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                  <text>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~

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Vol. 45, NO. 139
Copyright 1994

Meigs, Gallia
sites in running
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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- ·

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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

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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

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:~~~~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.
,,

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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.

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

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

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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

...

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J'

·triiffsCiay, November 17, 1994

.

Commentar
If the 1996 presidential race
began the day after last week's
midterm election, wbo's ahead?
Well, early poDs say that Sen. Bob
Dole, R-Kan., 1&amp;, but cbasiDg right
behind is Sen. Phil Gramm, R·
Texas, who's got money, focus,
and a tough conservative message.
Despite prodigious work on
behalf of Republican candidates,
most GOP analysts think that former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Alexander, former Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, and former
Housing Secretary Jack Kemp are
still second-tier candidales behind
financial powerhouses Dole and
Gramm.
Still, Alexander is not wasting
time. He bas begun readjusting bil
anti-Congress message ("cut their
pay and send them home") to the
new GOP era, most recently at a
conference in Washington on the
trendy topic of decentralizing the
whole federal governmenL
Also, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.,
bas been expected to announce his
candidacy for president on a mod·
crate, pro-choice platform, and
lawyers may quietly file papers
soon with the Federal Election
·Commission, enabling a Gramm
presidential committee to spend

111 Coart S~t
I'OIDIIOJ, Oldo

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publllller
\

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Coo troller

LETll!RS OF OPINION 11'8 welcome. 'lboy lllould be 1011 thin 300
wmll loDt· Alllellon ... oubjeA 10 odilinJIOd lllllll be oigood wilh n1111e,
ldchu llld telepboDe nwnber. No UIIIIJDOd leltm will be publiabod. Lellerl
lbould be ill &amp;ood IIIII, llldrelllq u.-, DOt p!I'IOIIIIilleo.

·Finding a way for
Clinton to lead

,,

I

~

ByNANCYBENAC
WASHJNGION - Rcflcctlng on the dutiea of world leaders, President Clinton posed an abstracl question whose aoswet could well determine bil polltlcal future: "WW tbe leaders themselves continue to lead ...
even wbeo k is locoovenient?''
' "Like now," be added with a rucfullaugb.
A week after the Democrats' devastaling election losses, Oiotoo and :
his aides are struggling over bow - and wben - be should try to lead in :
a new political universe In wblcb Republicans rule Congress.
·
If the clecllon results themselves weren't jarring enough, Republicans :
· have been floaling a eye-popping array of proposals to reverse the course :
Clinton charted over tbe past two years.
Everytblog from SC111pplog the fedellll Income tax and repealing the
. assault weapons!'an to pulling U.S. troops out of Haiti lounediately and
· requiring a balanced budget
" "The real focus at this point is just watcbing the Republicans," one
senior administtation official said Tuesday, speaking on condition of
anonymity. "At this point, we just have to walt and see how !heir programs develop."
Issue by issue, the administration is only begiDning to re-evaluare bow
the siblation bas changed. On health care, for exa..1ple, the Wbire House
. , beld Its fll'st post-election sttacegy session with outside incerest groups
Monday.
"The overall message is that this is very much a work in progress,"
' sail! -notber White House official, also speaking Oii coiidilioii or
anonymity.
,
· ·' The difflcuky of Clinton's balancing act in heeding the will of the voters and maintaining his political base was apparent Tuesday when the
. president angered liberals by declining to stomp on a GOP call for a constitutional amendment to allow school prayer.
·"The president's first post-election signal on 'culture war' issues
comes across as an instant cave-iil," groused Arthur Kropp, president of
People far tbe American Way Action Fund. "lnsread of taking his cue
·• from (Republican Speaker-to-be) Newt Gingrich, President Clinton
should be standing fll'm."
.
· The dispure was a mirror on the private struggle being waged within
the White House over wbether Clinton's approach to the Republicans
should be one of confrontation or cooperation.
''There are a lot of lvlks.who say tbe most important thing for the president to do right now ... is to defeat the Republican revolution and not to
seek accommodation," said one like-minded ally, speaking oo condition
or anonymity, "There are also some fo~ who see a more conciliatOI)'
--~"
app..........
'
· "Some of us fear that the president, by personality, leans toward the
Jatcer group."
·
Undergirding the cn~discussion is the question of what tack will
-hete Clinton gain re-election in 1996.
'I won't insult you by sayiDg it matrers just a little bi~" quipped one
admiDisttalion official..
Glngricb was only too happy Tuesday to point out Wall Stteet Journal
' ":'poll results showing 55 percent of Americans think Congress should take
the lead in setting policy, compared wilh 30 percent for Clinton.
Gingrich's read on tbe will or the electorate: "It wanted the presidem
" 'to compromise with the Congress; it did not want lhe Congress to com·
.promise with the presidenL''
· • · Paul Begala, a political adviser to the While House, allows that the
·Republicans do bave a responsibiliry to lead on issues like budget reform
that tbey successfuUy showcased during the midterm campaign,
• "The ball is in the Republican Congress' court," be said, baslening to
-:acid, however, that there are issues on which Clinton will not bend,
"where there is simply going to be a clash." .

money.
Gramm won't officially start
raising 1996 money until January,
when be becomes eUgil!le far fed----------- .

Morton Kondraclce
eral matching, and prObablY. won't
declare his candidacy unul about
Marcb.
Meantime, contrary to various
news reports, associaces say that
Kemp wiD not announce his candidacy this week. They say that, as
reported, be was eoersized by bis
courageous opposition to California's Proposition 187 on illegal
lounigration, but still bas not dccld·
ed wbctber to run.
A recent NBC-Wall Slreel Journal poll showed that Dole would
beat President Clinton, 45 to 39
percent, in a two-way race. Last
month, Dole was ahead 45 to 43
percent.
The Republican potnng fll'm or
Fabrizio.McLaugbUo showed Dole
narrowly beating Clinton .and Ross
Perot in a three-way race, 38.4 to
34.2 to 14.3 peroenL
The same poD showed that Dole
was the fii'St cboice of 18.9 percent
or GOP vocers as tbe 1996 noml-

nee, followed by Kemp at 10.9 percent, former Vice President Dan
Quayle at 7.S percent, Cheney at
3..5 percent, Gramm at 2.7 peroent,
Massachusetts Gov. William Weld
at 2 percent, and talk-show host Pat
Buchanan and Wisconsin Gov.
Tommy Thompson at I percent
each.

Tbe poll did not list Oliver
North, who may decide to skip
intennedlace ateps and run for president In 1996 and probably would
become the lostant favorile of the
radical right, wasblns out Quayle
and Buchanan.
Nor did it list retired Gen. Colin
Powell, aome or whose friends are
ursing that be run as a Republican.
But an unauthorized Powell-for. president committee beaded by for·
1 mer U.S. Ovil Rights Commission. er Arthur Fletcher and assisted by
GOP fund-raiser MarJaret AlcQJI·
dec reportedly bas foundered.
Despite Dole' 1 lead and the
attention be will draw as Seoale
Majority Leader, several GOP ana·
lysts say that Gramm got at least as
mucb 1V exposure during and after
the 1994 elections, and will ·be
freer than Dole to stake out bard
conservative positions in tbe
months

~ kNoW.~A
JU5t~T~t
ALL.0~ 'NOSt;

"OSTiL~~

ATT6MPTS

ANYMOQI;~...

~~4
a tO.Kl\~

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· ~r=&amp;t.Btii

Party lines blur~ as voters get mad ··
, The edi~ board meeling 'Yas vice, and utbers at: us bad talked to
more enlertainmg than usual during . voters as the election process wore
eleclloo week, as we discussed the on. We shared tbe opinion that
Republican tidal wave that swept many voters are so frustrated
the country N~v. 8. .
.
~ edito~ ~ IS compnsed Sarah Overstreet
of an mteresung uu~ on any day one ulln! consC!Vauve, ~ mod- they'll go with whomever talks the
erace conservauves, .one modcrale best game on the week they go to
liberal, three flaming !iberals and vote, and last time the Boys in the
one ... y wbo can be counted on to Bus gave better talk.
surpnse us no matter what the sub"Hey, I voted straight Demoject We meet weekly to argue the cratic ticket last time and straight
issues we'D cover in the upcoming Republican this time," one. man
week, and the lines between con- wbo bad just bought a business and
servativeandlibelllloftenblur.
began-handling bis own payroll
This session the flamers conjec· told me. "I'm being taxed to death,
lured that Americans just like to and if these guys don't do any bet·
snivel, that in the greatest country cer, I'll be back to the Democrats
on earth where our tax dollars at next election."
least go_ to social program~ and new
The Boys in the Bus promised
roads mstead of self·mdulged the(d deliver and, in so many vot·
despots, we ought to be grateful. ers eyes, didn't. First, they all but
The mode1_11res and the Big C won excluded Republicans from formasevellll pomts, however, and even lion or their bcallh-care plans and,
~ol them to agree. with. us a few second, sCared the wadding out of
umes. Before the diSCUSSion ended, middle-.:lassers wbo believed
one or lbe Uberals was even grum- they'd lose their doctors and be
bling that state employees get a unable to bear the tax burden of
paid b~.ur _off to vote. "Aha! what was put on the table. When
Gotcba! med the rest of us.
Clinton and Gore did enact some
Two of us bad talked to a verer- measures that cut popular programs
an political report~r wbo _covers and reduced the deficit somewhat,
four states for a. nauonal WII'C ser· they did a poor job or ceiling us.
,
.

EDITOR'S NOTE - Nancy Benac covers the White House for
The Associated Press.

·Today in histpry
. By TIM Alloclatetl Pre.
, Today is 1builday, Nov. 17,1be 32lst day of 1994. Tbere are 44 days
.. left In tbe year.
Toda 'a Hilbligbt In History:
. On t~. 17, 1800. Coogress held its first session In Wasblnston iD lbe
· J*liaiiY compJetecl Capitol building.

And equality • financial, racial,
gender. And a sound environment
too; government became more and
more involved in seein11 that the

John Cunniff

.,

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

.
...

...

~-

-

_,.

..

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. After reaching about 70,000 in
1980, the number or P:.f:!t~ the
Federal Resiscer, the pub · on In
which new regulations arc pub·
lisbed, feU again but not for long; it
was baclc to 69,688 pages in 1®3,
and beaded bigber. ·
Many people felt they were
more burt than beiJ!ed by government, that government bad gained
too much power over the private
sector, that it was Intrusive in their
lives, and that government costs
were outrageously high.
Robert Rector, a Heritage Foundation analyst, estimates that the
average American family of four
DOW pays :l4.S percent of income to
the federal government in taxes,
lncludins Social Securiry. 'versus 2
percent in 1948.
And tbe National Center for
Policy Analysis, a Dallas think
1ADk--"1CUiaures sbowina.J;omL .
pensatioo (benefits included) of ,
federal civilian workers In 1991 .
· averaged $46,164 versus $31,789
for private-sector worters.
ff people perceive the benefit-·
cost ratio bas changed, quite likcly :
these are amoag the reason•
involved.
John Cunniff II 1 builntll
analyst for the ~ted rr•.
'

..

{,

- . ....

"You can have ellber a aenauxi·
a1 afendi or a presidential asen·
da,' says Republican operative
Eddie Mahe. ''Tbe presidential
agenda is about visions of tbe
fublre. The Senate aaeoda is about
' getting S1 votes next week. Bob
Dole, If be stays Majority Leader
for more than a few months, wiD
have to make compromises to get
legislation passed To run for prCaident, yon have to speak with clear
tones. Pbil Gramm doesn't com·
Jl'i'omlse or wiggle. He knows wbo
be is."
Mabe and others think that
. Gramm, more than Dole, is I~
logically in syocb with incomlna
Speaker Newt Ginpicb, R-Cla., and
bla House followers, wbo mustlnl·
lillie all money bills and wiD also
pusli a rigoroualy CODKlVlltive lli1l
100 days qenda.
As majority leader, Dole also
· will be in the position of cuttioa
deals with tbe Clinton White
!House, while Gramm can take
:sharp rigbt·wlDJ )JOSidons -as be
did this year on health care and
crime - that please GOP llrimarY
voters. Dole, wbile a vigorous 70,
will bave to juggle two arduous
jobs as candidate and majority
leader, wbile Gnunm can coocentrale on ooc.
Tbe two are judged by proa to
be about equally qualified to raise
tbe $20 miUion a leading amdldate
will need before_ primaries be sin
next year. Top GOP fuod-ralscn
say that the available pool or GOP
money probably permits no more
than two or three candidates to collect tbe necessary funds.
Dole's top fund-raisers are former ambassador to the Nelberlands
Howard Wilkins and Lodwrick
Cook, chairman of ARCO.
Gramm' a include Floridian Alec
Courtellls, lalely recovered from
cancer, and a sroup of Texans
including Conner Dallas Cowl;loys
owner Bum Bright and former. Rep.
Tom Loeffler, R-Texas. Fornter
Ross Perot ally Tom Luce also is
with Gramm.
Alexander, aided by Tcoocasee
businessman Ted Welch, aays be
will have no problem raisiDg $20
million.
Democrats probably hope that
Gramm, with bis aoor image, wiD
be the 1996 nominee. They f&lt;qet,
though, that be's also tough.
(Morton Kondncke II uecutlve editor of RoD can, the newspaper of Cap''.oiiUU.)

Vocers seem to feel they have ment, tbe ldnd of food we eat and
very little to show for the slice of where we eat it, the clothes we
tbelr eaminss taken for taxes and wear. We may decide to live in
executives In agencies funded by more econom1cal homes or drive
thoSe taxes have done an equally lesser cars.
poor job or lnformlna them wbat . Many vocers have the idea that
their money is doing, They set a instead of cutting expenses, govsour taste in their mouths every ernment-funded agencies try as
time someone yells "entitle- bard as they cin to spend at least as
ments," and wonder why programs mucb as they are budgeted for ao as
begun as a bridge between depen· not to lose future funding. Some
dency and self-sufficiency have members of our editorial board
become som~thin11 thAt re~inients have served on boards of DODJXOiit,
nowconsidertbelr "righL"
government-subsidized agencies
Our discussion moved on to just where they've been told as much.
bow much these vocers want cut
The grass-roots belief that our
from our expenditures. Tbe guy tax funds have not been stewarded
wbo surprises us believes we're pro~ly is widespread. Wbicbever
expecting to get the budget bal· political party can persuade us that
anced by onlf cutting the "fat " It wiD handle those funds wilb lbe
and that there s not enough grea'se proper responsibility ..:.. and wbicb
on the menu to make mucb differ- can provide us J:VIth detailed,
ence. The rest of us arrived at the understandable plans for refonn point where we asreed that what will set our voce next lime. whether
we expect from our government is they are Democrais, Republicans or
that it play by the same rules by To Be Named.
wbicb we have to play:
Sarah Overstreet II Auodate
If we don't have enough money Edllorlal Paae Editor at the
to cover our debts we lind a way Sprlnglleld (Mo.) News-Lellder.
to cut back. If we've spent more
(For Information on how to
than we should have on our credit .communlcaC, 'lectronlcally with
cards and tbe inlerest is killing us this columnllt ·and others, con·
we .find a way to cut other expenseS tact America Olillne by ca1U111 1until we bring the balance down. 800-827-6364, ·~ 8317.)
We cut wbere we_c~: entertain·

There were positive impacts, on
poverty, housing, equality,environnient, safety, the workplace and
and lbe Red seas.
.on the role of an activist govern·
much more, but increasingly, negaln 1889, tbe Union Pacific Railroad Company began direct, daily rail· ment, perhaps deciding that tbe
tive ones too: Laws, regulations,
road sc:rvk:e bclweeo 011cago and Portland, Ore., as wen as Chicago and benefit-cost ratio no longer was in
•
mandates; rules and limitations on
Sao FranciiCO.
.
·
their favor.
.
behavior. And waste.
1n 1917,1CU1jlt« Augllll R!ldln died In Meudoo, France.
Th;ll reassessment may have elements of life were maintained.
Doubts continued to rise about
In 192S aaorRocltHudaoo was born in WinliCika, lll
.
been evolving well before tbe You can add safety and a host or the benefits of activist government,
1n 1934, Lyndon Balocs Jobosoo manied Claudia Alta Ta~lar, better Ronald Reagan era, but for sevellll otber issues to the list ·
with increasing references to the
knoWn 11 Lady Bini.
decades before then, back to the
All this cost money, so taxes lnleDtions of the founding fathers,
In 1962. Washington's Dulles International Airport was dedicated by Great Depression of the 1930s, it inched bigber. Deficits too: Since and txominent amQog the citations
PresJdenl Kamedy.
.
wasn't that way at all.
1958, lhe federal budget bas bad a were the words or James Madison,
In 1968 NBC·lV outraged football fans by cutting away from the
Their faith shattered by tbe surplus iD only two years, 1960 and to wit:
final minuia of a New York Jeu..()aldand Raiders game to begin an Great Depression, millions of 1969. Inflation in the 1970s was at
"I believe there are more
'lldaptatioo r:l "Heidi" on schedule. (Viewers missed seeios the Raiders Americans during tbe '30s accept· . rates never experienced by most instances of the abridgement or the
cxme rnm behind to beat the Jets. 43-to-32.)
ed as rigbt and proper the growing living Americans.
freedom of the people by gradual
In 1970, tbe Soviet Union landed an 1mmaoned, remoce-controlled involvement of govenunent iD tbeir
By the 1980s, more Americans and silent encroachments or those
vcbicle 011 tbe moon, tbe Lunokbocl One.
personal lives and to a lesser excent were questioning the benefits and In power than by violent and sudIn 1973, Presideol Nixon told Associated Press managlna editon meet· in tbeir busiDesscs.
· worrying about the intrusions Into den usurpatloo."
•
;IDJio Orbmdo, Fla., that ·~1c ~otto know wbetbet or not tbelr
There was little dispute about their lives. While living conditions
According to many people, gov~kblbacroot. Well, I moot a
"
the primary role or government in might have improved, It was emment was a burden on their
.• , 1n 1979, Inn'• Ayatollab Khcloeini ordered lbe release or 13 female the early 1940s, when events die- becoming harder for blue-collar bac)c. the Reagan administtalion
and blact American.boltaies beloJ held at tbe U.S. J!mhtssy In Tdlrao.
!Bled that all else ~ ~dary to workers to save and get ahead.
sought to ~elieve the bur~n.Jmt
'f:-+-~e;c.~.-TI• yesn 110= Eaypt.-uccd 11-IIIIUoiled.u "'"'in•tion-plot-by-tbe·war-effort, utHIIdiv1duals-and
Government-was-c1'el)'wbee~r~c:, -rreliof actions-wcrc-wllnlCred by
'Libya. Uling fabd J)botolrapbs to foollljc Libyanl iu)thinking a pooli· institutions accepted government and for all its benefits, everyone new e.ITorts or legislators wbo felt
IICIIl exllc (former l.ibylil Prime Minister Abdel·lfaml? Baklcoush) bad di~.
was tripping over IL
duty bound to enact laws.
been alalo.
Tbe trend continued into the
A federal government that spent
Thomas Hopkins, an author ape1
Five yean aao: The Senate Etblcl Commluee hired an outside cow\sel postwar years. It was widely $1.7 biiUon in 1902 spent $942 bil- cializing in the subject, observed In
to loot Into alleptioal r:l 1m~ qainst six ICIIIIOn.
accepted that a people who had · lion in 1980. Per capita taxes that 1992 that the Declaration of IndcOne year aao: By a aurprisiniJy wide marsiD of234-200, lbe House of·' gone through the worst depression were $18 in J9(Jl were $3,286 in pendencc required only 1,322
RcpmCPtadves vOied to approve Jegi1lation lmplementinf the North · and a great war deserved govern- 1980. Tbc number of federal words, but that sovemment resuta·
:.AmerieaD Free Tilde Agreement in what was aeen as a nuuot.potitical ment benefits, including financial employees numbered 3.2 million in tiona oil the sale of cabbage totaled
'victory for PJaldeDt Clil!ton.
seCurity, housing and education.
1929, but 17 million ill 1980. ·
· 26,911 words.

