<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9375" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9375?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-08T11:33:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19807">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/23c59c464c02e8fceeb7c2a2541a1285.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d64dbb391dcec2b8748b533bb8076626</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30095">
                  <text>Sunday, October 21, , .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plttttnt, 'WV

Candidates on farm policy:
They say little but know a lot

\

By GEORGE ANTHAN
!he modern food stamp and Women,
The 0.. MolnH Reglst.r
Infants and Children nutrition proWASHINGTON - It probably grams.
would not be t90 mucb of an overKeeping his seat on the Senate
statement to say !hat seldom, if ever, Agriculture Committee even after he
has !here been a presidential election became GOP leader, Dole repeated·
less concerned wilh agriculture poli· ly brokered behind-lhe-scenes agreecy and issues of direct interest to rnentsamongtheSoulh'scotton,rice .
fanners.
and tobacco interests, the Great
There are at least three major rea- Plains wheat farmers and the Com
sons for this:
Belt's feed-grain producers to enable
Firs~ !he number of farmers has agriculture to present a uruted front
decli~ed ~~the pojn~.that the.once- and ram lucrative subsidy programs
masstve farm vote ts stgmficant through a more urban Congress. .
Dnly in a handful of midwestern and · The 1985 farm bill, cobbled
southern states.
together b)' Dole, pumped tens ofbil• . Second, most segments of agri- lions of dollars into !he devastated
.culture are enjoying relative pros- farm economy . and helped many
penty:
states survive the worst agriculture
Thtrd, Congress has approved a recession since the 1930s.
popular overhaul of·traditional farm
And it ~ Dole who ensured that
41rograms !hat delivers billioru; of dol- com-based ethanol would get and
Iars to mostly large and thriving farm- keep favorable federal tax treatment,
;e.:s, at least temporarily muting the a deal which, coincidentally, also
:usual griping over federal agriculture helped his friend and political benej!Oiicy.
·
factor, Dwayne Andreas, the now; At the same time, the Democrat- embattled head of agribusiness giant
jc and Republican nominees have sel- Archer Daniels Midland Co.
~dom been more directly involved in
President Clinton is not one to
;.mt interested in farm policy. ·
. take a back seat on policy issues. In
! When The' Des Moines Register an example of almost mind-bog:several years ago asked movers and gling hyperbole, he told an Ames,
-shakers i~ ,agriculture to name the Iowa, audience in 1995 that he had
:persons v.:ho were most influential in -been more involved in agriculture
~lting national agriculture policy, than any president. Never mind·
-··Kansas Sen. Bob Dole easily lopped George Washington, Thomas Jeffer:the list.
son, Harry Truman (who engaged in
: Dole was influential in developing back-breaking labor on his family's
;every farm bill of the last three Missouri fium), and history's most
«cades and also was an architect of. famous peanut farmer, Jimmy Carter.

.

.P eoples Bancorp, Inc. third
~·uarter earnings show increase
.

·.

;MARIETfA-- Peoples Bancorp Inc.

compared to the same period last
~ Ohio bank holding company, has
year. Non-interest expense increased
·announced net income for the quar- $540,000 (or 13.4%) to $4,578,000
icr ended Sept. 30, 1995.
for the thtee·months ended Sept. 30,
Third quarter net income totaled 1996, due mostly to increased amorSI,830,000; a 13.7% increase com- tization of intangibles associated wilh
.j,ared to 1995's third quarter. Earn- lhe ~!luisition of three full-service
.ings per share reached $0.53, up offices in April, 1996. Also included
. ·$0.07 (or 15.2%) compared to the in third quarter non-interest expense
:Same period last year. For the nine is an estimated non-recurring expense
' months ended Sept: 30, 1996, net of $42,000 (pre-tax) related to the
' income increased 22.7% to special BIF-SAIF bill passed into law
-$5,682,000 (or $1.63 per share), on Sept. 30, 1996 (due to the "Oakar"·
.eompared to $4,630,000 (or S1.32 per deposits held by the Company).
"ihare) for lhe same period last year. ' ' ·
Peoples Bancorp is an Ohio
~
Net interest income tolliled · bank holding company with head• $6,616,000, an . iricrease of 17.9% quarters. in Marietta. Its banking subcompared to 1995's third quarter. ·Net sidiaries include The Peoples Bankintcl'tst margin reached 4.88% in the ing and Trust Company with offices
third quarter, up from 4.74% in third in central and soulhem Ohio; and~
quarter 1995.
First National Bank of Southeastern
• The Company reported third quar- Ohio with three southeastern Ohio
· ter non-interest income or- offices.
· $1,195,000, up $92,000 (or 8.3%)

r

•

&gt;

~

'

~

••
,

;
;

HAY SHOW WINNERS- Plllqun were preMilled by Marco Jellera, right, SWCD aupervleor, to the first place winners In the varloua
hay Fl!tllg&lt;lries at Tlleldtly nights Melga.SWCD

Vol. 47, NO. 124

Aaron ''

banquet. The recipients were, from left,
Sayre, a~ptlng tor Chris Hamm; David King; ·
and Ben Holter, accepting tor the Roy Holter
family.

'

,
·

has been a drag on Quaker's earnings.
Analysts said Snapple lost nearly $35
million
the third quaner,

customer

•ut••::c-...,

""'lloiiiiM.H

POSIIIEPIDIC

hllbt hiSHt. ts
I

LESABRE SEDANS
Liberal Trades
Big Dlsc.ounts

.LIMITED SEDAN
Last of the rear wheel
drive cars

Only "11 " Left!

1998 Park
Avenues

Flreblrd ,

Only "1 " Left!

See Don Carter. Bob C

Call 1·800-488·2264 or

·1-800-736-9134

"'

'
AI(RON (AP) - Almosl half o(
· Ohio's lawmakers doubt !he Legisla·
tt® will revamp !he state's education
finance system without a directive
from the Supreme Court, according
to a survey published Sunday.
The Akron Beacon Journal asked
each lawmaker to. respond anonymously to this question: "Do you
believe the Legislature and the
admfnistration will ·fix the scbool
: funf:!ing probJems wjthoUII!II ofliF to
· d!f"'WWf- ffOnrttre- Ohla· 'SupremeCoun.?"
Eighteen of the 33 senators and 47
of the 99 state representatives said_
they don't believe the Legislature
would enact changes in the system
less. tbe high coun orders a new system m pay for public schools~ lhe
newspaper,reponed .
Ten senators said the issue would
be addressed without a coun order
and four senators didn't respond.
Thiny-nine representatives said the
issue would be addressed without a
court directive . and · five didn't
respond, the paper said. .
The Legislature's reluctance to
take on school-funding problems
"comes,down to the politics of the .

issue," said one Democratic senator.

Gran Sport SedAn.

But that was never the intent of the food stamp program.
.
"The rationale for the program rests on the assurnpt.ion that households
with restricted incomes tend to skimp on food purchases, ending up living
on diets that are inadequate in quantity and quality," writes Rossi.
While there's evidence that families receiving food stamps spend more
on food than similar families not receiving stamps, there's no evidence the
program boosts overall nutrition.
. ' "Foodstuffs available to all poor families were well above the levels considered accurate," says the repon.
.
·. ·
Says Rossi. "The food stamp program is a good income maintenance pr&lt;&gt;gram but conrused and muddled as a nutrition program."
As of 19921almost all schools panicipated in the school lunch program
and slightly more than half offered the school breakfast prograrrr, where meals
(Continued on Page 3)

.b omb.i ng figure
dreads a-ftermath

1996 century

Speelal ·

1916 Pontlae
Prix C::oupe

~rand

Only "1 " Left!

or Brett

.

.

Legislators doubt
_funding reform will
come Kfithout high
court's
.directive .
'

.'96 ROADMASTER

1996Begal
C::ustom Sedan and

• The Child Care Food Program, which is aimed atlo.w income home day
care providers, fails to reach poor providers.
The study by Peter Rossi of the University of Massachusetts' Social and
Demographic Research Institute will he presented Monday at a seminar at
the American Enterprise institute, Rossi's work draws on many existing stud·
ies of the food programs.
Many people see the food stamp program as part of the social safety net,
giving poor Americans assistance buying gtoceries. The program also acts
as an equalizer to even out welfare assistance for recipients in states that offer
low benefits.
'
.._ .
For example, welfare (Aid to Families with Dependent Children) payments
in Texas average $174, compared to $468 in New York. But fOod stamp pay·
ments in Texas average $196, according to the report, compared to $152 in
New York.

fix soon

1111 IIZI·oJM SIO

'97 BUICK

1996 Skylark

:IS oenta,
A Glnnett Co. New p1p1r

No quick Keeping them warm _in winter Cleared Olympic

New manager ·
trainee hired

•

By RICHARD WHITMIRE
Gannett News Service
: WASHINGTON- An analysis of the nation's nutrition programs has
turned up some surprising findings:
.
• The School Breakfast Program has no effect on the number of students
baving bteakfast before school. .
' • There is solid evidence the WIC (Women, Infants and Children) program improves the birth outcomes for poor women, who deliver fewer premature and low birth weight babies when !hey receive the WIC supplements.
But there's almost no research on the effectiveness of !be WIC programs
aimed at young children.
,
.
. • While the food stamp program works well as an incoll!e maintenance
program, there's no evidence !he food stamp program improves nutrition for
\h~ participating f~ilies.

despite a mullimillion dollar giv~·
away
aimed at improviq_g

Attends wor~shop
GALLIPOLIS .. Lois Breech, of
die AAI). South Central Ohio Travel
·
Agericy, returned
recently from a
four-day series of
professional
wo~ops, training sessions and a
three night familiarization cruise
aboard
Royal
Breech
Caribbean Cruise
Line's "Viking
Serenade" from Los Angeles to
Ensenada, Mexicao. .
Breech attended the 8th annual
"Cruise-a-Long Confel"qce, spon- '
sored by Travel Trade"l'6blicalions
and Cruise Lines International Association.
; Professional travel agents from
ithroughout Nonh America participated in the workshops .

1 Section, 1D PegM

Monday, October 28, 1996

National food programs found lacking by study

~

---Business.briefs---.·
CHICAGO (AP) -The Quaker
Oats Co. plans to give its struggling
Snapple iced leas and fruit juices a
new look and new products, a move
analysts said may be Chairman
Will!am D. Smithburg's last chance
at reviving the line.
Th~ Snapple beverage division,
ai:quired in late 1994 for $1.7 billion,

Pomeroy~Middleport, 'Ohio,

0111116, Ohio Yllley Publt.hlng Cctmpeny

'

ATTENTIONII
If you are presently a customer of
Ferrellgas through J&amp;T. Gas Service
you are asked to' call our office to
make arrangements '!i!h our ~~w
Dealer. If you.respond by November
15,1996 we wifl ,give you $2.00 off
•
per cylinder on your next order.
Thank you

,

7-9-6..()

.•

Only "2" Left! ·

.,

Clear tonight, lowe In
the 408. Ta.eday, lncraae
tng afternoon cloudlneea.
Highs In the ,eo..

Pick 4:

$ports on Ftege 4

Il

MILTON, W. Va. · 84 Lumber
· h.as hired Scott Fishbaugh as its
newest manager trainee at the 84
Lumber in Milton, W. Va.
Fishbaugh, a
native
of Marietversity Extension.
ta,
Ga.,
graduated
Each class visits demonstration
from
J.
F.
sites and show the effects of forest
Kennedy High
management practices that improve
School in 1981.
timber production and enhance
He is the son of
wildlife values, including game and
Barbara · Fishnon-game species.
baugh, Marietta,
The goal is to develop a network
Flahbeugh Ga. Fishbaugh
of infonned landowners, according to
1
currently resides
Edward L. Smith, district extension
in
Bidwell.
specialists in natural resources. "We
As a manager trainee at the store,
hope to teach hundreds of Ohio
woodland owners about good forest Fishbaugh is responsible for learning the day-to-day operation of lhe
management," he said.
.
store
in order to ~orile a manager ·
. For more Information about the
himself.
Ohio COVERTS Project, contact
84 Lumber is the nation's largest,
Smith at the East District Extea·
sion Off'~&lt;e, 16714 SR 215, Caldwell privately own¢ lumber and build·
OH 43724, telephone (614) 73Z. ing supply retailer, with 381 stores
nationwide.
1381.

••

Kicker:
().9 4&amp; 44
Pick 3:

5-8·6

f

··Rutland Twp. resident attends
~ habitat improvement seminar
RUI"LAND ·• Teresa M. 'JYson- .
. Drummer of Rutland Township
~ recently completed several days of
training at the Ohio COVERTS Pro• jccl Semi nat in Jackson held Oct. 10" 13. Sbe was one of 50 participants
. who learned about ways to improve
' wildlife habitat through good forest
· management.
"I learned that timber management
and wildlife can and should go hand·
in-hand," said Tyson-Drummer.
"Landowners need to set goals ·and
objectives and follow through on
lhem."
~
The seminar was the eighth in a
special effon sponsored by the
Ruffed Grouse Society and the
National Wild Turkey Federation
and conducted by the Ohio State Uni·

Super Lotto:

2-5-17·19-38-43

23rd Series
championship

•

Are you·
preparing...
· Continued from D·l
bags. Check the plants every two
weeks. Sometimes !hey may dry oltt
(shrivel appearance), add just a little
water to the storage boxes. If grey
mold appears, it is too high of moisture. Cut out.the infected stems, toss
out any ·infected storage structure,
aM air out the storage box to reduce
the moisture level.
·
Farmers and other commercial
users of pesticides, are you properly
using these chemicals in your busi·
nesses? Many pesticides are being
restricted by the chemical companies
to minimize risks to the environment.
In order to use.tbese restricted pesti·
cides you need. to obtain a private
pesticide license. The Ohio Depart·
ment of Agriculture in cooperation
wilh !he Ohio State University Extension-Meigs County has set up a Pes·
ticide Testing Date on November 7 at
6 p.m. at lhe Meigs C11unty LibraryPomeroy Branch.
Stndy materials are available at
· cost at your local extension office. A.
fi'ee training session will be held
Tuesday, October 29th at the Meigs
County Extension office from 7,9
p.m.. If interested please call 9926696.
. Harold H. KneeD is the Meifs
County Agrkultural Agent, 0..,
State Ullivenlty Exteaslon.

·.Yankees net

•

But Clinton, ever the policy wonk,
has displayed an almost ~ncyclopedic
knowledge of farm \programs and has
articulated a coherent view of !he
importance of i~vesting in rural
development and infrastructure.
Clinton and Dole initially opposed
the GOP~ so-called "F~om to
Farm" act as welfare for farmers.
Dole, increasingly disinltted by his
presidential campaign, grudgingly
agreed to back the propo~ . Clinton,
warning it would leave the farm
economy vulnerable .when the
inevitable downturn .,-rives, never·
theless signed it after winning con·
cessions on environmental and nutri·
tion programs.
Wben agriculture has come op in
the campaign, both candidates have
stressed that their ovenill fiscal, tax,
regulatory, envjronmental and investment policies are good for farmers,
and for everybody else.

Ohio Lottery

'

' cleared of suspicion as ·aq '01ympic"tetrorist,
ATLANTA (AP)- Now
Richard Jewell went from hero to suspect to an example of how high-profile investigation.s·can make an innocent man infamous.
'"There will be a not\healing scar lhat is always affixed to my name," Jewell told The New York Times in an interview published Monday. "I don't
know if that will ever be cleared up."
Roy Black, the defense attorney who represented William Kenn~y Smith
in his rape trial, said Jewell is "the perfect image for w~y ·we-have the pre·
sumplion of innocence. But to be honest, this is one of !hose times that there
is a wrong with no real remedy."
The beefy security guard's life turned upside down when his name was
leaked as a suspect in the July 27 bomb lilast at Cen1ennial Olympic Park
that killed one person and injured more than 100. ,
·
The media "just jumped on it like piranha on a bleeding cow," Jewell told
The Time;$;&gt; ··
'
·
· .
&gt;
Though be never was charged with a crime, Jewell became a vinual prisoner as .federal agents and reponers slaked out the apllf(ment he shares with

Me~lg=•~~:

h~-~

prolect
People• Bank locations through
part of the benk'e.Coets tor Kids dle!Jiay.

tor

Peoples Bank continues Coats ~or Kids project
. Peoples Bank is continuing the
tradition of the Coats for Kids Pro·
ject for the Meigs Couniy area.
Through Dec. 13, Peoples
Bank, located at Coun and Second
streets in Pomeroy, will'he accept·
ing new and used children's winter
coats for needy children in the
community.
The Pomeroy office has been
involved with lhe project for 10
years under Bank One, said Coats
for Kids coordinator Dianna Law-

. "It's less philosophical !han political.
We ought.to go to the Ohio Supreme
Court and say, 'Would you please
son.
help us by telling us (education) is a
constitutional right?' "
That's the issue raised by a coalition of more than 550 mostly urban
and rural school districts in I99l.
The Ohio Coalition for Equity and
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (AcP) Adequacy of School Funding sued U.S. Attorney William Wilmoth said
th,e state, charging that !he system or he was not alarmed to discover the
fundins schools is unconstitutional' infonnant who )lnraveled an alleged
.and does not provide each child with plot to blow up 811 FBI building had
· .a thorough and efficient education. defaulted on a $33,000 lawsuit.
: The coalition won ~ case in 1.994
A defaultjudgme.nt was entered in
when a Perry·County judge ruled that favor of a Pittsburgh man in a lawsuit
.Ohio's system of public schools is so accusing 0. Marshall Richards and
]lOOrly funded that it violateS the state business panners of using fraud and
1:onstitution.
.
decep1ion in their medical alarm sys• Stale officials appealed !hat deci- tems business.
sion and an appellate coun over-·
turned the 1994 decision. The coali' lion, in tum, appealed that ruling and
lhe Ohio Supreme Coun is expected
· to issue its-ruling in seve111l months.
' In arguments filed with !he coun,
Gov. George Voinovich said school
funding should be left to the legislative and executive branches of slate
CINCINNATI (AP) -Although
~overnment, not the couns.
,"' "I really believe everyone ... the suppon for Issue I increased slight·
administration and the legislature, all ly during the past week, an Ohio Poll
want to do the ..-isht thins. They just tracking survey released loday indidon' 1 know how to do it," said one cated that most Ohioans are !lgainst
the proposal that would legalize
Republican senator.
rive~t casinos in parts of the state.
' ' "It will be easier to take the first
Voters will decide Nov. 5 on the
step if (we
&lt;;~rdered by lhe coun.
issue.
The proposed constitutional
If the court pushes, I think it will set
ilone," the senator tol4 the newspa- amendment would penn it up to eight
permanendy moored riverboat casir&gt;er.
.
· Senate President AronOff said lui nos in Ohio - three each in the
Week that he has "great raith and con- Cjncinnaii and Cleveland areas and
fidence, when an issue reaches a cri- one each in Youngstown and Loraih.
Of 519 pe&lt;tplc who identified
tis level, the Oeneral Assembly rises
to the occasion." Asked whether themselvej !II likely voters an.d were
education funding wu in crisis, he p~lled by telephone b6tween
Wedneaday and $11urday, 53 percent
$aid, "It's borderline."
said
!hey IJi&gt;,JOeed the amendment, 43
· "We recoanize we need to do
pertent
uld die)' favored it and 4 permoce," Rid VoinQvich spokesman
Mite DaWIOn, but he ldded that cenllaid they didn't know. .
The IUTVe)' illdlclled slitbiJy Dillie
Ohio bu made "lmtlendous
suppprtk
' for .the l~ue during the put
jJroJress" in heJPina its poorw ~c:hool ·
wee
.
·
distriru.

Children's winter coats can be
coats will then be distributed
dropped .off in specially marked
through local elementary schools.
boxes at any of Peoples Bank's
For some children, this will be their
three Meigs County offices in
first new winter coat, she added.
Pomeroy, Middleport or Rutland.
"Last.,ear, Pomeroy employees
Cash donations• will also be· collected and distributed more than
accepted at Peoples Bank locations
150 coats to Meigs County 'chilfor this program, which will allow
dren with growing demand each
the purchase winter coats from
year," Lawson said.
local stores to help meet the heavy 1
"Peoples Bank is again asking
demand, Lawson said.
'
for the community's suppon in
This year, Peoples •Bank . helping to make this winter a little
employees will son, clean and
warmer for our area school chilmend the coats, she said. The
dren," she added.

.

'

A letter Saturday from federal prosecutors dearing Jewell of suspicion
helps only so much, his attorneys say.
"There will always be people out there who believe Richard is the
'bomber," said Wayne 1Grant; one of several attorneys representing Jewell.
"There will always be people who stare. There will always be whispers of
recognition."
.
Jewell told The Times he was "overjoyed" to receive tbe letter, but his
chances of getting hired in law enforcement are "between slim and none."
His attorneys have threatened to sue news organizations and reporters who '
they believe tried to make Jewell fit a profile of a bomber as possibly a former police officer, military man or as!firing policeman seeking lo'become a
hero.
.
.,
·
·
Joseph E. DiGenova, a fonner U.S. attorney who now works as a criminal defense lawyer in Washington, said both Jewell's lawyers and federal offi.
cials should focus now on finding who was responsible for leaking Jewell's
name.
"It is absolutely essential that they try and lind out who leaked ... the fact
that this man allegedly fit some kind of bombet profile," he said. "It is that
piecc 'of infonnation that put this man in the position he's in today."
•

Feds :expect attacks on militia informant's credibility
. Six years lat~r, with the judgment , including the FBI's Cri~inal Justice because he was paid about $30,000 in
uncollected, Rtchards emerged as lnfonnation Services center, the FBI expenses and relocation costs.
the key witnes~ in the FBI's investi· said. The other targets were not idenWilmoth said he expects defense
gation into alleged crimi~al activities tified.
lawyers to keep up attacks on
tied ' to the West Virginia MounRichards was pilid $2,000 a month Richards' credibility. ·
"That's all they have," tbe prosetaineer Militia.
while reponing on alleged criminal
Richards' 200 tape recordings as activities by Looker and others, said cutor said. "Their (clients') voices
are on tape."
an undercover infonnanl res~!!ed in FBI Agent J.C. Raffety.
federal charges against Mountaineer
The default judgment probably
Richards attended AldersonMilitia ·commander 'Floyd "Ray" will provide more ammunition for Broaddus College in Philippi from
Looker and six oth~rs in an alleged .. defense lawyers who have been 1985 to 1'989, but did not graduate, a
plot to bomb .three federal targets.. .attempting to discredit the Informant

Opposition
to Issue 1
st~ll strong

.Gas prices
·i.nch up by
nearly ·1 cent

~N•i~,
.,.

~"'"*

are)

!II

,

. school official said. The Clarksburg
native described himself aS a former
Navy SEAL, according to the law·
suit. ·
·
.He also worked for a time as a
consultant for the National Research
Center'for Coal &amp; Energy at West
Virginia University. He received ·
$18,SOO for ~is work in ils alternative
fuel program from June I through last
September, the university said.

