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P-oe 10 • The Dally SeuUnel

Monday, October 14,1981

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~"..:~~!.:ultu~~· ~~~:~~r=~~~ ~~ =~~: ~~~~~. .~~~~~ !?~:.~~~~" ~;'~~~ '

T1le Diboll rt.wa.

If you want to unc!e~d why
Robeno Alomar's sptltlng on an
ump•re ~such a hue and cry
- and why 11 hasn't budged from
the headlines -just consider proressor Martin Shennan's little experiment in his Loyola University psychology c_lass.
Shennan, who studies the psychology of disgust, ~ses out steril·
lted glasses to his students, asks
~m to collect some saliva in their
!'"ouths·and spit it into their glass.
Then he aslcs them to drink it.
· Nine out of 10 times, says Sherman, "They can't do it. They can
·swallow it when it's in their mouth,
but not once it's outside. It's as if,"
l)e su.,ests, "we have a vision of
ourselves as an envelope, and anythins outside that envelope is contaminaied."
If most of us are disgusted by
drinking our own saliva, how much
more loathsome to have to swallow
someone else's- or, in the cue of

Hirschbec~. to have to mop it off
one's facial landscape.
Unless you've been living in a
cave the past week or so, you've
probably heard that Alomar, a Balli·
more Orioles second baseman, spat
on Hirschbeclc during an argument
over a strike Hirschbeclc called. Alomar was suspended for five games,
but the punishment was waived till
next season so Jl,lomar could compete in the playoffs. Umpires threatened to strike, but were blocked by a
court injunction.
Some will argue that fear of contagion gives spit its oomph- particularly _)n the age of AIDS - but
most experts agree that spitting's
power far predates the dawn of medical understanding.
.
In any event, says infectious disease specialist Dr. Steven R.
' Mostow at Denver's Rose Medical
Center, unless Alomar himself were
deathly ill, noihing in his spit would
be likely to hurt the .umpire..
t&lt;or, ad~s Dr. Sarah George at the

AIDS program, has HN ever been/Jibe or assault."
'
It's all the more shockiiiJ, be
shown to be transmitted via sativa. •
• Burwhat particularly oulrlged says, because the rules for express. No, argues anthropologist David Americans, Murray thinks; was Alo- ing disap-eement with an umpireMurray at Washington's Statistical mar's cheek in spilling on an poking fingers, shouting, kicking
Research Service, getting spat upon umpire.
dirt on their shoes - arc wellis far more revolting than other posBy definition, he notes. the known and clearly defined. "It is,"
sibl~ alternatives ·....., lilce getting umpire is "supposed to · be invio- lie says, "a very c4fefully orcbesyour lights punched out -because late,", the very symbol of the rules· · u-ated dance."
of the power bodily fluids carry in that separate organized play like
In violating that convention, he
human culture to "defile and baseball from a stiffer sort of com· says. Alomw has broken more than ·
degrade."
petition that ends in open combat.
just a baseball rule, " he's·threatened
This revulsion at body products,
"The agony of competition and· the very fabric that allows the game
he notes. seems to be universal. He the passions that arouses are animal- to exist. And in this sense," he adds,
cites the story of the insult. New istic," he says, "and there must be "baseball is very much like civilizaYork-area Indians delivered in 1524 some line where you say, 'This must tion itself."
to the first European colonizer to not be crossed,' or the game falls
Of course, Murray, Lynn and
step on their soil. "They sent a little apart."
other baseball enthusiasu are the
boy in to pee on Verrazzano's leg," . In showing such" contempt, he first to concede there's a lot of
says Murray with a chuckle. "No says, Alomar as good as declared "expectorating" in the nonnal
mistaking the message there." ·.
that "civilized boundaries are no course of the national pastime, a
Indeed, he argues, social rules as longer inviolable, that all of soci- phenomenon connected mostly to
to what can pennissibly emerge · ety's rules are open to abuse.~'
the sport's mystifying affection for
from someone else's body and Jan~
Kef\)lon College's David Lynn, chewing tobaccO.
on yours are among humankind's. an English professor who "teaches a
And lest any other louts be con:
strictest and most narrowly defined. course titled "Baseball and /l.meri- sidering the same sort of behavior,
"When you ·violate that bound- . can Culture,'' agrees with Murray the Michigan · Stat~ Police confirm ·
ary," he says, "not to get too hyster- and calls Alomar's loss of control that spi~ting in some~ne's face. could

Where can you find ·
wooden coat,hangers?
. By ANNE B. ADAMS and
don't need this info now, you may
NANCY N~H-CUMMINGS
need it in the future, so PLEASE
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: save this column.
Maybe" you could help me. I would
REGALWARE, INC.: (Club Alulike to buy wooden coat ~nd dress minum, Presto, Thermo-Craft, La
hangers. I can't find them anywhere Machine, Salad Master. Seal-Q;
.in the stores. I've searched all over. Matic and Wonder Wear.). Write
All carry the wooden suit hangers them at' Customer Service, 1675-T
llut not the coat and dress ones. The Regal Dr., Kewaskum, WI 53040 ( !reason J want them is that I crochet 800-998-8809).
around them and use them for my
WEST BEND CORP: (lnkor,
sweater~. That way the sweaters
Kitchen Craft, Lifetime Stainless
don't get bumps on the shoulders. -- Steel, Luster Craft, Miracle Maid,
ANNA MALUSKY, Ashalsnd, Pa.
Royal Queen.) Write them at Cus; DEAR ANNA: Every kind of tomer Service Department, West
wooden hanger you've ever wanted Bend ·corp.. 400 West Washington
is available from a catalog called St., West Bend, WI 53095 (414-334"Hold Everything," Mail Order 2311 ; ask for Customer Service.)
Department P.O. Bqx 7807; San
MIRRO CORP: (Mirro, Wearev·francisco, CA 94120.7807 (1-800- er) Write to: Customer Service. 1512
' §21-2264, 24 hours day).
Washington St., Box 1330, ManiThe
"Hold
)3verything" towoc, WI 54221 (414-684-4421). , .
Swedish-made hangers are bowed.at
VITA-CRAFf:
(Vita-Craft,
·the ends to "preventthe problem of Renaware)Cust0merService,lllOO
"shoulder humps" -- no crocheting W. 58th St., Shawnee, KS 66203
·necessary!
.
. (913-631:6265).
THE STEVENSON. CO.: Pres.' CUP-IT: No doubt prompted by
·&lt;iur response to the reader asking. · sure cooker replacement parts for
where she could write for Farber- Presto: Mirro, Minute Maid,
ware cookware knob and handle Guardian, General Mills, Ali-Amer.ieplacements, we have received an , ican; replacement lids for Guardian
avalanche of mail asking where to Service Cookware. 212 Birch Tree
write for replacement parts for other Lane, Lewisburg, PA 17837 (no
bmnds of pots and pans and the like. phone orders).
We've decided to lump them all
OUT OF. BUSINESS: (no
togetl)er rather than try to respond
replacement
pans available ·-- at
separately to each one. Even if you

a

our~:::~~)

Enterprise, Osrow, Household Institute (Streamline), Permanent Stainless Steel Cookware, Life-line, Maid
of Honor, Cuisine Ware, Homemakers Guild and Youngswarc . .
STUMPED: Mrs. Gus Bernier of
Cudjoe Key, Flit, is looking for a
foam-rubber strip with a flat top that
is used to cover the gap between two
twin mattresses that have been
pushed together. We know just what
she means. We have seen this handy
item in the past. but not recently. Do
any of our readers know if is it still
avail.able? And if so, where?
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Bo~ 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions .of general interest will
appe·ar in the column. Due to . the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

Braves staying
alive In search
·for NLCS title

Indeed, a staff attorney at Lambda Legal Defense's Midwestern
office notes that a cue is currently
before the Ohio Coun of Appeals
concernins a.man with HIV who spit
on officers. He's charge&lt;!. with felonious assault.
All of which may seem rather far
.afield from Roberto Alomar and his
difficulties with impulse control.
Murray. for one, doesn' t want to
be seen as crucifying the mail,
allhough,he compares the shock of
Alomar's gesture to that reg1stered
two weeks ago when the conVIcted
murderer of Polly Klaas accused her
own father of !f10lesting her. •

Anne~B . Adams and Nancy NashCummings are co-autl)ors of "Ask
Anne &amp; · Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne and Nan: 1\vo Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam). To order; call l800-888-1220.

Copyriahtl996 NEWSPAPER
ENTJi;RPRISE ASSN.

I

Vol. 47, NO. 115
Copyright 11M

"Please understand, I'm not saying Mr. Alomar is an animal," Murray notes. "But this episode has
much that ltind of power. I think we
are aroused by Alomar because
much is at stake, though we're not
quite sure what. And to let it pass
'without. cQnsequences is somehow
very disturliing."

.
restraint .ch.ains on the ' tables and
By TOM HUNTER
throwing·them over the riverbank.
Sentinel News Staff .
.
Repeated vandalism _c&amp;ks and ·
Vandals have also wreaked havoc
maintenance issues at Middleport's at the restroom facilities at General
two public parks were discussed by Hartinger Park, causing extensive
Middlepon Village Council during its ·damage to sinks and toilets in the
facility.
regular meeting Monday.
"If we're going to continue spend·
Vandalism has ·.been steadily
increasing at General Hartinger Park ing money on repairs, I suggest that
and Dave · Diles Riverfront Park, we set portable toilets in the park and
including a recent arson attempt at the • close the restrooms to the public. It's
former Middleport train depot along a shame that we can't have nice facil ities without having to worry about
the downtown riverfront.
In recent weeks, vandals have someone tearing them up ," said
damaged several • picnic tables at · Amold.Johnson of the village RecreDave Diles Riverfront Parle. breaking ation Commissioq.

The group apologiud for any
inconvenience the error ·may have

caused.

---Community calendar--The Community Calendar is
publlsbed aa a free """ice to non·
profit aroups wishinl to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not desiped to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space,
permits ud cannot be guaranteed
\. .

1ndian

to run a specif'l&lt; number or ilays.

RACINE-- Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the fire d~partment annex.

MONDAY
POMEROY -· Big Bend Farm
Antiques ·Club regular meeting
DARWIN -- Bedford Township ··
Monday, 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs · Tru~tecs will meet M.onday, 7 p.m. ·.
High School library.
at the Bedford Town Hall.

recipes.~..____ _ _ _ _ __

sodium; 23.1 grams carbohydrates.
Continued from page 6
In a large skillet, heat 'oil and BASMATI RICE WITH CUMIN
saute prepared olcra until light 2 cups white rice (Basmati if possi· brown. Reduce heat to low. Add ble)
onions and cook 5 to 6 minutes. Add
one-half cup vegetable oil
salt, all the spices •. lemon juice and
3 cups boil'i)'~ter
tpmatocs. Cover and simmer·5 mm-.
1 teaspoon cillnilkeed
ute~dd cilantro, stir and serve.. · I teaspoon salt
alee S
.
Heat oil in a saucepan and add
M . ~ servmgs._.
servin . 223 cumin seed to the hot oiL Saute ,
Nutnttonal.an alys•s peft (l g, a s "briefly until · cumin --seeds?· turn --I
caloncs; 1J. 2 grams •1 · ·.2 gr m c" b
·
saturated fat; 61 percent calories
ro':"n,
.
froni fat); 0 mg choleste.rol; 472 mg
Add dry "9.e and fry for about 5

·minutes, stirring constantly until the
rice grains tum white. Add boiling
water and salt.
Boil until most of the water has
evaporated. Reduce heat to Jaw and
simmer for 10 minutes with
·saucepan covered. · Makes 8 servings.
'
Nutritional a~alysis per serving: 288 ·
calories; 14.1 grams fat ( 1.2 grams
saturated faK 4'\ percent calories
·from.' fat);'O ,mJICbok&gt;tcroi;,2!U-.ng l
od" · 3·8 6.
boh d
s tum, . grams car y rates.

Owner of alleged ·
training site feels
militia leader Isn't
·a violent person

Opal Hollon, Everett Grant, Emla
Cleland, Goldie Fr~drick, Joann
Baum, Elizabeth Hayes, Mary
Holter, Ella Osborne, Kathcryn
Baum, Jcrui Welsh, Charlotte Grant,
Esther Smith. Thelma White, Eva ·
Robson, Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr,
Deloris Wolfe, Laura Nice and Opal
Eichinger.

By DAV.ID SHARP
Asaoclllted Preas WrHar
CHURCHVILLE, W.Va.
The owner of the 400-acre farm ·
where the West Virginia Mountaineer Militia conducted maneuvers described Commanding General floyd Looker as a · "super
patriot."
John Bob Woofter let members
train on his propeny after meeting
the militia commander now .
accused in a conspiracy to bomb
federal buildings.

Public Notice

N-Ot Etecllon on Tox

the purpo.. of
motntalnlng ond operltlng ·
eerneterlea. Sold Ill blltng • ,
renewal of an exlallng tax ol
1 milt
at o rote not
exceeding 1 (one) mill lor
eech ono dollor of
veluotlon, wlltch·-nta to
ton centa ($0.101 for ..oh
one hundred dollere of '
vohllllon, for flve (5) yMrL
The Polla lor oeld
EtiCIIon Will open II 1:30
0'9l00k a.m. and remain
open untM 7:30 o'otoek p.m.

In Ex.... of liM Ten
Mill Umlllllon
·
ReviMd Code, Seellona

3501.11(0), 5705.111, 5705.25
NOnCE Ia he111by given

thot In pureuance of a
Reaotutlon of the Boord of
Townahfp Truat~ea of the
Townahlp of IAtarl, Lelllrt,

liM~~ on tht 1at 11ay
Ill.,. will be
ot 1111

vote

of ..!dilly.
By order of the
Elecllona, of llelfll

'

I

\

•

ravorite ·Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be publUhi.Rg
.
. a ·

tiOLID(jll ,·
. COO~BOOK

Brintf your recipe into our .olfic• or tend il lor

Public Notice
Levy

Send Us llo·ur

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County residentS, .at 110 charge.
The recipes will be categomed a. followa:
• Appeaiser.J!Jeverage• • Bread/CI:aiiu
• Coke.JPie• &amp; Cookies ~ Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables ·
'·•S'oup~.- and.&gt;
StuulU1iche3'-' " ' -.~ ;~ ~Jt..,. ~·;.; ~&lt; '·" k·. N '
Hollday Coolt.boolc ··
·
c:/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Po""'roy,. Ola 45169 .

Pletue, include your. Mme Dnd .
phone # . t~~ith recipe.
Deadline for aU recipes
is October·31,.1996

35cenll

A Gannett Co. -•1111*

.

Mayor Dewey Horton said that Street side of General Hartinger Park,
enforcement will be stepped up in the with a ground cover.plant that won't
area during evening hours, and added be as hard to maintain.
that the current park closing time of
The reseeding project for the
II p.m. could be changed if vandal- 40,000-square-foot hillside area will
ism continues .at ihe parks.
·eliminate the need for constant main"We need help from the people in tenance by village employees during
stopping vandalism at the paries. If the summer months and eventually
village residents see anyone vandal- save the village · money due to the
izing the parks, they need tb call the elimination of cutting and low main·
police. The village spends a lot of tenance or the vegetation, according
money to keep up these parks," said to Horton.
Horton.
In other matters, council:
Council member,s gave full bless• approved payment of village
ing to a plan to reseed and landscape bills
• approved the Se~&gt;tember mayor's
. the ·hillside along the Broadway

'It's a strange contradiction here'

W.Va.
·
. the shotgun io the PTO; that is.incor: · ·
ian Hill ·donated the ham to the reel. The gun was purchased from
. Eber's by the PTO.
·
PTO.
The PTO is now holding ·a contest for a shotgun. It was written that
Eber's Citgo in Racine had donated

1Sectton,'to~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 15, 1996

Middleport park vandalism spu-rs village action

Letart Falls PTO holds. monthly meeting
The ~tart Falls Elementary Parent Teacher Organization announct;d
the winner of its ham contest which
.was held in September.
1be winner was announced at the
October PTO meeting. Winning was
Marty Rhodes of Point •Pleasant,

Buckeye 5:
3-6·16-34-36

•

Daughters of America to hold inspections
was out of the hospital and that Alta
Ballard is doing better. Cora and
Shirley Beegle had a car accident
with Cora spending time in the hospital.
Nathan Biggs had catheterization
and Mary Moore of Logan CounCil
spent several days . in the hospital.
Bette Wolfe of Logan Council is .
under a &lt;;loctor's care for a foot problem, it was reported.
'
· A card was read from Faye
Kirkhan and Lora Damewood.
JoAnn Baum reported on the
reception for the new state councilor
at Canton. Esther Smith reported on
the reception of Doris Williams at
Bethel. The meeting closed in regular fonn.
Present were: Mary Barringer,

1-3-9-7

c

The Meigs County Churches of ary, February and March , the Oct. 31 with speaker Lowell Mason.
The program was b'y Judy Well
Christ Women's · Fellowship met women's fellowship will meet wi.th
recently at the Hemlock Grove the men's fellowship with each hav- wiio spoke about dried flowers and
Church with the opening song "He ing separate business meetings but road side materials. She gave handIncluded Me" and opening prayer by common opening, devoti·ons and outs on flowers, their colors and
meanings, and made a victory
programs.
Patricia Arnold.
Cards were sent to Pat Thoma, wreath from different flowers and
Devotions were by Eileen Bower
of the Pomeroy Church with scrip- Ruth Underwood and Melanic told the fellowship the meaning of
ture froin Hebrews II: 1-l 0 and the · Daniels. The nominating committee each color used. Sara Culiums won
23rd Psalm on faith. The bu~iness selected Sabra Ash, Kathy· Erwin the ·wreath,
'
·meeting was conducted by President and Eileen Bowers. We will be supThe closing song was ~'When We
Patricia Arnold and reports were ·porting two girls, DePbie Alkire and
All Get to Heaven" with closing
read and approved.
. Joy O'Brien.
It was voted to change the time or
Upcoming church homecomings prayer by Charldine Alkire.. Refreshmeetings from 7:30p.m. to 7 p.m.
and revivals were announced includ- ments were served by the host
· ~so during the m~nths of Januing Pomeroy Churcli of Christ on church.

Chester Council 323 Daughters
of America met 7 p.m., Oct. I at the
hall with Councilor Goldie Fredrick.
. The pledg~ to the Christian Flag
was given and Psalms 117 was read.
The Lords Prayer was said in .unison. The Pledge to the American
Flag was given arid the first stanza
of the Star Spangled Banner was
sung by all.
It. was noted that inspections will
be held the next meeting and members were told to wear white. Practice was held for receiving national
and state officers.
The group practiced balloting. A
friendship meeting will be held Oct.
19 with a potluck at noon. The minutes were read and approved.·
.
It was reported that Jean FredriCk

Pick 3:
3-9-8
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 5

Women•s fellowship changes meeting time

ASK ANNE. NAN

Ohio Lottery

person.
a
person like that wanting to p8(ticipate in a scheme that would kill
innocent people. It's a strange con- - .
tradiction here," Woofter said.
Looker and six others with mili·
tia ties, including two Ohioans,
remained jailed awaiting hearings
AI,.LEGED TRAINING SITE- The FBI nld thl1 MCiudMI, 6110-acre farm In Churchville, W.Va.,
was the training site forth
untelneer Mllllla. FBI reports allege that militia members .pracon charges they conspired to blow
lie at the farm. SeVen mllltla members were arrested Friday
. tlcttd with an explosive vice
up three federal targets. An FBI
In
a
conlf)lf!ICY
to
blo
up
three
fedenll
buildings In Wnt V!rglnla. (AP)
complex near Clarksburg was the
only target identified.
he knew nothing about an exploJack Arland Phillips, 57, of FairRappelling, survival training,
rifle targets are mounted on a hillsion that was described in an FBI
mont. Moore and Phillips were
orienteering and target shooting . side.
affidavit.
identified as explosives experts.
. were practiced, Woofter.said. But
Militiamen held their maneu·carolyn Hoover, another neigh- .
Terrell P. Coon, 46, of Waynesthere also were discussions of con- . vers out of sigh!, behind a grove of
bor.
said
Woofter
knew
better
than
burg,
Pa.; James M. Johnson. 48, of
·
stitutional rights, executive orders
trees over the hill.
to allow bombs because the fann
Maple Heighu, Ohio; and Imam A.
and a return to common law.
Woofter said he does not know
rests over natural gas reserves, and
Lewis, 26, of Cleveland; were also
Some of the militia leaders'
how many militia members trained
a Consolidated Natural Gas Co.
arrested.
dres'sed in uniforms, while others
there, but court documents indicate
transmission
station
is
a
tenth
of
a
Charges include conspiracy to
26 leaders from West Virginia and
wore civilian clothes.
,
mile
away.
make
bombs, transporting explo- ·
Pennsylvania attended one meet"They were sort of like George
"Bob is no dummy. He's not
sivcs across state lines and conWashington's anny. They were
ing.
going to let people put explosives
spiracy to place explosives near the
· ' During that meeting, two
pretty rag-tag," he said Monday.
on
his
field,"
Hoover
said.
FBI center.
months
:
after
the
Oklahoma
City
Woqfter, who has not been
Woofter's closest neighbor, the
·
FBI
agents;
who
had
an
inforbombing, Looker discussed three
charsed, said he sympathited with
Rev,
Roger Brown, pastor of Grace
mant reporting on militia activities
targets. including the FBI's CrimLooker's concerns about the ConBaptist
Temple, said he heard gunfor 16 months, arrested Looker Fristitution being trampled and that he .. inal Justice lnfonnation Services
fire and saw vehicles on the oneday after he attempted to sell
Division complex ncar Clarksburg,
liked the militia's focus on educalane road to Woofter's property.
copies of FBI center blueprints for
tion, but. he was not a member.
authorities said.
.
''If they were .truly planning
· Woofter's property includes a
Woofter said .that during his ,
$50,000, authorities said.
·
what
they, say they were plahning,
Also arrested wer~ James R.
casual observations he never heard
two-story farmhouse painted bright
then
I
think we ought to be thanktalk or violence.
orange.
· Rogers of Jane Lew, a Clarksburg
ful
they
were caught," Brown said.
He said he warned militia memA wooden ~plank bridge leads to
lite lieutenant who authorities
") guess you never know your
bers against using or storing exploa field planted with blue spruce
allege photographed the blueprints;
neighbor."
sives on his property. And he said
seedlinss. Dozens of Woofter's
Fred Mo9re, 52, of Lavalette; and ·

Dole attac.ks escalate as second ·debate nears
,/

report in the amount of $4,606.70, ·
with $2,570 of that a111ount collected
in delinquent fines .
• learned from theRccreation
Commission's Johnson that Roscoe
and Sandeo Mills, owners/operators
of McDonald's of Pomeroy, have
donated additional playground equipment for General Hartinger Park.
Council expressed its appreciation
ani! thanks for the donation.
• approved a recommendation by
Horton to appoint Sandy Jannarclli to
fill the unc•pired council term of former council president Bob Gilmore.
which ends in 1997.1annarclli will be

sworn-in at the ne•t regular council
meeting.
,-di!;cusscd progress in grant applications and planning for sewer/water
improvements in the village, and ·
approved a resolution to enter a contractual agreement with FBA Environmental Inc. (formerly Floyd
Browne &amp; Associates) of Marion for
compilation of information necessary
for grant applications.
. • approved minutes of the Aug. 12,
Aug.
. 26,. Sept. 9; and Sept.
. 23 meetmgs.

.