'

By The Associated Press
Cloudy weather will prevail
across Ohio tonight and Friday, but
fair sides will return in lime for tbe
wcekend. fm:casters said.
It should be a little warmer on
Friday, the National Weather Servic.e said, with bigbs iD the low 60s.
Even though tbe sun wUI be on on
Saturday and Sunday,lemperatures
aren't likely to get out of tbc 50s,
the NWS said.
Lows tonight will be In the mid·
(

•

Americans may have reached a tentative decision

Ontbildafe:
1n 1~~. Rll•ebdb 1 ascended tbe Eoslisb tbroDc upon tbe death or
NEW YORK -Judging by the
Queen Mary
election results, Americans may
• 1n 1869, ibe Suez Canal opened iD Egypt, linking tbe Medicerranean bav~ reached a centative decision

.

Fri~, NOT.l8
Acco·We&amp;lber" forecast

GOP's Gramm is man to watch for '96

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

"·

Fair weather forecast for weekend

OHIO Weather

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

G-nl Mo:p·1•

Pege-2-The Deily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thul'8dey, November17, 1894

l!'omero!-Middlepon, Ohio

IND.

•lcolumbusl63•

I

Rain was easing off -in Florida,
but there was a chance of coastal
flooding In the Carolinas as Gordon
made its way out to sea afler causiog six dealbs and damaging the
nation's winter fruit and vegetable
aups.
Alta sJd resort east of Salt Lake
City picked up 321ncbes of snow
' Wednesday, with 4 10 8 inches
Tropical Storm Gordon was reported in the city. Klamath Falls,
pulling away from Florida this Ore., picked uf. 7 incbes or snow.
morning as winds blew snow and Mojave, Cali .. reported a wind
rain aaoss several western stales.
gust or 81 mph.
More beavy snow and strong
winds were expecled today across
' the Cascades, the northern Sierra

40s.
The record-bigb cemperallire for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 76 degrees In 1958
while the record low was 13 in
1959. Sunset tonight will be at5:14
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:20
a.m.

Around the nation

---- Loca I b

.I

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f
rle s---

Woman in wreck charged with DUI

S:my PlC/oudy

A Racine woman whO failed to stop in time when a man stopped
at a red light in Pomeroy was charged with driving under tbe influence and failure to maintain assured clear distance Wednesday,
according to Pomeroy Police records.
Pamela Wise, 40, Racine, scraped the front end of her 1978
Oldsmobile at 3:3S p.m. Wednesday at the intersection of Nye
Avenue and East Maio Street, reports stared.
Harry Oark. 61, of Pomeroy, reported bls 1986 Chevrolet 18XI
bad no damage to its rear end, records show.

=

McDonald's fender-bender reported
No cbarges were filed and no one was injured when two cars
bumped early Tuesday morning In the McDonald's parking lot,
according to Pomeroy Police records.
Opie Cobb, 86, Middleport, reporred no damage to bis 1984 Ford
L1D wben be backed from his parking spot into a woman's car that
was iD the drive through at 9:30a.m. Tuesday, reports staled.
Sheila Allen, 48, Racine, reporced light damage to the taillight
area of her 1994 Chevrolet truck, records show.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonigbt ... ParUy cloudy with a·
low in the mid 40s. South winds
less 'than 10 mpb.
Friday ... Partfy cloudy with a
high iD the lower 60s.
Extended forecaut

Saturday...Fair. Lows 40 to 45.
Highs iD tbe 50s.
Sunday... Fair. Lows 35 to•40.
Highs in the 50s.
Monday ... A chance of rain.
Lows upper 30s to lower 40s.
Highs upper ,Os to lower 60s.

Woman hung up on Pomeroy wall
A Pomeroy woman 'backed her 1984 Ford into a wall, causing
ber to get stuck Wednesday night, according to Pomeroy Police
records.
Christina Holloway, 35, Pomeroy, backed into the 832 East Maio
St. wall at 9:13p.m. Wednesday, reports stated. Holloway wa_i$
charged with improper backing.

-Area death·s - o. M. Stewart

Oty M. Stewart, 88, Vinton, died In Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va., Wednesday, Nov. 16, 1994.
continued trom page1
Mr. Stewart served as Gallia County treasurer from 1965 to 1975, and
was a Gallia County Commissioner from 1958 until 1962. He served as
Consultant Michael C. Fagan posed medium-security stale prison
mayor and a village councilman of Vinton Jar se~eral years, and owned pointed out the pros and cons of several years ago. The stale deCid·
and operated the Scewart Hardware Store in Vinton from 1947 to 1965.
each sire:
ed to locate !be prison in Belmont
Mr. Scewart was a member of the Vinton Methodist Cburcb; member
The Jackson Counry site bas the County.
and Past Mi!Ster, Vintou F&amp;AM Lodge 131; Ancient Accepled Scottish advantage
of easy access to bigb·
Consultants are ex~ected to
Rile Valley or Columbus; The Aladdin Temple of Columbus; The York ways and utilities,
bqt is on private announce a proposed s1te at the
Rile Bodies; Grand Cbapcer Royal Arcb Masons 79, Moriah Council 32 property and would probably have commission's Nov. 30 meeting. ~Y
and Rose Commandary 43; The Gallipolis Shrine Club, Past Patron of the
to be leased or purchased which Dec. 16, the county selected w1ll
Vinton Order of Eastern Star 375; Tbe Lafayeite White Shrine of · may raise operating costs, he said.
complele the ·paperwork necessary
Jerusalem 44, Gallipolis and Huntington Grange 731:
The Gallia Counry sile, like the to re~eive a state grant f~r. conHe was born Sept. 20, 1906, in Gallia County, son of the late James A.
·. and Tacy Sanders Srewart He was preceded in death by bis wife, Sara . Jackson County silt, ·also bas easy suuctio~ ~r the propo~d faCility.
access to highways, be noted.
Tb~ J&amp;l_l c_ommtsslon _w•ll also
Donnally Srewan Feb. 23, 1988.
The
Meigs
Counry
sile
is
local- submit mus1on and bas1c policy
Mr. Scewart is survived by a son and daugbter·ID-law, Norman and
Kathy Srewart, Gallipolis; daughter and son-in-law, Opal and John Pa~e, ed fartlier away from major bigb- statements,. letrers of support and
ways but is more centrally-located documentauon o~ needs, operau_ng
Vinton; six grandcbil~ren, four step-grandchil~n!, 14. gr~t-grandchll·
within the four-county district, be costs and otl!er ~tems along wtth
drent one brother, Arthur (Helen) Scewart, Xerua; on_e SISter·m·law, Lav·
The size of the sire IS also a the grant 3J&gt;Piicauon. .
erne Stewart, Gallipolis. He was preceded in death by one brother and one said.
plus, be nOied. However, the Meigs
Attendmg from Me1gs County
siscer.
·
County
site
docs
'llot-bli'Ve
easy
~ere
Hoffman and '11!ornt~n. Gal·
· ., " Servicel·wl be ·beld 1 p. m. Saturday at the Vinton Baptist Church access to gas Jines.
h,a
County
representatives mcluded
with Rev. Marvin Sallee and Rev. C. J. Lemley officiating.
In
addition
Hoffman
said
the
Common
Pleas
Court Judge Joseph
Burial will·be iD tbe Vinton Memorial Park.
·
board
or
com~issioners
has
not
Cain,
Commiss~on
President Ken
Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, Friday
approached Southern Ohio Coal Farm~r and Sbenff James Taylor.
~~andM~ .
.
Pnor lo the mee~ng, Hoffman
Masonic services will be conducted Friday, 8:45 p.m. by the Vmton Company about the land since it'
was originally offered for a pro- and Thornton met w~th consultants
F&amp;AM Lodge 131.
at the Salem Center s1te.

Meigs...

Paul C. Werner

Meigs announcements

Paul C. Werner, 75, of Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Nov. 16, 1994, at
Missouri Baptist Hospital in St Louis, Mo.
Born June 15, 1919, in Middleport. son of the late Chauncey and Letha
MCaJiie" Reed Werner, be worked in the accounting department or Kyger
Creek Power Plant iD Cbeshire. He was a member or the Trinity Cburcb
In Pomeroy and a World War II Air Force veteran.
He is survived by his aon and daugbrer-in-law, Rick and Adria Werner
of St. Louis; sister, Betty Fife of Middleport; and two grandchildren.
He was preceded in dealh by bis wife, Margaret MMickey" Werner and
brother, DalC Werner.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral Home. with
the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. Graveside ceremonies will be conducted by the Drew Webster Post of the American Legion at Gravel HiU
Cemetery in Cbesbire.
·
Friends may call between 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Sunday at the-funeral
home. In neu or flowers, send donations to the Trinity Church.

. will host the Smokey Mountain
Tuppen Plains square dance
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post Drifters who will play round and
square dance music rrom·8-11 p.m.
Saturday at the VFW ball. Cost is
$5 per couple and $3 for singles.
Am Ete Power ......................31 718
Dance to be lleld Friday
Abo ........ - ...........................57 118
CJ. and the Country Gentlemen
Ashland OU ..................................38
will play for round and square
AT&amp;T ................................... .51 118
dancing Friday, American legion
Bank Oue............................... .lS 314
Bob E•an~ ........:..................... .lO 1/4
Hall, Middleport. 8 to II p.m. No
Champion Ind ..............................25
admission.
Cbarmlnc Sbop ........................6 518
City Holdln&amp; .. -....- . ......... _..........Jl
Trustees to meet
Federal MoguJ ..............................lZ
Letart Township trustees will
Goodyear DR ............................35
meet
Monday at6 p.m. at the office
K·mart ......................................... ts
building.
Lands End .....-....................... 17 1/Z
Limited Inc. ........................... .20 314
RACO to have dinner
Multimedia lue ..................... .28 718
Polnl Bancorp .......-.....................19
RACO will have its Thanksgiv·
Reliance Electric .................. .30 118
ing dinner and meet at the Kountry
Robbins &amp; Myen .................. l7 1/Z
Kitchen Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
Royal Dutcb ... -.................... 109 114
Reservations are to be made by
Sboney's lnc.......................... .14 l/8
Saturday with Libby Fisher.
Star Bank ......-...................... .37 718
Wendy lnl'l...........................14 518
.WorlhlngiOn lnd ................... .ll t/Z
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quolu pro•lded by Advesl o
Galllpolls.

Stocks

EMS logs eight call~
. Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
eight calls for assistance Wednesday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPOR1'
4:0.1 a.m., Highland Road,
Leona Wallace. dead on arrival. .
4:48 p.m., South Second
Avenue. Clay Tuttle, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RACINE
5:05 a.m. , Third and Vine

Tb~· Daily Sentinel

streels, William Bird, Veterans
Memorial H05pital.
12:~9 p.m., Dorcas Road, CleUa
Findley, VMH.
POMEROY
9 p.m., East Main Street,
Michael Todd Hubbard, VMH.
11:05 p.m., Whites Hill Road,
Ernest Richmond's structure fire,
witb assistance by Rutland, no
injuries.
RUTLAND
7:(J}. p.m., Moleb811 Road, Debbie Ellis, VMH.
9:14 p.m:. VMH, Debbie Ellis.
Holzer Medical Center.

across eastern Montana, tbc Dakotas and oortbwest Minnesota.
Fair, dry weatber was forecast
for the Nortbeasl and most of the
Obip and the lower Mississippi val·
Jeys.
Temperatures were expected 10
reach lhe 30s and 40s in tbe North·
wes~ 20s and 30s in the. Rocldes,
60s in the Ohio and Mississippi
valleys, and 40s and 50s Nonbeast.
The nation's hoi spol Wednes·
day was Sarasola, Fla., at 84
degrees. The coolesl was Leadville,
Colo., at 4 degrees.

•

Pomeroy Court news
The followiDg cases were beard
in the Pomeroy Mayor's Coun of
John Blaettnar Monday.

Fmed were:
Ralph Fowler, Middleport, $100

plus costs for menaci.ng threats;
Thomas Anderson, Pomeroy, $48
plus costs for speed; Todd Voonie
Jr., Pomeroy, $113 plus costs for
public intoxication; Jack Hannan,
Pomeroy, plus costs for expired
tags; Stephanie English, Middle·
port, $63 plus costs for passing in a
no-passing zone; Vickie Peclcbam,
Racine, $54 plus costs for speed;
Nathan Griffith, Athens, $44 plus
costs for speed; Sally Moore,
Pomeroy. $113 plus costs for public intoxication; Leon Gray,
Pomeroy, $263 plus costs for bit·
skip, $63 plus costs for failure 10
maintain control; Robert Carson,
New Haven, W.Va., $63 -plus costs
for traffic ligbl violation; Charles
McCloud, Middleport, $113 plus
costs for public intoxicalion ;
Joseph LeMaster, Long Bottom,
$88 plus cosL~ for open container
on a parking lot, $88 plus costs for
consuming under 21; Harvey Lam·
ben, Pomeroy, $263 plus costs for
bit-skip, $50 plus costs for no
insurance, $43 plus costs for failuie
to yield while entering public high·
way; Christina Fifeman. Pomeroy,
$45 plus costs for speed; Thomas
McCourt, Middleport, $55 plus
costs for no operators' license;

Pomeroy, $61 for speed; Karren
Lemley. Pomeroy. $70 for speed;
Rebecca Griffith, Akron, $63 for
failure to maintain assured clear
dis1ance; Shawn Price, Racine, $83
for failure to comply; Danny Buffington, Pomeroy, $75 for speed;
Michael Eblin. Rutland, $63 for
failure 10 maintain assured clear
distance; Sandra Philson, Syracuse,
$69 for speed; Melody Phillips, ·
Parkersburg, W.Va., $68 for speed;
Harry Pickens Jr., Pomeroy, $69
for speed; Robert W. Fetty,
Pomeroy, $59 for speed; Betsy
Molden. Pomeroy, $63 for prohibired left turn at Butternut Avenue;
John Tuttle, Reynoldsburg, $69 for
speed; · Rickey McKnigbt,
Pomeroy, $65 for speed; Denn.is
Clark, Pomeroy, $68 for speed;
Sharon Buflington, Long Bouom,
$68 for speed; Paul Dill. Pomeroy;
$68 for speed; William Quickel,
Pomeroy, $63 for failure to malo- ·
tain assured clear distance; John
Wayne Salla, Letart, W.Va., $83
for squealing tires; Kenneth
Reynolds, Middleport, $64 for
speed;
Paul J. Jones, Pomeroy, $63
plus costs for no valid registration,
$150 plus costs for driving under
suspension; John Aeiker Jr.,
Albany, $375 plus costs for driving
under the influence, $51 plus costs
for speed;

Forfeited were:
Charles Aeiker Sr., Pomeroy.
$83 for disorderly manner; Roy E.
O'Dell, Rulllind, $60 for speed;
Rickie Reeves, Pomeroy, $133 for
public intoxication; Kelly Phelps,
Pomeroy, $63 for failure to yield;
Emmanuel Cundiff, Middleport,
$230 for petty theft; Jodi Young,

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL .

Wednesday admissions
Michael Todd Hubbard, Racine
Wednesday discharges - Lola
Barber, Middleport
Holzer Medical Center
Dlscbarges Nov. 16
Mrs. Jeff Jayjobn and son;
William Musser, Mrs. Basil Crews
and daugbrer; Ben Harris. Melissa
Williams, Kathleen Abens, Rebec·
ca Benyi, Sally Fielder, Tarron
Laoston and Amanda Tbi vener.
Births Nov. 16
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Knox ,
daugbcer, Hamden.
(Printed with permission)

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
PAULY SHORE

IN THE ARMY NOW PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
WES CRAVEN'S
NEW NIGHTMARE R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2.00

446-0923

.1LCQf{JJ.J[IO'J{S
FINE JEWELRY

(liSPS 213-HI)
Publiohod • .,.,., olltrDOOD, Molldly lllroul)l
Pdday, Ill C- St .• Pu. . .y, Olllo. by lbe
Oblo YllleJ Publlilllaa ~yiMultlmodla
IDC., Pumoroy, Olllo 45769, I'll. 992-2156.
s_..s ............ pold ........

and the central Rockies, and a mix·
ture of rain and snow was cxpectcd

GALLIPOLIS • MIDDLEPORT
Middleport court.

OPEN SUNDAY'S

,.auo.

The following cases were beard
in the Middleport Mayor's Coun of
N.._.,"--llloL
Dewey Horton Tuesday nigbL
POITMAS'flll• Sood- ........,....
Fined were: Beverly J. Hayes,
The Deily Sntloel, Ill Court So., .
Middleport,
$100 plus costs for dis........,.(llllo 45169.
orderly manner; Brian R. Hoffman,
IIVISCIIP'DOIIIIATII
Middleport, $25 plus costs for run·
olng
a stop sign; Shawn Ingels,
ooe - . ..................................~...........SI-'0
Middleport, $~5 plus costs for runOle fdoalh ......- ................................. ~.95
Ooe Y• .... ,.......................................... $1:1.20
ning a stop sign; Kimberly J. Seth,
Pomeroy, SIO plus costs for
11NGL1 COI'Y PRJ at
expired tags; Terry L. Rodatz. Mid·
Jiolly ............................................... , c..
dleport, $100 plus costs for disorSlllll&lt;ribon DOl deoldll to poylllo-.
derly manner; Kimberly A. Jordlin,
..mt ~~- ...... to The Glllllpolllllolly
Middleport, $25 plus costs for ficti·
Trlbuoe oe • - · Ilia or 12 molllh b•lo.
.tious ta&amp;S. J~.'JQLCQntempJ; GrewlU bopM- - - o.
PT-~.• ~~ ~\-II
~. -:~
aory R. Cooke, New Haven,
No•~i&gt;y..a.,....-illrW
W.Va., $425 i!lus costs for DUI
cbarse.
aloosfwith three days in
MAILSVIICIIPI10111
jail.
Ceulr
IS W-...:. ........: ..................................$21.~
Forfeited were: George D. Lem·
26 w-.......... .................................. ,..s.s.76
ley,
Jr., Cbesbile. $150 for possess2
.$14.
sion of marijuana; JOcinda Mullen,
. . . o.toYoG-~
IS w-...............:...........................S23AO
Middleport, $60 for running a red
26 w-.............................................145.50
light.
52 w-...............................:..............111.40

M_., The Allodotod rn., ud 1be Oblo

Sunday's

a,c.nw.--

SEE OUR GRAND NEW DISPLAY
OF CHRISTMAS JEWELRY

alder frames,
assorted
uphqlstered
seats and
backs.

GLIDER ROCKERS ·
SALE PRICES
STARTING-AT

$21900

NOVEMBER FINANCING SPECIAL*·

---·-·-

S]_O~:A MONTH

~cquisitians

......G..

1Wo Locations:
151 Second Ave. Gallipolis 446-2842
91 Mill St. Middleport 992-6250 •

w-.. . . . ... . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . .

· Member Jewel«~ Board of Trade

I '

I

1-4

o

FOR OIIE YEAR
II

0"

"' fJ:L..--1~~

�•

The Daily Sentine~

Sports

~

.

.

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

·In the NBA,.

