meigs C01111ty Recorder Emmogene·Hamilton: .
Deed, Betty Penons Mercer to
Roland Eugene and S berry S.
Goodwin, Chester, 1 acre;
Deed, Forest W. and Leda M.
Lee to Forest Alan and Judilll A.
Lee, ~edford parcel;
Deed. RClbert L. and Carolyn S.
Smith to Jimmie D. Allman, Sut10n 1 0304 acres·
b~ed, Judy' L. Mattea to
· Michael A. Mattea, Middleport lot;
Deed, Michael T. Burke to
'David W. and Jennifer Krawsczyn,
Chestet parcel;
Deed, Clyde 0. and Nancy Sue
Harrison 10 Michael Keilll Harri·
son, RudiWICIISalisbury parcels;
Deed, Edward E. ina Tammy R.
Adams to Melvin G. and Marjorie
Drake, Olive, 30 acres:
Deed, Adelmann Lumber Company to Thelma E. Harper, Lany
W. and Albert V. Banks, Bedford,
30 acreS;
Affidavit, Hilda D. Carpenter,
Hilda D. Wilson to Perry A; Car·

Basement, Kelly Stewart and
Marlene D. Chaffee to Kevin
St,, wart. Rutland;
Deed, Sandra A. and James W.
No:lson to Janna L. Price, Sandra A.
ard James W. Nelson, Chester,
.61211CJ'C;
.
Deed, Dora Stanley,_deceased,
tc Andy and Jeri Richardson, Olive
parcels, 70 acres;
Right of way, David and Ada
rv... Koblentz to Tuppers PlainsCnester Water District, Chester, 20
ll(.res;
_
Right of way, Dave and Sheila
Bevan to TPCWD, Bedford, 71.80
acres;

Right of way , Roger H. and
Christy L. Roush to TPCWD, Sotton, 3 acres:
Right of way, Lowell and Nancy
Beaver to TPCWD, Sutton, 2.50
II(.'I'CS;

Affidavit, Charles Curry,
dt.ceased. to Rosa Curty. Letart 101;
Deed, Rosa Curry to Ruby
D tvis, Letart lot;
Deed; Wanda Sue Arnott,
V. anda Sue Floyd to John L.
. penter;
.
A non; Pomeroy rracts;
Deed, Perry Carpenter to GregoDeed, Robert and Peggy Harris
ry B. and Tricia R. ca,pcnter, Rut· to Jerry R. and Bonita R. Hayman,
land village, .28 acre;
LOOanon parcels;
Deed, Charles R: and Waynira
Right of way, Willard L. and
Harris to Lawrence and Linda Eliz- 1\1 arlha Reed to Clermont Natural
abelll Bowling, Lebanon, 1.6272 Gu Co., Olive, 80 acres;
aaes;
.
Right of way, Claron G. and
Deed, Mary E. Jackson and Gloria P. Schultz to Mid Con
Gary Allen to John L. and Peuoleum Co., Olive, 56.52 acres;
Dorothea A. Hagerty, Columbia
Certificate, Therrien J. O'Reilly,
traCts'
· •
deCeased; Jim O'Reilly, deceased,
oCe&lt;t. Blrl and Doris Adams to to Debra Kay and Dawn R.
James ,;and Carol Adams, Letart Humphrey, Pomeroy parcels;
· ,1$;
Deed, Keith K. and Virginia
~~.Earl, .Doris, James and Arlene Howell to Carol A. D. ·
carol. J,ean Adams to James, Carol H 1bb, Rudand village lots;
Jean i nd Todd Anlllony Adams,
Deed, Kallly J. Ritterbeck to
Lclart. '11.612 acres;
R 1bert L. Ruterbeck; Salem
De¢. Earl 8!ld Doris Adams to p reels;
'
Jamet and Todd Anthony Adams,
Deed, Lau~ Hazel Cozart to
Le1arti 6.008 acres:
? .ul Black, Racmc parc\11)~
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Affidavit, Helen · Ca'rper,
Deod, Chri'stopher and Sheila
Napper to Southern Obio.Coal Co., dlccascd, to GeorgeS. and'tavinia
Salem, 10 acres;
C Ipcr, Bedford parcels;
·
Deed, Floyd and Esther Carson
Deed, Laura Baker, deceased, to
to Russell L., Larry .D. and Floyd M.ichaCI and Glenis Rush, Olester;
. Keith Carson, Middleport lOt;
Certificate, William B. Smith,
. Deed, John H. and Blall E. Noll d• ceased, to Belva K. Glaze,
to Roy M. and patricia L. Vannest, P..meroy parcels;
Lebanon.~S8acrcs;
Right of way, David P. and
Dccd, .~i G. SmitJI to Kevin AnnaL. Dowler, Clyde V. and
aDd Judy Knapp, Salisbury, ·96 ~ke ~~: :;::e~i
acres:
.
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Deed, James and Melinda Hay- for mainlenance rcpur;
man · to Paul F. · VanCoqney,
Deed, Roger and Linda Stobart,
LellanOD 1!966 ~~
ter Patricia Noel, Salisbury, 1.23
· Deed.' iames init 'Metinda Hay- acres;
man td Paul: F. VanCooncy,
Deed, Douglas and Sadie M.
Le'benon parcels:
Cr.apman to Danny and Kim West• Affidavit; John W. Zerkle, m nland. Rutland tiacts;
. deceased. to lillian· Zerkle, Mid·
Affidavit, Thorleif V. and
~~ Zelda · Maxin~ and ~ Bentz 10 Roger and Shirley
George A. Hobstetter Jr., Pamela
Affidavit,. Virginia Hendricks to
Jean O'Laughlln, Bette Jean T•.orleifV. and Donna Bentz;
· r ..wsczyn and Bette Jean Hoff·
Deed, Mary Price, Mary
·""'l!' '-'- .n · 'd B and BCthany L
Kathryn Price to S!Cven Wa,Yne
~ruJ:MfJT~'tOt:
Price, Stephen Wayne Pnce,
. Deed. John W. and Susan S. P. meroy parcels.

d

VIII. DilcoWI,IIW;
MJdcllp0rt, Of\ • FrH Gift W,.., · ;' ·
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· · .• FNe Pllldng
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Meigs land transfers .·

w.

Only
10" down
holds your. Clrrlstmn · :
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trine qewe~ry ;.

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FASHION
BOOTS
25% OFF

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Police capture long-time Fla. fugitive

Juvcnlle authorities· were bold·
1n1 the two boys. CountY, l'nllccutor David Landeteld said he Would
ast a judge to 1ry them as adults.

lll8lliqe were flied ._.tly in the Elwood Rhoncmus and Terri EngdffiCC of Meigs CoUnty Clerk of land Rhonemus, both of Shade;
QJuns 1..ury Spe11cer:
. SuJan Howell, L•ngsville, and

"2 ·-~~:i·

fine

was jmmedjate1y aeL

Divorces end dissolutions

The Dilly sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, O,lo .

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airport radio syst~m
draws concerns from un1on

High court reinstates shooting judgment

.

