<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9924" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9924?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:09:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20364">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/fea4382dc9d498bdf834384ba30d1109.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2ede3668ea02fee769c603a4a4d79c69</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31750">
                  <text>Page-1D-The Daily Sentinel

"j}T~

Nursing center
honors veterans
- Kemit McElroy, who served
People may think of the trenches of World War I simply as notes as a member of the military police
in World War II. McElroy guarded
on a long-forgotten history tome.
But, Garnet Griffin can still German prisoners. He enlisted with
his brother, one beading east and
remember firSt-band.
Griffin, a resident at the the other west. They didn't know
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita- where the other was for four years.
- Thomas Frye, who served in
tion Center, served in "The Great
Waf' under General John Pershing. Europe during World War 11. His
Griffin's unit spent most of its duties ranged from working as a
time riding across France by box- cook to operating a cannon and a
car - with most casualties from tank machine gun.
- Sherwood Meredith, who
!be Spanish flu. A 70-year member
of the DAY, be is the oldest mem- served at Burtonwood Air Base in
ber of the Drew Webster Post 39 in England during World War II.
Meredith was responsible for
Pomeroy.
Griffin and five other veterans rebuilding the airplane engines that
were honored with a luncheon by eventually bombed Germany. His
PNRC, administrator Jim Linde- tour of duty was from Thanksgiving Day 1942 to Thanksgiving Day
man said.
· "Each gave in different ways 1945.
- Robert Bush, who served
and different places but all for the
freedom and liberty we now under General Dwight Eisenhower
enjoy," Lindeman said. "It's the in North Africa and France during
least we can do to spend one day a World War ll. Bush operated antiyear remembering the many days aircraft guns.
- Donald Stephenson, who
these men sacrificed to keep us
served in the Viemarn War at Dasafe."
Other PNRC residents honored nang during the Tet offensive. He
served in the Navy.
included:

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoetlich
OOPS!
_
"I done bad." Yep, again.
Iti an earlier column, I mentioned that the Burlingham Modem
Woodmen of America will be holding a fund-raiser for Mr. and Mrs.
John Baxter.
There will be much activity
fcom 12 noon to 6 p.m. with a
smorgasbord, vocal and instrwnental music, cakewalks and an auction but I told you it would be held
at the hall on Sunday, Nov. 19. I
almost got it righL Actually, it will
be on Saturday, Nov. 19. Forgive
me-l know not what I do.

Friends are planning a card
shower for Mrs. Nora Jord!w, wellknown Middleport resident, who
will observe' her 93rd birthday on
Nov. 29. Mrs. Jordan loves to get
cards and they will reach her at 637
Grant Sl, Middleport.

the "orchestra pit" this year.
About this "goes around" stuff.
It's iQteresting to note that Kenny
was the drummer for the firSt few
shows presented by the Big Bend
Association in the early 1950's and
was the orchestra drummer for the
first presentation back in 1953 .
Think about it. That has been a

:~~

'···&gt;

WORLD WAR I VETGarnet Griffin, an Anny veteran or World War I, was
recently honored by Pomeroy
Nursing and Rebabllltatlon
Center. The nursing center
honored nve other veterans
during a ceremonial luncheon.

.

Racine UMW hold meeting
"No moo: of This" was the title
of the program presented by Karim
Walker at a recent metting of the
Racine United Methodist Women.
The worship center featured
seven candles and an open Bible on
a table covered with a colored
cloth. Scripture was taken from
Luke. The theme centered on the
importance of touch and the dis·
tinction between healing and barto·
ing touches, such as being abusive.
Cbris Hill and Marilyn Bogard
assisted with readings. Mter group
discussion, there was a litany of
healing presented by the leader
with responses from the members.
Jennifer Walker lighted !be candles
and prayer closed the program. .
Lee Lee, president, conducted
the business meeting which opened
with the Lord's Prayer and the
UMW purpose. Reports were given
by Mrs. Hill, secretary, and Clara
Mae Sargen~ treasurer. The penny

fund collection was taken and sick
calls reported.

Tbe ABC quilts were sent
recently and a letter of acknowledgement was read. The mission
project, "Don't Toss it Out" is
ongoing, it was noted. Plans were
made for the ·group to again sponsor the angel tree project in which
all members of the church are invited to participate.
An election day dinner was
served,' along with a dinner to Delta
Kappa Gamma.
A new project, the shoe b&lt;Ht
ministry, was discussed and
instruction papers were given out.
The Christmas boxes wiU be sent to
Good Works, Athens, and should
be brought to the next meeting.
Lucille Cardone, Kay Spencer,
Margie West, Cbris Hill, and Lee
Lee anended tbe UMW officer
training day held recently at The
Plains United Methodist Church.

Mrs. Spencer and Mrs. Lee accept~
ed district positions for next year.
The ·christmas dinner and party
will be beld Dec. 19, at6:30 p.m. at
!be Coontty Kitchen Restaurant in
Racine. Sharon Hall and Mrs.
Walker wiU have the program and
games. There will be a $5 gift
exchange and prayer partners will
be revealed.
It was noted !bat craft making is
continuing ?I the church on Mondays in preparation for the bazaar
to be held on Dec. 3. Craft tables
may be reserved for $10 by contacting Margie Wes~ 949-2881, or
Lee Lee, 949·2454. Refreshments
were served by Opal Diddle. Get
well cards were signed. Attending
besides those named were Gladys
Shields, Margery Roush, Opal Diddle, and Etta Mae HiU.
Next meeting will be Nov. 28 at
7:30 at the church with Mrs. Bogard to be program leader. .

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Scleni'O Writer
DALLAS (AP)- Sensible lowfat diets can reduce children's
cholesterol levels without risk of
stunting !heir growth, a new study
concludes.
Federal b5alth experts recommend that all youngsters over age 2
watch the amount of fat they eat,
especially those with high cholesterollevels in their blood.
However, many pediatricians
are concerned that withholding
calorie-rich fat may slow growth
and keep youngsters from becoming as tall as they normally would. ·
To help settle the question, the
National Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute launched the Dietary Intervention Study in Children at six
hospitals across the country. It is
the first major study t.o examine
whether cholesterol-lowering diets
are safe and effective for young
people.
·
The results, released Monday at

a meeting of the American Heart
Association, suggest these diets do
indeed work without sacrificing
growth.
"There has been concern that a
low-cholesterol diet in children will
make them healthy but stunted.
Now we have evidCI!ce that's not
true," said Dr. Davtd McCall of
the University of Texas in San
Antonio.
The study involved boys and
girls ages 7 to 10. All bad relatively
bigb levels of LDL, the so-called
bad cholesterol that is closely
linked with bean disease.
Doctors randomly assigned 334
volunteers to follow a low-fat diet.
Their families were put through an
intense program tbat involved
group. and individual counseling
sessions. They were taught how to
shop for certain foods and cook
low-fat meals.
For comparison, children from
329 families were given general

diet information packets but no
special instructions.
During the three;year study
period, youngsters in the diet group
lowered their fat consumption from
34 percent of their total daily calories to 28 percent. Those in the
comparison group only dropped
their fat consumption to 32 percent.
All the children's LDL levels
averaged 131 when the study started. During the follow up, WL levels fell in both groups, as normally
happens when youngsters reach
puberty. However, the decrease
was three points greater in the dieting children.
Levels of HDL, the good
cholesterol that protects against
bean trouble, were not significantly
different in the two groups.
· Furthermore. the doctors saw no
difference in the children's growth.
Both groups shot up an average of
eight inches during the three years.
Since a low-fat diet means cut-

And speaking of this year's
musical which wjll be presented
two nights this year at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport
on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 25
and 26, the jazz band for the second consecutive year will be partie- .

HEALTH CLUB ANNIVERreported ill. Others attending were
SARY
Iva Powell, Marge Fetty, and Eva
The 59th anniversary of the Robson.
Laurel Cliff Health Club was
FALL OUTING
.
observed at a dinner party held
Members of the Vtctory Bapust
recently at tbe home of Jean C~urcb and .their guests re~ently
WrigbL
enjoyed a ptg roast and haynde at
Charter members attending and the farm of their pastor the Rev.
recognized were Ruby Frick. Mil- James Keesee
,
dred Jacobs, and Donna Gilmore.
The youth ~arnped out the night
Garnes were played with Mabel before the picnic which was attendTracy wining the traveling prize. ed by about 80 people.
Donna Gilmore gave devotions and
. The Ladies Missionary Fellowseveral of the women auending bad ship reCently took a trip to the
readings. Next meeting will be at Amish country which included an
the home of Marge Fetty. Nara · overnight stay. Making that trip
Hartman and Katie Parker were were Ltsa
· Johnson, Be Iva Rousb,

Ba~·d Director Toney Dingess

ordered in a number of pieces of
"big band" selections. Not too surprising, the music, still hasn't
arrived. However, Toney dug
More and more I'm beginning around and found a couple of good
to get the meaning of the expres- numbers in the files and so the
· be ba e gone 10 plan B
sion: "What goes around, comes band mem
rs v those numbers
and are rehearsing
around."
~ecently, Tim Glaze who has
. in preparation for this year'~ ~roserved as drununer with the orcbes· dUCtiOO. Some 14 young mUSICianS
'tra for,the annual musicals of the
Big Bend Minstrel Association
telephoned to advise me that due to
his work schedule be couldn't take staging a jewelry sale from 9_a.ill.
part in-this year's show. Now to 6 p.m. Friday in the conference
that's a problem.
.
room of Veterans Memorial Ho~piHowever, Denver Rice who is a tal. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Salser of
' regular with the show and the
Racine will be on band to conduct
orchestra, learned of the situation the fund-raising sale wbicb is open
and carne up with the idea of askto the public.
ing Kenny McElhinny, well-known
--Meigs County residen~ to handle
l've seen the original movie of
the drums. Kenny accepted. No "Gone With the Wind" umpty-two
problem, except Kenny no longer times. That's probably why I'm
bas a drum set. Still no problem.
having trouble relating to the teleJennifer Sheets, show pianist, has a vision mini-series, "Scarlett". It
set which she will provide for just don't seem "fittin'." Do keep
Kenny. So you can look for Ken in
smiling.

on tape.· 'E"enzone's
J ·
m~::::·Auxili~willbe going to have a good time'
L1~1·ss
j

l

V

By JOHN HORN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Prosecutors played a videotape of
alleged Hollywood madam Heidi
Heiss bragging about her business
and telling an ·undercover officer
that for $1,500 per woman,
"everyone's going to have a good
time."
But as Fleiss' pandering trial
opened Monday, her lawyer said
she was entrapped by polt"ce who
"created a crime wben one didn't
exist." ·
Police deceived Fleiss during
several mo.nths of repeated tele-.

La!f-.91.-Wag for Christmas

1

1

Frances Oldaker, Phyllis Hudnall
Betty Barker, Myrtle Quillen:
Angie Hall, Linda Keesee, Jane
Snouffer, Wanda Ashley, Margaret
Nunn, and Verenia Barkman.
ADVISORY DISCONTINUED
.
Th_e L:eadmg C~ek C:onservancy Dtstnct bas dtscontmued the
boil advisog for customers 0 C_R
22 (Laurel lifO, east of Townshtp
R~ad 208, Burd~tte Road, TownRoad 7~. Wtllow Creek Ro~.
Townshtp Road 205, Goeglem
Road.
SORORITY BAZAAR
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter

°

:f

Chairs
startina at. Just $259.00
.

Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, planned a
craft show when the group met at
the home of Joan Corder Thursday
evening.
Tbe evening was spent making
crafts for the show which will be
beld in conjunction with the Christmas parade, Nov. 26 and 27. at222
East Main St., the former Democratic headquarters building.
Hours will be Saturday' 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 5
p.m. At the meting were Jane Walton, Clarice Krautter, Ruth Riffle,
Joan Corder, Carol Adams, Jean
Powell. Carolyn Grueser, and
Cbarloue Elberfeld.

~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~

cou~ SlfJYE
crrm
(11
TC' c &amp; ':Jf:J Jrurs·n
r.orp
L~\?LfVLll J
L
ifll

phone calls and led her to break
laws prohibiting the procuring of
women for prostitution, attorney
Donald Marks told the Superior
Courtjury.
The entrapment included undercover policemen pretending to be
business titans and speaking a nonsensical lingo that was supposed to
pass as Japanese, Marks said.
The undercover operation was
"a baloney story ... shrewdly calcu1atedb y the po1·tce to slowly and
surely entice our client into committing a criminal act," Marks said
in his opening statement.

('1,(

Opening Tuesday, November 15th
253 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

Formerly Prescription Shop Location

Open Tues.-Sat. 9:30·4:30 &amp;7·9 p.m
Classes Tuesday-Friday .
10 a.m.·12 noon &amp; 7 p.m.·9 p.m.
992·2289

So111e things
last forever.

Recliner Sale•••

Andsome
things don't.

No c/nsing costs

• Large Selection
fabrics
• Rocker Recliners
• Many styles
• Wall-A-Way Recliners • Reduced Price
I

The best things in life don't you won't have to pay any closTo fmd out more, stop by
last long Like Bank One's spe- ing costs- and you can keep any Bank One banking center;
cia! offer on horne equity lines. your home equity line at a · or give us a call atl-800-677Right now, when you get a · fixed rate and tepn by using 4994. But act quickly. Deals
Bank One Horne Equity Line, our lock-in option.this good can't be preserved.

Q

~

Oc10ber\

1~..;.,

BANK:ONE.
Whatever it takes:
Bank One, Athens. NA

MemberFl)(C

Minmt.m line MlCllX1t $5.00J. fu! fuly 'ndexed APR on variable&lt;ate ines wiha 100% tom-trvalue ratio as of
11.75'!(, APR. fu! APR on variabl&amp;&lt;a1e'ires may
IIUII.- orcrease or decre8se. not 10 exceed 25% 1n Ohio. tl yru loo IS disContinued wilhll 1he firs1 year, closing costs of up lo $360 wil be d1arged. fu! """"111ee is $50. Rates availa:lle frtllo
~ rew Bank One Hon1e Equrty Line customers on rew variable&lt;ate home equity Ire; with a qualilying tom-to-value ratio cl 100%. Suttjlo;llo or edt apprwal. Coosun yw tax acMsor rtmro.
lng ded1.Ctibll1tyof interest. Property insurance may be r~red. A !JTlalllee applieS lor 1he use Ollfie lOCI&lt; feature. Offer expires December 31 .·1!!14. © 1994 BAN;; oNE CORPORATioN

'

.

defeat·
Hornets
in overtime

Pick 3: ·
242
Pick 4:

5853
Buckeye 5:
2-lQ-19-28-32

Page4

I

(

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 138
Copyright 11184

2 Sectlono, 14 P•IIM 35 centa
A Muhlmecllo Inc. ttew.paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 16, 1994

Rutland Council
in heated debate
over levy's defeat
By GEORGE ABATE
StnUnel News Statr
Rutland residents must bold
their breath, prayinJ that Old Man
Winter doesn't unleash bis full
fury.
•
Members of village council
ar~ued about an equipment levy's
failure during !heir regular monthly
meeting Tuesday night.
Tbe levy would have paid to
replace the village's only backhoe
~ a 1954 model that needs coolin·
uous repair, said Dale H~ villaJ.e
maintenance supervisor. The village truck is also about to fall ap~
CmiT~GTim

.
opened ill doon Tuesday evenlDg with a ceremonial ribbon cutUna
by the aovernon or Weit VIrginia and Kent.cky. Left to right are
Well Virginia Governor Gutoa Caperton; Kentucky Governor
Brereton .Jones; Hellla·Mcyerl MID!!&amp;~r DIYI!I McNutt; Mrs.
Nedn Jonu, owner or the buDding bouslng the stun and mother

Helllg-Meyers President Troy
Perry; State Senator Ned Junes; Point Pleuant Mayor RusseU
Holland; and W .st VIrginia Commissioner or Agriculture Gus
Douglaa. More than 500 people auwded Main Street ror the cere·
mony. (See ltol'f on page 3)
.

Meigs Chamber names board members
By GEORGE ABATE ·
·
BankOne: Steve Story, attorney;
The chamber's goal remains to
Sentinel News Statr
and ~on McDade of American recruit dedicated people who want
The Meigs County Chamber of Electric Power.
.
to serve and help develop the counCommerce nominated new memTbe chamber also cb~g~d tiS . ty, ~added.
bers to Its board of directors at a bylaws. FirS~ lhe board eliminated . . Our general membership
meeting hosted by the Tuppers a rule that board meUibers come mcludes pepple from all over the
Plains VFW Po!! aM A\l"filillry from spec_ific villages to ensure county,'' bc-'said.
·
Tuesday night.
represcntaUon aaoss the count_y.
Second, the bylaws now allow
Bill Nease of Sutton Township
"When we firSt were eslablisbed board members to continue serving
and John Weeks of Rock Springs
~e ~ad a quota," Reed •aid. beyond a three-year term. The
will serve for one year on tbe _ . We ve turned down very quaulied member can only succeed themboard, fmishing the terms of mem- ·. people because there we~ ~y selves if no other individuals want
bers who stepped down, said Paul
too ll!any people from a,villa$e.
to serve on the board, Reed
Reed, chamber president.
BtU Nease,_newly-noounated explained.
.
.
Five other board of directors
board member,1ts a perfect example
In other bus mess, the chamber
who will serve three-year terms
of someone wbo could not have beard about the United Fund for
beginning next year are: the Rev.
been name,&lt;~ to the I,K&gt;ard - eve_n Meigs C~unty from its presiden~
Roland Wildman of · Trinity 1 though be s. excepuonally quah- Susan Ohver:
·
.
Church; Joyce Quillen of Roses'
fled, Reed satd.
Form.e~ 10 1993. the Untied
Excavating; Steve Dunfee of
Fund soltCtts funds from businesses

and private citizens funneling
m'!"ey to_ county non-profit groups,
Oltver satd. All ~ard members are
volu~teers, meanmg every dollar
conb'lbuted goes.~ a g~up and is
not spent on admimstrauve costs.
"We've raised $12,000 as of
today for the county. Perhaps by
the year 1998 we'll raise $50,000,"
Oliver_added. All.donations are tax
deducuble, she satd.
. Recipie~ts incl~de Meigs Jnd~tne_s, Metgs Umted Metbodtst
P~sh ~d the American Cancer
Soctety, JUS! to name a few.
Th~ October blood drive raised
36 unus and was a ~uccess, R~?ed
a~ed. The chambers .next meeung
wtU be at noon Dec. 12 at Carleton
School.

Consumer prices .are up _
0.1 percent
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose a tiny 0.1 percent
in October as falling energy prices
and moderation in food costs combined to give the country its best
inflation performance in six
months.
The small increase in the Labor
Department's Consumer Price
Index was better than expected.
Many analysts bad been forecasting
that October's increase would
match a 0.2 percent September

gain.
Today's report was certain to
provide ammunition to critics of
the Federal Reserve who contend
that the central bank is engaged in
monetary overltill, boosting interest
rates even though there is no evidence of escalating inflation.
The latest Fed rate hike occurred
Tuesday when tbe central bank
boosted two key rates by threequarters of a point. It was the
biggest increase in the Fed's dis-

count rate since May 198 I.
M~jor banks immediately followed suit by pushing their prime
rate up by a similar three-quarters
of a point to 8.5 percent, meaning
that borrowing costs will be rising
for millioos of Americans.
So far this year, inflation at the
consumer level is-rising at an annual rate of 2.6 oercenl even better
than last year's 2.7 percent
increase. Critics contend that the

central bank has no business slowing the economy and running the
risk of a recession in the face of
such an outstanding inflation performance.
The Fed and its supporters contend that the economy is growing
too rapidly at this stage of the economic expansion and must be
slowed or there is a great risk the
economy will overheat and force
even sharper rate hikes next year.

'

..

so a blade can't be fit on its fioo~
be added.
, The 2.5 mill, five-year.equipment levy would have raised
$30,000 to buy a ·backhoe and a
truck. The levy was defeated by a
110-99 margin.
"If we have any snow to speak
of we're going to be in trouble. If
we get what we bad last year we'U.
have to wait fcx someone to dig us
out," Hart said. "People better
stock up 011 some snow shovels."
Last year, the village managccl
because Fields Excavating Co. pro. Continued oil page 3

Smokers urged to 'kick a little butt'
during Thursday's smokeout event
On Thursday, the American Cancer Society expects
mon than nlnt mlUlon smokers to "kick a little butt'' - to
quit smoking ror at least 24
boun that .is, according to Pat
Boyer, director or the Gallla·
Meigs Chapter of the American Cancer Society.
Unfortunately, wanting to
quit and succeeding are often
two difrerent things, Boyer
said.
"The American Cancer
Society's Great American
Smokeout offers smokers the
perfect time to quit," she
added, sharrng $0me tips on
bow to quit:
- Throw out all cigarettes.
C~an out all ashtrays In your
home, omce and car and put
them away. Discard· matches
and give your lighter to someone to bide.
- Keep busy. Hold a pend I
or pen instead of a cigarette.
- Chew gum or carrot
sticks when you have an urge
to smoke.
- Drink lots of water and
fruit juices and avoid spicy
rood, coffee and soft drinks
with catreine that can trlgg~ a
desire for cigarettes.
- Change your habits connected with smoking. Leave

the dinner table sooli after eat;
lng to avoid the desln to li&amp;bt
up. When on the phone, reed!
for gum Instead or a cigarette.
To quit permanenUy, studIes show that smokers need
support from family, friends
and co-workers, Boyer commented.
"The Important thing to
remember Is to take it one step
and one day at a time," said
Norma Torres of the Meigs
County Health Department
and a member of the ACS
board of directors. "'ne day's
success can lead to another."
For the past 17 years, the
ACS has sponsored the smokeout as an upbeat, goodnatured effort to encourage
smokers to.give up cigarettes
for 24 hours, to prove to themselves that they can and In the
hope they might quit for good,
she said.
The smokeout is held each
year on the third Thursday In
November.
For more information on
the ACS Smokeout or for
more help in q uitling, call the
local American Cancer Society
at 1-800-446-7479 or call the
ACS toll-free Information line
at 1-800-ACS-2345.