~uns beat T-wolve~; Bulls edge Spurs

&amp;

Thursday, November 1L 199ot.
. P~ge-4~

!{.~IpoC~B~STER
r

In the Preseason NIT,

0 DC night removed from I
drought-ending victory over the
p-evlously Gol~ State Warriors,
up for the MinTheir chances to' make It two
~~~~appeared good because of
InJuries to the Phoenix Suns who
played without Charles Bukley
Kevin Johnson and Wayman ns=
dale. But the dream gave way to
historic reality for the Timberwolves, who had never beaien the
Suns.
They still haven't after 105-90
setback Wednesday night. In six
NB:&lt;\ season~, Minnesota Is 0-21
ag&amp;Jnst Pboemx.
ioS add itlon to the other ~oes,
the uns 1ost center Joe Kleme to
an ear injury in t!'e third 9uarter.
But Danny Mannmg .rematned on
the court •. and the !•mbervolves

OU Bobcats defeat Ohio State 78-67
By·RUSTV MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio University coach Larry
Hunler smelled au ambush.
"This was the biggest setup I've
ever had in 24 years of coaching,"
Hunler said.
But Gary Trent and the rest of
the Bobcats didn'tlet Ohio State
spring the trap, defeating the Buckeyes 78-67 Wednesday night in the
fli'St round of the Preseason NIT.
Trent scored 10 of his 26 points
during an 18-0 run in the first half
that put Ohio ahead to stay and
gave the Bobcats their 14th victory
in their last IS games over the last
two seasons.
The Bobcats advanced to play at
14th-ranked Virginia in the second
round Friday night.
Ohio returned eight of its top
nine players from a leam that went
25-8, woo the Mid-American Conference regular-season and tournament titles and played in the
NCAA tournament m 1993-94.
Two Ohio State starters transferred and three other players were
kicked off the team afler slcirmishes with the law in the wake of a 1316 record last year, the school's
fli'Stlosing season in 17 years.
"No one thought we could lose.
... It was a no-win situation,"
Hunter said.
For a while, at least, it looked as
if the Buckeyes might truly make it
a no-win situation for Ohio They
broke out to a 22-11 lead on
walton Kevin Martin's second
three-pointer with 9:24 left
But during the next 5:26, Trent
scored 10 points- bitting both Qf
his three-point attempts - and Gus
Johnson added two more threes.
Jeff Boals, who finished with 14
points, chipped in with a buclcet
"I knew we were down 10, then
all of a sudden I looked up and we
had made a nice 20-point
turnaround,'' Trent said.
"OU kept its poise and wore us
down. They didn't panic," Ohio
State coach Randy Ayers said.
"We lost our patience in the first
half and got too quick on the !rig-

ger."

The 6-foot-8 Trent, a two-time

MAC player of the year and a
Columbus native, bit IO-of-19
shots from the field. He added 15
rebounds.
Trent later scored four points in
an 8-2 second-half run that boosted
the Bobcats to a 13-point lead and
put tile game out of reach.
It was a special night for the
Bobcats and for Trent. The victory
was Ohio's first against a Big Ten
Conference team since the last time
it defeated Ohio State, on Dec. 29,
1973. Ohio State bad won the last
seven meetings in the series.
Friday's quarterfmals have Ohio
University at Virginia, Canisius at
George Wasbington and Alabama
at New Mexico State.
T)le semifinal~ and fmals are at
New York's Madison Square Garden on Nov. 23 and 25.
George Washington led by nine
'points with 2:01 to play in regulation. Lucious Jaclcson hit two long
tllree-polnters to lead Syracuse's
comeback that ended with Uoyd's
spectacular shot after be spun off a
defender.
·
"We were trying to deny them
the three-point shot. He made a
great shot. You can't ask for better
defense than that,'' Jones said.
S}'Jllcuse never got started in the
overtime. ·
"I don't think we bad much left
in the overtime," S~acuse coach
Jim Boeheim said. • We got lucky
at the end of regulation to get ourselves in position to get into overtime."
Lawrence Moten finished with
21 points and John Wallace added
17 for Syracuse, but they scored
just 14 points in the fmal 25 minutes.
Nimbo Hammons had 22 points
for George Washington, which was
9-for-18 from thrce-poim range.
Uoyd, a two-time junior coUege
scoring champion, fmisbed with 27
points in his major college debut,
scoring all but two after halftime.
Jaclcson hnished with 17.
Canlslus 81, PeM 78
At Philadelphia, Michael Meeks
scored a career-high 36 points and
made the decisive free throws with
12 seconds to play as the Golden

Griffins ended ·the Quakers' ISgame home winning streak. Jerome
Allen, who finished with 21 points,
drew Penn to 79-78 with a threepoint play with 53 seconds left, but
Mcelcs, wbo bad 26 points in the
second half, sealed it with his two
free throws.
No. 14 VIrginia 83
Old Dominion 80
At Charlottesville, Va., Cory
Alexander, who brolce an ankle in
last year's season opener, returned
in style with a career-high 29
' points, including three clinching
free throws in the final 37 seconds.
Petey Sessoms bad 21 points to
lead Old Domipion in the debut of
coach Jeff Capel.
. No. 18 Alabama 79
Kansas St. 48
At Tuscaloosa, Ala., the Crimson Tide cruised behind a 26-5 run
tllat closed the first half and opened
the second. Eric Washington bad a
career-high 23 points for Alabama,
15 from three-point range, while
Jamal Faulkner added 20 points.
Stanley Hamilton bad 10 points to
lead the Wildcats, who shot 28 percent from the field (18-of-64).
It also marked tile fii'St time that
Trent's father bad seen him play In
a college game. Dexter Trent bas
spent the last six years In a Kentucky prison on drug charges.
"I didn't think about him being
there during the game, just after it
was over," Trent said.
Rick Yudt scored 20 points and
Etzler added 17 for Ohio State.
Tony Watson, the lone returning
starter for the Buckeyes, scored
seven points and bad two rebounds
before fouling out
Trent said he was pleased with
his homecoming.
"I'm just happy to win and get
to the next round," he ~aid.
"We're just trying to get to Madison Square Garden (for the NIT
semifinals)."
In otber fim-round games
Wednesday night, it was: George
Wasbignton Ill, No. 12 Syracuse
104; Canisius 81, Penn 78; No. 14 ·
Virginia 83, Old Dominion 80; No.
18 Alabama 79, Kansas State 48;
and New Mexico State 97, South-

emCa184.
G. Washlaaton 111
Syracuse 104·
It was 14 seasons between losses - and games - at Manley
Field House for Syracuse. The
Orangemen last lost there in 1980
when Georgetown beat them to end
a 57 -game home winnins streak.
George Washington made it
consecutive losses in the building
on Wednesday night, scoring the
fli'Sl 12 points of overtime in a IIII04 victory over the 12th-ranked
Orangemen.
"What we didn't do in n:gulation - that we did in overtime was we stopped attacking," said
Kwame Evans, who led the Colonials with a career-high 29 points.
"We said we would go out and
attack for the whole five minutes in
ovenime."
That they did, and it was
impressive because Syracuse sent
tbe game into overtime only
because Michael Uoyd banked in a
three-pointer at the buzzer.
"Definitely, tbe momentum
went to tllem. But '!Ye played hard
for the whole game," George
Washington's Vau,bn Jones said
or Lloyd's shot. 'We weren't
going to give it up."
Syracuse was forced to move
the game to Manley because the
Carrier Dome, its home since 198081, was set up for a football game ·
this weekend.
"This was one of the best and
most important victories for ·
George Washington basketball,"
Colonials coach Mike Jarvis said.
The first round closes toni'ght
with Southwestern Louisiana at
Memphis and San Francisco at
WAITING for Ohio State's Carlos Davia to Jump over his ba~k Is
New Mexico.
Ohio University pard Geno Ford, who •ppean to be looking to pass
the b.U to te.mmate JIISOII Terry (51) during Wednesday nlgllt'• Preseason NIT ftnt-ro,.nd game In Colambu, where the Bobcats won 'J
New Mexico St. fJ7
711-67. (AP)
Southern Cal84
LAURA ASHLEY ~
At Los Aligeles, the A~ies ral•
lied from a I 5-point defiCit to ruin
the debut of Southern Cal inleriw
•
head coach Charlie Parlcer. Rodney 23 points. Parker replaced George
Now In Stock
Walker scored 25 points, including Raveling, who retired this week to
•
concentrate
on
his
recovery
from
the Aggies' final nine as tbcy
Fabri.e
By
The
Yard·
'
closed lhe game with a I S-5 run. injuries sustained In a September
Lorenzo Orr led the Troj~ with auto accidenL
-'

Home Decorating
8 12~

-

Basketball
'

NBA standings

'

DMo1oit.
~.., .............~ \ ~

Orludo ..................4

woo~~~..,................4
· -......................2
New JOIIOf ..............2
l'hlladeiJllltl ...........2
Mlami .................... J

2
2
4
l
6
l

.61J7
.61J7
.333
.286
.2!0
.167

Coall'lll Dlvloloo
llolloll ............... .....4 2 .61J7
CJJ!V~ ......... 3 l .600
MIIWMJI&lt;oe ............... 3 2 .600
CIJI........................4 3 .!71
IDdlalla ..................... l 3 .lOO
ctwlolle ..................l

Atlllltl .....................l

4 .m
l .216

Tonl&amp;ht'• pm•

Iii

Oll-11 HOUIUJD.I p.DL s-.10 II Dlllaa.I:JO p.m.
llollollll Deawr, 9 p.m.
CI.EVELAND II Portlmi,IO p.m.
New York 11. Golde11 Sllle,l0:30 p.m.

2
2.l
3

Friday'• R•ID••
l-A. Clippero II Philodelphla, 7:!0

3

p.m.

New J.aey II. OrluuSo, 1:30 p.m.
Bolto1 II Miami, 7:10p.m.
Milwaukee a Allaola. 7:)0 p.m.
Selnle lllodl0...1 p.m.
llolloU II Ullh, 9 p.m.

J
J
J
I

z

Por11ud II Phoellll. 9 p.m.
CLEVELAND 01 l-A. I.Uen. 10:30
pm.

2.l

Preseason NIT

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Wednudly'a ·

MWw. . DivW..

Iaa
-

ll: L lsi.

. ...................7

J)eover .....................!
llollu ...................... l
· Su Alltooio ........... .3

0 1.00
I . .Ill
l .600

l

.lOO

lil

Rrst-round scores
Cuii!W II.PcDD 71
DIDO 78, OIDO STATE 61
,
Ooorae WuhinfOn 111, SJTKUH 104

l .l
3
J.l

Ullh ...................... l

4 .429

4

lollDDCiota ................ l

7 .Ill

6.l

Pacille Dhioloo
Ooldeo Stale ............! I .13)
PortliDd ................... ) I .7!0
Jlhoeoill ....................l 2 .714
SaonmoliiO ............ l
2 .600
SeOitlo ...................... 3 3 .lOO
l-A. J.Wn .............. 3 s .m
I.A. Clippcn ..........0 6 .000

Jlrldlr
CIDiiiUI II Oeorae WllhiOJIOD, 7:)0
p.m.
OHIO 01 Vit1inl~ 9·30 p.m.
'l
Alabama It New Mexico St . midniaht

Wllhi11~11•Ncw fwuy, 7:30p.m.
l-A. Clfppon. Clla1dl&lt;, 7:Jl p.m.

Allaollc

tO'I)

Vlrpoilll, Old OomiDioDIO
Allhlma 79, Xamu Sllte 48
New MeJtioo Sr.e 97, Soulhmn Cali·

1

Toalgbt's
Rrst-round gam•

2
3
l

Southwr:alera Louilip ll Mempbi1,

9.30p.m.
Su Fructaco 11 New Mea1co, 10:30
p.m.

Wedllllday'•sco. .

"""'"'St. ,..... 7l, UtNu 69
RlhlbiUon
BC C - Bub, C10IIIa 12. Cilldll·
Dlll63

TIT Rip. Lolvla 71, Bowllq Onea

Salwd.,

US~UNM winn« va. SW Loui1lall•
loleraphil wloner, TBA

70

AI Madltaa Squar• G•dea
WalDCIIIIJ,NoT. J)
Allbama New Mexico St. winner w.
USf-UNM-USJ.,.Me-..hil WiDDer, !:30
8

p.m.

.

Oeorae WuhlnJ~on-Canlalus winner
VI. Ohio-ViraiDII WIDDW, 7:30p.m

Cbam~nahlp

AtM..UO. uueG•IIIe•
frldaJ, O't'.1S
Semifinal loaen, 1 p.m
ScmifiDII WilDen, 9 p.m.

Non-conference
Exblblllon

Bowliaa Oreeall. !.IIvia 73
Xavier 107,1JCE•plorml)

Ohio women's
college scores

"-lc•LoCLEVELAND INDIANS: Slaoed
Rick Wroaa IDd LuiJ lopez.-.
TEXAS RANGERS: Slpad fzlc foL
outfield•, to a colltnct wltb Otllboma
City ol 11M ArNricaa Aaoc:laUoa ud iavitecS IUm to 1pri111 tralalq; • a DOll-lOIter player.

aoaDel.
QIJCAOO CUBS: Namod Mu Oil"'
boadl COICb. Wolv~ Rudy V pitl;hcr. Anaoua'* dtl coolnd of Rick
l'lllenoD, 11111111" oCiowaol tbo Ameri-

0100 Dominican 19. Wllb«lcwce 70
AIIU&lt;IeoiD ActloD1l, Toledo71

BuellaU

NllloaaiLo...o .
ATLANTA BRAVES: Nllllld Jo11
M..luz !pedal ..,iltaot ol play" por-

Odler Ohio men's
college scores

'" AlloclatiOD, IDd J!nlle RoueiU, mi-

1101'-lelpl hitlina iDJtnldor, wUI aot be
renewed.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Named Pat
Raenta miDCW·' - • hiWoa...,dluto&lt;;
Oomcr Hodao D'IIDI&amp;W ud Jeff Fi1mtr
pildliDI'coadl o!W.. I'IIm Beochollhe
Flonda 51110 Jaaue.
NEW YORI(METS : Slaoed Bryn
Rodaers, DoD Floreace and Jimmy
WIIIIIIN, pitcben.
SAN DIOOO PADRES: N....a Pawy
l&lt;opoo rnt buo coocb; Oroia Ncalco lbiJd

OtiCE .

-·llO.s-le93

Christmas Savings
on

Childrens Shoes
Thursday, Friday and Saturday

2So/o off
• Dress Casuals,
• OshKosh
• LA Gear

I

base coacb: ud Tye Willer bl.lllptl
coach. Seat JO£e Mlrtioe:z, pitcher, to 1M
Vea• ol tbo ~rae Cout Laaue. aDd
Dave Staloa, Ont b•emu.. to Memphia
of \he Southen Leap.
SAN FRANCISCO OJANTS: Namod
Coaoie Koollbq acll«&lt;i muaacr oC Rlllil
opcnliu11.

•'

WAVERLY .
FABRICS .
'

•

BasketbaU

Transactions

Semlftnall

lonola 84
I
.l
1.5

Non-collferenee

Quorterftnato

Plolladdphla 109, Milml96
Olk:a&amp;O 94, Saa Aotoalo 92
Aloeoh 10!, MiiD-90
Ntw Yor'&lt; 110, l-A. LWn 19

On Saturchly, November 19,1994, from 8:00a.m. until
4:00 p.m., the Leading Creek Conservancy District will be
lnshllllng 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 water system, must be
drained and out of service during this time period.
All customers east of Danville on SR 325, SR 124, SR 7,
SR 143, SR. 684, and all county, township, etc. roads off
from these state roade will be supplied by the Dletrlct's
20,000 gallon tank on Homer Hill. Because this tank will
provide only a limited volume of water, the Dletrlct urges all
customers to prepare for this outage by stocking up on
Friday night and by conserving water on ·saturday. After
urvlce Is restored, the District's employeea will be flushing
all lines, so customer can expect some discoloration for the
next few daye. After service Is restored, all customera In
the affectad area should boll all water used for human
coneumptlon for 3 minutes until further notice.
'
, Those cuetomere at lower elevation• may not
ex1llrl8nc:e any significant chll!'geeln .their water preuure,

:

Matching Borders •
and Wallpaper· '

Scoreboard

NIIIGaal B. . .lb.U .U...lallaa
BOSTON CELTICS: Placed Shot"""
Daoalu, ..,.ro. on lho ioJind l~t Actlvlled Tony Harrii,IJllll'd.
CHARLOTIE HORNETS : Siaoed
Grea Sunoo. auard. Waived Joe CourtDey, forwll'd.
!:lnCAOO BULLS: Actovaled Bill
WeooinatoD, eeoter, ud Jud Buechler,
Corward, from lheloj\LRid liJL
DALLAS MAVERICKS: Ac&lt;lvated
Roy Tarpley, rorward, rrom lh• Injured

·.

AVAILABLE

•
'

WALLPAPER AND. •
BLIND SHOP

lilt

OOUlEN STATE WARRIORS: R..,
aianed Chria Webber, forwwd. Waived
Rod Hlglos, lorword.

IIUIOIIIAL IRIDGI A - H 011
GARFIELD AVI., PARitUIIURO

MON. THRU FRI. 9·8:30
SAT. 9-5:30, SUN. 12-4

FootbaU'
Nllllooal Football Lo,.oe
NFL: Named Allo KlncluJer NFL ED·
t«Prii• vie. prollhlenl of prollfllllmiDI

aaa media dewlopment.

428·1065

ARIZONA CARDINALS . Siaucd

CJrls Swaru, q-erb~ Waived Brlall
Heuesey, runmna b~et.

l~doana Firm Jlloeo&gt;eMJ'

~

Special " cream
for arthritis

•Until now, qaost arthritis creams have been nothing more than a "locker-room"
muscle aeam sold ror ll'thribo use. Now a
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Leading Creek Coneervancy Dletrlct
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1,

::;:::r!es

bal!~oanu~ole.forbiDI.

Mannmg IS carrying us right
now offensively," Suns coacb Paul
Westphal said. "He Is doing well,
but I don't ~ink we've seen the
Danny Mannmg we are going to
see, ~cause w.ben you surround
hiDI wtth guys like Barldey and KJ
it makes a difference." .

' Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:0Q p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
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Oh.
Week

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.

BAM! - Cblugo troutman s~ottle Pippen bangs from the rim
after 1lammlng In two points over San Antonio'• WIUie Anderson (40)
during Wednesday nlgbt'a NBA game In the Alamodome In San
Antonio, where the BtoUs won 94-91. (AP)

Past and present major
leaguers fin~ baseball jobs
very difficult to acquire
By BEN WALKER
Stewart. though, may have a job
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) waiting when be's finished pitchFor current major leaguers like in g. He bas done a lot of communiTom Henke and former players _ty work in Toronto for two years,
such as Chris Speier, it's the same and his off-the-field presence,
story: There aren't a whole lot of along with his on-the-field expertjobs In baseball these days.
ence. could serve the team well.
. "We got a call from Vince
"He's someone we'd like to
Coleman's people," Texas Rangers bave in our organization." Ash
gCJIClll) manager Doug Melvin said said.
Wednesday. "We weren't interestThis week's general managers
ed."
meeting bas attracted otllers lookIt used to be that teams were ing for jobs. Speier popiX:d into
eager to call any available players, - ·ne.Pboenician resort. looking for
just to see wbere they stood. But friendly faces.
now, with clubs trying to hold
Speier, a solid shOrtstop for
down salaries, plus the game's more than a decade, laler coached
11ncertain future, that time is fin- in the minors. He's been away
isbed.
from the game for a couple of years
Recently, Henke's representa- -aside from helping "Out some
live talked to the Toronto Blue infielders in the Arizona Fall
Jays, trying to find him a spot with League - and wants be on tbe
his old team.
field again.
.
"His agent called about two
"!just want to get back m the
weelcs ago and asked about that." game somehow," Speier said.
inue Jays fieneral manager Gord
The OMs have been spending
Ash said. • I don't think there will their mornings in small group sesbe a need there.''
sions, discussing issues such as the
The Blue Jays aren't sure need to get young athletes to play
whether Dave Stewan will play for baseball.
them next season, even if the labor
•'The breakdown happens in tile
situation is settled by then.
teen years,'' Ash said.
, Stewart said before this season
Later in the day, it's time to talk
.. sWtc:d that this would be his last trade.
year. He wavered. though, and had
"In past years, we targeted
not definitely decided wben major clubs we 'elt we matched up with
leaguers went on strike Aug. 12.
thebes~' Ash said. "But this year,
"He has indicated to us now, we thought it was smarter to talk to
and I believe it's .his final decision. everyone. •'
that be wants to play another
There bas been hardly· any disyear," Ash said. "Ideally, he'd like cussion, tbougb, about today's
:to play for us. I'm not certain we'll labor talks in Washington between