· The following cases were days jail concurrent with DUI; ta.1d, om, $7SO plus costs, 30 days supended upon complctlon ofrcsi- $60; Deanna Van Meter, Belpre, passing bad checks, $140.69; Ros·.~
· resolved last week in thi Meigs Ricky A. Priddy, Rutland, DUI, jaJIIUSpe!lded to 10 days, one YCI! dential trealmellt program. '
Sf at belt, $4S; Kenny Lunsford, 81'41 M. Roush, Middleport.' take a
County Court of Judge Patrick H. $750 plus costs, 30 days jailaus- OL suspension, two years probaForfeiting bonds - Tai McBur- PJmcroy, scat belt, $45; Jane d':er during closccfseason with a 1•
Q'l!ricn.
pended to IO days, one year OL lion, 90-day vehi~le immobiliZ:B- n~.y. ,Marietta; improper PB$Sing, 1\l .cCloud, New Haven, w :va., g1.11, $160.
·:
Fined were: Bclljamin Upton, suspension, one year prol!etion, 9().: ti~n; drivhil under suspension,
Reedsville, injuring animals, $100 · day vehicle immobilization; $~00 plus costs, two years proba"'
Public NotiCe
••
plus COSts, fliiC suspended, one year improper parking, $10 plus costs; lion, 30 days jail suspended to 10 1 _-=Pub=l~lc:;Not7,:;1ce=;:::Public NOIJce
Public Notlcl
·::
probation; Kenny Lunsford, disorderly conduct, cosJ,S only;
days concurrent with Dm; failure I NOTICE OF
opec III call on a. "Draft who woo a party to a _......;...:;:..:.;,;;...;.;.::.;,;,:.:.__ ·•
Pomeroy, domestic violence,
Amity Dixon, Pomeroy; seat to control, costs only;
The annual
ot Actio no" are written proceeding before tho
AND SERVICE BY
~
restraining order issued, six months belt, $25 plus costs; Denise A.
Margaret A. Cox, Cheshire, pos- . Dlreclora of tho Albany otolemonto of tho director of director by filing an appeal
I'UBUCATION TO:
v •
jail tuspcnded to IO days; driving Smilll, Gallipolis, scat bell, costs sess a deer or deer parts not proper- Independent AgrtcuiiUre environmental protection's wllhln 30 daya of notice of GEORGIA HENDERSHOT ,
under suspension, $200 plus costs, only; John H. Dougherty, Jy tagged, $60 plus costs; Robert L. Society will bt hold (Director's) Intent
tho final action. Pur..uant to whoM ldd-.H fs unknown, · ~
1
cannot whh reosont1ble
5
1
six monllls jail suspended to 30 Guysville, scat belt, $2S plus costs; BJiing, S}'IKIDC, disorderly while November • 994 bttwoon ~~'..':!~ :t~. t~~ ~~~:::~~~ : ~:!~.~~~la:d ~~~~ •:~1111~~ ond
dHigence be aocertalned; • t•
days and two years probation; Jolly E. Cross, Lorain, ~peed, $30 in·oxicated, $100 fliiC suspended to ·:~0: 1i~~n•;dG~~C:,09 :- r;:-.~~ IIcon t o, order, etc . ltoulng, denying , modifying. HOWARD POWELL, &gt;
Ronald Braham, Akron, scat belt, plus rosts; Anlllony Carlos Perry, $30 plus costs, six months proba- - Albany, Ohio.
lnloreatod poraona may revoking , or renewing a whoH laat known 1ddrn1 j ..
$)S plus cos.ts;' Ruby Nakao, Partlow, Va., speed, $30 plus costs; lien; Keith F. Pickens, Racine, no
Pelltloria can be obtained aubmtl written comments or permit. licente, or variance 11 3213 Murdock Ave.,,"
Racine, scat belt, $2S plus costs; Barbara A. Carulllers, Pomeroy, · OL, $100 phis costs, 30 days jail from Secretary Doria H. request a j)Ubllc meeling which is not preceded by a Perker~buro . wv 28101, ..
- Anthon!oR. Wells, Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs; Mary Stew- st ~pended; Denise Smith, Long Mace, 208t Reynold 's Ave., regarding. 'draft acllono. proposed action , may be whotl txiCI addrtll II '"'
....... $
1
N
W
M"ddl
f 'I
· ld B
d' d 1
d
$ OO Albany, Ohio 45710.
Commento or public appealed to the EBR by unknown and cannol wfth
.,.,......,
PUS costs; onnan . art, I eport, al ure to yle •
Ktom, ISOr er y con uct, I
Candldat!ll mual have a meeting requests must be tiling an appeal within 30 reaeonable diligence be . :;
Mora, Pomeroy; assured clear dis- $20 plus costs; Ronald M. Hawk, pi IS costs, fliiC suspended, restrain- valid membership llcket for aubmltted wnhtn 30 days of doya of Issuance of the final .acertllned;
. ·~.r.
FINLEY POWELL, WhOI t . j,
tance, $20 plus costs;
New Marshfield, speed, $30 plus . an~ order issued; Tammy Parker, tho Albany tndapendent notice of the draft action. action. EBR appeals mual
Thomas E. Casto Jr., Marietta, costs;
L.,ng Bottom, disorderly conduct, Ag rl cullu re Soc laty. "Propooed Acllono" are be flied wllh: Environmental leal known addre11 Ia R.D-2,' ..
Box 202, Usbon, Oh 44432,•
speed, $30 plus costs; Doug E.
Drema K. Ussery, West $ . 00 fine suspended, costs, . . Petlllona must be flied wnh written atatementa ol the Board of Review, 236 East whoae
addreaa la'd"'
Marcum, Chesapeake, seat belt, Columbia, W.Va.,.DUI, $500 plus 1e :tmining order issued;
lhe Secrelary alleaslseven Dlractor'a tntenl with Town Streel, Room 300, unknownexact
and cannot with .:·
$:2S plus costs; Erica Renee costs, 10 dasrckl:s
'ail suspended to
Lowell Chevalier, Reedsville, days before th election.
rupee! lo the lnuance, Columbus, Ohio 43215. A ru1on1ble dlttgonct bt
1&gt;
Be reoldants of Alexander dental , modification, copy of the appeal must be
.
..,owscy, Annandale, Va., speed, three days, I . . y OL suspension, dirorderly conduct, $100 fine sus- Loc•t School Olatrlct, 18 revocation, or renewal of a oorved on the director -ertalntd;
LARKINS whost ' '
$30 plus costs; Barbara S. Taylor, one year probation, lhrcc days jail pended, costs, one year suspended; years of age and over, Term permit, llcenoe, or variance. within 3 dayo alter tiling the laatHERMAN
known addre11l1 R.0.3, '·.J
Chauncey, scat belt, S2S plus costs; and $250 of llle fine suspended John G. Hawk, Pomeroy, theft, $SO of election will be for t 995. Written commenls and appeal wHh the EBR.
Calcutto, Eoat Uverpool, Oh ;:!
Michael L. Childs, Middleport, upon completion of residential plus costs, three days jail suspend- 97.
requeata for a public
Final iuuance of 43120, w1H11e oxect eddrtot -"
speed, $30 plus costs; Charles B. · trcaUnent program; failure to con- ed upon completion of 24 hours
There are 4 to be elected ;r~:~;:d :."t~::d~na~ b: co~lf~~tlo~ A
c
11 unknown and cannot wllh . ,;
Lant, We~ton, scat belt, ~25 plus trot, costs only; Milford Bowens . community service; Steven James, ~or • 3 year term and 1 tor 8 submitted within 30 'ilays of of E~;lnne~r~~ All r~~ orps r1aaon1bfe dllldgenco bo
C&lt;?Sts.: Tlf!!Othy A. Creighton, Jr,, Pomeroy, failure to yield from Pomeroy, criminal trespass, $50
ye~~~e~~bany Independent notice of the proposed luue Date t0111/94, 11=~r:::: LARK'INS •
Agriculture Society action. An adjudication Receiving Waters: All, This WATSON PARKER. who•• :'Cmcmnau, seat bel~. $2_5 )!IUS a stop sign, $35 plus costs; Coon- p;us costs, three days jail suspendC!lSts; Harvey G. Martin, Burrung· · liey D. Riggs, Pomeroy, failure to ed, rcstrainipg, order issued; JohnDoris H. Mace, Secretary hearing may be held on a final ectlon not preceded by loll known addrno Ia R.D.3,·
ham, Ala., sJICC:d, $30 plus costs; control, $30 plus costs;
ni ~ K. HarriSOI), Pomeroy, use of jtO) 20, 27; 2TC
proposed action If a hearing proposed action and Is Calcutta E. Liverpool, Oh , ·,
wholt exact eddrtll ·•
Geneva Lynn Hictle, Buckhannon.
Terry D. Ashburn, Bwington, unauthorized r!lates. $10 plus costs;
Public Notice
::i~!!~ b~rth~~:~~~th~~ f:":~~~~~rtWt;.~~:e;~~t~ 431120,
11 unknown end cannot with ,
W.VL, scat belt, SIS plus costs;
DUI, $!i00 plus catts, 10 days jail scaKtbeevlet.nSH2'Seapltousn,coCshtse;ster, speed,
30 days of issuance of lhe pertains to Huntington reeaonable diligence be ~ .
.~is R. Carn!an, Langsville, suspended to three days, 180-day
PUBLIC NOTICE
proposed acllon. Written District Corps of Engineers ltCitrtall_led; . .
•. ·
drivmg under the Influence, $SOC OL suspension ·one year probation $:!0 plus costs; Timolhy B. Stanley,
r he
10 11 0 w1n 9 commonls, requesla for Public Notice (H) 94·42.
DAVID DUNHAM, whoot
plu~ costs, 10 days jail suspCnded three days_ jail inrt $250 of the
I&lt; 1{enswood, W.Va., $100 plus applications end/or verified public meetlnga , a.nd (10) 20; lTC
oddruc 11 unknown ond ,
connol with ru1oneblo ;
l!' three days, ,180-day operator's sus~ upon completion ofrcsi- c. sts, $50 fme suspended if valid complaints were received adjudication hearing
diligence be IOCI,Uined; . .~
license suspenslOR, one year proba- dl'ntial trcaUnent progt11111; failure · C ~ presented within 90 days; and the following draft, requaats must be sent to:
. DONALD DUNHAM,
tion threeda jail' and$250 fdle
$
1
R hard A H ·1
Middl
proposed, or final actions Hearing Clerk , Ohio
ys
~
tc control, 30 Pus COSts; underage
.c
· ann ton,
eport,
Protection
w!HIH eddrtal 11 unknown
1ssue d, bY th e Ohl o Environmental
fi ~•sus~nded
Public Notlcl
upon compleltal of cusumption, $1 00 plus costs, one ",...11, $500 plus costs, 1Odays jail wore
Environmental
Protection Agency,1 P.O. Box 163669,
end cannot with reuoneble·l
res1denual tr~atment progr~m; Y• If probation, 10 days jail sus- 51 spended to lllrce days, 180-day Agency (OEPA) teal week. Columbus, Ohio 43216·3669
diligence be uc:ertalned; •
LEGAL NOTICE
The unknown heir a, •
Improper handJ!l!&amp; of a fJrCarm IRa p•nded to three days concurrent 0. suspension, one year probation, "Actions" Include the (Totephone: 614-644-2129).
IN THE COMMON PLEAS devlaeea, legateea ,
motor vehicle,~ plus costs, three w'.th DUI; Donald R. Dailey, Port- tt. 'CC days jail and $250 of the fme adoption, Modlflcallon, or "Final Actions: are aclions
COURT, PROBATE
admlnletretorl·, executo:rt-, ::i
revocation of ordera (other of the dlreclor which are
than emergency orders); the •"•cttve upon Issuance or a DIVISION, MEIGS COUNTY, end/or aaatgna of GEORGIA:',
OHIO CASE NO. 21,297
HENDERSHOT, HOWARD
111uance,
dental , •••ted effective date.
HELEN A. CLEVENGER,
POWELl, FINLEY POWELl, .
modification 01 revocation Pursuant to Ohio revised
Admx. of tho Eatole of
HERMAN
LARKINS',· · ·
of licenses, permits, teaaes, cod section ~745. 04, a final
DAYTON (AP), -;- A man w!K' "!return 'to .the Lakeland Commu- thought he'd be captured" Gift variances, or cortlllcelas; action may be appealed to
Wlllem Emmett Larlllna,
WYNEIIA
LARKINS ·'"
esc~ from a miDIDium-aecunty ruty Correction Center.
said
'
doctaHd v1 HELEN A.
WATSON PARKER, DAVID ·;;
and lhe approval or the envlronmenlal board of
Flonda pison eight years ago has
Abrams now is in the Mont·
·
(Continued on P913) ·':,
disapproval of plans and review (EBR) by a person CLEVENGER, et II NOTICE
been ppturcd by police· in south- gomery County Jail without bond.
'
~Ohio.
.
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He waived ,.extradition In Dayton
Aft« two weeks of sur'VCillalce, Municipal Court on Wednesday
Daytoa police arrested William and will be headed bact to Florida
Abrams, 46, on Tuesday at bis in' less than 10 days.
apartment In su~ Keutring.
Day1on ~lice SgL Charles Gift
Abrams had been using the alias said he thmts Abrams had been
Willi8m Blair. ·
· living In llle area t or about five
Abrams has been wanted on years.
.
.
escape cbarges since Jan. 15, 1986,
"He IOld detectives that since
when he left his wodt-release job in he'd been using this other name
Columbia County, Fla., and failed and it had been so long, he never