CAMARILLO, Calif. (AP) Gasoline pump prices rose nearly
three-quarters or a c~nt per gallon on
the strength of crude oil price hikes,
an industry analyst .said. ·
·
: The increase over two weeks put
;the average retail price ror all grades,
. 1including taxes, at about $1.28 per
,gallon, according to Friday's Lund.berg Survey of 10,000 stations
nationwide.
.
·
Tlte primary reason for the
,increase is a seasonal boost' in crude
prices orabout S I per barrel, analysi
Trilby Lund~rg said Sunday.
1 Demajld for crude typically increas·
ies during winter months as !lemand
:for heating oil rises.
"lhis upward pressure is overcoming the gasoline market after the
gasoline prices fell pretty consistently since late May," Lwtdberg said.
The avenae gasoline price WIS II
cents higher than at this time a year
ago, Lundberg said.
·
'1

I

FIRST PuCE ~ fJob Bl'ltiOII of Middleport,
center, and John Zurcher of P~ took first

=ce

In

the

~lllglf

Inaugural

Ohio

River
FaR Fishing Clltulc held SatMllg• County United Fund

=In':%
F"dant
• Gaul .,...,.. the two .•

8=

plaque and $300 prlza apOnsored by Farl'lllt'a
Bank • Savlnge Co. Zurchanlso won the
ror
non-t~ruet fish sponsored by
Rlwr ~and Jeff's.Cerry Out, POnwoy.
See~ and ather photoa on Page'·

1arC

.

�'

•

,

•

Monday, October 21, 18M

•

·One ticket sold will claim
_$aturday Super Lotto prize

I

The Daily Sentinel· Georgia duckmobile ruffles Ne~'s feathers
By JIICk Anderlon
.ndJanlloii.-

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-192·21 !MI • Fu: 992-2157

.2r

and
·Jan Moller

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publllher

. CHARLENE HOEFUCH

an

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Genera~. u.nager

'

.

.

Dayton may cash in on
Bosnia peace accords
By JAMES HANNAH
AIIOCIIIWd Prell WrHer ·
.
. DAYTON-.The city has gotten a lot of pats on the .back·for playing
host to the Bosma peace lalks. But the goodwill .generated by the negotiations soon may translate into cold hard cnsh
·
· O(ficials from ,Bosnia and Cro~tla will be in the city next month to commemorate the one-year ""nivcrsary of the Bosnia ~e Accords; which were
reached at nearby Wright-Patterson Air Force Base;
.
·
·
While here, the officials plan to meet with area business leaders to'lalk
trade.
.
'
·,
The Dayton-Bosnia business.connection was forg~ in July wben U.S.
Commerce Secretary MICkey Kantor went on a trade mission to the Balkans to drum up business for U.S. companies bidding fOr contracts to rebuild
the war-tom area.
·
·
,' Dayton Mayor Mike Turner went along on the trip to Bosnia and Croa·
tta.
. . "The government officials .indicated an affinity they had for the Dayton
area and a very htgh mterest tn doing business with Dayton companies "·
Turner recalled. "I believe it will result in a great benefit to us as we ent~r
those markets." ·
.
·
Turner said the key was that many of the Bosnian and Croatian officials ·
~.been to Dayton during the peace talks and are familiar with the area.
. The wannth. that Dayton showed them while they were here cenainly
IS a basts for a very good economic relationship.'' he said.
· A telephone message was left Thursday for.Phil Parker, eresident of the
Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce.
The mayor said that while Croatia's economy is slable, it is,down 30 percent from what ts was befo"' the war. And Bosnia has sustained severe war
damage and must rebuild its economy.
"They're going to he spending money in the international market " he
said. "We have an opponunity to play a very strong role in that." '
Botl_t countri~ have hishly trained and educated work forces but need
to rebutld computer and communication and other systems to employ more
of those workers. And Turner.said goods produced in Dayton would make
a nice fit for the needs in the Balkans.
Many Dayton companies build machinery ahd parts that can be used in
manufacturing production, he said. Others make comP,uters and computer
system~.

"They need to rebuild their telecommunicationS. systems, rebuild their
banking compoter systems," Turner S,!id. "Cenainly the computer companies we have here service those markets:" :
End AdvanQI\ for Release PMs 'If Friday, Oct. 25, &amp; Thereafter

Today in history

)

district A debate was finally sched- withalendof5SpercenttoColes' 41 grich's vehicle then began a " slow,
uled for last Friday, but that hasn 't ....nt. But the events of Oct. 19, OJ.-style chase ... they'dgoreal~
WASHINGTON -- House Speak- quieted tbe duckmobile.
which "'e've pieced together, show to see if we'd pass them," Gordon
er Newt Gingrich -- who's third in
As he has done in the past, Gin- that even if he doesn' t win, Coles has told us. Eventually. the car pulled olf
line for the presidency but now find s
definitely managed to ruffle the feath- at the exit to Oipgrich's district
himself in a tough re-election camers of the beleaguered Gingrich. It's office. A young man then tried to
paign -- was forced to pull over to the
also made his race one of this year's . block the car from entering the par~side of the road last week when a
most interesting House contests.
ing lot.
.
usecurity risk" arose.
.
As 24-year-old Tammy Gordon, a
After parting company for the
· He was being pursued by a woodColes campaign worker and4he cap- Ilunch hour; the duckmobile caught up
en duck.
tain of the duckmobile, tells it, tile with Gingrich ,that afternoon as he
day beaan with~ 95 mph chase down was leaving a rally. It followed GinGingrich and an 'aide were t&gt;eing
ferried around his suburbil\,l\tlanta grich is leaving voters .10 wonder anAt1anlahighway. Theduckmobile grich's vehicle as it wound through
district in a Chevrolet Suburban dri- whether he 's fish or fowl. After gov- had followed Gingrich to a breakfast
affluent suburjlan neighborhood.
ven by a U.S. Capitol Police officer emlng' as a mpdern-&lt;lay revolution- meeting with supponers, and after- stanling the afternoon bikers ariii
assigned. to protect him. Following ary, a chastened Gingrich is now ward the' speaker got into his car and walkers with the loud quackiiiJI
closely behind was a vehicle that's campaigning as a moderate.
.headed back toward his district sounds emanating from the roof.
becomei a familiar sight to voters in
His advertisements against Coles, office. The duckmobile was · close
Finally, the speaker had had
Georgia's 6th Congressional Dis- for example; attack the ehallengedor behind.
enough. The car pulle4 over into 11.
trict: the duckmobile, a bright yellow, violating child labor laws and for
That's when things got interesting. local municipal center, which also
1982 Ford Tempo with a wooden paying minimum wage to some of his Once they left downtown Marietta houses a police station. To Gordon:S
duck and a loudspealier affixed to the workers. Ironically, the labor viola- and got on the highway, Gordon says, surprise, the Capitol Police officer
roof.
lions were the result of 16- and 17- Gingrich's car began speeding in an went over to lalk to one of the ofliThe duckmobile. belongs to year-old workers operating a freight obvious effon to shed the duckmo- ,cers, who then approached the duckMichael Coles, who made millions elevator against Labor .Depanment bile. "We got into a little high-speed ·mobile. The following conversation
from a string of cookie franchisb and regulations -- a rule that Gingrich the chase with the speaker of the House," ·ensued:
.
·
now wants to unseat the speaker of revolutionary would probably chafe Gordon says. "We were driving in a
"Ma'm, could you please stop folthe House. It was originally designed against. Gingrich also fought against yellow Ford Tempo with a duck on lowing them?"
to publicize Gingrich's reluctance to raising the minimum wage, which top at 95 mph. He (Gingrich) would
"~m I doing anything illegal?"4
debate Coles, who remains a long- passed the House last summer.
zoom in behind cars ... "
"They just ask that you stop fol~
shot to win in the heavily Republican
A recent poll shows Gingrich
Unable to shake its puisuers, Gin- ·. lowing them."
.
:1
,-------------..---------....;;..._____
The Capitol Police offic'er 'the~
approached the duckmobile wit"
some words for its occupapts. "!just
.
wan( you to know tl!a! parking lo~
·and ev~nts are fine, but if you're fol•
lowing us ,it . becomes a securi~
risk."
Sgt. Dan Nichols of the U.S.
Capitol Police confirmed the incident, explaining that his officer WIIS
merely following standard operating
procedure. " As with any protecteo.
when we observe an individual" following them, "we alen the local
authorities.'' Both Nichols and a
Gingrich spokesman deny, ho)Yevcr, ·
that ·a high-sp~d chase took plaell
· earlier that morning.
"(Cqles) h;~S'Ihis gimmicky little
duckmobile," Gingrich spokesman
Mike Shields sniffed. "It's yellow
and it quacks .... It was the security
detail that determined that when try.
ing to be discreet with the person
who's third in line for the presiden,
cy, comes a point when it became
wise for tliem to ask 'them to ceasC:
making such !I huge commotion."
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer
; are writers ror United Featud!

13Y Jack Anderson

A Gannett Co. NewspaP,er

By.,The AIIOCieted Prell
.
.
Today is Monday, Oct. 28, the 302nd day of1996. There are 64 days left
in the year.
,
·
T(/day's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 28, 1886, the Statue of Libeny. a gift from the people of France,
was dedicated in New York Harbor by President Grover Cleveland.
On this date: .
In 1636. Harvard College was founded in Massachusetts.
.
In 1793, Eli Whitney applied for a patent for his colton gin (the patent
was granted the following March),
In 1919, Congress enacied the Volstead Act, which provided for enforcement of I?rohibitioil. over President Woodrow Wilson's veto.
In 1922. fascism came to llaly as Benito Mussolini took control of the
government.
In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt rededicated the Slatue of Libeny
on its 50th anniversary. ·
·In 1940, Italy invaded Greece during ·world War II.
.
In 1958, the RomaJl'Catholic patriarch of Venice, Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, was elected ·pope, taking the name John XXIII.
In 1962: Sovietleader Nikila Khrushchev infomted the United Slates that
he had ordered the dismantling of Soviet missile bases in Cuba.
·
In 1976, former Nixon aide John D. Ehrlichman entered a federal pri•on
camp in Safford. Ariz .• to begin serving his sentence for Watergate-related
convictions.
·
Ten years ~go: The true centennial of the Statue of Libeny was celebrated
in New·York with ceremonies that were modest compared with the hoopla
of " Liberty Weekend'' the previous Julv.
.

Berry's World'

.

•

: Syndicate, Inc.

'

A constitutional case against boxing
By Net Hentoff
In a current policy slatement, the
American Medical Association
· "encourages the elimination of both
amateur and professional boxing, a·
sport in which the primary objective
is to inflict injury " -- panicularly
''chronic hrain damage." For years,
Dr. George Lundberg of the AMA has
been writing anicles under the standing title': "Boxing should he banned
in civilized countries."
For nearly 10 years in Boston. I
broadcast boxing bouts -- sometimes
doing blow-by-blow and sometimes
color between rounds. I saw a young,
extraordinarily graceful hoxer who
seemed choreographed. His name
was Cassius Clay. And I remember
such equally swift and precise combatants as Sugar Ray Robinson and
Willie Pep.
'
They were boxers, not brutal
machines like the latter-day Mike
'fYs&lt;lfl.
Most of the bouts I broadcast,
however, lvere between club fighters
-- professionals who could put on a
good, often bloody show for the fan s
but would never make the big time.
I especially remember two of
them. Young and eager at first, they
looked, over time. as if they were
throwing punches on an assembly
line. They kept taking a lot of each
othet's punches, more each year.
By the time I left ringside to go to

.

see

.... .,~~no. qi...... ~......
"BBOr

-!
'

•

.,.,
·,

Law Journal: "Maybe there is some- broadcaster Ronald Reagan -- has•
thing less. than satisfying for a big written ·a screenplay about women:
fight to be decided by a disqualifica- boxers. "They're not oddities.~· she
tion rather than a knockout or a TKO: told the New York ·Post. "They're .
Without some form of knockout, athletes, and can be good looking."&gt;.
there is no catharsis l/,8fot the fans
Not for long. As Dr. George LUndberg of the AMA notes, the chron~
3/8." '
. I have hearil defenderS of the b~in damage that i• eventually sui'
who. by then, were in times zones of death penalty claim that each execu- fered by · boxers "who have had
their'own.
tion creates a catharsis in the sur- many fights; .. results from repetitive
One of the last bouts I broadcast roundi~g community. Why not then, subeoncussive blows over multiple
was between two fighters who had · televis.; executions-- with Don King, training sessions and matches.... A
•clobbered each other so hard in the Mike '!yson 's mentor and promoter, , major purpose of a sports event is to
early rounds that, neither being able deciding which "dead man walking" win. When the surest way to win is
to deliver a knockout blow, they more . merits prime time? There would then by damaging the opponent's brain,
lor less clung to each other. The dis- be a national catharsis from this and this becomes slandard procedure,
the sport is morally wrong."
.
' gusted crowd, cheated of the chance entertainment.
And constitutionally wrong. Box&lt;
Don King wasn't around when I,
·to see one of them fall unconscious,
mockingly stoned lo sing. " I'll in Boston, would visit dressing rooms ing is licensed by the states, and the
Always Be in Love With You" '· in before a bout to pick up some stories Eighth Amendment in the Bill of
.to use between rounds. My panner, a Rights forbids the inniction of "cru-·
waltz time.
Watching the deprived sports fans, seni~r spons &amp;Mouncer at the radio el and unusual punishment." Battera venerable sponswriter said to me. · station, warned me not to: ~arne on ing an opponent into unConscious:
"Once you, leave this place, kid, the air some of the ponly men with 1'ness, and worse, is not a sport. Not iri·
'1
you'll never go to !ICC another boxing cigars · backstage who · seemingly a civilized country.
The
defensive
rationale
for
proowned the fighters. "They don'tlike
boul. "
·
He was right. I don't go to the publicity." he said, "and for good fessional boxing is that it allows··
, fights. I don't watch them on televi- reason." They didn'tlike me either, youngsters at the bottom of society to'
sion. Friends of mine -- journalists, just for being there. Most of them, I get a chance at fame and fortune~
lawyers, nearly all of them men -- expect, are gone now; but -- spans- That works for some, but most of•
make festive evenings of boxing writers tell me -- others like them those I've seen wind up with chump
·t
change and a funny look.
events. They too are disappointed if have taken their place.
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally I
all that happens,is bloodless boxing
Occasionally I do see repons conwith nobody on the canvas with his cerning boxing on news shows. For , renowlled auU,ority on the Flnt :
1 lig~ts out.
instance, the increasing number of Amendment and the rest ot the BUI :
,
Daniel Kcimstein, a lawyer and professiomil bouts between women. ofRI&amp;Jtts. •
.
1 •
boxing fan, writes in the New York And Patti Davis -- daughter of former

Nat Hentoff ·

.;!

'

Bob. Dole's remarkable transformation
By JoNph Spear
,.
It is a wonderful thing, what is
happtning to Bob Dole. '
I never expected to
4he day
when a person of his age, not to mention a politician, would demonstrate
such amazing· personal maturation.
During his long career, he has been
~gainst everythi11g. Well, almost. He
has supported fann and ~ugar and
tobacco subsidies and a few other
. things dear to his bean, but .compassionate people will make allowan~s
for that.
Dole also has a solid 'record of
opposition 10 official investisations,
, particularly those conducted while
Presidenll Nixon, Ford, Reagan and
Bush were in office. It was all politics, Dole claimed, a bunch of
Democrats telllling up with their
allies in tbe 'media to persecute dili. gent public servants.
And . now, he has undeJione a
cDI!vers1on. He now sees the need for
ethtcal conduct, for purity in lli.dl'

-"

New York to cover_jazz, the speech
of those once ardent young men had
also slowed. And they were not
alone among the .vet_eran gladiators

'

Pomeroy • Mklcllepoft, Ohio '

public office. He now believes it is
utterly mandatory to probe prcsidents.
· The platform from which he

which year you read the Washington
Post, either "more than 100 (Reagan
officials) were accused of illegal or
unethical conduct" (Oct. 2·1, 1996),
'or there were "complaints that 242
current or former Reagan officials
_
_
have been alleged to have acted
unethically" (May 5, 1988). In any
speaks on the hustings is pften deco- , case, it's more than "more than
. rated with giant banners that read 30.")
.
"TRUST" and "ETHICS." He tells
But let's · ge,t back io the main
his audience "it is mind-boggling, the point, which is that until recently,
number 8lld persistence'of scandals" ..Bob Dole was one of the nation's
in the Bill Clinton White House. And: most outspoken apologists for presi" We have seen more than 30 Clinton dents who Wele in hot water, and now
officials investigllled, fired or forced he has underJone a remarkable transto resign due to ethical impropri- formation . I will give you example:~:
eties."
·
· -- On tbe matter of independent
(Let me digress for just a second counsels; ,
,
.
to comet some minor misconcepThrouJhout his career; Dole hatlions in Dole's slatefll~nts. His figure ed them. Once he referred to Iranihcludes such Clinton people .as for- contra proMCutor Lawrence Walsh's
mer SurJeon General Joycelyn of!if:e as "a Democ...Uc hotbed of
Ekle11, who got tangled up in pollti- · JDem()l)rltic ICiivlstlawyers" (Walsh
cal, prcdicaments,,as oppotec1 to eth- was a Rlpublioan). But shortly after
leal plights. ' Also, depending on Clinton was elected, Dole bepn to

Joseph Soear

~

~

(

q

.

,I

Meigs announcements·
Rotilecollliq pianaed
, , ~First Ch.urch of God, Syracuse, will have homecoming Nov. 10 with
serviCes to begm at 10 a.m. There will be special singing. Dinner will be
,s.c=rved on the grounds at noon. Pastor David Russell invites the public.

'Sorority to meet

.
Preceptor Bela Bela Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbi Sorority, will meet at7 p.m.
,Thursday at Grace Episcopal parish house. Members are asked to wear a Hal-'
loween
shin.
·
,.

i

.

1\Jesday, Oct 29
conditions and

AccuWeather" forecast for

Miles Blansette

MICH.

Miles Blan5ette, 75, 103 Buckeye Hills Road, Thurman, died Sunday, Oct.
27, 1996 at his res idenc~
.
Born Oct. 6, 1921 in Indianapolis, tnd., son of the late Miles and LOuise
Brown Blanseue, he was a retired U.S. Air Force chief master seraeant, serving for 27 years. He served tours of duty in France, Germany, England and
South Africa during World War II.
Surviving are his wife, Edna Marie Cardwell Blansette, whom he married Aug. 21 . 1943. in 'Thrre Haute, Ind.: two sons, Mike Blansette of Corinth,
Ky .. and Max (Connie) Blansette of Fayetteville; three daughters, Jackqueline (Hem) Carney ofWo!Utington, Deborah (Tom) Kirk of Hilton Head, S.C.;
and Cheryl (Max) Garwin of Lithopolis; two brothers, Thomas Blansette of
Knoxville, Tenn., and Mel&gt;'tn Blansette of Panama City, Fla.; and a sister,
Marcella Patlc of Lattimore, N.C.
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton. Burial will be in the Brush Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

IND.

• IColumbus Iss•I
70"

.Walter Crooks
Walter Crooks, Middlepon, died Monday, OCt. 28, 1996 in the Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility, Pomeroy.
Arrangements will he announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle-

CharleS W. King Sr.

Showers. T-storms Rain

"

