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PROPOSED CONSTI'IUI10NAL AMENDMENT

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&lt;h111101ed by Relolulloa of die &lt;&gt;-raJ A,wmbly of Olllo)

.,

.Chiefs
defeat
Broncos

Pick 3:
645
Pick 4:
2714
BuckeyeS:
1-11-18-29-36:

PageS

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Ohio Lottery .

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To ..-d Artlde VI ol die Olllo Coasdtutlon by die
acldltloa ol Sedloo 6.

en tine

TO INCREASE OPPORTVNITIII'B ro THE RESIDENTS OF TilE
STATE OF OHIO fOR BIGBII.IDVCATION AND10 IINCOURAGI
omo FAMILII!S 10 SAVI AIIEAD TO Btl"tiR AWORD BIGBD
EDUCATION, THIS AMINDMENT WILL:

1. ALLOW 111ESI'ATE10 MAINTAIN Al'llOGIWf FOR Till SALE
OF TV1'110N CRIDITS WBEIIIY TilE PROCIIIIDS OF SUCH
CREDITS PURCIIASID FOR THE IIINIITt OF SI'ATE RESIDINTS .
ARE GUARANTEI!D BY TilE STATI TO COVER A SPECIFIED
AMOUNT WHEN APPLIED TO TilE COST OF TUITION AT ANY
STATE INSI11VI10N OFIIIGIIEII!IJUCATION AND 1111! SAME OR
JD'FEIIENT AMOUNt W8IN APPLIID TO THE COST OF m- · PiDally, tbe'amendmmJ would require tbal all assets maintainccl in the Ohio
TION AT ANY OI1Bit IDGBIR EDUCATION INS'ITI11tiON AS MAY
TuitioD Trust Pond be usccl solely for the purposes of the fund. If the fund
BE PROVIDED BY LAW.
ia licptin' I ~.any nmainiiiiiSidB would be li'liiiiferred to the gencrsl'revauc
fund of the state.
2. TO 11EQ111RE THAT mT10N CUDn'S PAID FROM THE TUITIONCIEIIITSPIOGRAM AND TBI OHIO tvm0N TRUST ftJND
BE SUPI'Oirl'iD IY-111EitJU. FMI'B AND CUDri OF THE SI'ATE
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 3

Val 41, NO. 117

· ccp~1114

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 3

*

OF OmO AND UQVIUTBIPASSAGEOP LAWS FOR THE CONDUCT OF fBI Tm10NCRI!DD'S PIOGIAM CON~ Wll'll

3. REQUIRE TIIEGENIIIlAL ASSEMBLY 10 API'ROPIIIATE MONEY
TO OFFSET ANY DEriCIENCY IN THE omo TUITION TRUST
FUND TO GtrAilANTII THE PAYMINT OF TBI ftiLL AMOONT
OF ANY T1JITION PAYMENT QR lWUND RIQUIIlED BY AmTIONPA\'MENI'CONTRACT.z.~Al.LOWAM.UORITYOPTBE

MEMBERS OF EACH BOUSE w THEGBNIIAL ASSIMIILY10 APPllOPRIA11 J1JNDS POll fBI PAYMENT OP ANY TUITION PAYMENT CONTRAct PliiMOUSLY INTIIID INTO.
4. REQlJIUTHAT .ALL OHIO TUD10N TRUST ftJND ASSETS IE
USEDFORTHEftlii'OSIOPTBI~~t...i!..'!!IIPUNDISU­
QUIDATED, REQUIRE 111AT ANY UMAil'lll'ftj ASSETS II
TRANSFERRED 10 THE GINEIW. IIVIN1JE ftJND OF 1BI

STATE.

IF ADOn'ED, TmS AMENDMENT WILL BE EPPECTIVI

Since iDI:eplioo, the qeocy's Plepaid Tuitioo Prosram bas more than 31,SOO
dlildn!n earolled, 11a bcellllfely and ~Y inveated by Public Employees
Rdbomeut SyMa IIIOIIIIY ,,.:C sa• and 11a more than S1 1'3 million in asse~~~.

IMMI!DIATELY.

A -.Jorlly J8 t * II •

ry far ......

gram'• vllue, equity and affonlability. To ensure its cootiJiuccl affordability
ancl'eaa!l!e !IIQI'e Qbio c;hi"!~ w !!ll&lt;:q~ !!i&amp;bcr ~on, IlK! M ·, for-

SHALL THE PIOI'OSED
AMENDMI!NT IE ADOPtED?

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EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 3
(as preplll'eCI by the Obio a.Dot lkllrd)
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The amendment would requ!Je ·tbat tuition credits l"id from the tuition
credits program and the.Ohio Tuition Trust Pond be lupportcd by the full
faith and credit of tbo SUite of Obio. The •IIM"dment would also require the
passage qf lawa to provide tbal fulure ~ of~ tuition credits proarun
be consistent witb the IIIICildment.