Fa~ ling

dealing wilh planes within SO mil~
or the airpOrt, acted quickly.
Conii'Ollers also quickly warned
the 19-scat commuter jet inbound
from Indianapolis to prcv~t a seri·
ous situation, he said.
"We •·re as. conccnied about
safety as anyone is," said airport
Director Ralph Hannon, who plans
to meet with FAA officials to dis·
cuss the situation.
The responsibility for upgrading
the control tower rests with the
FAA, which owns and operates the
towers at major airports. said ~
Sweeney, spokesman for the Toledo-Lucas County Pon Authority.
which opemtes the airport.
About 40 .passenger jets and 30
cargo planes use Toledo Express
daily. The cargo flights are from
Burlillgton Air Express, which
operates at hub 'at the a~port .
Ammcan lnlrmalionat FreigJillnc.
plans to open a hub at die airport.
which will add 17 cargo flights a
day to the airport schedule.

.

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rue. ·

year-old equipment is l ' reliable,
good quality cquipmcnL" He said
TOLEDO- The Federal Avia· the radios would be replaced before
tion Administration said there is ,.1998.
William Schramm, local presinodling wrong willl the radio SYS·
tem at Toledo E:~press· Airport's dent for the National Air TraffiC
Controllers' Association, called the
control krNCr.
But the local air traffic con- SYstem old and undependable.
Schramm said the tower's radios
trollen~ union oa Wemcsday critiinstalled when the airport
cized the system as undependable.
As proof, officials pointed to two opened in 1955 - were to be
failures in radio equipment in the replaced in 1988, but dial has been
airpm's FAA control tower.
. postponed several times. ConA radio broke down on Toes- trollers now have been told not to
dar. forcing a controller who .was expect new radios until 1998, he
gWding a plane to scurry to anoiher said.
The stress of wortlng with the
wort station.
·
Last week, a small plane toot system is taking its toll on conoff into llle path of an incoming trollers, so it's time to buy new
USAir commuter plane when the equipment, he said.
•'The chance is there for a disastower radio broke. Conii'OHers were
ter
or for sometl!i!!g tenible 10 l!apable to warn the commuter and a
pen,"
he said. " There's no doubt
collision was averted.
- Donald Zochert, a spokesman about thal.''
Schramm said there was nil danfor the FAA's regional office in
ger ill Tuesday' s breakdown
Chic&amp;~o, said Wcdnclday the 40because the controller, who was

• .I

~ecent .cases concluded in Meigs County Court ;!

'

Weirton Steel was looting at its aerosol containers.
first profitable year since 1990
· The prodUct is'one of·Weirton
when fJrC spread through its mO&amp;t Steel's most profitable, and camproductive mill April6.
ings toot an immediate nosedive
The blaze was triggered when after the fire. Two other mills
someone accidentally operated a picted up 90111e of llle slac('butlin
disconnected hydraulic line, caus- mill shipncnts were cut In half.
ing fluid to spread over a IQO-foot
"In die second quarter prior to
area of the building one-lllird of a the fire, we were on a track where
mile long.
we thought we would bave about a
The fluid ignited when it came $12 ~ profit ... and we ended
in contact wilh a space healer, and up Wtth a $7.7 million loss," Garan
fire spread quietly because of said. "There's a $19 miiHon swing
grease around the mill. No one was in earnings in just one quarter."
seriously injured.
-- -- ·- ~ £0ffii!I!IY ~r JCPOfiCd
Fire was contained to the mill, a third-quarter net loss o $4.3 milbut more lllan 400 workers were lion. For llle flfSt nine months of
laid off and officials said rebuild· the year, Weinon Steel has maite
ing would take more than a yeir.
$17.2 million .behind a $325 mil" The black smoke lhat went up lion credit from property insurance
in the air that day was lndicati-vc of claims from the
the type of cloud of concern that
Cr.ews wor~cd 16-h'?ur days
was over our entire community and cleanm~ the m11l, rcplacmg pans
the Ohio VaHey " Mayor Ed Bow- and winng and updating a computman saill.
'
erized machi_ne that was state.-of·
"It was completely devastal· the-an when II ~ted In 1975.
ing " Klu~ said. "I never ever More than $72 million was spent
th~ht we d be bact In production· on repairs, including $6 million on
this quickly."
a ~~m to prevent future rues.
The three-story mill n&gt;lls.20-ton
I vi: ne,~er S!'CD such an.elf~
coils of .085-inch thick steel to a · any~here, sa1d Mart Glyplls,
thickness of .007 inches. The steel president of the Independent Sleet·
is then sent to another mill to be workers union. "Pan of it is, that's
coated in tin and sent to customers our mill. We own iL It's no differwho make it into everythinf from ent than our house burning down
soup and pet food cans to pamt and and rebuilding tbaL"

B;t MITCH WEISS
Asio1:18ted Prcu Writer

-,

,Thu~, October20,.1984

hopes fpr old steel town
liJ DAVID WILKISON

'

•

GMC:TRucK,

1-992-6641 1-800-8237-1094

1994 GEO METRO 1994 CHEVROLET
CORSICA
Was'7590 NOW •6499
or s13400 per month eo mts
NOW s11,769

1994 GGEO TRACKER

. 1994 CADILLAC
SEVILLE SLS
Loaded

5 spd, air, convertible

$11,595

WAS
$42,793

NOW s33,58

· ~

1994 CAPRICE
CLASSIC
NOW SJ 995

1994 CHEVROLET'
BERETTA
WAS
$13,995

w

PRE-OWNED l:ARS &amp; TRUl:KS '
1991 GMC SONOMA P/U 5 speed,air. .. ... ........ ...... ..... .. .... ... $6,995
1985 FORD THUNDERBIRD· Nice car. Hurry! ... ..... ..... .... ... $4,995
1992 CHEVROLET 1/2 TON P/U .. .... .... .... ... ..... ...... ...... :..$-10;999
1989 PONTIAC SUNBIRD· 5 spd, air, sunrool... ...... ....... .... $4,495
1989 JEEP WRANGLER ..... ...... .................................. $7,995
1990 CHEV CORSICA-4 dr, air, auto, stereo .......... .. .. .... .. $4,995
1988 NISSAN SENTRA·auto, air, stereo cass .. ... ...... ...... . $3,995
1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD- 4 dr, auto, air ...... .. .............. ...... .$5,995
1989 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL2 dr, Extra Sharp .. .... ....... .:............ .. ...... ... .. ... ................. ,.........$7,995
1992 CHEVY CONVERSION VAN-Loaded, rear air

.. ........ ... ....... .. ......... .. ... ..... ..;... .. ............... .. .. ........ .. .. .. .. ....... $13,995

NOW s12,489

.

e ltave rec~ived
a truddoad of 93
: 9~ lull size 4
~. Ptdcups. low
fillies,. ready for
"'•nter.
·
le .lirslfo; lhe
lest Choite/

"All pries include rebates thrudealer. Taxes &amp; tees not included.

All Used Cars &amp; Truoks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON .TATE MOTORS, _Inc.
· IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

'

,,,

..

...