Flurries

'To serve prepme
Charles William King Sr., 64, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Oct. 26, 1996 in
, Grace: Epi.scopal Church will serve food before the Meigs Marauder game .the Veterans Administration Medical Center, H!lntingtoft, W.Va.
Friday ntght m the pansh house at the church. Serving will begin at 5:30p.m.
Born March 6, 19~2 in Downington, he was the son of the late Edward
Park King and Frances Ellis King. He worked as a TV repairman and was
a U.S. mililary veteran, serving during the Korean Conflict.
.
.
He attended the Hillside Baptist·Church and was a member of the MidBy
The A11ociated Press
dlepon American Legion Post 338.
Clear
skies will create chilly conHe is survived by his wife, Sandra.Lynn Smith King of Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in- l;~w, Susan Marie and Bryan Reeves of Pomeroy: a son, Charles ditions tonight, with temperatures in .
William' Kjng Jr. of Pomeroy ; three brothers, Edward King of Pomeroy, nonhero Ohio dropping to around the
William King of Middlepon, and .Franklin King of Pomeroy; a sister, Leo- freezing mark. ~e ading s should
remain in the 40s. in the south.
ta Nortis of Akron ~ one grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Temperatures will recoup into the
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Alice Marie Rockwell
60s.on Tuesday but an approaching
King; and by three brothers ·and fiv e ~isters.
·
warm front will produce scattered
. Walter Robens Couch II, 69, o'f 35665 Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, died ' Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Hot;ne, Pomeroy, showers in the aftemoon, the Nationwith Dr. James Acree Sr. officiating. Military graveside rites. administered
.Saturday, October 26, 1996 at his home.
by
members of the Middlepon American Legion Post 338. and burial will al Weather Service said. Chances of
Born on May 18, ·1927 at Allentown, Pennsylvania, he was the son of the
rain will increase on Wednesday as
late Walter Robens Couch I and Lucy Ellen Watson Couch. He re~ in 1989 take place at the Wells Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral borne from the warm front clashes with a cold
as a shift operatmg engineer from Philip Sporn Power Plant, where he had 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
front
tworked for 39 years.
:
Lows Tu~sday night will be in the
' He served in the United Slates Army during World War II, Signal Service
50s.
in the Penlag.on Building-T~hilician Fifth Grade; Headquaners Company
The record-high temperature for
Irene Newlon, 87 ,!'oint Pleasant, W.Va., ditd Satu,rday1Oct. 26, 1996 in
War Depanment, and, received an honorable discharge on March 25, 1947.
'
'
Pleasant Valley Hospilal, following a brief illness.
Hew~ a life member of Drew Wc!ster Post 39, American ·Legion, Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 9, 1908 in Point Pleasant, daughter of the late Peter and Kate
• He lilso belonged to the Bradford Church of Christ, Pomeroy, the Frater· ,
.
.
.
nal Order of the Eagles 2171, the Meigs County Golf Club, Royal Oak Res on Varner Schneider. who owned and operated Schneider's Bakery ill Point
Ultralight crashes
Pleasant. 'she was a member of the Beights United Methodist Church, Point
Club, and the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
·
A Syracuse man was reponed in
Pleasant.
· He is survived by his wife of 44 year's, Isabelle Vtrginia Stoban Couch;
She was also a member of the Friendship Sunday School class arK!. the stable condition in an area hospital
two daughters, Janice Loraine (Mike) Fetty of Pomeroy, and Jennifer Lynn
·
this morning after his ultralight airHeights
United Methodist Women.
(Joseph) Roush of Ravenswood, West Virginia; four sons, Roben Wayne
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
by
her
husband,
G.
Russell
Newlon
Jr.,
craft
crash hinded in Syracuse Sun(Karen) Couch of Wadswonh, James Ronald (Gloria) Couch of Capon Bridge
day aroun4,4:51 p.m. ,
West Virginia, Richard Alan Couch of Germantown, Maryland, and Jeffrey oil Feb. 14, 1979; and a brother, Clarence "Pete" Schneider, in 1981.
Surviving
are
a
sister,
Luella
(Richard)
Fick
Sr.
of
Chester;
two
nephews
Bryce ~ond was attempting to
Lynn (Sophia) Couch of Seville.
and
.a
niece;
and
two
great-nieces
and
a
great-nephew.
.
.
land
the )lircraft in a field off Karr
_Also surviving~ a sister, Betty Mae Thomas of Columbus; six grandServices
will
be
II
a.m.
Tuesday
in
the
Crow-Hussell
Funeral
Home,
Point
Streetformerly known as Hubbard
-~hildren, Da~td Mtchael Fetty II and Amanda Nicole Fetty of Pomeroy,
Pleasant,
with
the
Rev.
Ben
Stevens
officiating.
B~ial
will
be
in
the
Sun·Streetwhen it flipped, said Meigs
,Heather Mane Couch and Jeremy Roben Couch of Seville; and Stephanie ·
thane Andrews and Jeremy Leon'Andrews of Capon Bridge, West Virginia; crest Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the funeral home from County Sheriff James M. Soulsby. He
.
·
· speculated the aircraft's landing gear
an aunt, Wjlma Martin; an uncle, Alben "Pete" Smith; imd several nieces and 7-9·tonight.
·
•
may have sank in the wet field, caus.
nephews.
·
ing it to fljp.
,
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his father-in-law, James
The ·Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Benjamin Stoban; and his mother-in-law, Crystal Anna Stobait; and. severDepartment and squad responded to
al aunts and uncles.
_ •.
Lester Ray Richard, 47, Racine, died Sunday, Oct. 27, 1996 in Veterans ·the scene and transported Bond ro
Services will he held Tuesday, October 29, 1996 at 2 p.m. at the Brad- Memorial Hospital.
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
ford .Church of Christ in Pomeroy. Burial will be in the Letart Falls CemeBorn Feb. 20, 1949 in Ravenswood, W.Va., he was the son of Harry and •Pomeroy. He was later transported to
l!:fY, where mililary ri.tes will be held. Officiating at the funeral services will Genevieve Richard of Long Bottom. He was a heayY equipment operator for Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis,
J;&gt;e Evangelist Keith Cooper, Elder Bill Nicholson and Deacon Bill Amberg- Richards &amp; Sons Inc.
where h~ was admitted for treatment
er.
.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, I. Renee Wilson Richard ·of lacerations, according to a hospi-.
, Friends may call at the Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, West Vir- of Racine: two daughters, Leslie Richard and Hollie Richard, both of Racine;
tal spokeswoman.
ginia. from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, October 28, 1996.
a son; Joseph Richard of Racine; two brothers, Roben and Jack Richard, both · This makes the second ultralight
ofLorig Bottom; a sister, Barbara McLaughlin of Homestead. Fla.; his moth- icrash for Bond in recent months. He
er-in-law and father-in-law. Alben and Dorothy ParkerofPomeroy i and sev- crashed on Minersville Hill a few
, I
,months ago, according to Soulsby.
eral nieces. nephews, aunts and uncles.
.
. .'
The ·aircraft was demolished,
· Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, MidIrene Newlon, 87, Point Pleasant, West Virginia, died Saturday afternoon,
·
dleport, with the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will he in the Letan Soulsby said.
October 26, 1996, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, following a Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral.home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. ·
Citation Issued
~rief illness.
·
A Columbus area man was cited
. She was a member of Heights United Methodist Church in Point Pleas- Tuesday.
for failure to yield and driving under
ant, where she was also a member of the Friendship Sunday School Class
suspension after a two·car accident
,
and the Heights United Methodist Women.
Saturday afternoon in Pomeroy.
She was horn December 19, 1908 in Point Pleasant, and was a daughter
Eloise Stiles, Middlepon, died Monday, Oct. 28, 1996 in Veterans Memo- ·according to Pomeroy Police Chief
of the late Peter and Kate Var:ner Schneider, who owned and operated Schneirial Hospital.
.
•
der's Bakery in Point Pleasant.
·
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home. Middle. In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her husband.
.
(l. Russell Newlon Jr., who died February 14, 1979; and by a brother, pan.
Clarence "Pete" Schneider, wh6 died in 1981. •
.
She is survived by a sister-in-law and a brother-in-law, Luella and Richard
. fick Sr. of Chester. Ohio; two neph~ws, R;~ben Schneider of Boulder, Colo .•
l!fld Thomas Schnetder of Cahfomta; a ntece, Karen Smith Of Chester; and
(Continued from Page 1)
two great-nieces and a great-nephew.
Services will be held II a.m. Tuesday, October 29, 1996 in the Crow-Hus- are full price, reduced price or free, depending on a family 's income level;
While there '• 'good evidence that children who eat no breakfast are less
s~ll Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Ben Stevens officiating. ·
likely
to perform well in the classrooms, there 's no evidence the national
. ~urial will follow in the Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant: Visiting hours
will be held at the funeral home on Monday, October 28, 1996, from 7 p.m. school breakfast program encourages mor~. children to eat breakfast.
A comparison of schools with and without. the breakfast programs show
'
until 9 p.m.
To
ttorr
that about 12 percent of the students at each of tllose schools ate no break·
roport l•t•· fast.
Why
?
"That's
a
bit
of
a
mystery."
said Rossi in a phone interview.
The
Sentinel
One possibility, said Rossi, is the low threshold researchers set for what
(USPS 213-!160)
consttlutes breaklast in the survey. For the study, breakfast was defined as
anything over 50 calories - about half a can of Coke.
·
Published cvei-)o afternoon, Mondlly through
·"If you took into accoun1 an adequate amount of calories, 300 calories,
Friday. Ill ' Ct~urt St., PomeTU)'.' Ohio. by Ihe
Ohio Valley Publiahin:S Company/c;Jannen Co..
the picture might be somewhat different," said Rossi.
· .
Pomeroy. Ohio 43769. Ph. 992-21!16. Second
.· Overall. the ·government food programs may work better as income supcll1111 polfDIC paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
plements than nu_tritional supplements.

Ice

Sunny Pf. Clo:idy Clo::dy .

Cleari~g

skies tonight
will drop temps into 40s
.

Walter Roberts Couch II

Irene Newlon

'

thi s date at the Columbus weather
station was 81 degrees in 1927 while
the record low was 2 1 in 1976. Sunset tonight w,ill be at 5: 34 p.m. and
sunrise Tuesday at .6:58 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight..Ciear. 'Lows in the mid
·30s north to around 40 south,
Tuesday ... Mostly sunny in the
morning with increasin g afternoon
clouds. A chance of showers west
third late in the afterno on. Highs in
the 60s.
Extended forecast :
Wednesday ...A chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 40s nonh to the
mid 50s south. Highs in the 60s.

-Local. News in Brief:-

Lester Ray Richard

'

Gerald Rought.
The accid~nt occurred at3: 13 p.m.
when, according to rcpons, Larry M.
Sull ivan. 50. Gahanna, pulled from
the Riverside Food Man lot into the
pa&lt;h of a 1986 Ford Tempo. driven by
Marcia A. Arrington, 36. Gallipolis
Ferry. W.Va.
Damage to Sullivan's 1985 Ford
LID was light to the front, while
damage to Arrington's vehicle was
also ligh!to .the ,right f{ont fender.
No .injuries were reponed io the
accident.

Irene Newlon.
~

Eloise Stiles
.

·National food programs

........
-•tip•,•"

Daily

992-2156

For

Commissioner

EXPERIENCED

Stocks

M~

The A11ocit1ed Preu. and the Ohio

•I

POS'J'MASTBR: Sead addi'CP corr«tiODI to

·J'

OHiO Weather

Chester trick or treat
..
.
. p.on.
: Chester will have trick or treat on Wednesday, 6to 7 p.in., wi!h.the siren
!osoundtobegmandend.theobscrvance. ·
.

New~ Auocilllion.

I

.

.

'I

see the light. He called for a special; ~
counsel to investigate the purging of' I
the White House travel office. In.Jan- :
uary 1994, he demanded an indep(\n-~
dent counsel to inve~tigatc White-~
water.
\
-- cin the matter of pardons:
Dole has been insisting· that Bill , ~
Cli~tton promise oe will not pardon, '
anyone ca. ~ht up iii the Whitewa!.Clr I
sca'nd~l· But just four yeats ago, he : !'
Wllf, m prosecutor Walsh's words '
"the foremost advocate'' of pardon:· ,
ing former Defense Secret1ry Caspar_;, ~
Wetnberger .for hts mvoJvement in the . •
Iran-contra mess.
:
-- On the matter of c1101pai11n · l
finance refomt:
'· ;
bol~ is, disturbed over the Clinton ;
campatan s acceptance of contribu- . :
'tJons from Indonesian interests· and " '
,hu called f~ ·overhaul of laws
'feililatina political fund·taiainJ. Not ·'
ion• 110, Senator No wu blocllna ;l
every such proposal that cimo bofore •
the legislawre.

an

CLEVELAND (AP) - There $4 million~
wu 0111: ticket IOid n•mina all six
There were I~ Super Lotto tick·
numben drawn in Saturday niJht's ets with five of tbe numben, IRCI-h
S24million Super Lotto drawina, the is worth S1,289. The 7,964 tickets
Ohio Lottery said.
showing four of tbe IIUIIIbers are -h
. The winnina ticket wu purchased wonh $74.
!II the Stone Circle Drive Thru in
In Kicker, qne player had the exact
J roy. The winner will lei $923,076 six-digit number and can claim
·a year for 26 years.
·
'$100,000. The winning ticket was
· . · The jackpot for Wednesday sold at Rini's Stop· N Shop in Mid.
. , ~ight 's Super Lotto drawing is wonh dlebllfi(Heights.

The Dally sentinel • Page 3

•

Am Ele Power .......................41\
Akzo·......................................64l,t
Ashland 011 ...............;...........42~

1be Daily Stntintl, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
Ohio4,769.

ATAT .......................................3&amp;1,1.
Bank OM .••••••••••.••: •••••..•..•••.•42\

sUNCtUmON RATES •
IJ Clnitrer M.,._RRI•
One w..t..................................................Sl.OO
One lotoollt ............................................... S8.70
Ofte Year................................................ SID$.00

............................. 18~
ShoPa.................. 4"1.

••• 1......... ~ •••• ••••••••••

12\
•........................ 37\

SINGLE COPY PRICI
Doily .......;....... .................................... JS C..U
Su~-not detirina .w pc.y tht,catrictft'N)y

mnh in ldvWt direct ro The: Dilly Sentinel
on a dne, six or 12 month bula. Crcdll wjll be
&amp;lven carrier each week.
No tubclj.don by mail pt'111'1ned In ueaR
where home ctrricr .moe J• •~anlbte.

PWI*r' _... "" rip ••a&gt;ti•• -

=

dot·

1"1 1111 -pdclo porlod. Sobocripdon noy k ,,_ne~ llr """'"" tile
of lho ..btatpdon.

13 -

_._._

MAILIUIBCRIPTIONI

·-Milpc.-r
..... ;,........................ ................ Sll.:IO

• .,....,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,........................MOO!'s,5].12

S2 -

............................................. SIOl:56

:N -

........................ ,................... l!6.641
"'""""""'""""""'""'""'"'"" $109.72

. JJ-~.~.~.~ .. m~
S2 -

J!

Stoclll

report1 .,.

1

1.m. C11101M pi'CMHII by '
Cit Glilllpolll.

~=~

EMS units answer 10 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Satl!fllay and
Sunday. Units responding in cluded:
. MIDDLEPORT
6:38 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
. ilepanment and squad to Grant Street, .
motor vehicle accident. Pat Clark.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
6:38p.m. Sunday; Fairlane Drive,
Harold Teaford, Pleasant Valley.Hospital;
.
li :S3 p.m. Sunday, Ovemrook
Nursing Center. Sadie Carr, Holzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
I :26 a.m. Sunday, Cotrn and Mllin
streets, Keilh Musser, VMH;
1:24 a.m. Sunday, Hysell Street.
Willilln Leach, VMH;
3:36 a.m. ' Sunday, Eagle Ridge
Road, Lester Richards, VMH. .

RUTLAND
6:47 p.m. Saturday. Carpent~ Hill
Road. Dennis Oxyer, VMH.
SYRACUSE
4:47p.m. Sunday, VFD and squad
to Hubbard Lane, light aircraft crash,
Bryce Bond. VMH:.
5:55 p.m. Sunday, Wessell Road,
Stanley Johnson, HMC;
7:33 p.m. Sunday. Maples Apanments. Mary Lyons, VMH.

• Four year degree· busilies; management.
• 21 years of bU8iness experience

· • 1996 Meigs County Extension Advisory Committee
• Cumber of Commerce- Board of Directors
• Community Improvement Corporation (CIC)
Officer
• Rt,lcine Order of Eastern Star- Member/Officer
• Big Bend Youth Football- Charter Member/Officer
• Stemwbeel Parade &amp; Queen Events - Chairpenon
• Beta Sigma Phi Sorority- Member/Officer

Hospital news
Vetei'MI Memorial
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - Dorothy
McKenzie, Pomeroy.
·
Sunday admissions - none.
Sunday d~&lt;eharJes - none.

�I

I

Sports

··-

The Daily Sentinel

•
•

' ..
.
•
..

Page4

Monday, ()ctober 28, 11111

'

Yankees win 23rd World Series title
l

I

By BEN WALKER

NEW YORK (AP) - Their
• f starters stayed even with Adanta's
; : • aces and their bullpen pitched better.
They made the key plays in the
I ourfield when the Braves did not, and
._: they managed to get more timely

•
I

~

1

hitsAII that Said, did the New York
Yankees have something else on
.&amp;heir side in the World Series? Did
you believe your team was destined ·
to win, Joe Torre?
"I guess I did, but I wouldn't let
it happen because once you think it's
fate, you stop working," the manager said after Saturday night's clinching 3-2 win over Atlahta in Oame 6.
"What made it happen were people
like John Wetteland and Bernie
Williams and Cecil Fielder.
· "Everybody has a piece of it. We
;·! went through a series and every play·
,, er on our roster helped us win a
,.. game. I'm not sure how many teams
n· can say that."
Not too many teams have accom1, plished what the Yankees did, either.
They became just the third club in 92
\ . World Series to win the cham pi-'
· onship after losi'llg the first two
L . games at home.
' It was the Yankees' record. 23rd
.11
h· title an(! first' since 1978. Their vic·
tory over the defending champion
1
. . Braves produced a huge pileup of

~:-

Local anglers helped raise $800
i' ·for the 1997 Meigs County United
1 Fund campaign during this week·
end's inaugural Ohio River
··~ Sauger/Walleye Fall. Fishing Classic,
~

h

NFL standings

•
AMEIUCAN CONFERENCE
E.tem Dh-W.

ram
lit 1. I lla. a
Bufl'alo ...,..... ,....... ~ 3 0 .625 129
IDdianapolis .........s 3

New Encland ...... .5' 3
Miami ................ ..4 4,

N.Y.Jela .............. l 8
,

EA

14.5
o .ru 140 145
o .625 202 164
0 . ~ 118 I~
0 .Ill 14~ 233

fin .....~ ..... 1.... 6

l
';

Ohio SL ......... 4
Mlchi&amp;Dn St ....4
Michisan .......... J
lowa ................. J
Penn SL .......... .J
lllioois ............. .l

I 0 .150 5 2 0
2 0 .600 7 2 0
3 0 .lSO 2 5 0

Purdue .............. l

3 0 .2."i0

2 o :1so !64
~ Hou11on ............... 5 3 (] .625 1&amp;3
Bahimcft ............. J ' 0 .375 196
Jaebonwille ......... J 6 0 .333 172

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eutem Dbilian

ram
R
Wuhift1IOR ........ .'.7

Philadelphi:. ........ ,6
Dallos ................... 5
Ari!Oill ................ 3
N.Y. ·Giants .......... 3

a EA

J. I lla.

I 0 .87~ 192
2. o .no 180
J 0 .625 165
S 0 .37.111 119
$ 0 J7;'11 124

CmtooiDIOrcen Bay ............ 7 I 0.875
Minnesota ............ 5 2 0 .714
· Delroit..................4 4 0 .!.00
Olie81o................ 2 5 0 .2B6
TM'4"' Bay .......... I 1 o .m

J IS

·us

117
188
IS4

240 99
127 116

I.-

m

.

'I

21. Wa&amp;hinatoa .............. S-2

22. Miami ......................J-2

•'

23.S. Miu ..................... 7-1
24. A•bum ..................... l ·l
zj. IOWI

•

'

i

~-2

1,519
1..16)
1.4-KI
1_...
1.&gt;47
1,2 10

K6ft
79o
7:19

~

10
1
II

439
412

21

19
l.l

2S
24
22
lO

Big Tea standings

=·-··' ~ ~ rt
'