Middleport pursues
funds for crime fight

327 meals and investigated nine
By GEORGE ABATE
accidents.
Sentinel News Staff
"It seems to be worth the trips
Middleport is joining the nation·
wide battle against crime.
· up there" to Columbus, be added.
In other business, council
The viUage is currently readying
going to line up for these tax shifts
reported
the October b~dgetary levapplications
to
get
money
from
the
neu year and vote them all in? I
recently paS'sed federal crime bill, els. The general funds' balance was
doubt it."
Commission Chairman"Frank council members agreed at Mon· $42,715 .64 . The following funds
ended with surplus: street maime- .
Mosier could not be reached. for day's regular meeting.
Mayor Dewey Horton said Mid- nance, fire equipmem, water syscomment today at his Cleveland
home. His telephone number is dleport Police Chief Sid Little. tem improvement, water, sanitary
Captain Bruce Swift arid village sewer, water meter trusts, ODNR
unpublished.
grants coordinator Jean Trussell Waterways, revolving loan and
The Commission to Study tbe
will apply for $300,000 in grants refuse. Deficit balances for the folOhio Economy and Tax Structure
that
would help add three police lowing funds included: miniature
was created by the 1993-95 state
golf, fire truck, tree planting, ecoofficers.
budget law. It provided the first
"They're figuring out what their nomic development, public transcomprehensive look at Ohio tax
portation, ll!creatioii, cemetery, arts ;
needs are now," Horton said.
policy in 25 years.
council
and Issue II.
Councilman Paul Gerard said
Browning said the administraIn
September
the general funds ' .
$165 million will be available for
lion and the Legislature will anabalance
was
$31.600.97.
Deficit ·
small
and
medium-size
police
lyze the recommendations wben
balances
were
listed
in
the
foUow· .
departments
within
the
next
three
they are officially made and decide
ing
fpnds:
miniature
golf,
fire ·
years.
wbicb of them can be mad·e into
"There's money there," Gerard truck, econanic development, publaw.
said, adding he has contacted lic lransportatioo, recreation, ceme.
Washington officials about the tery, arts council and Issue II. The
following funds were in the black:
funding.
street
mainteruince, fm: equipmen~
Running a police department
tree
plantit,~g. water system
requires lllucb more money than
people expect, Gerard said. The improvement, ·water, sanitary .
son was pending i~ tbe Senate federal funds could be used to hire sewer, water meter trusts, ODNR
new or rehire lliid-off officers, cov- waterways, revolving loan and ·
since House approvalm May 1993.
·
ering
up to 75 percent of the wages refuse.
Senate Agriculture Cbai~a.n
.
. . Tbe village also reported the .
Ben Gaeth, R~Defiance, the btll_s and benefits, be added.
In related Middleport police Middleport Volunteer Fm: Oepan.
chief backer m the Senate, satd
news,
Mayor Horton said the vil- ment answered 60 calls for ftre and
Ohio woul~ join 37 ?'her sta~ that .
lage
continues
to seek surplus EMS during October. Tbe depan• •
aUow h~nung !be_ ~grato~ bird.
from
tbe state. The . ment logged 48 hours in fue, EMS ·
materials
•'Obto and Mtcbigan I'll!~ them
departmept
bas
acquired
flack jack- and rescue training, while totaling
for ot)ler state~ to barves~ Gaeth
•
ets,
nighl
vision
glasses
and IBM !52 hours on maintenance.
said. "II) fa~ m !be south~ states
The
volunteer
fire
department
business
computers.
The
computers
~hen the doves are nugraung. that
ts !be second crop for many farm- are being worked on now, Horton will bold an honorary dinner Dec. •
1, {:ouncUwoman Beth Stivers • ·
ers down !here, huntmg doves on said.
.
· fi Ids "
During October, tbe police said.
!be nee 1e ·
department made 30 arrests, served

Group recommends business tax cuts
CLEVELAND (AP)- Individuals would pay a larger pan of the
state tax burden and businesses
would pay less if preliminary recommendations of a tax study panel
are accepted, published reports said
today.
Tbe 15-member commission,
appointed to study bow to make
Ohio more economically competitive, bas come up with about $3
billion worth· of tax cuts for businesses. The cuts would be offset by
higher consumer taxes, according
to a stories in The Plaln Dealer and
The Columbus Dispatch.
"The goal is certainly to take
the ·load off businesses and spur
economic development," said
Kathi Horwath, a tax collllllission

member· who works for the Ameri- changes. Tbe recommendations
can Federation of State, County include eliminating the tax on
and Municipal Employees. "There inventory, machinery and equipare a number of people wbo aren't . ment; eliminating the corporate net
looking to throw all of the burden worth tax and eliminating the pubon consumers, but I don't know if · lie utility property and gross
receipts taxes, according to the
that will bold true to the end''
The newspapers said the com- newspapers.
Tbe recom111endations; which
mission's preliminary recommendations include taxing the sale of wiU be put into a draft report next
all food or raising the state sales tax week and debated publicly early
one percentage point: expanding next month, will then be sent to
the types of personal services that Gov. George Voinovich and the
are taXable and changing lbe state's state Legislature, the newspapers
income tax structure so a 3.5 per- said.
"My sense is that they've idencent rate would be assessed, based
on an individual's federal income tified some legitimate issues and
questions,'' said state Budgei
tax liability.
Utility 'ompanies stand to gain Director R. Gregory Browning, ·
the most from the proposed tax Voinovicb's top P,Oli.cy adviser.
"Does that mean everybody's

f:!o~ .:C?Oh.~~f!!Jte OKs_~'!!'!.~~'!£~!!!9.,.~

'score it this w y: Lame Ducks l,
Mournin 00 0 wilh the
si
bility ola rematch involvinivot:
ers.
·
sed
The Senate on Tuesda
and sent to Gov. George V~i=ich
8 bill to add the state's estimated 4
miUion doves to the game bird lisi.
Approval 011 a 17-15 vote wilh
17 votes needed for
e, 'came'
· at the start of a hri~t~ection
· session
·H
to
toda
The ouse w,as re1urn
y
to begin its final sessions under
Democratic conttol for at least two

~epublicans wtU have a maJOf!·
ty tn January as a result of thetr
Nov. 8. election vic!ory._Senate
Republicans kept thetr maJOnty m
!be election.
Neith~r supporters nor opponents believe the public ~ b~
the last of the ~ove buntmg.btll,
even though Vomovlch bas satd be
will sign iL
.
Senate ~re~tde~t Stanley
Aronoff, R-C~ctonau, wb~ volejl
for the biU, satd the issue mtght coil
ball
up on !be . ot.
•
,
"Ob, sure.. I don't thtnk we ve

smce 1?61 and the only thing
that was different today was there
was no d.ebate on tbe noor,"
Aronoff satd.
:
The Humane Soctety of the
United States, a leadin~ oppane.nt
of the bill. said a ballot issue drive
was an approa£h it would consider.
"We're going to have to look at
that and make an assessment o~
that in the moolhs to com!l_. I can t
say right now," said,Bill Long,
director of government affairs.
. .
.
The legtslatto.n
that wtll au tho1
rize the 0bio.Division of Wildlife
tn

I
I

Low tooalgbt Ia upper 301,
portly cloudy. Thuradoy, partly
cloudy. High Ill lower 60s.

•

ting back on red meat, some
experts feared the youngsters
would not get enough iron. This
can lead to anemia, which may
slow learning ability.
However, the doctors saw no
difference in iron levels in the two
groups. Nor did they notice any
variation in other nutrients or in the
way the children behaved or
matured sexually. Researchers
intend to follow the youngsters
until they are 18.
Tbe National Cholesterol Edu·
cation Program recommends that
aU children over age 2 keep total
fat under 30 percent of daily calories an~ saturated fat to under 10
percent.
Other participants in the study
were from Northwestern University, !be University of Iowa, the New
Jersey Medical School, Children's
Hospital in New Orleans and the
Kaiser Permanente Center for
Health Research in Portland, Ore.

-------.Society SCrapbook-------

'patio

Ohio Lotteor

Cavs

Study finds low-fat diets safe for growing kids

whW~tcomeback,Ken.

I

...

•'

Tuesda~Novernber15,1994

Pomeroy-Mid.dleport, Ohio

••

•

�Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

·Page-2-the Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 16,1994

MICH.

•

Hussein's Manhattan Project. Intel·
ligence experts now believe that
Jaffar was the mastermind behind a
bomb-building effort that spent up

--Area deaths-Albert Ruschel, Sr
Albert Phillip Rusche!, Sr .. 89, of Palm Bay, Fla.. formerly of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Nov. 15, 1994 in Palm Bay.
Born on Feb. 8. 1905, be was the son of lhe late Phillip and Daisy
Smith Rusche!.
·
He is survived by two sons, Albert and Barbara Ruscbel of Cocoa.
Fla.; Alfred (Biz) and Grace Rusche! of Syracuse; five grandchildren, 11
great-grandchildren; two sisters, Eva Hendricks Dessauer, Pomeroy, and
Gel'trude Bass, Reedsville; three stepdaughters, and a stepson, eight step·
grandchildren, and three step great-grandchildren, a half brolher, Leroy,
and one half-sister, Brigget of Columbus.
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his second wife,
Louise, three brothers, Paul, Wilbert and Herman, five sisters, Carrie who
died as an infant, Ethel Russell, Hettie White, Phyllis Russell, and Syble
Russell.
Services and burial wiU be held in Palm Bay. A a

I'VE 601 To RElOAD.

Leona Wallace
Leona Elfa Rose Wallace, 73, of Hiland Road, Pomeroy, died Wednes·
day, Nov. 16, 1994, at hc;r resi_!!ence foUow_ing an extended illness . .
Born on Aug. 30, 1921 in Clintwood, Va, she was tbe daughter of the
late B~njamin Harrison and Gracie Vanover Rose. She was a homemaker
and affiliated with the Baptist Church.
She is survived by her husband of 44 years, Raybon R. Wallace, Sr., a
son. Raybon R. Wallace, Jr., a daughter, Naomi Black, two grandchildren,
Joshua and Stephanie Black, all of Pomeroy; six sisters, Edith Rose of
Pikeville. Ky.; Eva Mullins and Freda Carter of Orlando, Aa.; Thelma
Mullins of Clintwood, Va.; Tessie Evans of Houston, Texas; and Toni
Andrew of Easton, Md.; ber mother-in-law, Dora Robinson of Baltimore,
Md., and several nieces and nepbews.
',
Besides ber parents, she was preceded in dealh by two brothers, Arthur
and Mitchell Rose, and two infant sisters, Lome and Cinderella Rose. ·
Services will be held Saturday at I p.m. at the Mullins Funeral Home.
Main Street, Clintwood, Va Burial wiU be at Phipps Cemetery, Clintwood, Va Friends may call 3 to 7 pm. Thursday at the Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland, and 4 to 8 p.m. Friday at the Mullins Funeral Home in
Clintwood, Va.

A curse on thee, Newt Gingrich!
thought it was a Democrat,
described his Rhode Island col·
league John Chafee as part of the
party's "little old billy atrophied

Joseph Spear
left wing." Could it be that the
Grand Old party is going to have a
grand old quandary on its hands?
Dear Curmudgeon: Thank God
for Talk Radio. When the public
hears the truth from Rush Lim·
baugb and G. Gordon Liddy, they
do the rigbtlhing and vote Republi·
can. - Dittohead in Des Moines.
Dear Dittobrain: Why ar!! you
giving Watergate wacko and ex·
conv.ict Gordon Liddy any credit?
Rush did it all. You don't believe
me, ask him. The Baltimore Sun
ran a 1,000-word excerpt of one of
his articles the other week and lift·
ed one of Rush's own remarks for
the headline: ''The Torch Has
Been Passed to Me." In that
excerpt, the Curmudgeon counted
22 "l's" and 12 "me's" and
"my's." He's a one-inan political
machine, old Rush is.
Dear Curmudgeon: Ollie North
didn't lose! He just took a tiny step
backward. Ollie shall return! -

Rose in Roanoke.
Dear RNR: I am positively
bursting in anticipation.
Dear Curmudgeon: I find it hard
to believe the citizens of California
almost sent that empty suit Michael
Huffington to the U.S. Senate.
What were they thinking of, anyway?- Ann in Ann Arbor.
Dear ANAA: The only thing I
can figure is they were simply
grateful. Huffmgton Lbe millionaire
has pumped .$30.2 million of his
personal fortun.e into the California
economy since 1992. He spent $5.2
million on his House race that year,
$25 million this year. Another riddle: Why did they send Sonny
Bono to Congress? The only lhing I
can figure is to get him out of California.
Dear Curmudgeon: I know the
Republican victory irritates all you
scummy liberal media types, but
lhe rest of the country is in ecstasy.
Love it or leave it, pal! - Ditto·
bead in Denver.
Dear Dittobreath: For the
record, the Curmudgeon voted on
Nov. 8 for a governor. a state
comptroller, a state attorney general, a U.S. senator, a member of
Congress, a state senator, three

slate delegates, a county executive,
five county councilpersons, a
state's attorney, a circuit court
clerk, a register of wills, and a
sheriff. Eleven of my choices were
Republicans,
eight
were
Democrats. What else can I say?
Some people think for themselves.
Some peeple are dittoheads. ·
Dear Curmudgeon: Newt Gingrich is the speaker ·or the House!
God bless America! Newt in '96!
-Norm in Nashville.
Dear Norm: When I get up from
my d~sk, I intend to scratch these
words on a piece of aluminum foil
and search for a well to cast them
in~o: '.'1 hereby bind Newton Leroy
·Gmgnch by the horns or the ram,
the mouth of the crocodile, the poi·
son of the asp, and, of course, the
eye of the newt, to the tail of the
Serpent of Defeat so that he may
never set foot in the residence and
offices at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avem1e, except as a guest."
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1·
. 800-827·6364, ext. 8317.)

Heilig-Meyers opens
store ·in Point Pleasant
By DOUG HOST
OVP News Staff
The governors of West Virginia
and Kentucky were in attendance
Tuesday afternoon. along with an
estimated 500 onlookers, as HeiligMeyers celebrated its grand open·
ing in downtown Point Pleasant
The Point Pleasant store is lhe
628th for Heilig·Meyers, which has
now been in business for 80 years.
"I've never seen so much support or enthusiasm at one of our
openings, not to mention two gov·
emors" said Troy Perry, the presi·
dent of Heilig-Meyers, who
received a key to the city from
Mayor Russell HoUand. "We bope
you will like our store in 10 years
, just as much as today," be added.
"This is a day of progress and
growth, commitment and celebra·
tion," said Mayor Holland . "For
myself and the citizens of Point
Pleasant, I'd like to welcome
. Heillg-Meyers to Point Pleasant."
Kentucky Governor Brereton
Jones, a native of Point Pleasant
and whose family owns the building housing the new store, told lhe
crowd be met Perry two years ago,
and decided then that Point Pleas-

GOP now viewed as party of the mainstream

,.

•

,

.

·,

"Since there's nothing good on tonight, what
do you say we watch the NEGA TIVErCAM·
PAIGN ADS I taped?"

i

It's morning In America. And electorate bas given the party of
the Democrats bave a hangover. Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich a
The party of Clinton has absorbed clear mandate.
its worst midterm thrashing of lhe
Not simply to oppose tbe p,olipast half-century. About the best
thing that can be said for lhe lame
Joseph Perkins
duck majority is lhat at least they
still have one of their own in the cies of Clinton and lhe Democrats.
Wbite House. For now.
· But to pursue their own agenda, as
The Democrats might take some spelled out in the House GOP's
small bit of solace in their miser- . "Contract With America," the
able showing at the polls if they package of congressional reforms
could chaJJc it up to an anti-incum- and legislative initiatives that
bent virus infecting the body Republicans promised to bring to
politic.
floor votes withip the ftrst 100 days
But GOP incumbents lost not of the next Congress, if lhe Amelione race for Congress, in either the can people put them in charge.
Senate or House. And not one
Tbe first order of business for
Republican governor was denied the new Republican majority is to
re-election. The American voters change the way Congress does
were not anti-incumbent on Elec- business. Three reforms ought to be
tion Day. They were anti,Demo- introduced within the ftrst 10 days.
crat.
One, require lhat Congress abide
The message the American peo- by the same labor, health and safepie sent is unambiguous. They are ty and civil rights laws that apply
profoundly troubled by the direc· to the rest of the country: Two, cut
'lion in wbich the nation bas been congressional committee staff posi·
led during the past two years, with liOns by one-third. Three, commisa Democrat in lhe White House and sion a private audit of all congres·
a Der,nocrat-dominated Congress. sional accounts, including the infaThey now view the GOP as the mous House Post Office.
party of the American mainstream.
After adopting these internal
Moreover, by deliverin~ a land· reforms, lhe Republican majority
slide to Republicans nationwide,' can then move on to lhe legislative
allowing the GOP to post midterm agenda outlined In their Contract
gains of historic proportions, the With America

Among the planks: a constitutionally required balanced budget.
a recision of social spending in last
summer's crime bill (in favor of
increased funding for prisons and
law enforcement), welfare reform,
tax relief for families with children. .
stronger national defense, regulatory relief, reduction in unfunded
federal mandates, tort reform and.
congressional term limits.
While Clinto,n and the
Democrats - not to mention their
loyalists in the media - tried to
conjure up scary scenarios as to
what would happen if the GOP
agenda is enacted, the fact is that
most of the planks 'are widely
favored by the American people.
Such as tbe proposed balanced
budget amendment. Clinton and lhe
Democrats wildly claim that it
would require •.•a Uillion dollars"
in spending "cutS." But that simply is a fiction.
Tbe fact is that the budget can
be balanced in nve years by holding the overall INCREASE in fed'
era! spending IQ 3.2 percent a year
(roughly tbe rate of inflation),
rather than the 5.4 percent the
Democrats favor. In other words,
Congress does not have to cut a
single program to balance the bl4d·
geL Just limit the growth in federal
,putlays to the rate of inflation over

•·

"

t

1. j

'

"

I

the next five years. By the fifth
year, revenues will catch up with
spending. Tbe annual deficit would
1
be eliminated.
or course, the Republicans do
advocate spending cuts . Not the
trillion
dollars-worth
the
Democrats claimed during the
recent campaign. And not the evisceration of Social Security and
Medicare that the president accused
the GOP of secretly plotting 'while
stumping around the country.
But tbe Republicans have identi·
fled $176 billion in specific cuts,
many of which were included in
bipartisan legislation co-sponsored
by Ohio Republican John Kl\sicb
anti Minnesota Democrat Tim
Penny:
The Penny-Kasjch spending
cuts fell a few votes shy of House
passage Ibis year, after Qinton and
un·dearly departing House Speaker
Tom Foley strong-armed enough
Democratic members to vote
against it.
The new Republican m~jority
will be far more amenable to reduc·
ing the size or government. And
the savings that are gleaned from
spending cuts will be used to provide the various tax cuts proposed
by the GOP contract.
·
Joseph Perkins Is· a colunmlst
for The San Diego Unl011' Trl·
bune.

Around the nation

the southeastern two-thirds of the ·
state overnight. Rainfall amounts
.
.
.
were generally a half-inch or less.
~lvmg run and strong wmds
The record-high temperature for con~mued to ~ummel southern
this,date at the Columbus weather Florida as Troptcal S.torm Gordon
sta~on was 72 degrees in 19~ 3 hov~ o~ the~ m the. Gulf of
while the record low was 12 10 !"fextco this mommg. An mcreas1883. Sunset tonighl·will ·be at 5:15 mgly strong storm system sent
p.m. and s~nrise Thursday at 7:19 snow swirling througb several

Gordon is centered about 115
miles south of Sara_sota. fla., and
was expeeted 10 lla!t DiOvins slow"
Jy north-northeast today. Squalll
tbreateDed to produce tomadoa IIICI
mucb of central and soutbem Florida was under a tropical storm
waldl
·

Small business loans available through EDC

SHOTAND
WOULDN'T KNOW,

The (Marion) Star, Nov. 9
It's time to get radical about funding education.
Whether a higher court agrees tbe state funding system is unconstitu·
tiona! or no~ Tuesday's election results show it's become almost unwork·
A few days ago, I read a newspaper article about a cache of
able.
"curse tablets" recently discovWhether schools ran high proftle campaigns as Marion City Schools
and River Valley did or took a low key approach as Pleasant did, the ered in a Roman-era well in Israel.
· These are lead scrolls on which
result was the same. The levies lost.
·
The Ullth is, the present system forces schools to take a beating over people would engrave curses and
cast spells against lovers, lawyers,
taxes instead of lawmakers because the state funds only part of the educapoliticians. whomever. and tbrow
tion bill and sends schools out to raise the rest. At the same lime. a longthem in wells or bury them in
time slate law builds an automatic rollback into levies that keeps schools
from benefiting from gains in the district's property tax base unless they
graves so that water nymphs or the
go before the voters again and again.
dead would enforce lhem.
Wby in heaven~ s name did this
Ohioans need lawmakers with some starch in lheir spines who are will·
ing to make the difficult decisions necessary to fully fund education.
come to mind at this moment?
Who knows? Let's tnove on.
Springftekl News Sun, Nov. 7
You requested an Ask-the-Cur·
News repats of violent criminals who are released after only two or
mudgeon column on campaigns
three years in prison increase the p11blic clamor for tbe death penalty. Citi·
and elections. You got jC
·
zens want to be sure that the most dangerous among us are never freed to.
Dear Curmudgeon: America has
rape or murder or maim again.
spoken and Republicans reign!
But the death penalty is a dubious solution to crime. It does not serve
From 1860 to 19 I 2, Democrats
were an endangered species. Here's
as a deterrent. (If it did, America would be one of tbe world's"safest coun·
Uies.) It metes out a punishment that, once adminisiered, can never be
to another 52 years of domination!
-Happy Harry in Houston.
revoked if time and new evidence show ihat the defendant was not guilty.
Dear HHNH: Far be it from me
Most troubling, capital punishment is han&lt;led out unfairly. It carries a
suspicious racial tinge, since Death Row is rarely the lot of lhose wbo ldll
to precipitate on your parade, but it
appears that the GOP is facing a
blacks but is reserved for the murderers of whites. And lhe death sentence
faction problem of lhe sort lhat bas
clearly falls most heavily on those who are poor and cannot afford expenplagued the Democrat-s for years.
sive Uial lawyers with their teams of investigators and experts.
You've got moderates. moralists, .
fanatics, supply-siders, nativists,
right-wing Christians. Just the
other day, tough-talking Texas Sen.
Phil Gramm, wbo would eat an
armadillo, carapace and all, if he

It wtll be a.little warmer on
Thursday. than .11 w~ today, fore·
easters wd, wtth highs ·~ tbe low
60s under partly sunny skies.
An area of rain associated with a

.IToledo I 57" I

THE

The (Toledo) Blade, Nov. II
For those whose knowledge of American intelligence operations one always hopes lhat is not an o~ymoron - is limited to the perusal of
the ever-entertaining Tom Clancy novels, the Senate Intelligence Committee report on superspy Adlrich Ames should be insUllctive.
Ames confessed to betraying more than 100 U.S. and allied government intelligence operations, nearly twice as many as previously reported.
So mucb for the thesis that Congress is the source of national leaks from
the hush-bush Central Intelligence Agency. It seems the OA' s main concern is damage control on the inside.
The report says lhe former CIA official knew about several hundred
operations but cannot remember whether he passed them on to Moscow.
Thus are lhe worst fears of U.S. intelligence community realized- the
presence of a mole in a high position, one who had such far-reaching
access to secret operations that he cannot even remember which one he
peddled to a foreign power. It is a wonder the United States survived the
Cold War, given tbe decades•long effort of the Soviet intelligence apparatus to penetrate its opposite number in this country.

Near-freezmg tern~ were
pr~icted for Ohio t~mg~t. The
NatiOnal ~eatber Servtce wd lows
would~ m the 3~.

Accu-Weatber" forecast for

UNSCOM officials believe that all the other Iraqis showed a
they've now destroyed more than · lot of respect for him. II wasn 'I
95 percent of Hussein's nuclear fear; it was clearly admiration." .
The man wouldn't give his
weapons complex. But they readily
name
or title during that meeting,
concede that they can't be absobut
inspectors
soon found out it
lutely certain.
was
Jaffar,
a
genius
pbysicist wbo
Until recent years, UNSCOM
By Jack Anderson
officials didn't even know about received a Ph.D. from the Universiand
Dr. Jaffar. He first emerged, in dra- ty of Birrrtingham in England. But
fashion, during a July 1991 be and other Iraqi officials irtitiaUy
Michael Binstein matic
meeting between U.N. inspectors downplayed his importance.
U.N. inspectors' continued to
.. and Iraqi nuclear engineers in a
bunt
for the missing mastermind of
to $12 billion and employed some Baghdad hotel room: One particinuclear program, sometimes
Iraq's
20,000 people at its peak. Prior to pant from the Los Alamos National
with
Jartar
at their side assisting
the Gulf War, and the sanctions Laboratory recently recalled the
that followed, the plan's goal was meeting for our associate Dale Van where be could. Iraqi officials
balked at giving up the names of
to produce up to 20 nuclear Atta:
weapons per year.
"They were finally starting to their nuclear bigwigs out of fear
Although international experts tell us about their secret uranium- that the Israeli intelligence service,
bad long suspected that Hussein enrichment efforts. But lhey bad a Mossad, might assassinate them.
But the inspectors were finally
was harboring nuclear ambitions, it couple of junior engineers up there
able
to determine that Jaffar was, in
wasn't until after the Gulf War that talking. And we kept asking them
fact,
the man they'd been looking
inspectors learned just bow close · questions they couldn't answer.
the Iraqi leader bad come to Pretty soon, this immaculately for. The breakthrough came when
achieving his dream. Most of the dressed guy stood up and said, they seized a treasure trove of
program was so secret that, despite 'Well, I will answer your ques- nuclear program personnel records
after a dramatic stand-off in a
President Bush's claim that Hus· lions."'
·
sein's nuclear program had been
The official continued: "He was · Baghdad parking Jot. The cache destroyed, Desert Storm bombers very articulate and spoke English more lhan 25,000 pages worth of
hadn't even touched some of the very well .... Very knowledgeable. material - contained substantial
biggest installations because the He knew exactly what they had evidence . that pointed to Jaffar as
allied coalition didn't even know done, what bad happened, He was · the mastemtind. II was enough for
they existed.
technically very qualified. I noticed the U.N. to conclude in late 1991
that Jaffar bad "the lead technical
and administrative responsibility
for tbe nuclear weapons program _as
a whole '-despite bis claim (for a
time) that no such program existed.''
Jaffar continues to enjoy privi·
Jeged status in Iraq as the senior
undersecretary of tbe Ministry of
Industry and Minerals, formerly
PE~FECT
known as tbe Ministry of Industry
and Military Industrialization.
'(()(J
Western intelligence agencies
believe be is working feverishly to
resurrect Saddam's nuclear program, an effort lhat would no doubt
accelerate if the sanctions were lifted.
But even with the sanctions,
Iraq remains a threat as long as Jaf.
far remains. As Jaffar himself once
told an inspector from the
LawrGncc Livermore National Lab·
oratory: "You can destroy our
equipment and you can bomb our
buildings, but the one thing you
can't take away is the knowledge
that we've acquired - the things
that we know in our beads."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

' • UNI1'EP NATIONS - Saddam

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

,~!~:!r~essezin~~~~I!'Pr!L~~~~ forecast fo~!~ight .