.,

'

•

�'•

Paga 12-l'tle o.lly Sentinel

Tl'IUI'Iday; Octobef 20, 1894. •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l

'

Support These
:Fine Area
Businesses!

Sat., Oct. 22- Malor Colleges- Dlv. 1·A
• Alablma

1§
29

• Arizona

• Army

28

• Bolton Collogo

35

• Bowling Groan

26
31

Brlghom I'Oung
• Centro! t.tlehigan
• Colorado
Dllk.t

108 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

• Florida State

Frnno State
Georgia
• indiat\1

21
23

38

Loulsilllto

• t.taryllnl

21
24

• t.t....,t&gt;il Stat•

OFFERING PRE-NEED
COUNSELING AND
ARRANGEMENTS
Ben H.
-: Director

Ball State
• Tous-Ei Paoo
t.tlomi, Ohio •
Kansas State

Cliffia6n
·Air Force
• Kentuct&lt;y

7
13

Noothweatern
Clt&lt;tahoma
' Navy
Georgia Toch
Cinclnnatl

27
21

• Illinois
• Iowa

• Mlsslulp~

31
28

State
LouiSiana

Tulane
Jac:ksonvine State

-42

'" Missouri

25

• San Joso Stato
• Now Mexico State
Louisiana Tech
P\Jrd&lt;Jt

Nevada
New t.t ..loo
• Noothorn l!lnols
• ()11)0 Statt
Olllo U.

30

• Oklahoma Stato

24

29
19
20

7
14

7
22
12

21
14
17

•

A~lon

Augustana. S .D .
Baker
Baldwin·Wallace

• Virginia
• Virginia Tech

28

Rico

Ba~or

• Akron
• Colorado State
North Carolina
Pinsburgh

A.-,.m.a State
·
• "llbama.BirmingMm

27
42

• Alcorn
• Appa&amp;achlln Slate
• Austin Ptay
BoiN Stale

24
26
-42
30
32

Ga ."

• &amp;Iller
' Cal Slate NOf1hrldge

• Central CoOOKiicut
'C.o'Dita

' Connedlcue ·

' Cornel
• Davton

o.~aw.,.

state

E....m Kenludty
Euttm Wuhlngton

Aorida At N
Furman

17

20

25
20
2t
~

20
24

' Prairie v•w
Charlaalon Souttwrn

• Bethune.Coottman

• Montana Stale
RiChmond

San Oltoo u.

Cal Poi~-SLO

St . Francia, P11
Fot"dham
Rhode laland
OartmO\Ith

Drake

33

• Morgan Stale
22 · • Tann1111e Tach
28
• ldlhr&gt; Stale
10
South Carolina State
30
• V.M.I.

• l4aho

'17

• Indiana Slate

26
27
28

SW Miasowl
William &amp; Mary

• .t.ah~h
• lblfty

IAnuthuaals

Middle Temnaea
Mlubllppl Valley

Montane
McNMu

New HampeNrt
North Ca~lna A I T

Nonn Ttall

• Nortfltallem
• Nlilrthtm klwa
Pennt,.Wania

• Pofta.nd Slatt
• Princet9n

• S.F. Aulllf!

~tletn Utah

• SW Ttlaa

• TanneaaH Statt

• TOWton
Tror

V*'alto
• WMiem CltOina
• W.... m lllnoil
• W•tm Ktnlucky

• Yaa.

20
38

17

22
20
33
21
20
24

26

16

22
24

31
33
42
21

.._ 26
28

3U
23
21
35
16
27
1g

7

•

Hol'f Croaa .
Bucknell
Catawba
• Delaware
• SE Uisaouri
• Te11a Soutl'lern
• Weber Slalt
• Sam Houston
• Maine
.' Howard
• NW Louisiana
ViUanova

lllnota State
• Brow-n
Cat State Saaamenlo
Harvard
Henderson
St . Uary'a, Calli.
Nlctlolla Stale
T•nness...Martln

Amertcan interMiional

• Centfll Florida
• Evantvillt
Tenne.... ·Chattanoooa
Eaattm IUinols
Southern IRinols
COiumblfl

12
6
7

10
13

'2

7

15
17

17
13
17
10

12
13

12

""

17

7

"•
"16
17
1D

20
1D
15

•
•

Mount Union
NE MlsiOUfi
NE Okllhoma
North Dakota Sta te
NOfth Dakota U.
Pin Iburg State
Ro .. · Hulman
S~glnaw Vatter
South Oakola Stale
Soulhweltarn, Kan.
St. Frartele , Ill.
SW 8apll1t

"

Widener

Wmlam PatertOn

H"f"
' Kalamazoo
Wayne Slate , Mkh.
Eknhuttl ,
' Uornlngalde
' Eveno-1
' Hiram

Miuouri Vllley

• ~' lowa
' Simpson
Colorado Mines
Northwood
Adamt Slate
Mich~an 'Tech
Nonhw..tern, Iowa
Northern Michigan
WIKOnaln· Pialleville
' Capital
NW Oklahoma
luther

' Musllngum
• Minoufi..Rolaa

26

28

17

22
24
27
20
29
28
17

Doane
Winona Slate

SE O..lahoma
St. Cloud State
Nebtalka·Omaha
• CtfWral Milaourl .
• FrankMn
• lndlanapollt
South Oakota U.
KaniU Wa1t.yan

St . JoMph's
NW Mlesourl

Eall Ctntral Oklahoma
Hanov.r
• O.Uance
• North Park
Central Methodist

Other Gamu - South &amp; Southwest

' Abilent Christian
• Angelo Slate
• ArkanMIII Ted\

23
20
22
42
1i
33
28

• Ctraon-Ntwman
' Centre:
' Dda Slate
• Eut Tnas State
Emory &amp; Henry

28
· 26

fl'fttlevM•

• Fort VINey

3f

• Gienville
Howard Payne

30

• Unoir·Rhyna

27

21

17

• Mars Hill
• Morehouse
• Nor1olk
• Nor1h Alabama
• Norlh C111otina Centra l
• Ouachita

Savannah Stale
' Te~tas A &amp; M·KingtviUe
Vtldoelt'
Virginia State
t Libtrtr,

w..

Weal Virgin a Wesktpn
• WoUord

• Easttm OfWgon

10
D

UI'Mna

34
27

17

Washington &amp; Jalterson
Whelllton
• William Jewall

3
1D
10

Coati Guard

' Emporia Stale
' Waahburn
' SW Mlnnelda Stale

3Z
20

' Wabash

.......

20
12
7

Oel..ware Yahy

21
24
23
35
31
24
Ill
31
25
32
25

31
25

•
'
• SW Oklahoma

18
10
15
13

17
16

33

Hasllng a

20

"16

26
47
24

• Hillsdale
• loy.ta Waste/an
John Canol

•
•

• Bowdoin

21
24
33

• Fort Hayt Slale
• Grand Valier

'

37
25

41

Central IOWI

7

10

Jaellaon stale
• Bultakl tJ.
Northern Arizona

• Jamat Madieon
• lala)'tt1e

ti

21

MDrshead Stale

26
31

Holal1a

7

21
14
9

22
20

East TtnnHMt

• GrafN)Ino

21
14

Southarn U.
Marshall

2'

' Georgia Southam

8

SauiF.em Connec:Uwl
• lock Haven
'Cottii.M

20

• BentdlcUne
Buena Viata

~

' AIH'aht

35

• Lai'IQslon
• Loraa
• Mldltnd lutheran
• Ulnneaola.Ouluth
Mlesourl SoutMrn
Missouri Western
Moorhead State

• Utah State
• Temple
• Houston
S.M.U.

Bate1

Welt Chitter 61111

211

28
22
2:1
311

Aln'll
• Ashland
'Auguslana . lll .

·15
16

34
37

Samford

' Letllnon v.•er

Other Games - Midwest

• Chadron
• Ferria

10

. Bli'lllo Slllt

36
24
22

3l
44
29
20

16
22
3
24
7
10
10

8,

Cautomla Sllte, Pa.
Hamillon
Swantwnore

Klng'l (Pr.l

17

'Unlcon, N .Y.
• Wea!mln1ter
·Wilkes
• Worcester Tech

KIAztown
St. Johtl Rlher

22

as

Shippensburg
SpringliSlld
• Su.quthannil
Trinltv, Conn.

° Hobf;ft

48

27

• ~lddtebury
• Mlller&amp;'flllt
M&lt;Wavtan
'New Heven

• NOf'Wich

• Manltllkt
Slippery Rock
• Muhttr~&gt;ero
Cho'"'' Stlte

21

' Junltta
Licoming

• Vandeii&gt;Ht
CaUfornia

· eauon u.

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

17
10

Genrsbuto

• Indian• U.• Pa.
·Ithaca

22
23
40
26
27
29

Alban~.

992-3322

6

26
28
21

South Carolna

17
27
24
23

•

20
7

' Colby

' Dickinson, Pa
Eaat Slroudlburg
•·Edlnttoro

20

29
• Oregon
27
• Arizona State
20
Ea11orn Michigan
31
t.ttmesota
33
!San Otego Stale
Ma!Or Coll~s- Dlv. 1·AA

Queen

9

24
23
21
34

• Arkansas St3te

Werhlngton
Wallington Stall
• Wrlllam t.tic:t11gan
• wtoconlln
' Wytlmlng

Daint

20

·e......,"
'Clarion

27

Utah

992-2342

7

111

23

Toledo

111 East Second Str•t
POIMroy, Ohio

10

20
17

Paa11c

• Texas
• Texas A Ul
• Toxas loch

MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

Abanv. N. V.