•

j

t ' •t~

~~~

..

'1••._.•
\

•. 1

~l

~r
•• •

7hiOE KIRBY·T
6-1, 227-pound 1811lor

JEREMIAH JOHNSON-CIT
5--9, 1110-pound IOphomore

BRIAN ALLEN-SEJLB
5-8, 1511 pauiid eanlor
.

~~

~!i In Division IV district volleyball action, ·.-

.·

. .

.

Day1on II), Drall-e 16

Midwestern lntertoUeglate
Ashl:antl17, N. Michia:an 16

By SCOTT WOLFE
.
Sentlnitl Correspondent
•
The Eastern Eagles defeated the
··-Eastern Eagles7 That is, Saturday in
• · the Division IV District semi-finals
· • at South Webster High School, the
:: Eas~m-Pike Eagles defeated the
• • Reedsville-Eastern Eagles in a close,
:: excitin- three-set match. Pike won
•• the fitst set 15-11, then Eastern
·• • came back to claim lhesecond15-13,.
: Z before 'bowing out in a close finale
•:. 17-15. .
. .
~:
A close call that was dead wrong ·
: • may not have cost Eastern ihe game,
, : but certainly turned the tables in
•!
,, Eastern-Pike's favor. Reedsville•' Eastern was leading 15-14onaPike
• serve, when Jessica Brannon made a
.. great save that fell in the Pike front

..'

YES!- New York relief pitcher John Wetteland joins hands with •
In unkl8ntlfled t1!111111W11 In celeb! alion of the Yankees' 3-2 win over
the Atlanta Braves In Game 6 of the World Serlee In Yankee Stl!dlum Saturday night Wetteland was named the World Sarles Most
Valuable Player. (AP)

Jl

CllSe Rc~c 44; Obc:tlin 1
Woosttt 42. Kenyon ~6 (2 OT)

Ohio Athlell&lt; Conferen&lt;e
John Carroll .18, Capital 0
Moon1 Unifln 55, Musltingu"' 17
Ohio Nonhcm 26, Mark."ll:l 14

20. A.labamaSt 3
Cittdnnali 10, Louisvillt 7
Citadel J~ . GeorJ_ia So.lthtm 20
Odawart St JS. Mortnn S1. 14
E. lllinoii .J~ . Ttt~~Te...'h 27
E. Kc:nrudy 4~. TeM.·Manin 1
E. Te~St 21 , Farman 19
f1oridol St. J I, VirJinill 24
Gnqia Te.:h 27, Cent. Aoridll20
Hampton 20, S. CIWolina St 14
Howard )8, N. Carolina A.lT J
Jacluon St. ~2. OrAmblina Sf. 0
Kc:nruclty 24, ~ill7
LSV 28. Mini11ipp1 St. ,:zo ·
Uber1y 3M, Ou.Jn1on Sosnhern 7
J,.ouiliana Tech 3,, AII.-Birminaham
MARSHALL24, Appalachian St. 10
M..,.land 2~ DuO. 19
Miuiuippi ll, ArkMial Sr. lL

Navy 47. Wlh Fornt: 18
Rondolph-M""" 31 , llamloun 24
SW LoUiNana 13. ~i1 9
South Carolina27. Vanderbllr 0
SoudaernMiu, ll. T•lanel8
Southern U. 21. Alcorn St. 14
S.. JOiqlll'~ Ind. 26;Mcwellcod So. 22
r-lO.A-IJ
T - Stl&amp;, Atllda ,_,. 14

~

-'l ~ ~

Ri~&amp;ewood 21. Mal\lern 14
Shaker Hts. 45, Normandy 12
Southinaton 20. Ashtabula St. John
14(0T)
Tul. St. John's 43, Tot Scoct/8
Tol . Stlll'l ~2. Tal. Woodward 0
Tul, W:U1e 42, Tol. lil*y IIi
Vin1011 Co. 2M, Meigs 7
Wheelinc (W.Va.) linsly ~~.Cui .
Rtady.211
Y.ou. Ursulint J I, -Warrell Kennedy

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Adanlk Dhlslon

lam

lit J. I lb. GE GA

florida. ................?
Tampa Bay ..........!'i
Philadelphia .... ;...!'i
N.Y. RIIJ1Fr1 .......4
New Jcr.ey ..........4
wn,hingrot;~ ... ~ .... J
N.Y. Jslanden ...... l

lli\OTJ

.

court to return the game-point serve
to Reedsville-Eastern. A delayed
call by the line judge on the opposing side of the court said the ball
crossed the net on the out of bounds
sid~ of the boundary stick, when
clell!'ly the ball was a liood two-feet
plus on the inbounds side of the
stick. A no doubter, period.
Instead of a game point serve for
Eastern, the game stood lied at 1515 with Eastern Pike serving. They
went on to win 17-IS' and earn a
berth in the District finals.
Eastern went up ·1-0 on a Juli
Hayman serve and Val Karr block in
the first game, then Pike's Heather
Nickel gave Pike a 2·1 edge before
Jess Brannon delivered a kill to gel
the serve back. Val Karr tied it 2-2.

801ldwin-WaiiOK.:C 44, Hiram Ul
Hth:kltk:ra 28. Ouerbtin 0

T-.~20. W.c..tiod
Troy 51. 31. J~~:ba.-tl• Sc. 21

VUI_.alO. RM::tNnriled l
Vlmllio Ted! Jol. Pi-AIIll

Mid-States AIISOCiatlon
Filldlay 20. Trinity 0
Malo~ 26. Geneva 2!1
Wal.d! m. Tri-Stnte 7
Welitminller ~~ . Tiffin 7 ,

Non-conference action
Man..:hc•tcr 51, DcfiarM.:e· l2
Mnunt St. Jusel)h 14, 81\lfflun ~
Thnmus More ~I. Ohio Wcskynn 14
Urhana I~ . Sl. X11via' 13
Winc:nberg 24. Dtnilon 0
Yuunp1own St . 24. NorthweltCI'B St

,.

- Ohio a.s. scores-

I

a

''

J~

() 3

11

6 0
6 2
3 I

10 2~
10 39
9 20
6 2~
~
Ill

'J 0 10 31
~

o

4 J

Norlhc:all( Dh·iskJfl
Hwrtrurd .............. !\ 2 0 10 24

Zanes,.ille Rosa.-ran1 22. Johnstown 0

Ru!Tulu ................ S
Mont !btl •·+ ... .. :.4
o..... ................ J
·lto5IUII ................. J
Pi":iburgh ........... 2

Hockey
'

·NHL standings

5 0

10 :lO

) 2

I0

3K

l )

• '27

4 I
8 0

7

21'1
4' 2J

17
21
JO
41
20
2M

22
IY

n .

16

lH
2~

43

'

Ct1'1lnl DivWon
W .......~.--N-L TP111 GF GA
Ualhas ................:.ll 2 0 16 J2 22
Cbkago ...............6 4 I

13 '29

27

Detroit ................. 6 4 I
St Loui11 ..............!'i 6 0
'roromo .............. .4 !I 0

13 27
10 33
K 2~
7 21

17
:12
211

PhociUA .......... ....

.3

;&lt;;

I

Fi~stone

7

Akron Oouftc:Jd 49. Akron Cen-Huw·

"Q

Akron Hoban 21, Stc:ubenwiUe Cath.

0 '

Bellaire St. John's 36. Newc:omcr·
stown 21
·
Berkllllin: lO, H1wkcn 19
' Bold""""' )6. Shcnondooh 0
Canton McKinley 41, Louslvllle
Aquinas 10
'
Cit. Collinwood 28, Cle. Rhodn 14
Clr:. S01.1th 18, Cle. EMt Tech 12
Clr. Sr. IIRMius 35. Cln. St Xavier
14
Cle. Unlvc:rsily 20. Sah1bura (Pa.}
Kloki ...... 17(0T)

.

PadRe Divi!lion
Calgary ....... ,.......7 4 I I~ 36 26
Ct1lunWu .............6 4 I n . 43 2K
Edmonton .. ;........6 ~ 0 12 37. 34
Sun Jo'sc ...............4 !'i J II l!'i 40
U.s Angcl~.-"!1 ... .' .....4 . 6 I
~ ~K
~H
Vnncuu11cr .. ,..1 ....4 ·-' ,0 .'K 24_ ~. ,l tl
Anftuu ............. 1""X 2 • 4 24 4o4

•
·•
SECOND-PLACE WINNERS - Second place
. • In the Ohio Rlwr. W1lleyWSIIuger F.U Fllhlng
: Claulc Wll - n by J - Huff of New Haven,
; :· W.VI. (right)~ Mike Brewer of Mifon, ~~VI.
•

Day. Chamin1de·J\IIienne

Chadtam, Ont 13
_

HaN, Meigs County Unltld Fund vlce-pra~ldant
SUe Malson preeentl! the two a $200 prize and
plaque. Brawwr alao - n the $100 prize and
plaque for largest tl!rget apecle1.
·

••

Send Us Qoar

:~

••
•
•

,,'

ravorite Recipe

'i

'!:j

j'

.,
.,I

\

''l

'.I

THE POMEROY DAll-Y SENTINEL
will be pubU.hilig a .

•'· '"""

I'

..

I

'.

',

' i

••

..\

'! I

HOLIDtjQ

•
•

'

rr•

••••••
••

•• '•

.•

\

\

\

•
•
•

.

.

•
'•

•

,•

TllfiD-PLACE WINNERS- Fred Oldet' of Mkf.
dllport (right) 1nd Mike Lavender (canter) •lao
of Middleport, took third place In the Ohio River
WllleyaiSIIuger Fill Fllhlng Claalc held S.tur•

day In Pomet oy; Hare, Meigs County United Fund
treasurer Tom Dooley presents the twq wHh a
pl•que and $100 prize.
.

Brinw )'OUr recipe into our offiee or till~ u eo:...
Holiday Cookbook
·
c/o 'l1le Daily Sentinel
lll CoiU1 Street, Pomeroy, 011 45169

phone # Iiiith recipe.

.

ished off the Pike Countians 15-13 in
a great comeback.
The rubber game of the match
saw both teams play a tenacious
game as a t.arr Kill gave MeigsEastern a.2·1 edge off the Caldwell
serve. A Brannon kill returned the
. serve to the local Eagles, then Karr
1slammed two sttaight kills off Holter
.sets for a 4-2 edge.
·
. Then Eastern went a litde flat, and
Pike was a little flat. At this 'point,
·whoever came to life, definitely
could have taken control. Eastern
began a string of scoring 'points one
at a time, losing a serve, then adding
another until eventually they went
five rounds without scoring a single
· point.
Meanwhile, Pike regrouped and
cut the score .to 6-5, tying it at 6-6
after a missed Eastern opportunity. A
ten minute span saw no scoring put.
on the board, until Nickel gave Pike
a 7-6 lead. An Aeiker save returned ·
the.serve to Eastern and Evans tied
the score at 7-7.
Again Eastern went through five
aiffercnl servers to put three points
on the board. The Eastern defense
did play well enough, however, to

•keep them in the game. April Roberts
fgave Pike a 10-7 edge, the Caldwell
1madc it 10-8. Eastern had a lost
Iserve, Pike scored its II th point, then
'a Brannon Kill returned the serve to
Eastern where Karr made it 11-9.
'Martie Holter tied it with IWO grw
serves, then Tabby King gave Pike a
12-11 edge. Eva~ tied It at 12-12, '
then Roberts made it 13-12 Pike.
Caldwell gave Meigs-Eastern a
14·13 lead, then Kendra Rinehart
tied ilatl4-14. Eastern had a missed
scorig opportunity off i,ts ne~t serve,
then Pike did the same. Sophomore
Juli Hayman came in to serve an ace
and give Reedsville-Eastern a 15-14
lead. Pike called time on the paten·
tial game-point serve, trying to freeze
the Eastern server. Eastern swilched
servers and went to veteran Aeiker.
but the serve went in the net.
Then came the momentum killer
and the call that 'thanged the com·
plexion of the gome. Rebecb Reed
served up an ace and sent Pike on to
the championship with i string of ·
three straight serves.
Eastern bowed out with a sectional championship and a 13-10
overall record.

(Continued from Page 4)
· United Fund campaign, according to
tournament co-chairman Tom
Hunter.
"It's great to see that local sports·
men are concerned with what is happening in the community. The .
monies generated from the tournament and the kickoff breakfast will ·
help the l'!feigs County United Fund
in reaching their 1997 campaign goal
and assisting several non-profit agen·
cies in Meigs County," said Hunter.
Anglets jn the tournament fished
the Ohio River. between the Racine
Locks and Dam 'and the confluence
of the Ohio and Kanawha Rivers at
·.Point Pleasant, W.Va .. in wet condi-.
lions Satunlay morning and after·
noon.
Claiming the top prize of $300 in
the tournament was the team of Bob
Bratton, . Middleport, and John
Zurcher, Pomeroy. Bratton and
BAM! - Raaci1VIIIa Elatl!m'l Jeulca Brannon (25) 1pl_. 1M
Zurcher captured first place with I0
ball
across the net,~ Beaver Ea~tern'• II lither Nickell (MCsauger and walleye, weighing a com.
ond
from right) •nd Tibby King (fir right) nit for It during s.turbined seven pounds, 15 ounces.
day's
Division IV dlltrlct tournament match at South Webllilr High
Zurcher also claimed biggest nonSchool,
where the ...tam Pike County crew won In thlft a--.
target ,fish honors with a six-pound,
(Photo by Scott Wolfe)
3 In ounce catfish, for which he
received $25 from Deep River
Sports briefsRetrievers and Jefrs Carry Out of Pomeroy.
Golf.
Taking second place honors was
SOTOGRANDE, Spain (AP) the team of Jesse .Huff of New
Haven, W.Va., and Mike Brewer of Zimbabwe's Mark McNulty shot a 3·
Mason, W.Va. Huff and Brewer under-par 68 and won the Volvo
claimed· $200 for their team total Masters by seven shots in the PGA
weight of si~ pounds, 14 ounces in European Tour's · season'-ending
Guannteed S._tety &amp;
sauger. The team also claimed event.
High Interest Yields.
It was McNulty's third victory
biggest target fish honors and $100
for catching a one-pound, 9.5-ounce this year and 15th in his European
'AvaUable
.career. He had a 72-hole total of 8·
sauger.
• No Loads or Fees
Third place honors and $100 in under 276, worth $238,000 from the
• Accumulate or Momhly
prize money were claimed by the · $1.39 million purse.
Income
Four players tied for second at
team of Fred Older, ~iddleport, and
•
High Safety!
Mike Lavender, Middleport. Older 283, including South African Wayne
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
and Lavender finished with a total WeS!ner- whose 67 was the day's
AII .Kinds
weight of two pounds; eight ounces best score - · Argentina's Jose
can 'ror lnfonnalion:
Cocercs (71 ), Scotland's Sam Tor·
in sauger.
.
SCOTT INSURANCE
Fourth place honors were claimed ranee (68) and England's Lee Westby Matt Ridenour. Long Bottom, and wood (71 ).
·'
614-fi98-4oll (collect)
AMI, Japan (AP) - The t,J.S.
Brian ·Beeler, Long Bottom. Ride·
3222 Swart Rd.
nour and Beeler donated their $50 in LPGA team won eight or Sunday's
Allwiy,
Ohio 45710
prize winnjng back to the 1997 18 singles matches and tied four oth·
ers. finishing with a 21 112-14 112 1 • Annuities are issued by ~~~~~:1
United Fund Campaign.
i Companies and have s1
victory over Japan in the $675,000 1 penalties for early withdrawals.
Nichirei International.

. '

••'.

CIMeUieill...:yoar at

._. .............,,.,r.

pet··-···

Flad -.•L•J• oa peta,

2ft

Day. Northridae49, C'ononon Val. IS

-··· Day. Paltenon 38, Dty. Belmont6

""'-·

F11rpon Haf1)or 28. Danbury Lake.

Carh. 12

Gi-7,8.....,..0

Hopewcii:Loudotl 8.11ffinCaivtll 6

I

:

l..llhwood )1, E. O...lood- 14
~ 69, Loroln Soooch- 8

wan

Udpmoow 21, l'y-nin&amp; Vol. lO
Loo0.21,-Clllh, ~

(

--·-

• '

lfOURTH-PLACI WINNEAS - Ridenour
t (rllllt) end lrfln ••••• boll of
. Long lottom,
faurtiii*OIIIIICI_, In the.lrtaugtl'll Ohio
.........,.,~~.~••, f'lllll"'lhhng CliNic. Melg8

IUld

Cal for CIJI1IIIIele detllll
onphdaa
ldllo . . b' JOII.

lidr 21

O~~t~wsy 31, TUICIJJWII

.

Looking for a Pet?

Deadline for aU recipes
il October; 3l~ 19"96 .
'

·

FFC results •.•

2.l

Pletue, include your name ond

Saturday'• attion

Akron 8\lc:htel 22, Akron

BRANDON WOLFE

H, 195-pound frllh!Mn

_.

clear they were a better team. Now,
it was a game of momentum and
Pike had the edge.
Meigs-Easte111 again spullered
early, despite taking a 2-1 and 5-3
edge early. Nickel, the Pike ace serv·
er, put her club on top 7·5 with four
straight serves including an ace,
prompting a Don Jackson time out.
Nickel served up three more to push
the score to 10-S and the local
Eagles apJ)eared 1(1 be on the roP.,s
in dire straits.
Sophomore Stephanie Evans then
brought the Eagles back to life with
three excellent serves that tightened
the score to 10-8. Pike's Mary New·
some made it 12-S,lhen a Brannon
ace pushed it to 12-9. Mindy Sampson made a great save to keep the
volley alive on the next Brannon
serve, but the Eagles eventually lost
the serve. Pike hit into the net, the
Michelle Caldwell lined an ace and
added another pint for a 12-lltally.
Pike took it to 13-11, then Mindy
Sampson delivered three straight for
a 14·13 Meits-Eastem lead, scoring
the 14th point on a double block by
Val Karr and Martie Holler at the net.
Pike called time, but Sampson fin·

then Tabby King put Pike up 6-2 giv·
ing the Pike Eagles
boost of
momentum that carried them to the
victory.
. Patsy Aeiker and Karr had two
key kills in bring Eastern back to a
9-7 tally, but a Nickel ace and a 4-1
P*e scoring streak pushed the score
to 13-8 in favor of the Pike Coun·
tians. A Meredith Crow spike, Jess
Brannon Kill, and Aeiker dink
brought Eastern back to 14-1'1 on
Caldwell serves, but Jessica Helton
gave Pike the game-point and the
first match . .·
The local Eagles never really got
their rythym going in the first game
of the set, playing li~e a v-8 engine
firing on only six cylinders. Had the
Eagles played to potential, it was

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Included ir&amp; the cookbook wUl be recipe• from, Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County residents, al 110 charge.
'
The recipes will be.categorised aafolltnM~
• A.ppeeaen/Beverage• • BreGd/GraU,.
• Ct.dc.•IPie• &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp;: ~egetables
· •Soup• and Sandw.i ches

North Coast Alhleti&lt; Conf.

JAMIE BAKER-CIT

H, 171!-pound frnhman
.
.
.

:::Beaver Eastern ousts Reedsville Easte,rn from tourney

COOKBOO~

Pioneer League

Bucknell 311. Holy Cross7
Cc... Connetlicut St. 49. W11$Ra" 41
Colpk 40, Lal'ayettc 9
Columbia 13, Yak 10
Danmooth )8, Comellll
Delawlft 21. J~s Madi1011 13

South

9

Other• rteth•lna ,._. •• , Vlrainia
Tech 106. SyrKuae 72. Armr 66. Easl
C~tolina 6!, Air Force 42, MtdsiJ.III St
20, Nny 13, Tex.u Te'h IJ. GeotJb
Tech 6, California 3. So&amp;lmetn C1ll

Coot

Other Ohio
college scores·

Brown 27, Penft 21

Alat~r;una A&amp;M

8

~80
~76
4~

271
2M
2S7
231

Satu.-,.·MAC
Ball St. at E. Michi,nn
Dow lin&amp; Green a1 Akron
Cent. Michigan at Kenl'
Mi:r.m\ ut Toledo
. OHIO at W. Mkhip

f'urdham 46, Georanown. D.C. 6
H:ln';ud 24. Princeton 0
Hursua 24. Conllc!,·tio.:ut 16
Mlllill 21,St. Pttcr'sl3
Miami 10, Wut Virginia7
l"h:w Htllll(JShirt 40. Matl~t~:hu~~ens 1
Rholk lllund .l8. Boston Uni". 1
Robert Moni$ 4·' · tt100moulh, N.J. b
RuiFfs 28, Tc:mpke 17
Siena 45, Fairfx:ld 7
St. John's, N.Y. 41 , Cnn1Jiu2tl
Symcuse 45, Boslon Ctdle&amp;( 17
Towwn St ~.St. Francis.·Po. 14

6

IJ
I~
16
11
14
IS
12

6&lt;1

Far West

'Duq~Jnne 4~. lorwt 14

2
.l
4

1 , 19~

190

.

"·~"
'~o~o'

Ncnl'l Carolina 42, Houtlon 14

Air Force :W, Hawaii 7
Arizona Jt Oregon St 1
Aritona St. 41, Srg nford 9
CS Nor1hridge ~2 . Sacramcnm St 17
O.:dumdu 2M. Tcx;u 24
Culorndo St, 27. San Oic(to St. 18
E. WP.Shlnglon :ll,ldiilo Sr. 17
Fresno Sl. 34, UNLV 2:\
Mnmarul48, N. Aritona ~2
Mom:ma St 24, Ponllftd St. 6
New Me,tco St 52. S. Utah 21
Southern Cal 29, Washington Sl. 24
UC OaYi~ 31, St. M'ary'1. Cal. 10
UCLA 38, Cilliromla 29
Utoh 4~ . Tulso 19
Utllh St .l~. ldnhn 211
Wnshington l). Oregon 14

East

Loa

1.037

D .(IC()

0
0
0
0
!I 0
6 · ·o
7 0
'6 0
0 K 0

Division I scores

ram
~ lla.R«&lt;I
I. Florida (59) ............... 7.() 1,61&gt;6
I

1.06.'1

1.00 5
0 .HOD ~
0 .800 ~
0 .M7 4
o :soo 4
.0 .500 4
o .JJJ 3
0 .333 2
0 .200 2

Other NCAA

cialed Prc:u college football poll, wilh
firat·placc: "oles in pil('enthesc• . currem
records u or last Saturday. lotal pointJ
based on l'i poims for • lirlt plac:c vole:
through one point for a 2Sih pl""'f: vote,
Md last wec:k'llinorl ranking;
·

1,080

Cont. . O•en~ll

This week's slote

Heft are the: Top 25 teams in the Auo-

'

~~;

~~

Rk'1! 48, Tcxas-EI P.uo 21
S:.m Hoouon S1. 30. McN~!IC St 2S
Soo1~m Mct:h. ~2. New Mexico 31
Stq&gt;hen F.Austin 43. Sand'ord 14
Tc:K.Os Ta:h l l Ttx:u Adc.M 10

lt J. I r.t. lit J. I"

Nonoeonftrmct
Altmn J4, N. Illinois 17
Anny 27, Mlami 1

AP Top 25 college poll

·

OTI

MAC
Ba!l St. 24, Cent. Michipn 11
E MidHpn51. KentiO
OHIO J8, Bowlina Green 0
Toledo 10. W. Michipn 1

:w Minnaota. 9 p.m.

Jl BriJh:un Youna ....... S-1
14. Kana;asSt................. 7·1
15 ,..... St,.................... 7·2
16. Virgillia ............. t ...... 5-2
17. Wyomina ................. s.o
18. W. VIRGINJA ......... 7-I
!9. Norre,Darne .............4-2
20. UIOh ............. :........... 7·1

11

;

Nevada 40, Nonh TetiiJ I J
Nicholls St 49, SW Texas St. 36 U

Saturday's scores

Tooil!ht's pmt

s..

I

Miss. Valley St. 23, Texas Southern

2 0

115
111
I JiiO
222

D:lllas 29. M.inmi 10
Denver 14-. Kansas C'tty 7
N.Y. Jeu J I. Arizunall
Setattlc 32. S~a~~ Oieao 13
New England 28, Buffalo 2~
Open dale: New ()ri(oaru., Oakland

2. OHIO ST. (4\ ......... 7.Q
J. Florida
(1) .... ........ 6.()
4. AriroaaSt.(l ) ............ 8-0
5. Nelnlka ................... 6-1
6. Tetulc:UC!IIC ..................5-l
1. Colofado .................... 6-l
8. NortbC'arolina ........... 6-l
9, Mk:hipn ....... ,............6-l
10. Alabama ................... 7·1
II . Nordnvettem ........... 7· 1
12. 1..SU ......................... 6-1

..'.'

17

.\
l
5
4

104 IS2
a~ 165

Green Bay 13, TMnJ~G Boy 7

Baylor49, loWa St. 21
Brq:klm Young 4t Texas Chri11ian

21

Ball Sl.. ............ 4 I
OHI0 ... :........... 4 I
MlomL. ........... :\.1 2
BOwlinaOreen.tvr J
C. Mkhigan ..... J 3
Abon .. ............. 2 4
£ Michipn .... .2 4
Kent................. l 4
W. Michigan .... O ~

Philadelphia 20, Caroliia 9
Washinston 31. lndiannpolitl6
CINCINNATI28, JDc:'ltsonville 21
N.V. Gillftls 35. ~roil7
Pituburgh 20, Atl:ansa 17 ,
Baltimore 37. Sl• Loui• J I (01)
San Frundico 10, Houlton 9

Chl~o

Southwest ·

Toledo..........,...4 0 0

Sunday's scores

t

3 4 0
2 6 0

MAC standings

WnCft'n DiwWon

f

2 !I 0
J 4 0

Michipn Sl. 111: Michipn
'Miaaem~a a OHIO ST.
Nonhwe~lem at Penn St.
Purdue at Wis.:onsin

169 I S9

S1111 Fran&lt;:isco ......6 2 0 .150 193
Ovolin;a ............... s J o .62.&gt;1i 173
Nnt Ork:aru: ........ 2 6 0 .2SO 121
St.l..ouia .............. 2 6 0 .250 136
Aol""' .................o s o .()IJ() 1o10

Midwest .
Buller .14. San Diego 3
D&gt;~yton 19, Drake 16
EvnnsYilk 41, Valparaiso ~;'!
Kans;u St. 42, Ol.!Oihoma )5
Missouri 3~. Oklahoma St. 2tl (0T)
N. iowaJJ, ~· Illinois 1
Nebmskll 63, Kansns 7
SE Mi1souri 16, Middle Tenn. 13
SW Miuouri St. 24. llliDOit S1. 13
W. lllinois ;'II. taU Poiy-SLO 10
Youngstown Sl. 24. NW LouisiMa 14

Iowa al lllinoiJ

181

San DirJ0 ............ 4 4 0 . ~ 172 I~
Seal!le ................. J s 0 .37$ 141 200

o

SMurdly

181

179 148

6 1

o .no

Thi~ week's slate

2.U

w-...D~T~o~oa

o' .500

1

W. KentUcky 27, Indian~ St 20
William &amp; Mary 21, NMhetutern 14

Sahlrday's scores

Denvcr .................7 I 0 . 87~ 22.1 134
KanusCi1y .........~ J 0 . 62~ 1St' I•U

o-.ddant~ ...............4 4

7 0 0
~ :l 0

Michigan 44, MinnesotaiO
Michigao St. 30, Wisconsin 13
Nor1hwwcm 2t Illinois 24 ·
OHIO ST. .l8,1owa 26
Penn S1. ~.Indiana 26

120
Ul

I~

CINCINNATI ......2 6 0 .2.&lt;0

0 0 1.00
I 0 .800

, Minne101a ........0 4 0 .IXKI
Wisconsin ........p 4 0 .IXKI
lndhana .............O S 0 .000

Centnl Dl¥lden

F

.•

'

Scoreboard

Football

i'

All proceeds from the tournament
'Farmers Bank and Savings Campa·
held in Pomeroy.
and
the event's Kickoff Breakfast at
The Daily Sentinel and Ohio Val· ny, Don Tate Motors, Stewart John·