• approved closing out the CHIP
(Contlnuttd on P111ge 3)

Iraqis rebuilt part .
of missile system
followi~g attacks
By SUSANNE M. .SCHAFER
The Washington Post said in today 's
AP Military Writer
·
editions, also quoting an unnamed
WASHINGTON - Iraq rebuilt official.
part of its surface-to-air missile netThe official quoied by the newswar~ in southern Iraq last month paper said it would take just "a flip
witlim two weeks of U.S. missile of the switch" for the Iraqis to tum
attacks on the system, a senior U.S. on targeting radar and create a milimilitary officer says.
tary threat to U.S. and allied aircraft.
"They've been able to rebuild
"If thcylurn the radar on to "radipans ofthe system," said the officer. ate, i.t poses a military threat,"· the
who was interviewed rectntly and official said.
·
who spoke on conditipn of anonymiThe newspaper report also quoted
ty. "They've been slapping things the official as saying "there is no
together but not threatening our air- indication" on Iraq's part "of an
craft."
. iotent to challenge" U.S. ·;p~d allied.
· '11ltr officer, who said the Unlr!!'d.. , aircraft pairolfh1g]hc no-fly zone in
States is closely monitoring the situ- southcrq Iraq. .
ation, told The Associated Pres.&lt; the
The Clinton administration has
,rebuilt wcap?n system .w~s patched been sensitive to Republican crititogether and IS less sophisticated. than cisms that the United States spent a
the network before the U.S. m•sslle lot of money on missile strikes that
attacks.
.
did only minimal damage in Iraq.
!he radars o~ the.systems can be
American warships and planes
swuche~ on to pmpomt al.hed a~rcraft launched 44 cruise missiles against
momtormg the no-fly zone m south- the Iraqi air defense system Sept. 2
ern Iraq, but that also m~kes . thcm . and 3 in retaliation for Iraqi leader
vulnerable to attacks by alhcd mrcmft Saddam Hussein's offensive into
Kurdish-hcld territory in northern
anned with radar-seeking missiles.
"It is the same basic (system) that Iraq.
was there the 30th of August 1996,
Cruise missiles cost roughly $1
million each.
·
M

Pomeroy merchants
select ·holiday the
·at 992-7296-is available to put w
By CHARLENE .HOEFLICH
lights on buildings and a.~sist
rSentinel News Steff
"A Victorian Christmas Along the chants with other decorations. BrenRiver" has been selected by the da Roush volunteered to contact art
Pomeroy Merchants Association as classes in the various area schools
the theme for the village's annual about doing Victorian paintings on
window~. particularly those of empob.servancc of the holiday.
ty
buildings.
.
· Meeting last week in the Peoples
Bank conference room, merchants
Nov. I has been set a.• the kickoff.
discussed ways io enhance the date for .decorating the village,
appearance of the village. The asso- according to Susan Clark, president.
ciation will ask merchants to decomte Clark also noted that Hank Cleland
their balconies with garlands and · said Super Sundry will stock quantibows. to outline their buildings in tics of white strings of ligh~&lt; for usc
· '
.
white lights, and to carry out a holi- in decorating.
day the.me in their business windows.
As in previous years, the 'parade
It was reported that Bill Aleshire
(Continued on Page 3)

By; TOM RAU~ &gt; . , ,..""&gt; ·!! · r..,. ''} pump4nio Cafifomiain th~fma .thr.-c ~rSDnall¥'rJiised;qucsliouMonJnyr: 'gcSitd1 it.wa~a smokc.acrccn1811d thW +·-~- "''
Associated Press Writer
weeks. of the campaign wpn 't be ab~uf co~tnbuttons from l~dones1an there was no tmmcdtate ev1dcn~c that
SAN DIEGO, Calif.- Bob Dole, made until after Wednesday's debate, · han king tnteresu to Chnt?n s re~lec- Dole was buymg mo,re ads m the
stepping up attacks on President aide~ added.
. non campa1~n, and Dole s campa1gn · stat~.
.
Clinton for ethical lapses as he pre:
· Meanwhile. Dole has .been csca- sent the prestdent questions about the
. The~ have to sr-:nd a ~eek m ,
pares for the final debate, is promis- lating his criticism of Clinton in transact1on.s.
, .
Cahfom1a and ar~ trrmg tQ JUSt get
ing a full-bore·battle for California's ad:.oance of the debate, signaling he
"We thmk the Amer~~an people out of there ahve, smd Wh1t~ House
S4 electornl votes.
~ill use a harder line of attack than 1!_re cnlltle~, to the fa~IS,. Dole told poht1cal dt~to~ Doug Sosmk . .
"It all started right here in San he did in the first presidential debate rc.porters. . No . more_ shppmg and
But Cahfom1a Gov. Pet~. W1lson
Diego. We're going to worlc and work on Oct. 6 in Hartford, Conn.
shdm~. M~; Pres•dent,Just answer the .told the waterf~ont rally, . ~e a.rc
and worlc .... When the bell rings in
Aftersoundingoutaudiencesovcr · questtons.
closmg the gap tn.Cahforma.
Some&gt;GOP leaders ha've suggest'
California, it's going to say Bob the past few days on wheth~r he
Dole, Bob Dole won," .Dole said as should he tougher on Clinton. Dole ed the admmtstrauon trade~ favors
bole aides were pleased with a
he onived for debate preparations and provided the answer himself.
for huge campa1gn contnbut!ons Field Califomil•pall last week that
, some California campaicning.
"He talks about an ethical admin- f~om the conglomerate and ~1d a showed Clinton's lead over Dole had
: But it was a rocky beBinning in the istration. He does not have an ethical spec~al c?unsel sh!luld be ap~mted , narrowed to 10 ppints - from 22
;city that was host to the 1996 Repub- administration. And we're going to to tnv.esugat~. .
.
.
poinu at Labor Day.
·llcan convention. Dole at f~r~t pro- ·ao after thi! ·in the debate on WednesChnton. '" New. Mex1co for h1s
, Even so, the same Field Poll also
:claimed be was "honored to be back day night," Dole told a Kansas City, own debate p_reparauon. s~~ged off said that 88 percent of the voters
11m in San Francisco" at a waterfront Mo. rally on Monday.
•
s.uch ,Rep~bhcan attac:ks- It • elec· picking Clinton ·and 86 percem of
Today, the Republican challen•er tton lime, Cltnton 511~.
Dole voters were "very certain" of
rally Manday evenina. After aroans
from the audience, Dole corrected ·was expected to launch his sharpest
Dole camprugn o~c•ab htve sug- their choice, an unusually higH num)limself. "Yeah, San Dieao. sure."
atta&lt;:k yet on ethical problems ip gested the GO~ ca~tdate IS hkely to . ber and an indication that it will be
Dole campaign officials, buoyed Clinton's administration d~rlng a em~ark ?n a htgh-nslc effon to wm very hard· for Dole to make further
bypollsshowinaOinton'sleaddown 'S)*:Ch to an elemon•cs tndustry Cahfb':"~·· even though final strate- gains.
to about 10 polnll hm, say they have organization. He Pllllned 10 caW.ogue gy dectstons have yet to he made. ln
"Clinton has been leading Dole
decided to pour oddilional resources . point by point what the Dole ~Imp fact, Dole plans a post-debate bus
DOLE ARRIVES- Republlcen presidantltll car.dlcltti'- Bob Dole
:into the state in a hiah·rislc strategy conaideri to be the liiOit 11r1ous tour of Orange County, a GOP 'nationally and in this state for a long,
showed off a Supar Bowl chllmplonahlp ring and an ""FL Hill of
· that could muh in leu being1pent olfcnsn. from Whi...,lllr to 'lftv- stronghold lOUth of Los Angeles, on long time. Clinton's continuing lead
Fama ring belonging to footbiiH great John Mackay as hearr'-1
sugesu.
that
he
will
EOntinue
to.
111 San D'-llo, C.IH., on Monday. Running ,_.. Jack Kemp Ia at
in otlilr battlepound stateS.
elpte to FBI filel! COIIIIo¥11'1ies.
Thunday.
right. (AP)
A fiul deciaion on bow much to . In a prelude, Dole for the lint time
Clinton . campaiJil officials SUf· lead." )1"11 rounder Mervin Field said.

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Commentary
'Lsltlblis/id In 1948

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111 Court Sl, POIMI'oy, Ohio
61~·2156 • Fu: 992-2157

:2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
· ROBERT L WINGETT

Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Menage~

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

·· -------------~-__.

Excerpts ·from other
Ohio newsp~pers

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Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national inlerest from Ohio newspapers:
The Lima NeM, Oct. 10
Tho.SJ' iJl the med~a who view the presid~ntial race ~ an Olympic-size
pandenng,contest have concluded that the candidate who best woos working moms will seize an Election Day victory.
·
Not SUillfisingly, President Bill Clinton - wiJh his talk of V-chips, gov' emment-fundcd day-care and other Big Nanny programs -.,. is garnering
Slrong support ~ong women who don't view politics through the lens of
ISSUes such as hm1tcd government, overseas intervention and judicial
activism.
No maller how hard Bob Dole tries, he .simply can'ttop the presiden!'s
• suave delivery.
. It's true .that political candidates have always packaged therrlselves to
appeal to different blocs of voters. But Clinton's appeal to working moms
, seems so craven I,Ji:cause it's mostly about offering little federal ~odies that
the government has no business offering.
.
•
No candidate would be bole;! enough to say: "Grow up and stop expecting taxpayers to diaper your babiennd assure that y~ have enough cash
for an twcning out. u
~
- .,
_But it shouldn't be too hard for a candidate to explain the principle'that
the government that governs best governs least.
Only then will the race be elevated beyond the iwo-bit pandering the president has so obviously perfected.

ByS..Eckel
How does Bob Dole avoid being
influenced by the individuals and
groups who help fund his campaign?
" I think it's very difficult,'' said Dole
during the presidential debate. ''let 's
be honest about it. That's why we
need campaign finance reform."
President Clinton agreed. " I think
the American people _,.. know that
I've had a consistent record' in favor
of campaign finance.reform."
Dole may get a few more points
for candor, but the unfortunate fact is
that while both candidates are happy
to grandstand about campaign
finance reform, neither has done
much about it. ·
It's not hard to see why.' Dole and
Clinton may understand that the cur- .
tent system -- in which large corporations and .monied interest groups
help fund political campaigns -invites corruption and influence peddling. They may understand that this
process is bad for the American people. But they, like almost every other elected official. also understand a

more immediate fact: If they are
Clinton's most generous patrOn is
going to win the next election, they the Goldman Sachs investment bank.
will n.eed m~ney, lots of money.
which produced more than $100,000
And there is no better source of ·in individual contributions to Clinton 's '92 campaign. Goldman Sachs
co-chairman
Robert Rubin also conSara Eckel
tributed $27.500 in soft money to the
funding than America's captains of Democratic Party. Cum:ntly, Rubin is
industry and finance. Indeed, more the Clinton administration's Treasury '
than 70 percent of the money donat- secretary.
'
ed to the Republican and DemocratLast year. Rubin came under fire
ic parties comes from corporations, for his role in the Mexican peso' crisays Charles Lewis, executive direc- sis of 1993-94. Twenty billion in U.S.
'tor of the Center for Public lnt~grity. funds were sent to Mexico, which
Lewis has recOrded this and other helped the Mexican government pay
startling facts in his book "The Buy- its bondholders. One of those bondholders was Goldman Sachs.
ing of the Presidency."
Bob Dole's top corporate sponsor
" The presidential campaign in
the United States," writes Lewis, is the Ernest and Julio Gallo Winery.
" has b~ome not so much a 'beauty And over the years, with a little help
contest'/or a 'horse race, ' but a giant from the former senator from Kansas,
auction, in which multimillion-dollar the California company has received·
interests compete to influence and numerQus goodies from Congress.
gain access to the candidates who · For example. Dole ha.• consistently
voted down attempts to eliminate the
would be president."
Market
Promotion Program. which
Consider, for example, the top
gives
money
to large corporations to ·
career patrons of the two presidential
promote their products overseas.
candidates.

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there arc other ways io achieve this indic8tors:
-- The Robert Fair statisticaltcsi.
end.
They can study chicken entrails. · This Yale professor predicts presiThey can follow Nancy Reagan's dential races based on the inOation
rate in the two years preceding' the
election, the growth raic of the econJoseph Spear
omy in the second ·and third quarters
of the election year, aiKJ· whether an
example and hire astrologers. They incUJpbent is one .of the candidates.
can experiment with ·Ouija boards. Caution: Professor Fair· forecast an
They can consult fort~nc .cookies. I easy George Bush victory in 1992.
cracked one in the name of Bill Clin- .
-- The ·Allan Lichtman "keys."
ton and it read, "Steady as she This American University' professor
goes." I opened one for Bob Dole :tnd. examines 13 " kcy,s " (economy,
it read, "The time is tight to make social unrest, personality) to predict
new friends." You can read into that whether an incumbent candidate will
what you want.
kccpthc White Hilusc. He projects a
They can apply multi.farious mod - Clinton win in 1996.
els. Wine: A good year for Borilcaux
-- The "N" test. For some reason.
favors Democrats; a good year for the American people seem to like
California wines augurs well for candidates whose names end in "N."
Republicans. Hemlines: When they' Count them: Washington , Jefferson,
go down, Republicans win. World· Madison, Jacks&lt;m. Van Buren, Har- .
Series: An Amc~ican Lcaguc. victory rison ....
is ·good n~ws for Republicans. ·
--The Southf!8w Curse: Forty-nne
D9mocrats had better hope · the men ha.vc scr.vcd as chief executive.
Roberto Alomar· di sputc doesn 't Oljly five were left-handed -- James
result in .a: World Series cancellation. Oi"fi.~ld, Harry Truman..Gcrald Ford, .
That would forebode a big Rcpuhli - George Bush and Bill Clinton. Four
can wi~ (sec 1904 and 1994).
of them did not serve a' second tenn.
They can consult any of these Whither B'ill'!

.

-- The Roach Race. Two months
ago in ·East Brunswick, N.J .. a group
of extcrmihaturs set up a trnck with
a miniatur&lt;; White House at the gual
line and lct loose a cockroach hearing Dole's name and another bearing
Clinton's. The Dole hug won.
· People can also design and conduct their own surveys,.
Between the political qmventions
this Jl8Sl .summer, f&lt;ir example, I
strolled a Delaware beach for precisely nne mile in search ol' people in
white T-shirts with no writing on
them, like lhnsc Boh Dole wears
when he goes to Aorida. I observed
perflaps 2.000 pcopl~ and found none
who favored the Dole look.
I suhscquently strolled the same
stretch of beach wearing a white Tshirt with no lvriting on it and a pair
of swimming trunks that I had not&lt;'
had on since , 1974. I gol 742 compassion ale smiles, leading me to
believe that people probably like Boh
Dolc ·hut have a difficult lime thinking of him as·prcsidcnt.
I guar•ntcc Gallup c'ln 't do it any
better.
Joseph Spear is a writer ror
Newsp.!!p&lt;r Enterprise As.'IO&lt;iation.

The difference ·between Dole ,and Clinton

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By TONY SNOW
efforts to disgui.ic himself. he com- hand, a.'k about tl)is stuff!"·
Creator1 Syndicate
mandcd notice. He not only wore a
One page tlorc the logo: "Ohio
CINCINNATI -- You want to know trench coat, but pulled the coltar so Dcmocmtic 0Klrdinatcd Campaign."
the diffcrcncc•hetwccn thc:Dolc-and ~ high that~i:cllcad pecplld-out' like"'ll""..Jhat.Wil.'O apt, Demnaa1~ fl'&lt;fln coalil.,
· ""''"'" ClintoM:ampaig~} Tll)'&gt; thi&lt;. •igncuc~
j aek.&lt;iMbc&gt;pulpib - ..
to coast havc- ~oordin atcchh,dr• mcs,'"
Elizabeth Dole strolled tri- . Block is a' slight, wiry 'young man. sage beautifully this Yf ar. even the
umphantly ~ nto a ballroom at a He w~ars hls hair in a slick pomade, utterly false parts.
Conc1nnah hotel last Wednesday to more 1n the manner of a loan shark
l!lnck knows the rn)&gt; as well as
wow more than 1,000 Republican than a political opcratitc, and when anybody. He noted that Dole voted
women (and a f~w men). Clad in a he cases :t joint, his eyes dart about, against creating H~ad Start in 1964 ·
royal blue suit that accented the fire like·a convict searching for a snitch: and opposed the cstahlishmcn1 of
of her red hair, ' she dazzled the
But he knew his mission .
Mcdi~~re . His fact sh&lt;ct.J1sscrted that
throng of one thousand. She delivered
Early in the proceedings. he mate- ''the Dolc/Gingrich lludgct slashed
an hour-long chat that combined rializcd at my side, "Hey, I caught the EITC (Earned Income Tax Crcdjokes. sound-bites, a brief history of your speech in Columbus last it). Dole opposes :1 woman's right to
her husband 's legislative career and month," he said. "I didn 't agree, but choose. Dolc/Gingrich voted against
interviews with three loc~l heroines it was very funny.
increasing the minimum wage."
-- living, breathing, weeping monu"Whai do you think?' ' he asked,
The kid even used , the phrase,
mcnts· to the magnificence of Bob scanning the room.
• "risky $550 billion tax scheme that
Dulc's vision .
.
"I don't ·know. What do you will blow a hole in the deficit"-- a
The performance was even more think?"
mantra AI Gore would recite cig~t
impressive ~onsidering her itinerary
He laughed, brOwn eyes aieaming. limes that evening during the vicethat, da~ also included stops in Sagi- " If Dole's so much for womcn,-why presidential debate.
'
naw, M1., Akron and Orlando.
, docs he oppose their risht to choose?
Some people enter politics for
Yet not everybody came to praise If he cares about working mothers, hicrc, some for idcal~sm and some,
Bob Dole. As Mrs. Dole .wor~d the why did he-oppbse the Family and like Block, for the blood-churning
room, Joshua Block amv~d '" the . Medical Leave Act? Noooooobody thrill of joining a Great Cause. When
gu1se of a spy. The young press sec- opposes family leave! What a dumb an opponent uses a predictable arguretary for ~he Oh10 DemocratiC Par- vote! More than 80 percent of the mentor phrase, he pounces. Hiuycty shpped mto a small roped-off pen public loooves the idea!" .
·
brows flip up and down like windat the back of the room-- a gh.etto
His shoulders shook and he shield wipen. His f.:ee;J'lodesiMO
reserved for the press·-· and sw1ft1y · chuckled noiselessly. As the mirth. •lrin ofiliQ'edulity. He ·
a nole· '
set to work. ,
.
.
spasm S!lbsided, he reac:~ into his boob, flips 10 a scc:tion, IIIII proHe moved swiftly and furt1~ly coat and withdrew some papers. ducef .fac:toids. "Look!"
from reporter lo reporter, calhng "Look at these' f.:t sheets. If you
This fiUY haa one lim in life. H~
each by name. _Despite his apparent ~ interview Elirabeth Dole or her hus- wants to ICI'\'e by Bill Clinton's side
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durinJl the next li&gt;ur years. He ha.,
traveled the .country, S&lt;:t up a pre,;,,
operatic'" -- and helpei! ,Ush his man
ahead in a Republican sUite. "We •,:.
,leading,by dnuble'digits r '· he\ gllmtO:· ,
"And no matter' wMt these guys d&lt;i,
.~he numbers . d&lt;~n'l _mnve, They're
spend1ng a hall m1llmn dollars ~
week -- a week' -- und the numhel'!l
... just ,., don 't ... move."
··
Political scientists talk allout a
phenomenon known as vc~cr intcnsi"
ty: How much pa."ioncan p&lt;~itician~
or issues stir in · a voter's soul'! Yei
candidates generate their own aura a.~
well.
' · ·
Block didn ' t talk much ubnu~
Clinton. Perhap~ he sees the president:
as a flawed hut adequate escort til thC:
'dream realm of wa.,hington. WhaP
ever the case, he loves his work an"
goes about It wilh.an ulmost' infcc-:
tious glee. .
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·So, as Eli1.abcth Dole and hc.l
cntouraac departed, Josh Bloc 1
glanced twice around and took hi
leave as well.
Bob Dole, Jac:k Kemp and Coli
Powell were scheduled to beJin a
tour of the state the next day -- a
StronJ had to figure out how to get
011 the bus. --Write lbny Snow, (batOn $y!'di•
catc, .5777 West Conlllt)' BIYd., Suite
700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.
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~ere reported following two accidents investigated over
the weekend by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
. Mary J. Wolfe, 20, Cheshire, was drivinl on State Route 124 near Rutland early Sunday when she struck and killed a deer that ran ipto the road·
. way, causing moderate damage to her 1990 Dodge.
Brian Randolph, 22, Pomeroy, a Daily Sentinel rural carrier, was west•
bound on Whipple Road going home Sunday around 2:45a.m. after making his newspaper delivery when he apparently dozed off and ran off the
roadway on the right. His 1995 Ford overturned and struck some trees,
according to the report.

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~- Mild autumn weather
·.~ pattern set to continue

Dole focus on California
doesn~tmean he's _
g iving
·. up oil Ohio, staffer says

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,By The Alloclated Prell
· The mild autumn weather will
· .. continue at least until Th!Jrsday as
•, Ohio remains under the influence of
a high prcssun: syslem.J'emperatures
., wiU be above normal and no precip.. itation is in sight, forecasters Said.
Lows tonight will be in the 50s
, and higbs on Wednesday in the low
, to mid-70s. The same extremes are
•, expected on Thursday, the National
,. Weather Service said.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
,' . station was 90 degrees in 1897 while
. the record low was 24 in 1939. sun,

""t tonight will be at 6:52 p.m. and
sunrise 'Wednesday at 7:43 a.m.
· ' .. W~er forecast: .
Tonigl)t... Mostly cloudy north and
partly cloudy south. Lows in theolower to mid 50s.
. COLUMBUS (AP)- Republican
Wcdnesday... Partly sunny. Highs officials say there is no way Bob
in the lower to mid 70s.
Dole will give up wooing Ohio votExtended forecast:
ers to pour money into an effort to
Thursday... Fair. Lows 50 to 55 win California and its 54 electond
with highs in the lower to mid 70s.
votes.
Friday...Achance of showers west.
Dole campaign officials, buoyed
Fair east Lows generally in the low- by polls showing President Clinton's
er and mid 50s with highs 70 to 75.
lead down to about 10 points in CalSalurday...Cooler with showers ifomia, say they have de.cided to pour
likely. Lows from the mid 40s to low- · additional resources into the state that
er 50s. Highs in the 50s.
· could result in less being spent i'n oth..,
er battleground states.
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o~~~ ~~:!;d:~:~~·c~~a:.i~~ ~:

·:·Gannett earnings post
'•. •Increase •lA 3r d qua rter ·.
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - . Gannett Co. Inc., the nation's largest
, pewspaper group, n:ports its earnings
: more than quadrupled ip the third
quarter from a year ago, largely
because of the sale of its billboard
advertising business.
·
Gannett, in tbe report Monday,
also credited gains from newspepen·
and television, in part related to the
Olympics. Results also included the
_operations of Multimedia btc., which
.: Cannell purchased in December
1995.
·
·· It also reported its loss substan· .·tially natTOwed at The Detroit News,
-where a strike continues more than a
year after its July 13, 1995, start. The
.,

· connpanydidnotprovidep~_isefig-

. ures, but spokeswoman M1m1 Feller
· said the loss dropped to~~~~ SS mil· lion from about $30 m1lhon a year
,- ago, in line with projections.
On the earnings report, Gannett
r jumped $2 on the New York Stock
' Exchange to close at $71.75 a share.
'- In the quarter ended Sept. 29,
· Gannett reported earnings of $414.7
million, or $2.94 a share, compii!'Cd

with $96.1 million, or 69 cents a
share, in the comparable quarter endcd Sept. 24, 1995.
Earnings in the latest quarter
included a one-time, after-tax .cash
gain or $294.6 million from the
August sale of its outdoor advertising
business to Phoenix-based Outdoor
Systems·lnc1• Without the sale, third
quarter earnings . would have
increased 28 percent to $115.3 million. .
Revenue for the quarter increased
29 percent to $1.12 billion from
$864:9 million a year ago.
'
For the nine month• ended Sept.
29, earnings more than doubled to
$654.0 million, or $4.64 a share, from
$321.7 million, or ·$2.30 a share. in
the nine months ended Sept. · 24.
1995.
Revenue 1ose 23.8 perceht to
$3.31 billion from $2.67 billion. ·
·Gannett publishes 92 newspapers,
including USA Today; operates IS
televi,ion stations, 11 radio stations,
.cable television systems in five states
and alarm security services.

:Columbus police chief
'·still barred from office
COLUMBUS (AP) - Police Th6mas Rice reassigned Jackson to
·Chief James Jackson has heen his home during the probe. But he
ordered to return to work - ·at the issued the return-to-work order on
Monday aft~ City Attorney Ron
fire department.
An office is being set up for Jack- O'Brien said the action ·amounted to .
son in the Division of Fire's admin- a suspension, which , would have
is~n~tion building while he remains required the filing of charges and
banned from Police Headquarters scheduling of a hearing within five
during an investigation into alleged days.
Meanwhile, four of the seven
misconduct. .
·
sergeants reassigned along
police
Last week, Safety Director
with Jackson claim the investigation
is being used as an excuse to remove
them because they brought charges or.
The Daily Sentinel discrimination
and wrongdoing
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DeDutles Investigate two accidents

W.VA.