be able to come to a deal."
owners and players. Owners are
Stewart went 7-8 with a 5 . ~7 preparing a new proposal in hopes
ERA. He's 37, and the Blue Jays of progressing toward a settlement.
are not eager 10 pay more than $4
"There· s not mucb talk at all
miiHon for the two-time AL play- about that;" Asb said. "Better to
off MVP. ·
let them handle it there."

Bettman says he hasn't given
up on saving NHL season
despite league office layoffs
By JIMMY GOLEN
Officially, the league bas cut 14
TORONTO (AP) - Commis- games from each team's schedule.
sioner Gary Dettman said WednesSpeaking after the induction cerday that layoffs in the NHL office emonies for the Hockey Hall of
shouldn't be taken as a sign that he Fame on Tuesday night, Dettman
lias given up bope of saving the said hockey owners lilcely will canhockey season.
cel the season if they can't reach a
"I'm not going to be in a posi- labor agreement in time to salvage
tion where we cancel the season in a SO-game schedule.
mid-December and have to give
There bas been speculation
~pie 24 hours notice." be said. among team officials that mid'If we get going and people can be December might be the date, but
brought back, we will do iL"
Bellman's comments were the
Fifteen to 20 members of the suongest statement yet from the
league staff were laid off on Tuesday, with everyone else, Dettman lea~:f.i. be refused w set an absoincluded, taking a ,10 percent pay lute deadline.
--1-- - out.,-The commtnloner;--who is ·
"Obviously, tbtl-time is cooling-.bClieved to make $1 miiUon. would ~· W.~'reb not.d~~ yet, bu tdit',s
comang, c Sat . We wou1 n 1
take a $100,000 hiL
Dettman said be wiU
with like to have a season wltll less than
union chief Bob Goodenow today. 50 games. And we'd like to have
He would not say where, except one with more.
"What's clear," be added
thalli is not New YW:.
· Also t~y, league vice presi- today, "is that if we're not playing
dent Brian Burke said be expects In January there's not going 10 be a.,.
UIOlber round of double-digit game season. As we approach December,
cancellations later in the week. the stakes will rise dramatically." •
I

,,

.M:'l:~ ~:ed 13 of hia 22
pom .
quarter. He and
Dan Majerle, who added I~ polnll,
kept the Suns perfect agamst the
T'uo~olves.
.
W::rio':e~DIJS:~ff~ fr:
into the starting lineup wben
West was scratched witb a groi~
injury Marshall had 30 points and
led ali rebounden with 13.
Minnesota also got
inu
from second- ear Ia er f::.iah
Rider. But it J'aso't PenJugh, especially after Marshall tired late In
the game
"In tbc: final quarter, I probably
felt a liule bit winded," Marshall
said. "This was the firSt time that 1
really played a lot, and I felt it It
was close at the end, but they j'ust
pulled away"
So Minne~ta. wbicb snapped a
16-game lost~g streak spanning
two seasons wtth a victory at Golden State on Tuesday night, was
unable to make it two in a row
Elsewhere in the NBA, ii was
Boston 120, Seattle 93· Philadelpbia 109, Miami 96; chicago 94 .San Antonio 92, and New York
110, the Los Angeles Lakers 89.
Buill 94, 'Spun 91
Will Perdue's dunk with less

&amp;u

is

~.a SCC&lt;!nd left .was decisive as

Chicago wtthstood another
biB night by David Robinson.
Perdue caught a perfect pass
from Scottie Pippen, who was double-teamcd a! the top of the key,
and~ 10 for the easy ~L
30 ~~d~=n::~o.;:
b
• .
locks. Robl~son, who scored at
leas.t 30 pomts for lbe fou~th
stratght. giiJ!le, tied a fran~htse
blocked shots m the
Ron Harper who has struggled
.
. . . •
!'~ {=g the ~ulls as a free
vtSJllng

=SIX
8

~Ida 11027fu;!~sonb 93

Dominique Wilkins had his best
ame forB
'th 29 ·

York continued its mastery over
Los Angeles
Ewins, rested b coacb Pat
Riley after the
tercd tile
fmal period leadin 82
had 22
points as New ~ ork b~at Los
Angeles for. the sixth straight time.
firST~K~tcthreeks,winning fo~ the
em
tries on a .ourg~ road trip, took a 53-36 lead
With a 12-1 spurt in the fmal 2:19
of the ~nd quarter.
Cednc .Ceballo.s led host Los
Angeles?~th ~oC0 mts. """
n
, eat ..v
.Jeff .Malone ~red 12 of his 31

Koic6

.59

8

~f~ fpb~
lhird q~ancr, leadi!'J
13
1

tory. e .gh1 to on Y •ts second VICmet games.
reboun:.~~~:ns oft~matss: sp~ei~~~~
afterl64
start in hi fi 1 fi '
the M' ·
q
fli'St six s i : O:.v~a:I:~ g::!rter si;un•. closed .to 67-66. He scored
as the C~cs rallied fiOOI aq53 _53 O.U:~nts d~~~~ a 1~-0 run, and
halftime tie.
arros . 001 Jumper at the
They outscored visiting Seattle ~~~: •t88-75 cntenng the
39 18 fo 92 71 1 d 11
•
.--· ·
lead was to 1 po~~ ~ s
.Barros made four o~ six tllrees 1
· pomters, and bad 24 pomts and 10
scru:'~/wi~a
s1 9 ~~~~by Detlef a~~~sj Cl3!ence Weatherspoon
Knlcks 110, Lake;, 89
:ever tr!~~~ts for the 76ers, who
Hubert Davis bad 14 of his 27
Glen Ri 1 d d 1 d M' .
points wblle Patrick Ewing_ rested (I 5) w'th
e.1 ep ete
tam I
1D' the fourth quarter, ana New
had ~I poi~ :d ~d~::o~~~-

0::

fo

1:

3

le;

:M

Rose uses patience in going for reinstatement

meet

KennethMcCulloug~h~,R~.~Ph~.~~~

I

The UBny ~ntlnel Page 5

"

'

.(AP!- ~te Ro~

.

IS a pauent guy. !le swatted this
long to .set back mto baseball. He
can wall a little longer. Or a lot
longer,ifthat'swbatittakes.
The deal, when Rose was barred
from baseball for life In 1989, was
~be could apply to the commiss1oner for reinstatement after one
year. He was otherwise occupied
the next year, in prison for tax evasion. Now that he's available to
apply, there is no commissioner.
You don't write a letter like that
begi~~ing: "To whom it may con-

cern.

.

"Our .Philosophy is I~ let base;;
ball get 1ts house back m order,
the former Cincinnati Reds WaJ!liJ!:_

:!Bud
and P!arer said Wedn.esday.
Se.lig s got more on h1~.nund

thangelliDgalet!CfCJ:omme.
Rose figures lime IS on his side.
"Every day that goes by is a
pi~ for~," he said. "When Ban
Gtamalll suspended me he said I
bad to reconfigure my life. I've
complied with his wishes. Alii can
do is live life tile way you would
want me to.
"I think today I am the best
ambassador baseball bas. The peopie who run baseball don't want me
around, but I've got a nightly
forum for two hours. I don't badmouth tbe game. The game has
been good to me.llove the game."
The forum is the Pete Rose
Show, a radio sportstalk program

broadcaSt from Rose's restaurant in
Boca Raton, Fla. The program bas
just been picked up by SportsFan
Radio Network, meaning it is available for 140 markets including 43
of the country's top SO. He cohosts with Michelle Oaks "We
disagree about everything,'.' Rose
cracked. " '."ou'd think we were
married."
Rose knows that reinstatement
would mean almost certain induetion into the Hall of Fame. He
views that as his just due. "Without sounding arrogant," be said, "I
know the player I was and you
know the player I was. I was the
biggest thing in baseball. I sold the
game for 25 years."
His 4,256 bits_ more than any
player in history - are eloquent
testimony to his accomplishment.
The suspension for gambling is a
cloud that bangs permanently over
the record.
"My biggest uphill battle was
this: When Giamatti suspended me,
he was asked if he thought I bet on
baseball. He said, 'ltased on the

Dowd report, 1 eonclude he did. •
Well, based on tbe Dowd re n
I'd conclude I did 100 It po 8'
biased repon
'
· was
"Tb
·
t'
·1 1 b
baseba~ Pfr~~~ ~~~ !nde~ 1 ron
admittin · that I bet 0~ tile s or
Bowl G~ti could ba
zr
·
.
ve sa a
lot ?f ;oney if be h~ su~pended
me 10 elnary. 1admuted 11 then. I
to~d ~em 1 be! on football . They
satd, We don t care about that.'
Seven m~ths later, I was suspended~rbet~go~football."
ose ~~ his .belling was e~­
gerated. I .paad a lot more ID
la":Wye!, fees ~n I ever lost in gamblinJ,, he wd.. .
.
. . e bo~ds 110 ill Will for. G~u, who died a week after 1D1posmg
the suspension. "I got along with
Bart." Rose said. "We both loved
and cared for the game and worried
about where it was going."
He did no1 speak as warmly
about Fay Vincent, Giamaui's
deputy during tile investigation and
later the commissioner.

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�Page

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555 PAll ST.

MIDDLEPOIT, 01110
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Kansas
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29
34

L.S.U.
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Miami
Michigan
• Minnesota

28
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41
27
17
28

Nevada

'New Mexico
North Carolina .
North Texas
'Notre Dame
Ohio

u.

Oregon
• Paclftc

25

30

19
33

25
22
23
28

• Penn State
40
• Purdue
27
Rice
36
Rutgers
2t
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'Utah

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Texas Tecl1
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21
Jackson State
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44
V.M.I.
0
• We~t Virginia
19 • Boston U.
20
New Hampshire
14
Stanford
14 • Bucknell
26 , Fordham
8
Soulh Carolina
23 • Cal Paly·SLO
25 Southam Utah
17
Iowa State
10 • Cal State Sacramento 28 Cal State Northrtdga 14
• Fresno State
20 • Conhai Florida
36
Buffalo U.
10
• Vandarbllt
6 • Colgate
24 Holy Cross
12
• North Carolina State 10 • Columbia
21 Brown
7
Wake Forest
7 Davidson
14 Sewanee
13
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21 • Delaware
25 Rhode Island
6
Oklahoma State
7 • Eastern Illinois
29
Southam Illinois
16
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10 • Eastern Kentucl&lt;y
54
Morehead State
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East Carolina
19 • Furman
24 Tennessee-Chattanooga 8
• Temple
3 Gecrgia Southern
19 · •Citadel
12
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25 • Harvard ·
22 Yale
19
Iowa
14 Howard
17 Delaware State
16
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18 • ~sa State
10
Texas·EI Paso
7 •Jacksonville Stale
22 SW Missouri
13
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17 •James Madison
34
Northeastern
9
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27 Lafayette
23
Lehigh
20
Air Force
14 · • Liberty
37 Charleston Southam 3 ·
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16 • Massachusetts
21 Connecticut
20
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14 • Middle Tennessee
31 Tennessee Tech
10
San Jose State
12 • Montana
42
Montana State
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Northwastem
6 • McNeese
30
Nicholla State
14
Indiana
21 • Northern Carolina A&amp; T 20 South Carolina State 19
• Navy
1o • Northern Iowa
23 · Eastom Washington
17
• Pittsburgh
20 Pennsylvania
24 'Cornell
17
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17 'Princeton
20
Dartmouth
9
Western Michigan
14 • S.F. Austin
17 NW Louisiana
12
Maryland
13 • Sam Houston
21 SW Texas
19 ·
Kantucky
1 ·Tennessee State
28 se Mlsaourt
24
T.C.U.
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15 Austin Peay
14
Houston
8 • Texas Soulhern
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17 • Towson
38
Morgan State
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Brigham Young
14 •western ca.rolina
17 East Tennessee
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28 Murray State
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IIIYibiDa lo do widt bint, since be II

my fitber, but I just don~ Wllll tile
1111!1 ..... I p&amp; very upeet IIIII
~w:r I bear frun him.
AIID.l'm an dial it bu&amp;s my modlet

friendly IIOiel. A!lOtller year(lliled.
and be Qllled 8pin llldlellf a gift
for m~lcge gradualion. Over dte
IICll1
,.,.a.Harryeontiaeihilc
once or ~but 110w I really wiJb
Dw Au laden: My problem : lhlt be woulcl justleave.me lklne.
ia my biGiogical fatber,'"HMry." He Life seemed so mucb tim pier
divon:ed my mom when I was very widlout bini jwnping in evtly OOCCI
yw~g but kept in eonlllet about two
in a whlle.
or Jbrcc times 1 year as l was
When my claugbtcr wu 11om. it
growing up. When l decided in my JOl a lot complicet.ed. Hany
late teens to allow my loving 1elephoned IIICl lellt gifts for Ia
lleliadlerto leplly adopt me, HMry binllday 1114 at Cltrislmu. I .didn't
was vety n:sentful and cut off all Wllllto be rude, Ill I wrote lOme •
eoniiCL At fint. I wu burt, but lubwum dtank~you DOIIel. What
aft« 1 while, I felt OK about not ally ...oycd me illhat be ligned ·

and llfepdid.
WbaJ lhould I do? Am I morally
o1lliplcd 10 lcl Hilly into my life
even though it causes so much
clllol'1 Or do I baWl tbe right to tell
him to leave me IIIII my family
alone?
·
I need tO know what to do belen
I get another caD. Plcuc help me.
rm- FEELING SUFFOCATED
DEAltF.S.: It is obvious lhatyour
f'atberistryinghanltomakeamends
for; tbe way be treated yon in the
earlier years. Please considei tile lict

... Cllda 'Onindpa..

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14

HIGHLIGHTS:
The battle·between two Of the best teams In the country as well as the Southeastern Conference, Auburn and
Alabama, will be a teat of two of the nation's best quarterbacks as well. Alabama's Jay Barker became the &amp;ehool's
career paaslng yardage leader two weeks ago, and Al.bum's Patrick Nix has led the Tigers through another awesome
season. Last yaar slxlh·ranked Auburn beat No. 11 Alabama at home, 22-14, with Nix coming off the bench to replace
Injured &amp;tartar Stan Wtite in the second haW. With the Crimson Tide leading 14·5, Nix threw a TO pass that prpved to
be Jha turning point, and the Tlgera went on to end Aiabams'e'three-game winning streak In this 101·year-old series.
On Saturday, Auburn will make It two In a IfNI over the Tide, by nina points.
In the unpredictable Big Ten, Michigan vislls Ohio State, and the fight for second in the conference behind Pann
State heats 14). The Wolverines trounced the Buckeyes 28-0 in '93- 'We were outplayed In 8'111ry way; OSU coach
John Cooper said afterward- so Ohio State wants this game badly. Wanting nwon't be enough, though: Michigan will
run Its unbeaten (once-tied) streak over the Buckeyes to seven.
The Pactlfc-1 ochampionship Is sun up lor grabe, but Southern Cal Komia will need to make short work of arch rival
UCLA to keep Its title hopes allva. The Bruina have fallen far this year, but a USC blowout In the battle of LA would
be unusual: Not only has UCLA won three straight from the Trojans, but the Bruins' 27-21 victory In the Coliseum last .
year was the largest margin of victory In this series since '88. We like USC by nine.
The best game In Virginia this year, Virginia at Virginia Tach, looks to be a baHie of defenses: the Virginia Cavaliers'
against the run. and the Tecl1 Hokles' against the pass. The outcome may depend on which team's olfllnae can muster
some yardage and control the ball. Last year VIrginia Tech took the lead early In Charlotlesvllle and hung on to win
20-t7. This week, tha CavaNers will return the favor.
In Cambridge, Mass.. il's "The Game": Yale at Harvard. In '93, in their 110th meeting, the Yale Elis gava up three
Crimson TO's in the fourth quarter but still came out on top, 33·31 . This yaar, once again, both teams are well down
In the Ivy Laague standings, but in this rivalry that doesn't matter. Harvard Is the three·polnt favorite. ·

· UWUNGS.COAIS

Fisher
Funeral Home
IIKI fiSIII • Ow-/O,..•t..
THE NEW GOLD STANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

•

.Crow's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN
992·5432 ·

,.IE HARIIOIIFL FORICAS'

POMERbY

r--:::=

Saaday and Monday, Nov. 211-21

**BUFFAW .............. 24 GREEN BAY ................ 22
The Bills have won four of the five times they've played the Packers, most recently 34-24 in '91. G.B. can
defend anything Buffalo can throw or run at it, but the Bills have the edge at home.
**CHICAGO .............. l9 DETROIT ..................... 16
Four weeks ago the Lions eked out a black-and-blue win over the Bears, 21-16. Detroit shoul'd-run al over
Chicago's leaky rushing defense, but the Lions haven't beaten the Bears twice since '83.
**DALLAS ................. 32 WASHINGTON ............20
They're still losing, but the Redskins are a better team than the one the Cowboys punished 34-7 in week
five. Dallas will have to work to beat Washington twice for the first time in nine years.
**DENVER ................ 27 ATLANTA .................... 23
This is a tough pick, especially with all the passing that may ensue: Both the Broncos and Falcons throw
well, but neither has a clue when it comes to pass defense. They haven't met since '88.
INDIANAPOLIS ........ t7 **CINCINNATI ........... 12
,
Last year's TO-less 9-6 Colts win, on Dean Biasucci's 42-yard field goal with three seconds left in the game,
was their fourth straight over the Bengals - and all four were played in Cincinnati.
**KANSAS QTY ...... 28 CLEVELAND .............. 21
The Browns were 20-15 winners in '91, the last time these teams met. If Cleveland can score, it could be a
wild game, but the Chiefs will win it through the air, where the Brown defense is weak.
**L.A. RAIDERS ....... 25 NEW ORLEANS .... ......20
It's been three years since the teams in black butted heads - and the Saints kicked the Raiders' butts, 27-0.
1 N.O. 's slats arc better than L.A.'s, but the Raiders are a more talented medioae team.
MIAMI ........................ 30 **PriTSBURGH .......... 22
On a Monday night late last season, the Steelers wiihstood a fourth-quarter Miami rally to beat the Dolphins
21-20. This year Miami's offense is well-rounded, while Pittsburgh's is grounded.
''MINNESOTA ......... 34 N.'(. JETS ..................... t7
The Vikings and Jets have.played only four times, the Jets winning three but the last one 12 years ago.
Reeling from tough game with the Colts, Bills and Packers, New York dciesn't need Minnesota..
PHILADELPHIA ....... 31 *'ARIZONA ................ 19
'TWo weeks ago, the Eagles' Fred Barnett had 11 catches and the defense shone as Philadelphia beat the
Cardinals 17-7. To prove thatthey're worthy in the NFC East, the Eagles must do it again.
SAN DIEG0 ............... 29 ''NEW ENGLAND .... 21
It's been fine with the Chargeis that they haven't met the Patriots since '83, because up to that point N.E. has
bea!en them six times.in a row,_This y~y tile P!lts won't ~nliPu~lr!lllk. .
•
.
''SAN FRANCISC033 L.A. RAMS ................... 14
In the third week of the season, Steve Young and receivers Jerry Rice and Jobn Taylor gave the Rams'