OHIO Weather

Iraq's nuclear top gun is still dangerou-s

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

Berryls World

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Nov.17

Hussein's ill-conceived show of
force near tbe Kuwaiti border
couldn't have come at a better
time, top United Nations officials
here acknowledged to us.
Until recently, these officials including
some from the U.N. Spe·
ROBERT L. WINGETT
cia! Commission for the DisarmaPublisher
ment of Iraq (UNSCOM) - were
combating a rising tide of sentiment among some U.N. member
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
nations to lift tbe international
General Manqer •
Controller
sanctions a~ainst Iraq.
Hussein s arrogance and diplomatic stupidity appear to have
silenced .W countries that were
LEITERS OF OPINIC?N are welcome. They ohould be less than 300
wotds long. Alllettm are subject to editing and must be signed.with name, · eager to i'tfsume trade and diploaddress and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letters
matic relations with Iraq. Most
aboukl be in good taste, addressing issues, oot penonalities.
diplomats here are now convinced
that sanctions will never be lifted
as long as Hussein remains in
power.
One of the strongest arguments
against lifting sanctions - but one
not often beard - is the clout that
Dr. Jaffar Dbia Jaffar continues to
have in Baghdad. As long as Jaffar
remains in Iraq, officials say, Iraq
·
will have the will and the brains to
I
By The Associated Press
build a nuclear bomb.
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of statewide and national interest
Jaffar is the nuclear whiz-kid of
The Columbus Dispatch, Nov. 13
Iraq, the Robert Oppenheimer of
America's voters achieved a housecleaning of hiStoric proportions on
Tuesday, signaling their frustration with congressional leaders who have
failed to solve this nation's problems.
In transferring control of both houses of Congress from Democrats to
Republicans, the people have accomplished a bloodless revolution
unmatched in modem American history.
Across lhe nation, Americans believe that elected officials in Washing·
ton are not coming to grips with important issues. Taxes are high, weUare
can be a way of life, health care needs reforming, and the annual federal
deficit remains a crime against our children and grandchildren.
Republicans have a right to be celebrating all across the land. But they
should be thinking about this -perhaps voters Were not so much bent on
electing Republicans as they were determined to rid of the people in
charge.

I

Wednesday, Noveinb«tr 16, 1994

ant could use a Heilig·Meyers.
"There's no place like borne, and
there's no place like Point Pleasant,
· West Virginia," said Gov. Jones.
"You'll find that Ibis is a store that
will sell you a quality product at a
competitive price. They are willing
to stand up for what they believe in
just like the people in Point Pleasant, who are quality people that
stand behind the work they do."
Jones said that seeing the empty
buildings along Main Street on a
past visit made him feel that some·
thing needed to be done. "I thought
'Somebody's got to do sotnetbing.
Someone's got to gel the ball
rolling."'
West Virginia Governor G,aston
Caperton also expressed his plea·
sure with Point Pleasant's newest
business. "This is very exciting for
me. It is great to s'ee this fmt class
fa!=iliiY opening up and strengthen·
ing the downtown," said Gov.
Caperton.
Gov. Capenon also recognized
Sandy Dunn, State Senator Ned
Jones and Nedra Jones, owners of
the building and family of Governor Jones, as well as Commissioner
of Agriculture Gus Douglass. for
the work they had done for the
community.
Heilig-Meyers opened its doors
to the crowd around 4:30 p.m. Dr.
Jack Levine was the first customer.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-Kt)

Publllbed
.., -51.,
-Po.,...y,
· · 1\looclay
Prtdoy,
Ill••Court
Ohio,"""""'
by l1le '
Ohio Volloy l'llbllilolll QlqloayMallimodla
loc., ...... ,. Oblo 45769, l'b. !192-2156.
Seoood
poobee polcl• Po,_,y, ()blo.

PI-

M~ Tbo

-led-·

~~- AlloclalioL

Stocks
Am Ele Power ,_...........................31

ud tho Oldo

Akzo ,_,_................................ 57118
Asblaad on ........................... .37 718
AT&amp;T .................................... 52 318
Buk One ................................l6 114
Boll E...,_,......................... .lO 114
Cbamploa lad. _ ............~............lS

~.Solid -comc1iolll0
The Dally StiUael, Ill Court St.,
Ponwoy,Oblo ID69.

o.-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
SVIIICIUPI10N dfts
.,c.n.
..

Mot.......

Cbarmlq Sbop ........-..............6 518
Clly Hnldlnc ...........................31 314
Fedenl Mog_ul ..............................ll

SI.liO
oDol\lolllh ....... ~...................................... $6.95
ODe Yw ....:.......................................... $13.20

II'

_

IINGLICOPYPRICK

hlly...... :.......................................... lS c-.

.

.
'

s.-.,.. ... -,. .. ,.,,. .... ..., .
ma1t • • - dlrocl

Goodytar TI&lt;R ..................... .35 114

K·mut .................................... u 718
Landi End .............................. 17 114

Lim lied Inc. ..................... - .... .lO Ill
1o1be Ooltlpolll Dolly 1
Multimedia Inc. ,_, ............... .18 718
~"":.if.'b: ~~~
billa. .
Polnl llucorp ·--.....;............ ;...,.,
Reliance Electric ------... .30 118
l'lo •boalpjloa by mall ~ ill ,..,
Robbl• a Myen................... l7 Ill
when homa mrrt• ..vice iiiYiillbll.
Royal Dut&lt;:b ......................... I09 118
Shoaey'a lne........................... 14 114
' MAIL BtJISCIUP'I10NI
.... o. . c....,
• Stir Bank .......... ,....................37 314
13 w..a............................................nJ.I4
Wendy lai'L ........................... 14 518
26 w..a...............................................S43.16
Worlhinatoalnd ....................ll314
52 w~.:,;~·(j;;iii;;'c;;:;J;..$14.76
Stock reporll are tbe 10:30 8/m.

"'.!::::

13 W..U;............................................... .$23.40
26 Weob..........................:......................$45.50

siw........................ :........................sauo
I' I

quotes provided by Advut o
GaWpolll.
.
·

New and existing businesses
have a new option for financing
through the Athens-based Enter-·
prise Development Corp.
Formerly the Athens Small
Business Center. the Enterprise
Development Corp. was recently
awarded a $500,000 loan from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Farmer's Home Administration
(FmHA).
As a designated FmHA Intermediary Relending Program, the EDC
is eligible to make loans to independent businesses throughout
Appalachia. Loans to both
fledgling and expanding businesses
may be made for fixed assets and
or in capital financing up to
$150,000.
Borrowed funds may be used for
acquisition of land and buildings;
consUllction and improvements to
owned or leased property; purchase
of machinery. equipment and tools:
purchase of inventory, supplies,
furniture and fixtures as well as
working capital for general opera!·
ing expenses such as reo~ utilities,
advertising or insurance.
Loans are available in the 30
cities served by the EDC. These
counties include: Adams, Ashland.
Athens, Belmont, Brown, Carroll,
Columbiana, Coshocton, Gallia,
Guernsey, Harrison, Highland,
Hocldng, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Knox, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble,
Perry. Pike. ·Ross. Scioto, Tuscarawas, Vinton and Washington.
"We're excited about the possibilities of this program in assisting
businesses to become stable and
more established as well as get
innovative ideas off the ground,"

sad .Karen Panon. e~eculive !!iiec·
torofEDC.

Several other financial and governmental organizations have been
key partners in making this financing opportunity available to
Appalachian residents. They
include: Ohio Governors dflice of
Appalachia; Bank One, Marietta:
Peoples Bank and Trust Co.; Hock·
ing--'t(alley Bank; Vinton County
Co~issioners Community Devel·
opment Department; Bank One,
Dover and Athens. All of these
organizations have pledged financial support and set aside funding
to leverage the Farmer's Home
monies.
"Without the financial and
moral support of these lenders and
governmental groups, this program
would not be possible," Patton said.
"They have not only earmarked
special funds to be loaned to small
business, but will be contributing
actual dollars to the effort to better
enable low-moderate income persons to become self-employed and
self sufficient."
Under the terms of the program.
businesses may borrow up to 75
percent of a project's needed funding, with the remainder coming
from private sources and/or from
·traditional lenders. The maximum
project cost allowable is $150,000.
A goal of 1S loans has been targeted for the 1994-95 program year.
'This program fills a gap in tbe
financing options we are able to
offer our clients," Patton noted.
"It's a great complement to our
microloan program, but lets us
work with clients wbo have greater
financing needs as well as those
who wish to purchase land or a
building as part of lheir expansion
of start-up plans."
Applications for the program
and additional information are

Meigs announcements
Rutland turkey dinner set
The Rutland Volunteer -Fire
Department will host a turkey dinner beginning at 5 p.m. Thursday.
Tickets cost $5. Tickets available at
Joe's Country Market. Hill Top
Grocery, Rutland Department
Store, Quality Print Shop. Buttons
&amp; Bows and Rutland fueflghters.

will host the Union Bible College
Choir at 7 p.m. Friday at the
church.
Ministry group to sing
"Saved by Grace. a student ministry group from Mt. Vernon
Nazarene College, will be present·
ing music and speaking at the
Racine Church of the Nazarene,
I0:30a.m. Sunday.

Dance to be held
A round and square dance will
beheld at the Coolville Fire House, Slug shoot set
A slug shoot will be held at
8 to I 1 p.m. Saturday. "out of the
Blue" will play with Ronnie Wood lzaak Walton League farm Sunday,
as caller. The dance is being spon- I p.m.
sored by parents of Boy Scout
Agape supper planned
Troop 52.
The annual Agape supper will
be held Sunday at 6 p.m. at the
DanviUe church hosts choir
The Danville Holiness Church Enterprise United Methodist
·
at state Route 325 In Langsville Church.

Today's livestock report
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio direct hog prices at selectrd
buying points Tuesday by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower: demand light to mod·
crate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs .• country
points 26.50-27.50, a few 28.00;
plants 27.50-29.00;
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs .• country
points 24.00..26.00.
'
Prices from The Producers Live·
stoclc ASsociation:

Cattle: steady.
Slaughter steers: choice 63.0068.00: select 58.00-63.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 63.0066.00; selecl 52.00-63.25.
Cows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all
cows 45.25 and down.
Bulls: steady; aU ~ulls 50.85 and
down. ·
·
Sheep and lambS! 1.50 to 3.00
higher; choice wools 65.00-70.00;
choice clips 66.00·72 .00; feeder
lambs 64.00 and down; aged sbeep
34.00 and down.

OTICE

available at EDC, 900 E. State Sl,
Suite 101, Alhens, Ohio 45710 or
by calling 614-592-1188 or 1-800~
822-6096. The Small Business
Development Centers, Ventures in
Business Ownership and Small
Business Management programs
and other counseling serVices for
independent businesses throughout
lhe 30 counties are also applicatioo
and information sites.
Enterprise Development Corp.
is a private. not-for-profit a-ganiza-

lion that administers and markets
seven revolving loan programs
throughout Appalachia. The eeoter
currently bas more 1han 80 loans on
lhe books with more 1han $1 million
in funding supplied to microenterprises and small businesses
. throughout the region. Trainins.
technical assistance and consulting
for individual businesspersons, as
well as groups of associated businesses, is also provided by the
a-ganization.

Rutland Council...eontlmMKI from pege 1
vided at least two backhoes since Smith.said. U Ibis line breaks, the
the water line project was under· village could not flgbt fires, Smith
way, be added.
added.
Rutland Mayor- JoAnn Eads said
- Continues 10 seek people
the viUage will survive.
who will haul away bricks and
Councilwoman Judy Denney debris from the old Rutland High
added since a backhoe is owned· School. The village likely will have
and the village coped last winter to rent a jackhammer to break up
lhat aU will be nne.
some of the remaining concrete.
"It was the people's choice and
- Learned the Civic Center
if they wanted to vote for it they roof is leaking in new areas.
could have," Denney said.
- Passed tbe ftrSI reading of a
Councilwoman Gladys Barker bouse numbering ordinance for
said she's been wrongly accused of emergencies, not mailing address·
fighting the levy.
es. The numbers must be displayed
"I didn' t go out and twist peo- on homes by April I. 1995, Smith
ples' arms. I definitely didn't go said.
out and talk it down," Barker said,
- Accepted lhe resi~natioo of
· responding to complaints that she former marshal Ben Davtdson. The
didn't join council members in village will interview seven applipushing the levy in a door-to-door cants at 7 p.m. Monday at the vii·
campaign. "A lot of people felt that lage hall and hire someone that
if you bad put the lights on, they night.
would have voted for (the equip·
- Reported surpluses in all
ment levy)."
funds. The general fund dipped
Previous efforts to pass levies to from $3,172.97 to $974.03 from
pay for street ligbts failed. The viL- tbe beginning to the end of the
lage currently operates on just 2 month partially because of a $1,500
mills, while other villages in the state audit, Smith said. But, the
county run on I0 mills.
Civic Center fund grew due to tbeCouncil President Duane Weber $1.200 in money that will be added
said tbe lack of equipment will hurt with the first haunted bouse, she
in repairing water main breaks and added. The water fund inCR:asCXI by
sewer leaks. in addition to snow about 50 percent since most of the
removal.
leaks have been stopped.
"You can only run your s~ip so
- Will collect ''Toys for Tots"
tight before it sinks," Weber said.
at tbe Civic Center for the Meigs
Councilman Dick Fetty said the County Bikers. Tb~ center could
levy flopped because people mis- _ also be a disUibution center for the
understood the village's situation.
toy give-aw~y, Smith said.
"I stress the fact that if all (the
- Met in executive session to.
council) were ajlreeable, lhe people discuss legal matters against lhe
would have gone along with it," David Wilkes property.
Fetty said.
Councilman Danny Davis said
when be promoted the levy to residents be -thought it would pass.
•
"When the snow bits, don't call
me," Davis,said, adding last year
be worked for days without sleep to
clear roads. He refuses to do the
same this year.
Councilman Steve J.enkins said
the levy's failure was unfortunate.
"There's no doubt that there will
· be limited services," Jenkins said.
In other business, council:
- Filed for a $260,000 Issue II
grant that will replace a 100,000
water storage tank and eight-inch
water lines. The village must match
I 0 percent of the grant and will
meet with the commissioners Friday to seek priority for the projec~
Villa~e Clerk-Treasurer Sandy

CHRISTMAS SAVINGS
ON

BERKLINE RECLINERS
WALLAWAY RECLINERS, ROCK-o-lOUNGERS and
· Thermo Massage Recliners
Beautiful Fabrics and Berkline's Li!l'lited Lifetime

Warranty

On Saturday, November 19,1994, from 8:00 a.m. until
4:00 p.m., the Lea!llng Creek Conservancy District will be
Installing a new valve on their 250,000 gallon elevated
storage tank near Danville. In order to Install the valve, this
tank, which supplies all water to the . majority of our
customers on the east end of the wate r system, must be .
drained and out of SeJ'1!1Ce during this time period.
All customers east of Danville on SA 325, SA 124, SA 7,
SA 143, SA 684, and all county, township, etc. roads off
from these state roads will be supplied by the District's
20,000 gallon, tank on Horner Hill. Because this tank will
. provide only a limited volume of water, the District urges all
customers to prepare for this outege by stocking up on
Friday night and by conserv:lng water on Saturday. After
service Is restored, the District's employees will be flushing
all lines, so customer can expect some discoloration for the
next lew days. Aftet service Is restored, all customers In
the affected area should boll all water used for human
consumption for 3 minutes until further notice.
Those customers at lower elevations may not
experience any significant changes In their water pressure,
however, please be considerate of those on the higher
elevations and use water only when absolutely necessary.
The more water drained down from the hills, th~ more air
the District has to flush and the longer time to restore
service to all. Your cooperation during this period will be
greatly appreciated.

,...

Arlzl•n
I Peat

tJovem6e'l 1-L1ttVtcln~

$1 0°0

DOWN

pecia.l'' ·

$1 0°0

PER MONTH

0"

FO.R O.NE YEAR

II

Brent A Bolin, General Manager
Leading Creek Conservancy District
'

v

'

APR

�'

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

In the Virginia Slim$ Championships, .

Page 4

By~~ ~~~(AP)