~

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Commissioners OK
hiring of consultant
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Burglary charges are being~ against two 15-year-ddllnd • 16y--old for the Oct 4 burglary of the Hiram FISher residence on Min- . TbcMeipCountyBoan:lofCom- tionfaw.-ds luncheon for Friday, Dec.
enville Hill Rood.
, missioners,moctinsinabriefsession 6, 1996. The-.agency will close that
According to Meigs County Sberiff James M. Sotilsby, the buqlary
Monday aftemoon, agreed to retain a day between the hours of noon and
was discovered on Oct 5, but not reported to the sherift's office until FriColumbus firm for contnct negotia: 2:30p.m., because ofthe luncheon.
day.
Weekly bills of $174,121 .I 8, conlions between the employees of the
Thieves entered the residence around 6 p.m. on Oct. 4 by cutting a
sheriff's department and the county. sisting of 236 entries. were approved.
screen and pushing open a bathroom winclow. Screws were removed from
Clem6ils, Nelson &amp;: Associates,
The board approved a $2,600
the hinaes on a gun closet, but the door was pried open. Two old handColumbus, will be retained for a contract proposal with Dick Planisek
guns, a pair of old brass knuckles, some ammunition and a gallon conmonthly fee of $170. Contract nego- of Athens for improvements work at
tainer of change were taken.
tiaiions are expected to begin some- the Meigs County Dog Pound, in ·
The juveniles were released to the custody of their parents pending a
time around the first of the year.
· . accordance with an agreement with
bearing in Meigs County Juvenile Court.
The board approved a request the Meigs County Fair Board,,\
from the ~[larlment of Human SerPresent were Commission PresiWires cut to Pomeroy area home
vices 10 set the date of the depart- dent Fred Hoffman, and CommisHazel Six of Athens, formerly of Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, reported
ment's annual employee recogni- sioners Robert Hanenbach and Janet'
Saturday that within the last two weeks someone had gone to her propHoward.
-i
erty on Kingsbury Road and cut electric wires to the house, according to
a report from the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.

MICH.

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Local News in-Brief:
Juveniles face burglary charges

Recently renamed the ,Market Access
Program, it is widely criticized as
corporate welfare . .According to
Lewis, Gallo has rec[ ivcd more than
$23.8 miUinn between 19R6 and
·1994 from this program .
Dole was also· instrumental in
passing the " generation-skipping
transfer,'' later dubbed the Gallo
Amendment. The bill wi II allow the
Gallo heir.; to avoid an inheritance tax
on S104 million after Ernest and Julio
Gallo ~o to that big vineyard in the
sky. During the writing of this bill,
the Gallo family gave $20,000 to
Campaign America, Dole's political
action commiuee.
•
· The problems here do not lie
specifically with Dole and Clinton.
Unfortunately, pandering to monied
interest groups is ,all too common
among elected officials. As long, as
politicians arc dependent on wealthy ·
individuals to get ~lectcd, they will be
vulnerable. As Dole hi.msclfhas said,
&lt;~ When political action c&lt;immiuccs
give money. they expect soo:ncthing in
return other than good government."
. We can't even entirely blame the
'wealthy Am~rieans who try ·tO influence them. A.• long
politicians
show that they can be boughi, there
will never be a shortage of fatcats
waving doll~rs in front of them . .
The only solution is to end the
cycle of dependency. Tolcvision
advertising time for' political campaigns should .be free. Remember:
The airwaves he long to the American
people. not CBS or NBC. And campaigns should he publicly financed.
On its face. this might seem like
another Big Government taxpayer
cost. But if it eliminates the 'power
that Big Business has over our public servants, then American taxpayers
should gel that money back several
times over·.
But perhaps most . importantly..
Americans must keep tabs on the
money trail. As Lewis writes, "The
public and the news media should a.~k
not only where the money comes
from , but what exactly it buys."
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
Send comments lo the iuthor in
care of this newspaper or send her
e-mail at saraeumaol.oom.
:·

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO V/0&lt;tthr1
Weda 'ay, Oct. 16

u.s. fatcats buy the presidency

.The Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 10
One of the lower life forms is the absent spouse, usually the husband.
who refuses to support his c~ildren.
If parents refuse to cover the costs of raising their children, often the tax- .
payer is forced to come to the rescue. Fortunately, government has gotten
tougher in the past couple of years.
,
President Clinton suggested a short time ago that deadbeats should he
. denied government loans. Whoever wins in Novembj;r should push this idea
. in Cpngress this year.
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Franklin County's support-ef!forcement agency ls s~nding letter; to parents who owe an average of about $10,000, informing them that thCirdebts
By Joseph Spear
l will be posted with the credit bureau to help determine if they are good loan
One thing that Republicans agree
!risks. Thai's an appropriately tough move.
on is that political polis arc foolish
; On a statewide level, efforts to help counties collect payments have been
waslcs of time, n·ot to mention wrong:.
•paying off. Such payments increased from $880 million in 1991 to S1.3 biiThis probably has something to do
·
:Jion in the year ended June 30. That's a sizable jump.
with the fact that Bill Clinton is pro: Men and women who decide to bring children into this world have a
jected to crush Bob Dolo on Nov. 5.
:solemn responsibility !O support them so it doesn' t take a village to raise
but that 's neither here or there. The
•those children.
.
Republicans arc right: Polls arc stu'
pid things. They arc tantamount to
manufactured news. There arc way
! The (Cleveland) Plaia Dealer, Oct. s'
.
.
' too many of them. And t~cy arc not
; Undecided voters who hoped the presidential debate would help them
ncccss-p;nly accur'atc.
·
; choose between President Biltinton and Bob Dole must be looking ahead
It is for these reasons that I fanned
· : to Wednesday. The Oct. 6 de ate between the Democratic incumbent and a group four years ago called People
• the Republican challenger sh wcilscd the already-said.
Against Polls. Mono: WHO THE
• How many more times can Clinton lay claim to 100.000 more police on ' HELL CARES II
• the street?.
PAP has four missions. One is Lo
: How many more time can Dole lay the blame for youthful drug usc on
urge people to pay less ancn1ion to
the pres1dent?
1
polls. Two is to encourage people no1
Audience participati"'' may save the second, final presidential debate in
to participate in polls, or better yet.
' San Diego. It will be t01'fn-mecting style: just as courteous but less formal , to lie. Three is to campaign for the
more candid. And, we can hope, more attuned to real-life concerns.
establishment of a National Com'
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m'ission for the Study and Regulation
of Polling and for a code that would
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· The Marion Stllr, O.t. 8 '
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limit polls .to three per election year·
· Sometimes a d!lclinc is t cry good· news. We 're ihinking of the contin~
and require mandatory prison senued decline in the birth raic for teen-age mothers.
.
tc0ccs for anyone who conducts a
The govcmmcnt·said the 1995 teen birth rate fell for the fourth consec- call -in poll. Four is to educate people
utive year, making it 8 percent lower than it was in 1991 .
who insist on knowing in advance'
Last year, 1.2 million infants were born to unmarried mother.;; about a
who's going to win an election that
third of them were lcen mothers.
The Children's Defense Fund-OI)io says 80 percent of Ohio teen mothers in 1992 wcren'l married and nearly one in seven habics was born to a
teen-ager.

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p Tuuday, October 15, 18M

"""Tuucf.y, October
.
15, 18M

The l)aily .Sentinel How
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the 10:30
by AIMet

Ohio, said Monday Dole's national
campaignstaffhastoldhimOhiois
still a priority.
"We're continuing to work under
the age-old adage that no Republican
has been elected president without
carrying Ohio," Preisse said.
Campaign officials today would
nol .corifirm or deny a report in The
Blade of Toledo that Dole tentatively pl~nned a campaign appearance
next week in Ohio.
-' ·
Haley Barbour, chairman .or the
Rejmblic1111 National Committee, also

said Monday that "Bob Dole and the
Republicans are going to fight for
Ohio."
The latest statewide polls in Ohio
showed Clinton had an 8- to 10-point
lead over Dole.
.. .Other GOP officials discounted
reports i.n Monday's New York limes
that the camJl8ign would "scale bock
sharply" money being spent in Ohio,
Michigan, and New Jersey. .
"It just doesn't make any sense IQ
write off an Ohio and a Michigan,"
said David Doyle, senior Midwest.
consultant for Dole's campaign.
"We just completed a two-day bus
tour in Ohio going all over that stale
with tremendous crowds and a aood
response. Dole will go hack to Ohio,
Michigan, and Illinois," Doyle added.
GOP campaign workers today
will distribute fake "$1 ,609 bills"
across Ohio to highlight savings
each family would receive through
Dole's 15 pe,reent tax cut.
Democrats will counter with
"Dole Debt C,Crtificales" to highlight
what they say will be an additional
debt caused by Dole's tax plan.

Meigs announcements
Meeting scheduled
.
Scipio Township Trustees will
meet in special session, Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the Pageville town hall.
Servk:es announced
Services at the Red Brush Church
of Christ, Long Bottom, will be held
Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. and
6p.m.
Pre-game serving set
Grace Episcof!8l Church, Pomeroy
will serve food before the Meigs
High School home game Friday,
hours, 5:30 to 6J30 p.m.
Revival planned
Revival services will be held at the
Syracuse Nazarene Church Wednesday to Saturday, 7 p.m., and Sunday,
10:30 a.m. and 6p.m. Speaker will be
the Rev. Bob Stewart. There will be
special singing.
Meedng changed
Ron Adkins, executive director of
the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Men.tal Health Services, announced that
the regular meeting times for Octo-

News Hotline
News Hotline··
News ·Hotline,
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2-156

The seven 'gold medals won by
Mark Spitz of the United. States in
swimming in the 1972 Olympics set
a record . .No other athlete has -won
thai many · gold medais in one
Olympic meeting.

ber and November have been
changed. The Board will meet Saturday, 9 a.m. Nov. 2, for a business
meeiing followed by annual training,
at the Lewis Family Restaurant in
'Jackson.

Ex-trooper faces m·u rder ·
charge trial on Dec. ·16

MARIE1TA (AP) - · A former
State Highway ·Patrol trooper is
scheduled to go on trial on Dec. 16
for anegedly killi!lg his wife by
shooting her in the head.
Jack McCrady U, 31. of Belpre.
. pleaded innocent Monday to murder
in the death of his wife, Jenifcr, 30.
Her body was found on Oct. I ncar
Belpre.
McCrady had reported that she
ahandoned the family, and he filed for
divorce on Sept. 24. Prosecut'llj said
.
she was killed on Sept. 19.
Washington County Common
Pleas Jl.dge Susan Boyer set the trial dale fOr McCrady and continued a
$500,000 bond. He was rcturnet:! to
th~ Muskingum County jail in
Zanesville.
• If convicted, he could be sentenced to life in prison and fined
$15,000.
A gnmd jury indicted McCrady
Friday on charges of murder, theft of
drugs and drug abuse.
But he was arraigned only on ihe
murder charge at the request of
Waihington County Prosecutor

·Michael Spahr. The other two charg~s
were dismissed. Prosecutor.; sa1d
they may ask for indictments later.
McCrady, the 1995 trooper of the
year at the Marietta past, was fired
after his arrest last week.
Searches of his home turned up a
handgun, a purse and personal effects
belonging to Mrs. McCrady h1dden'"
the ceiling of the garage, authorities
said.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Debra ·
Bush, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Charles
Pauley. Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges O.t. 14 - David
Odell. Loren Riffle, Mrs. Walter
Peterson and daughter, Kristina Zinn.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Adkins, son, Oak Hill; Mr..and Mrs.
Robert Merry, daughter, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

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Middleport park vandalism
(Continued from Page 1)
and
Economic
Development
accounts and transferring , those
monies into the general fund, as per
a request by the state.
• approved a resolution to accept
the amounts and rales as set by the
Meigs County Budget Commission,
and authorized the necessary tax
levies and certified them to County
Auditor Nancy Campbell.
• approved a resolution to proceed
with a grant application for the Ohio
Economic Development . Grant
through the Ohio Department of
Devel!&gt;pment.
·
According to council member

Mick Childs, the grant allows access
to small business loans for businesses with five or less employees. The
loans arc primarily used as seed money for business start-ups or for business expan'sions.
Attending were council members
Beth Stivers, John Neville, Rae
Gwiazdowski, G&lt;l_orgc Hoffman,
Mick Childs, Horton. and village
· clerk/treasurer Dennis Hockman .

Pomeroy merchants

(Continued from Page 1)
will he held on the Sunday after
Thanksgiving, Dec. I. Toney Dingess
will again serve as parade chainnan.
· Parking meters will, be "freed"
Chamber blood drive ·
beginning on Npv. 25 through New ·
' The Meigs County Chamber of
Year's Day. Again this year, the
Commerce Halloween blood drive
Pomeroy Elementary School will
will he held Friday, Oct. 25 from 10
decorate
Christmas trees to be pura.m. to 2 p.m. at Trinity Church in
chased by the merchants.
Pomeroy.
While holiday shopping 'hour.;
have not yet been set, it was noted
that several merchants are operating 1
onextcndedhoursMondaycvenings.
. Units of the Meigs County EmerCouncilman George Wright
gency Medical Service recorded six reported that the streets lamps on the
calls for assistance Moriday. Units west end of the parking lot will be
responding included:
installed within the next few weeks. .
MIDDLEPORT
Holiday promotion plans were
I :32 p.m., Chestnut Street, Ruth · discussed with both the newspaper
Arnold. Veterans Memorial, Hospital. and radio.
· .
POMEROY
A report was given .on the mcr7:46 a.m., Riverside Apartments, chants' .paniciJ!8tion in the · StemMary Dean, VMH;
wheel Festival. It wa.~ noted that the
I :44 p.m ., U.S. 33, Penny Smith, duck derby was a success, raising
VMH;
enough money to pay for 37 new
5:58 p.m., Sycamore Street, Bob- banners, .the colorful flags to he used
by Dill, Holzer Medical Center.
.along the riverfront, and some new
SYRACUSE
Christmas lighting.
7:36a.m., Syracuse Fire Station,
C~ristmas bulbs featuring the
John Hunnell. O'Bieness Memorial Meigs County courthouse arc still
Hospital;
available at Peoples Bank for $7, it
7:40cp.m't, P~casant Ridge Road 1 was.rcported,
..
&amp;litb Rei be~ Pleasant&gt;Valley.Hospi• \ :,. Tho. merchants I next meclilrgcwill
tal.
· be hcldat8:301.1Q. on Nov. 13 at ihc
Peoples Bank cc:infercncc room.
'

• EMS
MeiQS
runs

We

Malllf,.

. Drivers, Ho. .
Ownersl•d
Mo.ile Ho•.e
Owners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age grou[is. So it's only lair
to charge you less tor · your
insurance. Insure your home and
car w~h us and save ~ven more
wilh our ·special mutti'policy

Meigs County
Republican
Bean Dinner

weilnes~~ay, October 16t1.. . 6 pm. n_.
Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center
Mulberry 11elghts · Pomeroy

•Vegetallle 1111 ._ Solps
•CWI
• Hot Pop &amp; Slippy Jots .
• Desserts • Ell111'*t

AN~

NER_;

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
982-81187
Auto-Ot.nen 1~•
.JJtaHome Car Bualnees

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The Daily Sentinel

•

Braves hOnlble-cardinals 14-0

Pege~

TuiiNY, October 15, 1 -

Beloit West·Branch Friday. · ,; •· · ·'- beating of second-ranked Canton
Chardon received 10 first-place McKinley Satunday.
voles and 294 points to Spnngficld's
Versailles, tops in Division V,
16 first-place ,votes and 292 _points: remains. in the spotlight. The Tigers
Last weeks No. I team tn DIVI· cari tie the sbtte's longest winning
sion U - Columbus Watterson streak wheh they play winless
plummeted to seventh after a 7-3 loss Casstown Miami East Friday night. ·
to rival Columbus DeSales.
Division VI leader St. Hcruy led
·DeSales, by the way, made the all teams in the poll with 26 firstbiggest cl!~tt~. i~ ~ - poll, jumping place votes and 335 total points.
from lith ~n Dtvtston Ill last week to
Only 53 unbealens remain. Diviseventh thas ~eek.
sion I has the fewest, with six, while
Another btg move was made by there are 13 in Division V.
Cleveland St. Ignatius, winner of six . St. Ignatius (6-1) meets fourthof the last seven ,big-schQOI poll ranked Lakewood St. Edward (7-0) in
c~~~~- After an early-season loss to · a bigcsch~l matchup. Another big
OtVISt~n m No. _I Mentor Lake game is top-ranked Massillon (7-0)
Cathohc, St. lgnabus made a slow against No. 7 Cincinnati Moeller (6climb hack before jumping from 1).
fifth to second this week off a 47-19

Reds attendance _drops to
lowest figure in seven y~ars
DAYTON (AP)- Seven of 10
" " area residents pollee! think this city
should 'have a minor-league l;aseball
team even though the club would
play in the shadow of the Cincinnati
Reds.
Seventy-one percent of 704 adult
Cincinnati- and Dayton-area residents surveyed by the Dayton Daily
News for a story published Monday
favored such a team, while 11 pen:ent
were opposed. Eighleen percent
either didn't know or didn't answer
the question.
"I think those numbers substanti. !!le What I've been saying for
las(
~tve years - that baseball would be
very successful in the Dayton
region," said Dayton City Commissioner Tony Capizzi.
Reds owner Marge Sehott'has said
she believes that a minor-league
team in Dayton would take fans away
from the Reds.
The Reds drew fewer fans per
game this .season than last, and the
fewest in seven years. An average
~4,492 fans attended each Reds
game, down from 25,882 last year.
But 67 percent of those polled said
. a minor-league team in Dayton wou.ld
have no bearing 6n their interest in
. the Reds, 18 percent said it would
:-make them' more inlerested in the
: Reds, 12 percent said they would be
' 1ess interested, and 3 percent didn't
know or didn't answer.
, Meanwhile, half said they had not
', auended a Reds game in at least two

ing 17 percent had never gone to a
game.
.
.
The telephone poll, conducted
from Sept. 12 to 20; was the focus of
a two-pan series published in the
newspaper that con&lt;;luded Monday.
The poll questioned adults from 15
counties in the Cincinnati and Dayton areas, including several counties
in Indiana and Kentucky.
Sixty percent of the 584 who
answered a question abou1 their interest io attendi~tg a Reds game said
·they were less interested in going to
a game now than they were five years
ago. Thirty-three percent said they
were just as interested and 7 percen~
said they were more interested.
Of those less interested, 69 peri:ent
blamed the 1994 baseball strike for
their declining_interest.
The random telephone survey was
conducled by 'Dayton Metro Services
and Directions in Research Inc. of
San Diego. It had a margin of error
of 4 percentage points.
. Across the league. attendance
reached 60 million lhis year, 14 percent below pre-strike figures.
Reds spokesman Charles Henderson said attendance was affected by
bad weather this season. Five games
were rained out.
However•. he said attendance
picked up during lhe second half of
the season after the learn increased
player involvement with fans and
offered discount tickets for some
games.
· ·
i seasons. ·
"We drew significantly better
1
Eighteen percent said they went to from mid-June onw.ard, and our mar; a game this season and IS percent keting efforts were redoubled with
l.said the last time they attended was John Allen at the helm,'' Henderson
J during the 1995 season. The remain- said.

me

I

Allenwasappointedinterimchief
executive ip June after Reds owner
·Marge Schon agreed to give up dayto-day control of her team through
the end of the 1998 season because
of remarks considered offensive to
certain ethnic groups. In August, he
was appoinled managing executive.
1

C~~~~~~ '(!~)er_

The
Cincinnati Reds have added right·
handed relief pitcher Tim Scott to
their 40-man roster after claiming
him from,the San Francisco Giants.
Scott, 29, was S·-7 with a 4:64
e&amp;n)ed run average this year in a
career-high 65 games with the Giants
·and the Mont(eal Expos.
· He began the season with Montreaf, posting a 3-S record with a 3.11

ERA in 45 relief appearances before
being traded July 30 with left-haniler
Kirk Rueter in exchange for righthander Mark Leiter.
In 20 games for the Giants, Scott
was 2-2 while allowing 18 earned
~uns in 19 2-3 innings. He was troubled by tendinitis in his pitching
sho;~~~t\ad his fourth consecutive
winn.ing season with 'Montreal . in
1995, leading all Expos relievers in
appearances with 62 as he went 2-0
with a 3.98 ERA in 63 1-3 innings.
The Los Angeles Dodgers selected Scott in the founh round of the
1984 free agenl draft. He spent sev·
en seasons in the Dodgers' minor
league system hefore breaking into
the big leagues with San Diego in
1991.

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Scoreboard

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S.llll"ddy. Od. 12

New VOO: A. Brdti~"

s.....,..Od. IJ

w-.....,..Oct.t

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~Cards still up 3-2; NLCS returns to Atlanta Wednesday night

l.ou•• 4, Alillnla )

MMd.J. 0tL 1•

~ IOC'rir~ ~;!

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DIVISION Ill

Olkn ~viiiJil ot.-e potintJ: II. Tllo.ll'll~llc: SIIMdulll-10. '12. 1\.ktlwl
HI. . . Jl. IJ, Kcw:rifta: Aller (I) )2. 1-4, Clew:. Baw:diclilllt :ZI. 15. Bclk-Ywt 1"- Ill.
E.-. •~ -

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Dn'IStON IV

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'

St. Ll'llliJ Ill Atbnt:l. II: II p.M.. ir nco.."CUUJ

Michigan leadership being questioned again

I

practice recently with a bad ankle, tice and 1 want to sec what he can
When Michigan opened the season and end Glen Steele has a foot prob- . do."
withfourstraighlvictories,theupper- lem to compound the bad back he's
Carr said he hasn't given up on
classmen were being given credit for had all year.
tailbacks Chris Howard and Clarence
their leadership.
,
"We did have the opponunity to Williams. But he is alarmed that
Now, with the No. ·13 Wolverines rest a lot of guys who were injured," . Michigan backs had no runs longer
·readying for their first game since a Carr said. "The bad news i~ I don't than 9. yards at Northwestern and
disappointing 17- il\ loss Oct. 5 at know how many of them are going to wants to see if a bigger runner can
Northwestern, that leadership is being play,
make a difference. . ·
·
challenged again.
"We have a number of guys, par"I just think sometimes a c~angc
Michigan, idle last weekend, . ticularly on defense, who are very of pace will help us,'' Carr said. "He
resumes Big Ten play Saturday by banged up."
(Anes) will be a fullback and at times
· hosting Indiana.
Carr said the open week did little the one back in ~one-back system."
Coach Lloyd Carr said Monday to erase tbe pain of the loss at Nonhthat his team's leaders, particularly western.
co-captains Jarrett Irons. ~nd ~ "The difficult thing about an open
Payne, m.u~t respond postUvely for
eek after a loss is that you're con- TENNIS
the,y.'olvennes to _get ba~k on track. ~tantly remiqded.about it," Carr said.
OSTRAVA, C1.cch Republic (AP)
The proof wtll be tn ho,'~ we "Obviously, it's the last game you -Top-seeded Goran lvanisevic of
respond these ne.xt few weeks, Carr played and there's a part ·of it that Croatia beat Adrian Voinca of Romasaid. "Theproo_f,is in the action, with lingers."
.
what happens, and we'll find out.
· Lingering most in Carr's mind is nia 7·6 (7-2) 6-4 irl the first round of
"I can say that Rod Payne and Jar- a combination ofturnovern, penalties, the Czech Indoors.
Sevent.h-seedcd Tim Henman of
re~t Irons arc two guys that want to clock mismanagement and inspired
Britain defeated Sweden's Nickla,•
wm_ and have the commtlme·nt an,d late-game play by Nonhwestem.
Ktilti 7-6 (7-3), 6-4; C1.cch Jiri Novak ·
ded u t tak t
B
11
tea , o~ t
es o wm." ut we
But most disappointing, he said. topped Russian Alexander Volkov 6find that out soon enough. .
was Michigan's inability to produce
One problem, though, ts that the kind of ci\)Ck-eating rllfning 2. 6-3, and German Patrick Baur
lron,s, an inside linebacker and Michi- game that would have allo~d the ousted Karol Kucera of Slovakia 7-6
( 11-9), 7-5.
.
gan s leadtng. tackle~, headhnes an Wolverines to preserve their lend.
ZURICH,
Switzerland
(AP) . ever-growmg InJUry hst, parttcularly
G:arr said that freshman fullback
Sixth-seeded
Brenda
Schultzof defen~ive _regul~. .
John Anc~. ·who ran for 83 yards in
McCanhy
of
the
Netherlands
defeat. Ir?ns ts sttll nursm~ toe and ankle th~ fourth quarter ofa 38-9 win over
ed
Germany's
Petra
Bcgerow
6-3, 4tn)unes that caused htm to mtss the UCLA, will probably sec more .
6, 6-4, and seventh-seeded Magdale·
fourth quarter at Northwestern.
· action.
n~ Maleeva of Bulgaria downed
At the otber i~side ~ackCI', Sam
"He's 235 pounds, be's a good Miriam OrCmins oftMNcthcrlaild$,
Sword has an InJUred foot and top running back •. he'.s a gQOd fo_otball
backu~ ROb Swett has a recurrmg player," Carr said. "He's 17 ·years 6-3, 7-5 to advance to the s.ccond
ankle InJUry.
.
.
old, but for his age he's a very mature round of the $926.000 European
Nose tackle Wtll Carr has m1ssed kid and he's done a great job in prac- Indoors.