By GEORGE AQATE
water line would extend along ButSentiDel News Sllff
ternut to the Marathon station.
Area drivers mu.$t modify !heir Blaettnar said. The project would
speeds on some Pomeroy .b.yways, cost $329,000 - requiring a 12
following action at Pomeroy Vii- percent ma~h from the village if. .
lage Council's Monday meeting.
the grant is ac!!uired.
In an emergency vote. council
Design and engineering studies
dropped ihe spbed limit from 25 to have all been completed for !his
20 miles per hour on Uncoln Hill project making funding !he last
from Lincoln Heights to the bottom Step, he added.
of !he hill and the entire length of
Pomeroy will also seek a
Osborn StreeL
·
$44,000 reereation grant to upgrade
But oourtc;il decided to keep the tbe baseball fields' concession
"no left IUnl" rule for drivers enter- stands, lights 811d rest rooms, Blacting Main Street from Butternut tnar saiil. The Pomeroy Youth
A
League has already pledged to
. . "=~roy police and safety cover the 25 per~en.~ .,!!lalch. or
au!lloridea had recommended !hat $~ 1,000, so .tbe projeCt wtll cost !he
ono-way Osborn Street have speed . VIllage nothing, he 8dded.
bumps IIIStalled, Mayor JQhn Blael- _ . B~aettnar B;1so su"ested council
tnar said, But, Blacunar countered cons!~er seunng !lstde money ~or
!his would affect snow removal acqutr!ng. recreatnon. grtl!ll montes
efforts.
for b~nldnng a walking p~!h from
Councilman Lany Wehrung ~ vt~age han !D Kroger s on ~
suggested a poliCe cruiser sit on· ~ver stde of Main S~ To stabt·
botb streets. to stop tbe speccling l!ze ~ground and build the fourproblem - and prevent children foot-wtde path could totll $28,000,
from bein killed.
hi' added.
.
.
"I donfl care if it's two in !he
In otJ;ter acboo, council:
afternoon or two at night, they
• Shifted $40,000 from .the
come down Lincoln Hill at 50 $t 9.000 general fund balance mto
· milesperhour,"Webrungsaid.
111: street fund.to pay for salllfi:es
I
Councilman Bill Young voicccl at.d recent pavmg, Blaeunar ~d.
concern !hat posting a lowrr speed ! .e street fund has no way of ~~­
limit and more signs would not m~ revenue except !hrouJ!h mintEASTERN QUEEN CANDIDATES- E¥tem High School is
slow drivers.
!"91 !Jas tax 811~ motor vehtcle reggeariDg up ror Ibis weekend's 1111nllll Homecoming activities. This
"We're letting !he tail wag tbe IS(lllbon collecuons, he added.
year's calldldates for Homecoming Queen, from left, are Becky
dog here. We need to enforce Ibis."
The street fund spends about
Driggs, Amy Redoviau, Heidi Nelson iiucl Jessial CheVIIIier. Atteu·Young said.
$1~,000 each month -.hal~ of
dants from other cla!IHS Include: freshmen, Billy Pooler; sop•oIn other business, coWJcil agreed whtch goes to wages of Its etght
more, Tracy Wblte; and junior, Crystal Summerfield. Tbe queen
be crowned during lbe balftim~ or Friday's game agal~st
will
to pursue grants for a Butternut emplo~.
.
...
Avenue water line and improve• will.mvestJgate !h~ possibiliJy
.Trimble. Oilier activities include Olympic evea!S betweea h1gh
·school students Friday afternoon and a semi-formal dance after
·ments to the Pomeroy baseball of leastng rooms 1n the old
fields.
P001eroy tligh School to !he Meigs
the foot baD game. (Seatine! photo by George Abate)
The one-111ile long, 10-inch
\Continued ou Page 3)

-REMOVES PRESSURE ,TO KEEP nJmON LOW: the lcveraae
wbicb the Trust Fund migb! have uaccl to COD!rol tuition COlli ia PlimiJWrd ,

The propoecclanw:odi!Ml!C bas brolld-bucd, bi-paitisan support: stale leadership IUJIIIOIU ita p
Jinecill aid adnmslnton endorse Issue 3 bra•!"'
advance family savings dccraaiel reliance O!IIICIII'CC linancial aid and burdeilsome lltlldealloana, opening pter accesa to education.

-DISCRIMINATES: low income families cannot afford to Contribute
to a college savings IICCOIIDt.

.VOTE NO ON ISSUE 3!

COMMI'ITEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 3
Senator Richard H. Pinan
SeNih" loben R. Cupp

COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISStJE 3

RepJ-..tative Michael 0. Vcricb
Repre:sentalive llublra H. loyd

State Representative Edward F. Kasputis

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The atneJICIJJ!Clll would allow the Stale of Ohio to mai•in a prop'UII for .~==~~~!,!White~'~----...,;,
the sale of tuiJion eredita ancl to guaraatee tbe proceeda of the credits IIOld.
The guarantee would cover a spcciftod aiDOOBI of the cost of tuitioolll any
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 4
state inslilutioo of bigbcr cclucation lll&lt;l.tbe aune or ·a differeDt unount of
the cost of tuition at any adler ~ emJCidioJi illltilution as may be provided
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VOTE '"lm.'' ON ISSUE 4 - TO STOP TAXES ON FOOD
by law.
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State Representative Joan

_.!

W. Lawrence

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT AGAINSI' SI'ATE ISSUE 4

STATE ISSUE 4 1a a constitutionll amendment to repeal a state tax on soda
pop Don't be misled intO believing it eliminates taxes on food. Since 1936
~ on Issue 4 will restore Ohio's tradition of protecting consumers Ohi~'s Constitvtioo bas prohibited stale taxes on fool! off the premisea wbele
The llllle!ldmen! would llso require the Oeneral Assembly to approp1iate A
from payms taxes on food.
. sold. · · ·
·
money to offset any defielency in the Ohi~ :rumon Trust Pond to~
ihe payment of lbc IIlli amount of any tulboD payment or refund required Wbe the c:onatitutionality 0 f 1
bolesal soft drink tax
ballengccl
·
by a tuition payment.cootract, an&lt;1 allow a majority of the members of each . n
.
new w.
e. . . ,
V.:U
~.
.
This imendment is beil!g proposed primarily by,out-of-atate soda pop ven·
house of the 0enen1 Allembly to appropriate fundi for tbc payment of any m 1992• the eowt rulina ~ a g1p111g bole .m Ohio 8 constitubon, which dora wbich seek to usc the Ohio COIIStitution to pJOJDOte their limited special
tuition paymeat contnl:t previoualy entered into.
had lleen tbollpt to prohibit food taxes.
interests. Here are five reasot111 why every Obio voter - and taxpayer -

m.

--::-::":::'::":r'::'::::--:-:;:-:::~:;;~~Ut;__.The court ruled tbat retail food taxes are indeccl illegll. But, it c:oacludccl should vote NO on ISSUE 4. '

DMENT
..ONSTITUTION.~~-,:,..u: ~:c=~
C

tbat wlllllmlc taxes on food are legal!
loopbolc. and restoreObio·sc:onstitu-

- - - - - -...- - - - - - - - - - -... Spccifically,lsaue 4 will prohibil wholesale taxes on food-and other hidden
taxes on food ili'pdients and food paclraging. It llso will repeal the 1992
PROPOSED CO~AL AMENDMENT ·
soft dlink tax. .
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(Piopa.d'lly fnillltlft Pedllon)

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Jepealina the aoft
tax will niJt affect ellilting state . .
. The
reveaue8 JO into die Oeneral Fund, and are not~ to any . · area.