• Bbomlburg

• Kant State
Iowa Stilt
Stanford

T.C.U.

DOWNING CHILDS

13
10
12

t.tlcltigan
t.tklltlgan S1att

• NE

12
7
13
17

Other Games - Ealll

......

11

15
9

• Wake Forest
• Tulsa

• West Virginia

• Soutflern Celttornia
• Souttlom t.tiAiallppl
SW Louisiana
Syracu:o

.DDlEPOITI 01110
991-6611

U.C.L.A.
Citadel
Rutgers

34

• Oregon State

555 PAll ST.

t.tlsslsai&gt;pl

t.tlaml

N11braska

VALLEY LUMBER·

22

24
28

• Klnlal

Dignity and Service
Always

25
31
26
36

E.r:t C.ollna

992·2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

Wnt Tn11 " I M

Ce:nt,.l Oklahoma

Ar'-ftN.a-MoniQio
Gatdntr· Wabb
Trlnll'f, Tal .
llvlnpton

Eaatern Na• U.•ico
• GuMford
• J .C. Smilh
Alabama A l M
Falmlont
• Midwetlarn State .
Nawbari'Y
Prtsby'larian
Mortil ~
Vlrglnla Unkln
¢lntflll Arklnaaa
Winllon·Salem

25
28
33
2t
23
30
50
33
24

CL.rk
TaM!on Sate
• Ultliu~AM College
• Elizabeth Cilv

30

• Concord

211
2S

Southern Arkanaaa

• West Virginia Stale

Wingate

Other Gamtl -' Far WeaJ

• Cai·Oavlt
• Central Wuhington
Humboktl

• LaVtma
Linfield
• Northem Colorado
• Occldantat
PaciUc lUIIIwran

• Pomona-Phz•
Weatam State
• Wntam Waltlington

.

24
40

30
26

22
32

23
20
27

C•ll.ulharan

~aStlla

Whllworth
Soulhtrn O~on
' San Franc*'o Stalt

Radlanda

• Wtalem Or•oon
MMbtD
Clatemont·Muctd

28
17

• Simon FraMI

37
28

·Puget
- Saond

Whlliar

10

..
.."•
16
7

'

UIDI'S

TOHO ,· ,·-

(Contlnuttd , _ . . . 11)
DUNHAII and DONALD
DUNHAM, If dectalld;

Thl unhown htlra,
davlle .. , ltgatau,
edmlnlatralort, axecutora
and/or 111lgn1 of OCII!
LAR.KINB
POWELL,
DECEASED; HARRY H.
LARKINS, DECEASED;
MARIE LARKINS DEVINE,
DECEASED; LEONARD C.
LARKINS, dtcnNd; LENA
V. LARKINS IIASON,
DECEASED;
DORIS
OUNHAII, DECEASED;
IIEZINIA FAYE LARKINS
~III'I'H, · DECEASED;
WILLIAM
EMIIETT
LARKINS, DECEASED:
MILLIE
LARKINS,
DECEASED;
ELLA
LARKINI, DECEASED; AND
WILLIAM
EIIIIETT
LARKINS, DECEASED.
You are hereby notllled
the! you hlllle bttn 1111mtd
dlfeftditnl8 In eltgtl tCIIon

D

.., UJ~,.
J,,." I

2C

10
12
0

•
"
"
11

7

17

7

7
3

24

ID

.·

DISCOVER WHY
,PEOPLE SAY, lllJI,UI• Wt have tht
·
...tlf ~
Strta yO.. want
P~
in tht sizt you 11114
a price .you'll likt.

'

10

at

ANDERSON'S

20
7
10

992-3671 •

.11
17

Po!Hroy, Ohio

"

20

tnlllltd Helin A.

21

•
7

•

AliD

COOLING

15

20
7

TRANE

7
9
17
20
22

,,

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION

17

"

furnaru

D

Air Cen4itionwl
lli!llt IHicitiiCy
loW(J fawing Htat Pump•
ltpain All Mak:s

13

"••
16
1D

915-4222

"8

Weathertron4P .
Heat Pump

Ohlo457a

Tht ObltCI of lht
Complllnl Ia to aell tho
atcftlnt•e undlvldtd ONI!·
FOURTH lnttrnt In tha
following deacrlbtd rtll

. XL 1200

.-

Super Efficiency
CHISTII. 01110

21

An u
lnttre In ·tho following
doa lbed real oateto
al ad In the Townahlp of
t:obanon, County ol 111111
and State of Ohio, and
IIOuncltd and clttcrlbed u

"

2C
1D

13

•
6

D
1D

.,.
17

•

12
7

· UWUIII;S-C:OATS

20

6
13
10

Fisher Funeral Home

"

IIIKI FlSHI.• Dw•r I D,....tar
MIIIUPOII

17

· 10
13

12
0
13

· .~

"
15
12
10

CHESTEI. OHIO

985·3301 or 985-3330

Peop,les :

Bank
People Get More From
Peoples Bank
.

. Mason • Point Pleasant • 'New Haven
Member FDIC

Yow local

STIH,;
Deal··

mHL .

SAllS - 'SERVICE - P~RTS

RfDJNOUR SUPPLY

wtnt 11 paltl;:u-10lllh
21 mlniiiiB well 11 poln;
lOuth 41 chg.... WISt 11

101171Wn

a 11one corner to Wm.
Clark; thane• with llld
C..,. llneNU 1/2dtg.E41
.pol.. to the place of
begt"lng, contalalng 41

7

15

••20

,

10

acrM'and I recltllfland.

• TIM purpoM of Nlcf .,.
11 to pey tht debto and
COlli of edMinllllring the
eatole of the decadent,

II
tO

1.
1.
17

(row's Family Restaurant

10

228 WEST MAIN
..,._ _ _ _9.92-5432

- You Ernmtl1
Lartdll. to
.... required
en1wtr the Cllilllplalnt
wltl*t 21 . , . ...., the ....
pu. MaItkin ol IIIII llllllct,
wlllelt wlh be r•ll1hed
oiiCI each wH tor alx
canucuttve wMU. Tlllltet

POM.EROY

, .... IDn . . betllldeon

N011n1bor 3, 1. . and Ilea
21 U,1 for _ .., will

c•• taxenthll ....
... ol , _ fllllure to
tnawtr or otlltrwllt

ad..,
of Civil

, _ . - Nqul

the

Ohio Rulea
ProweluN, IUCIIIHrll IIJ
clttault will be Ntlllared
. - I l l fOil lor Ilea Nllef
JuatJ J In . . Coa pt1hL
JJL 0-.rttn.AIIamtJtor

Pl. Plelnulr"'iPi;i;;;ii;;;;l·
I , .... W.O.UL

MIDDlEPOn

627

-

- -llulll WVUo1i11111

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1995
Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
' SHOP
255 Mill St. Middlef)ort
. .
. 992-3345

•

CliJtae ........17-..._..,...lllodgtll
tcaObW rt1n.

oEiectrlcll &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor &amp; Exterior

Painting al10 concrete

~·

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG II
1192-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

W1012tln

TV &amp; APPliANCI
.:GAS .SERVICE ·

CHESlER

.i

'

915·3307 ,.

Helen f.. Cltvenger, AcfllllL
of tht E.- of WIIIIMI
~ t.enlnl,

cllclalld
100 112 CourtsP-...y, Ohio 4l7tt
...... ... lhattlrold
Cltrk ot COurt ol

(11j3;iTC

PubliC Notice

.

t-

'.

A - -~~~
- . .;·
IDQa
1 Ida. ADIIICIIC

f
W

Tlw- Elf.,
COL-~-·

- . 1 , _ 0...

c..-.-- :
A kw• CrMJ-. ....... I •
............, ..dt11 . . . . . . ...

...

_......, - · -lllgli '

....
.
~;===
=c."'&amp;•• '-""= :-.r::::

-............. ...........
--Go
...
A-Qd#IMAUALU

cata &amp; Dr-. GIU-IIh IM-

-1817.

.

::

,

414 .tlr. No .

Doarlo Door.l a •• stu

W'!i 1hru Sal. 9-5
Speclalillng:
Dried Mllleriall
Pot pounl auppllel
Hetbal Crafts

S.parllla ttaltd BIDS lor
tha con1truct1on of
APPROXIMATELY 20,000
UNEAL FEET OF 3 &amp; 4
Inch PVC water maln1 and
lp,..,...ncta pn VJnton Cr
48, llelg1 CR 52 • 15, 1nd
Salem TR 15 • 11 will be
r-lvtd by the DISTRICT II
the DISTRICT OFFICE,
34411
CORN HOi.LOW
ROAD, RUTLAND, OHIO
until 5 p.m; Local Ume on
0ctot1er 27, 1114, and then
at aald ()filet publicly
opened end ,..., aloud.
Tht
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS, PLANS, and
SPECIFICATIONS mey be
exemlned et the following
loclllon; The Leading c...k.
Conaervancy Dlatrlct
locttad 11 34481 Corn
Hollow Rosel, Autllnd, Ohio.
Copl11 of the Contrect
Documanta, plena, end
tpeclflcetlon~ mey ba
obtolntd at the Office ol the
LIBeling CrNk ConHrYincy
Dlatrlct IOCIItd 11 34481
Com Hollow Rosel, Rutland,

7

TREE .TRIMMING

¥1-. eu.tom

... eo,.. ac:.pat
Co....... Tope,
Antlque'Can,

loll .....
O.WJDl'lnC.,..a

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

-

... • ., 011. 41711
11. . . .7117

. - . ,·

DlttMwaUI .•

.... ~.,,..
llnty

~

Oppor- !:

E-JWi .c:oruct: ••

=r:.=u.Otllpollt, Cillo:
,...,..

c::iNi

~-.