.
-On tbe
night when the tennis world came
to honor Martina Navratilova,
Gabriela Sabatini played an almost
Perfect match, perhaps her own
~~~~.to the winningest player in
This one, Navra•i.lova didn't
'
lo~:f: :~d~~~sl somebody
who was playing in another zone,"
said Navratilova, wbose tille-studded, 2 1-year singles career ended
in a 6-4, 6-2 flfst-rouod defeat at
the season-ending Virginia Slims
CbampionshipsonThesday night
And when the match was over, a

T-wolves &amp; Heat get first wins; Cavs beat Hornets in OT
'

'
'

.

'

'

Heat 115, Mavericks 102
five AUanta players in double figHarold Miner's best game of the ures against Boston and former
season helped Miami earn its fi.J'St teammate Domini9ue Willdns.
win.
Wilkins, retunung to his fo1mer
Miner doubled his season scor- home at The Omni, bad only 16
ing total with 23 points as tbe Heat points on 8-for-20 shooting. Rick
rebounded from an 0-4 start, their Fox led tbe Celtics with 18 points.
CavaUers 89, Hornets 86 (OT)
worst since their inaugural season
Chris Mills's three-pointer at the
in 1988.
Kevin Willis'matched his season buzzer sent the game into overtime,
· and Tyrone Hill's basket put
bigb with 24 points for Miami.
Jamal Mashburn, who scored 50 Cleveland ahead to stay.
Hill led Cleveland with 22
points Saturday against the Chicago Bulls, had to senle for 24 points, and his second consecutive
against Miami. Jim Jackson had 25 16-rebound game. Mills had 19
points and Mark Price 15.
for tbe visiting Mavericks. .
Alonzo Mourning scored 23 for
Nets 112, SuperSonics 106
Derrick Coleman needed a the Hornets.
Pistons 99, 76ers 98
jumpstart and Kenny Anderson
Detroit hung .on to beat
banded it to him.
Anderson helped Coleman Philadelphia despite missing three
break out of a slump by setting him of eight free throws in tbe final
up for six easy baskets in a 16- tbree minutes.
Joe Duinars scored seven of his
point first quarter in New Jersey's
20 points in the fmallive minutes.
victory over Seau!e.
Grant Hill's 22 points led tbe
Coleman finished with 25
Pistons. Willie Burton bad 27,
points.
Shawn Kemp led Seattle with including six three-pointers, off the
bench for the visiting 76ers.
26 points and 13 rebounds.
Nuggets 112, Spurs 99
Magic 122, BuDets 102
Robert Pack bit a career-high 30
Orlando rebounded from a season-opening loss to Washington, points and reserve forward Tom
getting 29 points and 13 rebounds Hammonds scored 12 of his 22
points in the fourth quarter for
from Sbaquille O'Neal.
Denver.
O'Neal, the NBA's leading
Hanunonds hit his flfst six shots
scorer, also blocked five shots and
bad six assists. Horace Grant bad in tbe final period after the Spurs
21 points and 13 rebounds for tbe cut the Nuggets' lead to two points
barely a minute into tbe quarter.
Magic.
David Robinson led the visiting
Rex Chapman led visiting
Spurs with 33 points and a seasonWashington with 17 points.
high 20 rebounds.
Hawks 110, Celtlcs 94
J!ucks 82, Pacers 81
S lacey Augmon scored 27
Milwaukee scored just eight
points and Ken Norman 19 lo lead

'

points in the fourth quarter and a
franchise record-low 24 in the second half, but stiU hung on to win. .
.Th~ ·Bucks, wbo led by 26
pomts m the fi.J'SI half, missed 19 of
their first 21 shots in the half.
Rookie Glenn Robinson made botb
buckets, a three-pointer and a 17foot jumper, to finish with 18
points.
Reggie Miller led Indiana witb
17 points.
Rockets lOS, Kings 99
Hake em Olaj uwon scored 28
points as Houston extended its season-opening winning streak to
seven games.
But tbe Kings didn't make it
easy for the defending NBA
champs, leading at the end of the
flfst, second and third quarters.
Mitch Richmond led Sacramen·
to with 31.
Lakers l 02, Clippers 92
Vlade Divac and Cedric Ceballos each scored 24 points and led
the Lakers' fourth-quarter comeback ~gainst the winless Clippers.
Terry Debere led the host Clippers with 15 points. Loy Vaught
added 14 and Tony Massenburg
and Harold EDis bad 13 each.
Suns 96, Trail Blazers 93
Danny Manning scored 10
points in tbe founh quatter to help
Phoenix come from 15 points down
and spoil Portland's home opener.
Elliott Perry, subbing for injured
point guard Kevin Johnson, scored
four of his 19 points in the final 44
seconds.
Clyde Drexler bad 26 points for
tbe BIazers.

OU men tabbed class of the MAC
By RUSTY MD..LER
AP Sports Writer
Ohio University won the last 13
games it played against Mid-Amer·
lean Conference competitloli last
season. To bear the coaches around
the MAC teD it, the Bobcats may
start this season where they left off.
• 'We bad a youn.g team last
year, so there's still a lot of room
for growth," is how OU coach

Larry Hunter puts it.
The Bobcats, 15-8 overall and
14-4 in the MAC, won both the
regular-season and tournament
lilies in tbe conference last season.
From that team, they return eight of
their top nine players.
The focal point is 6-foot-8 cenler Gary Trent, a runaway choice as
the MAC player of the year in each
of his fi.J'Sttwo years. He also is tbe

No. 1 reason why OU is favored to
repeat.
_
"Gary Trent makes it a bit of a
gap between Ohio and tbe rest of
the conference," Kent coach Dave
Grube said. "He's that good."
Here's a look at tbe MAC. in
order of preseason prediction by
media covering tbe league:
Oblo
Last year: 15-8, 14-4 MAC

In OU's game against Ohio State,

(flfst)
In a nutshell: A healthy Trent
(25.4 ppg, 11.4 rpg) gives the Bobcats dominance in the league. But
. supporting players like Geno Ford,
Gus Johnson, Mike Reese, Ryan
Greenwood, Curtis Simmons, Jeff
Boals and Jason Terry push OU to
another level. Only worry is replacing leadership of Chad Estis,
(See MAC on Page 5)

.

,

Improved Trent to have father in·the stands
By ~USTY ~D..LER
"Witb a player like Trent, you
TOLEDO, Obio (AP) - The hop on bis coattails. They don't
bad news iust gets worse for Ohio happen very often," Bowling
University s opponents. FU'Sl, Gary Green c&lt;iach Jim Larranaga said.
Trent is back. Second, be might be
To be honest, Tre.nt also sees
better.
.
· himM:If as better than anyone else
That's bard to fathom, since the . be plays. Asked last spring by a
6-foot·8 musclell181f'averaged 25.4 reporter if Ball State's Steve Payne
points and 11.4 rebou!ldl a game could match up with bim. Trent
last season. Twice in his two sea- bristled and said: "If be can, then
sons he bas been the Mid-Americ:aD why is it every time we play Ball
Conference player of the year. State, I'm doubl.e- and tripleAfter·deciding to return for his teamed?"
junior year rather than tum pro, he
Trent's pride will not let him
said be is an improved package.
admit he bas an equal. Labels also
"I'm suun:r on the floor, more bother him.
fluid witb my ball-handling, and
An example: "You know what I
my outside shot bas been falling tell tbe coaches all tbe time? All the
more," the junior from Columbus publications have me at power forsaid dllring the MAC pre-season ward, power forward. But I'm what
meetings. "I feel more comfortable they would call a small forward in
in tbe 'nt"
the NBA. So I always tell the
If rrent is as good at sizing up coaches I'm a small forward with a
his improvement as be is at fmding
lot of power."
a way through the tangle of arms
Or tbe label that be dominates
that try to guard him, tbat is cer- only because be plays in an inferior
tainly oot good news for tbe coach- )eague.
.
es around the conference. They
"It depend· on wbo says it. If
were having difficulty handling the it's a fan who says it, then I just
"old" Trent
tbink to myself, yeah, bul you'd

like to be in my shoes," he said.
baggage. The difference for us was
Nor is be content just to have I talked to some people in his
another blockbuster year. There is school system who knew about
always room for improvement, of Gary and they assured me he was
his own gaudy stats or Ohio's 25-8 worth it Then he signed the letter
record and NCAA tournament or intent and qualified his next testing period."
appearance .
"I always say I like to e~ceed
A key, Hunter said, is Trent
e~pectations. Everyone expects us
"reshaped his body. He's worked
to win the MAC and go to the bard to be wbere he is."
The future looks bright for
NCAA. But! want to win the MAC
by three or four games; I don't Trent, unlike wbat was on tbe horiwant to just win it by a game. I zon not so long ago. His father is
want to return to the NCAA tourna- now out of pri.son, where he bad
ment and win tbree or four games, · done time in Kentucky for a drug
or the whole tbing. I don't just conviction.
When Ohio plays at Ohio State
want to meet expectations," be
said.
in the Preseason National Invitation
Trent's coach, Larry Hunter, sel- Tournament tonight, it will be the
dom mentions his star's talent first time Dexter Trent bas ever
before talking about his work ethic. been in tbe stands for one of his
It's a recurring theme for a kid son's college games.
from a rough neighborhood who .. Now Trent needs only one more
was overlooked because of his big season and another year of seagrades and because be was a 6-6 soning, and be may decide to talce
all that NBA mooey.
center in high school.
"I like the decisions I have in
"I don't think anyone saw tbe
way this is unfolding," Hunter the future better than some I've bad
said. "We saw his great atbleti· to make in the past," he said.
cism. But we also saw be had some

Scoreboard
Tonight's games

Basketball

A--

SeanJe a1 Bolton, 7:30p.m.

Miariat ~1iladelphla, 7:)0 p.m.

Chicaao a1 San Antonio, 1:30 p.m.
Minoe10ta a1 Phoenil, 9 p.m.
New Yotk at L..A. Lakc:n , 10:30 p.m.

NIIA standings

ron.ooo.. .......... .........l!L~
2 . 7
Wlllliqloa .............6
New Yolt ............... l

,.,.,. .hney ..............2
- · ..................... 1
Miaai ..................... l

Pllllldetpbla ............. l

2 U7
2 .600

! .216
•
•

.200
.200

6 .143

ClokoF ..................)

1D41ooa................... l

~ .................2

Allula ................... 2

2 .600
2 .600
I .500
l .500
4 .333
j
.116

=
.Sao-.-.
.. ... .. .)

Wahinstoo 11 New Jeney. 7:30 p.m.

LA. Clippen • Olwlotte, 7:30 p.m.
Oi~:aao 11 Howton, I p.m.
Sacramento at Dallu,l:lO p.m.
Detroit al Denver, 9 p.m.
CUVE~ 11 Ponlond, 10 p.m..
New York at Colden State, 10:30 p.m.

.5
2.5
2.5 .
2.5
3.5

c..tniDoon&gt;K ....................6 2 M&gt;7
a.EVEI.\ND ........ )
M l -....... ......1

Thunday's games

ill

.5
.5

Ohio men's
college scores

I

Non-conference action

I
2

Codanillc 117,ladiana Univ1-Eut 43
Ceollll St. 79, Walll\68

2.5

Malone 72, St. Vince'nt. Pl. 152 .

Rl9 GRANDE 99, Wilberforce 6~
Exhibition

WESTERN CONFERENCE

:J tI .133
ftt

a1.5

2 .600
2 .600
Utall ......................... l · • .429
Mioielioll ............... .l 6 .~.,

3
3
4
6

ru-...................5
Dollal. ........ ............. l

r..llkDITWoo

.!
'

i
I,

OaWps-........... .5
P111i111!1 ................ ..!
- L....................
....... I .............. !
...........- -...........3

LA.~............1

LU!)Jnlln-.........0

1
I
2
l
2

.m .
.750
U7
.600
.600

• .m
6 .000

I '

loll~·

116, OoldeliSIIItlll

PITTSBUROH PIRATES : Named

Football

Southera L..eaaue.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : Rel•ed Keot Bonenfield, pitcher. Assianed
Tony Menendez, pile her, to Phoenil of
the Pacific Cout Lclpc. Named Keith

Bodie maoaaer; Steve Cllae pltchiD&amp;
coach; aDd Billy Carplae lralaer, of
Phoeal1; Roll Wotua, manaaer: Joel
Horlen. pitcbiq COICft and FraU Clctla-

father joined her on the court along

"

.
MAC men's cage previB'ftV•••
.

team's second;best player a year
ago.
Hunter: . "We won tbe MAC
and went to ihe NCAA toumam,ent
last ye~, and thoso were n1ce
accomplishments. To be really S(l!:·
c.ial. you've .got to repeat and .fo a
htlle farther m the tournament
BowDng Greell .
Last year: 18-10, 12-6 (bed for
·
second)
:In 111 nutshell: Falcons have
~X(lCrience (seven senio~). a g~t
ln~1de player (S.hane Kline-Rummsk1~ and a sohd com~lemen.t of
peruneter gu~s (Antomo Da:'uels,
Jay Larranaga, Sba.ne Kom1ves).
But they've also gouo fmd a way
to stop Trent, who ht them up for
46 points in . pivotal · game last
February.
Coac~ Jim Larr~nag~: "Tbe
strength of our team 1s.w~ re wellbalanced: ~e can go m~~de ... or
~an go outside and shoot
Miami

Major men's college hoops
to start with Preseason NIT

and kept the Blue Devils from tbeir
By JIM O'CONNELL
third title in four years.
AP Basketball Writer
The Razorbacks also have the
The 1994-95 college baslcetball
toughest
start for a defending
season starts tonight with six openchampion
i.
n recent memory. They
ing-round games in the Preseason
open
Nov.
25 against No. 3 MasNIT. It will end on the flfst Monsachusetts
in
the Tipoff Classic at
day night in A'pril in Seattle.
Springfield,
Mass.,
and tben play
Sit back and enjoy what's in
No.
15
Georgetown
in tbe Martin
between as a record 302 Division I
Luther
King
Classic
a1 Memphis, ·
teams try to get to the Kingdome.
Tenn
..
less
than
48
hours
later.
The Preseason NIT has a chance
Tbe
season
starts
with
54 new
at a good final four in New York.
coaches
and
without
a
single
mem. on Nov, 23. Twelfth-ranked Syraber
of
last
year's
All-America
cuse, No. 14 Virginia and No. 18
Alabama highlight the 16-team team, even though four were underclassmen.
field.
ESPN bas a 199-game schedule
The tournament wiD also be the
to
lead
the broadcast lineup, includ!!ebut ot Charlie Parker as coach at
ing
a
Championship
Week tbat will
Southern Cal, where be takes over
decide
21
NCAA
tournament
for George Raveling, who retired
benhs.
Monday as be continues to recover
from serious injuries sustained in
LARGE SELECTION
an auto accident.
The Maui Invitational and Great
Alaska Shootout each have tbree
Top 25s in their eight-team fields .
Maui bas No. 7 Maryland, No. 9
Indiana and No. 16 Michigan as
weU as a great storyline. If Arizona
State can advance to the semifinals,
it would be against Michigan, Bill
Frieder's first game against the
Wolverines since he left just before
they won the national championship in 1989.
Fifth-ranked Arizona, No. 21
Oklahoma State and Nov. 22 Villanova will spendTbanksgiving in
WATCHES
Alaska as the Sbootout starts its
Free Christmas Layaway
return to the major tournaments.
Middleport Dept. Store
Top-ranked Arkansas has five
starters back from the team that
"On the 'T' in Middle rt" ·
beat Duke 76-72 in

., -I

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS : Siaoed

Andy McCollum, oiTeuive pard.

PIOLADELPHIA EAOUlS: Siaoed

Jere Wiltiu, placek.icter, to • one.-year

Teuo

COIItnct.

..

BOBBYRUPE

Jt!nrinlm.

I

W.re
specialist~ in

.

- ·· ·.

--

_;.&lt;Coot_~~n....
~m-from
....._..l'aa.;;.,e.;.;;;4~..,.-._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Last year: 19-11, 12-6 MAC
(tied for second)
·
In a nutshell: Miami is a veter· ·
an team with no obvious weakness.
Devin Davis, Jamie Mahaffey and
Kevin Beard are solid on defense
and offense inside, while Derrick
Cross and Landon Hackim can fiU
it up outside. But still problems
with Trent (see above) who averaged 28 points and 13 rebounds in
two games against Miami last year.
Coach Herb Sendek: "Even
110 w, with six new players in the
program, we are in many ways sliD
in transition."
Eastern Michigan
Last year: 15-12, 10-8 MAC
(tied for fifth) ·
In a nutshell: Although picked
' tO finish fourth rest of MAC
coaches are wary of tbe Eagles.
Kareem Carpenter is a force inside
and lots of solid players, including
freshmen and transfers, around
him.
Coach Ben Braun: "The thing
1 like about freshmen is they all
come in thinking they can play.
And we're going to give them an
opportunity."
Ball State
Last year: 16-12 11 ,7 MAC
(founh)
'
'
In a nutshell: Steve Payne
might be se_cond best player in

Bobby Rupe of Rutland is one
of the top finishers in eight different .age divisions to advance to the
team championship round of tbe
Gatorade NFL Punt, Pass and Kick
following sectional competition at
Athens High School's Rutter Field.
The eight will join otber sectiona! winners during halftime of a
game between the Cincinnati Ben•

·
get-to-net-as-soon-as-you-ca!l
"I said, 'I'm sorry I woo/ but ;,
game that ~as mado ,her 11M: lli!ml· . sbe said, 'If you play like that, you •
nant force m women s. tenn1~ suace can beat everybody. That's the way'
sbe won ber firsl of JUDC . W~mble- 10 play,, Sabatini said
d u·tl · 1978 Sabab'ru,' though
·
·
on es m
·
•
"But it was really bard. On ooe
bad the perfect an~fer for cv~ side I didn't want to be the one to
probeblem that N~vrab ova presen
beal her. And on the other side, I
r.
.
.
was thinking, well, this is a great
After. Sabatim bad nailed ~e honor for me to get to play Martina
last pa:mgb~tbe two met at e in her last tournament"
net an em
·

MAC. But Cardinals need to fill
gaps around him to move up.
Coach Ray McCallum:
"We've got a very young team..
We've got nine new guys with ~im ·
and Randy Zachary.... But I think
we'll be very, very competitive."
Toledo
. Last year: 15-12, 10-8 MAC
(Ued for fifth)
In an nutsheU: Rockets making
move from perimeter-oriented, 3·
poi~t-launcbing ,ream to a blend of
1.ns1de and outside pla~e~ . Crrug
Thames and Scoop W1lhams are
cornerstones.
Coach Larry Gipson: "If we
lived and. died by the 3-poinler,
then we died 100 much. It affected
our rebounding and our.!ack of size
also hun us on defense.
Western Michigan
. Last year: 14-14, 1-11 MAC
(elgbth)
In a nutshell: Broncos are huge
with 6-10 Ben Handlogten, his 6-7
brother M1ke and 7:1 Mat.t Van
Abbema ms1~e. S~dd1 Washmgton
was a s~rpnse w1tb 14 ppg as a
frosb. SuU need more punch from
outside to break up jam inside.
Coacb Bob Done wall!: ''This
is going to be an interesting race.
MA~ baskelball is on ~e rise ~~
conunues to expand and unprove.
Kent

Last year: 13-14, 8-10 MAC
(seventh)
' In a nutshell: Two years ago
Flashes bad nine freshmen on ros:
ter. Maybe that trial by fire wiD pay
dividends Ibis year. Four starters
are back, led by Nate Reinking
(13.1 ppg) and 6-11 Brook Bright.
.G.ruhe: "We've got more alblet1C1sm and more size .... We've
got~ climb to the upper half of the
standmgs and go from there."
Central Mlcblggn
Last year: 5-21, 4-14 MAC
(ninth)
In a nutshell: Former Central
superstar Leonard Drake needs
more players such as, well,
LeonarU Drake. Nobody back who
averaged more tban five points a
game from last year's team.
Drake: "Believe it or not, I'm
kind of excited about our learn.
We've got a whole new squad."
Akron
.
Last year: 8-18, 2-16 MAC
(10th)
In a nutshell: Coach Coleman
Crawford said his team must do it
with defense. With no one back
who averaged 9 points a game last
year, that goes without saying.
Crawrord: "We've got to
develop some depth during the preconference season; that's the key
for.us."

infdrmation please call

. (61 4) 593-2398

Natt011al DockeJLIIIUt

By GUY COATES
· ' footbaU coacli in 15 years. At scme
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) time, stability must come," Dean
Curley Hallman gave Louisiana said, adding that be believed HallState University everything it want- man could have turned it around
ed in a football coach except victo- with one more year.
ries. ·
The fans would not allow that to
Chancellot Bud Davis and atb- happen, Davis said.
letic director Joe.Dean wanted des''You've bad some unhappy ·
perately to give him another chance campers out lbere," the cbancellar
next year, but fan pressure and dol- said. "The team does not enjoy at
tar pressure from empty seats in the Ibis parlicular time the full
80,00Q-seat Tiger Stadium were endorsement of the community of
too much afterfour losing seasons.
Baton Rouge or the State. of
So Hallman was fired Tuesday, Louisiana. I think you've got to
effective at the end of lbe 1994 sea- have thai suppon as well as the
son.
e~pectation of winning."
Hallman, 47, aclcnowledged that
Hallman bas two national chamthe won-loss column was the. bot- pionsbips on his resume from bis
tom line in coaching. "I understand work as an assistant coach at
my profession," said Hallman. 14- Alabama in 1973 aild Clemson in
28 with two games remaining in his
1980.
fourth season at LSU.
r-:::-:":':'=:-~-:---.;_---r
Dean and Davis said they could
.. .
nOl put a timetable on the search
·
·
for a new coach at LSU, which bas
been in the final Top 10 more than
20 times, including a national
championship and five Southeastem C':On~es.
111 Second St.,~
But il's a university tbat now
YOUIIIDEPEIDEIT
bas a 2-7 season with games left
IIEIJS SEIVIII
against Tulane and Arkansas. In the
end, LSU will have an unprece•111 COlin
~:;.ed si~lh straight losing seaSliCE

WIIIG CHILDS
•ulUI •usSEI
IISUUICE

1161

."We wiU be hi!ing the seventh

...•
..,••
-

• Whipped Potatoes &amp;
Gravy
• Sweet Potatoes
• Com O'brien
• Buttered Baby Carrots
• Seasoned Green Beans
• Salad Bar and Assorted
Desserts

and Jack Ramey, D.O. For more

Hockey

Bobby's scores were 78-punt,
106.9-pass, and 121.3-kick for a
total of 306. His score was the
highest in the sectional even~ topping IS-year-old Ryan Perdue of
The Plains, who finished with a
total score of269.3.
•
Bobby is the son of Bobby Rupe
of Rutland and Barbara Rupe of
Racine.

LSU fires HaUriiari before sixth
straight losing season ends

obstetri.cs and gynecology.

Glinter, D.O. (seated), Catherine Coats, D.O.,
12,16, or 20 .gauge

gals and the Indianapolis Colts at
Riverfront Stadium on November
20th.
Bobby was the ftrst place winner in the 14~year-old age group in
the local Gatorade NFL Punt, P&lt;tSs.
and Kick competition held in
September. The local event Is hosted by the Meigs County Parle District

FAREWELL TO MARTINA- Martina Navratllon (left) and
Gabriel• S1batlnl bug at tile net after Sabatini's 64, .6-Z win In tile
ftrst round of the VIrginia SU1111 Championships In New York. Tile
contest ma,rked tlae end of tile nine-lime Wimbledon cllamplon'• 21·
year career. (AP)
·
·:.

pleased to announce our

Left to right are Jack Chan,'D.O., Kenneth

$1.99

.

Rupe headed to PP&amp;K team championship

SPORTSMAN
SPECIALS

O'DELLS
Deer Slugs

PATRIOTS :

s

B 1 bf ·
th
· .
and :fleda a~~ g~t b ere m ume
down J'ustai:id~~~ tarthabt asetouchll'nede
N
til
lb
.
·
d avrakb ~vadwo~ b ehpomt, but the
ar • aue ru I· anti-. frnm
Argentina bad sent a mes$age'tbat
woUld be repeated over and over
througbouttheir81-minutematcb.
Sabatini, wbo hasn't won a tour·
nament in 2 112 years, played perhaps the finest match of ber career
and definitely tbe best since she
captured the U.S. Open in 1990.
"I played extremely well,"
Sabatini said. '"'Every single point I
was very focused and I knew what
1 was doing. I knew what I bad to
do and 1 attacked very.well
',.I played very aggressive and 1
played deep. You know,l can't ask
for more. 1mean. thai was great"
Navratilova played the same

FINISHES SEASON- Tbe Melp elgbtla-ande footbaD team fta. , . Ciaitt Van Meter, Fnftko Romano, David ltopldnl, Stephen Tborn·
llbed lbe nguiar Ieason with a 7·1 record UDder the dlnctlon rl bead ~n, J.R. Rife, Clayton Oblinger and Joe Weaver. Pktured In lbe
coac:b Don Dillon and aslstant C«NKb Jeff Baker.Io front are (L·R) • Wrd row are Baker, Bobby Rupe, Jeremiah Bentley, John Davldlon,
Adam Mood!Jpaugb, Robert Smltll, Jeule WllllaDII, Ec!son Hart, Wayloa McKinney, Juon Young, Charlie RJtter, J.T. Humphreys
Ryan Dill and Ben Molden. In tile second row are Ryan Jtamsbll!it .and Db:oa.

BOOM! -Charlotte postman Alonzo Mourning (33) jams for two
of bls game-blgb 23 points In front of Cleveland's John (Hot Rod)
Williams (front) and Chris Mills In the fourth quarter of Tuesday .
night's NBA contest In Cleveland, where the CavaUers won 89-86 in '
overtime. (AP)
·

Claimed Elbert Ellla, wide receiver, oCt
lhe Pitub\l'lh Steelen' ancti~ aquld.

ENGLAND

was bitting them deep. I tried all
kinds of things and she just played
better. If sbe plays like that, she
can go a long way in Ibis touma·
meitt"
In other first-round singles
matches, top-seeded Steffi Graf
defeated Brenda Schultz of the
Netherlands 1-5, 6-3 and No. 4
lana Novotna eliminated Iva
Majoli of Croatia 6-2, 3-6, 6-1.
Top-seeded Gigi Fernandez and
Natalia Zvereva moved into tbe
doubles semifinals by defeating
veterans Pam S·briver and Austialian Elizabeth Smylie 6-0, 6-4.
The opening point of toe
Navratilova-Sabalini match told the
story of the entire night. Navratilova got a short ball, drove a blckband.slice deep into the comer and
followed her sbot into the net.

"•

"SLUGGERS"

NEW

w1tb another great•player, Billie
Jean King•. and NaVr&amp;tilova spread
her arm~ WI~ and joined in singing
along w1th Tma Turner's recording
of "Simply Tbe Best." The crowd
roared·
Us appro~.
.
. It was Maruna Navratil ova
N!gbt. at th~ Garden. Sbe earned it,
~mnmg. e1gbt of .her record 167
Sl~gles biles on tb1s carpet. But in
tbu, the 1,650tb match of her
career, she suffered her 212th
defeat against 1.438 victories.
"I was hoping to stay in the
tournament a lillie longer, but 1
played Gaby, who play great, great
tennis," Navratilova said. "I have
n~thing to bang my head abOut. I
~1dn't play~ v.;eu as I would have
liked, but! didn l play badly either.
"Sbe just ran me over with a lot
of topspm on her shots, and she

NEW YORK ISLANDERS : AD·
aounced lhe maaaaemeat committee hu
purchued 10 pel'cenl or the team from
owaer Joha 0 . Pickett aad aareed to ID
ealeuioa of opcrataa coatrol.

2~Long

99 c E'xpress 9 99

Rifle
Rim_fire SO
Cartridge

Toumomenll
Pr•IIOII NIT
Tol» Tec:l&gt; ~S. Tolodo63 •

. Esblbltlon

AlhlCIMIDAcdoa60,01BOSI

BARBEQUE

Transactions

SJ69

Booeball
Aon•n-~.o.,..

OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Named

.
TEXAS RANOERS: Named Mite

Steel

•

Small
game
roads

4.49
6 &amp; 7Y.,shot
12 or 20 ga.

O'DELL LUMBER CO .
Vine St. &amp; Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH .

446-1276

Ted POIUowlti ~or ol Arizona b•oblll -"'"'"' ood DIYid Solow dirocl«
oiArizoDa bull- &lt;&gt;~~«~~~••·

634 E. Main St.
..,

I .orations

992-5500

I

Mon-Fri 7-6:30; Sat. 8-5 Sun 10-4

Paul advtDce Jcout: Perry Hl~l miiiOI·
leap iafield iDiwctor; Jim LeDliae Di·
DOf· ltllue b"ttiaa iDitNctor, ud Bunp
Willa nlnor·leque bue tunDioa imtrut·

Mon-Fii 7-5:30; .Sat.

GAWPOUS, OHIO
I

8-s

•
•

We Sell Hunting License, Deer Tags &amp; Wetland Stampk

Ill&lt;.

\.

.

'

National Foolball Le..ue

tore, hilliDJ coach, of ShrCVffort of the

~ Cwlol Laeaoo. DIIOIItr.
Todd Oaktl, ~itcbhll coach: ud Jim
Davtaport. biltiDI CiiOKh, ol Saa Jo.e of
tho Caliromia Lcquc; Mlkollart ,....,.
er; Keith ComstOCk pilchiDJ COICII; lad
Mickey Brantley hittiDJ COICh, or
Burliuatoa or the Midweat Leaaue: IDd
Oleaa Tufll, ~~~':. Eli~ .s~ pitch-

Square Garden. Her mother and

MIAMI DOLPHINS: WaiYtd Mark.
Hi.,., tuDDIDJ blct.

Shlwnce 51. 94, Wilberforce 64

115. Dallal IOl

LA. J.- 102, L~ . CIIPI*I 92

N•llo...l B.t.ketball A.oei•tlon

NEW IERSEY NETS: ActiYiled Eric:
Floyd, pard, (rom the Injured lilt. Placed
YiW Owe, center, 011. the IQju.rcd IL1L

Treat Jewett manaaer of ClroliDI on the

~~~~jrt:~!i~fr~~r 0~a~;d~~~

rutbna coadl.