To iaaeH ~ XD of die Oblo CoaadtudoD by the
addition of Sedloa 13.
.

I. Tujgs (pgd Ia W!!!JI. food tUa apecially bun !hoie who can least
allri to pay; IIICb as familiea witb dlilclrell and seniors on fixed

illllO'IW.

2, AllpwipB Sate wm'MD' 19 mts;t hiMcp 'I'" on fnnd will 1e1 a
deniM"' P""9"kn', The stale is already lookina al new food taxes
to raiae revenues.
·
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1. PROIDBITING THE CtJRREN1 WHOLESALE TAX ON
SOFr DRINKS AND (,)TBER «;ARBONATED, NONALCOBOIJC BIVIUlAGII.

BONATED, NON-ALCOBOUC 11\'DAGES, OR JOOD FOR
HUMAN CONSUMPTION, OR '1111Wt INGRIDIENTS OR
PACKAGING.
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I.At's l'llllre llUI' c:cJIIItitl.a-1 tradition of prohibitina food ~

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3. PROIIIBITJNG KNACTMIN.TOI' A TAXON THE SALE TO
OR. ~481 aY A . MANVJ~,..PR~
PACKAGIIl.' OR am1h. ·or sort PJUNU, C~·

... a•J"""" pa m furtbcr,

HUMAN CONSUMPI'IQt(;· OR ; i&amp;IIJl INGUDIINTS OR

coMMITta TO PRIPAU .UGVMKNT FOR ISSUE 4

......

JoiD IIIII' INC!id "•nd ~of ttwneqds of om-. in votina

BONATID,NC&gt;N;~~,ORfOODIOil

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IF AbOrrJD, 'I'Bil~~IE~30
DAYS~ ·ADCWJJOIII. I ' , . :i ~· •, . •,
~

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DIBNTS Oil rrs PACKAGINO; (2) UPON
ANY SALB OR PllltCHASI!.OF SUCH
I'I'I!MS SOLD TO OR PUlCHASJ!D BY A
MANUPACTUilEil,
pllOCESSOil,
PACKAOil. DISTRIBUTOil OR
Plriljiili ~ JIOOD JIOl liUM,'N
~.oartsllQig)II!NI'S: .
JIOl uu·IN m TaADB.OilBUSINIISS,
01, (3) 1M ANY UTAJLTIANSACI'ION.
ON ANY fACJCAIJIM0111AT.lxxo!TAJNS
Rl9Q JIOliiUNAN C0N1UMP1'1QN ON

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IIXC:DITAllll OllOPFTHIPIJI"G"'WHIIU*&gt;LD.
~ ·fuUolls ~ na IIICTION.
IUU.·~-,.....,._.,..,(1) fOOD ~ RUMAN COICSUMPnoN

UPON ANY ~ IWJ! Ol SIWJ. INCLUDE NON·ALCOHOUC
WHOU!SAU!JIVIlQ!ASBOP,:ooJIOR. I!IIVEJtAOES. 1111S SIICI'IO~ SHALL·

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· NO......,.oaartaJa_ • .....:._

. ~II Af)OPI'ID7

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(PI~"" !tJiiiiiM PolilloJ!)

lf'll.-.._, .. . . . .,..... at
OMo: •
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Al'licii ' XD at .. . &lt;*D e1 · t • ll
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....... .., llll ..... at~~ ..... ..,.
liall13. • . IW: .

SBAJ.j. TBiftOPOSID

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lli8VI4
T1XT or PROI'OSID
COJIIS'ImJTIONAL AMBNDMINT

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state funds available for cducalion
and childrens programs in Ohio. The ~ pop tax genentea $130 :
million per budget period, whicb Is needed to 8UJIIIOil educatiO'I a!Jd .
other vitll prop'UDS for children.

(3) If passed, ISSUE 4 will reduce

,\EPA official will
urge dioxin-free

pulp m111 plant

(4) Coosumers don't pay Ohio's pop tax. The soda pop coqJeDies do.
Marketplace COI!lpdition continues to bold down pop prices al the
store.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.(~
- A U.S. Environmentll Protection Agency official.says he
will urge developers of a proposed pulp mill in Mason County to consider new bleaching
technologies !hat ~o not create
dio~.
·
"I'm going to make a strong
pitch," said EPA Region III
· Administrator Peter Kostmayer.
"We'd like them to think about
alternative tecbnologies .in terms
. ofbleec:hing."
Kosanayer visited West Vir·
glnia on Monday and •
witb
feaden ~ various envit,onmentll
and labor groups.
Parsons &amp; Whiuemore Inc.,
hued in Rye Brook, N.Y., has
said the S1.1 billion project
would create 600 permanent
jobs in Apple Grove, located
: alon$ the Ohio River between
. Hunungton and Point PleasanL .
Developers say !he mill meets
· c:mrent EPA 8lllldardl
The itate Division of Bnvi. ronmental Protection in August
· issued industrial-landfill and
water-pollution permili to the
developers. The (JIOJeclls l'!li!ing 111 air-pollution permit.
, KOIU!IIyer said pranoliiJI I
mill that would aot produce
' dioldn falls in line with the Clio• ton administration's aoal of
encoufNing iodUitry to reduce
::llid eiimiriate pollution when
. possible.

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(S)

before

Diaoa Wiotethalter
Dan Schonhoft
STOP TAXES ON FOOD COMMI'ITEB

.

· 4. PROIDID'ING ENA~ or UTAIL TAUS ON
PACKAGINQ 'I'IIAT CONTAINS SOIT DIUNKS, OI'III!Oit CAR·
BONATED, NON-ALCOBOUC lbtVDAGIS, OR FOOD P0R
HUMAN c~ON; . . ..
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To balarice lbe state budget and prevent cuts in ICbool fuudio&amp;, the
wboleslle pop tax was approvccl in 1992 by a biputisan majority in
tbe atate,.Jegis!ature and Governor George Voioovich. Passlge of
ISSUE 4 could result in harmful cuts in education and other state pro- ·
3. JMicm. whnlee'c M'P on food are ultjmetcly maw' (jp to COIIgrams - or it will necessitate the adoption of another tax bike more
mgnm • The soft drink tax already costs c:onaumcrs $70 million Ill·
objectionable to conawners.
Dually. Fulure wh1llenle food taxes oou1d 00111 us hundred&amp; of millions On November 8tb. vote NO on ISSUE 41
of ikJ,Itm more per year.
·

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z. PROIDBITING KNACI'MINT
or A WBOLIS.ALE TAX ON
THE SALE OR· I'URCBAsli: or SOFt DIINKS, CAR-

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tion SOUI'CC for children or adults. So they sbould be subject to taxation just like other non-food products. It's only fair.
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PACKAGiNG.