secondary fits in a 34-19 S.F. win. The 49ers should win their ninth straight over the Ramr.
~ ·SEAITLE ............... l6
TAMP~BAY ................ !O
·
Winners of the only two games they've played against the Buccaneers, the Seahawks arc marginally better
on offense and defense than T.B., which, of course, isn't·saying much. A real thriller.
(Monday)
'
N.Y. GIANTS ............. 20 *'HOUSTON ............... !?
This game is nearly a tossup- in fact, to pick the Giants is to pick an upset, given N.Y.'s anemic offense and
the Oilers' solid D. But Houston has never beaten the Giants, last losing in '91.

MIDDLEPOIT

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

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
255 Mill St. Middleport
.
992-3345

0,

INDUCTED - Twelve students at Meigs
Hlgb School :were Inducted Into the National
Honor Society in ceremonies beld Tuisdaf
moml"'l· Students tapped for membership we.,.!
left to right, front, Anne Brown, CIDdl Stewart,
Lori R111HU. Amber Bennett. Dorothy Lellbelt:

second row, .Adam Sheets, Craig Knf8ht, Alison
Gerlach, and Jake Gannaway; and tblrd row,
Jamea White, Dodger ·vaughan, and Angee
Wells. Advisor of the Meigs Chapter Is Linda
Smith.

RIDENOUR'S
·TV &amp; APPliANCE

GAS SERVICE

CHESRR ·

915~3307.

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
· stamp releases were OOing unveiled
Associated Press Writer
today at tlte U.S. Botanic Garden
WASHINGTON (AP) - Envi- near the Capitol.
ronmental stamps designed by cbilStamps with designs ranging
dren, collections of jazz musicians, from anti~ue autos to musicians
garden flowers and the Civil War, highlight • the richness and diversiactress Marilyn Monroe and presi- ty of the American experience,"
dents ~chard Nillon and James K. ~ter Gene~ Marvin RunyPolk will be featured-Oii"·America's "011 Sird,10 prepared remarks.
1995 postage stamps.
A feature of the 1995 program is
Higbllgbts of tlte
a set of four stamps on the environ·

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

~·--- ·

JOIIT,.

~-

ed short-term relief, but it bad no Study.
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN ·
.
long·term effect on the course of
. AP Medical Writer
The findings are published in
CHICAGO (AP) - Researchers lung disease, the study found.
today's issue of The Journal of the
About 22 percent of the people American Medical Association.
have found another reason it's
never too late to stop smoking: who tried to quit and stayed off
Dr. Nicholas J. Gross, a profesLong-time puffers with early signs cigarettes until the end of the five- sor of medicine and biochemistry
of emphysema and chronic bron- year study suffered only a 2.S per· at Loyola University's Stritch
chitis arrested those conditions cent decline in breathing ability, School of Medicine, said the study
compared with an 11.4 percent is a landmark for its thoroughness
when they quit.
''The Lung Health Study lays to decline for smokers.
and scientific rigor, even if the
The 2.S ptta:nt decline is close results were expected.
rest once and for all the question of
,, whether stopping smoking can ben· to the average decline that accom·
" A big prospective study of the
efit people with early lung dis· panics normal aging, even in life- benefits of smoking cessation that
ease," said Dr. Claude Lenfant, long nonsmokers, said the National includes womOD as wen as men bas
director of the National Heart, Hean, Lung and Blood Institute, not been done in the past," said
Lung and Blood Institute, which which sponsored the $49 million Gross, wbo did not panicipate in
Lung Health Study.
.
sponsored the $49 miUion study.
the wort.
About
IS
million
Americans
Researchers spent five years
Prospective studies. wbicb
tracking almost 6~000 male and suffer from chronic obstructive pul- enroll people and watdl whal bap· female smokers ages 35 to 60 wbo monary disease, mainly emphyse- pens over time, are considered
had early signs of emphysema and ma and bronchitis. It is the fourth more reliable than retrospective
leading cause of death - killing · studies, wbich identify people with
bronchitis.
90,000
Americans a year - and certain health conditions and look
Participants were randomly
costs
the
nation $18 billion annual- for clues in their histories.
assigned to three groups. One
group received intensive stop- ly, the government estimates.
However, Gross said the study's
"Chronic obstructive lung dis- weakness is that it used a type of
smoking support and nicotine gum,
· plus medicauon sprayed through an ease is a disease that might not inhaler - ipralropium, or Atrovcnt
inhaler. One received stop-smoking exist if cigarette smoking didn't - that is generally more effective
help and an inhaled placebo. The exist," said Dr. Nicholas R. a~ a short-term medicine than a
Anthonisen, chairman of the steer- lon•-term one.
third received no special care.
ing
committee for The Lung Health
The inhaled medication pnovid-

ment - the winning designs 'from
a nationwide contest for youngsters
held earlier this year.
r" be released on Earth Day in
April, the stamps were designed by
,

l
Grange •InS taJ',s
new offtcers·

New orticers· were inslalled at
the recent meeting of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange held at
Star Grange hall recendy.
Installed were Zlha Midkiff,
master; Eldon Barrows, overseer;
Rosalie Story, lecturer; Ray Midkiff, Steward; Norman Will, assis·
tant steward; Maxine Dyer. lady
assistant steward; Nita Yost, chaplain; Helen Quivey, treasurer;
Pauline Atkins, secretary; Hilber
Quivey, gate keeper; Linda Montgomery, Pomona; Rose B_arrows, '
Ceres; Opal, Dyer, Aora; and Waid
Nicholson, three year term on the
executive committee.
A potluck dinner preceded the
meeting attended by guests from
Albany Grange .
Recognized were deputies from
Athens County, Lowell and Florence Ashcraft and Jackson County
Deputy, Dorothy Stewart. Mrs.
Stewan invited members to attend
the Nov. 12 meeting of the Jackson
County Grange where Patty Dyer
was the speaker.
A special song writing contest
will be held this year, it was decided, with with words or words and
music qualifying.
Literary program theme was
"Thanksgiving Tben and Now"
with readings includin~ "Thanksliving, 1920" by SylVIa Midkiff;
"Thanksgiving Now" by Hazel
Stout; Pilgrim Forefathers" br,
Janet Morris; "Ancient Landmark '
by Linda Montgomery; "I Would
Give Thanks" by Patty Dyer.
Officers conference will be held
on Dec. 4, 2 p.m. at the Hemlock
hall. Hemlock Grange will bost the
January meeting of Pomona
Grange.

Even though she bas bad a enter the contest wbicb will be
tough time over the past few judged from 6 to 8 p.m. on Dec. 13.
months, Kim Follrod, registered
Those wishing to enter should
nurse who is employed in the emer- have their lights turned on during
gency room and urgent care center the judging period. · No pre-regisat Veterans Memorial Hospital, tration is required. Prizes will be
feels she bas a lot to be thankful $50, $30 and $20, respectively, for
for.
ftrst. second and third places.
August 2 was a beautiful day
Anyone having questions about
and Kim bad moved into her new the contest call Mel Weese at 949mobile home at Carmel only two 2078 or Katlu)'n Han at949-26S6.
weeks before. On this day, Kim
had just mounted her horse when
A show b~iid bas been orgabe decided to lay down on his back nized for the Meigs County Talent
with Kim and the saddle under Showcase of 1994 to be presented
him. Kim was hospitalized a couple at the Meigs Junior Higb School in
of times with her injuries. Her Midilleport on Friday and Saturday
body was crushed. Two weeks after evenings, Nov. 25 and 26.
the incident she developed blood
Jennifer Sheets, who is the able
. clots in the left leg. She's doing sbow accompanist, will be on the
okay now but recuperation is tak- keyboard and she will be joined by
Ing time.
Denver Rice on the guitar; Junior
Kim extended big thanks lo all White of Cheshire on the bass, and
of you wonderful Meigs Countians Kenneth McElhinny, drummer.
who sympatltized, prayed for her The group plans a IS minute pro- ,
and bave been su kind to her. She gram of "oldies" before the curtain
hopes to return to work early next opens at 8: 1(} p.m. both evening.
year.
Sounds like a gOod group to me.
. She is the daughter of Jack Foilrod of Pomeroy and Sue Hager of
Wow! I'm really Impressed by
Racine.
· tlte great fall we're haVIng. Each
good day just brings spring that
The Star Mill Park Board will much closer. You can think of that
again be staging "Chrisbllas in the and keep smiling.
Park" in Racine this year starting at
6:30p.m. on Dec. 15.
Houses 3Dd business buildings
'
that were painted last year wiD be
displayed and there will be a light·
ed holiday tree in the ~- Various churches and orgaruzations will
be participating in one, lovely
Overhelming Response.
evening.
We Have Cooked A New Batch Of
Anyone wishing to donate lights
for the tree, cookies for the kids, or
design their home or business
should contaCt Eva Teaford at 949·
2692 or Marilyn Powell at 9492676.
Also any individual, cburcb,.
organization or busin~ wishing to
participate or provide i\)put for the
observance, may contact Eva or
~. Marilyn._ Tlme-move&amp;-rigbLalong
GrNnhouse-Hour11~
• so the quicker. the better.

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE

,-

I

'

Do To

Apple Iutter Cooked In A Copper
Kettle Over An Open Fire

And speaking Qf Racine tbe
Racine Area Community Organfza.
. lion will sponsor a Cbrisunas decorating contest in the community
· again Ibis year.
Homes in the village as well as
those within two miles of the cor·
poration limits will be·'eligible to

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

q

Nixon, flowers,.childr~n's d~signs _hi~hlight 1~95 ~tamp. pl~n~

AVAILABLE IN PINTS AND QUAllS

•

dial peace is beatr lhln ~ 11141ove Kenneilt is eucdy my iae and ... ftiCOI'IIIIIell II Iiiii JOG ciiiCel
is a lot hea!Jhier lhln hate.-lf, wilb · leVer been married. He WIIIU me 10 lite trip and tell KenMch lo fiDd
tile help of oounseling, you cou14 tell hia mother that 11111 28. He lllo him~elf a nice 28-yar-old BIIIICilt ·
get to that place, it would be well would prefer that I not mc:11tion my woman who bu JtOYer beea
worth tbe lime and money.
~~or !hall- bam married.
The decision must be youn, a CNbnlic. {He • a Blpcill.)
Clem of tile Day: People wllo • ·
however. Should you feel tltat
1'beiC "a'llelt'ODt" ba\&lt;e pYell always mlking allowuces for ·
leuing Harry back into your life me new intlgbt regarding my themselvet aad others ead up '
would be viewed u a betrayal by flaace'• chii'ICter. I am deeply brir1l(lt.
yow 11101'6 utd Ia husbMd. il may di'IIIJP'intiDCI. bull don't WlllliO be
Forget IIJ - t1/
be bell not 10 risk iL
bim. y ct I cunot ICe myself telling vorile AM I...Mder1 col1111W1 "Hill"
Dear Ann LaDders: 1 have ._. tbeae lies.
gets tJNI Ooolies" II tlee IIIII!M'.
going wilb "Kenneth" for a1mo1t a
Kenneth says he sees bit Seltd a ulf-Dildrused. loltg, btul·
ytM. We baWl~ Jiving togctbtr mother only twice a ,e. llld the. ltUNiu avtloJ¥ lllld a clttd or
for three month&amp;. He hu uted me "milillfomwion" won't tlllb 111y · • _ , Of'der !« S5 (diU iltcllldu
to marry him, 1114 we 1m going 11 difference. Please give me your pollllge tllld ltaltdlittg} w: N~ll.
Colorado tomcethia mother.
thoughts.- GRETA
. c/o AM Lander1, P.O./b 11$62,
·I am 32 and had 1 previous . DEAR.GRETA:~youueyou Clricago,/U. 6061UJS62. (/11 Cut·
marriage that 1as1ec1 only ODe ....... went to marry thtl man? My ado, wuJ $6.}

Study: Emphysema, bronchitis
arrested when smokers quit

.••,·UJ~,,
J..· I

.

i

~

I fed pi1ty IIYinal don't Willi-

'*• Hury callccl out
of tile .blue IIICl ~r~~t me 1 couple or
Four yem

221 W. Second, Pomeroy, Ohio

I.

c

llavilll him in my life.

BANK

Sat., Nov. 19 - Major Colleges - Dlv. 1·A
'Ar11ansas State
Auburn
Ball Stata
Boston College
• California

Ann .•
Landers

FARMERS

THE HARMON FORECAST

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

..

'lhe Dally Senti"" P!itr-7

PomeroY-Middlepo"' Ohio

Fair weather biologi.car f·ather has no place in daughter's life · ~

~

.

•.

INGELS

108 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

·, Football '94.f
Catch All The:.
•citement!
24 H~'-'r

992-2635

.
fo

'

~ursday, November 17, 1994

Mon.•Frl. 9·5, Sat. 9·4, Sunday

I~

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
Located 3% miles past southern High School

RACINe:, OH.

on Rt.124.

Melody K1per of Slirevepon. La.,
Jennifer Micbalove of Stonmgton;
Conn., Christy Millard of Lakewood, Colo., and Brian Hades of
Millville, Utah.
More than 150,000 youngsters
took part in the contest.
The post office isn't w~ting for
the new year to kiclt off tts stamp
program, planning release of a

lunar new year Year of the Boar
stamp next month.
The new year stamp ':Viii sell for
29 cents, but other de~1gns bemg
announced carry no pnce because
the independent Postal Rate Com·
mission bas n,ot yet ruled on a post
office request for a _rat~ increase..
The agency hopes to msutute a new

32-cent fli'St cl~s rate as early .m
January as possible.
Because of the planned prke
change the release of most new
stamps Will be put off unul March
or later. However, the annual love
stamp will sliD be issued in Febru~ fo~ V,alentine'.s Day. This year
u c~es a portrait. of a thoughtful
Cuv1d.
•..

J

YleacJi O,u.v, 6, 000
I
9.n
·Advertising.Deadline_:
Monday, Nov. 21st
5 p·.m.

Call
Dave or Bob

At 992-2155

94.9-2882

,

I

.

�Page . 8 The Dally Sentinel

Th-..rsday, November 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~andmark cholesterol-lowering study could change heart treatment
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
·AP Scle- Writer
DALLAS (AP) - The first
study ·•IJowlns that cholesterollowering dross save lives could
profoun4Jy change the way doctors
treat heart dlseaac, maltins these
medicines a front-line therapy·for
millions of Americans.
The study, being formally presented today at a meeting of the
American Heart Association,
shows !be drug simvastatin reduced
the risk of de81b by 30 percent over
five years In people who have bad
heart attacks and ansina.
About a fourth of U.S,. heart
patients now get cholesterol-lowering druss. While they have bee.n
availa.ble for several years, doctors
have been reluctant to give them
routinely because of doubts about

wbelherthey really do any good.
School in Houston. He plans to recExperts say the latest research ommend cholesterol-lowering
should silence the skeptics.
dross for all his heart patients with
Dr. Joseph Goldstei!l of tile lJRi- ·· bilh-cbolesteroL
..
versity of Texas Southwestern
"This could have a tremendous
Medical Center, who shared the economic Impact," be said.
Nobel Prize in 1985 for cholesterol
Treatment with cholesterol-lowresearch, said if medical studies erins drugs costs between $1,000
were rated like restaurants, be and $2,000 per year, depending on
would give Ibis one four stars.
the brand and dose used. Heart
"This is a landmark study in the bygass operations cost about
historyofmedicine," be said.
$4 ,000. Angioplasties, in which
Dr. B. Gregory Brown of the balloons arc used to squeeze open
University of Washington Medical clogsed arteries, cost about
Center In Seattle said the discovery $18,000 and often must be repeat·
may be '.'the botr grail of cardia- eel.
vascular disease.'
Simvastatin is one of four simiTreaanent with cbolesterol~low- · lar cboleSteroJcJOwering drugs now
ering drugs could reduce the need on lhe market. It is made by Merck
for bypass surgery and angioplasty, &amp; Co., which paid for the study.
said Dr. K. Lance Gould of the
The study was conducted on
University of Texas Medical 4,444 men and women at94 hospi·

tats in Derlmark, Finland. Iceland,
When the study began, the
Norway and Sweden. They were patients' cholesterol levels were
randomly assisned to set slmvas- mildly elevated, ranginll from 21~
tatin or. dummy .pills. AmOIII .the to 109. After·IIkins the drus, .their
key findinss after five years of fol- dlolesterol fell by 25 petCCDt and
low-up:
their levels of HDL. the good form
-The overall risk of death was of cholesterol that protects apinst
30 percent lower in the sroup that heart disease, rose If percent.
took slmvastatin, an~ their risk of
Worldwide, heart diiCBSC causes
dying from heart disease was 42 about one-fourth of all deaths,
percent lower.
about 12 million per year. People
-256 patients in the placebo who have already bad a heart auack
group died, compared with 182 in are at blgb risk or suffering anolbcr
lhe SIDlvastatin group.
one.
- ~ need for cc:ronary bypass
The researchers calculate that
operanons and angloplasty was 37 during a six-year period, nine or
percent lower in the treated sroup. every I 00 heart attack and ansina
"CholesterOl lowering with this · · patients will die from heart disease,
powerful drug prolongs life," said .
·
Dr. Terje R. Pedersen of Alter Hos··
pita! in Oslo, Norway, the study's
,~',
director.

'.,

·/

Can this cigarette~bu rnt coffee bible be saved?.'

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH·CVMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
husband bumc4 the top of my coffee table wilb a cigarette. I thought
1 read about somethins that would
rub this out. Any suggestions? A. RAHN, Aurora, ln.
DEAR A.: Although there are
sticks and pencils on the market
that remove nicks and scratches,
we think a cigarette burn is likely
to need a more drastic repair
approach.

We sussest you order a fumiture repair touch-up kit. We found
one In the Woodworker's Store cat·
alog, ilelll 56978, $6.95, plus ship- .
ping and handling. The kit includes
everythins you need to repair
scratched or dented wood and
includes touch-up pens for light
and dark wood, repair "stix" in
assorted shades, a metal spatula
and a' wood-burnishing stick.
You can order the kit by calling
1-800-279-4441 or by writing to
the Woodworker's Store, 21801
Industrial Blvd., Rogers. MN
553~·9514.

Fpr those of you who are wonderins bow to remove white rings
or marks from furniture, we recent·
ly received a letter ~~om Edna

Kneisel of Sabetha, Kan ., who
writes: "Perhaps you would like a
remedy I saw an antique dealer