·BasketbaU

Non..:oaference 1ct1on

. TuMday'allccira

~ . 116.-~l

tOller.

L.Opcz,

or Bellilll)wn or the Northwat Lcaaue.

Ohio women's
college scores

.I
I
1.5
1.5
2.5
5

~~-IU
Ill, Ourloao 16 (01')
Do11v11 SIP, l'lllladeljllllo PI
~ 112. s.. Aaloaio 99
-ll.lad-11
-IOS,Soonme,..99
I
I

COLORADO ROCKIES: Added Juan

Acevedo, Garvin Alston. Roaer Bailey.
John Burke, Uoyd Peever and Muk Voi•·
ard, pitchen: Juoo Bates, Crait Coun$ell,
and Tom Schm.ic*, infielders; lQd QWntoo
McCrakcn, outrieldcr, to thcir'40·mao

Wri&amp;(11 St. 60, DC Zapcb, Croatia S9

~ -112. Seallle 1011
~ 122. WlllhiiiiOD 102

-

iaa (;Qidi; ud Juau

Nallon.. Leque

1

r

'

Navratilov~ retires _following sa·batini's first-round win

Wednesday, Nqvember 16, 1994

In theNBA,

By The Associated Press
Finally, the Minnesota Timberwolves and Miami Heat got enough
oflosing,
Their first wins of the season
left the Los Angeles Clippers as the
NBA's only team with a zero in lbe
win column.
Tbe Timberwolves bad tbe
touallest task, going up against the
unbeaten Golden State Warriors.
Despite the Warriors' furious rally,
the Wolves held on for a 114-112
win Tuesday night
"A lot of teams are going to
overlook us," said Isaiab Rider,
wbo scored a career-high 35 points.
And no wonder. Minnesota's
last victory was last April 6, and
Saturday's loss to Boston - the
Wolves' 16tb straight- tied a
franchise record.
All of Minnesota's six previous
losses bad been by 12 points or
more.
Tbe Tunberwolves used a 20-4
run at the start of the founh quarter
to open a 17 -point lead, then
watcbed in amazement as 7-foot-7
· Manute Bol bit three three-pointers
as the Warriors pulled within a
point in the closing seconds.
~n· other NBA games, it was
New Jersey 112, Seattle 106;
Orlando 122, Washington 102;
Miami 115, Dallas 102; Atlanta
110, Boston 94; Cleveland 89,
Charlotte 86 in overtime; Detroit
99, Philadelphia 98; Denver 112,
San Antonio 99; Milwaukee 82,
Indiana 81; Houston 105, Sacramento 99; Phoenix 96, Portland 93;
and L.A. Lakers 102, L.A. Clippers
92.

2

'fednesday, Noveinb~e~r1~6:;,;199~4i::=:i':::=:~~~------.!P:!o:!!m~e!!ro y-~M!!;id~d~le:fPO~rt~,O~h~io2.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.!Th!!e~Dai~l:!y.!Se~n~tl~ne~I~P~•!D•!;·:-e,.l

'.

\

f

,.

I

,.

I

I

I

...•'
.•·

�"

~The

Daily Sentinel

4

.•

"'
Page

•

•'

~·

•
-·..
v .•

Wednesday, November 16, 1994:
"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

-~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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

!BULK CANDY By the CASE... .
!
!Wholesale Prices! Competitive Costs ! •

-EASTMAN'S

Vaughan's Deli will prepare
your Thanksgiving Dinner.
Vaughan's does not ship in
your Thanksgiving Dinner.
Our dinners are
Homemade with a
Family Touch.

1

Good for Churches, Businesses, and Individuals. Please allow s days before pick up.
QUANTITY CODE f
KEY II
500
551
552
503
504

:s WEIGH I

!53
510
511
515
. 518
521
522
523
53i
540
514

10
21J
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
10
30
30
20
20
20
15
15
20

"1

IS

sse
554

508

FOOD LAND
Buy a 2piece
Mirro
Roasting Pan
and Get a
10·12 Lb.
·Golden Delight

555
520

21
701
705
700
7011
710
718
717
743

seauest

21 00
1350
4350
4580
13.50
43 50
43 50
41 00
43.50
38 00
25 50
66 00
59 00
48 60
48 80
•5 60
38 50
3100
4350
4000
95 20
40 25

IIUT GOODIES
MILK CHOC PEANUTS
MILK CHOC RAISINS
MILK CltOC. PEANUT CLUSTER!
MILK CHOC . CARAMEL PNUT CL
MilK CltOC STARS
MILK CHOC. MALTED MilK BALL
CHOCOLATE BRIDGE MIX
CHOCOLATE DROPS
JOTS iM&amp;M.S)
CHRISTMAS MELLOWCREMES

4925
6850
118 50
5990
4925
7050

32
28
23
]]

25
32
JO
33

COST

30
30
30
30

DARK CltOC CREME DROP
MILII CfiOC CREME DROP
FUDGE DROP
All FANCY HARD MIX

35 00
3500
3500
27 00

25
30
30
30
25
30
30
30
25

•SAtlfA liARD MIX
ORANGE SLICES
JUMBO JElLIES A&amp;ST GUW
SPICE JELLIES
COCONUT BON BON
COCONU I BROWNIES
SOUTHERN CREME DROP!
DANDY MIX (CREMEIJELLU
FILLED HARD MIX

r5
21 00
21 00
21 00
33 00
3900
2H5
21 sa

·--

BRADLEY
180
610
820
680
800
810
900
600
350
SPANGLER CANOY
412
CilA~NOY
101
104
105
107
400
402
404
301
302
CROWN CANDY

---

-------

--

--

N240

rm5
N212
N223

·- -

saoo
6850
5400
57 00
3500

1~227

-·-·-

rmo

24 t'O

OPERA CREMES

15 00

27
25
25
25
30
30 .
30
32
32

BONBONS
VANILLA HAYSTACKS
CHOCOLATE HAYSTACKS
HAWAIIAN HAYSTACKS
PEANUT BRITTlE
PECOFLAKE
PEANUT SQUARE
VANILLA FUDGE
CHOCOLATE FUDGE

40 30
33 25
33 25
33 25
+2 00
4485
4485
4i 50
49 50

20
24
20
22
22

COCONUT,BON SONS
PEANUT BRiffiE
PECO FLAKE
CARAMEL HAYSTACKS
CHOCOLATE HAYSTACKS·
CARWCHOC HAVSTACKS
ASS I COLORS HAYSTACK:
COCONUT MACAROONS
PEANUT SQUARES
PECAN DIVINITY

2500
36 00
31 50
25 00
2500

22
22

N231
N224
N332
N512

23

40

20
24
20

Available at any Eastman's Foodland 5 days after ordering.
Name of Organization:
Address:
Phone:
.
_r
Signature: .

Vaughan's Cardinal
Supermarket's
In Middleport and
Mason
Will be closed on
THANKSGIVING
·· DAY

zsoo ·

2500
3550
44 50

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

28 75

.

L-------------------------~~----------------------------~
·

l:::· QT.$)19

Deta1ls

'

....

···l~

' '

~\ 'k't . t,;)•o .

3 cans $1

.•

r "

·~

• ·,,

.. t

i,:.i -

,

··

~,. ..

-

Roll

Heiners
Dinner Rolls

'"'··:

ti

t

tv

'!"•'

'f't\' ' '

•

&lt;1

~{

~

.,

,;~&gt; .., . ,

'

'rj"' "'
Nt,
'

t\

r

•

~·

'\

I

" .,.

·l

'

'f

::\
'

''~

,

~

; \;' I

J

'

~.

,

'·

~·~••\

#'"'~·

,.['ll)

I

'j

'"' ,of

'

_.

c
lb.

Tavern Ham

1Bib.and

Asst. Flavors
Pepsi Cola
Products

.Green Beans • Corn • p
DIM .
eas

Lb

•

e . onte Vegetables

F

·Baked
Pumpkin

11·170z.

P1e .

Cans

2 for$

1 doz. Rolls
1 10" Pumpkin Pie

Vaughan-'s _C ardinal, A fa,m ily
Supermarket feels that
_, family is important and
Thanksgiving is a time our
employees need to be home
with their families.
Have a Happy and ·Safe
Thanksgiving. ·

~

';,.•

..._

TURKEY DINNERS

I

c ·-~~u·~ ~~li(J~y~J&gt;Jrtner

·

I

We will be closing Wednesday November 23rd 10-12 lb. Turkey
2 lb. Homemade Sweet Potatoes
at Midnight and we will be Reopening
21b. Homemade Dressing
Friday November 25th-at 6:00am.
1 lb. Cole Slaw

.: ~ :~ ,t.~;" CpJJ~~Fl_~~DRESSI~G '•1 LB.........
.
GRAVY .
:i:2t~~~:1;;; 'd.;•'2J~~~f,I~EN BEA~S 0~ 2 LB. OF )'AMS .
. ,.
1l.;1;!~t''j2.iOVEN :~.-"''DINNER ROLLS • CR~NBER~ · RELI$H

1 Lb.
1

'~.,ri''i)·;-.1

"

··;;;~~1·~.,~·~ ~~Lif,~ ~~
. ~l~s~~~ ~··. ·. ·
~·m .r~t!w·

Grade A'
Frozen Butterball
Turkeys

~

Serves
6-8 people
So we may better
serve you 48 hour
notice please, At your · · ·
participating
.
.f'·\ F odiand Deli. · ':~··•; •' ·

FARMS®

·Showboat
Pork &amp;Beans

99

: s WEIGHT DESCRIPTION

OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY SeeF~;ore

Egg Nog

1

30
32

32

TURKEY

FROSTED PRETZELS
VANILLA CR PNUT CLUSTER
MAPLE CREAM PNUT CLUSTER
CHOCOLATE MINT CREAMS
CHOC CARAMEL NUT PATTIES
CHOC IIIIIJ( CARAMELS
CARAMEL CRISPIE CLUSTERS
LADYFINGERS
CARAMEL PNUT CLUSTERS
BUTTERSCOTCH LOG
CHOCOLATE COVERED PRETZI
MILK CHOC BREAKUP (SLABS I
WHITE BREAKUP (SLABSl
VANILLA CREAMS
MAPLE CREAMS
CHOCOLATE CREAMS
CHOCOLATE PRETZEL PETITES
FROSTED PRETZEL PETITES
FUDGE PEANUT CLUSTERS
MARSHMALLOW CLUSTERS
ALMOI~D COCONUT CLUSTERS
MILK CHOCOLATE DROPS

QUANTITY CODE I
MELSTER CANDIES
0051
MOSI
61
700

ae&amp;::H:S

FREE
Sealtest

20

20

CIISE
COST

DESCiliPTION

s·

$2995
Only
.
6-71b. Ham
2 lb~ Homemade Sweet Potatoes
2 lb. Green Beans
1 lb. Cole Slaw "
1 doz. Rolls
.1 10" Pumpkin Pie
Only

Dr. Pepper and Seven Up
Products
88
12 oz. cans $

Gold.Medal Flour
Umit One Free 5# Plain Qr Self·Aising Only

~- ¢1!1, ~ BUY ONE GET ONE
1 urn~ 1 free with

FREE

2

I
I

1

l
l

[I

Thll COUPOn OOOd · only on PYICPIIU ol

1 19
•

1

1

L-~~~~~------------~
1111114-11.11
,:0001 ANOVI\LUABLE COUF'ON

Baker's
1B·P56·11-055
Chocolate Chips ccaM24 I
limn one 1L5·12 oz. Real or MMk Chocolate O~ly II
l.il: '":
"~$

L

I H 'IVE 11 11 I 1 19 G1

rtlrnbllfH you lor llle !~ ¥tkrl of ltlit

-------------------~
!:ftrA~Il3

15-PSS-1·072

.

202 502 01

To Grocer: Comlloc•

Get FooiUand Frozen
Topping 8 'oz. Tub ......,.,._

L-----

lb.

MRV0072 A4·141

I

Rl!ailaf: Milt to Kreft, Inc.
,. CNS Oept. 1219QG, 1

IAihlnr•a~

,,

plul eu" ' "' tlandllflt lt1. Ill

&amp;LbnlltdloCCIIIlpiYnclo,.,._GfC

Buy 2 Thank You Pie Filling 4·P56-1HOO ·
MRV100
·
20·21 ot. Oherry,l.lle Cherry.
.
.
Of" Apple

IKOiklcf ll'ldiCIIad. My Oltlef uu conataut••l
lfll.ld. Coupon n01 tll,.ltrtlblt. limit I
~I*IU'IIIM. lo - r•.ur GFPWIIII
eoupon

FtwCen Dr.• Del Rio, TX
78440 Caeh Val~ 1/1~ .

FREE

Limit 1 with this coupon

BIG BEND

Throw
. Rugs

.SUPERMARKETS .

'

'

"

'

,

\

•./

~.

~'

r

~

I

$29

95

Call Today 992·3471 Last Day to order Nov. 22
'Pickup No Later Than Wed. Nov. 23· 10:00 p.m.
$5.00 charge extra to go out hot.

2 Liter
;-..... ~~
1~ ~\

.

.HAM DINNER

c
24 Packs $5.99

The Daily Sentinei-Page.:...7

•

..•

.
~

I
I
I

'

---

·o~

•

••

�Wednesday, November 16.1994

Page ~the Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Novembei'·16,.1994

bar, and my weight pops up onlhc

I

.. 18CH, U.AngMI
'Tirnn Syndicate Mel

er..tor. Syndicalt"

Dear ADD LaDdera: My fieezer
is full of chocolate cake, brownies,
chocolate ice cream, vanilla ice
cream (there's chocolate sauce in lhe
cupboard), several kinds of
chocolate ice cream bars, chocolate
pie and lots of chocolate candies.
I stand in front of my freez;er and
wanuo cry. You11 understand when
I teD you I keep my weight under
12S pounds. I do it by starvation.
One bite-sized chocolate ice cream

acuvc. Because rm big-boned, I
don'tlook charming when I put on
weighL But I'm also 83 years old.
Should I spend my remaining years
resisting chocolate? Or should I just
go on and be fat and sloppy?
This is a very real problem 10 me.
P1eue help me straighten it ouL -·
CHOCOLATE ADDICT IN EL
PASO
.
DEAR EL PASO: You asked lhc
wrong person. I, too, am addicled
to chocolate. See a nutritionist, and
get your diet squared away so you
can keep chocolate in your life
without starving.

Dear Readeru The ideal
holiday gift Is Liz Cmpenter's new
book, "Unplanned Parenlhood." It's
• real upper and only $20
(in Canada: $27 .9S). Publisher:
Random House.
Dear ADn LaDders: For a lonR
lime, rve suspected my husband has
been cheating on me. Now, I have
phone numbers; leuers and
photographs of him with women,
and the evidence is conclusive.
When I confronled "Sheldon," he
insisled these women are just friends.
"Donna" traveled with him on a
"business trip" to lhe Caribbean. I
know a lot about his business, and
he has no customers in that part of
lhe world.
My husband says Donna doesn't

mean a lhing to him and that he
hasn't slept with her or with
"Myrna," either. He took Myrna,
whoisrecenllydivorced,IOCannel,
Calif., for a week of golf. As luck
would have it, he shot a hole in one
and got his picture in the
paper. Myrna was standing next to
him.
We've been togelher 10 years and
have lhree young children. I don't
want 10 raise my kids alone, but I
don't trust lheir falher. He says my
imagination is working overtime. I
did not "imagine" those letters and
lhe newSPaper photo. Sheldon says
a marriage wilhout trust is sure 10
fail. Advise soonest. •• D.C.
DEAR D.C.: If Sheldon wants you
)l.l trust him, he'd better clean up his

act and earn lhat trusL
You need an unbiased third party
to establish some firm guidelines.
The two of you should SCI. some
marriage counseling so Sheldon wiD
have a clear. understanding of what
is acceptable behavior ind what iii
not. Obviously,lhe man doesn't have
a clue, and I might add, he has been
gelling away wilh murder.
Dear ADD LaDdera: My father is
84. His eyesight is poor, and he Is
quite deaf. He insisted on driving
me 10 lhe post office last week, IUid
I nearly had a heart attack. He
jumped a curb and almost hit a
pedestrian. ·
• .
The ne~l day, I phoned lhe chief
of police and asked him 10 have my
falher followed and tate away his

Study finds that lowering
cholesterol is hardest for fattest

'

'

By DA.NIEL Q. HA.NEY
AP Science Writer
DALLAS (AP)- Yes, nature
can be unfair. A study sbows that
lowering cholesterol is hardest for
overweight people, who need it the
mosL
Obesity bas long been linked
with bigb cholesterol, and-.4.octors
often exbon overweight people to
reduce their cholesterol levels by
eating less fat. Typical dietary
guidelines recommend lhat people
limit fat to less than 30 percent of
lheir daily calories.
Tbe study shows lhat the suc·
cess of a low-fat diet depj:nds a lot
: on people's size and shape. Skinny
people's cholesterol levels drop
sharply on a sensible diet, but overweight people' s levels hardly
budge at all.
.
Researchers aren't sure why.
''There is something about obe·
sity lhat makes people less responsive 10 diet," said Dr. Judy S. Hannab. "This is a major public beallh
concern as we become a more
obese nation."
The study was presented Tuesday at a meeting of lhe American

Heart Association.
Hannah and colleagues from
Medlantic Research Institute in
Washington, D.C., put 29 men and
33 women on cbolesterol-lowering
diets.
At the stan, the volunteers were
getting 37 percent of lheir calories
from fat, including 15 .percent from
saturated fat - a typical American
diet Their cholesterol levels averaged 237, which is moderately
high.
The ·subjects were placed on
four different diets that limited
total fat to 30 percent of calories.
The diets included varying proportions of saturated fat. which raises
cbole!sterol levels, and polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fat,
which lowers cholesterol.
Overall, the diets worked.
Cholesterol levels fell an average
of 11 points. But when researchers
divided lhe people into four equal
groups, IIley saw large differences.
Cholesterol levels in lhe ·skinniest quarter of the volunteers
dropped 19 points. In the fattest
quarter, IIley fell just a point. Those
in lhe middle two quarters reduced

their cholesterol an average of
about 14 points.
" Overweight people are much
less likely to respond to a lowcholesterol diet," Hannah said.
"They may need additional efforts,
such as weight loss.''
Whether fat people truly would
lower their cholesterol beller if
they lost weight remains 10 be seen,
but olher experts agree Ibis is likely
to be true.
.
"I suspect that if lhese people
could get their weight down, they
would respond to diet," said Dr.
Dawn C. Schwenke of Bowman
Gray School of Medicine in Win·
ston·Salem, N.C.
More than just fatness is probably involved, however. The study
also suggests lhat body shape also
may have something to do with
cholesterollevels. .
The study found that some
women with big behinds and relalively thin waists were able to
lower lheir cholesterol, while none
of lhe women with large stomachs
lowered their levels.
Sex and race bad no bearing on
people's ability to reduce their
cholesterol levels, the study found.

driver's license if he thought Dad
was a menace. Three days later, my
father lost his license. He is very
depressed, and rm fdlc.d with guilL
Please commcnL- NO NAMB, NO
CITY
·
DE'AR N.N.N.C.: Yoo.wpeao.,.jlfolhrrmmed
a public service and maY have saved
yOII' falha'alife. 11links on behalf
of alllhc people he didn't hiL
Js thai AM Lollders colWM ~~~
clipped JtOTS ago yellow with age?
For 11 copy of her most frequently
requested poems and essays. send a
ulf-addreued, lo11g, business-size
ellvt:lope and a check or money ortkrfor $4.85 (this i11cluks pos/IJgi!
and handling) 10: Gems, c/o AM
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
111. 6061 NJ562. (/11 CIUUlda, utld
7
$51l .)

"'·

' The following land transfers
: were filed recenty in the office of
: Meigs C~unty Recorder Emmo·
. gene Hamilton:
: Deed, Edward and June Sycks
·to Max and B:ubara Grueser, Bed: ford;
; Deed, James H. Woodyard to
·Albert and Macie DeWeese, Letart,
: 3.164 acres;
r Right of way, Clara Mae
· ' Swindell, Gloria A. and Robert
Mcintosh, Philip H. and Crystal
Swindell, Rebecca L. and Garry E.
Htlnier and Alan B. Swindell to
; ·tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis, trict, Bedford;
: Right of way, Ralpb B. and
: Regena Koffelto TPCWD, Olive,
, 27.67 acres;
l Right of way, George, B. and
• M~el D. ,Anderson to TPCWD,
: suuon;
: Right of way, Bobby J. Jr. and
' Belinda Adams 10 TPCWD, Su110n,
: 4.3469 aaes;
: Right of way, Randy A. and
• Elizabeth Jean Wilson to TPCWD,
: Cbester;
• Right of way, Steven D. and
' Carrie Morris to Bucteye Rural
: Electric Cooperative, Rutland,
: 1.117 ~;

l "

Stores Close Normal lime Wed., Nov. 23rd.

OPEN THANKSCIVINC D~
8:00AM· 4:00PM

...

All Stores Re.Open Friday, November 25
~

,.

'

U.S. GRADE A, 10-LBS. AND UP
KROGER

" '

:• .

, c

'

•

"'

Fresh
Oysters are
back at
Kroger for
Stuffing!

U.S. GRADE A
WAMPLER/LONGACRE (1D-24-LB.)
· REUNION-The popular cloalag group, tbe
Sbdy River Sbumers, wiD bo1il a reunion In
performing at the Meigs County Talent Show·
case of 1!1941n the Meigs Junior Hlgb Scboolln
Middleport on Nov. ZS and 26. Tbe group
under tbe dlrecllon of Paulette Harrison
Includes: front, Ito r, Lara McCleary, Charla
Burge, Ashley Hannahs. Andrea Krawsnyn;

U.S. GRADE A(4·7-LB.)

rufTcey
·Breast·

Frozen
Turkeys

secood row, Ito r, Kay Hemsle)', Rhonda Hannabs, Erin Krawsczyn, Jodie Sisson, Whitney
Haptonstall, Meggle McCleary, Jenny Cum·
mlns, Tassi Cummins; back row0 lto r, Linda
Young, Joanle Anderson, Debbie Evans, Jane
Banks, Melissa Harrison, Sarah Anderson, Julie
Zirkle, Lauren Anderson, Danlelle Crow, Jamie
Blaettnar, Jodi Glass and Director Harrison.
.

*·· .,

STRAIGHT OR
ELBOWS
GALVANIZED

QUARTERHORSE

STOVE
CEMENT
STOVE
BOARDS
·FURNACE
FILTERS

. thursday· Friday· Saturday Nov~ 17.;19
8:30 pm • 1:00 am

. ,. .

. .

. · ·

·

· .w·th
I
.· ·

"'

:t:e&gt;+ ·
~...~

I

: ·

·

.

Pound

£i4iecl

~
Jl C\~

.Lf.ottdo
.
~
\

.7N.

';) &lt;:}

Oh

..,_..,_

new... 231Ui

---

neacA o~ 6,ooo

..

-

.

-~

.. .

.

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

~ - - ~

···

Each

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW,

FROZEN .

Mountain.Top
Pumpkin Pie

Pepsi or Diet
· Pepsi

37-oz.

Kroger
$f79
Shortening . Hb

-

.-.
--..

...-

.--

DOroiiNO 10X 1M RIC ·BIICIWN OR

Light Brown 2/$ fD9

Sugar . . . . . . . ... . Ha
'

'

KIIOCEf

':'lt"i!J.~~~~~~~299
ftGUlM Oil t rGHf'

cool WhiP
Topping

Shelled
Pecan Halves

~ Kroger

.,

/

_............... .....