(2) State law bas never defined soft clrinb as food: They are NOT a DU!ri-

We liiJC you to suppon Iaaue 4 bealuse:

CURRENT SacnON 3(C) OF AR11CLE XD PROIDBITS
TAXES ON 11IE SALE OR I'URCBASEOfPOOD FOR HUMAN
CONSUMP'110N OPP THE PIIMISES WIIERI SOLD. '11111:
AMENDMENT WOULD EXPAND TBI CURRENT RESTRIC·
TION~ BY:

·.

(I) Contrary to its supporters' misleading claims, ISSUE4 ia nota reliCtion to atax on food. Its purpose is to prohibit the currem wholelalc
tax ooaoftdrinb iDd otbercarboaatcd. non-a1cobolic beventp. The
tax amounts to a penay a can, .which is modest and fair.

.

' COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 4
R. Gregory Browning

=·AC:.,~ng·

NOT AFPBCTTHE llXTIINI'TO WHICH
lido XVI, Secdoa I atlboCwij•• 1attk
THE LBVY OR COLLI!CTION OP SAL!!S
Sllle of Ol!lo - ' a OOIIIIa
OR OTHER EXCISE TAXES ON THE
ltETAIL SAL!! Oil UTAIL PUilCHA811
OP FOOD FOR HUMAN CONSIIMPI'ION ·
IS PERMriTBD Oil PllOIIIIIITIID BY
SECTION :ICC) OF 11IIS All'I'ICIJ!.

OfPICE OP TIIIIKRITNIY
OP ITATE Of OliO .
I, !lob Taft, Soa-y at SIMI, do '-by
corlify "'"' "'" ............. "'" !loll lUI at

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.u..bly -'l!loc! Ia .. atat Sllle Jl!ftiiiiiiD At-

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MarkRell
I. Jobn Reimers

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By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Staff
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CHESHIRE - Two parties
involved in a sexual harassment
complaint at the Guiding Hand
School were ready to settle !he
issue Monday night, but could not
because !he Jhirl! p!1!1y •s attorney
was not presenL
"We thought tbat it would be
resolvccl tonighJ." said Prosecuting
Auomey Brent Saunders, who rei!:
resents !he Gallia County Board 6f
Mental Retardation and Developmentll Disabilities.
Saunders and !he board met in
executive session for about half an
hour witb !he attorney of Guiding
Hand Superintendent Jobn Riffe.
Riffe was placed on 30-day
leave in September. The board
agreed Monday to exL...ld !he leave,
which would end ·, hursday. until
!he matter is resolved.
The. superinJendent's dismissal
is being sought by supporters of
Kelly Davis. a program nurse who
says she was termina!ed in June
because she filed a sexual harass·
ment complaint against the superintendent

The prosecu!OI' did 1101 COI!IIIIellt
on !he agreement, but said it could
not be acted upon bel:ause Davis"
attomey. Richard Walla' of Lop!,
was not present at the meeting.
Saunders said he failed 1 letter
Thursday and made six pbope calls
to inform Wallar of tbe meetins,
but was· never contacted.
Riffe will continue working for
the school on home assignment
until a decision is reached.
.. At Ibis point he has not been
terminated," Saunders said. "'But he
is not going to be back in this
building until this matter is
resolved.~

Saunders advised the boll'll not
to wait another month, but to call a
special meeting as 50011 as Wallar
is available to respond to !he agreement
Davis said she spoke with her
attorney Friday and was under the
impression that Wallar was
infoimed of tbe meeting, but not
asked to attend.
In August, !he State Personnel
Board of Review instructed the
r.'fRDD board to reinstate navis
(Continued on Pqe 3)

Negotiators meeting
to avert Gallia strike
GALLIPOLIS - Negotiators
were meeting !his afternoon in a
last-ditch attempt to avert a strike
by teachers and suPJXYI staff in the
Gallia County Local School Dis-

Wednesday.
Letters to parents from the distiicl administtation explaioins !he
situation were sent home with studeniS Monday.
trict
The associations rejected wbat
Should bargaining fail again . was called a "final" offer by tbe
today, ~ work stoppage by !he Gal- board of education on new conlia Local Education Association traciS on Oct. 4 and voted 10 authoand the Gallia Local Suppon Staff rize a strike. Noti(ication of tbe
Association begins at 5 a.m .
(Continued from h~~t 3)

Poll: healtf\ ~ ·
crisis no ~i~
deal in Ohio

Trade summit opens
as Ohio hopes to get
bigger slice of pi~

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CINCINNATI (AP)- Two!hirds of !he Ohioans surveyed said