17D .,

~et•••a••

Heating. Ina.

Pellet Stoves
381 Stale Rt. 180
w/NIIIIonwlcllllll.
Galllpollt, Oh.

. . .7. .

.....,.. Wii.W IIIIDI
..

__

t,49-2168
.,

AJUERWOOD

IENNRI
· ..

CoeUr Spenlele

End lor

~'.

yaungldlilllor . . .
.Q750111e . . Rd.

...... Oh

• ·u: .....5I _.... ~
·
...., .

=r---IIOOZID :

8

_,.,.,__0
till-.,.

'VISIT OUR SHoWROOM"

110 COUit St. Pomeroy, .OIIio· - · ·

{r k

IOIEIT IISSEll
COIISTIUCTION

··

---"·-

t.-.a1-1111
lt4-IIINI10
_..,.

511*'1111 S7.85hnonlt lor 13 c:llaottll on up 1D II m.1Y at

•NewHomea
oGingea

yaurheulciMiNI.

-ULES·

Dilhat IUiglng In liD lftJm 10 INI cit.- dtJMIIO 1llndlat.
-PAYIENT PLANV.., we CUI ..,. cuhl - 10 ayt U cull -or•

eComplete

Remodeling
Stop • Comp.,.

--..--.

:....0:
~e&amp;a.
.......__
Ill

W.liJIIIMceatlha lop t
• it hea llwl¥• .,_, our
lnt priolityt In t.ct. "'llr ..,. IMiot ....now. .. may
~~-

..._..,.Otl ...

_...._ .

uiOr

ollll

-

I

.w_-.;;:; ·

.

.....

-.
J~&amp;ll'lo-.~-_. .._,
... 6~ .......

....... to liur I I • ., ,...~- ....

-

-.

,.,.an-"'*"

I

·'

•

w.:.iil •.

. . . . . Cloontd IJghl ......... .
C
loll, II II
...... 1141.
•

.........

ti5-447J

.

............................
WI- .

ptyiiWDtor41"*""uiDw!1013Mflottll.
.
-IEIMCE- .
XQI!B MDSFAC1!0tl • Our Sue c111 btgint I endt with
NNlcel So, ltlhen your IIIITIIilt lln'l -'tin; right . ..,.
htl'l lolwlpt Ely phone or In
you eel,

ESTIMATES

•

Is' II ... CJII 1Z111 ,_. ;
..... IILota,eAJI. .fp.a., ...

.,_, War!&gt;

t:EfF·5f
__ --...-.-.....,_
a-. Ia -

LMr,_. a--.·~

I'WJAL.IOSI

. . . . .\41.tii.Fer!E.-- .

.~

----.ii~ii.1i:iiiiii--;--,l
lllii.LhU
l"!:._,C..-=ar
rI&amp;LILKTIONKS
2-.

.

1.0:-=:."::n::
,,, .

.....,

.

II

IUIIWM7

:

= ' I...:....
I
- .,.,.
, . - .·.'
E p $;

l'8rHalola

tor lhow n caot!plrlicnt.
Slud ttMce &amp; I!IW-.

FR~

*""*

CM£?0p
Cll*lll f!IIIN Clnln II •

"LookJKthe Red iDi1 Wiute Awnllll"
992-41.19 Aln-Owlir l.-291-56110

au.rtyand
T.,.,..ament

Slit "'*Ill In

__
...... .
......................
..... ---·--·

• Cualo• llade
• Solid vinyl
replac•••nt
windows
J Free' Eatl•atea · ··
• 1200 lnatalltd
Call For betalla

·

II

Plottop

'Mus~

_,~ · Sign On.

~I

.

Jm' "•""''
blollp,lst,.,

Ceo

r:t'L-~=

.

992·3838

Tlltit----.. :.

0111, 111111 - .
·...
- Lalt
-

.

Locally

~••~~--.~~o~.~~~~~;.in~'~' :

.... c..td'lltni - . Ful'.

~..::'-=

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
ShNba.Shepped
Downspouts
and Removed ' Gutter Cl..,lng
MiL JObs.
Painting
' FREE ESTIMATES

Delivered

tiS.

Yanl Slle

..........,..JNE: 2:00 .....

Uwrt...._.llng,

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

. . . Workl ~ltnl Poyl ,.. '
-.l.la Pr deetp AI ....._ Cll :·

Howard L Wrltelel
ROORNG

AND REMOVAl

HJ-2269

.

llw·J-IIwtd·leto .....

--

--

to Ill ••• 'htft. .... :
IAIE: c:...tle IIII"OM!·~·
... llm,!lenAng:lo. Tl
;.
. . . . 1'

---tor-:
.
ALLYonl--·-..

Buy-Sell-Ttede
- - -"

:

8100 Tol F-. ,_,.__ EliL ,

4~
.
_ Tlio ..... • ~
AJI. -4
P.ll. Mao.
' Cralle,
~~--I I '•
Cltelr - . " ' - ' " '·

eCI'IIftsman Tooll
•Toys.
oGIIIIW8,.
Loads of IlliG•

. .•

......

...

of INclt. . . .

-

Galllpolll
&amp; VICinity

One mile out
F-fiepalr
.
.
143 from Rt. 7
lEI l USED PARTI FOR
' n-.-Wed..frl..sat.
1~
ALL IIAKEI a MODELl

.

&amp;...

r •-. .... ,,. , ...... ..

DIVE'S
SWIPSHOP

''"'"""

~~-. :IOW7W851.

n.o-n. .....

..._.-tlOO-~- :·

Buy All Non FlmHIS lfetzlr

..

•

Robert F. S,,.no..,wdttrdeltn
Prelldtnl
BolrdofDirecton
(11417112·2411
(1011. 13, 20; 3TC

-

111m

no·

~

lilt&gt;' . • P.O. ...

11121114

112·7tU OR
·..ftt·iiUOR
TOLL FIIEE 1.aH m H7t
DARII.,OHIO

Go,

.....
......-.
r-.-_,.....,._.
........ -.---:

12 Gaige
Faclory Gob Owly ·
Bas....... .

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS •
1 Specltlllllngln Cuatom

,.,-

_,~

•

:::.., Af·~=~~ f:'
CO:·
112. a,. •

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

Season

AtrCOI,

Or'W~Yin-

=--~

Now open for Fal

J

uu To Sol
f14. .
--·~-•• au
..... IW.._ w- ..:
1111...._,. ~an ••• 1711-•

Loti: llloolt lit I I - - .
992•5114
1011IITFII
II I•* ~ Pa_..,
L................~~~~~......~~~!~~~k~jt~~~~M~~~~~~~

614-247-4035

:

Uo1tts " ' T.,.., OptioMI 1-•

... In IEtmlna ..

C111 FOI CIIIIIT PIICU

Co•it's Olllo
IUYtrHtrlll•ad
Ewerlutl11•

Add ....

Autl8nd, Ohio 15775

; OR·PHONE 992-2194

- Plwlllart,.,--

···:= ........ &amp;.- ..... -

112 Plloul, 112 - · ........
Cocltar ........ I'HOid.
bolt .........
holt ' • •
wlchldiaL iOiiiH4z7.

le-se ... ,.,... ...,........
We

I

Illite, -

Glv••v

Loti: -

...... County, Ohio
(I) 2t; (11)1, 13,... 27:

Ohio.

A - I AI -

Ina
ltlo .... .....,.
.....
••••f..IDO
... :
1Drlww_Te . . . . ..

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

SAYRE lRU(J(ING

c-ntonPian
Probtto Dlvlllon,

EASTERN HIGH:SCHOOL
, .DINNER SERVED AT 6:00 P.M.
· nCKET $10.00 At THE DOoR OR
IN ADVANCE FRoM REP.
CENTRAL COMMITTEE
~

4

only . . . . . -

P•JI•t 'loHy 45 c... for dHa drr

614-742·2131
,..,.,...

Public Notice

·SATURDAY, OCT. 22

RIDENOUR'S

by-.1. .

OPEN 7 DAYS l W&amp;l FOR YOUI COIMIIIEIKE
IION.·FRL 9-6: SAT. &amp; SUII. 9-3

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

work

CLARENCE E.
MILLER

'

........ -

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

Umestone
&amp;Gravel

.

INdtr;

AI-A-0•--·

~-

(No Sunday Calls)

HAULING

oNewGa:agn

October 01, 11M

Helpwantlld

._...~-

CARPENTER SERVICE

.

11

cert~ac....
a "••••••·
~
Ina ..........
-...