··· ·· ...... .

'

'•

.

:1

-

~ff~~~~~~~l:Z/$,,
ICifAF r

tc.-aoEtt

Philadelphia
cream Cheese
'""·

semi-Sweet

Baking Chips
I:Hn.

Family Size Turkey Dinner
·..•

81 ft~

Pumpkin ..1!Hll.

KIOCE ~

12-Pack 12-oz. Cans

- gge gge
gge $~99

./ :

1&lt;&gt;1.

"

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

12.Ct.

..

At 992-2155
'

Pound

100 SIZE

VEGETABlE OIIBVTTER RAK&gt;•

&amp;JUI1hj!

1' .

.

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

.

•
.'

....
....'"' .

.-..
-'-

7', '·5583

~

..

l'"

---

Call

MASON, W.VA.

Yams

...,.,.,..

Tangerines or Brown 'N Hanover cut
serve
Rolls·
Greenso-ozBeans
Tangelos
.
Buy one cet one

.--·

5 p.m.

HARDWARE

--...
.,o

FLORIDA 150 SIZE

-,.,.. .

~layingJtll~YlJllr Ji'nTJ'nrit'PVf-~·I~F•••i~DIII"
· · KE~

.

Fresh

...'

·......---...
-

9.ijt 9.uicle

9n,

Limit 1 Per
Customer Please

.,

~

'.~

J

.

,..
,.
,..

·A dvertising Deadline:
Monday, Nov. 21st·

BLACK or BLUE

BAND
-

(

STOVE
PIPE

Now Appearing at The Holiday Inn...

0 •

· Kick Oii The Holiday Season

Right of way, Leonanl D. Wells Cathy Scarberry. to CSP, Salisbury,
to BREC, Salem, 33.33 acres;
20.471 acres;
Right of way, John F. Mitchell
Right of way, Grace Allen and
to BREC, Bedford. 8.06 acres;
Lisa Woods 10 CSP, Lebanon, 4.S
Right of way, Robert D. and aaes;
Anita J. Butcher to BREC, Scipio,
Right of way, Mary J. and
68.07 and 17.55 acres;
Charles R. Lawrence to CSP,
~
Right of way, Millard Burke and Lebanon, 5.33 and 44 acres;
Becky Berger to BREC. Columbia.
Right of way, Charles W. and
92.7 acres;
Linda R. Holter to CSP, Lebanon,
Deed, Philip Bearbs to Linda 42 and 28.05 acres;
Jarrell, Sutton, 1/2 aae;
Ri&amp;,ht of way, Ronald G. and
Right of way, Ronald W. Vance Linda A. Wri~htto CSP, Salem, 39
to Columbus Southern Power, acres;
Olive, 33.65 acres;
Right of way, Larry R. and Lois
Right of way, Arthur H. and J. Dragoo toCSP, l..ebanonl(!l;
Josephine Price to CSP. Olive,
Right of way, Dixie A. and Gar23.75 acres;
net Smith 10 CSP, Lebanon lot;
Right of way, Marvin K. and
Right of way, Kevin D. and
Patricia L. Gardner 10 CSP, Salem, Doneue R. Dugan to CSP, Orange,
36.34 aaes;
2.1699 acres;
Right of way , Laura M. and
Right of way, Paul R. and Bar· ·
Troy D. Gulhrie to CSP, Chester, bara R. Roush to CSP, Orange,
1.2S3 aaes;
58.38 acres;
Right of way. Timothy D. and
Deed, Forrest A. Ward and Elila
Betsy Hawlhome to CSP, Chester, Adams, Orange, 1.201 acres;
1.09 acres;
r,r...,.....,
Right of way, James A. and
Casol Will to CSP, Salisbury, IS
acres;
Right of way, Donald E. Bailey
to CSP, Salisbury, 2.748 acres;
Right of way, Robert M. and

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO

-

on Saturday and noon 10 4 p.m. on classes are 10 be listed on a 3x5 . lllumin~es
creative designs
. In the sen~or horuculture d~vl- branch~, animal or character made
Sunday.
card wbicb the plaCement commit· . ancorporaung lights as one of lhe s:on, lhere are .class~s for Cbnst- . from fnuts ~d/or vegetab.les. . .
In addition to ribbons being tee will provide on lhe ·day of the compo~nts. The rules .specify that !"as cactus, Afncan vc~lets, bloom- . In lhe holiday decorauons: d:vt·
awarded in four places in each show
lhe lighung must be an mtegral pan mg bousel'lants, fohage house- s:on lhere are classes ~or wrealhs,
class lhere will be special awards
·Artistic Arrangements
of lhe design not just adding some- plants, cacu and succulems, benied swags or wall hangmgs, bo.th
for best of show, reserve best of
The classes in the artistic thing. for the sole purpose of branches, broadleaf evergreens, indoo_rs and. outdoors, and g!fl
show and creativity In lhe artistic arrangements division which are includmg li!lh~.
narrowleaf evergreens, and ever- wrappangs to mclude plant matenal
anangement classes, and a sweep: limited 10 Meigs County Garden
Other arttsttc anangement class- green gf!lun~ covers. .
. ,
for chtldren. and adults.
.
states award in the horticulture Club members are "I bear the patter cs open 10 non-Rarden club mem~be JUDI,?r, cla.sses m arusuc
Th~ w•ll also be,an educauondivision with the winner 10 be of little feet." a synergistic design; ~ers ll!e "Tbe re~son for it all," des:g~ are I.t s .ume !.o get ,up~" ~ exh:b:t on bohd~y &lt;:Fafts w~t~
determined through a pointsystem. "Breakfast first ," a Christmas t~cludmg the Christmas. ~adonna. showmg !POII!!n, and .What ~ m mclude p~l malerlal m w~·~
Plants must be grown and breakfast table: "We'll now have e:ther modern or trad:uon; and my ~ock, an mterprehye .des:gn. clubs are bem~ ~ked t~ e)llnbtl.
owned and arrangements must be ·morning prayer," a religious design "Now I can rest" including trea- Hl_ll'llcultun: classes ~or JURtors are
Sheila Cunis IS chainnail for the
.made' by the exhibitor.
without Madonna; "See lhe sunrise sured wood.
&lt;!Jicd _roads:de matenal, everareen
Baubles, gliuer, snow, back· on the snow," using lots of glitter;
_l( 'l .
,
' I
+,.&lt;".
., •/ ~ , -, , ......•, ~·
. ·. . . .
' . • . .. . . . . . . ~·-·
gr~unds, and accessories are per·
"Look, thirty-two deer tracks in the
I
JY ,
~mltled in all classes provided they snow" featuring the usc of artificial
I•
.
·.
. .
·.
. I
add distinction to lhe desi~n. Plant snow;' and "Ooh! Tbe tree!" an
materials used in the artisllc design iUuminary design.

~ Meigs County land transfer:; posted

COPYRIGHT 19M. • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13, Tlt,ROUGH SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1 INPOMEROY.

Gift Certificates. .
for Ho\\da~ Gwmg.

I'"

'1 "

Christmas day morning theme set for Me~·!iCCgs holiday f'ower show .

"On Cbristmes Day in tbe
Morning" will be the theme of the
annual holiday fl?wer show to be
. staged by the Me:gs County Gar·' den Clubs Association at CarleiOn
.:: School, Syracuse, Nov. 26 and 27.
': In addi~bn to artistic. arr~ge·
ments, Cbrisunas plants, illummarles, gift wrappings, and holiday
decoralions, including wrealhs and
swags for ind_oor and o~ldoor use,
as wcU as bobday craft1tems made
of plant materials will be featured
: in the show. With the exception of.
: six classes in ti!e artistic arrange• ments ca~gory, anyone can enter
: lhe sbow m any class.
• The sbow wiD be open for view: ing by the public from I to 5 p.m.

The Daily Sentinei-Pag..:-e

MUI&amp; /iW IIOIJC'I. Exh Of these advertised ijems k requt"ed to be readly avalable for sale In each Kroger
Slllrt, tllCIIIt as IIJI(Iflcally noted In thiS ad. wwe do run out of an advert~ed Item. we wll Offer you VOII'
choke Of ltomplllllit Item, Wilen ava131Jte. refleetlntl the same saVInQs or a ralntheck whlcll wM entitle yru to
iUChiH the ldvlrtlsed Item at the advertised price within 50 days. only one vendor coupon wl be accepted
per~~sed.
.

Woman fceeps weight under control by starving herself
Ann
· ICile lhe next mcning.
question to you is: Is it worlh
Landers .it?My
_I'm a widow and slill socially

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• Turkey Gravy •Green Beans or Sweet Potatoes
•Snowflake Rolls or Dinner Rolls •Cranberry Relish

Heat &amp;Serve ...... $25.9999 1
"
$
Readytofat.......................................................... ilil•

Family Size Ham Dinner
•6-Lb.Russer Smoked Va. Style

•Sweet Potatoes •Green Beans
•Cranberry.Relish •Snowflake Rolls or Dinner rolls

Family Size Spiral Ham Dinnf!r
•6-B·Lb. Spiral Ham : (includes stand eli glaze) •Sweet Pota toes
• Green Beans • Cranberry Relish • Snowflake Rolls or Dinner Rolls

Heat 6 Serve......$35.99

Heat
&amp;Serve ...... $22.•99
Readytofat.........................................................$ •

29 11
£Ret tire t7&lt;hogeh COei?t COo ..f)t! , ..AtiOtflobtP.
g~Of&gt;PP!:.
··'-~----------------~------~~----~~~~~~----~------------~--~~~----._~~~~~~
I

�•

Sentinel

Wltdl)ef&lt;lay, November 16, 1994

Ohio

Teens take part in workshqp .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News stair

THE TRUST CIRCLE - Part of the chatlcngc of leadership Is to Jearn to trust and
depend on others to complete a program or pro·
JecL Here Tim Peavley, a student at Meigs IDgh
School, faDs around the circle depending on oth·

ers In his leadership group to prevent blm from
faDing. Trusting others was a part of the leadership training at the Teen Leadership College
held at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
camp.

.Farm some green to some gold
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I am
soon retin~tbe U.S. Army.
I've bought 20 acres of land in
Central Texas where I want to
grow Christmas trees. Could you
help me in obtaining infonnation
on this project, such as the bestsuited trees, price ranges and any
other infonnation on Christmas ttee
farming? - GREG FELDER,
Copperas Cove, Texas
DEAR GREG: In the course of
investigating your question, we
were amazed to find that Chrisbl\as
tree farming bas become a boom·
ing industry in Texas - green
gold! There is even aTeilas Christmas Tree Growers Association in
Conroe (409-273-2120), whose
members share infonnation, marlceting stralegies, etc.
However, we think 'llle best way

for you to start is to contact the
Forest Science Department, College of Agriculture, Texas A &amp; M
University, College Station, TX
77843 (409-845-5000).
The department has a wide variely of infonnational material on
ChristmaS tree growing as well as
experts "out in the field" who are
available to you wben and if you
need furlher advice or have addi.tiona! questions. Good luck!
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
family vows and declares that
Mertbiolate will heal minor cuts
overnight. We are unable to find
Lhis product in our local pharmacy.
The family would appreciate your
help in finding the product- if it
is still available. If no~ we wonder
why it was removed from Lhe market. - FRAN WIGGINS, Ocala,
Fla.
,
DEAR FRAN : Lately we've

Family
Medicine

for you. Most individuals suffering
wilh Ule illness are comfortable if
Uley just keep lheir hands and feet
warm. This is true even lhougb Ule
. condition does tend to get progressively worse as Ule rears pass.
The most effecuve lleabl\ent is
lhe avoidance of cold wealher. That
is more of a problem for you since
you live here in Ohio, Lhan it is for
readers in the Soulh. For you, lilis
means being the first person in
your neighborhood to get out warm
boots and millens . And I stress
"miuens" because when wearing
them, each finger warms its neighbor. Therefore , they are much
warmer than gloves. It is also
important to avoid the use oftobacco and cough, cold, and sinus
remedies that contain decongestants since all of these can worsen
the circulation problems of this ill·
ness.
Medications in the "beta blocker" family are used for many bean
conditions and for high blood pressure. These medications make Raynaud's much worse and therefore
should be avoided. 'Medications
the "calcium channel blocker" Camily can provide some relief of the
. symptoms, but they can't "cure" it
In the most severe cases, surgery is
tried once in a while, but the results
are often disappointing.
I recommend lhat you talk with
your doctor about your Raynaud's
syndrome. He or she will be sure
that any medications you need
won't make your condition worse.
· And, if your symptoms are sumciently severe, be or she may ask
you to take a calcium channel
blocker.
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
.column. To submit questions
write to John C. Wolf, D.o.;
Oblo Ulilvenilty College of OSteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Crow~ · Family

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Child Conservation League, 7 p.m.
Thursday, at Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
RACINE - Racine Grange
2606, 7 p.m. Thursday, installing
new members.
RACINE - "Chri.sbl\as in the
Park" committee meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park. Members urged to auend.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Reedsville Church of Christ.
Workshop by Marilyn Hannum and
Ruth Ann Balderson. Members to
take finger foods.

Cochrans have anolller daughter,

OMITTED
·
, SIX.
.
Kara Smeelts, Stacy Creeger, sarah
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Samantba Sanden, Amanda SoulsMrs. Max Davis, Middleport,
by, and Kristin Callaway were and
and paternal grandparents are Char·
junior bridesmaids at the Aug. 4 Jene Cochran, Gallipolis. and the
weddint ot Paula Lee Cowdery, late James Robert Cochran.
and Robert Creeger. Their names
'Paternal great-grandparents are
were not included in a recent Mrs. Mary Kathleen Williams,
account of lbe wedding wbicll took Middleport and the late C. P.
at lbe Faith Gospel Church at -Williams,· · ·,
.
.· .- -

~~--~~~~:~::n:
Th-n and
m ans
tile
of James
Sandra

\

~

........- ___ .,.. . q...J,-- -.-- ............ .

.,-~-----·

.

.. . -·-·· ...

1

CHESTDER - Special meeting, Chester
Township Trustdees,
7
1b
.
p.m. ursday.
FR
. IDAY
REEDSVn.LE .:.. Eastern Albletic Boosters fall banquets. Friday,
6:30 p.m. for junior high parents,
athletes and coaching staff; Saturday, 6:30 for sen~or bigb parents,
a!ll!~tes and OO!Idi..I!IJ ·statf..Eutcm
Higb School gymnasium. Each
family to take two desserts, or one
dessert and fmger foods.

of

W

LINDA LOU
STEWART,
who passed
away Aug.

16, 1973.
Loved, Lost and Remembered by
Family and Friends.
Near a shady will! a rose once grew.
Budded and blossomed in God's free light.
Watered and fed by morning dew.
Shedding ns sweetness day and night.
As " grew and blossomed fair and tall,
Slowly rising to loftier height.
It came to a crevice In the wall
Through which there shone a beam of light.
Onward " crept w"h added strength
WHh never a thought of fear or pride
It followed the light through the crevice-length,
And unfolded Hself on the other side.
The light, the dew, the broadening view
Were found the same as they were before;
And Hlost Itself In beauties new,
Breathing its fragrance more and more.
Shall claim of death cause us to grieve,
And make our courage faint or fall?
Nay, let us faith and hope receive The rose still grows beyond the wall.
Scattering fragrance far and wide,
Just as It did in day of yore.
Just as it did on the other side,
Just as Rwill forever more.
11

1

November Special at

THURSDAY
RACINE - Post 602, Ameri·
can Legion, 6:30 p.m. at Ule hall
Thursday.

lnMemory

memories

..

A

12G.ge

· Factory Clloke Oily
Bas!H.IIIIIihg
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•

In precious

r-----~~------~------~======~ 1

u;

AUXILIARY MEETING
Reedsville, and tbe
Final pl110s for a jewelry sale on
bridegroom is the son of Dennis · Friday, and a bake and craft sale on
aDtl Sue Oeeger, CoolviUe.
Nov . 22 will be made when the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital meet Tuesday
COCHRAN BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Cochran, at I :30 in the coriference room.
Mitchell Road. Gallipolis,
Hostesses for the metin' will be
anuoun&lt;:C the binb of a daughter, ·· Betty Sayre, Helen H11l, and
Me'san Lynn, Ocl. 20. Tbe I Jeanette Lawrence.
..

2

l

POM EROY - Rock Springs
Beller Health Club, Wednesday,
home of Phyllis Skinner, I p.m.

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

Restaurant
.a ndKFC

Help Wanted

Ov~rbrook

Center

.A~ IOO Bed Long Term Care_ Center
In Middleport Is Seeking A Social
; Worker/admissions Coordinator 'To
; Join Our Management Team. The
:Facility Is Undergoing A Rebuilding
:Of Its Management Te11.m And Seeks
AMotivated Person To Join Us. LSW
Is Preferred. We Offer A Competitive
: Salary And Benefit Package. Send
llesume To David Snyder, 333 Page
1
Street, Middleport, Ohio, 45760.
F~x (614) 992-7406.
:real Estate General

oNaw Gllragea
oEIIICirlcal It Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor a Exterior
Palntlngalao eoncl'llle
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG Ul
Qi2-8216

12 Pieces of Chicken
(White/Dark Combination only}

ALL IIAKlS I IIODEU
112·1111 OR

..u.ms OR

TOLL FREE 1-111·141-t071
DARWIN, OHIO

UNDA'S
PAINDNI &amp; CO.
l1terlor I
bterlor
the

!NIIn out

Iplllr•llng. LM .. c1o 1t tor

PLUS

C•ll

OH 45631

ANNOUNCEMENT
, Now Accepting New Clients

DENISE L.BUNCE
AnORNEY AT LAW ·

.f.""t-l

I lxcnltl•t

·

AtdJJnls.d AlllnfeaJtltalldaftf .O.aln

10117/ln

1111112

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out

I•NIIW Homes

143 from Rt. 1
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
1~

Remodeling .
•
Stop a eom,.,.
FREE ESnMAT&amp;S

915-4471

• Craftsman Toots
•Toys

•Guna
Loads of.Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade

992-2060

011

only $1495
·
.

•
•'•
. .•
•
'

Chuck Stotts
614-992-$223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

StateRt33 ·

ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

11381kyan 1"lllllldd.llllfllllorl
882-27'12
Ofllce Houn: lion.-Fri.

1:00.....,:30pm
VInyl It ~urn. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING
OPEN 1 DAYS AWEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
MON.·FRI. 9·6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9·3

Paying Tod•y SSC lb. for clean dry
aluminum cans.
I C·5C Bonus per pound for flallened cans.

Replacament

Windon, Blown
lnaut.tlon, Storm
Doora,Storm
Windon, GaraiJIII.

We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals

F,.Eau-

Joe II.

s.,.

POMI!AOV· Crew Rd .· This 2 story, contemporary home, 1+
years old includes, 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, double glase
windows. carpet. heat pump w/C.A., C &amp; S etec., TPC water,
' " 'i
patio, deck, TV antenna, dishwasher, refrigerator, microwave,
range
&amp; hood, fireplace, septic tank, bar &amp; 2 car garage With
'.
door openers on 1+ acre. ASKING $110,000 VERY NlCEl
-'•
'
; •
MINERSVILLE· 2 story frame home with 2 bedrooms, bath.
I
N.G.F.A. heat, 80xt00+ lot. Home has newer wiring ,
• t
carpeting &amp; roof. Cable hook-up, front porch of 71&lt;24. Located
~-~--J-..I--'--"""lllpevl(l8treet. ·
' .•
. ASIQNG 129,500

·l

..

~'· .

CROW'I
FAMILY RESTAU,RANT,

.'

''
SUNDAY
RACINE - Saved by Grace, a
student mlnistty group from Mt. ·
.
Vemoo. Nazare~!C College, will be
presentmg MUSIC and speaking at
228 West Main
. Pome•fty ~
the Racioe Church of the Nazarene,
•..,.
10:30am. Sunday.
...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _!;99~2~·;~4:::3~2:.,__,:.________
1

.

...;.....J J
•

NEW HOPE RD.• Nice 1 floor frame home that Includes 2-3
.bedrooms, 1 bath. 2 car garage. outbuildings, fenced yard.
garden area, blinds, A/C, paneling, carpel, elec. heat pump
and cellar.
ASKING $43,500
HENRY E..CI.ELAND .......................,................... 992-6191
; TRACY BAINAGEA..............................................IMII-2439
IHERRl HART......................................................742-2357
, HENRY E. CLELAND 11....................................... 992-6191
KATHY CLELAND............................................... 992-6191
OFFICI! ...;............,................................................ 992·2259
fAX ........................................................................ 992..soo&amp;

·'

l.ool: Blocll Pokl.._ Wtlh
WWto 0n Chnl,
vtclnny: Plno Stroot. a Old
Sl~rd.._ CloiUDollo, Chii*Pet,
tokM Modlc8llon. 110
Reword
h No a.-1ano Aokod, Plootoo C.lllf You
tnlarmotlon, 1114-44&amp;-IISI.

a P-

"""Any

Loll: Sill 01 ThiM V I - 01
Natlonol Paolut AI s-.1, Plno
Thureday
Evontng
11/WIM
Aowlrdll14-446-2380,
Loll: Stnlll "-lo Doct, Port
Chow, Lana Holr Tan Chilil Collar, Thuroday, SA 5111 And Buill

992·5114

LOST: WhHo Enafloh PotWith Rod Collar In'Tho Johnlon

-

. 111 146 3851.

Rklgo Arol. REWARD Fot
Rolum. C.ll1-1114-446-lll10.

Yard Sale

7

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

NOW OI'FER IN G GENERAL HAULING

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

SAYRE TRUCKING

AdVInco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho cloy bo""" tho od 1o to run.
Sllndor odltlon - 2:00 p.m.

Fl'ldar. llonday oc1n1on • 2:oo

p.m. s.turdly.

992-395 4

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Llgtit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

lill Slack
992·2269

Emf'rgen cy Pho nL' 985-3 418

Temperament
Specloizlng In Pllrt-colono
lor lhow and companions.

Stud M~Vic4o l puppiea,
young .Wlla for ....
.U7SO lllle Hill Rd.
Raclna, Oh
114-04D-2.U7

WANTED: COIIIIUNm' SKILLS •

All Vord 9aloo lluot Be Polclln

..

614·742·2138

decls, family room. fireplace, hotlub, dishwasher, disposal,
partial basement. heat pump w/C.A.. triple payne windows .
ASKING $94,900

I""""__

I~

11011on Rood, R-rd V..-

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Pl!flies

leuoaalllelates

l.ool: 3 llonlh Puppy, Sluloh
-Rood,
0ny . With
lllorltlngo,

CALL FOR CURRENT PRICES

MODERN SANITATION

Uinestone
· &amp; Gravel

CHESTER· Sr 248· This beautnul 1 floor stone/frame home

•

--

L.._.;__ _ _ _ _...,;;;::;::::::;,
1WZI- _
· _ _ _ _.....

HAULING

pn 4.3+ acres includes 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 ear garage. 3

''•

-

Dawln, Ohio

Howard L. Writesel

OFFICE 992·2259

IIIDDLEPOAT· Hartinger Plwy.· This nice one lloor lrame
hOme features 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. utility room, 2 fireplaces,
n•wer l ANG furnace, perms-payne windows, paneling,
carpet &amp; vinyl flooring, front sitting porch and shed.
ASKING $35,000

Step Ctmplete Aute 8e4y Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614-843·5264
.
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • An nuity •I RA • Mortgage

llllwtng Exportonc:., And -

- - Cal.
llc:onao
' 304
..154430.

9

o.c.r E. Cllclt,
a ~,._,.....

Wanted to Buy

1100 COlli "" dOod 1144 -

"'

"111o - - . . · Cool!
lor Ollwr old - · ..... old ..
polntlngo,
- ·

.........
W.ntod

To

Buy: A COlli' 01 Thl

Ploy

AI

,_,..
On Oct 11114.

Tho · 114-411-

portunlly

E..,....,...

.