break into smaller groups to dis!hey did not believe !here was a
cuss banking and insurance.
naJional health care crisis. a
telecommunications, lr811sportation
statewide poll reported Monday.
and other sectors of international
The Ohio Poll found that 3S.I
trade.
percent thought the healtb care sysTbe goal is to standardize as ·
tem was in a crisis, and 34.4 permuch of the process as poSsible cent lhought it had major problems
from .electronic messages to cusbut was not in crisis. The poll said
Joms 'documents, said Kamran
26.3 percent -said tbe problems
Kusari. spokesman for the UN
were 1101 major and could be fixed
Conference on Trade and Developby !he end of the decade, and 4.2
menL
percent had other opinions.
"This is the ftrst time loolting at
· The poll said S1.1 percent of
every sector together in relation to
!hose responding said !hey would
each other," Kusari said. "Trade
he more inclined to !I'USt stale aovwill nevrr be m01e efficient !han its
e(nment to reform the system .
least efficient sector."
while 28.9 penlCIII said they WOIIki
On Wednesday, UN Secretary·
trust Washington to oo the job.
Genenl Bou!I'OS Bou!I'OS-Gabli and
or Ohioans questioned. 2.6 perU.S. Commerce Secretary Ron
cent said both governnteniS should
Brown will help deliver the Columbe involved; 12:5 ~I said nei- ·
bus Declaration 011 Trade EfficienJRADE SUMMIT - All Iaiaae ·ot die Earth projected as
!her should; IDd 4.8 Pcn:eat said
Ray Willker of the United Ki~Jadomapoke at tile World SUI!Imit OD
cy.
they didn't Jmow.
1'rlde Efllcle!ICy ill Columbal Moadly. Tbe pi o{ tiN! summit Is
The declaration, tl)e culmination
· In a similar Ohio Poll repou;ad •
to brlq toatfter tiie United Nations' tnlde miDisten and sellior
of two years of meetings on trade
in October 1993, 47 perceat said
efficie!ICy, consists of a mix ofJ!Ol·
onldall will -yon, mualelpalleaden ud bllllille!IS e1endves
they would trust ata1e go~et!IQW
frGm throupoat the world to promote laterutloul trlcle lbroqll
icy reconimendations and pracucal
to do ref~mn, and 33 pereeat
steps to belp countries reduce · aew ...,_.tlall tediDCitops and electronic commerce. (AP)
favored WashingiOII.
bureaucratic barriers to l!'llde.
The University of Ciacinnad
H the stepS are implement¢, the
and The Cincinnati Post SJIOiliOr
UN estimates tbat countries ~ CUI meeting.
The city
spend more tban the ·Ohio Poll. Tbe univerlity'a
S1 billion a year off !he cos! of
In general, it )ooked like the Sl million on security for the sum- Insli!Ute for Policy R~ condoing buSiness.
· start of any large convention. mit. That's in addition to the ducted the poll Sept. 14-23, daiaa
Monday's opening session of e1 C.lp! f('r the large number of uni· $SOO.OOO !he city chipped in 10 pay . telephone interviews with •lllldcl!i
the summit wu llevoted mainly to fc med Columbus police officers ftr the delegates' hotel and travel sample of ~1 adults statewide. :
housekeeping items, including s&lt; altered inside and outside !he cts!S.
The poll had a margin error of
'
electing .officers' for a UN trade cmvention Center.
three percentage poinJs.

By PAUL SOUHRADA
f o\isoelated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Corporate
Columbus plays host today to trade
officials from around !he worlcf.
Some of !he nearly 1,000 delegates attending the World Summit
on Thiele EffiCiency will leave the
mini-United Nations in the Greater
Columbus Convention Center to
tour seven) corporate headQuarters.
There, local business leaders
will try to develop future trading
relationships.
Scheduled stops on the summit's second dar include ComPIIServe informanon services. The
Limited Inc. retailing chain, Chern. ical Abstracts Service and the
Huntington National Bank Service
Center.
.
. "We need to inclalse the pres. ence of Columbus and Ohio com·
paniea in international markets,"
said Jona!hu York, president of
the Greater Columbus Chamber of

Comm_mce.

.

. If that happens, the $2 million
!he city is lipendiag to put on the
five-day sbow for repreaentatives
of 130 countiles will return many
times over, YOlk said.
The goal of the summit Is to
make. inlemllional .trading easier,
, particularly fat small· .and mccliumsiZed busineaes.
'
. In ~ tours, *lcRaleS will

will

•

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I
I·

I • liP IF

GH superintendent's
case still unresolved

:speed reduction

--STATE COMPETES WITH PRlVATE INVESTMENTS: people
wbo.can alford to prepay tuitipD can do so without ata1e help.

mal, c:oastitulioaaly-mmhC:d ""full 'faitb and credit" is needed.

NO

a_..

only tbat itsu!llOrted "all the steps tate:. by Presi!lent Saddam HusSein to
ccl StateS of fomenting a new crisis in 1he Gulf in oilk:z to get more rev- . ·
g!lll'lllltee lraqt securiJy and ... to get the sancli0111 imposed on Iraq lift·
enue from tbe ruling families in Kuwait811d Saudi Arabia.
·
ed.''
.
In its daily editorial, Baghdad Obst 'Vtr called Saudi Arabi,a's King
Las! week, Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev brokered a deal
Fahd !he "Kmg of Decadence .. and sa J he should drop his claim to be
in which Saddam plcclged to accept Kuwait's independence. and !hen !he custodian of Islam's hoi y shrines in Mec a and Medina.
Security Council would set a date for lifting a ban on Iraqi oil sales
"The crisis over Kuwait has left him .takccl to the feet," it said. "Ho is
imposed aflt'r the August1990 invasion Jf KuwaiL
in reality no more than a servant to the ttievel who come &amp;om across the
'The deal came after an estimated 70,000 Iraqi soldiers massed on the · ·Atlantic Ocean to pi Wider our oil riche·. leaving large parts of the Arab
Kuwaiti border earlier !his month, precipitating !he largest Western
world .so desperately poor."
·
buildup in !he region since the 1991 Gulf war.
Since sanctions forced Iraqi oil of · !he market, Saudi Arabia, !he
Iraq has now withdrawn most of tbe soldiers. But it appears to be
world's tqJ oil Jl'O(Iucer, made' up mos of the shortfall. boosting ouJput
s!alling on the pledge to recognize Kuw1.iL
from about 5 million barrels a day to more tban g million barrels. Traders
Today, Baghdad's only English,Janguage newspaper accused !he Unit·
say OPEC has no plans yet to handle the return of Iraqi oil, which they
call a major wildcard iri the oil futures Irarket

·Pomeroy ouncil
:approves treet ,

-TRUST FUNDNOI' SELF.stJPIIORTING: when this lqi""'im was
passed six years ago, it was to be illdepeodent of ata1e goverDIIICIIt and
investors bad no claim on the Oeuenl Revenue Fund. Now they will have
first claim 011 the GRPI

Recent lepationiJII*d by the Oeoerll Asaembly bas improvcd the pro-

VIS

:By NED.. MacFARQUHAR
Associated Press Writer
.
-· : · BAGHDAD, Iraq -After au the troop movemenJS, !h~ saber rauling,
:!he diplomatic posturing. the dispute wilh Saddam H~em comes do~
· to !his: What is the wotld going to do about the sancuons tbat are cnp, lin Iraq?
·: p fs Russia and ·!he United States c:ashed over !he issue; Baghdad
: stallCd on a pledge 10 1ee0gnize Kuwait's independence, a key demand
:before sanctions will be li{ted
.
,
. .
.
. The Revolutionary Command Coui'Ctl, Iraq s lop dectst~n-malung
:body, reoortedly had approved the decision to recogruze Kuwatt on Satur. day. Parlianient hail been expected tp JObber-stamp !he move Monday. .
; It did not. .After a closed-door meet ng. the National Assembly satd