ley Publishing presented this inau· sori Post #9926 Veterans of Foreign · McDonald's Restaurant of Pomeroy
gural event, with support coming Wars, Fisher Funeral Home. and benefited the 1997 Meigs County
(See RESULTS on Pqe 5).
from tournament sponsors The McDonald's of Pomeroy.

.

(,

•

Yankees on the mound following the more on a personal playing field," ro well. especially in the pivotal
final out.
Torre said "I think maybe this Game 4 when Atlanta lllew a 6-0
lead. Mark Wohlers gave up
Wilde Boggs rode around the out- humanized the game.
Leyritz's
tying. three-run homer in
field on a police boise, and the play"I think it's unfortunate for Bobers, at Torre's suggestion, took a vic- by Cox, because we seem to have the eighth inning aild Steve Avery
tory lap.
more people praying for us. The sto· walked pinch-hitter Boggs with the
·
· "A tremendous idea, it was " said ry is about more than wins and loss· bases loaded in the lOth.
Bl!ggs,.
with
a
bad
back,
was
Series MVP John Wetteland. •:When es and has a bit more human interest
among
several
players
Torre
hadon
in it."
you don't think it gets any better,
Surely, the catch by that 12-year- the bench at one time or another.
then that lap around the field, seeing
old boy in right field during Game I Paiil O'Neill, slowed by a sore hamthe Yankee fans as loud as they ever
of the AL championship series string, wound up making a saving
got."
against
Baltimore seemed to indicate catch for the last out in a 1·0 win in
Certainly a lot of those fans were
Game 5, and Darryl Strawberry also
luck was in the Yankees' comer.
rooting for Torre. '
Yet after losing the first two contributed.
He'd lost his brother, Rocco, to a
Braves pinch· hitters·, meanwhile,
heart attack this season. He'd finll- games to At!an"' at home 12·1 and
went
0-for-22 in October. putting
ly made it to the World' Series after 4-0, they needed more than just good
them in a pos1$eason record slump of
4,272 giunes as a player and manag- fortune.
0-for-24
going back to last year's
"They beat some of the best play· '
er, the longest such drought in major
World
Series
win over Cleveland.
ers in baseball," Atlanta's Ryan
league history.
Cecil
FieldeJ,
in his fir&gt;l Series.
His brother, Frank, had undergone . Klesko said. "But we can 'I believe
led
the
Yankees'
with.
nine hits in 23
a desperately needed heart transplant it. ..
at-bats.
New
York
won
despite hit·
New York matched up well with
at a New York hospital a day before
Game 6. His sister, Sister Mar· the Braves' great. starters as David ling .216,the lowest for a Series win·
guerile, is a princiJ"'I at a Catholic Cone beat Tom Olavine, Andy Pel· ner since Bahimore hit.213 against
tine decisioned John Smaltz and Philadelphia.in 1983.
grade school in nearby Queens.
Then again, the Braves had more
The Yankees were sentimental Jimmy Key downed Greg Maddux
than
the Yankees hiueis, pitchers and
favorites, no doubt. Manager Bobby over the final three games.
Cox and the Braves already had won
Wetteland became the first pitch· · fielders to contend with. There was
last year's title, and were.appearing er to earn four saves in a Series. Set· the Torre story, too. 1 .
"If! had to lose, I sure don't mind
for the fourth time in the last five . up man Mariano Rivera had a 1.59
losing
to Joe Torre," Cox said. "He's
World Series.
ERA in four appearances, Jeff Nel·
. "I think the ihing with my broth· son pitched 4 1/3 scoreless innings a class aci, a great manager and I'm
or passing away and my brother, and Graeme Lloyd retired all eight happy the way things have gone for
his family."
Frank, ~as taken the game and put it batters he faced in four games.
The Braves' bullpen did not fare

Fall Fishing Classic results announced

Meet the Tornadoes------..;........----

..

..• .••'•
.• .•

By outlasting the Braves 3·2,

'it1

"

The Deily Sentinel• Page 15

PomeroY • lllddllpof't, Ohio

Moncltly, October 28, 1tll8

•

County United Pund prftident Chlot1• Qaul p,..

...,.. . . two with. p--111d prla, which they
~ bfck to the United Fund.
·

992-2158
••
'·

'

In compliance with provlllone of Section 5721.03 of the
Revised Code of the State of Ohio, there will be publlehlld on
November 15th and November 22, 1996, In thlt newt~paper, •
delinquent land lilt contelnlng the deacrlptlon of the property
as It IPP~ tu lilt, tha name of the plt'IOI'IIn whoee
name the
· I• llltl!d, end •mount of tax11 and panaltlei
due1ncl
•
.
·
.
Eech·pai'IOfl charged with IWII property tu11 1nd panaltln
may pay the full IIIIOUnt of taxes at the Melaa County
Trulu1'81''1 Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 13, 1996, to
avoid publlcaUon.
To avoid 1ddHio1111l lntare1t c:herged on December 111, •
taxpayer 11111y antar Into 1 wtllteA iiWIIIMI'It with the County
Trealurar to pay one-fifth (111) of the dlllnquant 111111.

.

Nancy P8IUr c.mpblll

. ll~lgl County Auditor

�•

t

'

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Monday~~-;.:

•

Legion Auxiliary gives
contribution to veterans

Welfare reform and Social SecuritY \
By Ed ,_._, "

Local Bulinn:s Needs ,.,., 16m.

eg

· - Soclol-..rtty Olllce

The law also prohtbtts payment of
SSI to many noncmzens Only the
followtng noncmzens may get SSI
% Refugees asylees and noncm
zens whose deportatton has been
Withheld (sUbjCCitO 5 year ehJibth·
ty
Certatn acuve duty Anned
Forces personnel and honorably l!ts
charged veterans Thetr spouses/chtl
dren also may qualtfy
% Lawfully admttted altens who
have 40 quarters of coverage (quar
ters earned by spouse/parents may
also count)
SSA estimates that up to 185 000
chtldren and 500,000 nonctttzens
currently receiVIng SSI may lose thetr
benefits
The law requtres that Soctal Secu
nty notify all chtldren potenually
affected by ~an I, 1997 In order to
meet the requtrements of the law and
to effectively deal wtth the mcreased
workload the nottces wtll he spread
over time as follows
Infonnallonal nouces wtll he sent
to about 300,000 chtldren 10 mtd
November through mtd·Deccmber
1996
% lnfonnattOnal nottces to about

I I rrulhon non-ctuzen SSI rectptents
wtll be m111led tn February llld March
1997
Soctal Secun" ts currently devel
opmg the regulattons to tmplement
these provtstons and ts also exarmnmg gutdehnes to assure that all rectptents recetve due process protection
Regulattons wtll be out by mtd
November

you may not have rememben:d to
noufy SSA when you moved But
Soctal Secunty needs your current
address so you can recetve 8Jency
notices about your benefits And
now you re approachmg the ttme of
year when 11 s parttcularly rmportant
thai SSA has your correct address
For example 10 January you wtll be
matled a Soctal Secunty ~nefit
Statement (Form SSA I~) You
need thts form to determme whether
or not you wtll have to pay federal
mcome laX on any Soctal Secunty
benefits you recetved tn 1996
To report an address chanJC, con·
tact the Athens office or call SSA s
toll free number I 800.772 1213,
between 7 a m and 7 p m any bust
ness day The hnes lire bustest early
m the week and early m the month
so 11 s hestto call other umes

The Personal Responstbtbty and
prestdent of the Dcpanment of Ohto Wont Oppcrtumty Reconctliauon Act
at the July convenuon held m Tole (Welfare Reform) was passed by
do A get well card was stgned at the Congress and stgroed by the President
conference for Florence Richards a on August 22 1996
past disll'tct prestdent, who was hos
The law makes stgntficant
pttaltzed at that ume Lewts Manley changes to the Supplemental Secun
also sent her a card
ty Income (SSI) program I wtll brief
It was reponed by the prestdent diSCUSS the welfare reform provtSIOOS
that 300 ts the mtmmum small pop- for whtch SSA has responstbtltty to
ptes whtch can he ordered from help you understand how you may he
Benefictanes Should Report Change
Department for dtsll'tbuttOn at Memo- affected
If you rea Soc tal Secunty beneti·
nat Day
ctary and you moved recently, be sure
The Persoiial Responstbihty and
Mrs Ross served a chtcken dmner Work Opportumty Reconcthat10n
to nottfy the Socoal Secunty Admm
at the meetmg Smgmg of Amenca Act
tsll'tllton (SSA) as soon as posstble
a prayer for peace and remarks by
Fatlure to report thetr new address
Requtres that children meet more
the prestdent closed the meetms stnngent medtcal cntena to quahfy
when they move ts the most frequent
Margaret Bowles wtll host the next for SSI and estabhshes spectfic tnter·
reason benetictanes do not recetve
meeung
thetr Soctal Secunty checks
vals for revtewmg thetr conhnumg
If your beneftts are dtrectly
ehgtbthty
depostted
mto your bank account
% Chtldren who do not meet the
new crnena wtlllose benefits July I
I997 or the month after thetr case ts
revtewed
whtchever IS later
Chad Lewts, MIT Untverstty, on a crUise to the Cataltna Islands
%
Revtews
wtll take place every
Cambridge Mass vtstted hts grand
Dons and Lloyd Dtlbnger Kathy
parents, Marguente and Delbert Kyle and Ntcole Essman The Plams, three years for children under 18 and
• Steans enroute to Caltfornta where vtstted the Amtsh Country recently at 12 months for mfants who recetved
he wtll attend college
They enJoyed a buggy nde stghtsee SSI because thetr btrth wetght was
low
Nma Robtnson accompamed her mg and shoppmg
son and daughter 10 law, Bob and
Wtlbur Pulhns Manetta Rtchard
Janet Robmson, Belpre, to Leach and a friend Myrl, Mmeral
Greenville, S C where they vtsned Wells Rila Carsey Athens were
nmnu, Greg and Mtrassa crum
recent vtsttors of Mattte Pulbns
Martha, Joe and Wtll Poole Nel
Imogene and Lester Keaton
toe Parker and Suzanne Gretf attend attended the Walnut Fesuval at
ed Southeast Chapter of Nauonal Spencer W Va
Zachary Scott Barton son of Scott
Federation of the Bhnd gospel con
Those anendmg Tuppers Pl111ns St Barton Pomeroy, celebrated hts
PROFESSIONAL* EXPERIENCED * EDUCA~D
cort at Zion Baptost Church near Paul UMC afternoon homecommg fourth btrthday recently wtth a cook
Shade
program were Thelma Henderson out and party at the home of his
Sharon Gollogly Albany, Robert JBrenda and Gary Johnson Sarah grandparents Bob and Pany Barton
Lee Henderson. Alfred and Ltsa Caldwell Nma Rob10son and Nelhe
A Dmosour themed cake, tce
* RESPECT for the concerns of all Meigs
Ritchoe, Long Bottom flew tq Calt 1 Parker
cream and chtps were served to
County Citizens
forma recently and from there went
those at the party
•
Presenhng gtfts to Zachary were
eOOPERATION
with
arewlice
hts great grandpllfCnts Edtth Barton
and Glen and Madehne McClung
departments, fire departments, and EMS
Helen Ftelds Betty Maynard, Jesse
personnel
and Courtney Haggy Betty Reed,
Crystal Hood Tyson Lee Judy Stew
* INCREASED PATROLS on county and
art Joey ana Peggy Barton, Brenda
Phahn Tara Wyatt Angte Bass, Mta
township roads
Scott Rose gave a program on Chnsunas dmner was set for 6 p m Jordan Dylan Bass Renee and Mor~wldmg Chrisuan character m chtl
on Dec 12 using the theme Chrtst gan Hardy Btll Neutthng. and Tory
ONGOING TRAINING to msure that all
dren at the rec:ent meebng of TEACH mas Around the World Famdtes wtll Swanz
(1\'ainmg Educallon and Chnsl!an he asked to talke dtshes from dtffer
Shenff's Office personnel are current and upHome) attended by 30 persons ent countnes and gtve a short pre
to-date
1ncluding two new famtltes
sentauon on that country
Rose talked about bvmg a Godly
There wtll be a home school
* CONFIDENTIALITY of ongoing
Jonathan Hayman, son of James
life for children to see noung lhat moms retreat m January at whtch
they observe the presence of love ume there wtll he a prruse and wor and Mehnda Hayman Long Bottom,
investigations to protect the pp~acy of crime
peao:eiWness, JOy, kindness f111!hful shtp servtce a sharmg ltme and recently observed hts first borthday
r I
victims and their fanulies
wtth a party
ness, honesty, mtesnty, and other crafts
things m the daily llves of thetr par·
A report was gtven on the Oct II
AWmnoelhe Pooh theme was car·
*A WORKING RELATIONSHIP WITH
e~ts
- suppon group and the field ll'tp to the ned out and cake, tee cream chops
He talked about the acllvtltes that Syracuse Ftre Department Jeff and beverages were served
THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS to
teach Godly character mcludtng Bable a home schoohng father and
Attending hestdes hJS parents were
establish a budget that msures the
Btble reading. memonzauon or scnp- fireman gave a presentauon on fire hts older brother Jostah, maternal
ture and prayer and concluded hts safety and conducted a tour of the tire grandparents, Frank and Shtrley
community of an effective and professional
prosram wtth tools used m teachmg stabon The chtldren were all gtven Wells Lawrence and Betty Foreman
character
fire hats and pencils
Howte Ehzabeth and Sarah
Shenff's Office
Plans were announced for the
Informauon on the program may Lawrence Jeny Glenda Amber and
Nov 14 meeting at the Racme be obtained from Bnan and Kim Stephante St Cl111r
*ACTIVELY PURSUE CONSTRUCTION
J&lt;lazarene Church when DIXle Wolfe Hupp at 949 3119
Sendmg gtfts were BtU Mehssa.
OF A MODERN JAIL FACILITY which
wtll speak on teach10g preschool A
Joshua, and Alexander Moms Todd
Dtana Andrew and Brady Btssell
houses both male and famale prisoners, as
Tammy Jeff Christopher and Katlyn
well as handtcapped pnsoners
Cowdery, Marty Anthony and Bnt
JONATHAN HAYMAN
tany Tolhver Mtke and Karen Fore
man and family, and Kelly Satter
Jean Hayman Merritt * AGGRESSIVE ENFORCEMENT of
1be Commumty Calendar rs pub- erans Servtce CommtsstOner 7 30
field and hts paternal grandparents
alcohol sales to minors
bshed as a free servtce to non profit p m Monday at the Veterans Servtcc
groups wtshing to announce meeting Office Mulbeny Avenue Pomeroy
Radio Days
manufactunng Atwater Kent radto
CONTINUED &amp; EXPANDED
and spectal events The calendar rs
BURLINGTON
Vt
(AP)-The
recetvers
whtch
became
wtdely
popnot destgned to promote sales or fund
RUTIAND
Rutland Garden
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS, such as
nusers of any type Items are pnnted Club Monday, at I p m at the home name of Amencan manufacturer ular m Amencan homes before the
Atwaler
Kent
born
here
m
1873
wtll
advent
of
televtston
as space permtts and cannot be guar of Joy Combs Dexter Road
DARE, to protect the lives and safety of our
forever be hoked to radto sets used 10
JQteed to run a specttic number of Langsville
Kent accumulated a large fortune
mtlhons of Amencan homes
chtldren.
reared m 1936 and devoted hts hfe to
Kent was educated at the Worces
RACINE
Southern Local
phtlanlhroptc mterests until hts death
Paid lor by the Canan for Sheriff Commillee, Sarah Biggs Treasurer:
POMEROY •• Metgs County Vet School Board regular meetmg Mon ter, Mass Polytechmc Institute In m Cahfornta tn 1949
34048 BeH Run Rd Pome~ Oh 45789 ,
1902 he set up a factory 10 Phtladel
day 7 p m m the htgh school cafe
phta and began making telephones
ten a
voltmeters and automobtle equtp
-':""":"':::---......;__- 1-~~--....:'
Public Notice
ment
Public
llloUce
TUESDAY
Public Notice
PUblic NotiCe
The II th annual arts and crafts
Duong World War I he manufac
POKI'LAND
Lebanon
Town
Notlol
ot.,_lon
on
Tu
NOtice ol Election on Tox
show wtll he held at the Semor Cttl
Noll.,. ol Election on Tox
-.:. ol Election on Tax &gt;
tured gun stghts and other mthlaryl Levy In Ex- o1 1M Ten
Levy In E • - ollhl Till
Levy In E - ollhl Ten
Levy In Ex- olllle Ten ;
zens Center Pomeroy Fnday from shtp Trustees 7 p m Tuesday at the equtpment Then tn I923 he started
Mill Llmltotlon
townshtp butldmg
Mill Umltatlon
•
MHI Llmltellon
1111 L.lmltellon
lOam to6pm
Rev- Code, Soctlolll
RevtHd ~. Section•
Revlaecl ~. Sectlone
lleviMd Code, Sectlone
Several area crafts persons wtll he
3501 11(0). 570519, 5705.25 350111(0), 57111111, 57011.25 380t 11(0), 570511, 570ii.2S )
350111(0~ 570518,5705.25
NOTICE II hereby given
attendmg wtth a wtde vartety of
NOTICE le hereby given
NOTICE II hereby given
NOnCE II hereby given ;
FINAL
NOTIFICATION
OF
NO
PRACTICLE
that
In pureuance of a thet In pu11uance of 1 that In pureuenae of a
that
In
pureuence
of
1
handmade crafts baked goods and
Raaolutlon ol the Board of Re1olu!lon of !he Boord of Reoolu11on of the VIllage RHOiutlon ol tile - d of l
ALTERNATIVE TO WETLAND IMPACT
candy avltllable for hohday gtfts and
Townehlp
Truetaae of the Townahlp Tru1t•a ol the Council, ol the VIllage of Townehlr. Trua- of the ~
U S Deparli'i'ient of Agncuhure/Rural Development (USDAIRD)
decorattons
Townehlp ol Sutton, Rllclne, Townehlp of Cheater, Reolne, Recine, Ohio Towneh p of Rutland, ,
has recetved an application for ftnanctal assistance from Tuppers
Lunch wtll be avatlable from
Ohio puHd on the 3rd dlty ChHter, Ohio pat-ad on peaaed on the 5th dlty o1 Rutland, Ohio paaaed on •
Platns
Regronal
Sewer
District
(TPRSD)
TPRSD
has
proposed
to
of June, 1998, there will be the 7th dlty of Aug.ilt, 111116, Auguat, 1991, there will be the 3rd day ol July, 18118, ,
12 30 to 4 30 p II) The craft show ts
eubmlnld
to 1 vota of the there wUI be aubmltted to a IUbmltlecl to 1 vote of the tlteno wHI be aullmltleclto 1 •
use !he asststance to construct a sanitary sewer system for the
open to the pubhc wtth no admtsston
people of eikl eubdlvlelon voto ol the people of aald - ' ' of Hid 1ubdhllaton vote ol the p1opte ol eald
umncorporated community of Tuppers P.latns
charge Door pnzes wtll be .awarded
II a Oenerel ~loctlon to be aubdlvlelon at a Oenerol II 1 OenerlPl Election to be eubdlvlelon at a O~nel'lll ~
USDA/AD has assessed the potential envlronrneotallmpects of
held In the Township of Election no be hold In lite held In the Vlll1ga of Eleotlon to be held In lhe ,
Ohio, 11 the retular TowMhlp of Ch•ter, Ohio, AlCina, Oltlo, 11 1M I'II8Uiar Townehlp o1 Rlltlancl, Oltlo, •
Sutton,
the project and detemuned the project Will dtrectly tmpact 6 acre
Water Hitchhiker
pl-.
of
volin, therein, on at Jhe reguler plac11 of p i - ol voting thenlln, on at the reguler pleNa of of welland Stx hundred feet of 8"_grqvily sawer hne will cross a
BARBUDA Leeward Islands
the
&amp;!h
day
o Novamber, voting therein, on lhf 5th the Sth dlly of November, voting lllereln, on 1M 1111 N
wetland
(AP) _ The trumpettish found m
199llhl queetton of levying ct., ol Novamlter, 11118 tlie 11118 1M qunllon ofllvf!olfl 4ay of No~amlter, till 1M "
waters of lhe West lndtes, ts also
This wetland 1mpact wlll,be m~1gated by retum1ng the line route
1 . . . In excne of the ten q-lon of levying I Ill, In
tax, In • - o1 the ten qo '""" of
In
uc111 of the ton mill 1mill
called the flutemouth The fish have
lllnltetlon, tor the exoe11 of , llle. •n mill
to tiS ong1nal contour us1ng excavated topsotl for bacldtllrng the top mill llmltellon, lor the llml"""n,
lor the be~;~ellt of benefit ot AIClne VIllage lor limitation, flir lilt tlitn.llt ot
benefit of Button Townehlp
slender, elongated bodtes wuh tubeSIX Inches of the trench In addHion no granular matenal Will be
lor the purpoee of Choeter Townehlp lor the lhe purpo11 of ourrent Rutllnf r..,nehlp for lhe ~
hke mouths
used to backfill the trench
""'lntalnlng end operetlng purpoae of p11ven!lon, II,.._ hid tu belrlfl • plllpHe of mallltelnlngiSnd
lbetr bodtes can reach a length of
and ~nt of llr ,._, oton lldallng tu ol op•a!llll aernolltlaa. hid
Any written comments regarding the above should be provided
cltMteriH. llald tex being • c-.1
pollution S.kl tu being 1111 2 mille 11 a rete not tu llelng 1 , . _ , of an6 feet and are covered wtth small
r_,.el
olen
oxllllngtu
o1
within fifteen days of th1s publiollt10n to
0 4 mill 11 1 rata not -llloMIIIIII ott miN II a IIOIICIIng 2 (two) mlHI for IXIaetng tu of G.l mill II I
scales A row of spmes on the back
Ltnda K Page, Stale Dlrectpr
ex-lng
0 4 mille for rill not exoeedlng 1 (one) eiCh one doller of rate not ·•l'•oedlng 0 3
can be nused tn self-defense
USDA/Rural Oeveleipment
each one doller of mille for Moll one clolllr of VIIUIIIIon, wtilch IIIID .. lllllo mMia for Noh dol'- of n
1be reddtsh brown trUmpettish
vllu8tlon, wlllch - l o Vlluatlon, wltloh -nna to twenty Olntl (SO 20) for ollllMIIon, wlllch 1111 unta to I'
Federal B!JIIdlng, Room 507
ten Cltlte (tO 10) lor - h
sometrmes "httchhtke' on the backs
lour centa (10 04) lor - h 0111 hlllldrecl dollrw "' three (tf).OI) for - h "
200 North High Street
one hundred dollare ot one hundred do11111 of Yllulllton, fqr liN (I) ,.... ' " ' hundred doltaro of "'
of IIIler fish
vllllllllon,
for
live
(I)
YMI8
Columbus, Ohio 43215-2477
The Polla for .. ld valuation, for tMt (I) ,.,._ vaiUilllon, lor n.. (I) ,..,..
Tho Polle for eald Eleotlon wl~ opan at • •
USDAIRD will make to further decisions regarding this proje¢1
The Polle for eeld
The Polle for 1 . . ld "'
Flirt..._ Jobs
Election will open 11 e 10 Elaoll011 wiU open ot I ID o'olook am. aiMII reftNSin llnllon Wilt 1tp111 ot t:ID :f
dunng
tins
fifteen
day
pel1od
ftequests
to
receive
a
copy
of,
or
to
o clock • m ud remain
MAHWAH,NJ (AP)-Shiftsm
o clock a m ''"' remain Ofllll untii7:JO o'otook p m. opan 1111111 7:30 o'Oioolt p.n1. o'oloel! ...m. and - I n ,
review
the
USDA/AD
envtronmental
assessment
upon
which
th1s
oflPIId .,.