-Sports briefs-

•

•

of the inning, helped by a misplayed
The Braves finished with an LCS· days' rest for the firsl time since July
fiy ball that turned into a ' two-out record 22 hits, including two" by 199S, also felt ready. That was until
triple forJeffBiauser, Atlanta had six pitcher John Smaltz, who worked. be gave up hits to nine or the 12 bat·
hits and led S-0.
seven shutout innings.
ters he faced befote manager Tony La
The Busch Stadium recorCI crowd
"The only thing is when we win Russ a pulled him .
"That's the way it goes,'' Stottleof 56,782, meanwhile,' was silent. . .a game like this, you ' wish it counts
"Before they 'could even get t~eir for two," Smoltz said. "You would myre s.aid. "They were fighting for
popcorn and beer, they we~ down think that a I0-run rule would count their lives."
five," said Chipper Jones, who had a for two."
The Braves, a team that began the
two-run.do.uble. ''What I really lik'ed
No, but it did send the Braves game hatting only .213 in this year's
is that we had the killer instinct. We home to Atlanta with renewed hope postseason, got four hits each from
ktpt piling it on. Last night, I didn't in the best-of-7 series.
Lopez and Mark Lemke. Lopez
sense that."
And no wonder. Four-time Cy scored four runs and Fred McGriff
Coming off a 4-3 loss in which the Young winner Greg Maddux will try · drove in the last two with a home run.
B.raves blew ·.., three-run lead in a to rebound from his loss in Game 2
. "We got out early and took their
postseason game for tile ftrsl time in wben he pitches Wednesday night .crowd out of it," Lemke said. "I 1\Unk
franchise history, they made sure against Donovan Osborne. If Atlanta you have to credit jhc whole offense.
there would be no letup.
wins, 1995 World Series MVP Tom ·The learn really came through."
The Cardinals had won nine in a
By the time Javy Lopez singled in Olavine. will siart Game 7.
the tourth, every Braves batter had a
·"I'm glad that I get to pitch .row at home in the postseason before
hit. Wilen he homered to dead center again," Maddux· said. "You know, the Braves broke loose. Atlattlli is trythe next inning, Atlanta led 11-0 and you'come_to the J&gt;ark today getting_ ing to become the eighth team - out
already had an NLCS recotd with 17 . ready to p1tch, but m the back of your of 48 -10 overcome a 3-1 deficit; St.
hits.
mind, you're not."
Louis is the only club to twice blow
Stottlemyre, working on .three · such leads, in the 1968 and 1985
.

HOLIDljQ
COOKBOOK

season an(! 3-0 this October. The
major leagUe: leader in wins an4
strikeouts this year, he passed Bob
Gibson and Whitey Ford to becom~
baseball's career leader in postseason
strikeouts with 98.
:
"Now that we're able to pitch two
guys on four d,ays' rest,. now· we call
say II!$Jlave somewhat of an ad van-:
tag(." said Smoltz, who has 27 vic-j
tories overall this SCljSOn.
;
Notes: Danny Jackson relieved Stot-,
tlemyre, and joined Don Baylor a$
the only players to appear with fiv~
different learns in a league charnpi-i
onship series. Jackson also played fo~
Kansas City, Cinciimati, Pittsburgh!
and Philadelphia. Smohz became the:
first pitcher to get two hits in an Lcs:
game since he did it in 1992 . ... Cox:
managed his 62nd postseason game,:
moving past Tom Lasorda into sec-:
ond place on the career list. Casey:
Stengel managed 63 games, all in th~
World Series.
'

.

•, I

\'

NEW YORK (AP)- After taking
-Right fielder Paul O'Neill, hob- who have belped us to get where we awaiting beart transplant surgery. ...
Qnly in Yankeedom: On the day his
a day off to rest following their first · bling because of a pulled right ham- are right now to play,'' he said.
Torre also has some big decisions learn won the pennant, general manAL pennant in 15 years, the New string, is just 5-for-26.
.
York Yankees are re(uming to prac-Darryl Strawberry, who feared to make about his pitchers. Andy Pet· ager Bob Watson was talking again
tice with an eye to healing their nag· his right big toe might be fractured · title, who allowed just three hits in about getting fired by George Steinwhen he fouled off a pitch Sunday; eight innings in Sunday's clincher, , brenner. Watson, who claimed Stein·
•gfng injuries. ,
On Monday, the clubhouse was had X-rays Monday, but no break eould start Game I on fiv,e days' rest. brenner faded him to lie at times durOr Cone could start on nine days' ing the swan, is due to get $400,000
nearly quiet, mail piled·neatly on the was found. ·
, ·
next year, the last ·guaranteed season
players'' chairs, World Series tickets
-Tun Raines, replaced by'Straw- rest.
on
his contract.
Against
the
Orioles,
Torre
elecled
'filling envelopes on a table in the berry in Garnes 4 and 5, is bothered
to use Pettitte in the opener, giving
middle of the room.
by sore hamstrings in both legs.
"I don'!' think you would want
And David Cone, who returned him a chance to pitch Game 4 on
five days off," manager Joe Torre from surgery in September, has strug· three days' rest. That was foiled when
said after Sunday's 6-4 victory at Bal· gled in both of his postseason starts. Game I was pushed back a day BOXING .
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)timore, which wrapped up the best- Orioles manager Davey Johnson said because of rain, and No. 4 starter
Wilfreda
Benitez, a three-time world
Kenny
Jl,ogers
had
another
lousy
start
of-7 AL·championship series in five Cone ·showed signs of a dead arm,
·games.
muscular tiring· that usually .hits when he pitched Game 4, giving up boxing champion, was in critical con. · "As far as the alternative, we will , pitchers iq the middle of spring train- four l'\lllS and five hils in three-plus . dition three days after he was found
comatose in his home.
··: innings.
..
take five days as opposed to playing· · ing.
Benitez, 38, who suffers from
Cone,
according
to
TOfTe,
doesn't
· '1\tesday and Wednesday," he joked. ·
In Game 3, Torre resied both Bogpost-traumatic
e,ncephalitis, or
have
the
arm
strength
to
pitch
on
Rest will give players a chance to gs and O'Neill, shaking up the lineinflammation
ofthe
brain, was taken
heal before ojlening lhe World Series up and trying_to, give them a day of short rest. If he stays with that theoagainst Atlanta or St. Louis at Yankee rest. Charlie Hayes took over at third ry. Pettitte would get Saturday's start. to an emergency room Friday after
Notes: While it was quiet inside Yan· his mother found him passed oul in
Stadium on Saturday night.
and Strawberry played right.
kee
Stadium, where the main activi- bed in his home. He was later trans-Second baseman Mariano Dun"It's a nice luxury to have," Johnty
appeared
to be•the grounds crew ferred to the nearby University Hoscan missed Sunday's game becau·se · son said, .wishing he had spare pans
watering
the
field, thousands of fans pital in San Juan for specialized
of a sore hamstring.
of that quality.
-Third baseman Wade Boggs,
Torre h~ stayed with O'Neill and ringed the ballpark to buy World treatment.
Benitez won his first world chambothered by a bad back during the Boggs. even through their hitting Series tickets. ..: Torre visiled his
pionship
at the age of 18, beating
at
Columbia-Presby,
brother
Frank
second half of the season, is 3-for-28 funks.
defending
champion Antonio Certerian
Medical
Center,
where
he
is
in the postseason.
"I feel like I owe i.t to the people
vanles of Colombia to take the junior
welterweight title.

-Sports briefs-

Peekers edge 49ers

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -· Chris to 6-3, then Elvis Grbac found Jerry and interception that he returned· to
Jacke's 53-yard field goal 3:41 into·- Rice for touchdowns of 7 and 13 the Green Bay 28.
Green Bay got back in the game
overtime gave the Green Bay Pack- yards in the final 2:20 of the half to
midway
through the third quancr on
' ers a 23-20 victory over the San Fran·.·. send the 49ers off with a '17-6 halfFavre's
59-yai-d
pass to Beebe.
·cisco 49ers on Monday· night in the· . time lead. The second touchdown
season's most dramatic game.
was set
Dana Stubblefield's tip
Jacke, who had tied the game with
a 31-yarder with eighl seconds left in'
regulation,. kicked the longest field '
goal in NFL history to win an over.time game.
The real hero for Green B~y.
though, was Don Beebe, the veteran
wide receiver who.caught II passes ·
from Brett Favre for 220 yards,
including a 13-yarder that set up
~acke 's winning kick
Jacke's winning kick was one yard
longer than Mike Cofer's that won liD
overtime game I.St season for Indianapolis over the New York Jets.
· The teams were tied at 17 when
San Francisco's Marquez Pope inter- .
cepled a pass by Favre with 2: 13 left
and returned it 12 yards to the Green ·
Bay 12. That set up Jeff Wilkins' 28- !
yard field goal with I :50 left that.
gave the 49ers a 20-171ead.
_.
But Favre led Green Bay 69 yards
in 10 plays to Jacke's tying field goar
The drive was belped by 20 y~s in
penalties against Steve Israel, a
reserve defensive back for the 49crs;·
who was called for a 5-yard hands to.
.. the· face penalty, then penalized 15:
more yards and ejected from the
game for unsportmanli ke ·conduct. ;
. The Packers took a 6·0 lead on
· .. , . ·Iicht. goaJs ,of, 30,and..25- ,yards ·bY I· ' !iii''.
· r r .••.t. '• ('l't· .. ··'1 ·;r)!
·~
· '-'"''"" ·. Jacke: ·
'
~
Bul San Francisco scored on three
·
'
Bey'J Chris ·
gamestraight possessions late in the second
winning field goal In overtime egelnet the Sen Frencltco 48ere
quaner. .
·
. : Mondlly night at Green Bay. Hie 53-yard kick gave the Ptckere
Wilkins' 48-yard field goal cut 11
e 23-20 victory. (AP)
·

Send Us llo·ar

World Series .
"Before we could escape, they
had put up a couple of crooked numbers," La Russa said. "It just wasn't
any fu11. That game got aw~y from
us."
"We've had a few of those- not
many - but when we've had them,
we shook it off. We'll be ready the
next time we 're scheduled to play."
The Braves broke the LCS record
of 19 hits set by the New York Yan·
trees against Oakland in 1981. The
Braves also surpassed the Chicago
Cubs' 13-0 win over San Diego in
1984 for the largest margin of victory in an LCS game.
The Braves matched the record for
a postseason rout. The New York
Yankees beat the New York Giants
I 8-4 in 'Qame 2 of the 1936 World
Series.
Smoltz, not t))at the Braves needed him to be so sharp on this night,
improved to 8-1 lifetime in the post·

·:Yankees ready to go back to work after a day off

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -

•

•

'

l

'

HIGH FIVES - Atlanta's Ryan Kllieko, right, congretulatea hla
teammatas Mark Lemke and Marquis Grllaom In tha flrllt Inning
as lfley score on e double by Chipper ;Jones during game 5 of
the National League Chemplonahlp serlas at St. Louie Monday
night. The Braves won; 14-0. (AP)

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

'

'

To

offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips ·

Small Company·'s
New. Golf Ball Flies
·Too Far; Could Ob-solete
Many Golf Courses
1?ro Hits 400-Yard Tee Shots
during Test Round
Want to Shoot an Eagle or Two ?

virtually locked out of these outlets. ,
TV advertising is too expensive to :
buy on your own, at·least for us.
:
"Now, you've seen how far this ball ·
can fly. Can you imagine a pro using :
it on TV and eagle-ing par-four's? He :
would turn the course into a partqree, and real .men don't play
par·three's. This new fly-power forces
us to sell it without relying on pros or
pro-shops. One way is to sell it direct
from our plant. That way we can
keep the name printed on the ball a
secret that only a buyer would know.
There's more to golf than. tournaments, you know."

YALESVILLE, CT '- A small golf com·
pany iri Connecticut has created a
powerful, new ball that·flies like a U-2,
putts with the steady roll of a cue ball
and bites the green on approach shots
like a dropped cat. But don't look for it
on weekend TV. Long-hitting pros
could·make a joke out of some of golf's
finest' courses with it. One pro who
tested the ball drove it 400 yards,
reaching the green on all but the
----~~~--~--.~-------------- :
longest par-four's.
''We keep the name on
l
Scientific tests by an i!ldependent
the ball a secret"
lab using a hitting machine prove the
ball&gt; out--dis·t ances·· ten&gt; major' b'L'a nds-.- ,..,. · :· ,
. . .
dramatically.
The 'company guarantees a golfer
a prompt refund if the 'new ball
cut five to ten strokes off
Ball gains altitude quickly, doesn't
his or her average score. Simply .
then sails like a glider
return theoalls-new or used=to
the address below.
The ·ball's extraordinary distance · "No one else would dare do that,"
comes partly from a revolutionary boasted the company's director.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)- It their Nov. 30 date with top-ranked son last year's 1,000-yard receivers
-EmieGreenandAndreCooper·
new dimple design that keeps the
If you would like an eagle or two,
doesn't make any difference to Flori· Florida.
462
~a State coaches or players if they're
"Those are good football teams,'' ' have combined for
yards. Tail·
ball aloft longer. B1.1t there's also a here's your best chance yet. Write
No. 2 or No. 3 right now. Their aim saitl Bowden, whose Seminoles have back Warrick Dunn has run for 510
yards as he seeks a third straight
secret change in ~he core that makes your name and address and "Code
is focused 011 being No. I at the end · alreadr knocked North Carolina_ and 1,000-yard
season. ·
it rise faster off the clubhead. Name S" (the ball's R&amp;D name) on a
..,
Mtamt . - ranked II th. and stxth,
of tile year.'
And
the
Seminoles
have
an
extra
.
Another
change reduces air drag. piece of paper and send it along With
·"We miaht not be the No. I team· res~ttvcly, on the days they played
week to shake off some nicks ~nd
The result is a ball that gains alti- a check '(or your credit card number
in t~ nation yet, but hopefully at the Flo.~da ~tate.
tude quickly, then sails like a glider. . and expiration date) to National Golf
~ of the year we will be," middle
We ve g~ to ta~e o~r opponen,ts bruises from Saturday's win .in MialinebllCker Daryl Bush said. "I think OM at a lime, he wd. If we don t, mibeforekickingoff0ct.26against
None of the changes is noticeable in Center (Dept. SN-700), 60 Church
we'~ geuinJ there atcp by step."
we'll,get beat just like we did Ills\ Virginia - the team that snapped
h e ba11 Itse
· If·
Street • Yia1esVI'11e, CT 06492. Or phone
Florida State's 29-game ACC wint
Florida State, which vaulted past year.
.
.
Despite this extraordinary perfor- 800-285-3900 anytime. No P.O. boxes.
9Jtio Slate into the f'lo. 2 slot in the,
B.owdcn said Mon~ay the Semt· ning streak a year ago.
Vi!Jinia's 31-26 victory over the
mance, the ·coml?any has a problem. A
One dozen "S" balls cost $24.95, two
QOIIChes' poll, (fails the Buckeyes by: :notes (S-0, 4-~ Atlanbc.Coast Conspokesman put 1t this way:
to five dozen are only $22 ..00 each, six
jjllldtleepoin!JintheAPpollforthe ,ference) are JUSt stantng to find Seminoles last season also ended
FloridaStale'schancesofascason"lngolfyouneedendorsementsand
·
dozen
are only $109.00. You save
IIICaqd apot bohind Florida.
the~lves.
,
Cqach Bobby Bowden also isn '!' I
If we can slay healthy, we II he ending showdown between_unbeatTV publicity. This is what ge,ts you in $40.70 ordering six. Shipping and ·
~ about the pollt right n&lt;lw. mighty good,'' he told boosters at his ens with .-chrival Florida.
the pro sh ops
· and s tores wh ere 95"'h andl'mg IS
· on)y $5.00 no matter how
Bowden doesn't want thatto hap711
r~. he'a payinaattention 10 Vl,f· ·weekly football luncheon. "~e pen aaain.
of all golf products are sold. Unless large your order. Specify white or HiIa, OearJI• ~ and Southern haven't even
the
. ball to the wide
"Let's get 0- n· with v;...,;nia," he
the pros use your ball on TV, you're Vision yellow
iuillllppi -l811111 tbal could up~et recetvcrs yet.
·~·
L-=~~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~::=---~==~::==~-~~--~.-~~~u~
.SA~--~-~·~~~e·~~~~-~,~
~
'tlrd-rubd Seminolel 'befote
ladeed, at the midpoint of the sea- said.

'

WtidMidQ. On. It

By BEN WALKER
.AP llalelutll Writer
ST. LOUIS -'The Adanta Braves
made it seem too easy:
.. As if they just decided it was time
·to win, the Braves staved off elimi!lation in the NL championship series
with one of the most overpowering
performances ever in October.
- The defending World Series
champions, heeding manager Bobby
Cox's pregame call, matched the
biggest postseason rout in history
·Monday night with a 14-0 romp over
:st. Louis that cut the Cardinals'lcad
!to 3-2.
"I had a short meeting, nothing
real big. It wasn't like 'Let's all have
a nice winter.' It was more like I
expect to play 7-to-I 0 more games,''
Cox said. ·
Marquis Grissom set the tone
with a single on Game 2 winner Todd
Stottlemyre's first P.itch. BY, the end

JESSE THOMAS.TB
5-foot-4, 120-pound, fn,.hlllln

. .

s..u,. on. I)

\ Ailanla 1-1. St. Lloui• 0. Stl-4~•

· JIMMY YEAUOER-G
5-foot-6, 140-pound, frnhmen

. THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be pubU.hing
a
.

Atlanta -1 . St. L..wit 2
n.ndaJ, Oct. II
S1. ~llllt It At&amp;atb J
s.tllnieJ, Oct. IJ
St. l.o1Uil J. Albftll:!

St.

.JOHN BOUNG-C
5-foot-9, 175-pound, fretthmen

favorite_Recipe:

New Y\11'11 fl. Bllumoo: 4. New y,n •in, Kril:s 4· 1

The Dally sentinel• P . 5

'

..

-Chardon takes over No. 1 - . -Meet the Marauders.-spot in Divi$ion .II AP - poll
COLl!MBi.Js (AP) - Chardon .
c!tmbed mto the No. I _spot in Oiviston D for the first bme tn school his. tory in the ~fth weekly Associated
Press state htsh school f001ball poll
released '1\tesday.
··
Just four years removed from
. g~in~ 0-10 -.~two years after
· wmnmg the DiVJston D stale cham·
pions~ip - the: Hilltoppers joined
Massd~on WaShington, Mentor Lake
Cathohc, Versatlles, Germantown
Valley View and St. Henry as the No,
I teams.
But ~on hardly rec~ived a
mandate, stnce Akron Spnngfield
was JUSt two po!nts back ·~ SCC?nd
place. And Spnngfield mtght JUSt
niake up thltdiffere~ this weekend,
· when at ballles Divtston lll No. 3

'

Pomeroy •..Middleport, Ohio

TUIIdiJ, October 15, 1998

Sports

•

Included i11 the cookbook wiU be recipes from Ma&amp;on,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County re&amp;ident&amp;, al110 charge.
The reeipe• will be categorised .at folltnoa:
• Appeliser./Beverage• • Breod/Groina
• Calce•/Pis• &amp; C~kie• • Pork • PoUltry
·• Salads &amp; Yegetablea,.,.~- ·
· •'S'O-,parand S·andall(eluts-·rr.; -&gt;.r ,;.&lt;;i~:::;;,. &gt;·.v .. , .,,;;;. •'--· ·"' ,,1l &gt;t n ·~"
.Brlltg your recipe lnlo our oJ!it:• or rend it to:
Holiday (:oohboofc

c/o Tbe Daily Sealinel
111 Cour&amp; Srreea, Pomeroy, 0" 45169
PletUe, inc~ your name and
pkone # with reeipe.
·
·

fSU climbs pastJJSU in· coaches po(L

Deadline for aU recipes
il.October ..Jl~ 1996 ·

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. PIQii I • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Pqe 7 .

Pomeroy • Mlddlefiort, Oh!o

Scent of mothballs turns woman away from possible mate .
This man is considered one of the
out with him. He could nOI under·
town's most ouutanding citizens.
studwby.
May I suggest a possibility? He penicipiiiCI in ICtivities thai suplanders
Maybe he had careless grooming port a variety of good causes. He has
199S, lM .......
habits and unpleasant odors she been singl_e for several ye&amp;l$ and is
T-. ,,...._ .t 08couldn't tolerate. In my case, an considered a real catch. I wonder
interesting, well·informed man · how many women bt:sides me were
whose company I enjoy reeks of turned off by the mothballs and dis·
By ANN LANDERS
, molhballs. What's worse, he insists infectant. •• Nose All in Oregon
Dear Ann . Landers: I read with on disinfecting every lond of laun·
Dear Oregon: It's too bad no. one
interest the letter -in your column dry with Lysol. Even his car smells has the courage to level with that
from "Max in · Utah," whose lady like a hospilal. Once, I spent an hour ouutanding citizen who reeks of
friend called him on the ~elepbone in his apartment and had the worst mothballs and disinfectant. It would
often. He liked her very much and coughing spell I've ever experi· be a .tremendous favor if someone
loaned her sizable sums of money enced. All my eye makeup washed told him how his obsession with
on more than one occasi011. 1bey away, and my throat was raw for eliminating bacteria ~ales such an
. hnd friendly and pleasant phone hours.! would never risk going !here unpleasant aroma. Why don't you be
convcnations, but she refused to go again.
the one to clue him in? The rewards

could be enormOII$.
P.S.: As for Max in Utah. that
telephone sweetie was interested
only in his bankroll.
Dear Ann Landers: ''Concerned
Parent in San Diego" was right on
tbe. money about the perils of discarded cigarette butts.
My parents, both smokers, used
to bundle us kids into the back seat
of the car for weekend trips to our
grandparents' home. During the
Kentuc'ky winters, we always had on
mittens, coats and scarves. One
time, my mother finished her cigarette and threw the butt out of the
front window. Unfortunately. the
butt flew into th.e back seat and land-.