VOTE NO;

-INSURES PERSoNAL SAVINGS PLANS: the inveator would be
Pe"W of hr!C 3 'will IIJI qjs n~c• or met Ohio hJPIYM more. It is assured of a fixed return when college tuitioo crcclits are piii'Cllas4ld
needed to demoollrate to lbe lnlemal Revenue Service tbat the Prepaid Tui- . regardless of earnings on Trust Fund investments.
tioo froaram qullifi~ for fcdenl tax exemption. This ""stamp of approvll''
will enable the program to c:cmnue providing an affordable means for families -COMMITS STATE TAXING POWER: sbould the invatmcnt of colto prq11y Aature biJber education at competitive prices.
lege tuition funds be insufficient to cover future tuitioo, tax-payers will
have to pay the difference. In a time of difficult budget cboices, wbcre
AJJ altlfe qeocy, lbe Autbority bas many checks and balances to safeguard raising taxes or reducins spending are opti0111, guuanteeing perDIIi sava lbcally-tolllld prop'UII for ita piJiicipantl. The funds are sufficient to meet ings is wrong.
future obliplions. Pulqe of Iaaue 3 will officially back the Aulbority witb
lbe Slale'i eodorlomeat, laliafyina federal guidelillea.
-GUARANTEES PAYMENT: an absolutec:onstitutiooll guarutee is
made only for lang-term debt for stale buildings. Ouarantecing payment
The Obio Tuition Trut Auihority was mated in 1989 as a stale agency to for personal college savings IICCClWits is BAD PUBUC POUCYl
provide Obio fwmi!W with a safe, simple and affordable way to prepay the .
00111 of lJl8ber educalioll in 1111111 ilaaements. Alao, scbolanbipll can DOW -'-IRS QUFSI'IONS: lmemal Revenue SeNice will tax Trust Fund earnbe mated by Clllpollllioaa or otber Olpnirr-o~~~ ~ prepay tuition for Children ings unless the program Ia stale bac:kccl. In reality these: are private savfrom funiliea who cannot afford advanced savmgs.
'
ings and should remain so.

TmS AMENDMI!NT.

J1ect1on. 10 ......

Allultlmrcl!ll lne. t!J

U.S., Russia clash over Iraqi sanctions

. THE OHIO CONSTITUTION SHOULD tml BE AMEJ11DED TO
PLEDGE STATE TAXES TO GUARANTEE PERSONAL COLLEGE
nJmON SAVINGSI

REASONS TO

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 18, 1994

I

�•
•

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'TUeldaj, oclo~r 18,1994

Commentar
I l l Court StJeet

·

·l'bininiy, olilo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITI!RS Of OPINION 11e welcome. They Jbould be leas tban 300
words lone. All lell&lt;n .,.. subject to editing and must be •ianed with DilDo,
lddras and tclepbone number. No ·unsicoed lcttc11 will be published. LellcJI
sbould be in good Iaiiie. otddleuinJ iuuea, not penonllilies.

·Study: Less money
available to build roads

· Fnltn da~ one or the Ronald
Reagan JIICSidency, it was clear he
was not the most pen:eptive person
ever 10 hold the office. ·
He told stories abo~t himself
and others that were more fanciful
than factual. He had little grasp of
details and particulars. He bungled
names and foiJ!ot faces - indeed,
he did not recognize his own Housing and Urban Development seaetary when he came to the White
House with a group of mayors.
lt made no difference. The press
reported his faults and faux pas, but
the scories had little effect on his
popularity. Because nothing stuck,
they dubbed him the Teflon president.
From day one of the Bill Clinton
presidency, it bas been clear that he
1s a brainy person - perhaps one
of the smartest men ever to bold
the office. A policy wonk, they call
him, a
who wallows in the

~ihink that to' say that ~third ol the stale's bighways are in substandard condition, that is alarmist rlletoric," he said.
Wykoff said usc of the term "subsl8lldard" meant ooly that a road
would need maintenanCe. "lf a road or bridge was unsafe, we'd shut it
down We'dclose it.« we'd fix it," he .;aid. ·
~ association made no recommendations about raising the gasoline
tax, imposing coils, &lt;x; ending revenue diversions tbst make less money
available for constructiOII.
"We're certainly not going 10 talk about anyth~ specifiC like a motor
fuel tax because there really are a lot of 'options," Finley said.
Each JIC!IIIY of tbc stale gasoline tax raises about $54 million a year.
The 22-cenllevy produces $1.1 billion.
Of that total, tbc largest II!DOODt of $7~ .million goes ~ ~DC?T. Cities,
counties and townshlps rece1ve $286.2 r.nlhon; $145.8 million 1s used for
the Ohio Department of Highway _Saf.:ty which includes the highway
patrol; and $S4 million goes' 10 the Tninsoortation Improvement Fund that .
also benefits local govc:mmenL
··
.
Most of the department's $702 millio 1 share- $463.5 million- goes
for basic Operating.costs; $92 million tc monicipalities for snow removal
and mowing along stale routes; and $54 million for miscellaneous opera- ·
lional items.
•
.
Anotbcr$54 million of the agency's 1otal is used to pay off interest and
principal of money that the state borro¥ ed to help finance past construc-

0

tionJ:!~~ation said tbc remaining $37.8 million is used to matl:h fed·
eral highway grants and for a small nuuber of totally stale-fund~ construction projects.

Today in history
By Tile Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, OcL 18, the 29lst day of 1994. There are 74 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Histocy:
On Oct. 18, 1767, tbc boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania,
the Mason-Dixon line, was agreed upon.
'On this dale:
: In 1685, King Louis the 14th of Fra:;tee revoked the Edict of Nantes,
wliich bad established the ' gal toleration of France's Protestant population. the Huguenots.
In 1867, tbc United States took form&amp;! possession of Alaska from Russi&amp;
.
: In 1898, tbe American flag was raisM in Puerto Rico shonly before
SJiain fonnally relinquished conlrol of the island to the United Slafe4.
:In 1931, inventor Thomas Alva Edison died in West Orange, NJ., at

.