give on TV. He said to use toothpaste with a cloth and rub with the
grain of the wood. I bad a walnut
desk on which alcohol bad made .
three streaks down the front.
Thinking it would have to be re·
finished, I let it go for years but
then I saw the TV demonstration. I
used toothpaste (the regular kind
-not the gel) and rubbed wilh the
grain. It left a beautiful patina and
you'd never know that it bad ever
been streaked."
Finally, a note to Elizabeth
Reneker of Banning, Calif.: We
couldri't find your "Zenith Almond
Stick" (for furniture touch-ups) or
the Zenilh Chemical Works in any
or our manufacturers resource
books, so we don't know where
you can get anolher.
STIJMPED: Carla Jo Upchurch
of Des Plaines, In., Is looking for
information on craft clubs. She
writes: "Approximately 20 years
ago, I belonged to a craft club. It
was set up like a Book-of·tbe·
Month club where every four to
five weeks they sent out a craft kit
and then you mailed in the payment The kits came complete with

Grange initiates members
Jyl Birchfield. Steven Eckstein,
and Christy Eckstein were initiated
int() Star Grange at a recent meet·
ing.
Lesislative Agent Eldon Barrows reported on the upcoming
election and the state issues that
.would be on the ballot. Janet Mor·
ris, women's activities chairman,
reminded members that the baking
contests will be held at the next
meeting. There are different con--· tests ror subordinate, youth, youns
adult, married persons and juniors,
·

Benefit to
be staged
Burlingham Modem Woodmen
· and the llurllnsbam community
will combine Saturday to stase a
benefit for Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Buter.
· · Due to Mn. Buter's illness, a
bathroom needs to be installed in
tbeir bomc and proceeds from the
benefit wiU go toward that
The benefit will be held from
11:30 a.m. until 6 p.m, and will
include a sm':J::bord. to eat in or
take out, ror aatlon. During the
al'lcinoon there will be band music,
vocal selections. a slng-alons and
cakewalb.

There wiU also be an auction of
donated Items between musical
selections.
. , Monday raised at the benefit
will be matched by the Modern
Woodmen's home office. For those
who cannot attend but wish to·
make a donation residents may
cqntact Mildred Ziegler, 992-7770·'
or 696-1116 or 592-2636.

she explained.
Vicki Smith, lecturer, presented
a prosram ~November and
Thanksgiving. auline Rife and
Pauline Atltins ve the delegates
report for State Grange Session.
They noted that there were 164 del·
egates at the session. Resolutions
were reviewed and it was
announced tbat the Master will
receive a master list of resolutions
_at a later time from the State
GrnnJe office.
A total of 47 members. juniors
and visitors enjoyed potluck
n:lresbments followang the meet·
ing.

everylhing you could possibly need
to complete the project. My son,
grandchildren and I would all like
information on joining a club like

ASK ANNE • NAN

and laking lbe Cholesterol-lowerina
drug could prevent four or theac
deaths.
Dr. John KjeQbus, a !1!!-111~
of tbe.sllldy, saki It lhowl hUlk•
Ins dlolcsleiOI-Iowcrins drugala as
Important as quitting amoklng in
prevenlins Curtber beart aaadca. ·
Althoush simvastatin was the
only drug used in the study, Dr.
1ukka T. Salonen or the Uoivcnity
of Kuopio In Finland said be
believed the rival medicines will
work just as wen.
The study does not answer a
larger question about these
medicines - their UIC In outwardly
heallby people. ·

For your convenience

...

I

'
;

antiques, misc. Items,

Chrtstmaa lleoonltions.

No reasonable offers refuaad.

No mort untimely lnterruptlona.
No more Marching for change on collection clay.
No I1Md to ak your carrttr to comalllck.
No DHCI to Hva reoelpta.
.
.
No mort mlaalng your carrltr w11tn you go ahopplng.
No extra ooat. ..juat 1 epeclal dlaoount l'ltt.

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-autbon
or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem-Solver•
Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, calll-800-888-1210.

'
E

J

&amp;Gravel

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

July8,1925-Nov.17,19113
!11111 playing your
Juat like 1 king
Up In HIIIYIII whtre

angelttlng.
Your ••-lnment me11ntl
aomuch
We attll min your ftddll•'•l
touch• .

Wl1h 1111 dedication

their IOngl

Your leglcy IIIII llngaral
on

MIIHd by everyone
and near

Vou've bMn gone

21" Off .... S..1Crfptlo11 late
'''-59

one year.

. Subecrlbe lor 13 ...... lncl pq
Subecrtbe lor 28 Wllkl end pq $31.40
Subecrtbe lor 52 ...... end pq SM.OO

Gone But Not Forgotten

The Family

Name ___________________________________

In Memory Of

· Addrt••----------~~--------------------

BELINDAJ.
HICKS
who palled away
November 17, 1991.
We did not know that
morning
Whet sorrow that day
would bring
When a heart of gold
. atopped beating
And he couldn't do a
· thing.
To your rastlng place
we welidered
With flowers, we
placed wHh care
God only knowa how
our heart ached
As we tumed end left
you there.
'You bid us no farewell
Not even e goodbye,
You were gone before
we known
Arid only God knows
why.
Sadly mlased by
Doreen Smith,
Family and Frlenda.

City----------------- Phone ----------Signature---------------------------------

The Daily Sentinel
"Your Hotll$town Ne1111paper"

Kenny's Auto Cel*r
264 Upper River Rd.
OH .c5631

••
••••
••
-

11

Alclne, Oh
It 4 11411 2417

!1123121-11117192
..
•
-· . ··--H'a been 2 long
ROBERT BISSELL
yeara, Mom, aliu:e :·
Godtookyouhome.A
CONSTRUCTION
day never pa11es
•NtwHomM ·
without thinking about
and mllalng you.
oGaragea
You are forever In
-complete
our heart and always
Remodeling •
onourmlnd.
'
Stop&amp;Compare
Loved and milled by: ,.
f:REE ESTIMATES •
Albert, Gerry, Joan,
Judy, Dale, Roger,
tiS-4473
Becky, Kt~~~, Family
71221M
. . . . . . -- - - .
and Frlanda.

.

.

•

,.

-

3 Announcements

Exterior

Sllootlaglltcl!

~···tl.
......Fn

Frw Eatlmataa
Before 8 p.m. leave

1ilttt 1:00 ....... 20
'
I
Factary Cloke O.s

· AKers
m••·••ge.
p.in.

:

814-186-4180 -

·• Cu110111 lldt
• Solid vinyl

.

HAPPY

ANNIVERSARY·
·MOM&amp;DAD

NEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL !lAKES &amp;IIODELS
112·7113 OR
···U2·55530R
TOLL FREE t .. DI·I41·0070

(Dave &amp; Ginny
Barrett)
&lt;

AU our Love,

1.''

r

Stephanie, Neil, ;
Matt &amp; Orion ,,
L . . - - - - . . . . 1 1 ..

Help Wanted

DARWIN, OHIO
713t.. t TFN

...-..----RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
12Galge
Factory (lloke Oily
BasaBtlllcl11

.

YOUNG'S
-Room Addition•
oNew Garagea
oEIIICtrleal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olntarlor I Exterior
P1lntlng aleo concrete
work
(FREE ESnMATES)

V.Cf. YOUNG Ul
882.C2t6
Pomeroy, Oltlo

IW111121n

Workerlltdmissions Cc:»ordinator To
Join Our Management Team. The
Facility is Undergoin8 A Rebuilding.
Of Its Management Team And Seeks

(I

'

I

'

''"ilt ~.

Frw Klltono • Cot

windows

AVON I AI " - I "*ter ·

Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mia. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992•2269

J.fre.e Estlm1t11

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 1
Tuea. - Wed. • Fri. • Set.
HI

• Craftsmen Toole
•Toys
•Guns
Loada of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992·2060 10/0/1 mo.

• $200 Instilled

Call For betalla

Concrete, Etc.
FaU Special
Get 25 yr. shingles
the pnce of 20 year

(61 388•9865

J&amp;L INSULATION

•• ary. ......
111111' ron
112-2112
Ottloe Ibn: llon..frL

1:00 -.3:10 p!ll

VInyl I Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl'
Replacement

Windon, Blown
lnlulatlon, Storm
Doort,Stonn
Windon, GaragN..

·-

2

....

'

pooiJona,

F!:::.tc7
..

Hll

atonlod, And
Tnno. Elp. !lllpo
lui lui Nol Aoquloocl. Good Oj&gt;-

~'='..;~

r.::~
*'

Col~
Dac=-i:,'f! =·

=...

BISSELL IUILDERS,·INC..
•· New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garage• • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing ·.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .,
. FREE ESTIMATES

a. ·

:

~. llook . . . . . _. Wllh
While On ChHI, I Pon.

...
No--..

VlcfnMy: Pine Ill-, •

Old

~~""\:::~r ~=-=
~';?Wih
kocl,
PI-Call NYou _ ,
lntcnn.tton,llt 441

(No Sunday Calls)

.

12 , . , _ Hra IWto.

Lost &amp; Found

Found:
llrtnanr
Bponlot
Vlcfnlly: . _ I ChoiohiN, ~ Coop. • 111 1
Hoo Rod ~..... I - · -• a, ZO...IIe, 011 4m1,
Spala, 1-1121.
Ann: Larl Wlcllhom, 1-tiiOG1·
1710
Found:
-· !; -=-:::-:::--:::--:--=-:---o-:1~:.::-:...
Wootd ~lonl 11ayt
lngZ~I1l U l Toll F~'M::::· ~
3'11.
'
.
LOST 1-. nil b1k ' brvwn
Shopl....r mix, Yld~klr I IIIIa
Ad, OaiiiiiOh Forry. REWARD.
30WJ'llo1043.

~:

~

911 01 Tllrw Vlclloa 01

Nltlonll 1'11111 AI . _ , Pine

Th~Evonlna111*M
RIW8rdl114 41~ '

~: Small Doa, Pill
Chow, Lang Holr Ton CMiil Collor,
SR 1U And BUill
Morton lloiod A-ni

MODERN SAiftA7101

Til"""'"',
R..., llt ue JUe.

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable tollata rented.
Deily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

v..-

LOST: WhMo Enalloh , _ ,

With Rod Collor In"'rho Rldgo - . AEWARO

Job lllel' C1111p Sites • F1mlly Reunions &amp; Parties

Rotum. Coll1 ..~lll10•

NOW O FFERING GENERAL HAULING

For

Yard Sale

7

Llmeatona, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

HdiBo ded 20

Pomeroy,

0 .

· Middleport

99 2·3954
fnwrqenry Phn rH' 985-1 ..1 113

&amp; Vicinity

11 8 In

AI Yord Solei llull II Paid In
Advonoa. DoociiN: 1:GG!MII the
~ - . the od II to run,
SUnclly
1:GG!MII
""""·
llandoY odll'odllloll
10:GOo.Jn.

Graded Benefit Whol~. Life is now available The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health
questions asked on
/
the application. Ages 40·60

_,

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

614-843·5264

8

PUblic Sale
&amp;Auction

Rick Poo110n Auction Compony
full time •uctlon.r, complltti
ouctlon
-..
Ucon.od
166,0nlo
..........
77'3-5785. ' .. .. .. t 304-

Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

Roofin~ Siding
R~id~itons

•

- .......
7_.,.,. .. 1!B-I-.

-

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

HOllE IMPIOV'EIIE:NTI

~

~

CUITOIIER
liiiVICE.COPY REP
lllclcll AeociN Pit IIDDPJ S..

614·992·7643

6:30
Sundar, Nov. 13
1:00

--ol.......
-.........
.
:=- .
- --·
=PT-To
=CaN
......, :-a.=
......,

lind Ill Rd.,

'

Ugt;t Hauling,

FneEallntatle

Help wanted

... a.dtlocl In
c.o.c:a..a-.
=R':l~.,J:
'

811111.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

~----~~~· ~~~~~
CARPENTER SERVICE ·

.
11

c.tfted

-Ooldon Roirlftw,
""-· 7 ·
- Old, 112
--417211.

repiiCIIIInt

u

A 100 Bed Lo118 Term Care Center
. In Middleport Is Seeking A Social

·'

Willi¥
WDIDIIW·ma&amp;MI
...

- . 114 1112 IIUL

HappyAds
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Spac:lallzlng In Cuetom
Frame Repair

-:"~~-_..;,_ _

llpoorl, ~-

Giveaway

Found: lernoloiiMglo, -

Startl•t Slug
Matches
Frldar, Nov• 11

Tllla 1M ptln out of
pelnllng. 1M .. do It for
you. V., rrr raftlble.

ford'• ~
3D4o17H404,

6

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

l•terlor &amp;

lllpl
enr.:
........... wv.

Cleonii!I'IIIIIY. 111101ooc1
.., .......

Emplo yment Se rv1cec,

992·5 14

p

LINDA'S
PAINftiG &amp; CO.

Overbrook Center

' I

.

Pwt-oolora

487&amp;0 IIIII Hill Rd.

VELSIAM.
ROUSH

3 AnnOUIICIIIItntl
Pro
I• o.t

CALl FOR CURRENT PRICES .

·'
· ,•
. •

lor lhow and COfiiPIIIlone.
Stud Nlllic» &amp; PIIIIIIIM. .
young IIGrllllor .....

"

"""' ....... ....... ~

om.

4

·•••I••• ,....

Bus.

Specillztng In

. _ To !krJ: ......,. To 1w

We Buy All Non Ferrciua Mltlls

KENNE~
· :

In Loving Memory Of

ToHJ 55 4 lit. for ct... drr

Wantad to Buy

1C·5C a-s per patad for flatteMtl am.

·AMBERWOOD

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCT·
OR poaltiona available to teach community
and per,onal skills to an adult with Ieeming
limitations In Metsis County. HOURS: (1) 40
hnt.lwk. (llv•ln); 8:30:8:30 am; 3:3~9:30 pm,
M·F; sleep-over ~ulred; vacatlonllnaurance benefltl; (2) 32 hra.lwk. (llv•ln): 10 am
Sat. thru 8:30 am Mon.; sleep-over required;
vacation benefits. Various skllla and talent•
needed. High school degree, valid driver's
license, good. ·~riving record, three year•
licensed driving experience, and adequate
automobile · lnaurance coverage required.
Training provided. Salary: $5.00/hr. to atlrt.
If intarnted contact Cecilia at 1·1100-5312302 no ·Jater than 11/21/94. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

/

Parl•t

1-eo&lt;H86-15GO

In Memory

5

OPEN 7DAYS AWEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
MON.·FRL 9·6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9·3

V•••l

Bredlor
Quality and
· Te!f1111rament

2

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

Kenny's Is the place to co••
when you need a car rental.
We """' CatJ anlf

8

An noun cr-men t s

...

1. . . . . ..

Cocker Spanlela ·.

In lllemory
GLEN 0. "Lefty"
BAKER

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Rej)alr Also
992·5251
992·7162
John
Doug
,

IHIO••Itleihtu
Jtti.S.yre

SAYRE 1RUCKING
614-742·2131

THE WATERING
HOLE

We'll take cart of all the bookk81plng. Before you go
on vacation, call ua direct It 1192·2155. We'll taka care of
atopplng and atartlng dellvary, credHing your account anel
~ending your aublcrlptlon tor 1111 time you're
··

Sne Up to

O&amp;E ELE~TRI£

Kenny's Auto Rental

FRIDAY. NOV.18
9:00 TIL 1:00
.DANCE AND SING
WITH VIDEO
.ALONG
,.
KARAC'KEAT

Alfred UMW
enjoy dinner
Alfred United Methodist Cburdl
held its annuaiThankssivins dinner Sunday with the Rev. Sba10n
Hausman sivins the blessing,
Attending"were Nina Robin sou,
Sarah Caldwell, Thelma Hender- '
sou, Charlotte Van 'Meter, Russell
and Eloise Archer, Tom and John
Taylor, Richard. Florence and Tun
, Spencer, Nellie Parker. Osie and
Clair Follrod, Kathy, Stacy and
· A)len Watson, Lloyd and Doris
Dilllager, Marilyn Robinson, Edna
Harmon, Brenda Weber, Gary
Lloyd, Ruth, Raben and
Brooks, Dan, Sheila, Kitt
1e and TiffanJ Spencer.
•,Sasan .Pullins, Gertrude Robinson. M.elvin Tracy, Sharon and
, PJtUip Boylea, Will
Clara

:

You'll recalve the 11me excellent home delivery
,Hrvlcea aa alwaye but without worrying about making
w81kly paymenta.

Copyrlaht1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPitiSE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calUng 1·
800-827-63M, ext. 8317.)

HAULING
. Uiaest•

1M7Mn

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Women's Auxiliary Jewelry
: Sale Friday, Nov. 18
9a.m.-6p.m.
14 Karat
and more·.

All you ciO Ia mall 1 chack or money order In with your
order to Pomeroy Dilly Santlnel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohlo45789.
P.O. Box 240,1iartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

Colll'ldllt
&amp;lxcn1tl•t
992-4103

272 S.Thlrd S.• Middleport, 992·2828
Household goods, fumlture, some

.

•

Dnl. ·· -

M(JIVtl\lr. SALE
THUA., FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:00·4:00

this.,,

STIJMPED: Mrs. V. Frederick
McDaniel of Port Arthur, Texas,
writes: "I would like to obtain a
pattern for a man's tuxedo witb
tails, size 42. My daughter is getting married, and I'd like to make
my future son-in-law's tuxedo."
We've looked through tons of
pattern boots and have come up
with a big zero. We guess there
aren't very many future motber-in·
laws like Mrs. McDaniel, who are ·
willing to embark on such an ambi·
tious project. Readers, can you
help?
READER FEEDBACK: For Ed
Timmons of Vernon, Texas, who
was wondering where to fmd wood
cut-out panerns for lhe Three Wise
Men, !banks to our readers we now
know tbey are available from
Meisel Hardware Specialists, P.O.
Box 70, Mound, MN 55364-0070
(1-800-441-9870) catalog 15: and
from Harriet Carter's Scroll Saw
Holiday Pattern Book, item B6070
(Harriet Carter, Dept. 14, North
Wales, PA 19455. Phone (215) .
361-5151).
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at

..,;
....
........
••dr ....
ltnkl

{

r-----------------;....
____
___,
ANNOUNCEMENT
. ~::.J.~" ' .._,
Auct'-

Cal.

=· .:

~r:.:'Lt"t..~~

Now A«eeptlng New Clients

~d~

DENISE L.BUNCE

-l -•

AnORNEY AT LAW

9

wanted to auy

(above Bank One)

Ace r ... Serv1ce. Coolpillo tne

.

r----------------.
011 Step C.11plete lute B••f Rep1lr

...

!;:~~~~

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

EzCIIIM'II child -.., • • • • •

ond

old oU

814-HUIIIS

eo...

11/11/l mo.

18 wamed to Do

tw o11wr old boob

105SecondSt,Pomeroy,OH.
m
.
m
~...L,.~ Tel. No. (614) 992·5730 ~.J..-'l.&gt; :=':::
General·Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business

o.c... E. Click.

W.nlod To Buy: A
01 n.
~
.. 011
Pioy
A1_flie_-·~
•~
I Oct 1... u . . -

Cleon LMa Trucko, lllf1 -

c.,.

........

ond--.·~
~ Tltlo XX ..tlllld, 11o1go Co.

....... 111-~

Or

ar - .

PRECI·SION AUTOMOTIVE ::::...::. . ~~L- ::O...J::.~to'r:-'J.'t-1
r., ·
0

Chuck Stotts ~
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

11

~-rllllll Monewarw. -~ ,....

.=' ~Ani~-=

' phonM, old ~~~~~ ltw-

-

-.. -

21121. Wolluy H I -

· 114-fta.

...

71-1117.

Protlnlal'lllll,. Semoe

plna I T~ Hoclal Tlllit- .
mlnir Slump Removol Fflo . .

llmoioat 114 3.. 111111, . _ , . .
7o1o.

�.

'

Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI:

38 Shot up 1 Mil
clwaGIIr
38 Palntlnilltyla.

ACROSS ·

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATnE BLVD."'

FIll 'II( I 'I

11-17-IH

6K Q 54

21

• ,

t2

6A

76

•54

51

Vulnerable: aoth
Dealer: South
West Nortb
Pass 2 •
Pass 4 NT
Pass 6 •
. Opening lead: •

~~.11:"~

Houllhold '
Good•

a.. ......... "'"' v.n.,

..,,IMUI$111

"SECONT OPINION
ELVINIY" SHE IS
KNOWED AS

SO SAIRY HERSELF
TOLD ME THAT'S
WHY SHE
DITCHED
WILFERD
!!

'What are you complaining about?
We're nervous like this all year long!"

42 Mobile ttomea
lor Rant

l"EANUTS
lole: -

-~

. . . . Roeumod.

U.YIIE'I FURNIIURE
~fumftlooloNr-.iillnlo
..... llonlll N.
.........
oil! ..... Rd.

_...... -.
.................
...e.rw

,,.,.~

..........

~piT

.........
.t. ...,.,...

!!loNfti. ft

-..... .....

Ad. Pl. .

.......
.
'
=
5
.....-,.............
........
, . ...., lllalnl .....

~ Hoeerhald Funtlll•
And~""-lllii•

DIIIIIIM

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

llil
INvlna .....

I

=.:.: _,,

.......
"':)

..
-

••

twnlllllll 01'

·~=.'=
..,.,.,,,... oiOII to

iallooll ond c~ 121.000,
114 .~~~~.
~~~-~11/lllllllll,po