.... 1111111 7:aD .......... P.lll. '
Amenca's economy ai\d employ·
open unlll 7 30 o'alooll p.m.
ollPIId cr-y
determination Is based shoUld be directed to
ollllkl cr-y
lyonlirelllllloMtol
'l
ment 11 ruauon are creallng many
By onlir of lilt . _ of
l!leoiiOPII, oflilllgl ~
l
y
of lilt a-d llf
ay on1er o1111e loilnl or Elootlont,
Jehn
B
Ra1,10h,
ofMalgl Cou 11y,
(llrt ume Jobs across the nallon
Ellollo.., oiMIIII Counlyo
01110. -.......; "' ...... c.unt,. ••
Rural Development Specialist
Ohio
AccOOfing to busineu experts, our
Henry L ftuntlr. ~A&amp;a,
01110. , ..
Oltlo.
HMry
L.
HuiMr,
Cltalrlnen,
USDA/Rural
Development
• D.lnlllll,llltill
~ ......_..
........... -.....
wort forte of 12S mtlbon
Hlnty L.
CllltlnnM,
wu:u" •-J
IIIII D Bmllll, lllttJIIor
346 M~m Drive
llltte D lmlth, ' * Pllldllpl.11,tD
.......
lllt nat
mclndea more than 20 mtlhon
o.tedlapt. , .. , ...
o.ted
8epl.
18,
1111
Marietta,
OhiQ
45750
1435
plll·lllllef1, nwnly tn sales and ser·
(10)8,11,22,11 4TC
(10)8,1~:·~..
(10) 8, 15, 22, 2t 4TC
(10) 8, 11, 22, 21 4TC
I

A contnbutlon was made .for the
Olillicolhe Vclcnns Hospual ChriS!
mullld bir1hday party when Lewts
Maley Untt263, Amencan LeJton,
met It the home of Edith Ross Pomt
PI 1 nt , Reenlly
Lorrene GoJ&amp;tnS prestdent
opeaed the meenng tn ntuahsttc
fclrm 1be newsleuer from Etghth
llisa:lct prestdent, Nancy Brown
was read slattng that great great
JflllddauJhters are now ehJible to
JOIR the Amencan Leg10n Auxlltary
GogJins delegate to the fall con
fcrence held at Juncbon Ctty, Oct 10
gave a repcrt on that sesston She not
ed that Catte Curl of Umt 222
Croolcsvtlle, was elected second vtce

lr"&gt;

Alfred News notes

..... ctork Sond ....,.. .. 30J
:l&lt;d St Pi. 1'111- WI: 25550

Water 8usln••• For Salt 2
Trucks Pumps Evaryrh1ng You
Nt*Ct to Gtt Starred ! 814 256
11n Alw8P.M

Personnel Temparary Services
will bl ln Pt PleHint Tutaday
Oct 2tlh. To accept lppllcadona
for Qtntral labor warahauae
gtntrlf Dtftce secrttarial etc
Please call 1 800 550 1718 lor
an appom.,nent EOE

Elect

9t{~ *

AIFIIIMiateiCMiMIQ~

lo- ,_. --lo
-on

lhlo - I t MjtctiO
lho F-1 Fill&lt; Hooolng Ad
of lllel WIIICh- lllegll
"any prefofa1co.

'

ODio&lt; tolglon
01 lll.tionll

It)( famltiiii1Mul

Canan

Observes birthday

HARTS MASON~RV
Block
brick &amp; atane WOtk :.:» YHrt e~e
perlence reasonable ra tes 30•
BOS-3581 aher 8:00pm no fOb to
lmatl or ID BKl WV.021208

Ol1gln or any
make any IUCh PI"""'*
.,....uon ot dlac:tii1Wiltion •

1013 Sctw.rtz 14x70 With e.,_,
14•80 Tra1ler Electnc W11h Air 2
do 3 8edfooms 2 Baths Nice Bedrooms W &amp; 0 5 Wiles Out
Kill:!lon. CA. H•t l'un1p Anc1 Alol $300 614 256-1 ....
•
Morel 814 245--5*
2 I 3 Bedroom Tra1l1r 11• .ue
1082 Ux52" mobile home new 0722 8J4--77U
carP~t. cal 114-742 3114
2 Be&lt;lroom Furmshtd Tfeiltt
111117 14 Wi&lt;le- 3 bodn&gt;om, 1 Hl28 112 Chtllnul Galli polis
battt $7e8!d0wn 1133/mo with S22511A~ $150 ()opo•M 814-4A8epprov~ crM11 Call 1 eoo 80t
3870
8777
2 bedroom mob•l• home '"
1007 18~~:80 3 btCiraom 2 Dalh Racine no ptta 114-8112 5858.
$1 325fdown SUI1tmo frH err
2 BtclroOm Tra•ter Actchton Pike
wilh IPPfO'I&amp;d crtcht 1 800 ID1
S220JMO lneiUdlt Wettr $100
8777
Oopi&gt;lil. 814-44G-3437
1007 Doublewide 3 bedroom 2
beth t 1 4tsldown 121 Otmo free 3 Bedroom 1~x70 Galhpohs
Ferry $250tmo + utflmts must
11r With lpprovld cr.t t 1 800
hiYI reftrencea. 30~ &amp;15-4088
•1-em

I

~ P'c LIV'"t RDDm Surte Wood
With CUihlon1 Uko Now S235 00
614 258 1332

Would You L1k1 To Get Grtat
Tasting Water Out Of Vour Ex111
Wa1er $upply? RtmO"N Lead
Chtonnt 4rw::l Odor For o.i~ 113
St Per Gtllon Don 1 Otlay Ca I

•no

Todlyl814 245-5634

520

Warm Warrung 50 000 BTU l P
Gas Healef Used 1 Winter $:J50
614 388 8226 Asl&lt; Fo&lt; Glody1
Warm Mornmg Stove Nstural
20 000 Hourlr BTU
Input 1 500 M n mum BTU Input
$75 61.11 .1146 4705

a.. Heater

Wh te 8 shding patro door nw•
been our of box $150 ft t 4 Q•D

:!E,.

Stacks $2DO
75 000 BTU W lh
5 Rooms Of Duct Work $200
Tra ler Furna ce t100 Glass
Sttower Door' 525 6 ' 4 256

l m led Olftr , a~7 doubliW de

'Two 2 Bedrooms Stove Refrlg
era tor Wiler Trash Furn11htCI
Near N G H S 525D • Dtpos t
61 &lt;1 388 9686

wv 304 755 S8115

~ ~ro

Two bedroom mob le hOme out

MUST SELL 1981 Ux70 wr1h
hreplace Need 10 sell fast Ca U

Regina at tl1'14 385-2~34

Netd 10 sell •mmed•ately Nrce
1985 two bath 1••10 Calf M•k9 et
814 385-9621
New 1••80 Onlr make 2' pay
men1s &amp; move n no payment al
ter 4 years frM s&amp;l up &amp; delivery

aide of Pomeroy 614 1192 50311

Apartments
for Rent

440

&amp; 2 Btdroom Apls l ow rtnl
from $180 to 5300 somt Ultllttes
ncluded 111 Street area Pleas
am Valley Realty 30• 87S..100
1

and 2 De&amp;oom aparrmtnJI fur
and unlurn•sl'led aec:unty
depoan requ1ted no pe11 814
1

msi'IIHI

992 2218

no

apartment Spr
5190 per month
pets csll afler

House

1722

Bur or sell R ve ne Ant1ques
1 2.11 E Matn Street a.n At 2•
Pomero~ Hours M T W 10 00
a m 10 8:00 p m Sullday t 00 to
BOD p m 814 99 2 2528 Russ
Moore DWner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

550

Building
Supplies

Btock br ck sewer p pes w10d
owa lintels eiC Claude W nters
~ o Grande OH Call 614 245
5t21

560

Pets for sale

2 la{ge Appte Bu tlt Kellle&amp; Ex
cetlent Shape 1 large Corn
SheRto 614 388-96&lt;0

A Groom Shop P'et Groom ng
Ftalut ng Hydro Ball\ Don
She&amp;ll 373 Georges Creek Rd
614 046-0231

21 cubic foo1 2 year old Tappan
freezer upnghl I ost free 18 cu
b c fool May tag tlr gerato r f ost
free Ike new 614 985 3521

AKC Reglltered Btagte Pups 8
Weeks Wormed Shots 160 00
Each Steve Slapleton Work 614
446 •112 Homes1• 256 16t9

6 ai hockey table 6 .pool !able
1375 lor both good cond 11on
4314 247 2851 even nos

AKC Reguuered Male Cocker
Span1els Bott'l Adults 1 Black &amp;
Wh1111 1 Bull &amp; Wh11e Wllh
Champ1on Btoolllll ne 614 379

2728
AKC

flotlllerodY- Lab

pu,.. ahot1 wanned de..cJIWI removed htelth certlfl
cit• 814 141-2411 after 4pm
orlai!Vemn~~ge

*

New Holland 88 Square 9•1er

Call

2457

w..hnd•

Only, 814 742

Tri Axil Doztr Or Backhoe Tra 1
er 11f fl Deck Fold Down
Ramr;~1 22 ODO GVW P•ndle
H tch For Sale Or Treat 61.11

255-7

620 Wanted to Buy
Stlndtn$ 1 mber pulp wood or
land With limber call ...,,n,nga al
1t1 epm et4-379 2009

Livestock

B lly Ptgmy Goat 3 Years Old
Black $811 814 387 0206

Broke Pony For Sate Want To
Rent Pa11ure To Turn Our
Hor181i 814 2•5 Q88(l
Registered Angus Buill_ 3W3 AI
Bull e Monlhs Bull 7 Month
(Grendson 01 G•nger H1ll Ouste
89) A(lgu• Heller e Uonths 8t4
31111-97118

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Allalla Hsy RoUa Slorage and de
ava I able Morgan Farm

h~ery

3041137 201~

1

'

--tSNDAY

Show scheduled

'"""-.a ..

J

·-1

Hu-.

YJCe.ioW

'

•

'

\

1-

1983 Chevy Sleps•d• 6cy l
31))(1 30 000 "''"'
Hl89 S 10 4Cyl Slpd IC p s
am lm caneue 52 500ea 30-4

875-15930
1988 Jeep Co mane: he&amp; P ckup
Truck 4 WO Good Shape
Hutcttman Woodburner 1251)
61&lt;11 245 ~3
1990 N1nan 1 uck Stanaata
AMtFM Cu seue !it 000 M Its
One Owner S5 .11~5 614 :?4 5
9.1113
1092 Ford F t50 5 SPM~ Under
35K AMtFM Catstllt Excellent
Conciii!On 614 24S.9tN
1993 Wh te Ranger SP'LASH 4
t uu au o R r casseue 34 OOD
miles $9 600 304 875-1602

1995 Fo d F 150 Xt 2~ 000
m les A C dr vers 11 r oag I'll
ma•nder lac1ory warrantr ull
614 992 6422
Fiberglass Topper For 88 Ana
Up Chevy P eli! Up long Bed
$250 614-U6 6565 Aftt&lt; 6 ~M

For sale 1971 Ford t 10n lrud\. wl
ul•hly bed lire damAf8d •ngtne
1500 30+113 5305 aha&lt; 5pm

79 Dodge Van 318 automatic
runa good saoo 080 61• 949

71 o Autoe for Sale

,981 Ford 4 wnetl Drive 70 aoo
Mil&amp;&amp;$2500 614 37112742
1987 Ford Bronco 4 whtet dr ve
au1o 1ran1 complete engine re
bu td Iron! su•penslon rebutll
new pa nr new wheels &amp; 11res

1000 s of cars ttucks boa ts
RV s and more l All government
UtiZtd and surplus 11ems sold a1
wholesale pr ces Ser•ous nqu
nes only 1 aoo •os 8616 ell!

2108

1957 Cnevr Selalf 2 Doors Hard
top 1~880 Stale Route 554 8 d
'"II Ottio 45814 350 Motor Au
tomatic 19•8 Chevrolll Fleet! ne

IXC COnd

IS 800

30~ 8K3174

1988 Chevy Aslro Cargo Van V
6 automa1ic 11r 84 000 m11es

excellenl cond ton .$4 900 OBO
304-675-5404

1990 Chevrolet 31• Ton Full Size
Pick Up' WO 61&lt; ... 3438

1Di0 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 Mdes $4 000 080 Can
8e Seen AI Gall pols Oa ly Tr b
unt 825 Th rd Aven~o~e Galt pofis
t9U Cnevy 2500 ~u

bla ck

350
Sspd
8800
GVW
24 ooom S17 ooo 304 675
1742

740
1091 Harlty Oav son Sporrat¥
.,.as
A Fatbob Tank W dt Gl d
Fron1 End Forwafd Controls Et

Furn ihed 2 Bedroom Apar1men1
Acron From Park AC No Pe11

S7000 814 2511-8270

814 446..0517
Couch
;~~~~O~e!po~e~•I~S3~5~0:1M~o~~
8809

For Rent Now accept ng apphca
11ons all s ze riomes acctplld
Countr)l Lane Mobile Home Park
Gat !pOliS Ferry 304 675 St121
New O~elopmenl R verbenel Es
tiles seen c lois unde g ound
ut I11es 2 m les from Ravenswood
3011 213-9773 Ot 304 273-3052

Beaullful v•ew 3 91 ac rea 2 1rs
Old Albr 2 112 balhs large k tch
en 304 e 75 3929 R•dgt~ood
Estates

Chriety • Famllr

WANTED Statr Development
and infection cantrof nurse for
138 bed long 1erm care fac•f tr
Appllnntl
moer ponen
bfc:l'lelort dtQfH or be aerrtf•ed
a1 gerontoloe cal nurse Plnse
rtspond by t0t28198 10 Donna
Northup AN DON L1k1n Hospt

111 304 815 0160 £&lt;1 126 Mon

Fr 8 ooa~:rpm lakm rs an
EEQ/AAE

Living

In AulllfHI a 4 bedroom house
rtctnlly renova1&amp;d CIA new car
port doors new Sid no ot.ntlu•ld
ng $28.000 080 61.4 992 4514

Exc jocat on 809 30th St
3bedroom central a~r clean Scar
vanogo 155000 30•-175-7791

180 wanted To Do

For sale pr rent Two bed room
hOme ntc:IIOI 614-992 nJ11

Any odd jobs Plinting guners
clun.d shrub tnmm1ng nome
weatheriZitfon luves raked
cOI'I'IptMe a.wn cafe etc 304 875-

log Home 3 4 bedroom 2 balhs
neat purro 2 ca• garage 3 1 a;
es 3 1 2 m es 1 om 1own 304
675-e88g

7112

New 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths 2x6
Georges Portable Sawmill don 1 Walls Tnermopane Wmdows
lw.ul ,our togs lO the m II JUII call Oak Cab ntts Heal Pump On
304 875-1157
large Corner lol Meallowh Us
Subd v 11on Call French Cily
JIM Contrtctii''D AoolinQ, S ding Homes 111c 6t4 11-48 Q340 30-4
&amp; RamcltUI ng f1~.....eeoo~~
675-3313

Prolelli(J(lal Tree Servrce Stump
RemO\Itl Frte Est mates I In
aurance 8tctwen on o 61 ~ 388
9848 114 3177010

Parcels on Raybu r n Ad Water
paved road reasonable restr i't
1ons 304 675 5253 (no s ngte
wide tnquwes please)

360

Real Estate
Wanted

10 To 2Q Acres Level To Rot .ng
land W11h n 10M lei Of Gall po
lis SOme Paslure R~u red Pond
Des rable W II Pay To Survey
Spin WOu d Cons der Land Con

tract Cal! 61,. 846 8328 AI er 5
P.M 0. Weekeoos

N1ce larg&amp; -4 bectrOOI'fl two balh
new roof s nglt car garage w th
J.pft above lor 11orage Nye Ave
nue Pomeroy Oh o Prrced n
530s 304 422 8941 or after 6pm
247 21u2

e••

Will Do BabriiDng Monday Ttuu
F&lt;ldoy I AM To 6 ~M In Mr
Homt In B•dwell Aru Call 114 Palm Hartlou• Sec! onal 3br
441.oeo2Ailor5P.M
2Dath tun room Wlht't pulflp
c
.. b o - 30+773 5303
Will Do Homo Ollloe Fall Or Hoi•
dlrCieo •10. ;104-t~
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY
WITH HOUI£ 727 FIRST AVE
NUE GALLIPOLIS $8t 500
114-4&lt;18 7112

... 31145

110n

Cl&amp;an small country cabm in
btautJh,d qu111 seltlng will rent
momhly no rn11de pels 61• U8
724-4
Chrl.ty • Funllr Llvlnt
In Rutland: • 4 bedroom house
rec:enlly renovated CIA, new c.r
pet doors. new tidr.g. outbi.Jifd.
S-400 ptua deposit pets &amp;
children are welcome twa

•no.

Grt.c.ou1 I v ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apa{lments at VI lag&amp; Manor and
R vers de Apartments n M ddle
port From S232 1355 Call 6 t 4
992 5084 Equal Hous ng Oppor

1981 Oldsmobile Delta Oiest
exira angne clean
car cold a1r dnve home S350
61~ 949 2877

new batter es

In Gal! polls Elfecl 1175 1 Bed
room $255 2 Bedrooms 1260
61.4 388-1108

1985 A.ud SOOOS Clean Car
Needs Mo1or Work 5 Cyl nder

A&lt;oto $750 614&lt;48-1795

N ce 2 Bedroom Furn shed
Apar 1men1 Galhpohl laundry
Room An No Pets S3651Mo
Plus Oef)d's 1 814 ~46 2800

btl WHWr or rron&amp;Ny rates
modem &amp; roach ha call e1•
992 4Sto~~
1pm

earn-,

For Rent
Tra er 2 8edfooms SOuthwt11..-n
SchOolS

-

Hovst for Rent Btdwell Schoolt
81• 37D 2540
Qatt pohl Afti House For Rent
Rl'f'tt Front ProPJ'rty Reference
And Deposit It~ eeD ~102 Or
814-3303

•

11ave and relriQINI10r

turnlahad •lherl drytt hookup

... 814 01268811 , . _ 530
1:00pm

Two bedroom home in Pomltfor
bt' rent Wllh opdon to buy on oon
no ln11de pall dtPQttl re

114-72-.
flDule IICWe and

.. ,..... -

814

hell pump $8 500 304

1988 Ford Fest va Good Cond1
ton $1 200 Ftrm $14 388 9780
Ahe&lt; 4 ~M

5 m lar to thote
hangrng on Pomeroy park ng met
Ofll 61• 742 1306

Pa n1ed slates

R ploy WV 304 372 3933
BOO 273-9329

790

o• 1

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

eu

245

AC Furnace E~ecelltnl COndition
13 200 614 381-8m

Queen S ze Bo• Spr ngs &amp; Mar
tress Trpe Waterbed W rh Heat
er Excellent Condll on• 1300
614...46-3635

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

61 o Farm Equipment
1996 GT•2 A&amp;V Bush Hog •
Months O ldl New Cond•t on
St 100 814--446 8015

Home '

810

!111PIOYenMii'lts

BAiiMMf'. .

1

1

WATERPROOFING

Uncondiuonaf I lei me guarantee
lo.ocat rtflrences f~o~rr·ll,hld Ell
tabl shed 197S Call {61-41 4-46
0870 Or 1 800 2870578 Roger s
WIIO&lt;P&lt;Oolm~

Appl ance Pans And Sarv ce All

1989 lsuza I Mark 18 Valve AS
Wrll'l lotus Handling Package
71 000 Ules HAS Rear W1n.g &amp;
Ground Etlocts Patkage Sporl
Wheels Runs Great Needs A ll
!Ia Ma ntenance Books for
5111 000 W I Sacral ce fo $l ~0
614 ~&lt;48 8795

,._me Brtnds 0v8f 25 Vears Ex*
pe.r~ence All Work G~o~sranlte~
Fren(:h City M1yta9 814 •48

1989 New Yorker V 6 Auto
1t 0 000 M les Loaded $1 800

lroc eJI mate coli CMt 6 1 o1 99:?
8323

7705

C&amp;C Gen,rat Home Ma n
tenenet Pa•nfln8 v nyl s dmg
Clrptnlry IJOQ,i Windows baths

mobili' home r11Pf1" aM mo

t!

Fo)

090614 2511233

7N5

Car~

&amp; V•nyl In Stock SB DO Yd

MOftotwn Carpels 61.f 4•8 :'1~.4.4

Country Furn Me 30~ 675 682D
Rt 2 N em les Pt Pleasant WV
Tues Sat 0-e Sun 11 S
GOOD USED APPliANCES
Wllhttl dryers relngerators
ranges Skaggs Appli ances 76
Vme Slrtet. Call 61~ ~.116 7398
1 800 o408 3499
Kenmore Waahtr Wat SHIO Cui
To $125 Kenmore Dryer Wll
115 Cu1 To $75 Wh rlpool Qryer
Wh 11 195 Whitt G E Wa sher I
Dryer Stl 1205 Eactt 1 Year
Wlmlnty G E ElectriC Aangt 36

Inch

Wu $75 CuT To $ 150

AI

°

mond Caloric Ettelr c Rangt 3
Inch $t75 Almond Catone Gil
Ringe 30 lnc;h V•ry N ce 1175
Fnttdllfl Harvell Gold Frost

FrH Refftttrltor Wat 1125 Cut

141151 Aro'*lh"a 2br total

fm cassene ale good cond•bon

S2500 6" !192 ss.u

Ludw g Snart Drum Used 8
Weeks W ttl Stand And Books
614 388 8193

Apphancea
Recond t ontd
Walhers Orrers~anges Rtff1
grators 90 Day Guarantee !
Frenctt City M11y1ag eu 446

1 ton tru.ck

SI:.RVICES

1988 Camaro wtl te black and
gray nttnor V e automat•c anv

Rooms lor renl week or month
S1ar1 ng 11 5120/mo Gall a Hotel
614 446 95fl'l

Goods

New gas links

1783

*

Hous.hold

Budge! Pnce Transm n•on.
Used IRtbultt. •11 Types Ovllr
1o 000 Transmiss ons Clulch',a
Flywhtela Overhual K Is tit of·
245 5877

1993 Pop Up Calam,n Cemper

1986 Fofd Escort •dr auto new
1 rts run1 good nttdl talp PI
I7DO 304 •58 2018 or 304 .. SB

New Owner1h1p
Newly Remodeled Etl c ency
Rooms HBO. Clntmax Showt1me
Weeklr Monlhlr Ra1es su •4&amp;

510

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceasortes

1207

One bedroom furn shed apart
ment n Midd+eport call 6 14 446
3091 61.11 992 2178 or 61• 992
530&lt;

MERCHANDISE

760

17 F1 Camper $700

Ont bedroom apartmenl rn Pr
Pleasant 81~ 992 5858

2501 614 367 0612

Mo1orc~cle Hartty Dav dson
Sporttltr First I~ 000 Gets IJ
G14 37i-2920

whttls &amp; radlaJors 0 " R Auto

t985 Cad lac Fleetwood Well
Manta ned Loadtd Runs Great
Over 100K M•les Good For 100
More Sac:raf ct AI 11 800 81-4
446 8795

N1ce IWO bedroom 11panmen1 m
Pomeroy; no pelS 61.4gg25858

In P.Po"m"'""'"'loir: 12K12 funitl1ecl
room. eccnato appliance..
~'"'*'- bolh,laund&lt;J' I '" u~

remodlltd

-

Aluminum

prec!alel $2 !500 814 256 1657

Nn!Des

.....-,1 Ia*

Pomeroy two "droom llil1ctten

1Q7t Windsor 141170 new csrpe1
&amp; v•nrl v•nyl sk irting extru
Must . . ta appr~e~are 30• 713

New Tues

Wheels Many New Parts! E~ecel
len! Cond!lton Must Seo To Ap

C~rcte Mo1e1

17$.5182

011.2101

1981 Ford Mustang 4 Speed T

_ _ __;:.:,:.::.::.;_;=---1 Tops New Performance Suspen

1988 Black Rtq11 Cuatom 2
Door• Fwo Auto 2 8 Mult Port
Sl 5gK S2 895 1988 VW Fo&lt; 2
Doors 69K l1ke New Cond lion
11 8GS t99t Red Z24 Coolil Mo
IOfl 614 4146 0103

N•ce Clean 3 Bedroom Refet
enc81 I O.poalt No ~tf 30~

Free tnorl.,l Cash gl~eawars
private grlln&amp;a INns mtlltons
aMiabll, Sou ret 1 100 401oN1 I

Furmshed Eflldencv All Uul t 11
Pad Shsre Batn •u51Mo 919
Secand Avenue Gall polis 814

l

19S;S Harley Oav dson 12ob
Sporrster low m1tes S8200 30-4
675 3824
I

&amp; love seat 304 B7S

3bedroom bath tv ng roorTt wl
hardwood floors k !chen &amp; dining
area logether new roof garage
on R1 2 304 675 413!ili or 304
&amp;75-7326 alter 8;3)

?

Of-- -...

720 1l'uctce for Sete

01&gt;~

*

\

742 3802

2~1t

614 388-8565

tommunity calendar

{

Wanted 10 Dur 17 01' n,..r Ca
pru:e Cla111c mu11 be 4 door V
8 l011dld Brougham or lS f1 14

730 Vans &amp; 4·WO$

Hayman observes first birthday

'

~Qr81425e-1487

•

TRANSPORTATION
AKC Rtglllerec:l Gefman Short
haued pupa. D weekt flt111 lhotl
and wormed S2DO eu 742 3177

1112 Geo Metro 5 S,.a6 A1f
57500 Mlel tl450 010 fl14

SIS7k1golloRd.

--.:--------1630

Antiques

Ashley Wood nser heavv duty
automaT c 11'1ermo! a1 blower one AKC Regtllered lab pupa 4
black males parents on pr•mlt
se1 of g ass &amp; s et dOors 1250
es cham~1on blood lme OFA
614 742 2050
certified S300ea. 30111.,.74 3883

*

.nvw.n • film Equipment

5515

N ce 2 Bedrooms 1225/Mo 8
M tes Down 2t8 N•ce Rektrenc
es Oepoan Requ red 61~ 4•6

Onlr at Oakwood Homes

flit ApptiCiato
"""'
114--1111

N.wldeal 706 0 eset UntSJ11am
Wt1h Combine 1 Grain Table
New Ideal 2 Row Corn P1ck11
T.,o Gravtty Wagons 81"' 245

3 Sadraoms t2ll85 New P11n t
Car~1 Hoi Water Heater Eltc
ttlc Box Shower Enclosure 53 500
f rm 614 3U-9&amp;81

530

Fulr Sailllodl

11...-7311

Wood !Coal Bum ng StO\Ie Good
Cond11 on S3SO &amp;l&lt;f 388 8229
Aftet 5 PM

3br 2ba1h 117'99 down 1279
month Free de very &amp; se tup

·--1

e_.....

Gllllpollo OIU!Ie31

433e

8172 614 256-6251

Timely M1tter In Wl'llch Wt Do
Our Repall' Work On Any Brand
01
l See H lbu A&lt;an1

WATER WELLS DRILLED

WHITE S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Alhso n 1210 Second Ave
nue Ga lhpol 1 Oh o 8 14 us

Sporting
Goods

Plrt1 &amp; Serva
Compafl The Ouahly P'rtce &amp;

FAST REASONABLE SERVICE

N ce 2 Bedroom Mobrle Home
H•ghway 160 t3001Mo Plus S.
cur 11 Deposn 614 •40 818D
6, -4 448-6865

GOALS &amp; OBJECTIVE$

Program features
character building

UNCI Fum rure 130 BullwiU. Pike
Bunk s.cls I'Manrtsses $150 00
Couc;hl H th Back Cha~raJ Otto
man 1150 ao TaDtts G1tt1 Mi
CfOWIVI C lrl Beds I 1 o4 448
4712.

1887 2 &amp; 3 Btcln&gt;om Slltl5 clown
t1D51tno frM delivery I HI up
only at Oak Wood Hom,• N~rro
wv 304 715 58115.

304 755-5885

Sheriff

S.e Us For A Comphtlll ne ol

lt5l Sll11!,1 Appl 1nces 78
Sit"' • ll&lt;pohs 81• U8

48 Chevy 2 dr SeGan $00d
shape $2 -400 89 Grand p, • 2

Sofa Bed FoH Co~&gt;r' 110 Ele&lt;lric
Dryer lelthtr Sew ng Machma
614,.. 1 0825ltMUessage
STORAGE TANKS 3 DOD Gallon
Up Ql'lt Ron Evans Enterprllet
Jadi&amp;On 0t110 1 II)() 537 9528

I

Super S1ng1e 4 Posrtr WaltrDid
Fo Salt 81.4 o4AI7123

Whee l Horn L.awn &amp;
Trac1ors Husq~tr'lll Chan
Weedtaltrt Etc A Complete
Line or livestock Cl pp..- Bladtl
Groommg &amp; Show Supplies We
Also Ha'llt 4 Variety 01 Used

Vtntleu gas hnters ••rosena

Equ"'""""

t'ltllers

a wood IIOWI In SIOC:k

$idtnEqu&lt;-T:IO+e75-7421
Fall Spectal New Stpt c Tank
AeratOfl Mo1ors Comr,•• S309
plus ' 81 ln•llalion 13 ptus IT'll

llfiiii&amp;1•...UO 4~
1

New Hollend 818 Forage bot 3

bearer wtroof e12 Tandem ule
&lt;ut!nlfl9 gel&lt; S7100 N H Mo&lt;lol
30 forage blower 1DOD rpm
12 500 H H Modal 824 2 row
fotiQe held

d

v eos orrgtna 1• .. 00 1

~~1g-~~-~:W~11Uc~=.::=-.1 :::;~,:10me
~" VCR TV
,;..;
lill.in#fi

"'""eli"" 5 Round 8111-

•ldto

s• 500

1 9 F1nanc
ing tar 3e monfla. KNfet I Strv
leo Cen111
AI 87 PI PI••
01111 FfiNr W'l :IIM-1115-3874

s...

•• IUIO n•• S3 950 2 '"'00
show cues good shape eu
949 2045"' 614 9 92838
lilt red Btreua 3 1 8 ely
742 2950

eu

z

Cradll Probtam•? E Sank F1
nanctn8 For Used Veh 1cles No
Turn Downa Call Ruth eu ua
2881

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSESCEmiFIEDDEALEA

LAWF£NCE ENTERPRISES

Hut Pumps A r Cond non1ng II
Vou Don t Cell Us We Bom laHd
FrH Et11ma1t1 1 BOO 291-ootl.
814 448-6308 VN 00~5

or commefdal wW1ne.
new Mf'lllce or tepslrs MIIIIW Li
2•7..a....
cenltd tlectr clsn Rktentutl
~~~-:-::--::--::-:-,..,.1 EltCk!CII wV000308 1114 171
Mua1 Slit 1111 Ford Pro"- G t
1'118
Re11denlial