Ann

---

by Bob" Hoeflich

and his wife; Beverly.
On Sept 27, at Ohio Slate Uni·
versity Hospilal surgeons transplanted a kidney from Gene to Beverly.
Allhoush the kidney was heallhy
and the operation should have
worked, it didn_,. Both Gene and
Beverly are back at their 1\ome in the
Racine atea with Beyerly l\avi 0g
· gotten home only 'last Sunday.
With the transplant not having
worked, Beverly has been placed on
a waiting list at the Columbus hospi·
tal for a transplant but it will be four
of five months probably before one
will become available. Gene and ·
Beverly bave hnd the loving care
and assistance of his mother,
Jeanenc Lawrence, of Racine during
their ordeal.
MargjU'Ct Bealmear of Syracuse
Such' a 'disappointment. but the
who mQved back to J'V!eigs Co~nty a family seems to have livery positive ·
year or so ago from Baltimore, Md., outlook. That always helps.
where she:resided for many years, is
having health problems and relatiVes
I sometimes wonder who comes
'are hoping you'll remember her with lip with some of those television
a get-well card.
·
commercials.
I bate the one on cellular phones
Mrs. Bealmear was admitted to
the Holzer Medical Center and was which features two young people
there when families mc;mbers gath- stopping beside Ike vehicle of an
ered in her room for a birthday cele· · elderly gentleman and giving him
bration. She later underwent surgery the overbearing laughs because they,
last Tuesday and remains hospilal· too, have a cellular phone. Pretty
ized for observation. Her room num- 111de presentation as I see it.
'ber is 21D-A.
· 1ben there's the gas company one
showing a grotesque man frozen .in
It's· been a·.Jong' time since I've . ice while shQwering. Whl\1 a turnoff.
. seen Virginia' Hindy of Middleport,
Oh well. It takes all kinds--even
;but I did run into·her at Fruth's.
in commercials.
Virginia has had major, major
••••••••
health problems since I last saw her
And Columbus Day has provided
several years ago. However, she's on another excuse for closing down
her feci again and doing pretty well. - some .businesses and governmental
With • very positive attitude, Vir· functions. I'm with the American
ginia, like a lot of us, is doing "one Indians who protest the observance. .
day at a time." ·
Columbus. didn't really discover
.•.••••.
America. It wasn't lost in the first
Bad news for Gene R. Lawrence place. Do keep smiling.
Word has been received here of
ihe dealh of Virginia Ellen McCann,
82, formerly of Rutland, on OCt. 2 at
her home in Charleston, W.Va.
Mrs. McCann was a member of
the Boyd Memorial Christian
Church. an~ was a former employee
of Berman Jewelers. Mrs. McCann
is survived by three sons, adaughter,
six grandchildren. and nine great·
grandchildren. .
· She was reared in Rutland and
her )ale husband, Forrest, grew up in
the Dex~er area. Bolh were grnduales of lhe Rutland High School.
Services were held Oct. 5 at the
,WjJson Funeral Home, and burial
was in Floral Hills Gardens of Mem·
ories at Sissonville.

-·Community calendar·'

.. The -Com~uoity Calendar Is
SYRACUSE ·- The Meigs CounBoard
()f
Mental
pubU.becl as a free 11\trvke to non· ty
profit groups wishing to announce Retardation/Developmental Disabilmeetlnc and special events. 1be ities, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
ealen4ar Is not dealped to pro·
POMEROY·· Rock Springs Betmote .-lea or ruDd raisers cl any
type. Jtems are printed as space ter Health Club, Thursday, I p.m.
permill and cannot be cuarmteed
POMEROY -- Revival, MI. Her·
to 111'! a speclfk number of days.
• TUESDAY .
moo United Brethren in C~rist
CHI'STER·- Chester Council Church, through Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
323, l;)aughters of America, Tues- nightly. Evangelist, Rev. Bennie
day, 7 p.m. Inspection; members to Stevens of Ppint Pleasant; special
singing' each night. Church located
wear '!'hite. ·
in Texas Community on Wickham
Rood, just off Texas Rood.
THU~DAY

'

992-7296. ·
Alao discuued wu lhc Christ·

1

We will work wHhln your budget.
Ph• 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
. 108
Street
wv

.,

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119

PAI.I, CUAN·UP

H&amp;H

FOOL
· PROOF
LOVE!!!

,.,,..,.

SAWMILL
. la,Jaw Mill '

Call

.

32124 tt.ppy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 451..
O.nny I Pej(gy Brtcktee

1-900..5 26-5050
EXt. 4500

614-742·2193

Mustbe18yra.
Serv-U· (619) 64~

$3.89 per tnln.

111131M1 rno.

LINDA'S
.PAINTING
llniiOI·IJTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATe
T•li• ... ,.lit 01t of
,.tall•l· Let •• •• It
·for ptr.
DIY IIASOifAILI
IIIYIII.f iiiiCIS

614-tll-4110 .

4(3t/ 1 mo. pd .

tion. ,

. .

But Montgomery, Ala., optician
Hobson Cox said people are impa·
tient with that requirement. 'He will
not sell contacts at his three stores .
because his customers became
uncooperative about bringing in
prescriptions.
"It's Joe Public and the Golden
Arches syndrome." he said . "Joe
Public does not want to wait to

CORRECT CONTACTS • "Plano" or colored lenses were not made to be used for COSf!IBIIC purposes -they are to be worn by people with certain eye diseoses or after surgery to help the eye
heal.
have his eyes examined properly; "plano·: lenses, and were not made · suppliers as well as local unli·
Joe Public docs not want to go to be used for cosmetic purposes censed vendors. Disease.~ that can
through the steps necessary to lit they ·are to be worn by ·people with be passed from a dirty contact lens
contacts the right way."
certain eye diseases or after surgery to the wearer's eye include hcpatiThe contacts being sold on the to help the eye heal, Cox said.
tis B, pinkeye and strep infections.
street are referred to in the trade as
"(The unlicensed vendors arc)
.Untreated infections can devol·
targeting young jlcople who don't op into ulcers that form scars and
have blue cyes,"·he said. "Kids arc cause blindness or the need fQr a
curious. They buy them and some- corneal transplant. People who
body else says, 'Oh. let me try wear damaged lenses also risk
By Gannett Nawa"Servlce
them.' They swap (hem hack and injury from scratches or 'tears in ·
How to wear and care"for your contact lenses, based on tips from
forth /'
contact lchses that can irritate and ,
the Contact Lens Council:
'
So the lenses designed to help . ulcerate the eyes..
- ·Wash and rinse hands before handling lenses. A soap without
damaged eyes heal can cause dam"We've seen several young
perfume is best.
· age themselves. if not used correct- patients with serious corneal ulcers
- Clean. wash and air-dry your lens case. Lens cases can be a
ly.
from cosmetic lenses bought from
source of bacterial growth. Clean, rinse and air dry case each time
Biggest danger in buying lenses friend s." said Dr. Tom Lyle
lenses are removed from case. Replace cases regularly.
from an unlicensed place, and with· Mitchell Jr., a Montgomery oph- Clean, rinse and disinfect snft lenses if they have been stored
out examination by an optometrist thalmologist.
for longer than 12 hours. Consult your contact lens product literature
or ophthalmologist trained to deterThe street sales aren't the only '
or eye care professional for more detailed directions.
tnine the proper prescription, is that source of lenses swapped among
· - See your eye care P.rofessional every six months or on the
the buyer will not know how to friends. Lens manufacturers supply
schedule the professional n;COfDmends to you.
.
protect the eyes from disease and trial lenses to optical stores so peo·
- Replace contact lenses regularly. They wear out with time.
injury.
pic buying c0 ntacts can make sure
Cox is concerned about the safe- · a prescriptjon fits their eyes as the
'
Continued on page 10
ty of some cut-rate mail-order lens
C
ont1nued on page 10

Contact lenses-:-:- a how-to guide

ave
music that is both original and con,
lemporary as well as traditional and
new, from home and abroad.
II

Classical guitarist John Rosen·
bohm comes .to Foothills with per·
formance experience that has taken
him acrosS/ the- Unite&lt;t State~· and to '
Ilill¥• WhcrrnoHtachin'g&gt;.,.,perform»
ing, Rosenbohm lakes to the skies
in his 1946 Aeronca Champ 7AC. ·
He will perform on Sunday, 2 to 4
p.m .
·

"' ·;· ,OPEN HOU~E
October 12·20 · .
Save 20% on everything in the
store (except Tom Shahl artwork and
Dept 56 merchandise.)
'

The festival is open Friday and
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m . and Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. Food con-

Christmas bulbs are on sale for
$7 at local ~in':"~~- Also dis·
cussed was the posstbtlny of loc:kmg
the mini·park to stop vandalism dur·
ing the holiday stason.
EnteJf&amp;inment for the stage area
wa5 also mentioned.
·
The Dally Sentinel, represenled
by Bob Atwood, presented an adver· tisement package to the association
for a series.of ads to appear ~ugh·
out the holiday season. 1be ktck.off
dale for the packaJe is Oct. 31 and
· the_ deat!line ,f « that ad is Oct. 2S.
ThiS senes wdl ~ through Dec. 19.
Kathy Male11ck from WMPO
presented semal ndvertising pack~
ages for Christmas for six wec:ks of

131.801.Amberger Ad. . •
Off E'orest Run

949·2057

,.... ' ..........
MIKE

eR=tiHIIt
Wintlows
Genge,
.

..

Blf~G

I'I'ID,

. 1:00 o:m.-3:30 p.m.

•Sr.. Doers&amp;.
WitdOWs

pel. '

..... Aikltlals

P~bll~ Notice
:NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
tR.r.rance: 5715.t70hlo .
'
ReviHd Code
The Melgo County Board
evlelon hoe oompleted
work of equollutton.

Call for Domonetratlon &amp; Free Estimate

20 Year.

E.cp~rience

•

Iru~IJ!:!'d

&amp;
Stump Grinding

'

Industrial• Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Condensers/Hose Assembly&amp;

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
•Room Addltlona
•New Garagea
-Eiectrteall Plumbing
'ROQIIng
'
.
-Interior &amp; Exterior
PitlnUng
Alao Conc;rate Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

982-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
•

Notice·.

14.Q_
89-2271

~

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6 P.M.
Public Notice
thot In purouance of a
Roaotutlon of the Vllloga
Council, ol tho VIllage of
R101
R10 1
0 h10
ne, on tho
no,
paaHd
5th. dey of
Auguot, 19111, there will be
b 1M~ 10
ot f lh1
ou
m ·of
- uid• oubdlvlalon
• 1 0
people
11 o Genetol Eloctlon to be
held In tho Vl!loge of
Roclu., Ohio, ot the regular
PilCH of volin, therein, on
th1 5th d 0 N
b
IY
avom
er,
19118 the q-~ of levying
1 till, In uc111 of lho ton
mill Umltotlon, far tho
beMflt of Roclne Vllllge lor
the purp•oo of current
expenHa. Said lox being a
...,..,.l,of·ori.exlotlng-tax· of,
~ mllto · 1t 1 rate not
exeMtllng 2 (two): milhl'for'
each one dollu at
voluotlan, which omounta to
twonly cento ($0.20) for
..eh ona hundrld clolal'll of
valuotlon, lor nvo (51 yHro.
The Polio tor aoid
Election will open at 6:30
o'clock o.m. and rtmaln
open until 7:30 o'clock p.m.

In Loving M1mory of
CLYDE WINES, JR.
wllop....
OGt-11, 1111.
Though tiW ..td
IJOM by without you,
tllld ohllngu IMy by

. KARAOKE
EVERY WEDNESDAY
8-11

djly,

OUr love Mid mem-

•'*"

ort.. or you,
1*0...,. .

Mlltaodbylll hll
lwnlly.

,

S~lck/MIG Aluminum Welding

.

W1Mifl ,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1·900·656-SOSO
. Ext. 3998

ALL OHIO
Any Ci!r
Any Driver
DU I &amp; SR-22
&gt; D1ocoun1s .
Compul er Quo tes
(6 14) 992-6677

Po m eroy

· (No Sunday Calls)

Nff!llfHJ.. Millie
Hontt Funaces, •.. · '
Air Co~tdlflanenlllll .
"FREE 5-yoer porto

-nty.

"'N THE SPOT FINANCING
hlllabJe to QUAUFIED
BUYER&amp;

FURNACES

~

~
I
I

'

"'.AAGE INVENTORY FOR
IMMEOIATE IHSTALUTIONS.

SY~A~USE

WITH YOU LIVEUI.

614-992.7643

'fREE ESnMATES on
nowoq.........L

HUB BARDS
·GREENHOUSE .

WOMEN TO TALK

FREE ESTIMATES

Athl-on Heat P~~~ps.

·' ......,

lEAl PUMPS
-lied with low

monthly poymtnll
low II

•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pa~sys
•Fancy Gourds
·Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskels
Open Mondoy-s.turdoy
!HI; CloHd Sundoy

Unforgettable
Conversations(( ·
Call this exclusiVe
24 hr. hotllnell
Call 1-900-47!HISS5
Ext3313
$3.89 per mln.Muot be 18 yro.

K1tttn1 I cat food 10 gJwe away.
304·11115-3013.

60

Lost and Found

FOUND: near TombltiOr'l Run 011
Rl 2, medium lize dog. 304-

li&amp;s-3900.

lost: Black Luther WIHtt At Rio
Grande Mc:Donalda, Reward t1
Returned, e1.c-448-1ft49.
Academy, Fourth Avenue, Small
Reward! 61 o4·388·814.C,
lost: mate Pug, CR 31/Stive•svilte
Rd., answers to •popeye" . S tOO
reward, no queations asked 1 81.4-

IKI-5135.

losl: .rtddish brown Chihuahua.
PomeroytMason brklge vicinity, ·
•t:~swers

to ·cash·, 8 U-992-

3896.

70

Yard Sale
Galllpoll!l
&amp; VIcinity

.6.ll Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In •
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p, m. '
lht dl)' b"ort lhe ad is 10 run.
Sunda)' edition · 2;00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition· 10;00 a.m. Sar:
urdar.

Nintendo Bedspreads , Curtains,
Jeant, Baby l1ems, Everytt')ing
Cheap! Wednesday. 2208 SA
588, Gallipolis, 112 Mile Pasl Am.
legion.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnny
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid I~
Advance.' Otadl ine: 1:OOpm the
before the ad ia 10 ' run, Sun·
&amp; Monday edition
- 1:Oopm
.

.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity
4 Family Garage Sale, Tue~·
Wtd·Thurs October f'S·IB ·H.

130•Mea-..k0r. Q-?

·

Yard Sate-Wed a Thur. 8-? 2013
Ut. Varnon. Nol retponsible for
acdden1s.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Putton Auction Compan~,
full time auctioneer, c:omP1e1e
aUction
tervice . licensed
168,0hia I Welt Virginia, 30.4-

773-57850.304-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

:

COLLINS

ver And Gold Coin•. ProofMtl
D!amondt, Anrique Jewelry, Gord
Rnlgs, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currencr,
St&amp;~llng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelrr
· U.T.S, Coin Shop, 151 second
Avenue,fa~ipolis, 81-4.,.48-2842.

CONSTRUCTION

oflnidentlal Remodeling
•Additions
'
.tltw Ccinotructlon
oOver 10 Yra. Experience
ot.aw Rates
ofrae Eatlmotes
•All Work Ouaiantaecf
614-992-9910
1a.1 ... ,..

(UmeStoneLow Rates)

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
ptacu of votinp therein, on
Otaalddey.
Natlea of Eloctlon on Tail
, By orctw of tha B-d of the 5th day o November,
· Levy In Exeao.l of tho Ton
Electlono, of Melgo County, 19116_tho qu111ion ol levying
Mill Limitation .
.
Ohio. I IlK, in IXCHI of.the ten
ReviHd Code, Sections
mill llmJiollon, fer the
Limestone,
3501.11(0), 5705.19, 5705.25 Henry L. Hunllr, Chairman, benefit of Sunon Townohlp
· r,lta p. Smhh, Director
NOTICE lo hereby given
Oet*d Sap!. 18, 1996 for ' the purpoae of
Gravel, Sarid,
thet in purouonce of 1 (1018, 15, 22, 29 4TC
mointolnlng and operotlng ·
RHolutlon of the Boord of
cemotarloa. Said tax being a
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
Tawnohlp
Truoteea of the
r•-•1
of
an
uioting
tax of
•·
.Public Notice
0.4 mill ot a rote not
Tawnohlp al Cheoter,
614·992-3470
oxceodlng 0.4 millo for
Chiller, ·ohio poooed on
Notioe of Eteotlon on Tax
eoch one dollar of
the 7th dey of Augual, 1tllll,
valuotlan, which amounta to
there will be oubmltted too Levy In EICM&amp; of the Ten
vote of tho """
-pte o_I oald
Mill Umltotlon
lour centa ($0.04) for nch
RniHd Code, Section•
one hundred dollars of
aubdlvlolon at a Generot
Pick up dlacorded
Election to be held in the 3501.11(0), 5705.19,5705.25 valuation, tor five (51 yoora.
NOTICE II her,by given
The Polio for oald
appllancll, batteries,
Townehlp of Cheater, Ohio,
11111ny metal• a
et tho regular ptocoo of thot In pureuance of a Election will opon at 6:30
voting therein, on tha 5th Reaolutlon ol the Boord of o'clock a.m. a~d remain
motor blocb.
, dav a! Navember, 1896 the Townohlp Truoteoa of the :r;::tci~7:30 o clock p.m~ 81 4-8112..402&amp; 8 om.-&amp;
q~Htlon of levying • tax·, In Townohlp of Sutton, Roclna,
excesa• of• tbe,. ten; mill&gt; Ohlo·pusad-&lt;ln. tha.3rd day ,. · ~"' B\&lt;•or.derlOttllalloll'd.ilt ~ ~r-·--·
limitation, for the benefit of of June, 19111, there will be Etoctiono, of Melga County;
ChHter Tawnohlp lor the
Ohio.
IOIEU BisSEll
purpoae of prevention, :=~~it:~ !:~: :~~d~:ro::~ . Henry L. Huntw, Chalnnon,
CONSTRUCTION
Rite 0. Snrlth,.DirwCtor
control end obo~tent of olr at o General Election to be
hold
In
lhe_
Townahlp
of
· Doted Sept.18, 19111
pollution. Said tal being an
•NawHomes
oddltlonal tex of 1 mill ot 1 Sutton, Ohio, ot the regutor (10)8, 15, 22,29 4TC
•Garages
rate not ext;eedlng 1 (one)
mllto for HCh one dallor ol
•Complete
440 Apartments
valuation, whteh omounto to
Remodeling
ten oento (10.10) for oaoh
for Rent
ono hundred doll ora ol
Stop &amp; Compire
vatuotion, for llva (5) yuro.
FREE
The Polio for . oold WATERS EQGE APARTMENTS
ESTIMATEES
Electlo_n will open at 6:30
o'ciQ.ck o.m. a~d ramaln
. Syracuse, Ohlp
985-4473
open until7:30 o clack p.m.
Now a~allable FmHA One BR apts.
Card of Thank•
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
"Baalc monthly REnt $286.00
Tha VFW Poll 9053
Personals
005
Resident paya electric only Range, ·
and Auxlll•ry In
Tuppel'l Pl1lna would
~·•Adoption
Refrigerator, AIC on-site laundry,
Loving, childlesa coyple long 10
like to think evnryone
adopt inrant. LegaiiConlidenlial.
Community R~,· Management,
who · don1tod 1nd
We un help I Please call Janna
&amp; Slove. 1-800-IWS.S71!i
purchlled artiCltl for
Maintenance provided
our benatlt auction.
LooklnQ For Relaliv.a Of PeiiQ
SEE MANAGER FQR BENT up SPECIAL
Rachel ~ltU Rumfteld. Any lnkl
Al10 would ' like to
Obit, Call Or Write: Judi Proctor,
tllank 1. 0. McCoy tor
814-9112-64111 TOO 1-800-750-0750
5!185, Oongn Rood, Shel"r, OH
44175, 4tQ·IIII8·2788. Also, Anr
auctlontllrlng tor ua
IIlio- Taytc&gt;rs Wm S.muli .JICOII •
tllld AIYin Ctlllllo lnd
John W. Fonzo. Gr~•ur't -81r·
II the mtlllclllne w11o
(etra .wucox·a Ru~·· •'thOEqual Housing Qppo(tunlly
funtllhotl . . millie.
~~

WICKS

HAULING

raa

----::----,

•

lost: Eyeglasses,' VIcinity: Gallia

..
'
Aboolutt Top Dolla.: Ail U.S. s;).

ROOF SPI:CI..t£

i

Four a Week 0~ Yellow Tiger
1Cinen1, Mother Cal, Goad Home!
&amp;14-3B7·720D, 114-3e7· XIH.

Sarv.U· 619 645 8434

"ASK ABOUT OIJR

mo.

3 Month old bit&lt;k 1.111. good with
thlldr.n. 10. CJOOd homt. 304-875ol850.

WHit mo. pd.

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

2 'I'Hr Old " - " ' Ai&lt;odale, et• ·
IJ8S.0029.

2.99/Min. I 8+ Sefv·U
(619)645-8434

Garages • Replacement Windows

1/tllln

1211

d_,

~t.ahls ChrM~tmM
Route 1, Box 221
Little Hocking,
Hours
Mon-Frl 8·6
Sit B·S, Sun· 1

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

6:14-949-3117

By Order or the Board of
Electlona of Melgo County,
'
Ohio.
Hem L Hunter Chairman
Rlio D. &amp;mith, Direct.;
•
Datad Sopt. ta; 1896
(10)8, 15, 22, 19 4TC
In Memory

~:D ~~.
.

St. Rt. 124,
. · Racii\.Ohlci ·
. • Min~ pairs .
4 Hr•
To~ollback
rvlce
AA &amp; All State
Motor Club

of uld day.

~-IW ,

~hop

&amp;GAUGE

exce1a of the ten mill

~(?~"'
.

LUCIY J. TOWIIG

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
742·3212

For all the answers
talk live to one of
our metaphyalcel
advleoralll
Call 1-800-562-4000
Ext. 2308
$3.99 per min.
Mutt be t 8 yra.
Serv·U· (619)645-8434

Gutters
Downspouts
o 'utter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Owner:
Ronnie Jon8J.--"

What's on Your
·Horizon?

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

$19.95 /Month

Removal

Body work, car, truck
&amp; lruck painting,
minor machllnl~
reJ)alr,
Tune·upl, 011 Change,
Wox, Buffing .
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, A1k for Kip

Howard L Wrltoeel

New World Net - It's Waiting
• 1-888-goNWNET

Top, .T rlm,

GUN SHOOT ·
FRIDAY

. . Publlc"Not~c.t. •
Public
a11o1 of Etactton·on Tox
ovy In EXCM&amp; of the To
Notice 61 Eloctlon on Tax
Mill Limitation
·
Levy In Excno of the Ten
· iHd Code, Sectlono
' MNI Limitation
1.11(Q~ 5701.11,5701.26
ReviHd Code, Soctlono
~OTICE io hareby glvon 3501.11(G), 5705.19,5701.25
11ttt In purauance of •
NOTIC!.J! hereby· given

Pomeroy, Ohio

Unlimited Acceu- No Set-U Fee

FORKED-RUN
SPORTSMAN ·

limitation, tor the benofh of
Rudand Townohlp for the
purpoaa of maintaining and
operotlrig comoterlll. Said
tex baing a ronewot of on
exioling tu of 0.3 mill ato
rato not exceeding 0.3
~ for eaeh one dollar of
mil ••
voluetlon,
~lch omountolo ·
thrH canta ($0.03) tor - h
On. hundred dolloro o1
votuetlon, lor five (5) yura.
Tho Palla for. aald
·Eioctlon will open o1 6:30
a'cloc}&lt; o.m. and rlmoln
open until 7:30 o'clock p.m.
of aald dey.
of
By order of the Election•, of Mttlge County,
..
Ohio.
Henry L. Hunter, Chairman,
Rite D. Smith, Director
•
.Dated .Sept.18, 19111
(10) 8,15, 22, 29, 4TC

1-BOj)-291-5600

THE INTERNET.

JONES' TREE SERVICE

CLUB

Complolnta agelnot the
luetlono. •• eotabllohod
till r•r 19118, mual be
de In oocardonce with
1011 5715.111 of tho Ohio
vlaed Code. Theoe
lolnta muot be Iliad on
I rma which will be
1 rnlahed by the County
· 1tor end' muot be Iliad In
County Audlter'a Olllea
o or before the 3111 deT, of
ch, 1197. All compla nta
1 ad with tho County
ltor will be hlord by the
rd of Rovlolon In the
nfPifll!provldad by Soctlon
5.18 of tho Ohio ReviHd

614-992-4119
110 Court St.

GIUESEI'S
GAUGE

7/1Min

REPLACEMENT

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, qak shelves; quill racks;
goose outfits; fall decorations ..
WATKI_NS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in salurated fat than olive oil)
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/giffsJfund raisers
Mon. thru Sal. 10.6, Sunday 1·5
2 miles North Silver Bridge 011 SA 1

30 Announcements
Public Notice
Raaotutlon of the Board of
Townahlr, TruatHa of tho·
Townah p of Rutland,
Ruttond, Ohio p.,.aed on
lho 3rd day of July, 19111,
thare will be .eubmltted to o
tllx returne tor tax yur vote of the people of aold
how been roviHd and oubdlvl1lon at o Oanorol
tt• voluatlono completed Eloctlon to be hold In tho
Mid ·ora open lor publlo Townohlp of Rutlond, Ohio,
l~on In tho office of at the. rogulor ptacos of
1~1 Malga County 'Auditor, voting thoroln, on tho 5th
ltcond Floor, Courthauoe, day of November, 19111 the
'-cond Sti'Mt, Pomeroy, qu111fon of levying o tax, In
lo46769.