-. ..._ ......

• ..-.

: : . . .': -: .

.....

. . . . .....

....., t:r -

•

~~

: =.'=o.'=".rt

.....

-.:10411:1811

IJII.
tara

Rentals

r,.o;::-Pold~ , ••~':.t

0 .,~··

,.
•••, ''lr -

I I 1d oona.~l300fmo.
Altll'tiUOie I
~NIL

hlo ......
.......

ollor

5 - . ...... lot,
doa&amp;llowr" 1271/mo. .....,.
1111.

lnlonned that all dwellings

m.

.......,..

LlvUiock

63

75 Boata &amp; Molars

for Sale

111o1,

·-··
,

.

:

r

•

~

Tl\~1'5 ~It(&gt; YOU T~

11£.'1, lf{)lto., WIV-.1~

- 'i '
,'I

~-~Ac~:!:c•~·o~rle~•~~

llno old .....
.._ IIWn40II4.
·--.

luclall Piloeil Tnilll'llllont, \
IIIII I ....... 1H IY- llllto'~
Ina Ill til:-·~~~

'

... _._,_

53

~----:o"'-"-~--~
~

di:ar -100

0:

-

Of\...LtK£ DEU\FFEJAATE.D
COFFEE., JJIJI\ ?

I

In yesterday's deal it helped if the
declarer could visualize the layout of
· the club suit and how he could overcome a bad break in that suit. Here is
another deal in which the club suit
was critical.
North appears to be overbidding by
using Blackwood, but he does have
good distribution and controls .
Moreover, the ninth trump is usually
worth about a king.
Upon winning the diamond lead in
his hand, South drew two rounds of
trumps, getting the bad news. He
ruffed his diamond loser in the dummy
and played on spades, discarding a
club on the last round as East ruffed in .
When East exited with a clirb, South
put in his nine and won West's jack
with dummy's ace. Now South fi·
nessed his club 10. but West produced
the queen: one down.
"Boy, that was unlucky," said South.
"I make if either the trumps come in
or the club honors are split"
True, but what did South overlook?
Assuming West's diamond-four lead
was an honest fourth-highest, East
had to have five or six diamonds. East
was also kriown to have three hearts,
and he followed to three spades. So he
had at most two clubs. After the third
spade, South should have played a
club to his king and a club to dummy's
ace. Then he leads the last spade. If
East doesn't ruff, declarer continues
with a trump. If East ruffs, he is end·
played immediately. East must return
a diamond, which declarer ruffs in
hand while discarding dummy's club
loser.
Counting hands saves coniracts.
I) 1994 NEA

= . ,_,. . , =z:

............... :I0447IHOI2
7:00~ 10:00 All.

71

55

Auto• for Sale

Building

=="

Suppll81

_.......,414.*-PW,.-

1111 Eklonldo Clldllllc. 11m.
good - . ~

"-.-.IOM'IM'Illl.

79

~

LN .

H ,R

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION • 'China is lhe most remole localton I've worked
unless you counl Cleveland.· - (Actor) Stephen Lang.
'
0 199-4 by NEA, Inc.

lUI DAILY
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by f1111ng in the miuino words
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
1
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-I.nS ANSWERS

Motor Homea
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1171 Chewy ....... Homo, :10,000 ~:
..... 12.000 Firm, IM 441 t011

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ASTRO-GRAPH
.. .
TAURUS (April ZO.May 20) Aesisl banking on lh1ngs lhat have not been fina~zad
and don't spend f~nds you've not yet
received. Lr.te in rellity's realm.
.
GEMINI (llay 21-June 20) Establishing
objectives is admirable, butloday make
sure the resuM will be worth the effort.
something doesn'l work out as you'd · CANCER (June 21.July 221 This is not a
hoped, don't blame your male. Today's
domestic arguments could have a pro· good day to take on other people's
·
longed and negatr.te effect.
responsibilities. The extra burden might
~....
betoomuchforyourightnow.
.
-uu U.IUGJ'
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jan. 1,8 O· LEO (July 23.Aug. 221 Be extremely
workers might gang up on you loday il
Friday, Nov. 18, 1994
you fail to see any meri1 in lheir ideas. Be ·careful today nol to rePJiat a costly busi·
de h.
ali 11 good listener and keep an open mind. . riess mislake !rom lite past. Act profeslh the year·ahead, your lea rs 1P qu • AQU'RIUS (Jon 20-Feb 181 Financial sionally with everyone. including your
""11...._..... 18 onnarent especial·
"
.
tles "' """"''~ mo ""'Y
'
'II , recklessness may result in SIQ!III.I!tllll- .fne_~· - : ·
- · -- .l
You
. . · ~ ;·
· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) TOilay,
way of doing things might conflict with the
.
be good gilvem your bank account.
slons, and your cho 1ces w111
PISCES (Feb."zo.Mirch 20) 11 you want · desires ol your mate. Be prepared
compromise or you will create
ones.
Think twiCe .'·others to rally behind your banner today,
221
tension .
~~o:;.~::;io a oomPiicaled , you m_ust l(uly _believe in yourself and sary
UBRA (lllpt. 23-0cl. 23) This could be
oday
.
,.,.,. idea 10 slear whatoyou are doing.
COIIaborallon. It Is a r .
lnf • . ARES (lllrch 21·.&amp;-" 11) When you've · .a day when you have to contand with cis·
Clear of all fltl(leaVOB he,ving liaalc &lt;1r
·
· ,..,.. '1
' · tasleful tasks. A negative attitude
ma11on lhili'B tuzzy. 0,1 ajuinp on l"e by ' been lreated unfllrly, K8 sometime&amp; hard make what you !lave to do much harder.
understanding the lnfluani:es which are to let ~ygones ba bygones. Today -you
CIIIIM NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
. lhe ear ahead Send might have to wrestle With thts emotron.
governing you tn
Y
· . .
I

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

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.

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CiM.tr

for your Astro·Graph predictions today by
mailing $1. 25 10 Astro-Graph, c/o 1his
newspaper, P.O. Box 4 465, New York,
NY 10163. Be sure 10 slate your zodiac
sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) If

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Cellbtity Cipher cryplogramt art created !rom qootahone by tamoue; people, put and present
Each letter in the cioher sllnds lor anothel". Todlly's 00.: S equals H

My uncle has a funny outlook on politicians. He
that
.
. _ a politician is someone who
sees the light at the end of the
r-I-:-L-:U7"'::R-:S::-::T-:V~--,~ tunnel then goes out and • • -.
1-.,....-r-.,r-T:""T"-i · · · · tunnel.

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make any such preference,

32 .Mobtlt ttomea
for Sale

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All n~aleslala aCIVaniSing In
litis neW8j18par Is subjaciiO
lite Federal Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 which makes II Illegal
10 advertise "any preference.
llmllatlon or discrimination
base&lt;! on race, color, religion,

know!lngly a0cap1
aCIVartlsements for oeal eslale
wl1lch Is In lliolallon of lite law.

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41 HOU818 for Rent

Tllla newspaper will not

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M'&lt; NAME 15 RERUN .. .
CAN '&lt;OUR D06 COME OUT
TO PLA'&lt;?

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By Phillip Alder

NIDI 2fit 1·,,···-.......

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51=or

Seeing the highcard placement

PataforSale

Apartment
lor Rent

11 ~~

130 X.qy ftiiiiUra

SOUTH
6A J 10
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41 ~
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14 Cornedlln
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by Bruce Beattie

32 Moblla ttonlea
for Sale

1 T004IIpMII
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'

STRIK£ ABLOWN Tf£ WVI ON
liGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CI.ASSFEDS.

Damask· Upper· Began • Pestle • SEPARATED
A small boy was wondering how the rope in the
community swimming pool kept the deep water and .the
shallow water SEPARATED.
.

�..
Thursday, November 17, 1994
2-:The

Ohio

Sentinel

Ethics Seminar
Use rlew a
·aiscussed at Rotary ·drug as a quick fix
Sbilo Moore of Meigs High
SchooL Courtney Roush of Southem and Amy Redovian or Eastern
wen: speakers at tbc Monday nigbt
meeting of the Middlcr,ortPomeroy Rotary Club be d at
Heath United Methodist Cburcb in
Middleport.
Tbey talked about tbe Etbics
Seminar which they auended at tbe
PriiCbard Laughlin Civic Cenler in
Cambridge on Thursday, Nov. 10.
Lloyd Blackwood, club member,
also spoke briefly about tbe Seminar.,
The lbree students reponed tbat
tbe seminar was informative .
Moore talked about tbe necessity of
living a good, moral life and said
tbat ethics are a major component
in ber life. Speaking about ber
future plans 10 be a physician, she
said that she looks forward 10 helping and benefiting people and
hopes tbat ber life shines as an
example.
Amy Redovian said tbat Dr. Jim
Burson, professor and basketball
coach at Muskingum College, was
ber favorite speaker. Dr. Burson
spoke at tbe seminar about sportsrelaled ethics. The topic was panicularly appealing to Redovian

because of ber athletic interest.
Another speaker at the seminar,
Stephen Stover, administrative
director of the Supreme Court of
Ohio. He declined to accept a sim·
pie candy jar noting tbat it is not
ethical for bim 10 accept gifts.
Roush, the Southern student,
spoke of ber desire to become a
physician and commented tbat the
Eibics Seminar was beneficial to
her and said sbe would encourage
others to attend next year.
· In conclusion Blackwood dis;
cussed tbe ethics seminar and tbe
importance of the exchange that
occurred between students and
speakers. Fifty area bigb schools
were represented by 180 students
and representatives were present
from 35 Rotary Oubs. The students
were encouraged to present their
own cases and problems for discus·
sion at tbe seminar and there was
lively participation, Blackwood
said
Speakers wen: Dr. Jim Burson,
Mr. Stepbeo Stover, Tbe Reverend
Dr. Robert Browning, Professor
Emeritus, Methodist Theological
School in Obio, and senior coon·
selor for the Council on Ethics in

believed to be dead.ly

By LAUKAN NEERGAARD
Auoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Asthma sufferers are being
w8111Cd never 10 use a new astb·
ma prevention drug for quick
help in breathing, following
reports tbat some patients died
when using tbe drug incorrealy.
It is not yet clear bow many
of tbc 20 deaths reponed since
Sereveot began selUng in April
are due to misuse of the drug,
particularly since asthma alone
can be deadly.
But officials warned that
some patients are using Serevent
to treat asthma auacks instead of
just prevent them - wbicb is
dangerous because it takes tbe
drug about 30 minutes to begin
working.
. ~
"It's very, very important
that people understand Serevent
is not · for acute asthma,"
Ramona Jones, a spokeswoman
Economics, and Richard E.
McClead, Jr., M.D., Physician on
tbe Columbus Children's Hospital
Medical Staff and a National Fac·

for manufacturer Glaxo Inc.,
said Wednesday. Instead, she
said, "It's so Important for people to have that sbon-acting
broncbodilaiOr in case they get
in trouble."
Glaxo warned doctors to
make sure tbe rigbt patients get
Serevent and know bow to use
iL Company officials are meetIng with the Food and Drug
Administration about strengthening Serevent's patient warning label.
·
Tbe FDA emphasized that
Serevent used properly is safe
and very effective m preventing
asthma attacks for 12 hours tbe longest-lasting drug sold.
It can't yet prove a connection witb tbe 20 deaths. But
improper Serevent usc is suspected because 111any of tbe
reports list asthma a- "no drug
effect" as tbe probable ~use.

Ohio Lottery

Bevo Francis
Classic.,.......
this evening

Pick 3:

341
Pick 4:

8341
Buckeye 5: .

PageS

4-10-18-21-33 •

1994 LINCOLN

entine

TOWN CAR
V-8, IUtO, Cllmltl Control,
PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr. 111t,

tilt, crultl, AM/FM
Mort.

Slgneturl S1r111, V-II Auto,
Climate Control, Pe, Pb, Pw,
Pdl, Pwr Seat, Tilt, Crulae,
Am/fmCaee.
.
Vol. 45, NO. 140

$26,449

$24,949

Copyright 1994

PETER. .

By PEn~
DEAR DR.
Does
chromium help build muscle and
curb a person's desire for sugar?
DEAR READER: Trace
amounts of chromium, readily
available in a balanced diet, are
necessary for sugar metabolism.
Chromium deficiency .in bumans is
extraordinarily unusual.
Chromium poisoning (at dietary
levels about 50 milligrams per day)

is associated witb kidney and liver
damage; thus, chromium supplements sbould not be used except
under close medical supervision.
Chromium does not build muscle
or affect a person's sweet tooth.
To give you more information. I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "Fads I: Vitamins
and Minerals." Other readers wbo
would like a copy sbould send $2
plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433,' New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention tbe title.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've been
diagnosed witb polymyalgia
rbeumatica Can you please tell me
more about Ibis painful ailment?
Wbat causes it and wben will it go
away?
DEAR READER: This is considered to be
dis. . an auto-Immune
.

A womao aa:used of poisoning
ber husband with arsenic in 1989
pleaded not guilty 10 charges of
attempted murder and felonious
assault during ber arraignment Ibis
morning in tbe Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
Sarah Snouffer and Danny
Zirkle, both of Pomeroy, are
accused or conspiring 10 klU Mrs.
Snouffer' s then-husband Gary

ulty Member of tbe American
Academy of Pedialrics.
. A special welcome was extend·
ed 10 Gene Riggs.

-

ease, in which people become alle~­

require additional courses of prednisone.
gic 10 lbcir own normal tissues DEAR DR. GOrt: Some time
in Ibis case. muscles and aneries.
Polymyalgia rbeumatica bas a ago, I read in your colwim tbat zinc
predilection for females over tbe and vitamin E supplements work as
age or SO. It causes muscle pain healing agents. Am I COITCCI in my
and stifrness, malaise, fever, recollection?
depression, and weight loss. It may
DEAR READER: Yes and no.
affect tbe temporal ar1ery (near the Zinc and vitamin E will aid healear), leading to headache and visual ing, as do many other necessary
diSturbances. Tbe diagnosis is minerals and vitamins. However,
made by blood tests or - on occa· we usually obtain a sufficient quan·
sion - biopsy.
tity of these substances in our diets;
Tbe disease can be successfully tberefore, supplements are not nectreated with prednisone, a steroid essary, in most cases.
drug. If lbe temporal artery is
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA·
involved, drug therapy may have to PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
be continued for months, to avoid
(For lorormatlon on bow to
blindness.
communicate electronically wltb
Once symptoms have abated tbls columnist and others, conand the blood tests are normal, the tad America OnBne by calllng 1·
prednisone can be stoppe4. Howev- . 800-817-6~ exL 8317,)
er, re1=urrcru:cs are c.ommon and

CBS soars with Million Dollar Babies' miniseries .

V-8,

ca..,

T·B.IRD
Auto, A/C, AM/FM

PS, PEJ, PW, PDL,
Pwr Seat, Tilt &amp; Crut....
LOADEDI

The facts are these: On May 28,
1934, in tbe northern Ontario barnlet of Corbeil, five identical girls
were born two mo11tbs prematurely
to 25-year-old Elzire Dionne,
already tbe mother of five.
None of the five newborns
· bed more th an two 11ounds,
we1g
and their attending pbysictan, Dr.
. Allan Roy Dafoe, believed tbey
· would not survive the night. He
ordered tbem kept warm by the
oven and went borne. The girls survived.

Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as a rree service to
oon·proflf groups wlsbing to
announce meetings and special
nenta. T.,e calendar Ia not
designed to promote sales or
rund railer• or any type. Itema
are printed u space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
apeclftc number or days.

RACINE - Racine Grange
2606, 7 p.m. Thursday, installing
new members.

Beau Bridges plays Dafoe, tbe
"•imple country doctor" who
belpe4 deliver the quilituplets, then
became a celebrity himself, as well
as tbe guardian of the five identical
girls, taking over every aspect of
their young lives.
From the outset. Dafoe refuses
to let Elzlre and her husband,
Oliva, even touch tbe newborns.
Soon tbe girls are taken across !be
road.IO a bospital-likc "nursery,"
isolated from tbe world and tbeir
parents. A long custody battle

ensues; in fact, it lasted nine years:
Bridges' Dafoe is a little man
seduced by bis sudden celebrity.
With the collusion of tbe media·
goaded provincial government, be
presidCs over a "quints" industry
that becomes Canada's biggest
IOurist
attraction.
Dafoe
- tbe villain of tbe [ll·ece,
15

PLEADS NOT GUIL'fY- Sanh Snouffer, Pomeroy, pleaded
Innocent to charges of attempted murder and relonlotU assault
during en arralpment hearing tbls morning in tbe Mel&amp;l County
Court or Conunon Pleu. Sbe II charged In the 1989 polsonlng of
.,er tben·busbend, Gary Snoull'er. She Is represented by attorney
Cbarlel Knight, abown berc.

Convertible, Auto, Air Cond.,
AM/FM C111, PS, PB, PW,
PDL, Pwr Sell, Tilt, Crulae.

512,949

Prosecutor says Ellis ,_,
may plead guilty to murder

1990 FORD
PROBE GT
4 cyl., Turbo, 5 epd,
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
crulae, AM/FM C111,
Loaded

$9,449

$7,949

------Community calendar----RACINE - "Christmas in tbe
Park" committee meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sw MUI Park. Mem·
bers urged 10 auend.

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
THURSDAY
at tbe ReedsviUe Church of Christ.
. RACINE - Post 602, Ameri- Workshop by Marilyn Hannum and
can Legion, 6:30 p.m. at tbe ball Rutll Ann Balderson. Members 10
take fmger foods.
Thursday.

LONG BOTTOM - Faitb Full
POMEROY .,..-. Annual Agape
Gospel Cburcb, Friday, 7 p.m. supper, 6 p.m. Sunday, Enterprise
preaching and singing, Dave Dai· United-MethOdist Cburcb:
.ley, guest. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT -Community
SAnJRDAY
Thanksgiving service, Sunday,
SALEM CENTER - Star Heath United Methodist Church,
CHESTER - Special meeting,
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Grange
778. annual Thanksgiving Middleport, 7 p.m. Those auending
Chesler
Township
Trustees,
7
p.m
Child Conservation League, 7 p.m.
supper and iun nigbt Saturday at requested to take canned food for
Thursday, at Rock Springs United Thursday.
6:301
at tbe grange ball. Meat foodpantryoftbecounty.
Methodist Church.