For Sale 1t•a Slyted B 614

Loaded

Hlth

Mllu

Tu&lt;bo

Ooesn 1 Work But Runs Grtat
Wofloullllllooh Foo 15 125 W&lt;ll
Sacrrflce For 12 200 Ftrm tt4
4.... 7115

Aftldtnt 11 Ot 'Commercial Wtr

~.::-E=~ ::,:~~~ J
lric
~ • ttso oaw.u...is
Ol1io 814 4
-r-

'

�.'

• • 8 • The o.lly Sentinel
r~ , , • • I , l 1 ,

001

110

HllpWIII.d

NKA Cro11word Pu•ale

... ICKIIII
ACROitl

pHJI,I,lP

" ...

• ...... - 7

e~·
~10Yn.E'I'I

1121110

"AX UOVI' OIIJI
" 11001 SI'ICIAL

.........

Wl11l YOU UVEIU
. ,: ll(lforgettable

Convereattonall
Call this exclusive
.,a4.hr. hotllnell
CaiU-900-478 11585
. .. Ext. 3313
. ,, A.ll perlllln.
Muatbe18,...

a. 5 u- 11

141 8434

, .• lNG'S
·'· AUTO .
REPAiR
· MilE IIIII
..... &amp;WI 'lien
IIIO. pllll.

,.,_,_,.,,

'YOUNG'S

W~EN'IER SERVIa·

ofloom Addllloo-.
-NewGengta
-Eieetrlc8ll Plumbing

•Roollng

·ll•lwrkw a Exterior

Plllnllng
Alto c : - Work
(FREE EBTIIIATES)
V.C. YOUNG II
112-G15
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

Card oflllllnlal

The family of
Garnet Smith
Ervine would like
to ,xprM~t their
appreclllllon for

7/'l2/tfn

vlalta It the time
of Mre. Ervine's
death.
We wfah to thank
the Racine
Emergency ,
Squed; Veterans
Memorial Hospital
and staff, Gay
Cremeens, Racine
Baptlat Church,
Rev. Marte: Haley,
and Rev.JIIII
Wingrove for their
klndneee.
We would alao like
toiakethls
oppor1unlty to
thank all those
who made Mra.
Ervine's 95th

1:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
. . . . 171 Wi:.DWS

.... 0..11
eS'-Diors&amp;
WI

••ws
.._.,,.loU
BINGO

MUD......,
10Yearslospltal

F,_•clallelaletl
lxl•rie•c•
. . .tory CPA

......,.,.

.•

Send Resume To:

Legion Poet 602
DoorsQpen
4:30p.m.
Blngo6:30
Every Sunday

25850

'
AAIEOE

Public Notice

Commllllonera,
CoUtthclu8e, PoiMro,. Ohio.
PuL'pOM o i i M - . .. to

rett loctt •ppllcttlone
eubmltted for Round 11
ICIPoonelderllllon.

Fradltoffm8n, .........
SCIP Locel Review .

~
Octob1r 21, , . . ·

S2.911*'mln.
Muetbet8,...

celebration a very
happy one with
their cards and
vlslta.
MayGodBieu

You All. Holrlw-AIIor
.......,., ....
.... _....:.;::.:=::... . ........ Clooalf""Sonfoo.

LUCKY J. TOWIH
&amp;&amp;IU&amp;E
' St. Rt. 124,
Racfna, Ohio

Minor Repairs
24 Hr.
Towing/Rollback

Service

AAA&amp;AIIStat.
Motor Club ·

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Gafages • R,eplacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing .·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

992·7119
.FAll. CLUN·UP

.'

FREE ESTIMATES

Aeration Repair or Reitlace•ent
10% DlscH•t for Sept. &amp; Oct.
.Evealtg a1td W..klld .U X.Charge
"tu/2mo.

DE'S GAUGE
H170Atl81
off Rt. 33 It At 181
Darwin, Ohio

.,.... Pll1s Alta
&amp;'hcU. .

·st. Rt. 7 &amp; 33 Pomeroy

Extra large 18"
three item
5

814 696-1407

11.50

(Limited free delivery

area)
large 16" one iterri

•6.99
(CaiT}'-Out Only)
992-6111

U_.llns:

Howard L Wrlteael

IOOflll
NEW·REPIIR
Gutterw
Down1pouta
Gutter Clearilng
· Painting

MEl! ESTIIIATEI

14f.2188
fllfrWit

•

•

•JS:J543

•96~32

... 10

TASC. P.O. Bo• 88. GaiOpoho. 01'1

South

Gallia -Jackson TASC Ia 1m

2NT

Equal Opportunitl Employ!(&lt;
Funded By Tho Ohio llopartment

AUihorizad AQA Dislribulor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine ShpP
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair ·Welding
• AlumlnunVStalnlesa • Tool Dfi!!I,Sing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, RaiHngs, Pallo Fumltunt, Flntplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Tntlliaes &amp; lots of other stuflll

"No Job Too Large or Too Sinafln
We will work wnhln your budge!.
Ph. 773-9173
.
.
FAX 773-58411
108 Po
Straat
,MIIbn, WY

MIUIEW
PEOPLE THE
fUIWAY
TODAY
1·900-656-5050
Ext.3"1
UMin.1 .. ....u

GRUESER'S
GAUGE
8ocly
""""pllnllng,
- · truck
" truck
minor macltlnlcal

......

.1ft.upl, 011 Cllenl:la.
Wile, lulling
Long St., ....... ~~~, opt.
74241M, Alk for KIP

(11t)ltl ••••

lrltll ........

'

.,

7/lrliln

--or

ON IIALLOWEEN
. N1611T, THE ''S«EAT
PIJMPKIH" RISES OUT

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1

'(00 RE JUST
TR'(IH6 Tc;J MESS
WITII M'i MIND,
AREN'T 'I'OU ~ .

OF THE PUMPKIN
PATCII, AND ..

lmii01·11111101
FREE ESTIMATES

fllkath,.laa.faf
.....1.......... ..

,.,,...

YE1Y fiiiOIAIU
IIAVIIIHUICU
614-91J.4110

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

limestone • Gravill
Dirt•sand

:rHE BORN LOSI!:K

985-4422

Ani You Sick And "nred
Of Being Single 7 Days
A Weelt(l Romance Is .
Just.A Heartbeat Away!

J ···-

·--

All pass

Here is another fascinating deal
!rom the European Junior 'Charnpion·
ship. How should the play go in three notrump alter West has led the heart tO?
The two-no-trump response was in·
vita(ional. showing aboul II points.
Wilh enough points lor game, South
would have jumped straight to three
no-trump. .
South starts with eight top tricks:
two spades. two hearts cgiven the
leadl and four clubs. He could play for
a 3-3 spade break. but that is against
the odds. The ninth Irick can be gen·
erated from the diamon&lt;!s. but there is
a risk the opponents will gel five tricks
first. Suppose South wins the fiL"!ll or
second heart. When Wesl wins the first
diamond trick wilh the king, he returns
a heart. This establishes East"s suit
While he slill holds the diamond ace.
Roderigo Soares of Portugal ducked
two rounds or hearts, winning the
third. He played a club lo the dummy
and ran the diamond 10. West won
with the king put didn't have another
heart to lead. Declarer'• nine tricks
were two spades, two hearts, one dia·
mond and lour dubs.
Nicely done - except lhat East
should have covered dummy's dia·
· mond 10 with his jack. Then surely
!)oares would have played the queen
and gone down, losing lhree diamond
tricks lo go with the two hearts al·
ready conceded.
AI another table, after' Wes~ Enling
Erbil of Turkey, led the heart 10, his
partner, Ercan Aydin, played a dis. couraging lhree . So, when South
ducked, West swilched to the spade
.. queen. This allows South lo generate
three spade tricks lor his contra~:~ but .
'lhe declarer didn't find the winning
play, going one down.

S1f.......
IIUflb
32 Oil ••, Itt

33llallllf'loal
3801C*-IIId

rr-+-+--i

CARroT

or-

38 No-.....
~

44Genlllhi411Naval ........
411 Ttnan'e- ·
4t !IMJ (2 Wilt.) '

10 Fr•=•• ,

52~affteh
i{df .

14

II Conasuz; II 1

"--""-...1.-'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoa

bdl-..rinhciphtr...,...,anohf,

. • V M S X

c· X

0 M

W L

VWXF G U V ,

DXt WUH

TOdi)"'~J

S W E M

'
5I TIL II: I

.. a;=.

.

..-s

C W. Y D W U

TXSIM.'-

PGDU

WY

.

'

X

V W F ·W U I Y W T M ,

1

SIR

CtMIM'ityCipher CI)JdUG 11M .... et.-otrom ...,...a., . . . ~..... ,......

J B Y

WUD M0 MU Y

SGNSXUV .

PREVIOUS $0LUTION: "The Bronx? I No thonx." .... Ogden Nult.·
"New Yorlt Cily: Skylcraper Na~ P8rlc."- Kurt Vonnegut.

T::~~~~~~

·S© ~4\l-y
1-A- Jt r..;,s· ....
WOII

ltlllo4 loy

.L I'OWUI - - - - - - - - -

'letters of
0 Reorronge
lour ICrambl.d words

tM
below to form four. olmpla wordo.

I

GO RUBE

I
·•

I
· .,1-_,o,.......,r,...s......I__,J. . -l ;o;o~'

The famous comic had the
audience in stitChes when he
.said that; "Middle age is when
...---:-.,.......,_;...-..:~~ your age starts to show • • • • - ii 0 D R A N
your \fliddle." .
~
Q Complont tht chuckle quoted

I I
~

j

I

I
H, I I' I I
.

.

.

.

~v filling In the milling - •
you doYelop 1rom •op No. 3 below.