. 614·992·7643

oRoomAddltlone

FEATURED·SPUIER

)

1·800-486·1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971 ·

~

Employ men t Serv;ces

-

FALL ULLY

.

-

Cllt

YOUNG'S

MEIIS COUNTY
IEPIIliCAII PARTY

.

WV.

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

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEN"q_AL
FREE ESTIMATES

Echo Saw's in stock
Christmas Layaway
· Available on
Weedeaters &amp;
chain saw.

992-4103

~.

~

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Saw Senb li Parts

w

23

Kenny's Auto Cenblr
264 Upper Rivar Rd.
Galll.v.l"
Al:l&gt;'!i4
"t~Y.'... OH ~

949-2804

Coatrldllt
I Excn1tl8t

-==-=·. =-~~··f!!
"'! ~
Ad.,.-, '

l!ho;l .......... II II I

c., ••d V•••l

We ll•ve

Complete Chain

....,.1

.,

IIIW7W404.

Mower Clinic

Dni.WIIU.•

a'ffl::r' -

"' ,..........
'• c.":!:
T:r
Kenny's is the place to cotne
w
when yo~ need a car rental.
...........
,
....
""- ..........,.... ..

RACINE

H1yforS.Ie

.....

. . ..., _ . , ..

·~··-

tonre

Undlppliaacts
for S.le
C1ll
614-992·5515
'~"""

Senlce

ADVERTISEIIENT FOR
17 polel; S 17 dtaiHt WI
BIDS
po~aa; N a c11g. w• poltl;
N 113112 c1tg. 11 po1tt to . Leading Creek Conttrvancy
Dlllrlcl, Owner
I IIIOne In atlcl rold; theMe
N 211/Zcltg. E 1Mpolttto
34411 Com Hollow Road

THE NEW COLD STANDARD IN .
CHICKEN TASTE .

(Thursday) •
' ' MINNESOTA ..... . 27 GREEN BAY •............... 21
Constantly pressuring Warren Mo!'ln, Ihe Packers ended a string of four straight losses to the Vikings with a
16-10 win on opening day. With both teams resled and both needing a win, a great game.
(Sunday)
ATLANTA .................. 30 " LA RAIDERS .. ....... I9
These two clubs haven 't mel since 1991 ; when the Falcons bea t the Raiders 21·17. This could be an aerial
war. because both teams prefe r the passing game but neither has much of a pass defense.
CHICAQO
........... 23 '* DETROIT ............ ... 20
)n ' 93the Bears and lions split. each heating the other on the road. This year they may swap positions in the
NFC Central. and Chicago may beat Detroit twice for the first time in six years.
.
" CLEVELAND ........ 32 CINCINNATI ............... I6
Sparked by huge second -quarter kick relurns by Randy Baldwin and Eric Metcalf, the Browns beat the
Bengals 28-20 in week one . Now that they 've found Uteir game, this one won't be as close .
DALLAS ............ ........ 33 " ARIZONA ................ I4
Good grief, the Cardina ls must be thinking, not again . During the Cowboys ' 38-3 win two weeks ago,
Arizona 's defense was nowhere to be seen. Dallas has now taken eight in a row from the Cards.
'* INDIANAPOLIS .... 17 WASHINGTON ............ I3
Last year Washington ended a six-game losing streak by beating the Colis 30-24. The Redskins' defense is
weak against the run, so it's a sa fe bet they' ll be seeing a lot of Marshall Faulk .
" KANSAS CITY ..... 28 SEA1TLE ... .............. .... 21
It's been four years since the Seahawks last heat lhe Chiefs. Seattle rested last week' while K.C. was in
Denver on Monday night, but the Chiefs. involved in a desperate Charger hunt. are buitgry.
** NEWORLEANS .... 20 LA RAMS ................... I5
The Rams had lost seven in a row against the Saints until Jerome Bellis ran for 212.yards in N.O. last
Decemher and L.A. won 23-20. With nothi~g on the line. thi s may be the best game of Ihe week .
' ' N.Y. GIANTS ......... 29 PITISBURGH ... .......... 23
If we wen I by offensive slats alone. the Steelers might he the pick. Bu t the Giants. who won their last ga me
against Pittsburgh 23-211 in "Ill }will do so again if they can contain B~rry Foster.
*' SAN DIEG0 ... :..... ,.3 1 DENVER .................... 24
'
In the first ;,eek of the se.ason , the last time the Broncqs looked like an AFC West con!ender, John Elwlly
threw" club-record 36 completions against the Chargers in Denver but S.D. won 37-34 .
*' SAN FRANCISC0.27 . TAMPA BAY ..... ........... I4
Jerry ijice C&lt;IUght four TO passes to lead the 49ers in a 45-2 1 rout of the Buccaneers .in ' 93 . T.B:'s defense
. may keep s:F. from makihg this anol,her.,.uitaway, b~ttlte Bucs don 't generale much- offens~ .
(Mimday)
. *' PHilADELPHIA ... 26 H0USTON L .. ... c., ... l8
The Oilm are II for 5 against the Eagles, lasl los ing to lhcm in '91. Philadelphia is gaining streriglh while
1
Houslnn is slumping. but the Oiler pass dc fcnse should hluntthe Eagle air attack .
· ,
'
1
· .
'
(Open date: Buffalo, Miami, New- Englanflr N.Y. Jets)

Lumber

..,....

polea; 8.211 112 dttl'llt . W

ft•rsday, S•nday and Moaday, let.. 21, 23-24

Baum

In Section 20, Town
3; Renga 11 of Ohio
Comptny"l PurclltH.
8eglnnlng al a atone
corner to , W111. Clark'a In
center · of rosd on W.U.
Run; thenCe 111aandarlng
1tld rosd lOUth I ........

...

....=·~
lldtc'd ,

lenny's Auto Rental

.,....

Uc. No. 0182-27

3 Annou11C11111111S

GaiDa &amp; Alhene Co.

For lll•fer

949-2038
949-2749

An no unu men t s

.

Now Setvlng Melg1,

DD'I
IPPLIIICI
IIIVICI

8th Rltclne Legion
Post 1102 8:45 pm
This lid good for 1
FREE CARD

,,.ea.......
,.,.,..·,

Call-800-806-9482
•992-5710

Bidwell, Oh 45814

Stllrtlng Sun. Oct.

VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Rocillng, VInyl
Rep'-nt
Windows, Blown
lnaultttlon, Storm
Doore,Storm
Window., 0.,....

Are Yoa Too Busy far Rwwli'l &amp;n.Mis?
let Errlllll loy Do the
fw Yov.

(6~~-~-:!65

BINGO

Ollloti lloln: llon..frt.
1:00 ~::Ill pM

Being

'

11AUOIS alld
IIIIINGIIOWEIS

~

followl:

7

18
1D
10

ma•·••e-.

Alfilr. p.m.

at Bryan Pllee
lldtiJII ort
•-2772

Cltvet~t~er,

Admx. of tho Ettata of
Wlllllm EmmaH Ltrklnt,
dtcnNd pltlnUII va Heltn
A. Clevenger, tl al,
doftndenta. Th'- tctlon hat
'bttn aoelgntd Catt No.
21,217 In the Court of
Common Pitta, Probata
Dlvlalon lltlgo County,
Ohio, . Addrtat, lltlgt
County Probate Court,
Court Houee, Pomeroy,

10

7
12

FIN &amp;tlrMtee ·
Beto... p.m. ....

110 ..... 8l,"1' pari
'-Eel. It

Co11plete Une of Errand Service.

Siding
Concrete, Etc.
· FaU Special
Gel 25 yr. shingles for
the pnce d 20 year

T.a ... pMI out of
P*tlng. Lot • clo It for
you. 'l1lry rt I Dlllblo.