WAHTtD: COIIIIUNITY SKILLS '

INSTRUC'IOR
pooltlon llftilo
, _ oommun11y
onc1 _..

,

okltla lo an odul llllh
looming - - - In . . . •
County. NouN: (I) IU.....tnj: 1:- :- . .; 3:311- ..
t :30pm. 1111-F; 111111 owr ,. ·'
qulood;
- S2 - 1 :, _
(ll..tn):
IOinl··
Sol(2)lhrv
lion;
llllp DUW Nq. . . j YICatiDn
..... ..
talonta-.
High okllll
ochool..._

Eel.-drty1::"'--._.._. '
dmir'o - . ,

and

New Homes •.VInyl Siding Naw

odoqlllto ... _

Itt- .

NqUilrecf. '
Trolnlng
-ldOd. Sllory: ·
SS.OOIIW, to lhlt. If lnt..... od '
"""'""' Ceclllo .. 1-.sll-ao2
no Ill• thon 11~ . Equtt ,
O!&gt;portunlly
W.ntod:
Full-'lime
Oltloo ~
aurii'ICII

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CDII....

"""*"-'·

.....got . . . . . . .

'-*-

And Ho .. - - Oui!IOing
y , C.. I A.ll . .(' P.l[

614·992·7643

114-446-31111, llt-4*4514.

up..-·
..
---.1
814.
"'~ - - ···· ...

:

18 Wanted to Do

ko TIM

s.mc.. Cotn!llillo-

---.1. . . . . .
..... :ZO,..

QDILirY waDOW IYIIIMI
1

•

JID .. _ _ _ _ogo.

-~•
. --

Custom lladt

louytng

Solid vinyl
rtpllctment

a chon

dO WI

B:30-li~~~~~ij~~;,{J1i/~H-J-~~~;~Iiiil~iil-~

Sat.
thru
vacation
111 Various
needed. High school degree, valid driver's
llcenH, good driving record, three years
licensed driving experience, and adequate
automobile Insurance coverage required.
Training provided. Salary: $5.00/hr. to start.
If Interested contact Cacllla at 1-800-531·
2302 no later than 11121194. Equal
Oppq,.Wntty
·

.

PrwlcloiG. Sllory: 15.00 llir, 10 .
Slon. " 1 - o d CGntact j
Coclllo AI 1~-DI:I liD
UlOt Titan 1112tJM. Eq...t Or&gt;- .

Help Wanted

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS 1\IISTRUCT·
OR positions available to teach community
· and personal skills to an adult with teaming
limitations In Meigs County. HOURS: (t) 40
. hrsJwk. (live-In); &amp;:3Cl-8:30 am; 3:3D-9:30 pm,
M-F; sleep-over required; vacatlonllnsuranee benellta; (2) 32 hrsJwk. (live-In): 10 am

..

GOod

(No Sunday Calls)

11

-e

lu..ln): 1:311 .. ,30 A.ll.; 3:311
-t::tll P.ll., IH'; Sloop 4tow A. .
qulood;
ouoSidlloAndTIIonta-.
HIGh School tlogleo, Yolld ·

guoto AAII- - -.
eov0&lt;:ogo Roqulrod. Trolnlna

Dnc:ull

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

A-

on--.
uDmlna
R-.1, ThiM v .... Uconttil .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Graded Benefit Whole Life ts now available The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
the application: Ages 40-80

INSTRUC'IOR -

ablo To TNCII eo.-.nlly And
""-"" Sldlo To An Adui wtth ·
l.Mrnlng Umltlllano In ...... County. 'HOURS; (I ) 40 Hro ftb

-ion -

1: sun

8

. Quality and

.•'

11 /ll/1 mo.

(614) 992· 7434

~er~~~!~
Bred for

.

General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business

Sales, Service &amp; Installation

AMBERWOOD

'

.f.""t-l

~...L.~ Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 ~...L.~

992-4103

814 186-4180

1:00

.'

.

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate

Betore 8 p.m. laave

. ltfar8
m••••ge.
p.m.

1OS Second Sl, Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)

DnhiWIIIII•
Colll1'8dl11

Employment Se r: cc·s

1·800-486-1590
446-9971

Morrison's Heating &amp;Cooling

hHrll

Armou llC Crn o11 Is

Bus.

lack Hoe
Service
••,.., Slle

Very r111 anllale.
FNI EatlrMtea

Sunday, llov. 13

• 1 Pint Cole Slaw
•1 Pint Baked Beans
• 1 Pint Mashed Potatoes
• 1·Pint Gravy
• 6 Biscuits

Autoc.n•r
River Rd.

264

Forlll•l*

u............

comes back folding money

lenny's Is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We ,,,. '"" 11nll V•n•l

Dll'l
IPJILIIJICI
IUIICI

.,.........

a few pennies spent here

Kenny's Auto Rental

W11W2lflt

6:30

or 1 1/2 Rotisserie Chicken .

./

Speclallllngln Cu.tom
Fran Repair
IIEW I USED PARTS FOR

I

614-992·5515

Pomeroy, Ohio

Starting Slug
Matches
Frldar, Nov. 11

No Coupons Neccessary .
Offer Good Thru November 30, 1994

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

7JI1181 TFN

TOPS losers recognized ··

• ,

Society scrapbook

1

JOIN O'DELL LUMBER'S
BIG BUCK CLUB.
Stop by 634 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, for deails.
We sell Hunting License, Tags

ASK ANNE. NAN

Community
calendar

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

Question: I was diagnosed wilh
Raynaud' s syndrome, but lhe doctor didn't provide any information . .
So far, only my fingers seem to be
affected since this started six
monlhs ago. I seem to be gradually
getting worse. Is this something I
just need to learnt~ li~e with, or is
there tteabl\ent avallalile?
Answer: Raynaud' s syndrome,
which. is also called ~yn.aud's disease, as a problem wllb cuculauon.
It most commonly invol~es ~e
bands - as you are expenencmg
- and the ~eel. In this i~iness the
small artenes that nounsb these
parts temporarily close off after
only mild exposure to cold. Ray naud' s syndrome is actually anexaggeration of a normal body
reaction to cold temperatures. This
natural reflex shifts blood toward
Ule heart and lungs to conserve heat
and allow us to live in colder envi·
. ronments.
• .
.
In Ray~ud s dtsease thiS normal reduction in blood flow to the
hands and feet is carried out to an
extreme degree. The hands, feet or
both can become quite cold when
the weath~r is o~ly ~ool. On cold
days the ctrculauon m Lhese areas
may be so severely re~uced that
Uley becom~ bl.ue and pamful.
Raynaud s IS sometimes a con sequence of illness. The ~ost co~ man 1ttn;ss. that IS ass_OCJated w~lh
Raynaud s 1s an auto-trnmune d1sease called ~cl~e~. However,
the diagnosu IS complicated by a
delay tbat may be a~ long as 20
years from the ftrst s1gns of Raynaud' s until the appearance of
other. sians of sclerod~nna ~~er
Individuals develop th1s condition
without a link to any other apparent
iUness.
Raynaud'.s s yndrom~ !S ofle_n
more of a nu1san~ than 11.as a senOUS disability, as I hope II Will be

!fUSt and dependence on otben
complete a program~.~~o~ri/~~~:~~
Several "initiative" t11
carried out by lbe teens who
enjoyed en~ent provided
Rockin' Regg1e of. Health 1l~,.,..vJi..•
ery Services.
.
~Tbe camp was funded by aril~
Ohio Dc.Parunent of Health Ado;! ·
lescent Grant and coordinators of,=
the project included Dana::
Kessinger and Fenton Taylor repre·, :
senting Meigs County schools, and!.David R. Haggerty and Cindy S.; :
Oliveri, of the Oblo State Universl·1:
ty Extension, Meigs County.
·~ •
Margie Blake, Meigs big ~~
School served as the staff nurse~ :
and Fred Dee!, Gallia County
Extension assisted with programming at Lhe camp.
Goals of the program when the
students return to their local higli
schools is to train other students iq · .
similar leadership techniques.
.
The next Teen Leadership Col- .
lege wiD be held in the fall of 1995.

been receiving letters from all over
the country asking where MerthioI
late has gone. It hasn't gone anyHazel Peck, Leon, W.Va.; Carolyn Searls, Middleport, wa!i
wbere: It is still available, but you
:
Mamie
Stephenson, Pomeroy; and welcomed into lhe group.
may have to ask your pharmacist to
Programs
last
month
included
Christina
Westfall,
Gallipolis,
each
special-onler it for you.
received a TOPS charm and a cer- "Self-Esteem" by Naomi Gwinn,
Botb Merthiolate and Mertificate of recognition as winners in "Why Did I do That" by Janet•
eurochrome's popularity have
the Hang In There contest when Thomas; and "Why Diets Fail" by'
declined over the years in the face outward). And
TOPS OH 1383 met recently at the Geri Gibson, Naomi GwiM, Katie;
of new, anti-bacterial antiseptics, it!
and your local pbarml~Cy bas only
DOUBLE-STUMPED: Since Cheshire United Methodist Church. Moore, Sharon Matson, and Juanita;
Tbe awards are presented to Spencer.
· ·
so much shelf space. What doe§n't August we have received three letmembers
who lose weight or stay
Contest winners in Octobe C: ·
move off the sbelf isn't kept in ters from Ernest Hatwig of Paris,
stock.
Ark .. who is looking for one-piece the same for six consecutive weeks. included lhe "Bear with Me," Edith:
Over the past several weeks, the Gardner; and the Miss Autumn: .
We don't know whether Merthi· sleepers, with feet, for adult men.
TOPS
best losers were Jane Oldak· contest winners were Naomi' ·
alate can,1n fact, heal minor cuts He tbinks they are made someovernight, but then we don't know where on the East Coast but e_r, Pomeroy; Geri Gibson, Gallipo- Gwinn as TOPS and Janet Thomas: .
if wetting warts with stump water doesn't know where or by wbom. lis; and Hazel Peck, Leon, W. Va. as KOPS. Eacb received a certifi.:
and rubbing Lhem wilh a toad in Lhe We have exhausted all our KOPS best losers bave included cate of recognition and a TOPS: ·
charm.
; ·
light of a fuU moon works either.
resources. Can someone out there )anet Thomas, Mary Martin. Best
losers
of
the
week
receive
a
certifiThe
Cheshire
Chapter
meets
on:
:
READER FEEDBACK: Our help?
Mondays,
10:30
to
11:30
a.m.
witll'
·
cate
of
recognition
and
a
gift
from
kind readers have let us know that
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
weigh-in
an
hour
preceding
that
a~
:
the
gift
box.
Any
members
who
you can make your very own play- P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
ing card holders for literally noth- Questions of general interest will gains weight must put a gift in the the Cheshire United Metbodis( :
Church. Janet Thomas is leader~ ·
ing, and re-cycle in the process. appear in the column. Due to the box.
Jane Oldaker was awarded a and Kathy McDaniel, area captain. : :
Take two plastic lids from either volume of mail, personal replies
shortening or coffee cans. Place cannot be provided.
. charm for getting a new member.
them together with lhe edges of Lhe
lids facing outward. Then connect -----------+-----------T~---------r--------~. 0
--------1-~-.;......-_.;• .
the lids together with a paper clasp
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
•
'
Room 11S or the Ohio aectlona by applying ralroJarryWraY, ;
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
reflectlva
polyuter
Department
of
Dl..ctor of TranaporteUoll ,
STATE OF OHIO
: •
Tranaporta1lon, Coluntbua, pavement mar~lng material (11) 18, 23, 2TC
DEPARTMENT OF
Ohio, until 10:00 a.m. lor center llnaa and ltna -------~
TRANSI'ORTATION
Tlluraday, December 8,1994 llnoe.
Columbua, Ohio
"The date 111 lor 3 Announcement• · • '
for lmprovementa In:
November 11, 1994
complollon
of thlt work
Atheno, Gallla, Hocking,
BlirHu of Contract Sal11
WEDNESDAY
ohall
ba
aa
eel
forth In the
llalga,
llonroa,
Morgan,
Shoo... Maid!
Copy Number 114-857
SYRACUSE - Third Wednes- Legal
Noble, VInton, Waahlrigton bidding- propoaat. • Pltna ·
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
laity R111 Rtl.
day Homemakers Club, WednesSealed propo11t1 will be Countlu, Ohio for end Speclflcatlona ere on
flit
In
tho
Deptrtment
of
l.egioltfftl
day, 10 am. at Syracuse Municipal accoptod from til ·pre· Improving 11cllon ATH-143Tranaport11lon.
0.00
on
State
Route
143
and
qualified
blddtra
at
the
Building. Thanksgiving recipe for
Time 1:00 ,. Nov. ~~
roll call. Potluck at noon. Project, Bureau of Contract Salta, other varloua routea and
Factory Cllaltt Gills · 1
Amish dolls. Each one to take waffle weave dish clothes, 1/4 inch ribt
bon to match . 3/4 inch lace to
t
match, needle, thread and scissors.·
••
RACINE - Wildwood Garden
t
Club, Kountry Kitchen, I p.m.
•
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday,
borne of Mrs. Richard Owen. Mrs.
Bernard Fultz to review "The
Trees, The Fields, and The Farm",
a trilogy by Conrad Richter. Roll
call response to be pioneer of Ohio.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
Free and Accepted Masons, open
installation of David W. Fox as district deputy grand master of 12th
Masonic District, 7:30 Wednesday,
at the temple.

Oh io University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Cold bands, warm bean

Developing personal leadership
styles, more ·self-esteem, and better
communication skills was the
emphasis .of the Teen Leadership
College staged this week at the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
campgrounds near Pomeroy.
More than 40 teens from Eastem, Meigs, and Southern School
Districts In Meigs County. Gallia
County Scliools and Ripley High
School in Ripley, W.Va. attended
the workshop.
Tbe students auending were
selected to participant on the basis
ofleadersbip potential.
Instructors for the program were
Meigs Higb School students who
are graduates of the Teen Leadership CoUege held annually by Ohio
State University Extension.
The workshops were conducted
by Leadership College graduates
Taryn Doidge, Allison Gerlach,

Dorothy Leifheit, Darrick St. Clair,
Jason Taylor 1111d Dodger Vaughan.
A hi,hlight of the camp was
motivational speaker Jack Wiseman , principal of Ripley High
School, who challenged the partici·
pants to be their best and to always
remember that "if it is to be, it is up
to me."
He also made the analogy of a
Jeilder to a nail that protrudes and is
"bammered" on. Wiseman was recognized last year as one of Lhe lop
50 principals in the United States at
a conference in Los Angeles. That
hi~ school bas received the status
of exemplary school consistently
for three years.
Program participants wore Tshirts designed wllh Lhe camp logo
and inscribed "Anyone can be a
leader, but it takes training to have
this much Altlrude."
The group activities conducted
during the overnight and aU-day
session included games where the
. emphasis was on leaders and their

• $200 Instilled
C1ll For betalls

truclqj, Aioo
TD-aaor

Wont .. buy: AoiiiMnnl ......
01 -~ 304-m.

!!"..L Tlllo ltlt -lllod, llelgo co. '
"""· 111·71J.3121.

�·NQvember 16, 1994

The

Ohio
BRIDGE

... THEN WE'LL LOOP
IT .O.ROU ..D DINNYS
T"IL .o.G.O.IN AN' I.ET
'IM PULL IT TWR()UGH .

ACROSS

PHILLIP

AJ..DER

2----ln

.48 SpaCe for Rem

54 U111C81111180US
Men:handl18

71111. - Qolllpallt, -

7po. clnollo 011,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
•

Pl. - ,

**·

-vt'"Y light, _
Augor
wooer
epllttw, m J04.171.Z111.

Audlovoa
Collutor Phone,
SpookM, iiBO llomwy. Colt ""'"
5pm. S75.00.114 311 11M

•A 5
•Q9R 6';

CA'f ~~~~sopi\V '
IF A 1.,\MI' f.O.W.S IN
'f~li £-lVI IIIli !'oo/1\ Alii I) 1'/o ONE IS ~ti.DIIIIID

THE ~AAJaD SXIm-

OF AME.R\(16, ELIVED ·
,111£ CHAIRMAN (J lH'GREAil
Ct(tPrt\lt
11.1~~
(OVIMiffiE
RESR)JS!BILITES 9

Bond .,_, olzo I. FIUII, 4yn.
old., or~ SeOul Unllonn, • 11
lala of boro clolhoo (o~
olzo 10.1211Mono. o1zo U Ntl 1

Wll do boll¥llttlng1nor homo, or
wiU do llou .. renlng. Pt.
P I - or Oolllpollo - · 304I1Htll.

Bloc• • Wfllto ir lV. Latot

gl~'o

• i -1
II&gt; A J ; l

'fo H6AIL IT, -rt~e-l't "ftl~ Glif "10'1"S DI"F'

,c.o-r -F,._,...-!"

ltQL, ~W'RiL'f 10 ~
MD F13U&lt;E clJr w.IAT
I.I£R 1J G/&gt;i./oJ ~ "THIS
C~EAP R.Or' ..

9871;4

EAST
•QJ113
•4 3
oAKt0 9 8 52
II&gt;R

SOUTH

Oi

'"K 2

ololhoo, dllloro!W - .

304-e7t-734t.

•AKJ10 2
t J H

Flll il llCtil l

· 21

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•Qr. :J2
Vulnerabl e: Botti
Dealer: East
South
West North East
3 .
J•
Pass
4"
All pass

Bualneaa
Opportunity

lhnlb
49 Golf mounct
50 Entaftltl- -

1 T. .r

4 Very fino halra
Surnec
53 HaM! (al.)
I S.ble. .nct
mlnka
55 Ltvo (In)
12- League
59 Chilled by the
13 Ox of Colebetl
wind
14Letlall
62-lha15 For (Sp.)
63 Sffllllflll bird
16 Work togethor • 64 Eot
18 Build
e5 Brown kiwi •
20 Reaort 1r1tt
66 John Lennon'•
21 Aclor- Ayres
eon
22 Grook lalsnd
67 Wen1 quickly
24 Polaonoua
68 Noun oufftx
snake
DOWN
26 Clipped (aheep)
30Uncanny
34 Cry of
t Ready to be
affirmation
plckocl
35 Actor Montand 2 Actor37Portlon
Novello
38 Social misfit
3 Fu!*al pile'
(II.)
4 Plant
40 Slippery fishes 5 Numoro42 Aunt in Spain
6 Parka for wild
43 Unsuccessful
animals
car
7 Rocker
45 Leeot strong
Frank47 Evergreen
e PrHidentlal

Initials
9 Ruaola 'oMountilins
10 By - (fixed
methodI
11 Gush forth
17Comfor1
19 Eapionage org.

By Phillip Alder

rlna. ..... lor •••

lnatrumenta

'r::'ood
....

tllltl.llalh .... 01111

~

..

'(OUR VOON6ER BROTHER
I DON'T SUCK M'i '
OR CL.IN6 TO A
I!L.O•NKI;T FOR SECURIT'i..

....,_,.~go_

..ch or a 111'114.11• . , ,. .,..

VIdea .. "'11 I 1, ........
MIL

......

114-ltll ........ ..,.

All real estate advertising in
thiS newspaper Is sublect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes llllogal
to advertise wany preference,
limitation or dlscrtmlnalion
based on race. color, rallglon.
sex familial status or national

•nro u eu.

Pl. .._,.nttor
Willi loe CUIII ~ Wa I tlgMin

""*"· - - - ""

AS THE '!'EARS 60
8'( '!'OU'LL PROI3A&amp;L'(
DEVELOP A REAL
RESENTMENT TOW~D

FJrm Sup oltrs

&amp; Lt ves l ock

c.ntplr....... 441 • •

. . . . . . - . , . . . 114-lQ.

2117.

make any such p~terence,

~.:At.:''= .,~1'::

llmltaUon or dlscrlmlnatlon.•
This newspaper will not

Eloclrlo -

-7717.

,.

Electdc 'Mtlllahlll'

which Is in violation ollho law.

f,AtiiCt.Y,

JIDI~

Informed that all awettings

Foil-

advertised In this newspaper

tt2-1212.

are aVailable on an equal

Arllllco 1t,

N, .,._

opportunity basis.

35 L.ots &amp; Acreage
4 Amo 011 Adcloon FlU. Cor-Of Poooum Tn&gt;l And 81uor
31 Homea for 8818
Rood, fiC,OOO, 114--38JL11illt.
13AcrMAndlom-3 14 oorM Cntb Crooi1 Ad,
Bod-, 1 .112 lolho, LA,. 128,000. On IN.. top rood, 304Plvecl Ortnway. 114 ••• 0135.
11Wlll1.
2 Bod""""
Eurolca, Sonlo Ylllor, A!IIIIO ~
124,000, Or ..... And Ollor, 114- booutN 2oo. lalo, aood rood,
411 1033
wator.._&lt;!~ ctyc1o . _ , Jr.

-In

2 aid- Aporl_,.i w;;, F-, • Dopoolt
RoqulrH, 114-448-107l.
2 A - I - · No Kllollon,
1200/Uo. All Utlillloe
114-441-7733,

4:00.

-n

Incl-.

1:30

~

(,AN ~~,t&gt;LY
WAIT Tl£.1,.
Tt4t MEf:IC
1Nt4tll1T

011', GeiDd COM.I11 ttl 1101.
Ex............. ~

Our readers are hereby

eye.
South had to play in four heart s.
Th e d~ fcnders began with two rounds
of diamond s before sw itching t o a
spade. How should Soll)h have contin·
ued'!
South's only problem wa s a ~ - I lor
5-01 club split Because of East's open·
ing pre -,empt. Wes t was more likely to
be long in clubs . So. 'South won trick
three with dummy's spade ace . drew
trump s and cashed hts spade king .
Then he led a club to dummy's jack.
If it had lost lo th e singleton kinf&gt;.
East would hav e bee n endplay ed\
forced to concede a ruff-and-discard .
!South's remaining club loser would
have disappeared .I
However. wh en th e club jack won
the trick. South conltnued with a low
club from the dummy. After East discarded . South pl ayed low from hi s
hand . We st won the trick with th e
nine. but was endplayed . A club l ead
would have sac rifi ced his potential
trick there. wher eas his spade switch
conceded a ruff-and -dtscard.

.

! _ • .........,..._

advertisements tor real estate

Mtf

----.

For -

lloytog 01110 woohor.
IWQI
worll,- -.138, ,,.....,
AUCTION I RJRNITURE. 12 2344.
Olivo 81., Oolllpotlo. Now • Uood
For-= CotftiiUIOr'Otoo Drlvo,
ltll, 114 441 IIISI.
w.rtl boOla. 111 4it IIH.

ex -. w-

For Solo: Lola
tom, A""'""'!',_!!wl..,, .1101

Exm, 114414....,, -

P.ll.

304-1-.

S l a - el - - ond opplllnDtl to be _... • one ·lot,
0111114 - 2IDI.
llmolcy blue
oofl

llvJ:i,_,

=~ao. ~~~o,

10

To lillie Ollllo el Lovom 11cno
toz M am on s - Rt. 35, Lo4
12. Pliny, WY. Appnoolod SI,IIIO.

IIkins sa,oeo. ,,..._~,

SQuare....._ tL21 to 12.00 per
bolo, .u.tto. elowr, ~-~
Sq..,. boloo olmlud hoy,...

Twa doolnllto . lalo In "-cine,
14,1100 oool(or
lor loath,
l,....llo3071J or I-NOM.

",1011

4 - - · 2 Full lotho, 10
..... 1om, Sl"'!'t" lulkl!91.

Crooil
Frontoao.
'-'od
Right
Off 211,
Gil'

11po111, ~v.oao

111 ••• 1312.

or .

·~
•••7pm.

Rentals

0111r.

doy,

AND FIND .DIFFERENT
WA'iS TO 6ET EVEN ..

B..._. PtiHd Traullll IIIIane.'

D.--:
M77,,

Uool • . -...
lnall·;-1

I1W7Ni131, I1W11-2213.

'
.