PR~~~=sLfTTEIS IN

I'

~~~~=HEmasl

NOPE 1 T GoNE 0\.JT

I

,......

---f---1--t .q
40 ,.....,
.......

•
5TiC.I&lt;.~ ~

r I' I' I' r I

•• •

••
•
•I

. ,'
••

t

'

II I llJ ;.

SCIAM UTS ANSWIU

'

'

Acting • Graft • Event - Gender· DANCING
One old·timer lamented to his pal that living Willi more

TREASURES
748 s. 1111rd Ave.,
llddleport
Clrlmlce, Wooclcl'llfla,
tlomeltiMiti Doll &amp; .
Bltketl.

. like wrestling than DANCING.
\

IMONDAY
~uta Pari~.

.J I .D'a

'·

•

OCTOBER28I

Buying sal-

vage vehicles. Selling partl .

713-5033.

•liVI•m'

21~LII

tnt

ae;::,....;._.

HIDDEN

IEAIITIUl LADIES,

.

1·9

ORAND OPENING

WANT TO TAll TO

......
27--..
D--

• LMf-culllng

Eaot

_

Ext. 6218
$2.99/mln, 18+
ServU

GUYs!

7 ly 111011111

·-111

zsAir':-

1-900-526-5050

AIIIO Clllkhn'l
Pllyroom
MMol!111"1dll:dny 10 anMI pm
Tuii.·Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
Fllclay 2 pm-1 pm

I Con• lan

11 . . . . . . .

171ftllel .......
ltUftl, .....
in1MU.I.A. 1

By Phillip Alder

dawn, 814·1112-e921.

·• Ropfing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992·2753

(619) 645-8434.

LoCk :r 0111
4 Homeroom
-~2-.)

3

Call .L111 AI

•'Siding

30•·

Top dollar. antiqutt, furniture,
gl111. china, cloc:ka. gold, til\llr,
eDina. ntehla, eararn, alcf ttant
ftlfl, old blue &amp; whire dilhtt, ojd
wood

bo•••. milk bol11fl, M~OI

County Adverristmtnt, Olbr
Mlttin, 814·992'·7U1.

CALLIDI.foo-476ol515
El\'.4971

tfteMk !fetak

3 NT

-

IAclatiUt

Mo;cMumy

41 Wordutad

10I'tlt

PhiliP'

2 Actor

Duck and win,
duck and lose

A Held Start On Chriltnwl~
Tomo'rro~

Will giYt ''"' fot' firtwOOd,
are tllptrienc.ed to cut

•New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• R!llllodellng

Pass

North
It

.=:-....

M:J:"-

388iarrw
37 '"I"" on nell of
ol)

10 6 3
A Q7 I
Q 4 3
K 8 4

West

12 field

Opening lead: • 10

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

·

t. AJ8~2

Vulnerable: North-Soulh
pealer: North

1 •5831 .

good home. 31).4-e75-4650

Cu&amp;IOm BuildinG 6 Remodei!IIQ

·DATE LINE

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

..

• 8 7

• 10 g 2
t K

APPLIC~TION
DEADLINI(:
Resumes Must Be Rece•ved Bv
November 1. 199tt Send .To G·ll

brownJwnita, good wlchildren, to

Eul

•QJ114

•
•
•
•

........,_,

21 Y-. lo t aallor 14 IIIIa Kill! a1
22 Sgt., e.g.
the comlca
:MOUlded
-~
• : :=r!ly
• 'btol leltl
DOWN
35 e. dlndlr
1 o... etone

Soulb

Of Alcohol And Drug' Addiction
lnto,.oatodl Services ThrouGh .The Gallla •Jackson ·Meigs Board Of Alcc(::---::~:-'-:-:"--~--:-:-1 hoi, Drug Add•c1ion And Mental
Ptlrl Shephtrd, temale. 1yr old, Heellh Strvieea.

SMITH'S .
COISTRUmOI

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

614·992-7643

Onr 15 Yea::s Exp.
lnlerior ond Exterior
l'lllntlna
l'lllntlna Roots
w.u..,.per H...,n1
..._... Cleanlag
Roofln1
·
Minor llemodellnt

IIIUII[J

j

::.;.:..;.:;:.:;...-------1

Chester, Ohio

AIID DKOilliiiG

SS.OO&amp;Up
1lrt • .,. &amp; $fill

WOrk
Crlmlnel Justice
YearaOrEllptrience
IN S.tting.
A Social

22M~~~2!N~¥~~~··~·-------1
~
Good Home
I
1.,1 Malt, 1
:;Liillr:;:;.~..:'tlo~!eCI::.•c;....:...;;..:...:.;.::;:;.__

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Condensers/Hose Assemblys

(No Sunday Calls)

JUKEBOX
PIZZA

West

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Stump Grinding

614-949-3117

Reoklentio:lllld
Commerdel

U Atty.'• deg.

-·

11 Ford ftllln

fl01176
•AQJ7

413111 • · pd.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding'
742·3212
Wf .....

llerv-IHIII) 845 8434

.

Plastic Culvert· Dual wall and Regular 11' lhru 36"
4" S&amp;D ·perf. · solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
'/," &amp; •1: C.P:V.C. pipe
1'lr" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'It &amp; 1" 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls lhru 1.000• rolls)
•1: U.L. approved Condun
·
8" Graveiess Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" lhru 2" • fittings • Regulators • Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Aex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full Uno of Cislem, Seplic &amp; Waler slorage ranks

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

. CA'-L
1-900-5211-5050
EXT.4500

PUIUC NOTICE

The .ICIP Locel Review
Committee will m..l
Wedneecloly, November I,
1tll Ill 3:00 P·"'· In the
olllce of 1M llelga County

211 Fo1y

•·n

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

Drlvll
Polllt PIZIIInl, WV

Tuppers Pfalna, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-64Q4

Ownar:

UNOERNEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBUC WELCOME

Holp~ ~Valley

Sl At. 7

20 Yean E%jierience •

Amer~n

MlctiMI G. SaiiMia
PI
nt 'lllllay

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPL!

JONES' TREE SERVICE

RackJe

birthday

·I

112-2772

CFO

ttie'manr ~rds,

flowe,.., foOd and

IIIODL!I'OIIT

Help Wanted

110

Mon. thru Sat. 10.6, Sunday 1·5
2 miles North Silver Bridge on SR 7

537 BRYAN PLACE

10M11 T - -

AESPON9181LITIES: S&lt;:rHning.
Atteument, Referral, Case .

:-

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, oal&lt; shelves; quilt racks; .
goose outfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in saturated fat than olive oil)
TUPPERWARE -Some cash and carry.
·Place orderS/book parties/gifts/lund raisers

'

•NewHomea
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop lc Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985 4473

tluten1111111hr.ntl

blrltlldu

WOI:dltful Ute
.-6
15LA.Low
57-

Uanagemtnl, Monitoring, And

614-446-4530

J&amp;L.SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

f

~

~:;.,.---~---1 Random Urinulyals For COUtt RtFrH Puppies: lt1
Of Good l&amp;rrea Subslanee ADu11ng JuHome. Sh1 To Choate From 814· Ylf'lilea.
'

obilga1ions and arrange a fair dislribution of asseiS.
Debtors in bankruptcy may keep "e~empl" property
for their personal use. This may include a car, a house,
~lolhes, and household goods.
Por Information Regarding Bankruptcy conlact;

Attorney At Law ·
(614) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

.

lng supplies, licente I game grta In Social Work Or Crlmi"'l
chec:ll ttalktn. C'''l8"ftQ'1 Hen- Juttica Wilh A Minimum Of T\1110

Pomeroy, Ohio

51~

Aclor._

DIPs'la•

Coolot ....,._ - . Nlliii&lt;Y. Hun:· Rolautd Fitld Or Auocioto Dt-

1-800-~1-5600

IOIERIIISSELL
coNnaucnoN

uuuge.

f7 Aator :

14--

13

QUALIFICATIONS : Cerut1ed
Chem~cal O.pendency Counse40r
Or Licensed SOcial WOrker Pra·
ft,td OR Bacl'ltlor Otgrtt l'n
Soc:•al WCN"k, Crirnmal JIJtliC:t Of

~
lmALE COUNTRY CUnS &amp; GinS

.·

tunMMt

:::::.lotol:

,..,_..,_

4 flu t lilly '

To Exl)tnence, Ltcenaurt. Al4d

-~-~""':·~;~~~:~

WilUam Safranek

. •.•. 949-l057

PMtN. Jttkr.

:

Ill

'!!
I_.....,.._
41
,.,__
;_
12Exlll

SALARY: Nego1111td Accord•~

:.Cc;...,•

814-992-3470

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial

31801 Amberger Rd.
•.
1 ·r CitY Fclrest Run

'

Edu&lt;aton

Call tor Demonatratlon &amp; Free Estimate
614-992-4119
110 Court Sl

g&lt;~~~~.ia.lo~)

W.~2StCMI.

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill D!1t

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

·. WOMEN TO TALK

... Christian Male In Yr Mid
:10"1. -lng A Single Clvilllon
F-Ie AQe 25·.00. II lntt&lt;Hitd
Wrile: P.O. 8or 313, ~erean,

HAULING

Blocks 99.5%
ofUY Rays
Offered Exluslvely
by

....... falh: ....
JIM WiMI Clo 1 .... d

'

WICKS

•

"'

'It II PI

· 10DI'a

'OSITION: c... Manager F~r
Tht Oallia ·JICktol\ TtNimttU
Alt«net~ To StrHI Crime PFe·

l.adlol A,. 'lbv Tiled 01 Spoftd·
inll HoHiy1 AloM?I Am A Sin·

L..awR.i)

SJII••·
Hlgheet "R Value"

.., .

ALDER

CAIIIUM1 •

Ill LIIISf II BIUCIIIIIII' WIIHW
11CIIOLOIY .
"'llt - · · · ........

4-0wll.-

•u

TheO.U,81 ...... , •••

Pomeroy elllddleport, Ohio
·. 'J , '

···coWlS
. , . . . . . .101

·-

•

' $3.99 ,.. min.
Must be 18 yn~.
Sent·U (819) 8434

Wanted To Buy : We 8u)' Auto's
Any CondillDI!, Of4·388·1062. Or
014·-PART.

EMPLOvr.H: NT

St HVICE S
;;.EOE;,;;_ _ _...:,__ _

Plclc up dill II did

ipplt.naH,t...........
111111Y 11111111• l
1110101' bloclll.

relationship work. Mail $2 .75 10 TAURUS (April 2D·Moy 20) Your .
Malchmlker. clo lhia newapeptr, P.O. progress ban be enhanced loc:Jey if you
:-------...;,,___..,.. Bo• 1768, Murtay Hill Slalion, New .Yorlc, experirnent with new le~hniques and ·
NY 10156.
-kesl&gt; approaches lo clu:umvenl, Ihe
!IAGITTARIUI (Nov. :13-Dec:. 21) Todly impadimenls which obstruct your pelh.
you mighlllnd yourHif lhinking about t GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Tty 10 be a
BERNICE
pellicular friend . HCO\IId be becluse you good liste~er loday. because a casual
BEDEOSOL are on ltis or her mind as IOIIil. Reach out remarlc made by a lriend might conlain
to !hie petaon.
importanl lnl.ormalion essenlial to your
CAPRICORN . (Dec. 22·Jen. 11) immecliole needs.
ConditiOnS in general appear to be worlc· CANCER (June 2t .July 22) Do no1 driw
, ing in your lavor loday. Afresh opportuni- yoursell crazy trying to make plana wilh
ly might develop and your career will lriendsloday. lnalaad. you aitd your male
''

110

Halp Wlntad

• ATTN ~ Polnr PIIAUnl' Pollal

Potiliont. Ptrmanefll lull lime for
Cllf~/IOtllrl. Full Btnefilt . For
t~~:am, applicallon end Hlary 1nSo

call.

(708)80&amp; ·2350E" 3870.

a.........
AVON

j

.'

o.\11 HLL -NITY

MEDICAl. CIHTIA
JOII POSTING tlft'171H

F... Timo, 0ty S1!if:. Dio:ory COOII
l'olltion II AYIIIab/o In The Dl•' '
tory Dorlott-.t At Ook HRI c ....

mun:tay Mtdical C~ttr, Rt111a nli·

f AU Artaa

t

Shulef

- .•• 30&lt;1-875·1428

Alalkl Jabal Earn Up To
130,000 In Thin Months Fi&amp;l'lino
Salmon. Conttr~K~ion, C.Mtrlel

· Oi F~dt. Morwi 7 Dayo &lt;107-875:
2022 E•L.0!121M2.
An Ohio Oil Comp""" N - Ml·
Now In Tilt GALLI ·
Rtaardltll Of E•·
Lt La. Rood, ~o.
OIUS.001.

•.,,no....,·
Mr Homt,
1n

.11..:117·

biiU1 .. Include Preparlna Food
fDr Patlentt And Emp!DJHI,•

benllll.

WOahing Dla~. Artll Compiodng'

Other AlliiOMd llutiu The Can·
dlftto l.lua1 Bo A High School
Gradullt Or EqiHVIItnt. Plelle 1
Appil IN Poraon Or Send Ae.•

~ume To : Oak Hill Community .. ,.
ed1ct~l Ctnltt', Atrenllon: Brtndl "

Mci&lt;Wit, 350 Choilollp A-ue ·

a. HiU. otio '58!1.

' '• '1

..

Tuetdty.~. 29.

•

AQUARIUS (Jen, »Fell.1t) Y011 will
f..l -IOdl:y. Kyou _,.to clt8ngtL
!hie tllluallo!t, Hwill be lmporlanllo -

1988
activitlel which will your lmlgl'najlon.
In lhe y,o:r lhaad, a big alllfl of ctrcum·
lltnCea ~ en8ble you 10 full two limb!· . PIICI!I (Fel!. 211 Mtroh 211) ff you ha"'
.. "'"'"rgloday, oon"l play your
lloua goel8. Vou mua1 gtlliacly 10 move 1 trump
ctrdl
.100 toon. If you eave lhe
fall.,... lite - Ia ~'
·bul
for
1811,
·you will retp gretter
tcoiii'IO (011. Jt Nov. 221 Your inlu·
-rdl.
Ilion COUicl ... -....- Nn ULU811Ddty,
ARID (...rch 11·Apr1111) II may be
10 111111 ~ lntti!ICII· " you Cl8!' ....-.
- l l l f l '·lor y011 10 mtke t complex
' - · llllre't no •Y you wiN toM. deCIL"Mtoday.llowa'!lr.KwllbeWIMIO
T1Yif10 10 patch up a 11n*1n -nee?
d l - your oplionl withe IIUIIWOIII!y
,..,. AlmMJr.ph Malctlm8lttr help
lrltnCf.
you _ . . . . . 10 do Ill. mtlle tha

"

·.
..
·'

..

lhould lpend lime logelher.

••

LEO(July113-Aug.22)Ewnlllolqlyour
mind miQI&gt;I be oet on doing *"':ethil'll in
a specific- today. clof11 ignore anllvft lhtl rnlghl suddenly pop lnlo your

.·'..•

I}Md. .

•!

I

~

•

.

...•-

VIRGO (Aug; 23-lept. 22) Sornelhing of
might be,_ avat111111e to ·
· you today lhlouglt on une&gt;&lt;pecled - ·
A cuual ~ miLY be~

,.Mrill......,

(

.•'
:1

:r.

ble far lltio opportunly.
ueRA
11-Gat. Ia) T&lt;*r. 1ry 1o
gttlrtwll= in •••u w111c1: ohf tllll

-(

."'•'

ot ftlelldly oornpelition. You will enjoy
cl1th111111.
•

••

•

'

�•

•
••

Monday, Oclcblr 21, , .

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

'Judge had best of intentions, but failed to communicate
ly ANN LANI:IIIM
0.. Aa Linden: I'd like 10 add
to yOflll c• ' dOD ol ltorica llbout
,..... who *-.lei IIOt be 011 lhe
bellch. 1'111 -.dina 111 Associated
Preu liar)' &amp;om lhe SlcraIIIMIO Bee IIIII hope you will prinl il
ll's time Ohio &amp;Ill rid of lhis idiot. -

Ann
Landers

,Fumin&amp; ill SICOII~RIP
and insulting to both men and
. Dear "-ina: Thanks for sending' women.
" 'Men n easy,' Judge Shirley
.on the · story. It was wriuen by
Strickland
Saffold told Katie Nemeth
JqlOI1er JICqUi Podzius Cook. If you
hid not - • 1he clippina, I would before acqopting her guilty plea.
· 'You can go,wail in lhe bus slop, pul
-have ~you made it up.
• "A judp's lidvice to a youna on a short skirt, cross your legs and
woman ia bcr COUI1room has earned pick up 25. Ten of !hem will give you
her lhe scorn of 1wo nalional organi.- money.' She didn't slop there.
'"If you don'! pick up lhe fllSt 10,'
zations that called her remarks sexist

Odds and ends

.Football team can't
dress in drag
·anymore
.
!1J The Aug elated Prea

lhe judge said. '!hen Ill you sot to do
is open your lep elittle bit end cross
!hem at the bottom, and lhen lhey' ll ·
stop.'
'
" Judae Saffold made lhe com·
ments in linin&amp; 19-ycar-old Nemeth
$200 for misusin1 1 credit card.
Nemeth had pleaded guilty. Her
lawyer said Nemeth had worked in a
store where a customer lost a credit
card and Nemelh's boyfriend used·it.
He laler repaid the owner.
"According to a transcript of lhe
hearing, !he judge told Nemeth she
should break up wilh her boyfriend
because 'all !he women in prisons
across lhese United Stales of America are !here because of a guy.'

"Ncmelh said she wasn' l wilh !he
boyfriend anymore, s.o Judge s.trold
sugesled she go 10 a IICirby medical
school and ' marry a doclor lic~y·
split. All you got to do is take 1 &amp;iol·
ogy book, don 'I even read it. When
one of them walks by, say, "Excuse
me, could you tell me whal this
means?" You gor yourself a date.'
"The 4S-year-old judge; who was
elecled in 1994,' is married 10 a doctor. Nemeth's lawyer was shocked by
her words and said, 'l lhought it was
inappropriate for a judge to suggesl
10 a woman defendantlhallhe way to
get ahead is lo find a man -- and to
do !hat by exposing your sexuality as
opposed to your mind.'

I

I second lhe motion.

"Judae Saffold said her renwks
were taken out of conlextlnd denied
urJins Nemeth to OWT)' or pick up a
doctor even lhou&amp;h iteppears in rhe

Our Ann Landen: My couain,
"Fred," qe 47, has been enaeaed to

a lovely woman for 17 yCIII. He is
well-fixed and good-looking and has
transcripl.
.
a
beautiful borne. What's your JUOU?
"'I was reUin&amp; her her boyfriend's
-Bolivar, Mo.
a bum,' she said. 'I think she's a nice
Dear Mo.: My guess is Couain
kid. I wu telling her her choice was
!he wrong cboice. She's a young kid Fred would rather go wid) a woman
wilh no prior record. She has a rhan marry her and was lucky enough
to have found a woman who doesn'l
chance to be productive.'
"The president of the Center for mind the arrangement. M.Y.O.B..
Women Policy Studies in Washington dear.
said Judge Saffold may have had the
Send questions to Arm Laden,
besl of inlentions but added, 'She
should just say it slnlighl oul and nol Crtators Syndicate, 5777 W. Ce•
give her really appallingly bad and tury Blvd.,.Suite 700, lAo Angeles,
seXist advice.""
Calif. 90045

Yegan.eh serious about his ·reputation,
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
Yorker who was dubbed !he Soup
Nazi in a "Seinfeld" episode is slill
slewing over !he epithet.
AI Yeganeh lei Jerry Seinfeld
have it when lhe comic visired him
recently to apologize for the episode
in which Yeganeh is portrayed as a
sadislic soup-seller wilh the heSI
recipes in town.
"For three minules, I jus! kept
cursing him and he jusl kept saying,
'I'm sorry,"' Yeganeh said in. Sunday's Daily News.
'
. ul have talent I have education,"
Yeganeh said. "Thai word should 'nor
he used for any serious person. II is
never funny."
Yeganeh is serious abou1 his repUialio~. Dozens of people lined up
outside his midrown srore one recent
afternoon to order delicacies like crab
bisque or com chowder.
"My customers love me. They
worship me," he sai~. :'And I love
them back."

sure," s~d audience member Rose
Anne Thorn. "Can you imagine a
· NAUOATIJCK. Conn. (AP) choreographer
running 10 the srage
1hc NIUJIIUCk High School football
and
lelling
a
dancer
her rums are too
te1111 can't dress in draa anymore.
"ll's offensive, embarrassing and wobbly?"
Srowell admiued overreacting.
4n bild wte.'' principal Salvatore
"We've all been operating under
Catania said. "Years ago il was
a
lot
of rension and frusttation lhese
done, bultoday we are making a con·
pas!
few
weeks what wilh injuries
scious effort to respect people's sex."
and
!he
slress
of !his .lour," he said.
.~ Every year, jusl before the big
· Artistic 1an1rums n ·nor new to
Thanksgivin&amp; Day game against
Alisonia, ·a pep rally .is held where balle1- As · Srowell poinled out,
foOtball players dress like cheerlead- Rudolph Nureyev used to yell at con·
ers, even pllddills lheir chests with duclors from lhe srage all !he lime.
intlared blllloons.
. . The checrleilders gel into il as
HALIFAX, Mass. (AP) -When
well, dressins like football players.
this !own decided to pul out a Web
. Bur me cross-dressing must stop, page, il had no need for high-priced
said Calania,· angering many of his consultants.
.sludents. Aboul 100 protesred by
Nine-year-old Patrick Cable did
•walkins out of class Friday.
jus! fine.
"li's somelhing !hat's been going
The red·haired fourlh-grader proon for yWI," Melissa Bochicchio posed lhe idea when he read in a
NEW YORK CAP) - The Line
$11id. "All our parents did it. They newspaper that a nearby town had set ,
King has found his queen.
can't break
up its own Web site;
. lradition."
AI Hirschfeld. the caricaturisl
,
,
"I thouglt~ 'Hey, why can'! Hal- .
whose'
life is the subjecl of the
NEW YORK (AP) - Ballet afi- ifax have a Web page, if !hey do,"'
recently-rel~ed
documentary "The
•cionados were siUnned when a man he said.
Line
ftlng,"
has
married.
buts! inro a performance of George
Patrick wentro see Charlie SeeiThe'1l3-year-old, whose drawings
·Balanchine's "DivertimenroNo. IS" ig, lhe e•ecutive secrelary in this
have
been a slaplc of The New York
and screamed at !he conduclor.
community of abou1 MOO, and asked
Times
since 1927, married Louise
, . Illumed outlhe man was PacifiC if he could have the job.
Kerz,
60,
last week.
NorlhweSI Balle! direclor Kent Slow·
"I !hough! il was great," Seelig
·ell, who could no longer sland by as said. "I jusl had too much on my
. his conductor, Stewart Kershaw, led plale and it was not a high priority.
").the orchestra in what he considered Having Patrick's ~lp made il n,tuch
the wrong le!Dpo.
, more of a possibility."
. . ·"Too fast, Stewart!" Stowell
lbe home page, set to debur nexr
shouted Thursday while srorming monlh, will ·have maps, photos of the
down an· aisle to lhe orchestra pil at. town and lhe names and telephone
City Cenrer.
numbers of depanmenl heads.
Nervous whispers and giggles rip: .
The page is a little dry for Patrick,
pled throuah the ~d as Kers~aw , however.
.
.
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)"I wanled Sluff hke sound, vrdeo
conlinued conduelln&amp;- at a nollceably slower pace.
- Clips and movi~g picrures in·it," he Few predicred Glenna Milchell ·
would survive when she was bom
"Maybe it was a little fat. I'm not said:
prematurely nearly four monlhs ago, /
weighing only 14 ounces.
Sunday, she wen! home in her
molher's arms, and d~tors called !he
recovery of !he now 4-pound, ISounce infant nothing short of "'markable.
"Every once in awhile, a kid will
come along and heal the odds," said
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The earned $1 million to push ils North Dr. Charles Winslow, a specialisl in
revenge drama "Sieepcn" beat out American bo• office pas! the $300 crirically iII newborns al Blodgell
liRe new nioviesto lop lhe weekend million mark.
Memorial Medical Cenler. "When .
box office wilh an estim...ed gross of
The top IOmovies for lhe l'rid~y· you slart wilh a tiny lillie baby and
lhrough-Sunday period: ·
$9.7 million.
she goes home - that's just an ela·
I. "Sleepers,'' $9.7 million.
The film, starring 'Brad Pill,
tion."
2. "High School High,'' $7 milDustin Hoffman and Roben De Niro,
Glenna's obsracles were large
was No. I for a second slnlighr week, lion.
when she was bum July 7: immalure
3. "Thinner," $5.8 million.
according to preliminary industry
lungs, puny organs and virtually no
4. "The Associare," $4.4 million muscle mass. By early Augusl, her
cstimares.
Final figures were due out today. (tie).
condilion go1 so bad lhal her weigh!
5. "Firs! Wives Club," $4.4 mil- dropped to a mere 12 ounces.
The Jon Lovitt parody "High
SchoOl High" and lhe dieting horror lion (tie).
"We had no expeclation she ·
6. ''The Ghost and rhe Darkness," would survive," Winslow said.
film ''Thinner" opened in second and
lhird place wilh $7 million and $5.8 $4.4 million (lie).
Bur wiihin days,.Gienna began to
7. ''The Long Kiss Goodnighl," improve.
million, respeclivcly.
In fourlh place, wilh about $4.4 $4.1 million.
By late Sepremher, Winslow was
million each, were a trio of movies:
8. "Michael Collins,'' $2.5 mil· sure !he baby would he going home.
The debul ofWhoopi Goldberg's lat· lion.
Morher Tanya Milchell, 25, and
es) comedy "The Associate," Ihe
9. ''That Thing You Do," $2.1 husband Tom, 34, slept in Glenna's
comedy "The First Wives Club" and million.
hospital room ~alurday nighllo pre10. ."D3: The Mighly Ducks," pare (or her homecoming, learning ·
!he lion·hunling drama "1'he Ghosl
and the Darkness."
$1.8 million.
how 10 care for her. Like other new"Independence Day," meanwhile,
borns, she gets a bottle· feeding' every ·
lhree hours.
"She's no problem al all ," Mrs.
Mi!Chell said. "She's sleepi~ like a
baby."

Mrs. HirSchfeld is a museum cura· divorce setllementlast year.
lor and helped pul logether the deal ·
"I am riot afraid of marriage."
for her husband's documentary.
Roger&amp;; said. "I'm afraid of failure ."
~- -

LONDON (AP) - When it
comes to love, Kenny Rogers is a lrUe
gambler.
Rogers is considering tying the
knot for !he fifth time, and the coun·
try singer !old a British news ap;encv
Sunday !hat he's got his eye on Wanda Miller, 30.
"We are much more serious now
· ,rhan we were three monlhs ago but
one of rhe rhings we have lo consid·
er is lhe age difference," Roge(S, 58,
told the Press Association in a phone
· interview from his Nashville home.
"Wanda ls a very sensible inlelligenl girl and I just wan! to make sure
she is ready to sellle down for !he rest
of her life," said the singer, whose
hits include "The Gambler,"
"Lucille" and "Coward of the Coun·
ly."
~gers' last wife, Marianne, look
a reported $40 million from him in a

'

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysi~
(AP) - Some Muslim groups told
Michael Jackson lo go. Forty thousand olhers screamed for him to stay.
· Jackson held a concert Sunday 1o
a shrieking, capacily crowd a! Independence Stadium despite protests
from some of the country's Muslim
popularion.
-M\Islini groups said Jackson's
music is immoral and demanded lhe
'concert he canceled. More than 1,000
Muslims held a half-hour prorest outside !he Narional Mosque as riot ·
'police srood·by. _
The concert, one of rwo scheduled
ar a soccer stadium, was the largesl
ever held in Malaysia. _
"We are giving the people a

Fans don't understand the com·
plainiS against Jackson.'
.
"How can Michael's concert he
• immoral and have a bad effect
youth?" Dincsh Sai, 17, said. "If !hal
is immoral what about all sons of
rhings on lnlernel, movies and songs.
Then· everyrhing should he banned
and whal would we have lefl?"

on

CHICAGO (APJ - It happens
only once every ten y~ars.'and if was
Jodie Foster's !urn this time around.
The actress was named aclor of ·
lhe decade al !he Chicago International Film Festivill on Saturday. Pre· •
vious winners have been Jack Lcm·
mon, Sophia Loren and Tom Cruise.
"It's hard ro rhink or myself as a
trophy·geuer" Foster said.
Fosler adds !his laiCSI pri zc 10 her
two Academy Awards, She won best
actress Oscars for "The Accused,''
chance to see a renowned artiste," the 1988 fi'lm in which she plays a
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad , rape survivor, and as an FBI-trainee
said. "It has never been our intention i.n 1991's "The Silence of lhe
to encourage bad values."
Lambs."

.

OBILE.

said.
The pn~utor says th,at's not lhe

point.
"It's kindoflheold sayiaJ," said
Dillrict AIIA:iraey Max Uttle. "It's ,11
o'dock- do you know where your
c:llildNII ~~~:?"
, . Harlfdrd'slawycl (ran 1he Con·
ter for Reproductive l.Aw and Policy

8th ANNUAL OCTOBERFEST

SALE·A·BRATION

u;,...,....~-~

Pumpkin ·Pie

9AM· 7PM

~

.

•

-

SPECIAL FINANCING RATES
LOW, LOW PAYMENTS
,

r

,

YOU CANNOT AF~ORD TO
BUY
UNTIL YOU. STOP HERE!
.

r

.

;

SPECIAL, LOW PRICES 'ON .
.ALL HOMES DURING SHOW!

.

'

~_,

Purchase a lot Model or special order any model ho~e of your choice! ·

in New York said Ibis case i~ aboul
abortion, not child safety.
"Nowhere elSe in !he nalion has a
prosecution a&lt;;curred when an indi·
vidual hall assisted a woman to exercise her constiiUiional righls," said
lead 'auorney Kathryn Kolhert.
"My biggest fear is !hat young
women will he frighlened by !his case
and not seck mellical advice," she ·
said. ·
"
Kolhen was !he aUof!ley who
argued before the U.S. Supreme
Court against the Pennsylvania
parental consent law. The Supreme
Court upheld lhe law in lll92.
Hartford's lawyers said !hey won't
comment further on !he case until the .
lrial is compleled.
Li\tle said lhe central issue is that
the Jirl was too youns 10 apec 1o the

•

Choose from our Iorge seleclion of new 1996 ond 1997 Model
Skyline Homes! Single and Double Wides Gas or eleclric your choice!

'

TRADE-INS WELCOME!

:-=~L~O~C~Aft~l~l~fi~B~E~i~fi~R~I~a~V;;E~Y;;;
.Onu--i :
.
'

'

12556 Harmony Rd

Rt.50

Athen•, Oh

Belpre, Oh
42Mn3

5t4 6816

1-n Exit 146

Ravenawood, W.Va
27~135

Rt. 56

~miletriploBinghamiOn,N,Y. The

aae of consent is 14 in Pennsylvania.
Hlltf'Oid facea up to 6 YCIII in

prim, bul 1he prosec:utor said he
won't lOCk a jail ~leince -only try·
to send a message.

'

.7oin Me, tJJe 'f])rug !free

7·DAY SALE·A·IRATION
WEDNESDAY THRU TUESDAY
. OCTOIEI 23• THRU .OCTOBER 29111

•

__

.• '

Bringing American Home

Woman faces trial for taking
girl out of state for an abortion

'Now, in a case activistS have
'called a historic Challence to abortion
ripts, Hartford is going 011 trill .on a
chqe of intafcrins with lhe custody
of a child. Jury selection heains
Monday~
·
"I was helping out," Hanford has

• 1

Stop In and Purchase ASKYLINE Manufcidured Home

'Sleepers' No. 1
box office .attraction

Yorlc.

· "

HO ES

Glenna, the
14-ounce .
baby, goes
home Sunday

· LAPORTE. Pa. (AP) - One
August nigh~ a 13-year·old sirl crept
liom her house lo inecl a woman who
offered to help !he child set an abortion. II was !he woman's slepson
Who'd impregnared lhe girl.
Because Pennsylvania law
requi~ pnnlal notification in case• of such young females, lhe
woman, Rosa Marie Hartford, took
rhe girl acro~s lhe llale line into l'lew

• • ·' ·,

i

'

•

,.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="392">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9768">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30097">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30096">
              <text>October 28, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6185">
      <name>blansette</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2368">
      <name>couch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3390">
      <name>crooks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="470">
      <name>king</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5613">
      <name>newlon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1244">
      <name>richard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2653">
      <name>scheider</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>stiles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