J&amp;LINSULATION

812-2011

~~~

tt+IIB&amp;-4180-

221. W. Second, Pomeroy, Ohio

7

HMIMOYmEIII

lattrlor&amp;
Exterior

ARNIE'S Sl='ORTS BAR
Featuring
Dream Catcher
Oct: 21 &amp; 22

D.IUIY'I
IUIOIODY

MANlEY'S.

P111n1•a co.

10
7

'HE HARMON NFL FORECAS'

-

ChtsiH, Ohio

~

FARMERS
BANK

THE HARMON FORECAST

992-2635

I

.

24 Hour
Banking
Seven Days A
Week

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

,

. .

. ..

and RADIO SHACK

/.

,.

·'

FURNITURE,.JEWELRY

~

.

Football '94 .
CatchAll The .
Excitement!

INGELS

..,__

.

•~

�'.

..

' '

.,

,..·..

Ohio

1994

:T

NEA Crossword Puz
ACROSS

PHlLLIP
ALDER

BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie

5I

.
......................
t:l!:' ~~~-==-w.t.:.21

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

•...

..... Or ...................

'

AIICTICIH I · RIIIIITURI. 12 ~- I

=:!:0::=.'$'...."-%

~

-

•K 9 3

•J 4
tKQ1097

=._.... -, .... --

SWAIN

llollla.C..-IIUI.Forllu,

.,,

.KIT 'N' CARL YLE®by Larry Wright

Houllhold
GoodI

11oo1a.
WRA RIIIIITURI
40u1 Rt. Ml

---

•A 3 2

aw.r,

Mulohllr a
Good
Choir, La. -,~!4-Q~.'IIDl

•J 2
ort08652
tA 2
olo!O 8 5 4

Ex-, ..... l i t - Ill
Fltwood For •

14 AIKido I2D

. "liuok Lood. .,.... IITIII.

And Appl@-. IIIII... 11111 • I'LIAit INI'OIICIR OVEIINITE
'".GO; IJiniiiM • 1!41.00; FLEA .1fiAP . I.Mooglloomll.·atUOt..ll~ . .. _ .._..............
II.
•
I2To.uu; GUAIIANTEEDI 'nit N1 11:
llllllglnl.,. • RlngM • VALLEY WIIIIR RIO
WI~ 0,.,.
FEED.

..._,

=-~·-

52 Sporting Goods

"I have four daughters and four blow·dryers. •·

-

32 Mobile Hom~~

Apanment
torRent

tor sale

Ftnanctal
-------1
21

T - .._ Anlllr -:sz

For- llollrli-.
-oondlllon
f,111, 114-1'13-.

~····

6 Capuchin
monkey
7 Drawer.pulli
8 Moat rational
9 Milling soldier

Q7

South

West

3 NT

Pass

North
I t
Pass

Opening lead: •

10 senator,
Robert11 Pula down

grass

16 PeeWee-

East
I0
Pass

J

Thek~y

TH'CARD
GAME!!

number

..... ..... llloolrla
~.._With""' Cirillo
Oondllloftl. 114-

Anii!Jue """'- Chllr riiCIY lo
llnlllipr .... $10.00. Wlnlod to buy: - " .... IIEAUTI'UL APAR'TIIEHTI AT 111
BUDGET PRICU AT ~
....... - . to4-e1a--.
UTA'~:~
from
toi2Q.w.ll&amp;to ..... 54 MIIIC81111180UI
34
Buall'llll
' ....... c.a 1111. . . . .
MarchandIll
EOil
Buildings

1M....._-

SHE'S EXPECTIN' ME
HOME FROM

11t 141 4131.

53

Antiques

CAN I SORRY
ELVINEY'S
EXPECT IN'
YORE STEWPOT,
LOWEEZ.Y?
COMPANY?

For ..... Couoll 7 112" Dirk
Gold And· . _ ...., CoMIIIon. hi, Clll ~ Or
For

5 Emmell

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

..... . , . . -

~ IIIII In box,

+6 5
•J 9 6

o~oK

;:;,_=~m~a~d~II~-=-Wl""Miofll"'"'&lt;::
rallo, t4Nolr, 1-.1 ..... .,.

~--

1 Motorists' org.
2 -a date!
3- Angeles
4 Beamlrchea

SOUTH
•Q 6 5
orA Q 3
•J 8 4 3

Ouolllj ........... Furnlolli.,.. Flowood. 30M7NIA

- - •Ill. H .Wod. H;
Don1 l'vrgol Our REPO. alion.

DOWN

EAST
•AI0874
orK97

•••Ill llloftlo

· Antonio Artaud, the French theater
producer. actor and theorist, said, "I
have myself spent nine years in a lunatic asylum and have never suffered
from the obsession of wanting to kill
mvself: but I know that each conversa- '
lion -vith a psychiatrist in the morning
made me wan! to hang myself be cause I knew I coul~ not strangle

,..,.;a

PEANUTS

him.''
Guess the value of the critical card

m today's deal!
How should South plan the play in
three no-trump after West leads the
. spade jack in answer to his partner's
overcall'
I much prefer a two-spade cue -bid
by South. If North. for example, has Kx in spades . no · trump should be
played by him. not by South . And if
North doesn't r ebid in no -t rump.
South can continue with thre e notrump , expre ssing doubt about th at
contract:

-

,..

,..

¥/01JLI&gt;N'T If ~l
'ON'- r&amp;l!oK I) !'
.. v ..,r ,..,
60Vifl.NMeNT 111
. '-OT
I"~
U'
~~
INVOL.Vfl&gt;/
~p

.. I·
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rive first. D edarer had to try to stop
East from establishing hi s spade suiht.'
Luckily, South didn't overlook t e
power of dummy 's spade nin e. He
called for dummy's spade king East
won with the ace but couldn't return

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yov develop from 11ep No. 3 below.

LOOK Al .THOSE EIGHTH·
GRA!&gt;E C.I.NS HITTIIoiG ON
T&gt;flSE !&gt;llltH·(,RI\OC (,IRLS 1
IT:S MAKING !'IE SICI&lt;. 1

A PRINT NUMBfRED
~ lETTERS

I REFUSE TO STAND FOR
HIS ANYMORE 1 COI'IE ON,
TEOD\' 1 \oJE'VE GoT TO
DEFEND 'THE HONOR OF
SllCTH - GR.a.DE MEN 1

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PREVIOUS ~OLUTI()_N: "I love_life ::- '1think_possibly because Oflhe tragedies
that havel)e8n maikiiil along tile way." - Kelsey Grammer.

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penses we had incurred when our
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spades without giving declarer two
tricks in th e sui!. Instead. East
' switched to a heart. However, South
went up with the ace lin case We st
had the king and East the diamond
ace) and played on diamonds. Th e
contract was home whatever the lie of
the cards.
What if West has the J-10 doubleton .
of spades? Then , when East returns a
spade at trick two. South just d~cks .
• The suit is blocked and the contract is
st ill safe.

wNc:llla.,_ata. law.

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diamonds and three. clubs But there
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by Luis Campos
c.lebrityCiPt* Clt::r•'* ..-.CNB.Sirom quotatiOns bv t.rftouaPMP'e. pUt Mel pntMr'll

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l~fO•MATION
YOU JUST KNfW IT

Real Estate

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SCJtAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
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You'll be floating on a doud wi
' the buys you'll find in the
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c/assifieds.

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ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

=-,...~.'Good=·~·~·..,.."!"'!"

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Visage • Mange • Scrim - Amulet- UNRAVEL
An old friend seemed to get very lazy over the weekends. I believe that some people use the weekend to
unwind while others just simply use it to UNRAVEL

OCTOBER 20 I

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APPt.IAIICU

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Graph predlptions loday by mailing $1 .25 ":you have your head on-straighl today in
to As!ro·Graph, c/o this newspaper, .P.O. financial dealings. Indifference or a lack
Box 4465. New Yolk. N. Y, 10163. Be of awareness could cause you to lose
sure to state your zodiac sign.
something thai you've recently gained
SCORPIO ,(Oct. 24·Nov. 22) In a j0inl TAURUS (April 20·Mar 20) Carefully
effort today y9u·might feel you'reo,the one . examine the mot1ves of pe&lt;sons who '
dojng !he lion's share. However. If all the make you grandiose promises Ieday .
contributions were carefully weighed. lhe What they say they're going Ia do lor you
oppos1te might prove true. .
may actually 'be what they are hoping to
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dac. 21) The do lor themselves at your expense.
key 10 being elleclive Ieday is nol Ia GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Your sell-disattempt things beyond your talenls and c1pline in your personal affa~rs could be
skills. Do the very best you can withm lop lax lor your own good today. Your .
your niche.
chart indicates several undeveloped
I;I'PRICOIIN (Dec. 22-.llln. 19~ In com· oqponunities.
.
petitive developmenis today. belfeve in CANCE.R (June 21.July 22) Be stra1ght:
yoUr abilities w1thout foolishly underesti· fo.i'Ward 'in a conve-rsation with a close
.o)· - l'riday,,Oct. 21 . 19!M
mating
your compelilion. If you keel'\ your fiil!nd lo.d~y . even '!.h~n di~cussi ng an
.
"·
perspficlive.
you'll make a good showing. extremely sensitive matter. Honesty is
In ~ y,~~ ahead you might experience
AQUARIUS
(Jan,_20-F~b. 19) It's best . the 9Bst policy.
an impro~emen~ in general cond1I10ns.
JuS! becatl~ things. may be getting,, b9t· nol to Involve relatives or outsiders in ; LE,O.(July 23-Aug. 22) Success pould be
ter.~v(ji:" dolisn'l mean you can sim· sensitiVe domestic matters today . Their denied you today if you nurture sell·
intentions might be good , bul their input doubts. II yell don't lhlnk like a winner.
ply~st.
.·
'
you won't act like a winner and the
US.~ (~1. 23-0CI. 231 Promoters who might ~mpound proble,ms.
dangle a carrot in front ol you today m1gnt PISCES '{F..,. 20-Mirch 20) Boasting or results could be unimpressive. ,
be /nole i,riterested in someth1ng ot~~r exaggerating Ieday could lead lo embar· Vlfl!lO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The way you
· than' gr, tilying you . Analyze theor ra&amp;l!rnenl. There's a possibility you might · perfl'1iVe things today is likely to ,be .accua !lf1ffiah story to ~ ·guy wl\d' has
a rate,
but you could be. influenced away
motives.· Get ·a1ju!JIP on life by under- lell
,, • ! ,,.. .
'
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lrom· your views by pulling tOQ muCh ere· ·
·s lalilll"9 the inllul!nces '~h 'govern you ruler in his pocket .
1
.
in the ,yeilt ahead: sen&lt;S lor your Astro- ARIES (Mircli 21-Aprll 19) Be certain denee in the opinions ol associlo!es.
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