QUALITY
WINDOW

614-446-4530

1

Register for door prizes to be given
away October 201h at 5:00 p.m.
Shop U...1111me brand depill'tii~Mnr.:

either FM or AMIFM spots with various businesses featured.
.
Clark thanked Larry and .Jane
Banks for serving as chairpersons
for the duck derby during lhe annual
stemwheel festival.
Several merchants stated the restival was very successful for their
businesses.
Also, George Wright, Kenny
N~ and the Meigs High School
weldtng class were commended for
inslalling the lighu on the parking
lot durin1 the festival ..
_ The next ~ting wtll be Nov. 13
·It 8:30 a.m. tn the Peoples Bank
conference rQOm.

I

Highest "R Value"
......!.. -Rating Blocks99.5o/o
of UV Rays
Offered Exluslvely
by

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFIS &amp; GIFIS

GR4ND OPENING
HIDDEN
BINGO
TREASURES
Racine
749 S. Third Ave.,
American
MICtctlaport
' Legion Post 602
Ceramics, Woodc~ . ',,
Homemade Dolle &amp;
' . Doors Open
Bubtn.
. 4:30p.m. ·
Alao Children's
Bingo 6:30
Playroom
Monday 10 am-6 pm
· Every Sunday
' ru...-Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
UNDER NEW
'
Friday 2 pnHI pm
MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC WELCOME

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
BING'S
INSULATION
AUTO
BRYAN PLACE
, REPAIR ·. . 537MIDDLEPORT
· m-m2 .

......... ,.

4' S&amp;D · perf. ·solid pipe
4' &amp;6' Fie• pipe
&amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
'It" &amp;'1." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/," thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
&amp;1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll$ thru 1,0(1()' rolls)
U.L approved Conduh
Graveless Leach pipe
• ..;
1
pipe I" thru 2" · fittings · Regulat01s · Rlselli
of P.V.C. &amp; Aex fittings &amp;Waterllttlngs
Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

11

Pomeroy M·erchant set plans for upcoming holidays

Brenda Roush of Leo's C111ise
and Travel suggesled conw:ung the
an classes in tht; four schools to dec0f81;C windows or.empty buildinpor
~messes ':"antmg to have thetr
wtndows . paroled. She sugaested a
window judging with 1 dorwion to
the_11rt class that wins.

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

'

814-985-3813 or 814-687-6484

I Pl1t&amp;lic Cutven · Dual wall and Regular f1' thru 36"

Q/412mo.

~

mas season.

.

llllAIIIT II IIPUCUIIIT WillOW
UCIIIOLOIY
•HEAT MIRROR• patllled syst-.

Tuppare Plaine, Ohio 45783

St. Rt. 7

Ew•lllf a1tl WHko1d 110 I·CIIargo

pale

mas trees decorated by Pomeroy
Elementary School students. M~chants were asked to purchase w1re
to attach the ornaments on the trees
this year ·and to pay in advance for
the trees this year.
Discussion was also held aoout
businesses stayinJ open until 8 p.m.
on Monday nights during the Christ·

Authorized AGA Dlaltibutol'
o'Weldlng !'uPPJias •Industrial G - • Machine :;!hop
Services • Steel Salae &amp; Fabrication • Repair Walding
• Alumlnum/Sialnless • Tool Dressing • OmamantaJ
-Steps • Stairs. Railings, Patio FumHure, Flrep!Ge
Items, Plante.r Hangers, Trellisas &amp; lois o1 other stuffll

contact lenses
.

I&amp;W PLASTICS AID SUPPLY

10% Dlscou1t for Sept. &amp; Oct.

15th Annual Foothills Art drawing, prints, mixed media, exhibit by being able to make their
will' be held in the Lodae at watercolor, photography and a wide very own "masterpieces" to take
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp, off Route range of 3 .dimensional creations. home.
35, 5 rniles north of Jackson Friday Admission, class:es, and entertainClassical music ·lovers will find
through Sunday spons~red by rnent are free.
.
new sounds to enjoy. Saturday from ·
Southqm Hills Arts Counctl.
One spcctal feature of the fesuval 2 to 4 p.m. visitors will enjoy EverCo-sponsors for _the festiv~l •are is the opP?nunity to I~ more green Strinss. an ensemble from the
the. Milton' Banking&lt; Compan.y,.;c:, about the·k.ind, of• an on ·dtsplAy&gt; by • Martella' area that petforms undef·
OSCO Industries, . Naiional City ·• creatin~ artwork,:,:ourse)f,, A special -' the baton .of.William n .BiggerJ•· ·».:
Bank,
Hill BaJJks, Big Bear and · area is set aside on the_mezzanine
''I;'rairie Orchid" bring·a comJllete
the O)J10 Arts Council. . ·
called "Experiencing Foothills" and change of pace at4:30 as they swing
1lJCI yearly·festival features work is manned by teachers and volun· into two hours of toe tappin', hand
by. art4sts from throughout the lri· teers on Saturday from noon to 2 clappin,' · sing·along folk music.
state ""sion. live music, and hand·on p.m. ·and 5 !b 7 p.m. and again on Sarah Goslee Reed and Lisa Hill
aits acjivities. About 140 anists are Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. Kids play guitars, co·ncenina, ~iolin,
· expeclfd. to exhibit approximately have a ball learning more about the dobro, rain sticks, and -more as they
600 wru in oils, acrylics, pastels, various media they have seen in the bring their audience into-the act with

. KJping with. Pomeroy's down·
town 1 revit~lization scheme, the
thcmeior Pomeroy's upcomulg hoi·
iday ason will be "A Victorian
Christ as Along the River.·
· Ho tday activities dominaled the
Oct. 9 meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants Associalion.
S~ Clark of Clark's Jewelry
· Store asked thai white lights be
· placed on the buildings asaln. this
year. It was suuested garland, lights
or bows be placed 011 the balconies.
Anyone needing assis~nC:e w~th
JighlinJ can conca.;t Ball Aleshire
dtrollllhlhc Neighborhood Lendeut

Nt~A- !fd411

Aeration Repair or R.lat~iiiHI _

~
Festiv~l

'

•

By M.J: ELLINGTON .
The ~ (Ato.) AclveriiThe newspaper advertisement
promised "fashion" riame·brand,
extended·wear contact lenses for
$55 - . far Jess than the usual price
of $350, it claimed.
And it insuucted readers to call
a beeper number for more informa·
lion. But the Alabama address
where the lenses were available
turned out to be the waiting room
of a business set up to cut hair.
1bere was nobody there trained
to examine eyes or fit contact lens.
es.
There was no instruction av~il­
able for buyers unfamiliar with the
steps necessary to keep the contact
lenses clean and sterile.
There was no education about
the harm wearers could suffer if
they insert dirty or damaged contacts.
But this doesn't disturb many
potential customers, particularly
the teens and young adults for
whom cosmetic .contact lenses
designed"to change ey~ ..color are
most poputar, say opticians and
opthalmologists. And that is the
specific group targeted _ by the
ndvertising for s_treet sales.
"People trade them, especi_ally
when kids are buying them," said
Cbarlotte Rancilio, a spokeswoman
for the American Optometric Asso·
elation. Then the lenses can
become contaminated. It could
cause eye health problems:"
Such sales can also violate the
law, she said - contact lenses are
consid~red a "'medical 'device,':
and a person must have a prescrip-

Foothills Art Festival slate

,.

.

Be careful where

Bear of the Bend ...

I.I

ed in the scarf that was wrapped selves." That's not tnle. Scc::onclwtil
smoke, litter, fires, accidental bunlf
tightly around my 5-year-old neck.
I began screaming, and my father •. these are the problems innocett
I
pulled the car over. By the time he non-smokers face.
got my scarf off, I hnd a severe bum . Keep encouraging people to bt
on my neck. lbe doctor cleaned the responsible for their actions. It's J
wound and told me I would have a Jesson worth repeating. -· Vuginit
1
nice scar. He was right.
Beach, Va.
~·
Dear Va. Beach: You can cou
Ann_. I get so angry every time I
see a cigarette butt fly out a car win- on me. Thanks for a letter that is su
dow, not only because of the pain of ' to strike some raw nerves. If an~
my experience but because it sick· render wonders if this letter is meant
ens me to see the ·oasty sea of butts for you. the answer is "Probably." :
•
lining our curbs.
.
I get upset with smokers who
Send questions to Ann Laade~
believe it is their right to smoke any- Creators Syncllcate, 5777 W. Cen·
where at any time because they tury Blvd.; Suite 700, Loa Angelel(
uaren 't .hurting~ a'~yOne but them- Calif. 90045
•

'

Clean Late Madel Cau Or
Trucks, 1UO Models Or Newer
Smittt Bukk Ponlilc, 1900 East~·
,em ~e. Gallipolis.
·

J &amp; O't Auto Parts. Bu'ring sa!·
VIIO'I .,.hicles. Setting parts.' 304·'
7-73-5033.
Junk Cars &amp; Truck Varloua Run..
nino Vehlclea &amp; Car Parts, &amp;14 ·.
ol48-45aa.
.

Top dolllr· antiques, furniture,
gl~11, china, clocks, gold, ailver,1
c:o•na, .watchlts, estates. old stone.
jars, old blue &amp; while diahes, olc:b
wood boxes, milk bOIIIes. Meit~s·
Cou~ry Advenisement, Osby
Martin, 614·992 ·~ 441.
Wanted To . Bur Uud Mobihi
Hames . Call : ,614·448·0175 Or !
30•-875-596~

Wanted To Buy: Junk A.uto&amp; Wilh
Or Without Motors. Call Larfy ·

LiYoly. 514-388·9303.

.

Wantitd To BU~ : Litde Tykes OutPloy Hou.., 81.·2•5-5887.

-

EMPLOYMENT

SERVICES
110

HelpWanted

. ~ATTN ; Point Pleasant' Pastal 1
Poaitions. ~rmanent lull t•me for ~
clerk/sorters . Full Benefits . For
exam, application tnd salary. ihlo

colt !- 70~)908-2350ht. 3870,•1, . ·~

Bam-Bpm.

.

)

.

I .

AVON ' I All Ar&amp;BI' I SMitley ·~
Spelll'l, 30.4-875-1420.
l

\o.

Able Avon Represenlil ives
needed . Earn money lor Christ· l
mas bil!s at homelal work. 1-800· ,
992·8356 or 304-882·2:6.&amp;5, Ind. ·
Rep.
i
Accept1ng ,Apphcattons through Oct ·181t'! lor rti)ISiired long term :
care nurstng ani aram rraimng '
crass. Matione Elltou, RN . Cll!as
tnstrutlor. Pomr Pleasant Nursi~
I Rehabilirahon Center, Stale Ro- ~~
ute 62, Route 1. Box 326, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550 . A Glen·
mark ·Mul1tcare Company. EOE .

:l

300-675-3005.
Band Seekino Bass Pla.rer Only
Sirlous Inquire, 614·367·7890 •II
$14· ..6·2659.
'
' )

'
Nonprofit Organization Looking .
For Bookkeeper With Two Year.s -'
Ae1u11 Experience, WOfkln;
~nOWIIdgo 01 AIR, AlP, General '
Ledger, Payroll, Ttn:e&amp;, lotua 1-2- ·

3 And Windbwl . Send Reaume r'f
Br Oc1Dbor 23, 1He, To: F~CTS. ~
1770 Jackson Pike, Biclwtll OH .'

•5614 EOE. I.t/Fili.

'

'
•.
Ow111... PO&lt;· •

..... 1.

~"I"
d3 Soc· I'
Oalhi&gt;OIII, OH ('•
~~~------~~

'

··~ ~

�-

'

•

r

T..-y, October 15, 1996

The O.lly Sentinel• ........

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

AI.LIYOOP
PHILLIP
ALDER

Male Py;my goat S30. 304·175·
1 and 2 DtdfOOm apartments. tur·
nlal'led and unlurnlshtd, lt&lt;:u ritro
deposit required, no pels, 814 ·

1192·2218.
'
1 bodntom lurnilllled _,.,..,,,~

FINANCIAL
r

Middlepon, clll 6t4·4.tl·30i1 or

-

_aoc:--773-..:..52:.:;.:05.::.__ _ _ _ _ 1 614·1192·2178 or 614-1192-~4.

Dlac...ry TOll Hoed You. Earn
up to 1301tw, thowing Plf*'ltt lha

OHIO VAUEV PUBliSHING CO.
reCGmmendt lhat you do but i·

educational value ol our tors,
bOoks &amp; co,rnputer tattw.re. Call

Mil wlrh people you
NOT 10 tend ~~:,::::.:~::
meil until you I

~~s;-;;;;;;;;;21i;;;;;;;;;:212
a.dtoom a;"ick Townt-ouMt. 35
11
·Btdrooma, 2 Wet~ Apartments, $295/Uo., Plut

~~~~~~--~-l-:6,:-80-a_al_4_·
::

Have Vou Ever Sold Cookware,
looking For Managers In This

&amp;x1a Buting, 81.....,1·C17D.

Work
1-800-

21-0-~B~u~s~l~n~e~ss~'--J

I DID Schuhz, 2br, 2 lull bothl,
fireptace, IPPianctt. rent or lilt.

~n·o~w~lo~r~~~~~~30=4~-~6=75~- ~ ~~-0~~7-"0~·,.-~~~~--!MI
0omino·a Pina 'of Pome-roy now
hlriNt. . - . - 814-992 2124
·-· .. • - . .
·
·
Drn..s '
Nor.&amp;hwell Ohio Based Truckload
.ca,ier Looking For Expertencld

l'roftslionlll. W. P!ovido;

• Starting Pay 28.5e !Milt Solo

~e~~

Aroo, Pan· Tlmo Coli 304·675·
6181..
'

YINOINO: Great Bulirwu; linle

WOrk, Ctfip. HI00-8211-4353 . .
We pay $2.00 for I'Jery envelope
you sruff fill nome. Sand a aelf·ld-

clrllstd stamped envelope 10

' PoJd Yoc:atlon

'.OCt(K)Widt~Mo!Ch

R.W.J. Entorprl... P.O. Box 4Q6,
Temple Hilla, MD 2a74ajpay·

• 2500·3000-Pw-

chocklmoiled._,Fridoy)

'SC:htduledHomoTma
• Roeionall'Doitio.no 11 You live

230

Professional
Servt

In iNOot Dhlo

COl-A Wlti&gt;' Hazma1 And 1 Ynr
E•porionoa Raqunct.
.
C~ai!Uftr
1·10C·717·051S

1882 Moblt. Homo 14x78 3 Bod·
rooms. 2 Balha, 118,000 814-448·

2281 .

11105 Clayton 14170 2 Bedrooms,
2 Bllht, HMI Pump, 5JI10 ~rch,

Earn 1000's wHidy Sluffing en.vetopes 11 home. Be your boss.
Start now. No eJ1per1tnce. Free
suppiHts inb, no obfiQition. Send
S.A.S.E . to Nuggetl.Jnil 384·G,

251-!C'IO.

3 aper1m«1t1 for renL 1 BR, 2 BR
lelfi&lt;Mrocy. 814-388-1'108.

OJ 3 Bedrooms, $2001No., 1.aoo.

.

.... -9882.

3 room apa~anent, turnishtd, utilities paid, references &amp; deposit,
three tnd orie half miiH touth of
Middleport. At 7, 61-4-367·081 t.

Factory Goofed Sav. Thouunds,
t-801).251 -5070.
•

3 Room front Apamnenls, Laroe
Front Yard, Trash Pick-Up Pa1d,

of uHd 12 &amp; t4 ft.
homes. ICanauga UoHomes. Gallipolis, 0H 8U-

51 Uni'llrsiry Blvd. Orlando
FL 32117
tO~

Easy World Ercellenl Payl At·
semble Product• at Hom•. :can

fireplac • . Need to tell tan Call

Reaino a1 614-385-2434.

1o-

--- -

lmitalton Of cllcr'llllilllitloi I

-on race, calOr, NllgiOn.

...

OIIgln, or o n y - .0

make anv tuctt

Pf8fe••c:e. .

lln'ilallonor-llcln."

Toll FrH 1·8QQ, 4G7·55e8 EXT. ,
12170.

Thia neuu .f4IP8I' wllf not
-

-

'iJIIOCOP.I
..
lor .... _

"'*"'""'Our- ...

olllto low.
ltlflby

....mad lltotal d o1t 01
in INI ne PlfW

2 Bedroom. furnished apt for rent.
deposit feQUifed. ~4-675-6512.

3711 · EOH.

IIUST SELL 1981 14x7C with

. . MW I"WtllfkUIIIciiO
IIIF-Fal&lt;-.gAd
oiiDIB'"'*"'- ft legal
'lny ,..,., • .,.,

1

Deposit, For More lnfo.rmatlon
614-446-8515,614-"6-0006.

!at Time Burera E-Z Financing

•z•t•m.

Ail rtOI Ollal8 advottlolugln

--

2bdrm. apls., Jolal electric, ap1907-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom.·SKS dOWn, pliancea turniaheit, laundr~ room
$1051"'9. FrH deUwery I set-up, facilities, close to aehool in rown.
only lllf Oak Wood Hornet, Nitro Applicallonl avatlable ai: V!llaoe
~WV--=·304-:--75::-5-;,;5;:8.:;85:;·- - - - - - l .Gr"n ApiS. t4i or ull 614·992·

ctS
HARTS MASONARY • Block, Firat Time Bu)ltra : E·Z Financing
brick &amp; stone work, 30 y•rs fll.lf· 2 or 3 Btdtoom, around S2001ma.
~,.,.,..
perlence, rea10nable ratea. 30•· 1-800-251-5070.
aas-3591 oftor 8:0aprri, no job to
Oriv4H'I ·OTR: Advanced Olstri· omall or 10 BIG. WV.02t 208
Limite~ Offerl 1007 doubtewi~e.
bullon
s1,ooo lion-on
3br, 2bo1h, 1\199 ~own, 12791
Bonus. lf11lted Openingl For·
month . Free delivery &amp; setup.
Flllbed Drlvota. Pho,. Appil ApOnly at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
proved In 2 Hourtl Cal Far D~
WV. -755-5885.
tlaloiiiii0-CI4e-3431, En 101a.
Ea'rn S t ,OCIO -ltly Stu lling En"'opes. At· Home. Sll.rt Now. No
Expotlonce. FrH Suppllk, lnlo.
No Obllaatlon . .Send lSASE To:
ACE, Dept 1351, Box 5137, Dil·
mond Bar, CA 81785.

1 Room And Bath 1175/Mo. All
UtililiH Plid, 51£574·25311.

Need IO tell immediately. Nic:e
1i85 IWO blith 14x70. Call Mike at

614·385·De21.

New 1·h80 Only make 2 pay·
'!*'tl I I'IICMt·in, no payment at•
let 4 Y81rt. free MI·UP &amp; deliverr.

Ni~t

one bedroom apartment in
Miel&lt;lltporl, no pete., deposit requi.r~ 814·992·6633.

Rio Gran~e. OH Call 814·2•55121 .

day, Octoi&gt;¥' 28th;
Uay Be Broug;hl In
On Friday, All Breeds

stock Accepted . Hauling Avail abl e, Athens livestock Sties,
814·5e2·2'322, 1!!114-898-3531.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Alfalfa Hay Rolls-Storage and de-livery avall abte. Morgan Farm

30&lt;·937-2018..

TRANSPORTATION

7UJ Autos tor Sale
'85 ChBYy Cellbrity, two door, 2.5

~:--:~-:-~---I litre, runs

great, $200, call Chad

:-;;::-;:::::;:"':"::-.:'~~·J .89 Njnan Pulsar, Hops, good
condition, needs engine work ,
saso. caN e••·ll92-9984.

V·8, Automatit, Looks Great,
Run s Great, S1 ,20G. 614· 448·

&lt;5311.

1957 Chi'VJ Btlatr 2 Door Hir4·
top. 14880 State Routl' 554, Bid·
well , Ohio 45614, 350 Menor Au·

Camper
Condition,

romaic, 614·388-8565.

1$176 Fora Torino 2 Door v.e.
Auto, 58,000 Miles, $500, 614 ·

.(179·2211 .

8144.

....

+JICI74S

9KlD9B32
• Q5

1983 Ford F150 4x4 for par11,

• K Q. 42

• 10 3

3583.

.• A I 3
• A J 6

'

Weot

ing bad, 302 Y·8, garage kept,

2NT

Yan, 4 capllins aeall, bldt !Old·

PuB

11,000 mile.s, Stt.OOO, 114-2.t7·

SNIF SNIF·- l CAN ALMOST
HEAR OL' BULLET
WHINtN' FER
ME NOW

30&lt;2.
1890 Dodge Rom Von B·250.
72,aoo Mileo, $4,CCO, 080 Con
Be Se9n At: Galipolis Daily Trlb·

milts. S14 .5QO OBO. 814 ·448·

1990 Torota E~tendltd Cab •••.
8!4-2511-1385.
'

•
PEANUTS

'·

1905 cnevy S-10, 5spd, air, am·
tm cuaeue, LS pacqg., caM If·
"' 4:DCipm. 304-675-1 51 a

~OW

SIIOLILD I
KNOW? I CAN'T
SEE A TMIN6.

Yahama •x4 4·Whl'el drive, Big
350 el,ctric: 11ar1, reverse.
-new tir... new lront &amp;. bearings,
8JIC tond. $3,100. 304-IIDS-387• .

Btar

740

574-2539

Twin Rivers Tower. now accepting

·1 Acre, Water, Sewer, Foolert,
Garage, On Possum Trot Road.

450

Motorcycles

. TllAFFIC., BUT

Sandyville Post

Somerville 's. ·

Tt'AN~

Concreta &amp; Plastic Septic
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons
Evans Enterprises, Jackson,

··•··

·

' t:AI.l SPECIAL

sulation To Ell isting Duck Sr•·
5 Year Warranty All Par11,

. On H,e.ar Ew-

31 Heft lunch
401Jtup
41 Acttlb•-

Nortll
!NT

s•

t"'

i

· af~ •
21 Die.
30 ......
~

·-,...,.......-

Pass
All pass

2

32Atr,

This was my favorite deal from the
European Junior Iunder 251 'and
Schools Iunder 201 Championahlps that
·~.Ril~Yed in C8rdlll, Wales, last July.
It reitllf1!l a fantchled piece or declar·
er-play by Hungarian junior Gyorgy
Kemeny in the match against Italy.
H9w would you plu the play in
three spades after West has shown
length in the minon and leads the dia·
mondjack?
Bidding two no-trump when 6·4 ,
rather than 5·5, is debatable, but he
did manage to push North-South up to
the tbreeolevel.
·The/Italian declarer won the ~ia ·
mond lead with dummy's king, played
a diamand to· his ace·and ruffed his
;last diamond with dummy's spade
eight. True, East overrufled with his
natural trump trick, but when he re·
turned the club 10, declarer couldn't
collect nine tricks.
Suppose South wins with the club
ace, plays a spade to dummy's king,
and exits with a care!. West cashes one
heart and .two club tricks before leading
a diamond, which Ea8t ruffs with the
spade jack to uppercut declarer's ace.
Alternatively, il South covers with
the club jack, West wine with the
queen, caohea the heart ace and con·
tlnue8 with'.a diamond, East discard·
ing his last Club. Again. t~e defenders
gain five tricks.
·
·
Kemeny aputted the solution. After
winning with dummy's diamond king,
., he unblocked the spade king. Now,
when East ovemdred the third dilmond
and returned the club 10, declarer won
with the ace and caahed the spade ace,
which dre!f trumpa. Kemeny loat one
heart, two clubs and an overruf!.
Very nicely done!

31 Goocl-

f7

810
IBM Computtr ,With C.olor Monitor. Hard Drive, Alto Two Color

, Home
Improvements

l!n v

'

ITUESDAY .