"""+--+-l 61 Chemical
aufftx

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetmty Crpher cryplograms are oeated Irom quotatoOns by lemous people. past encl present
Each lel1er lfllhe cipher stancls IOf another

' NCBWE

PHA

UCY

BT

ZHNEUBHW

OHTU

B ' GY

NHAWU

roa.y'.s cf~H

X «JUIJis W

MYOHUY

XHMFYJ.

AW_ZVTT

NZVGVZEWJ . '

(ENUHMF
TUYKCVW
ZEWD .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ; "All you neea in ihts tile is 'gnorance and confidence,
and then success is sure." - Mark Twain.

•••
,~~:t;~' S©\\onlA-~r.;rs· •••••
ldltttd lty CLAY I . I'OUAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange lentri of the ~~~V"-""':i~
scrambled wordJ below to form four words

I

SAMKAD
2
3

r 1 I I 1 I

I

REPUP

I I 1· I Is "'"
:~=:G16:E:,A=:B17:N:,=:-I~
_

_

_

.

I I I. I

__

I~
_

e

Complete the chuckle Quoted
bv I,IJr ng ,, the rruU~ng words
L-...J..-1-...L.--JL-...L.....J vov develop from step No. 3 below.

.

.
1

BIG NATE

71 Autos tor Sale

......

rl-+--1
"'
60TVco.

_

lloor mol •
R~'"':l-·~~:MJ%: · .

m41133cr1~

Fr1nce·
57 Klflll oflho
jungle
58 Futuro ldtya.·

A small boy was wondering
how the rope in the community
swimming pool kept the deep
.---::S-L_E_E_P-T---. water and the shallow water

•'

~ Cltovy 110 • lnnofltt•
-~··•llprn.
Now
....... - l o l l ...... :

Transportatto n

.....-+--+--! 5211oglon
54 R-r screen
-t-+--1 56 Image
To be. in

I think Henry Ki ssin ger had the
right idea wh en he summed up th e
Cold War thu s: "The superpowers oft en behave like two heav ily armed
blind men fee ling their way around a
room , each believin g himself i n mortal
p eri l from the oth er . w hom he assumes to have perfect vision ."
In bridge. some play er s- act as if
th ey were blind. They claim they rannot vi sualize the layout without actually seeing cvcryonc's eards . True, visualtzmg ca n be difficult. But il is not
impossible ; it JUSI requires a willingness to trv.
Today·s deal is easy if you can pte·

lure the distribution in your mind 's

llano. .. ~

-.tiOO.OIO.

knowtlngly accept

81 Fann Equlpmlnl
I N l'ood 12,1110, 114 4M liM,

..... _....,_ .................
...
-";--

ongn, ~r anv Intention to

---+--+-+---1 50 Devletea .
51 Mud

Mullcll

t..dy'........

Rea l Eslale

organa
26Judge

llr'fti"'"TT''!"'Tl''t"1 33 Coup d ' 36Norropentng
39Actroao
Suun41 Coasted
m-+--+-l 44 Comedian
Jay46 Condenaod
moisture
48Teak 1nc1
walnut

The mind's eye
sees the answer

,a
=...oo:.:,::.,. ..............
-............-

to
28 Listening
31AIIOII
32 Eye part

Opening lead: "Q

54 MIIIC8IIaneoua
Men:handll8

23GolforBalleatoroo
25 Energy
26 Auld Leng 27 Pay allonllon

.

8

•

PRINr

•

_

.
1

NUMBfRED I'

lfTTfR5

e UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

STRIKE. A BLOW iN THE. WAR ON

HIGH PRICES. SHOP THf. CLASSIFIEDS.

.

·.

Servtces

Home

Improvement•

-.._-..- """'""""
IIASEIIENf

WATEAPROOANQ
' llf*lmll ....... .
Colt ~ Or .,...,. •.

u...-1-

MNn-woe..,.-,. ...

.-...J1m.

Ron'• lV . . . . .

ASTRO-GRAPH

..lllna

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

••Iiiio•

In - .........
IIIOil
olhor
~~.,.

--..wv
82

- ~Cfour .
M'Birthday

PlumblnO It
Hilling
1

J:' ,- ~hursday. Nov. 17. t994
I'

~ Eltlon

Wttrtod to Jour· 'M or Coprloe Clooiloo, -

2ldl t lr, 2

72 Tr\lclcl lor Slit

""'*""•

'For lote or Trodo 1111 - . . .

AI
M,IOD.OO.., bo- !111'17 Drt
Hoo

~~·Oil.

bo

~2~.,.., loodod, 4

c:~·~~·d~'l:·~
lloltle ....... l14 .......
Prloo

IIR.

In Jhe year ahead, you will be more uccesstul worktng .wone_Jhitn will' a team.
Bringing in weak partners could drag you
down professionally and ltnancially .
SCiORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 221 Don't kid
· y~iselt : your companions don't agree
wjJ!Il100 percent ol your opinions. If you
se~$11 some resistance. there's no call to
pressure them. It's only natural to dtssent
~asionalty, Trylng to patch up a broken
ro!IJjince? The ~tro-GrapH Matchmaker
caU:i 'elp you to understand what to do IO

117V Cltovy !llap tilde, y... 3118,
auto tnnamiUIOII,~

Ph,,,.

::•.=.t"""

,.

-----

.... .

.,

-

. . , - · ... ' ......

........ .... ·-· ,._,_.. ..

-

...

.,._

_....... .,.. . " ... -·,..,.

·,

.

make the relattonship work. Mail $2 lo TAURUS (April ~0-May 20) Today 's
Matchmaker. P.O. Box 4465. New York, tmponant deciSions should not be made
NY t0163.
by persons with quoslionable judgment .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov , 23·Doc. 21 I Be Speak up and make your own choices.
reasonable about what you charge ·fO! GEMINI (May 21-.Juno 20) Someone i~ a
your seiVices tod!iY· Inflated prices ke.ep position to assist you migh.t turn you
customers from returntng.
down today. No one likes be1ng asked to
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Allhough . help with things you can easily do lor
you aren't usually a showoff , today_you yourself.
might try to upstage your lriends to be the · CANCER (June 21 · July 221 Strive to
center of attention.
think positively today. but at the same
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb . 19) Do not time be realistic. Castles built upon the ·
· waffle on a matter you need to finalize. sand are easily washed out to sea.
The arrangement rs wonhle~~_tl__tt...'_sn' t LEOJ.J_utr__2a:AU9- 22) Do not allow sen&lt;:io'sed prOfJ"rly
doubt to paralyze you today. ',_.,..,&lt;"-'-''- -tr
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Situations make a mistake than not to try at all.
you can normally assess in an- instant VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Today, avoid
may be decepllve today. Take your time debating subjects about which you 're
and ~nalyze ci rcumstances carefully ; unsure . You'll look smarter saying nothdon't jump to conclusions.
ing.
~
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 1t) For your LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 2~) Beware of
economic well -being, avoid e•travagant someone tryinQ to manipulate you today.
companions. II you try to keep up with big l'le/She would like to take advantage of
spenders. you 'll soon regret il.t
your generous nature .
·
"I I
. I

Astray- Gloom • Ord~r • Exodus .. SMARTER
Granny says _!tlat if you 're wise enough to learn from
other people's mistakes. you are probably SMARTER
than most.

I

�iP•ag11e-_1•4_Th_e•D•a•ilyi.Se•n•t•in•e•l--------------P•o•miiierlioliy•o....M.iiiiiiiddiiililepiloiirtii.'.ioliihiiio--------------•Wednesd~y, Noveinbcir 16: 1994~

H

RC COLA
PRODUOS

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Man- Sat.
Hot Dogs 21s1.00 with sauce 3/s1.00 plain

Ohio Lottery

OUBobcats
topOSU
Buckeyes

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Vol. 45, NO. 139
Copyright 1994

Meigs, Gallia
sites in running
for.regional jai I

(

GROUND
S'J49

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

Pork Chops ••••••••••••~·.

PORK BUTT STEAKS OR

Roasts •••••••••••••••••••~.
0

MIXED FRYER

$

10 LB.

1(
Betle»gna •••••••••••••~~••••• 79

KENTUCKY BORDER CHUNK

s

59

SUPPORTS TOLL-FREE CALLING -

.

LONGHORN

support or toU-rree calllnK between portions or
Meigs and Mason count1es. Also shown are,

1.
49(

. •
M
.
k
1111
MelgS, 8S0n feSiuenfS Spea .
·.OUt In
• support 0 f t0 /I- fJree serviCe
•

PRICILLA CUT

Lt

YAMS

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Approximately 100 Meigs and
·Mason County, W.Va. residents,
.officials and merchaniS attended a
Public Utilities Commission of
·Ohio (PUCO) bearing in Pomeroy
Thursday morning to support establislunent of toll-free telephone ser·
vice between parts of die two coun- ·

2 $1

CAROLINA SLICED ·

'

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••·~.!~

KRAFT
,,
MARS
CREAM

MOUNTAINEER

Sage •••••••••••••••••••••
'
ll#rollorJOoz.links

'

7 oz.

..

Cranberries •••••••••••1i~i;k.
, VALLEY BELL

~~o· IUlillt ••••••••••••••:,~..

•

·

KRAFT GRAPE JELLY OR

'

.

·.

·

GOLD MEDAL

32 oz.

::
KRAFT
:: I:
:: MIRACLE WHIP :~ i::
I

I

I

SUGAR FREE OR
REG.

2/99C

:11:

1

'1

TOILET .TISSUE

I

II

I

I

I

COUPON

:

STOVE TOP
STUFFING

42 USE 980Z.

:I
'I

Good Only At Powell's Super Vlllu
o
1 o Offer Good Nov. IS thru Nov. 19, 1994 ol

I '- - -- -

!J!!'I! 1.. ~·! 1?'.!'2"!•!. -- - - ~I

·~·············
,

I

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

--

•

I

..... .. . .. . . ...... ... . · ~··· ·~

I

•

a
)I

I

I

I

·'

'

'

.

PROPOSED JAR. SITES - Consultants narrowed the field
or proposed regional jail sites from five down to three Thunday.
Michael C. Fagan of M.S. Consultants or Youngstown shows mem.
ben or the Southeast Ohio Corrections Commission the remaining
sites and uplalns the pros and cons ofeacb site.

WASHINGTON (AP) ,....
Republicans about to take conlrol
of Congress have ideas that would
cosl hundreds of biUions of dollars.
They have anolber idea lbat could
make part of lbat cost vanish at the
tap of a computer key.
·
Some GOP leaders say lhey
want to change die way Congress
calculates lbe costs of tax cuts.
Their melbod - "dynamic scoring" - assumes that some tax
reductions stimulate extra economic activity, wbicb in tum brings,in
extra revenues to lbe government.
It' s a technique that .could shave
tens of biUions of dollars. perhaps
more, from the costs of die tax cuts
IIley are seeking - tbat is, wben
compared with the way the Democratic-controlled Congress has
detennined lbe costs of laX bills for
decades.
It's also a technique that many
Democrats say is little more dian
wishfullbinlcing that wpuld end up
allowing die federal delkit to grow
bigger and bigger. "Smoke and
mirrors," President Clinton's Chief
of Staff Leon Panetta called il ·
Wednesday.. "Nonsense," a!jmin·
istralion budget chief Alice Rivlin
said Tuesday.
Som.e of Congress' more con-

servative Republicans see lbings
differently. Reps. Newt Gingrich of
,Georgia, the likely next speaker;
Richard Armey of Texas, who
probably will be House majority
leader; and John Kasich of Ohio,
expected to bead lhe House Budge!
Commiltee, all suppo'rt tbe new
system, They say lbe curren1 way
of doing things ignores the economic growlh that some tax cuts
can promote.
"The currenl model is broken."
Kasich said in an interview. "We
are going to change the currenl
model."
' If the GOP-controlled Congress
adopts lhe technique,. it will
become easier for them to pay for
lbeir long, expensive list of promises many Republican House candidates made in their campaign manifesto, the "Contract With Ameri -

ca.··

These include a constitutional
amendment calling for a balanced
federal budget by lbe year 2002,
which would require anywhere
from $500 billion to $700 billion
wonh of spending cuts. Their proposed tax cuts include a $500 per
child laX credit, a reduction in the
capilal gains laX rate, and laX savings for many businesses, bener off
Social Security recipients, married

couples and olbers- at a five-year
cost of nearly $200 billion.
They also pledged to halt recent
reductions in Pentagon spending.
The overall price tag for their
"Contract" could approach $1 trillion over five years.
'
The dynamic scoring melbod
would have its most dramatic effect
on lwo items. One is the reduction
in the capilal gains laX rate, which
is paid on property sales. The other
would increase the coscs of investm~ nts thai businesses could write
·Off. Both, Rep~blicans argue,
would become btg money-earners
for the govenunenl.
The dispute over calculating lax
bills echoes fights that occurred
when President Reagan came to
town in 1981 with an entourage of
supply-side economists. They too
argued that cutting taxes would
· create extra economic activity
which in tum would generate mo~
money for the Treasury. Reagan's
laX cuts were largely rolled back as
federal deficits beaded skyward.
The government has never used
die dynamic scoring method, even
when Reagan eonlrolied die White
House. But with Republicans con.
trolling die House and Senate DQt ..
year, tbey wUI have an opponulllty
lodoso.

The Federal Bureau of Invesli- car. The incident occurred on Red
galions (FBi) is conducting a clvil Mud Ridge.
rights invesligatiop into die death
The two deputies, John McCoy
of Jeremy Michael Halley, accord- and Linden Miller, have been susing to Supervisory Special Agent pended wilb pay unlit investigalion
Jim Kessler.
iniO die incident is complete.
Kessler said the FBI was
Sgt. G.L . Clark of lhe Poini
approached about performing a Pleasant Detachm.ent said stale
civil rights investigation and dial fX?Iice investigators should be fin·
the investigation is underway. ' •shed with lbeir investigation inlo

pendent investigation of all aspeccs ·
of die event I am cenain tlley will ·
be complete and thorough."
"In addition, I, as Mason County Sheriff, am conducting an internai investigation;· Watterson said
"Pursuant to established policy j
have suspellded, with pay, die ~
officers involved until bolb investigations are completed."

~~~';:::;:.::!!1TJ~~=~:·~~~:;~~~~:-IH~~~::~~~~~:~~-!:~;~~~~~~£~:~:c::~~---~~:
incident-County
1l&amp;xtWhekO"
. ~~-mattc:l1s~WilittiC!ilffi::cJOrver-~,...
in who
Mason
Sheriff
Ernie to "AU.
the office
of the prosecuting

-~1"--"~--l~;;;;f.~ 1icj
Center wiU be
ctoaed Ia ohaenance of
holiday
Tb•uri1lay. The cobb
routed 10 lO.pound turkeys Wednuday. Tbe tu,rkey and aU the
tr1mm1np were delivered to 170 homebound penons acroa Melp
County and Nrved to more than 150 at the Center today u a part
oftltecounty'anulritlonproanm.Fortheputl8yean,flomona
Hawll, pictured here, bu cooked turkey• at tbe Center for the
TbaliuaJvlll&amp; dinner. (Photo by Charlene Htlemcb)
.

'I

P-17·11·040 1121 BFF4

I

"

I

I

6 oz~

''

Ellis lying on die living 'toom·noor
wilb Mr. Ellis sitting next to her, be
laid:
Two children, ages 9 and 13,
were at home when die incident
occurred, be added. They stayed at
a neighbor's home last night. A
third. child was not home atlbe
time of the Incident
The Rutland squad of die

·TIDE ULTRA
DETERGENT

:•
::

,,'·· .., '

7

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

:1

'

:~~~~n s~;.~~sf~~ :~i~~E~~~ FBI conducting civil rights investigation
bad been sho~ Soulsby said. Upon
• t
.,.
, 1'1 th; shen"ff ma"es
(,
't a tement
anivalatlberuialSalemTownsbip In 0 .een s uea
s
mobile home, officers found Mrs.
,,

P-17·11 ·075/211CCBT64

••••••••••••••••
1 ------------ ---------1

FLAVORITE
:I : :
:: :: . MAC &amp;CHEESE :: : :
tl

NORTHERN

1

Good Only at Powell's Super V&amp;lu

Fle»11r•••••••••••••t.~•••••••••

•I I'

Meigs County law enforcement
officials are investigating tbe
apparent shotgun murder of a westem Meigs County woman Wednesday night
Deborah K. Ellis, 35, 31720
Moleban Road, Vinton, died
around 11:12 p.m. at the Holzer
Medical Center Emergency Room
in Gallipolis from injuries caused
by a 12-gauge sholgun blast to die
upper-lefl portion of her body,
Meigs County Shefiff James M.
Soulshy said Ibis morning.
Her 39-year-old husband, Den·
nis J. Ellis, is in custody al lbe
Meigs County Jail on a charge of
murder, be added.
Soulsby said lbe shooting was
die result' of an apparent domestic
dispute:
The sheriffs office got a call

60Z.

·

• II! Jl. ll! .!1. 11! .• • • • !I.I! .!1_11! .!II •rll! !1. 11! !1.11! • • • • ·!I.'! !1.11! !'I •,. '!! -•- '! -•- '! .• • • • .!"_ '! -•-'! -•I
1~
COUPON
: I I
COUPON .
I
It
COUPON
I

'-

JELLO GELATIN

COOL

16 oz. box

17

$ )89

89(
Spread •••••••••••••••~~~.....
2
69(
WHIP ••~•••••••••••:.~...... ·
Spaghetti •••••••••••
89(
8
9
(
Jam •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PAR KAY JUMBO ,

Husband
charged in
wife's death

..

290Z.

$139

ing information on the existing
Meigs County Jail.
.
"We're definitely interested in
joining in the procedures for a
regional jail," said Fred Hoffman,
pres ld ent of the Meigs county
Board of Commissioners.
"I would like to see each counly
be able to build its own jail," be
added, "but lbat is not a feasible oc
affordable option at Ibis time."
Meigs County Economic Developinent Qkector Julia Houdasbelt·
Thornton presented information
about die number of prisoners and
costs associated wilb keeping them
in die Meigs County Jail. Iofonnalion from each county wiD be calculilled to determine operating
cosiS of the new facility.
Members of tbe Soulbeast Obio
Corrections Commission met
Thursday afternoon in Wellston
with representatives from M.S.
Consultants, Inc. of Youngstown

GOP says some tax cuts will earn money

STOKELY
PUMPKIN

MUELLERS

and New Haven exchanges in
Mason County.
Thornton appealed to the P1JCO
to consider ioll·free calling
between die two counties.
"It is a fact lbat we are a distressed county being a part of
Appalachia, so lberefore it is clear
lbat we need.
wilb·
our grasp

lion include a sile a1 the Sara James·\
Industrial Park near Jackson, a
location near die Gallia County
Children· s Home on state Route
160 near Gallipolis and a 300-acre
site near Salem Center in the west·
em end of Meigs County.
Continued on page 3

mil:~t::::.:~igscountycame
a step closer towards throwing iiS
t~i!~tc~~t;i~~eb:n~r~:~~v,d~

"I feel it is ridiculous to be able
10 call 10-lS mjles wilb no charge
and yet have to pay a fee to call a
few lbousand feet across the river,"
be added.
Hoffman ·~rew a barb at GTE
w
and die PUCO: "Where Meigs
County is concerned, it appears lb~t
we ba11e been forgolten once ag~n
~ lbat Wlil!' can ~n so easll,Y
' lie&amp;.
11,1 SUIJ~Un~n~g areas JUSt d~sp t
1!\100 attOtni!
..
Daniel
~ m.Maas,County uoless.ONe ··.
E. fulljn ~J:r~~~~~ceiinr
·~
~efii at ttiC Meigs County Mullip~need a chance .to better !ill sti~ together to makiTure lbat
,
po5e Building In Pomeroy. GTE, ourselves. I hope tbe (PUCO) will It cJ.?es.
We sbouldn ! settl~ f~r less
Inc. was represented by attorney discover and uphold that need
~an lbe same sel!'lce wb1~ ts proBruce Kazee and Pat Cook, the today."
vtded
to our netghbors m Galha
company'~ ~gulator ~ coordi' -·~ . Fn:d Hoffman, president of die
County
and the soulbem poruon of
nator, wi~QC die Meigs and Mason Meigs County Board of CommisMason
C~unty .. We deserve tbe
resldeniS were represented by Julia sioners. said the two coimlies need
sam~
C?,nstde~auon
and the same
Houdasbelt ~ Thornton, Meigs toll-free telephone service.
servtce,
be
satd.
.
C11unty economic development
"Businesses.· and industries on
A~proximately
35
people
tes.ullirectot.
bolb sides of die river need Ibis
C,urrently, local officials are toll-free servi"'~ not only provide tied ~nclud~ yeterans Memon~
adnum~trator Scott Lu~,
attempting to establish toll-free economic beqe~fit for their busi- Hosptlal
Paul Reed, prestdent of die Metgs
calllng. between the Middleport, nesses but for ,dJe convenience of County Chamber of Commerce and
Pomeroy and Syracuse exchanges lbeir customers;Qnd employees,'' be Farmers Bank and Savings Compa·
.in Meias County and die Mason said.
.
·
ny, and Pomeroy and Mason mayors John Blaettnar and Fred Taylor.
respectively.
Follin said PUCO will review
die testimony and letters prior to
making a decision on the mauer.

16 oz.

Chicken Parts ••••••••••~ .

By JIM·FREEMAN
who examined five potential jail
SenUnel News Staff
sites earlier in the day.
ConsultaniS Thursday eliminat·
Consultaills ruled out use of a
ed two sites for a proposed four- Gallia County site on state Route
county jail leaving lbree sites in 160 behind the Gallia Coun1y
Gallia, Meigs and Jackson counties Senior Citizens Center and a Yin·
open for consideration. The fmal ton County site near Wilkesville.
site selected will be named at the
Remaining areas for consideraend of the month to allow a grant
application to be filled out and sub-

seated from left, GTE attorney Bruce Kazee,
PVCO attorney examiner Daniel Fullln and
Melp County Economic Development Director
Julia Houdashelt·Tbomton. (OVP photo)

M~lp County Commbslon president Fred Hoff·
man, standing at right, spoke out Thursday In

SJ89
Colb Cheese.............
·

19

BEEF

~

LB.

2 Sections, 12 Peese 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nawapaper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 17, 1994

•

. ·
Chuck·RoasI ••••••••••••••

Hlglt In lower ~

en tine

2UTER

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Low tonlpiiD 401, pertly
cloudy. Friday, pard)' cloudy.

.

•

7 UP, DIET, REG,
DR. PEPPER
·DIET, REG.

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

'

Pick 4:
3052
Super Lotto:
3-7-1()-20-29-38
Kicker:
073545

Page4

.WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD NOV. 13 THRU NOV. 19, 1994.

'

Pick3:

. 587

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

'

~

I

..

die
part or die coun- ·
Halley, 17, Gallipolis Ferry,
ty near Gallla County.
was killed Saturday by a Mason
·. The incident remains under County Sheriff's deputy while
Investigation, Soulsby said. As sis- · apparently attempting to drive off
llllltMelgsCounlyprosccutorCbris In a shenfrs department cruiser.
Tenaglia said Ellis may- be Halley bad been detained by two
arraigned on charges tbis after- deputies for allegedly stealing a
noon.
"
,

Watterson told die Rel!ister today,
"I know die public is con~emed
about die incident resulting in die
dealb of Jeremy Halley. 1 want to
assure everybody; at my request,
die D~partment of Public Safety
(Swe Police) is conducing an inde-

attorney, who I feel certain will
present it to a grand jury consistinR •
of 16 Mason County citi~ens !l ·
W~~otterson said.
'
"We want 1 to and will be fair
wilb everyone involved and
complete Ibis process as soon u
' possibiC,'' the sheriff conciudCd..

will

I

...

'

..

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="367">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9739">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31752">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31751">
              <text>November 16, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="719">
      <name>rose</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1325">
      <name>ruschel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="8">
      <name>wallace</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