Councilors
name new
officers

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

New officers were named at a
recent meeting of the Past Councilors Club of Cbester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
Tbey are Inzy Newell, president;
Goldie Frederick, vice president;
Erma Cleland, secretary; Ella
Osborne, treasurer; Mary Jo Barringer, sentinel; and Opal Hollon,
flower committee cbairman.
Tbe annual Christmas super and
meeting was planned for Dec. 14 at
6 p.m. at Trinity Cburcb. There
. will be a $3 gift exchange.
Laura Mae Nice 11nd Marcia
Keller were hostesses for tbe meet·
in' which ~ned with Jean Fredend:, pres1dent, reading from
Psalms 63. The Lord's prayer and
pledge to the American flag were
given in unison. Alta Ballard was
repated in SL Josepb Hospital for

Quad 4 engine, auto, A/C, PS, PB, PDL, tilt, crulae,

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Output 5.7L, Auto,
Crulae, AM/FM C111,
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$17,949

1994 FORD
RANGER XLT

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, November 19th Only
Come See Our Special Event Figurine
" Susanna" . Stop by to purchase this. Special
Event Figurine brought to you only at Fontanini
Open Houses. Quantities are limited!

@~'Joe.

Point Pleasant bas approacbed
tbe SEOAL about joining the
league in the past, but diffeaeoces
in seasons such as in girlJ t.kct·
ball and volleyball blocked it rrom
becoming a reality. The latter is
cb3nging Ibis ·year. however, with
girls basketball now being a wimer
sport and volleyball a fall sport.
The West Virginia school
becomes tbe 18th school to join tbc
SEOAL and lbe first outside tbe
Buckeye State. During its fmt balfcentury of operation, only 14
schools were pan of tbe league llld
some of those were r~ by coqsolidation of former members.
The SEOAL was established at
a meeting beld in Wellston Man:b
7, 1925 and operated as an eightteam league for more lban five
decades and went 30 years fnm tbe
mid·l930s to tbe mid· l960s wilbout any membership change;.

statewide policy that arrest was tbe
preferred co urse of ac tion for
police to follow in handling domestic violence cases. Officers wbo
chose not to arrest would have to
offer a written explanation.
Opponents wanted tbe arrests
required, not preferred.
Rep. Joan Lawrence. R-Galena.
said tbe bill represented an anempt
to micro-mana ge local police
depanments.
"I think they should arrest when
tbey feel they should, but I don· t
tbink tbe slale Legislalure should
be mandating exactly what's done
with every arrest by a local police
depanment ... Lawrence said.
Rep. Betty Sutton, ~- Barberton.
said tbe bill bad been oescribed as a
step in the right direction, but she
was u~ure wby.
" I have searched it, and I have
searched it, over and over again. to

find something tbat one can cling
to to say that w~ are improving
tbmgs m tbe state of Ohio. I can't
find it." Sutton said.
Sponsoring Rep. Barbara
Pringle, D-Cievcland, defended tbe
legislation. "We definitely did not
weaken tbe law," she said. "We
sLrengtbened it."
In other action Thursday, lbe
House:
'_ Approved 80-11 a bill to
require that new commercial infectious waste i~cinerators be built at
least I ,000 feet from any homes,
schools. prisons or jails. Supporters
recomm ended tbe restrictions in ;
response to proposed incinerators :
in Athens and Muslci'!gum coun-

b.:s.

-Passed 87-5 a bill giving
lown ship trustees th e power to
es tabli sh a curfew for persons
under age 18.

America's trade deficit increases in September

XLT

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V-8, Auto, Air Condition,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, Tilt,
Cruise, AM/FM Caet.
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1993 FORD

i

~~~a=tte=n=d=in~g~~~·~tak~e~------------------~

It's Our Fontanini Fest!

Ousted lawmakers will
see healthy pensions .

1t93 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEYA S

1994 CHEV. ASTRO
EXTJIDED

1993-94 school year and panidpat· '·
ed in football for tbc firSt time Ibis
year.
River Valley officials informed
league officials last June of its
decision to leave tbe league at tbe
conclusion of the current school
year. As part of that request, the
school agreed to play SEOAL
scbools in football during tbe 1995
season although on a non-league
basis.
Since those dates bad already
been scheduled. tbey will now
rerum to being league contests and
scheduling bas been arranged in
otbcr sports so that tbc scbool will
not miss any league competition.
Point Pleasant. meanwhile, will
begin league competition in golf.
wrestling and spring sports dwing
the 1995:96 school year and
expand to include other sports,
including football. in lbe 1996
scbool year.

Dom
.
· estt•c Vl.olence bl.ll goes to governor

yet Bridges never plays bim as a
one-note bad guy · Pompous and
stuffy, be believes bis own press
clippings, yet cannot perceive his
own patronizing Cruelty to all tbe
Dionnes.

REEDSVILLE - Eastern Alb· covered dish.
letic Boosters fall banquets. Friday,
6:30 p.m. for junior bigb parents,
SUNDAY
athletes and coaching staff; SaturRACINE - Saved by Grace, a
day, 6:30 for senior bigb parents, student ministry group from Mt.
athletes and coaching staff. Eastern Vernon !iazareoe College, will be
High Scbool gymnasium. Eacb presenting music 1111d sP.e&amp;king at
family 10 take two desserts, or one tbe Racine Cburcb of the Nazarene,
dessertandfmger foods.
!0:30a.m. Sunday.

Jwtlon.

The Soulbcutao Obio Atbletlc
The SEOAL bas operated with
league. one of tbc okleat J!10UP11 m six or seven members since the
its type in tbc state, bas retUrned to early 1980s after Wellston, Meigs,
l!elng an eight-member organiza- Nelsonville-York, Waverly and
· tion.
Ironton left tbe confen:nce.
As part of a membership
Action on tbe two scbools was
change approved Thursday, tbe taken by the league's principals
league· which will observe its 70th during their fall meeting beld in
anniversary in•Marcb, 1995 ·will Athens Thursday. Both schools
also now include its first out-of- were approved by a unanimous
state member. ·
vote.
River Valley, wbicb bad with·
In requesting re-admission to
drawn from the league after just tbe league, River Valley provided
By JIM FREEMAN
cially testifying in court since they one full season as a member, will SEOAL offiCials with assurance of
and GEORGE ABATE
were eye-wimesses," Lentes said. · instead continue without any inter· at least a four-year commitment.
OVP nen stall'
The sentence for a murder charge is ruption and Point Pleasant, W. Va; Tbe sdlool was famed by tbc conA Mei•s County mi!D @!:CU ~!;!I IS years 19 lif~, !!~ added.
.
will enler tbc league, starting with solldation of four schools in Uallia
of murdenng his wife Wednesday
Deborah K. Ellis, 3S, 31720 tbc 1995-96 school year.
County, Hannan Trace, Kyger
night in tbeir Salem Township Mole han Road , Vinton, died
This was announced Thursday Creek, ~ortb Gallia and Southwestbome will likely plead guilty to around 11:12 p.m. at the Holzer nigbt by Gallia Academy Higb em.
murder charges following recent Medical Center Emergency Room School Principal Bruce Wilson dur·
The Raiders began some league
statements to authorities, Meigs in Gallipolis from injuries caused ing GaUia Academy Higb School's competition in tbe SEOAL in tbe
County Prosecutor John R. Lentes by a I2-gauge shotgun blast 10 tbe ·' annual fall sports banquet at Buck- spring of 1993, expanded to
said Ibis morning.
upper-left portion o.f,!1er body, eye Hills Career Center in Rio include other sports during tbe
Dennis J. Ellis, 39, remains in Meigs County Sheriff James .M. . Gralide.
~Meigs County Jail on a cbarge Soulsby said Thursday.
ofmurder, Lentessaid.
Duringbis
arraignment
set for 2 p.m.
today, tbeSoulsbysaidtbesbootingwas
result of an apparent domestic
.
Ellis is expected 10 waive bis ri&amp;bt dispute. Lentes said Ibis morning
to an attorney and bis preliminacyc . that Ellis bad been drinking alcohol
COLUMBUS, ObiQ (AP)- 22 years of Democratic rule.
bearing. On Monday followin-g a before tbe shooting.
Domestic
violence. Infectious
The House concluded Ibis year's
grand jury, Ellis will likely plead
Two children, ageS: 9 and 13,
activity
with an 81 -11 vote to
waste.
Curfews
for
teen-agers.
guilty to a murder charge, be were at borne wben the incident
accept
changes
tbe Senate made in
Those
topics
and
otbers
were
in
a
added.
· occurred, Soulsby said. A third
a
domestic
violence
bill.
package
of
eight
bills
legislators
"He'.s expressed .considerable child was at a neighbor's bouse at
Supporters
said
tbe legislation
to
Gov.
George
Voinovicb,
sent
remorse and doesn't want to put his tbe time, be added.
strengthened
the
law
against viowho
will
sign
tbcm
all.
children tbrougb any more - espeThe House and Senate wrapped lence in the home; opponents conup a post-election voling session tended there was no improvement
House Minority Leader Jo Ann
Thursday that was expected to be
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, said
tbc lawmakers'last of tbe year.
One exception: retiring House hundreds of hours of work on tbe
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wbeelers- bill over 18 months bad advanced
WASHINGTON (AP) - ··Virginia's Leslie Byrne and Ob~ burg , invited representatives to tbe cause of dealing with domestic
There's a silver lining for many of freshmen Eric Fingerhut, David attend a one-day meeting sometime violence.
early next month.
" Let me just suggest that
those members of Congress ousted Mann and Ted· Slrickland. They
Altbougb tbe session will have because of tbe bigb profile that we
frl)m office by voters. Most will didn't serve long enougb to qualify
·soon be getting a lifetime pension. for tbe congressional pension sys- no roll call votes, it will provide a have now brought domestic viochance for farewell speeches from lence ... and bow it is bandied by
tbat far exceeds those of most tem.
Americans.
Pension figures aren't readily legislators who are retiring or were law enforcement agencies ... it will
Take for instance Thomas available on Capitol Hill. But the ousted in tbe Nov. 8 election.
never now sink back into tbe state
Republicans take control of tbe that it was when I fmt joined tbe
Foley, tbe first House speaker to .NTU annually provides its own·
lose re-election in a century. After estimates based on a survey it took House in tbe 121 st General Assem- Legislature," Davidson said
Tbe bill would adopt as
32 years of government service, of members of Congress concern· bly that opens in January, ending
be's eligible to begin collecting an ing their years of federal service
estimated $123,804-a-year pension and the pension option in wbicb
staning in January.
they bave enrolled, wbicb also can
Foley tops tbe list of more than include 40l(k) plans.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Amer- bigb-tecbnology products jump to
tbree dozen lawmakers rejected on
Lawmakers wbo declined to
ica's
uade deficit swelled to $10.13 an all-time high.
Election Day. Most are immediate· provide tbe information arc
For tbe first nine months of Ibis
billion
in September as the country
ly entitled to pensions ranging from assumed to be in tbe maio civil seryear,
the United States is running
remained
well
on
track
10
record
its
about $35,000 to more than vice pension program for tbe puran
annual
deficit in goods of
$100,000, according to estimates pose of tbe estimates, tbe group second-worst merchandise deficit $148.8 billion, lbe second worst
in history Ibis year.
·calculated by tbe National Taxpay· said.
The c;ommerce Department said showing on record. The all-time
Other ousted lawmakers wbo
ers Union, a Washington-based
bigb was a $152 bi llion goods
group that advocates lower govern- served several terms - but 1101 as tbe September deficit was 4.6 per- deficit set in 1987.
ment spe.n~g and taxes. . ,
long as Foley or Brooks - qualify cent bigber tban a $9.68 billion
The trade deterioration is comAugust imbalance as tbe deficit
Quahfymg for pens1ons of. for more 1odest pensions.
ing
despite tbe fact tbat President
$96,462 a year, accordmg to the
Amon;; them is outgoing House with Cbina swelled to an all-time Clinton bas made uade promotion a
bigb
of$3.49
billion.
group, are:
.
Intelligence Committee Chairman
Tbe volume of foreign oil key part his foreign policy. Tbe
-Former House Ways and Dan Glickman. D-Kan., wbo is elipresident earlier Ibis week attended
~eans Cbairm~ DanRostenko~sgible in 1995 to begin ~;ollecting imP.OrtS shot up to a record even tbe second annual summit of tbe
tbougb America's overall foreign
lri, D-I.ll., wbo IS f~mg. mounhng just under $50,000. Defeated Sen.
oil
bill declined, reflecting a drop Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperalegal bills as be aWlllts trial on pub- Jim Sasser D-Tenn., can collect
tion forum, where be and ·17 Asian
in tbe price.
·
lie COJTUption charges.
$53,289. '
.
The country alsu saw imports of · leaders pledged to create a free
-Rep. Jack Brooks, D· Texas,
Afew of tbe younger lawmakers
chairman of tbe House Judiciary defeated on Election I5ay are cer·
Commit~e. ~bo was upset in bis
tain 10 seek other employment for
re-elecuon b1d _after 46 years of tbe time being. That' s because tbey
government semce.
bave to wait until tbey reach tbe
-Rep. Neal Smith , an Iowa minimum age to begin collecting
_ Democrat with 39 years of service.
their congressional retirement benIf Foley, Roslenkowski, Smith. · eflts .
~ and Broolls reach tbeir respective
Included in th at class are .
: ages of life expectancy - between Richard Lehman, 0-C;ilif.. wbo bas
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - More er.
: 80 and 85 - tbeir four pensions 12 years .or government serv~ but than 6,000 customers wbo agreed
A judge was expected to rule .
:.atone will have cost taxpayers near- mu~l w~t until 2008 to. begm col· not to sue tbe maker of ice cream Ibis afternoon on a request by peoly $9 million, according to tbe lecting his $35,973 peps1on. Aootb- linked· to a nationwide salmonella pte suing Schwan's, wbo want tbe ·
·NTU.
er is Indiana Democrat Frank outbreak will receive an average of company to stop making sucb setLawmakers can retire as early 3S McCloskey, wbo is eligible for a $1S8 eacb, tbe company said today. tlements until claimants can COJJSult
, age SO. Their pensions generally ~7,874-a-year pension beginning
. Aootb~r. 2,611 people accepted .a lawyer.
.
:are fully vested in five ·years, and m 1999. _
__ _.. _ . . ~g1ft certlf~c'ates ~nd 4,6~2 cus: .
The Cente.rs ~or Disease Control
tlley are 11&lt;Jjustcd-eacb year, for · --Besides tbe election losers
---;-b•g mmm decliliCd rompeosation from and Prevenbon m Atlanta-said tbe
inflation. '
pensions await some lawmakers Uberty Mutual, tbe insurance com· illness was confumed in about 645
· "Congress bas literally become wbo retired, including Illinois pany representing Schwan's Sales ' cases in 28 states. State bealtb omcials estimated that 32,000 Min·
a pension milliotiaire's club " said Republican Bob Micbel, wbo can Enterprises Inc.
Pete Sepp of tbe National Taxpay- begin collecting $110,538 a year
Tbe nearly $1 million settlement nesotans became ill during tbe out. ers Union.
starting in January.
of clal~s by _people wbo say tbe break in September and October.
Perllaps lbc biggest losers in tbe
. Ohio's only House retiree, contaminated ICC cream made them
Salmonella causes nauSClj, vom1994 election are the handful of Democrat Doug Applegate, can ill ~~ flied Thursday, said Dave iting, abdominal cramps. dianilea,
·defeated House fresbmen such as begin collectinl! $53,825 in Jan· Jennmgs, a spokesman for tbe Mar- fever and beadacbes.
' ·
'l&amp;rf· tbe N11J said. ,
· shall-~ ice cream manufactur-

MUSTANG LX

~13.~449.

. ''l

Snouffer. Snouffer was po~ in prosecutor K. Robert Toy, Atbcns,
Presiding JudJC Roben Buclt ~e~ •
tbe fall of 1989 with arsenic, a was not present at tbe bearins.
Mrs.
Snouffer' a mitial bear for Ja.
beavy metal.
According 10 tbe Ohio Revised 18 at 9:30 am. ID
Zirlde pleaded not guilty to tbc Code, attempted murder is an set the final pretrial bearingBuct
charges during bis arraignment aggravated felony of the first Feb. 6 at 10 am. and lbc trial for
for
Tuesday morning. The two were de.gree punishable by a maximum
Feb.
IS
at
9
a.m.
indicted by a grand jury on Oct.19. pnsun term of 2S years while feloSbc was released on ber own
Mrs. Snouffer was represented nious assault 'is an aggravated
by attorney Charles Koigbt who felony of tbe second degree punishwaived reading of tbe indictments able by a maximum prison term of ~iS'!:tfer and members or•
bis family were on band for tbeand tbe possib!e penal_ties. Special IS years.
arralgnmenL
·

Point Pleasanfadmitted to Southeastern League

1993 FORD

1

By. SCOTT WILLIAMS
APTelevlsion Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Come
bome, CBS; all is forgiven. The
wretched, ratings-driven excesses
of your " Scarlett" miniseries are
behind us, and now you bless us
wu· b a superb, f our- bour mo vie
·about tbe Dionne quintuplets.
"Million Dollar Babies," open, :
ing Sunday night and ending Tues·
day, is a family ~gedy based on
the early lives of history's fJtst sur·
viving quintuplets. It is simple as a
(able and powerfully told.

AMultlmedilllnc. New I I I r

M_
rs. Snouffer pleads not guilty

Does chromium help curb sweet tooth?
DR.GOTT

2 Sections, 12 P-e- 311 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 18, 1994

1994 NISSAN
KING CAB 4X4

trade zone in tbe Pacific by tbe year
2020.
Tbe administration views the
fast-growing Asian markets as a

big prize to be won by American
exporters. While tbe region represents great opportunities it also is
the source of America's largest
trade deficits.
. .

CE:NTE:R

Victims settle with
ice cream maker

Long Bid, 4 cyl, 5 apd, Air
XE·V6, Auto, Air Cond, PS,
Cond. PS, PB, AM/FM Caet,
.
.
PB, Tilt, Crulee, AM/FM
Topper
ca
.. , Chrome Wheele,
ONLY 3,000 lilt.
ONLY6,000 Mll11

$18,949

20% Off All .Nativity Items·
Stop by tod~y to
See our displays.

·~--~!urf:z~·NeweD and !::lbctOrr were .
named to make tbe hostess list for
1995.
Enna Cleland bad a Tbailksaiv- ·
ing prayer. Door prizes were won
by Margaret Amberger, Goldie
FR&lt;Ierick, imd Mary Jo Barringer.
Otben auendiog were Mary K.
Hottcf, Thelma White, Lora Dame·
wood, Ella Osborne, and Opal
Eichinger, a gUCit.

•'
J

'

'

I

•

FIVE YEARS OF SERVICE - Manlry's Recycling Center 1D
Middleport Is celebrating fiv e yean of bandllng recyclables tbll
week. Tbe family business - run by allen, J\oger Ma~y Jr.III!L .:..._.__:_
Roger Manley Sr. - has-extended-lts-bour!r$9 a.m.'"4 p.m. Mon- ·
day tbrougb Friday, the elder Manley said.' The expanded boura
binge on the acceptance or more recycled materials. Manley'• now
will also accept motor cast, Insulated aluminum wire, lns•lated ·
copper wire, stainless steel, die cast, auto transmissions, electric
motors, alternators, starters and sbort iron. Tbe seven fllU-tlme
employee business recently bas added another employee for tbla
purpose, Manley said. "We want to be a one-stop shopping rec:y.
cling center," be said adding perceptions about recycling have dra.
matk:ally changed. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

•

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