Unconditional Hfetlmeo 9uar'antee.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESfOCK

Local reterencls furn1shed. Established 1975. Call (814~ .us.
0870 Or 1·8110·287-a576. Aoaars
Wattlfpt'oofing.

'

2 bedroom mob ile home
lllcino, no pot o, 814-992-5858.

Two bldroorri unfurnished rrailtr
on o,. acrt, t300rmo., depotil
and f'tftttnctl reQutred, 014· tatc&gt;Yo.
aes 4434 . ·

predictiOns for lite year ahead by mailing
$2 and SASE to Astro-Graph, eta this
newspaper. P .O . Bo• 1758, Murray Hill
Stalion. New York, NY 10156. Make sure ·
·to state your zodiac sign.'
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hav. 22) Do not hilitate to compliment someone Who does
something well today, oven n you do not
like this paroon very much.
SAOITTAAIUS (Noy , 23·Dac. 2t) In
bualneM meetings today, try to eliminate
corny ·)okea and small talk. You will be ,
: more IIUCCelllul ff you ~~ right down to
bile~!*&amp;.

USED APPLI~NCES

CAPIIICOAII (Dec. 22.,_ tt) h wiN not
be prociUctMI to try to UH fllllery 10 gain

Waan•rt, drytra, relrlgeratara,

lido oiA&gt;I!IOOW. 814-DD2·!5030.

ld~:;

·- ..

Wedl-y. Oct. 16, 1996
tn ... ,.., ei!Nd. you mlgltt putloglltet

a&lt;&gt;!&lt;fiOWieclgment today, Aaoocilltn ,w~l
have mote ,...ct 10f yow you're 1ott11-

n

and-·

.

• partnerlhlp arrongement thai could right
ma11t pNYIOuaont1 ,.,_ in comparllon. AQUAIIIUS (.lan. 2llohll. 11) Make an
You wm acltl••• llnanclol and ooclal effort 10 kMP a noay friend out or your
lllain toclay. E...,. though Ill or oha may
goM.
•
try
111 hltp, H'l more llt!ety IIIII your pal
UIIIA (lllpt. n.oct, UJ Eorty In lha
wtllWlttf)llolllot..
.., you mlgltiii!Uih your ttiPDfllltlfllll
I'JICU (Fell. IO-Ihnih 10) Accept I
....... hoping. - - af them ......
IIOatllll(, ,OU . . t1DI be llllt to ...... up .--flltwlloohalatodlly~af
lor loiJHme. Libra, treat yGUIHW ID I trylfl9 to make thlt perton conform to
lilt I • tlft. ..,.. JOUI' Alti'O-GIIPh )IIIII' ~11oa110111. Yau wll be glad

1

vau

ror.

1

did.

AAIES (ll.,ch 2t-April 18) Associates
will not be pleased H you Icy to teke credil
tor something that was a canectlve
endeavor. Honesty is always the best"

policY.

TAURUS (Apfil .211-Mlty 20) Do not lei
the bel1avlor ot someone you don't like
take the lun out

ol

any siluation today .•

Move away tram thit Individual. and relax
and have a good '""'·
QE-1 (Miy 2t.JWM 20) Your evalua·
tion ot a situalion Ia likely to be belter
lha'n your mato'ajudgment IOd,ly,. Do not
let fOlK lfiOUN change your mind.
CANCIII (June 21-.luly 22) n you put
logethet .., impOrlanl agieement today,
do not,...
-lllldain.
TMM bltl and ptecee .,. ooon be -

tlte...,..-

Ylllt.

LEO (July 21-Aug. 121 tt wt1t be !mpal'·
bini 111....., rour ~In an1et ~·
Do not dtvoBa time 10 frtvotouo ac:IIYIIIM
that wiiQCiel)IIIII c:M.allord.
VlfiQO (Alit. 1J St,e . . 1At ,our hlir
down and anjo~ yourotlf without
~ "*Y· YoU w11 ' - a good
'tmU vau do.,.,.. tn n-ildton.

"*'

I

'

!5I Hit ,.,.
!II Foxy

.

~~

CELEBRrTY CIPHER

• W II

X0 UV

V II

L ·p

PG ,

F Ill .I Y X 0::

W Ill

BIIZAOO

NLHHLTDUW.'

,.
I.

by I..&amp;.M Campoe
~~C::::.~...,::,:,...:.~r~~: K,..C_.~

c.

..1110

r •.

FIIVWZY.
'KIIUI.WLTI'

EAYV

SVNHVUUIICI' . ' -

VI'WXIIOI'VN
FIIIIN. EIIO
'

PREVIOUS SOUITIOH: 'Real totk muaiC long ago Mill
no 1&lt;.-n IUMWrS.' - (MUIIIC critic) 0onot Henlhan.

IITV.
.

...•
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'

10 NaiiWIIt ... ltll, •
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....

••••

.:
• f

11UI1 lAlLY
PUUIII
- . . , . - - - - - - 141to41ry Ct.Af I . POUAN _.:...__ _ __
Aeorrong. lett•r• of
0 four
tcrombltd - word•

low to forrn four

the

be(

!•,;

-ll:

l lr.,,-.-T-.R_I-rF_L.,...,5

,, ..

,-.__,..R"""A""'S:-'-:-0...,.,V--,1 ~o:
1 I. ' I. I. .I'. _

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WOfdl.

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re.

...

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........ alia .
12 c::tJy ... ~ ~
53Spn•
r,.
II A drIll .

l

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Printer' 614-2&lt;5-54113.

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

bedroom mobile hamt out·

c:

-~
47Aa*

010

ric. s. h1Vet"'
ou
a .

•

J'
42 Frull •llitiP42 Cent tpOI r.
41 tml•t d .

Overheard in ollice etevator:
• Duty a task \Ne perform With
reluctance and brag about

chuckle q.-1
by filling in the misaiftg woi-ds
yov develop from slop Net. 3 botow.

',.
.. ".
J• ' •

••,,
1o. ·

IIIII III

SCIWMETS ANSWEIS

ur ol

~·

ou . .111
) ·::• .yAnrup

. . UNSCRAMBlE FORI
V ANSWER
•

DD2·3all0.

37D-282D.

•

I'

'

Nict 2 Btelraoms Furnisntd.
Near Cora Milf, Rtfertnces, Ot·
puil, No Pets, 1300/Mo., 114·

11111Ji£INI · .·~

... Pf!INT NUh\BfREO
'::11' tfTTERS
•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

~- 411D-'14DD

'~
1011··· -

IQ-~a:.::.:: :h.

•

"o~

27;11FI'•-:l'

Eul

e

SERVICES

(J'

21 , . _ ... 1J
2t Tlllt ID . . -~

BIG NATE

For Lease
or Pllture Wft htall

.,..... Skouo Appllonaoa, 78
Vine Slreer, Call e 14-•.te· 7381,

••

._.

lt-IIWW ,.

hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
3)•·773-5651 , Ltason WV.

GOOD

I

tallltt
5H&amp;a"n
dmberlrtt

1J "41PIIol8 -

·l..__Le
·0.......L~·_RI._T
......I,_A......
YI.........
. .•
•
•
•
•

, full

,,

7~-- - ·· ·

._.....

t Cnily
- ·
~
:1 AIM18
3 Lilli eon:aarw
wlllu

-Cttlne

.........

---- .......

DOWN

34TY-

Sleepinq rooms with c:ooking.

20 Acrea
harte barn. New .1,500 aquare
teet. 3· bedroom, $500/mo. on approx . 3 acres olland. 304·758·
1331.
I

t,', ..:

33-2,100

/

Two bedroom house, 110\1&amp; and
refrigerator, no maida pell, 61•·

•

' 12
22 VIII ptiiOcl ol D - 1111
24
14
21_,....
-21NIINn- UTY-.1
' 31 Eager
• In-

814-446-

ASTR0-0RAPH

Mobile Home In CouritfJ, 6 14·
448·38D7.

Tltl&gt; IT{

516H :':

02'4 High Efficiency Furnac11:
6o,oaa BTU $1 ,;100: ao,aaa BTU
$1,4CO: IQQ,OOQ BTU II.SCO
Above Pr1ee1 Include Normal In·

Rooms for rem - week or month.
Saarting at $120.1~. Gallia Ho~el.
814-4.8-9580.

MERCHANDISE

..e-a.

~

GOOPNtSI

THE BORN LOSER

•

2 Bedroom•. In Gall iPOiit, 0,4·

BfAT

. ..·.·Tt-lt ,uStt f'tOUit

boots,

Furnished .
Rooms

=ltiht

~~

Ge7-6205.

490

2 Boclroomo, Grtlrl SC:hoolt,, Prl·
'!lite Lo~ $325/llo., Dopolil S25a,
- - -. 614-448-4314.

5N'T Tl-\15 6REAT. CIIUCK 7
TillS IS REAL· SPORT~ TillS
IS REAL FOOTBALl.!

clothing, Insulated

1

·11--

........

By Phillip Alder

'

.

11Aclrw.
--

·-a

The communication
coup

1990 GMC pickup, 4X4 . Loaded.
Verr good condiuon . 22.000

P.II.'61A-441-9284.

• CPr.)
II ,..,....
14 .....
17 11.-y .....

Opening lead: • J

una, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Ohio.

'

~

11 .,...,. ltln
11 l'lldtle
14 Ccui'.
11 Plllne ~
1
1-1711om

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1188 Ford Ec:onoUne Conwirslan

23114- 1pnt.

41 I'Nilcll

31 ~=-)
u.d

~
• 4

~ I&gt;IQN'T

•·1100-537-&amp;sza

• J. 5

•A76432

1987 Ford Bronco, 4·""'"' drwt,
auto trans, complete engme re·
bUild. front suspension rtbuilt,
new peln~ new wheels &amp; titft, eJIC
cone! $5,1100. 30&lt;·8115-3874.
1DI8 Bronco XlT 4 WD 11 .... 411.

•QII

•

S700 firm : 814·002· 8288 ah•r
Spm.

·-di*......- .............
14 ~=I

ACfiOSS

1 - tCIInllla

=-

• K 'a
• ., 7 5
But

lw..a

1892 OcKIQe' Gfand Caravan LE,
EMcellent Condition, Call After 7

7516.

One bedroom apartment in Pt.

Very clean apartment in Pomeroy,
delpolit and references, c:an eu-

3 Bedroom houat, central air,
S3251mo • .utilities. reterentea '
S2Sd &amp;ecutity depaalt required.
304· 773-5898.

thing, $500: 1983 CheYy Camara.

Stains. 1I,Oio BTU unvented
heater S149. Now in a tack, tialh
choc:olale candy Willers. Paints
Plus Ha~ 304-675-4084.

PGm&amp;rOJ', no 'pets, 61~·992· 5858. ·

capped. EOH 304-675-6679.

410 Houses tor Rent

Block •. brick, sewer pipet, winctows, hntels, atc. Claude Winters,

Special Fetdtr Ca lf

614·949-2384.

18Ft. Utitlrr Tra'iler Hauls Any·

Nice two' bedroom apaflminl 1n

;150 Lots &amp; Acreage

RENTALS

·

Fall Harvett Sale .now ooing on.
Savt on eGarior paints and

applications "'' 1br. HUD subaid·
ized apt. for elderly and llandl-

paved road. reasonable restric:·
tions. 304-875-5253. (no single·
wide inquires please)

well, OH 814-2&lt;5-5173..

1

Building
Supplies

61..V&lt;fl.2582.

•QJ765

Gracious living. 't and 2 bedroom

614-446·8755.

Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,

100 Westtfn By Max Brand And
Others .Also, About 500 Mixed
Sports Cards, Basketball, Foolbllt
And BlltbaHJncluding Frank
Thomaa Lialed At S20, 2 Belt
Oilers By November 111, Moses
Troyer, '323 Vaughn Road , Bid-

550

• KI

- · $8000, 614·843-S17e.
1D7B Ford .ex4 , long wMel baH,·
390, auto, 3' bod' llh , 38' buck
xholl ., Amoticon .. Go"'
blo&lt;-304-1'73-5078. '
Callllt ·l IDIO Jetp CJ5 Many Now Pori,
Vtrr Good Condition, 814·381·

Six 112 Holstein &amp; 112 H.,.bd, 2
wnlte fate, two 112 Holslein &amp; 112
Angu s, Iaroe Springii\Q Heifers,

apattments 'at Village Manor and

One Room and Bath all Utilities
Paid St85, Two Room ard Bath all
Utilities Paid $200, One Bedroom
apt all Utilities Paid $325, 51 3·

And Holpitai614·U6-0116.

1 Winchester Model 84 3030

Good Condition, S170, 81•·441 ·
1824.

Ill-lUI

..6-3844 After 7P.M.

340 Business and
Buildings

5 Acres Off State Route t80, On
Kerr Road, Close To Freewa'V

$1DD.
low momN1 PIPIIY'Ym""'"' ""'
FREE color ca~O!ICall TODAY 1·1100·842· 1305.

'80 Fora FISC XlT lariat 4x4,
auu.r.lc ttaMmlslion. IWO•Iontd

$225rMo .. Utilities Paid,' 101

Pteuant. 814·DD2·5858.

I16,00Cl:B14·388·6978.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

8755.

Founh Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·

dltion. 30&lt;·8D5-3584.

Br Owner : DupltJI Aparrment
Buildlno: Total Electric 2 HouH
Trailers On Adjacen~ Lol, Good
Income Prop..-ty, 4 Rtnlall Toll!.

CommeraaVHama units frum

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 7x1 6 Garage DoOr, Like New, CSII
ESTATES ,' 52 We11wood Drive E.arly Morning Or Late Evening,
~om 1244 to $315. Walk 10 ohop 614·ot48·Ba21!, 3a4-675-5349.
&amp; moviet. Call 814·448· 251S8.
Equal Houling Opporlunity.
8 H Utilitr Truc:k Bed, Full Size
Cab Over Topper, With Too~ 80•·
Be"tl Sr. Middleport, 2br, lur· es, t 8 Ft Ladder Rack, 614o388·
ri ilhed, utilities paid, deposit &amp; 1100.
relorenc:n.
Middleport, 2br, furnished . also', 2 Ashley Woodburner Stolle, 'suck
room efficiancy wMilities paid, de- Stove lns1er1, Stereo. 814-387p31it &amp; referenceL

Many Extraol614·388-8505.

UsK trailer. 12x80 In good con·

WoiUTannlnaTAN AT HOM~
buy DIRECT and SAVEl

Moore owner.

cliners Included, Make# Into A
Bed s•oo; Royai.Typ&amp;'o1o:r!l8r $20,
fl14-3!57-723(1.

REAL ESTATE

''

rnon!li'-

l ...
FREE color catalo!l.
COli TODAY 1·1100-842-1305.

a:oo p.m. 614 ·9&amp;2-25215 , Ru 11

44e-CI515or61H46-ooae

Requied. tor Application caH: et4-

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

~10.

Bur or sett. Riverin e Ant iQull ,
11 2• E. Main Street. on Rt 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to e:oo p.m., ·Sunday 1;OO to

5 Pc. Sacbonal Rourd Sola 2 Re-

Small Schultz Trailer, With 2 Ad·
dod - · On 112 Acre, Garage,

310 Homes tor' sale

$1DD.

35 , West Apr. Town Houe11s.

._,.,...,-.

Unbell8vable, New tdi70, no
pilym~:nta a her · 4 years, onlr
make 2 pavments to move in, tree
deliver~ &amp; set-up. 1•800· 251 ·

CornrMrc:iaiiHrame unit&amp; from

Antiques

$295. A Motlth. No Pets! Oepolit

Riverside Aparrments 1n Middle·
poft. From $232·$355 . Call 6, 4.
992·5064 . Equal Housing Ol)portunitiel.

' Neon an IQUit

530

1100.

Schult 12xt5, fair -cond., 2tw, WI
large Ulilit~ room, refrlgeraior,
sa. &amp; 2 windOW ae, $2,500 firm.
304.-875-XM)O.

•~"~

WotUTannl111 hdo
TAN AT HOME
t&gt;., DIRECT and SAVEl

6132.

No Pets, Poner Area , 81&lt;4 -388-

New Haven, nice 2bt, lumiatled,
'-30&lt;;.;...:755-.:.:.'-58:.:85=·:,..__ _ _ _ _ de~si! &amp; references. 304·882·
1
New homes Starling at S1 10 per 25tl 6.
marnh .wlrn onlr $170 down. Call Furnilhed 2 Bedroom ,Apartment,
Rulla11..aoo.&amp;37·3238.
Acro11 From Park, AC, No Pets,
.
References; Depaslt1 $350/Uo.,
NEWt ,Sank .Repo's, ontr 3 felt, 814-44fl-8235, 814·446-0577.·
IUIII·under warranly, free delivery
&amp; 181-up. ~.t- 755-7191.
Furnished Apartment, Share Bath
Ok;Str Schultz nome, owner cx:cupi•d'. 2 bedroom , e~ec:ellent lor
young ~ retired, cquple, pnced On
lf'I!IP8Cti0n. 30&lt;4-475-!538.t.

3·30.00 RtmingiOn au&amp;omallc ri·
fltt. 1·30 .30 M•rlln. 304·175·

___,...

•

NEA Cro11word Punle

Bottom- Plush· Hasty- Submit· MOST of US
From the didja ever WOI;Ider department 'Why does
the sign ·of wet cement bring out the child inMOST of
US?"

. ,,

...
'

...

,,

' c

�....-.
~

•

Pom 1roy •lllddllport, Ohio

TUIItlay, Octol*' 15, 1. .

Ohio Lottery

Fessing up about smpking pot in the '~Os can he_
lp children avoid it in the '~0 :
8r MANEr IICH KEINAH
Tr..Da••
~

..W 1t1r
.,.._..

19-~-old 1011
hid ever liken
ld Groae Pointe
, IIIOCher faced the lat-

.,._, ·
e1t piiAtial dilemma for die postpot p 1 llicM. how to JC1 your kids
to sq 110 Ia the '90s when you said
yea ill !he '60s.
"I was terrified to admit it
... - I l'elred it would aive hiln
liteaa to IIIIOia! pot himself," says
CII'OI, who, like the other parents in
Ibis ltory•.u~d not to be identified.
"So l tOOk the President Ointon
I told him I had tried it But
I said, 'You can choose to
pot, but it will steal you of
your ambition and intellect Those.
arc the consequences."'
.
Still, when her son's peer presAim came to bear, he did not heed
. her warninp. "He ·smokes recreationllly, I think, at parties."
According to a recent survey,
two-thirds of~ boomer parents
who ~ipated in some way in.the
dru1 culture of the '60s expect their
own Children will do the same.
Many parents said they have too littie inftuence to stop diem.
11le survey, conducted by the
National Center For Addiction and
Substance Abuse, also found that an
overwhelming number of parents

.,

Slid IIIey would tell !heir children of
lheirowndnacuse,
Wilh some repons claiminJ druc
111e 111101111eens is on the rise, par"enu we questionina wbethet they
should come clean with ~ sins of
their sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll
youth. Do they tell the truth and run
the risk that it will be inlelpreted as
tacit approval? Or, do the many
. members of the generation that prided itself on exposing the hypocrisies
of its elders lie to their kids and
become hypocrites themselves?
"This is a clear case of when a
parent needs to say 'I want you to do
as I say and not as I do,'" says Sandra Lyness, a clinical psychologist
and associate professor at Wayne
State University. "Don't set into
true confessions or long stories; kids
will read more than wliat you're
telling them. And don't moralize or
gel into a debate of right and wrong.
The reason they should abstain is
simple: Drugs are dangerous."
That's precisely how Karen,
mother of an 11-y~ar-old, responded
recently when. her son asked her
about her past during a conversation
about drugs. "He said, 'How do you
know they are that bad? Did you
ever do it?"' the Bloomfield Hills,
Mich., psychologist say~. "I admitted I had had experience, but r told
him I was one of the lucky ones. I

hid many friend&amp; in hip school
who died or were seriously hurt, I
also told him tiW even experimentation is rislcy because tobacco and
alcohol and poure amways to serious drup. Thankfully: my use never
progressed. But I told him it could
have. I was justluclcy."
John, a banker in Detroit · and
father of two sons, ages II and 14,
also took the honest approach. He
says simply ·teiUng your kids "no"
may actually increase their desire to
experiment: They want to know
what it is they are saying no to.
"A lot of kids don't believe their
parents or think their parents don't
know what they're wking about,''
be says. "They want to find things
out for themselves. And if parents
hide things from their kids, they
have more of a reason to not trust
their parents' warnings."
John recently told his sons be had
used marijuana, and had even sold
·it, in his youth.
"Then I told·them what a friend
sa,id to me: 'Do you really want to
throw all your schooling and career
away for a nickel bag? 'Plat's what
you'd be doing if you get stopped by
the police.'
"I got scared and that's when I
quit. I think it made an impression
on them,"
.
But, even with all the cautionary

Eyelid ~urgery is a fine .sol,ution
By Pi!TER H. OOTT, M.D.
· could actually worsen the ocular
. DEAR DR. OOTI: I'm a white problems of G111ves' disease by
female, 47 yean old. I'm interested removing the excess skin oftbe eyein havin1 cosmetic surgery for lids. The additional skin is actually
drooping eyelids, a problem of aging needed in this instance.
Your situation is entirely differand, I believe, heredity. However,
l've, read that people&gt; with thyroid ent. Lackihg a thyroid gland, you
conditions cannot have eyelid must now take pifls to supply the
surgery. I had thyroid cancer 20 needed hormone. Although the
yean a1o and my thyroid was amount you requir~ should be moniremoved. I'm currently on daily L- tared by periodic blood tests, you
thyroxine, Does this rule me out for are in no danger of developing
sul)ery?
,
Graves' disease. Therefore, you are
DEAR READER: If you have free to explore the possibility that
bauy eyelids, which can interfere · J)lastic surgery could cure your conwith vision and look unanractive, dition, without worrying that your
you are certainly a candidate for (absent) thyroid gland might play a
eyelid SUQiery, a simple and safe . role.
procedure ,during which. a plastic
To give you more information, I
siqeon simply removes the excess, am sending you a copy of my Health
wrinlcled skin. 11ie fact that you are Report "An lnfom\ed Approach to
iakin1 thrroid replacement hor- ·Surgery." Other readers who would
11101101 is unimportant
· like a copy should send $2 plus a
11le reasoa that blepharoplasty long, self-addressed, stamped enve(theoperationinquestion)isnOtrec- lope to P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill
omrnended for patients with over- Station, New York, NY r0156. Be
active thyroid alancls is that hyper- sure to mention the title.
thyroidism may be associated with
DBAR DR. G01T: Will taking
an increase. in tissue ~nd the eye- lactQbacillus acidophilus pills help
balls (On\111' disease), which caus- prevent a•yeait infection? ,
cs the eyea to protrude.
DEAR READER: Yes, Harmless
In this situation, in order for the lactobacilli have been shown to
eyes to remain moist, the lids are_ retarll the arowth of yeasts.
stretched. Thus, blcp~plasty Althouah not cffecti ve in every case,

DR

GOTT

':-------

PETER
GOTT, M.D.

School distriCts in southeastern
Ohio will acain be undertaking an
intensive effort this fall to identify .
all4!hildren with disabilities in their
districu.
ldentjfyinl all children in the
tesion· with suspected or confirmed
disabililill is the first of a three-part
effort aimed at tnsuring that childlOD with disabilities receive the
best possible education in the most
ljiJifOJ)riate proararn. The othet two
steps in the effort are assessment and
placement.
11le identification processes
required under the 1975 federal law
entitled, "llle Education. for All
Handicapped Children Act," (now
lndividuals with Disabilities Educa- .
don Act), which states that each dis...,, .-ionwide must conduct an
"Intensive Awareness Carnpaip" to
loclte children with disabilities
. every three yean.
AI ,.n ofa statewide project. !he
. effort will be coordinated in the area
by the Southeastern Ohio Special
llducation Regional Resource Centct (SBO-SEAAC), which has provided special education program
auistance to the 27 school districts
ia Athens, Gallia, Hockina. Jackson.
. Meip,
Perry. Vinton and
""" · ,-,. WulliagtoR'wulllicUillCel.~968, · ,
' . -" The step-by-step procedures
planned for the re&amp;ion's area
uewide child 5tii'Ch, will be simiI.-to these implemented during the
last campaip'in 1993.
"Our efl'oru," said ·SEO-SERRC
Director, David Roach, "are aimed
~ locllinJ children, birth through 21
y..,_ o( age, who reside in die ten.. county area served by SEO-SERRC, ·
111ese children may be in need of
specill educition programs or relateel services, and are not CllfTtndy m
public schools or served by a private
or other non:public acency.