.

.

.

· In 1944, SO years ago, Sov1et troops mvaded Czechoslovakia durmg
WorldWarU.
.
·
.
; In 1968, tile U.S. Olympic Commi~ suspended two black athletes,
Tammie Smith and John Carlos, for givmg a "black power" salute as a
Poteat during a victory ceremony in Mexico City.

•

\

OK.!H
IAAf Po~~ 1'\!
. NQ Mo~E
UNlOr-&amp;01\IONAL

-

•··I

1..0'1~-

a
0

ton"?

-Velcro's direst enemies and
women of questionable character or

\\l~

DiDN'T

C.~\.t.

MEl
'

..... _...

- · ~

muddled niotivc accuse him of io
many liaisons that he may go down
not m history but in mythology.
Eisenhower is said to have had a
lover. Kennedy bad a hundred, give
or take. Johnson dallied, and Carter
lusled in his bean. So why is Clinton the only one commonly viewed
as a satyr?
- Republicans regularly accuse
Velcro of pushing through the
''largest taX hike in history" and
punishing the middle class with tax
mcreascs. The great Teflon pushed
through a jumbo taX hike in 1982,
but he called it "revenue enhancement" and an adoring public paid.
it with scarcely a whimper.
Teflon's taX boost soaked everybody. Velcro's package affects
only the well-heeled and doesn't
touch the middle class. So why is
he a "tax and sr.end" lefty and
Teflon the people s president?
- During Velcro's tenure. the

OBViOUSLY•r

"

• . '''•w.: ··• . .,

.•..

. '•·

IMansfield Iss•' I•'''
IND.

··..

7(1'

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/an Shoales

a

.

and personal quirks. Oh; and love,
of course.
·
Obviously, conservatives are
tilting at windmills ..And liberals
everywhere, the suDPOSCd strident
advocates of the if-It-feels-good· d•. -it school of interpersonal rela·
ti• .ns, must be
their beads
:.
shame. '"'cy
stan revealed as
u
~"
lollely unfulfilled people with delusi liiS of grandeur. And conserva·
ti 1es stand revealed as lonely
urfulfilled people, and prgud of it!
Who is to blame for this sad
Ia k f.10 t'
..
.
~ ·0
tmacy 10 our persona1
li&gt;'CS? I think it's obvious.
Ooinhaion JX!Ils.
d'
·vie ve ,ar too many stu les
pryin~ into our private lives. What
doebavese 'set~?attcrWhathodoeswmanl.tmaytimltereswwhoe
we have sex with? What does it
m!llter if we don't have sex at all?
Ir voluntary cel1'bacy m1'ght ·be a
lhestyle I've em~ but it's not
a Jifestyle I would choose 10 enter
.
da base
m&lt;&gt;any Ia
•
It's not enough that wounded
h11mans, Jacking in communica.·
tiCAtsskills,orsoskilledincommun;' ~·on tbst actual commuru'cati'on
••ems
redondant, arc 1"·'lin·g about,
""
tr ·i!lg 10 (not to put too fme a point
UJ on It) satisfy basic biOlogical
nEeds, as dictaled by the process of
e• olution- no now we must deal

bangi':f

A

.

.

backs:-

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Smorgasbord dinner Saturday
A smorgasbord dinner will be held ~t the Wilkesville Py~ '
:

Hall Saturday from 4 td 6 p.m. The pubt.; is inviled.

., ..
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Mod·
est health care reforms would be
like "putting lipstick on a pig!"
but it's doubtful Congress wtll
have the appetite for sweeping
chan~es in 1995 after tbe collapse
of this year's effort, says the head
of tbc Congressional ·Budget
By Tile Asaot:lated Preas
station was 83 degrees in 1938 Office.
Looking back on a turbulent
Rain returns 10 Ohio tonight but while the 'Tecord low was 25 in
should taper off W~y mom- 1976. Sunset tonight will be at 6:48 year in the eye of the health care
ing. Then the prospect is for at least p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at storm, Robert D. Rcischauer said
that if Americans really ·want to
four days of fair weather, forecast· 7:46a.m.
expand coverage or slow .medical
ers said.
.
Weather forecast:
CloUds will build over tbc stale
Today ... Partly ciQudy. Highs in . inflation "we're going 10 have to
give ~elbing up."
tonight, the National Weather Scr- the 70s.
"There's no free lunch here,"
vice said. The threat for rain will
· TonighL ..Sbowers with a chance
he
said.
move eastward across tbc state as of thunderstorms west. Showers
President Clinton and Senate
the night progresses. Lows in the likely after midnight east. Lows in
. Minority Leader Bob Dole both
50s arc expecled staU:widc.
the 50s. ·
Showers will continue into tbe
Wednesday ... Showers likely have said health care reform will be
morning hours on Wednesday. A east. A chance o( morning showers at the top of their agendas when
gradual clearing is expccled across . west then partial clearing in the Congress returns early next year.
But Rciscbauer said in an inter·
northwestern Ohio during tbc after. afternoon. Highs 65 to 70.
view last weclc, "1 would doubt if
noon, while skies elsewhere should
Extended forecast:
remain mostly cloudy for most of
Thursday .•.Fair. Lows in the there's going to be substantial
the day. Highs will be in the mid- upper 40s to lower 50s. Highs in movement on health care reform."
"We never got to some of the
and IJAl!lt60s.
the 60s.
The iccord-bigb temperature for
Friday and Saturday ... Fair. tough issues," said the 53-year-old
this date at tlre Columbus weather Lows in the 40s and highs in the economist who bas led Congr.:ss'
6()s.
.
in-house shop of budget experts
since 1989.
Congress normally narrows dif.
ferences on major bills as they
work their way through committees
and onto the floor of the House and
Senate. But that didn't happen with
A nu vaccine clinic for those 6S cians are offering nu shots from $8 health reform, he said.
years of age and older or those with to $15 each and suggested that
"The political environment will
chronic health conditions which put . those who are over 65 or at high probably be less conducive to
the!D at risk will be held Friday risk who want the nu vaccine and health care reform next year," he
from 9 tO 11 a.m. and Ito 3 p.m. at are unable to attend the Oct. 21 said.
the Meigs County Health Depart· clinic,
a private physician for
ment_
an appointmenL
. A second clinic originally
Some, however, may want to
announced for Oct. 24 bas been wait for the expected November
canceled because of the limited- .vaccine at the health ·department,
Revival dates set
number of doses available at this she said.
.
The Syracuse Church of
time. The at-risk health conditions
Torres noted that- an Ohio
Nazarene
will hold an "End of
include diabetes, heart conditions, Department of Health lmmunizaTime"
revival
at 7 p.m. Wednesday
and chronic lung problems, accord· lion unit director advised them that
through
Sunday
with song evange·
ing to Norma Torres, R.N., nursing the flu vaccine manufacturers are
list
Bruce
Stone
and evangelist
direciOr at the health department.
having difficulty making enough
Wayne
Everman.
Torres said tl\at only 720 doses vaccine, which this year includes
of tbc low cost vaccine have been the strains of A(fexas, NSbangreceived from Ohio Department of dong, and B/Panama strains, which Play to be presented
Pl;~yers Group of Columbus will
Health Immunization. The remain· were the main causative strains of
present
"Rose on the Altar" at 6:30
dcr of the 1,800 ordered doses will serious flus last year.
p.m.
Wednesday
the Middleport
not arrive at the health dcpanment
For the past 20 years the local Masonic Temple.atAll
32nd degree
until sometime in Noveinbcr, Tor- health department bas offered lowMasons
and
their
invited
guests are
res said.
cust flu vaccine to residents.
inviled.
$7.50
for
g~ts.
She noted that private physi·