Monroe,

'60s."
Most importantly, experts advise;
kids should be told that drugs today
are far more potent than they were
20 years ago - designer drugs a
case in point.
·
"Drugs weren't nearly as scary,

abOUt d"Ug
U$8
I'

Continued from page 6
Do not wear .lenses longer
than the prescribed time. For example,don'twearyourdailywearlenses \llhile sleeping, or keep your disposable lenses longer than prescribed.
- Don't put lenses irr your
mouth to wet or clean them.
- Don't use unsterile, homeprepared saline solution, distilled
water or tap water for any part of
-

your lens care routine. .
-Don't allow lenses to come
into contact with cosmetic lotions,
creams or sprays. It's best to insert
lenses lieforc pulling on makeup and
remove them · before removing
makeup. Water-based cosmetics are
less likely to damage lenses than oilbased products.
·
- Don't change !ens care routine or solutions withopt consulting
your eye care professional. Not all

and, in the ·main, effec·inexpensive
tive. '

.;'If southeastern Ohio schools are . impaired, autistic, and traumatic ·
to fully respond to the educational brain injured.
needs of our children with disabili·The identification process, curties," he added, "we need to identify ~ntly underway, will run throuah
them and determine what education- December of this year. The assessal program will best serve their ment and place~ent cotr\pilnents
needs. Our goal is to ensure that all will follow.
children are receiving an appropriate
education."
~ .--,;,'..;
·
To identify all cl)ildren with dis- l .'"f"1..
.
0'
abilities, both health and social ser1 1,..._
:L ~
vice qencies will be surveyed to
~
,
.
determine if children they serve may .
be disabled. Households in the ten
counties may also be ~ontacted.
All information collected will be
confidential and parents have rights
'
to review this information. ResiDave
dents who have a child or know of a
Grate
child they believe ,may be disabled
will be asked to call thejr local
of
schoo! districts.
All children identified as poten- ··
tially disabled may then be observed
and tested to more fully evaluate
their learning problems. Then, with
parental or guardian approval, children (ages 3-21) will be placed in
the most appropriate proaram. This
may mean intearating the child into
the regular classroom, or into regular school .activities as much as possible,. at placing the child in.speci~l- . ;
classe .. 01' othe• educationa~ pro•• · :
arams-, Parents who· disaaree&gt; with• :
you
the school district's decision have i
starts avoiding
due process riJhts to present com- '
I
* •
plaints and have hearing conducted
Walking the floor with a
by an impartial hearing officer. Parbaby Is goOd practice for
ents will be notified specifically of
later on when he's out at
these rights by the school distqcts.
night with the car-. I S *
Children in need of special edu- .
cation may include: hearing
What dldone
to the other? "Dt,n't bol'hi!iirl
impaired. orthopedically handime - I have
capped, other health impaired, visuproblems."
ally _impaired, .seve~ or multiply
amp11red, leaman1 da~bled, severe
behaviorally handicapped, mentally
retarded. speech and language

:

Vol. 47, NO. 111
Copyright , .

. . ·to

L;g.h t

Altendina were Carolyn Grueser,
Clarice Krauaer, Charlotte Elberfeld, Ana
Jean Powell, Ruth
Ann Riffie, Norma Custer, Velma
Rue, Reva Vauchn, Joan Corder and
J-WIIton.

·.

Rupe.

llle' next meetinl will be Oct. 31, .
• Grace Spiaoopal Chilreh, die time
10 be announced later. I

RUJI.d fllliiMI

IL II(. •1 l A

742-2211

.

WE All lOW 1'111 lAHEST IIIIPIIDEII PIONIIDUUI II
SOUTIIASTIII OliO &amp; SOIII WUTEII WIST ¥1111111.
IU1WII, 01. • IOICI, 01. ~ •cOI.IIIIW, 01.
'Ill Pill., 01,• JACIJOI, 01. • l'"'fl''l, 01. • LOUI, 01.
(814) 742·2511 "Fam,llv Owned" 1 800 837-1217

--~~----~-------·~----------~
:
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~· ··-·· - ·~-

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2 Slctlo.., 12 Poges 3 5 A Glln ..ll Co. Newoptlptl'

I

Po!"'eroy·Mkldleport, Ohio, Wedn-.clay, October 16, 1996

OUTSTANDIIIIG FARM FAMILY - Jack and
Ellzllbeth Shiflet of Rutland Town•hlp were
awarded· the 1996 Outstanding Farm Family
Award at TUHdly'a Melga _Soli and Water Con-

aervatlon District annual meeting, held at
Meigs High School. Meigs SWCD Supervisor
Joe Bolin, len, presents tljle award to the Shlfleta.
I

~eaanne Kenhl~dy o·ay,~ai·nner

Fonner U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
0-Lucasyille, will be the guest speak-er at the Meigs County Democratic
Party's Kennedy Day Dinner on Sat.urday, Meigs Democratic Party
Chainnan Sue Maison announced
Tuesday.
The dinner will be held · at the
Meigs County Senior/Multipurpose
Center, beginning with a social hour
at5 p.m., and a baked steak dinner at
6p.m.
.
' Strickland, raised iis the son of a
Scioto County steelworker, was the
only one of his brothers and sisters to
attend college. He is an ordained
United Methodist minister and a
· licensed psychologist.
He was elected in 1992 to the U.S.'
House of Representatives, serving
Ohio's Sixth District in the 103rd
· Ted Strlckllnci
Conaress. While 'there, Strickland
served on the House Education and
Labor Committee, as well as the reform debate, he worked on the rur·
al and mental health components of
House Small Business Committee.
During the 1993 , health care the House Education an~ Labor

AT RUTLAN.D BOTTLE GAS,
WE DON'T.CHARGE FOR .S~RVICE.

.

•

Congressional hopeful Strickland

,-·--------------~------!"'"--"'!"------'!'"'~;....;.oi

RUTLA"D FURNITURE
a BOTTLE GAS

•

I

By JOHN D. Mt:CLAIN
remained in check, unlike the 14.3 bring it in line with reality and help
Aaaoclllted Preu WrHer
percent jump in 1980 and 11.2 per· · trim the federal budget deficit, moch
WASHINGTON- The nation's ·cent in 1981 ; when prices were surg- of it from Social Security spending,
44 million Social Security recipients ing.
An advisory group studYing the pro.bwill get a 2.9 percent increase in their
"The continuation·of low inflation lem is .scheduled to iSJ&gt;ue its final
benefits next year, largest in four is good news for all Americans, par· report in Dec~mber. .
years.
ticularly for those, such as the elder·
Unless reformed, the Social SecuSocial Security Commissioner ly and disabled, living on fixed rity program will go broke by the
Shirley S, Chater said today the incomes," Chater said in a statement. year 2029 as growing numbers of
cost-of-living adjus\IJient, or COLA, ·
The change for Social Security ··baby boomers reach retirem.ent age,
means the average monthly check for recipients is effective Jan, 3 and for' officials say.
·
retired workers will rise by $21 to those in the Supplemental Security · Both President Clinton and Bob
$745, from $724 this ye&amp;f,
programs, which provides minimum Dole, his Republican challenger, have
. The maximum monthly payment incomes for the elderly poor. on Dec. endorsed appointing a blue-ribbon
for 6.5 million individuals receiving 31..
commission along· the lines of a
Supplemental Security income also
· For millions of other Americans, 1983 panel that dealt with an earlier
will rise 2.9 percent, boosting their the maximum earnings subject to crisis in the government's biggest
checks by $14 to $484, from $470. Social Security and Medicare taxes benefit program. '~)ley have not
for a couple, the maXimum goes to also will rise in January, although the addressed specific reforms, however.
$726, from $705.
7.65 percent rate will not change.
Among , the proposals being
Monthly cheeks for the aovem- . The earnings base will be raised advanced elsewhere is one that would
ment's biggest benefit program are from $62,700 to $65,400 for the 6.2 privatize at least part of the $400 biladjusted annually to prevent erosion percent Social Security portion of the lion collected each year, permitting
by inflation .''rhe adjustment is based tax. That means a maximum annual some of the money to be invested in
on increases in the Consumer Price - Sociaj Security tax of $4,055.
the stock market. Others would boost
Index from the third quarter of one
There is no ceiling on earnings the retirement age and the lax rate.·
·year to thC corresponding quarter of subject to the remaining 1.45 percent
The lax rate wois 1 peri:enl, up to
the next.
. , jaX that finances Medicare, the health a maximum of$3,000 in earnings,
Benefits rose 2.6 percent for 1996, care program for the elderly.
from the time Social Security was
matching the 1994increase, which
Many officials and economists created in 1937until1950.Afterthat,
was the smallest since they inched up maintain the Consumer Price Index it rose aradually to the current rate,
1.3 percent in 1987.
overstate• inflation.
set in the 1983 plan that ConJfess
11le annual increases have been . Some recommend cutting the CPI designed to rescue the system from
small in recent years as inflation by as much as a percentage point to recw:rent financial problems.

-~

CALL1·800·837·8217 TOLL FREE

and upper 10•.

SS ecipients will get
2.9 Yo· increase in 1997

.

IrS FREEl Our installation includes a lifetime lease on the tank as long as
you remain a customer of Rutland Bottle Gas. And We Furnish The Tank! ·
You don't have to buy the tank!
·
·
·
· If you buy a 500 gallon tank from our competition at $1 ,200. and that is
'------..;;;;=::; :1 what they charge for the tank, that means you own the tank. If someday a
valve goes bad on that tank, it will cosfyou several hundred dollars to have·
the tank pumped out and a new valve put in. The owner of the tank will
bear these expenses.
If you have a tank leased from Rutland Bottle Gas, these repairs are
free, up to and including replacement of the tank if necessa!Y at no cost to
you, the customer.
~'
Call our competition and·verify what we say about the tank if you own it.
If you buy propane f~r one year from our competitor at 59.9¢ and pay
$1,200 to buy the tank (which Is required to get the price of 59.9¢) you will
have $1,559.40 in your propane for- the first year if you use 600 gallons.
Rallwl
. This equals to paying over $2.59 a gallon for your propane instead of 59¢ .
If you use 900 gallons of propane onder the same program, you would
have spent $1,740 which equals $1.93 per gallon. This means that you ·
would have paid our competition $660 more than you would have paid
' Rutland,Bottle Gas if we had charged .you $1.20 per gallon fofthe whole
year (which we have never done)
If you were a vlc~im of this~ plan, and purchased a tank from our
C&lt;!IJ1RS.titor.~wl;len.JI:Ie , 12, mootl:ls.ar,e, up,, you, are. not obligated te)buy yQUr
propane from them. You CB:n buy your propane from Rutland Bottle Gas or
anyone else that sells propane.
A!so', are you willing to pay "tough" winter prices during a mild winter?
We've been here almost 50 years and we specialize in service. That's
why we are still here.
·
·

Clear tonight; Iowa In
the 50a. Thuradey, partly
cloudy. Hlgha In the mid

(

!

All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section m~~t
· be submitted within 30 days of
occurrence. All birthdays must lit
submiucd within 42 days of tile
occurrence.
,.
All material submitted for publt"
·cation is subject to editing.
.,

Buckeye 5:
5·6-19-22·31

a1

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the GalliJl9lis D~ily Tribune and The DaQy
Sentinel will not accept 'weddinss
after 60 days from the date of the
· event.

Pick 4:

•

.News policy ..
.

3-5~3

Sports on Page 5 ·

types of products are suitable·for !11 .
contact lenses.
;
- Never share or trade lensQ$.
Some diseases can be transmillllll,
including pinkeye and stn:p inf~tioils.
•
For more information about contact lenses. y.ou can call the Contact
Lens Council at (800) 884-4252 or
read infonnation on the council's
web ·
page
at
http://www.iglohal.com/clc

.

Pick 3:
1-~9-6

By MARNEY RICH KEENAN
:'
The Detroit Newa
,
..
,
How should you handle your kids' questions about your prior dru~
use?
·
!
. H~
some tips from Birmingham Bloomfield (Mich.) Families il1'
Action:
.!_ .
:
- Don't morau~.
' . ake this an issue of right and wrong;)
Instead, make it a health issue.
.
~
-Inform them that today's drugs arc much more potent and danger-1
ous thim those from 20 to 30 ycars.ago.
~
-Don't lie; don't dodge, and don't elaborate. Give minimal infor-!
mation about your past, and move on·to the present. .
:·
-Look for a teachable moment- a TV commercoal, for example_.
rather than lecturing them.
:
- Lay a foundation early. before the question even comes up.
~.
'
"

co•ntacts.

Sorority visits craft, mall

•

'T.al'~t'ng
I c 1\.

-«

but reJularly, none~ l
felt she probably llrelldy knew,: (
told her thai her modlet llld_.1~
learned a lot from die 111...,_ of'60s: A lot -of people ~aewed liP
!heir lives. And I told her thll I ftk
very stronsJy that I didn't Willi lpr
to smoke pot because it tOOk '!W
llmost25 yean to get off it
. .. .
"That's no! somethincl'm very
proud of. And while it's hlrd :Jb
admit your own failinp with YO!*
kids, I think the honesty hid ~·
impact She, as best I know, does!"!'
smoke pot and I really don't thiOl&lt;
she will."
:•
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Contacts guide ... -----------+
·~

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Several rnemben of Preceptor
j1e111 Beta Chlpler, Beta Sipna Phi
~ly, eli.ioYed aa outin1 at the
· ~ and m~u· and the antiqut! malls
'l'luldly.
. .·
The pvup was in Ma'dt of ldeu
IIIII tqMWb to llllke salable cral'll
to bBip IAIJIPOt'l Mariliel. After
...,ilia, die rnembell enjoyed
huldt Mlhe Coloniala.c-nnt ,

~~e~rly u IIUJilefOUS, Clf u danprous
u thoy arc today:: aays Ann
Hansen, executive cfuector of the
Michipn Communilill in Action
for 11 Drua Free YoutiL "It wun't
until (basketball star) Len Btu died
thai the yuppies realized how danserous cocaine was."
It was anticipation that led
Michael,, a ·social worker in Ann
Arbor, to disclose to his 15-year-old
daughter his relationship with pot.
"I volunteered it quite a while
ago because I expected she might
ask soon,'' Michael relates, "I had
smoked . pot o~ a reJUiar basis for
many years- justa coupleoftolces,

prevent
yeast infections in a
percentage of
·
individuals,
especially those
have been pre'
0 I
•
scribed antibiotics (which. may
----~--------------encourage yeasts -- but not bacteria disposable con)acts were perfected,
Continued from page 6
-to arow).
Such lenses often are supplied at "kids would come in \llith tom lens-.
DEAR DR. OOTI: I'm a 33es,'' he said, "Their parents would
year-old school teacher and still no cost to the consumer trying con- have to ·pay for new ones that were
have acne, I've been to a dermatolo- ., tacts for the first time.
But, Cox said, "When I told kind of expensive.
gist and have tried Retin A. It was
"After the second or third time,
(teens
who wanted trial lenses) they
.
unsuccessful. Can you give me any
kids
would quit telling parents when
would•need to have a prescription
suggestions?
t.
h
eir
lens tore. They would wear the
DEAR READER: Acne is from an eye doctor to get the trial damaged lens. If your children arc
uncommon in adults, in whom it pair, they would become frustrated
may be confused with other similar and tell me that they'd gotten them interested in wearing contacJs, you
from other stores. All I could do is probably should get them disposskin diseases, such as rosacea.
ables."
tell them we don't do that here."
And parents should·agree to such
Even legitimately obtained conIf your dermatologist diagnosed
a
purchase
only after a proper eye
acne, you may be helped by taking tact lenses can be trouble for some exam and training in how to care for
the antibiotic tetracycline; ask people, Cox said. A:fter soft contact anti wear contacts, he said.
-him/her about this. 11le therapy is lenses were developed, but before

SGhool districts· working to identify disabilities
'

wks, m111y babY boomers feel 1111t
!heir kids' drua 111e iJ ' inevitable.
"So die pile!IIS tend to take a back
seat," says Emilie Dauch,
Dauch is a psycholoaist who
beads Birminaham Bloomfield
Families in Action. a nonprofit volunteer organization in Michi1111 thai
works to prevent drua use. "Druss
and alcohol are not inevitable," she
says. "But you must suut early, Give
them your spin before they get a
chance to be influenced by their
peers and before their question
· about .Your drug use ever even
comes up."
· Dauch says children entering
middle school are ready to hear
about the dangers of drugs and alco'hoi.
.
If the question does come up,
Dauch says that being honest does
not mFan you're giving .the areen
light t.o your kids. "You can say, 'I
did this, but I survived ·intact and 1
was more the exception than the
rule,'" she says. "And most baby
boomers know of those who did not
survive the drug culture of the

Stars defeat ·
Redwlngs In
NHL actlon .

Committee's bill. He was also an
activist on education issues, helping
to author many education bills,
including the National Service Act
and the Re-Authorization of the Elementary and Secondl\1)' Education
Act.
·
During his final year in office,
Strickland began working on a·.welfare reform proararn he calls "Economic Uplift,'' the core of which was
to establish community-based part,
nerships between the working poor
and welfare recipients with civic,
government and educational leaders
in their areas.
Since leaving office, St(ickland
has resumed his work as a professor
of psychology at Shawnee State University and as a con~ulting psychologist at Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility. He and his wife, Frances,
reside in Lucasville, where he was
born and raised.
Accordin.sto Maison, Strickland
(Co.,tlnuad on Plga 3)

'Halloween' beetle swarm in Meigs
spurs advisory from extension office
'

Numerous residents have contact·
ed the Meigs County Extension
Offic~ seeking ·solutions to the
S"ianRS of beetles that are alighting
on many homes in the county. · · · .
The yellow-orange beetles have
· 19 spots, and-aro called· the Multi•
"" 'calorcd Asian•Lady, Beetle (Hanna'·'
•· '' ·nia axyridi•)l or bettel' knowft' u 'the&gt;
Halloween Lady Beetle, advises
Extension Agent Harold H. Kneen.
Lady beetles are beneficial to the
.environment, he said, as they eat
.harmful insects, such as aphids and
scale insects found in the tree,.
"Unfortunately they have the,habit of
swarming near our homes tduring
October· looking for a place to over
' winter. The lady bi:edes seem to prefer lighter-colored houses (white or
pale colors) and the west and/or south
sides of bouses (the late · afternoon
sun is warmer "On these sides),"
Kneen noted.
·
He said that there are no legal pesticides registered to control this bee· .
tie as it is not considered a harmful
pest, and that perhaps die best con:trol is to use a vacuum, .sweep them
up and dispose of the bag.
·
"The beetles do aive off a di~~JteC­
able odor !lfld II)&amp;Y deposit a bl~k
and yellow droppins which . may
c.- 1 yellow 1tain. Lady beetles clo
• not bill, however
· lep do have
claw-like
1 (tarsll claws)
for hold
onto plant stems. The

swarming is caused by the release of
pheromones that attract other lady
beetles of the same specie," said
Kneen.
·
"
As for keeping them out of the

house. he suggested sealing up cracks
and crevices around the ·doors and
· windows, and keep family members
from utiljzing.south and west facing
·doors and keep windows closed.

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GOODYEAR FARM FAMILY - Royal Oak
Farnia, owned and opeaated by the Horac:e Ka.rr
'family, received tha Goodyur Farm Family
Award et Tuetday'• Meigs SWCD banquet at
Meigs High ~hoot Ho111r:e Karr, eecond from

left, accepted tne .plaque from SWCD Supervl· .

sor Marco Jeffers. ·Other family members are,
from left, Dorothy Karr, and two of the couple's
grandsons, Brandon Buckle¥ and Wesley Karr.

Meigs SWC[t' honors families
for practice ,of conservation .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SWCD since 1967, the family was well as a small plantation of ChristSentinel News Steff
.
also rbcognizcd lor their work with mas trees.
Numero~s awards were presented th9 . division of Wildlife in. doing
M~lick hosted members of :the
and new supervisors were elected at numerll,us wildlife management prac- Southeast Ohio Woodland Interest
the 53rd annual meeting and banquet ticcs.
Group for an educational tour of the
of the Meigs Soil and Water Conser- 1 They lwere recognized or their woodland area~ on the property and
vation Tuesday night at Meigs High numcro~ conservation practices, 1to view his two.well-managed ponds.
School.
. .
'including conservation tillage, tim her
Forst place plaques for hay show
Recipientofthe 19960utslanding stand improvement, fencing live- awards went to Roy Holter, 75 Jl!:rFarm Family award was Jack and stock out of the woods, spring dcvel- .. i cent or more alfalfa; Chris Hamm, all
Elizabeth Shiflet, who operate a farm opments, gra"ed waterways and pas- grasses; and David King, 49 percent
in Rutland Township.
ture and hayla~d management. The~ or less legumes.
The $hiflets have been coopera· installed I0,000 fcct·of fence through
Vocational' agriculture students
tors with lbe Meigs SWCD since the Sewardship Incentive Progra.m. were recognized for winning the
1974. They raise be~f cattle and ~ay
The family raises callle and hors- county-wide soil judging co~test.
on their 117~acre fann on which they es, as well as the full range of grains. This year's contest was held on the
have completed numerous conscrvaThe Fore§t Stewardship Award Sue and Joe QeLille farm ,in Salem
tion practices, including pasture and went to Doyle Melick, who owns a Township, and the winhers wen: all
hay land seedlings, critical area seed- 53-acre tree farm in Salem Township. :from Southern High ScJiool FFA.
ing's and multiflora rose contra!. .
His emphasis has been on ! Winning team for the agriculture
. The Royal Oa~FarmSI owncd, ~nd· grapevine, control,; particularly.&gt; in "till~&lt;!: judging, .contcsb were&gt;Larcy ., ,.;.
operated by, the Horace Kwr famoly,.. youn~c.stand!lof. hardwoods. He haS&gt; , Wolhs, Jon. Smoth, John· Matson and .. ,
was the recipient of the Goodyear also been working on thinning of Jason Lambert, woth Willis and' Smith
Fann award given to a family who young hardwood stands to maintain tying for first and each receiving $25;
farms in excess of 2,500 acres.
rapid growth rate on the trees. He has ·Matson, second with a cash award of ,.
Cooperators with the Meigs planted ove~ 1,000 loblolly pines, as
(Continued on Page 3)

I

Flood control funding for Rutland lies
in hands of state and ·federal sources
'

"This $300.000 is only a tcnllltivc
By TOM HUNTER
recommendation.
If we receive any
Sentinel News Steff
Several thousand dollars in feder- monies at all,. they could . be less
al and state aid could be coming to depending upon how the reooml"cnthe village of Rutland for flood con- dations are trimlf!Cd during the final
trol projects, members of Rutland · federal approval process," said Birch·
Village Council learned at Tuesday's field.
The tentative $300..000 in, funding
reaular meeting.
could
be used for Category I or II
• Rutland Aood Control Committee ·
through
the Flood Control Program.member Jim Birchfield infonncd.
whichcver
category the vii) age flood
council that the state has recomcontrol
project
falls into, Birchfield
mended the release of $300.000 in
,
flood assistance monies to the village ·said.
111e
village
was eligible for a
for possible flood control projects.
15n5
'federal
grant
funding under
· The Federal Emerge~t~;y Manaaemenl Administration will review the ~ident Clinton's 13-county ~mer­
slate recommendations for funding gency declaration that became effecallotments and make final decisions tive after floods affected the area last
· January,
on pro,iecl' &gt;U"Ound January 1997.
-·-~-

-.. -

- -- -... - -- - - T-·

-- -

.

'

The mandated project criteria for
federal funding notes that the project
must be: cost-effective; take into
account environmental considerations and impact statements; and
must he legal, and not in violation of.
any civil or criminals laws, according
to Dean Ogen of FEMA. ·
· In _routine financial review by
councol, the following village fund
balances were reported for Oct.' 15 bv
Clerk-Treasurer Rosemary SnowdenEskew: General Fund, $6,947.97;
Civic Center, $2,900.61; Police,
$2, r:n92;. Law Enforcement,
$387.33; Street, $3,403.83; Hipway,
$4,166.67; Water, $~,788.37; Sewer,
$6,857.76; Sewer Debt, $15,004.85;
(Contlnuect on Page 3)

,.

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