Rain expected to spread
across state by to~ight

Health unit schedules flu
vaccine·clinic for Friday

Instead of trying to fashion one
"grand solution" 10 health reform,
Congress may .opt _to "weave our
way .tftrough thiS mme field step by
step," Reischauer said.
"Many people seemed to
approach the health care debate as
· if we .were trying to climb a mountain and if only we could scale this
mountain ... then it was an easy
ride down the other side," he said.
"I always viewed health care
reform as crossing a mountain
range, that when we scaled to the
top of the employer mandate
mountain and looked out all you
would see is - 'Good Lordi
There's even a taller mountain
beyond!"' he said. "We were in
the foothills."
A slowdown in medical infiation may lead some to ar~e that
"the system is healing rtself,"
Reiscbauer said, bUt added, "In tbc
long run I don't think there is much
hope that the system can reform
itself."
Event~ally_. the ~ressure for
cbangt: '!ill bwkl !!Sam as 500,'!00
or ~ m1ll1on ~encans keep losrng
theu health msur~nce each year
and medical bills climb:
He dismissed the idea of modest
insurance reforms, such as lifting
restrictions on those with pre-:exist·
in~ conditions as "putting lipstick
on a pig."
. ·
"That's not health reform,"
sf.id Reischauer, who said they
could drive ~surance costs up and
ad to tbe number of uninsured.

call

1"-

Meigs announcements

GH superintendent's case

'

cc.uldn't h8ndle him alone.
,
While Clinton ought to benefit'
p &gt;litically from .h~s ha~dl!ng of .
Saddam, the admmtstration s per-.;
formancehasnotbeenflawlcss.
On "~t the Press," White
H&gt;usc Ouef of Staff Leon Panetta1
re'ileatedly said that ."we are not .
g.• mg to allow the m~takes of tbc t
past to be repealed" 1!1 Iraq, sug- •
gcsting that the administration was :
p ·~pared to invade Baghdad and :
d pose Saddam, which the Bush •
a· ministration declined to. do in :
I' 91.
.
.
"'Mistakes. of .~e past?'" .one 1
flnner Bush &amp;Ide Jtbed. "I wonder i
hvw Panetta voted on the Gulf •
War." Of course, hC voted a&amp;ainst :
it as did a m~ty of Democrats ;
.ir Congress.
.. .
1
The Bush admwstration should 1
h. ve kept the Gulf War going for
a~Jother three dar.s in order to
d"stroy Sadda~ s Republican
Gaards, but. "going to Bqhdad"
"'Juld have mvolved lengthy occu- I
p..lion of a troubled' Dation Qf 13 ; ,
.rr. J1ion people.
.
:
.BasiCally, Ointon will be doing '
v. .11l to avoid mistakes in Iraq as I
well as Bush did. One good 'sign is
that Clinton, like Bus!!, ~ planDing
to bancJle Saddlm wltbout .the 1
.d 'llo~ interven~on of Jimmy 1.
C ·.rter.
·
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.
"(MO.,OU Koadracke is aecu- 1
live editor o1 Roll CaD, the ~ 1
paper of Capitol HID.) ·
··· . :
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plinary order with the State when
(Coatinued from Paae 1)
she
was fued June 24.
with full back pay and benefits
Davis
was offered her job back,
because it had not filed a discibut has not accepted while negotiations arc taking plaGe. She said
Monday she was about to make up
VETERANS MEMORIAL
her mind, but wanted to meet with
Monday admissions - Delbert the board first. The board would
Pridemore, Middleport; Shirley not talk with her because her auorRoush, Racine.
ney was not present, she said.
Monday discharges - none.
"1 just want to clear the air with
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER the board before I come back,"
Discharges Od. 17 - Justin Davis said.
StareU, Georgia Bush, StaniOn FelWallar could not be reached for
lurc, Judy Canter, Mrs. Maurice comment this morning.
Swisher and son.
•
Blrtb - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
· Albright, son. Point Pleasant,
(Continued from Page 1)
W.Va.
(J'u,!llished with permission)
strike was filed with the adminis·
tration and state agencies three
·
days
later.
The Daily Sentinel
While spokesmen for the board
(liSPS 10.,._)
and the unions have declined to
discuss specifics of the dispute, disl'llbl- IWIY IIIIIDOOD, Moll&lt;lay lllnl!l&amp;h
agreement bas settled on economic
Pridly, Ill COUll St., Po111110y, Oblo, by tile
Oblo Volley Publlilli. ~yMilllmodia
and job security issues.
lac., pg_.y, Oblo •s769, I'll. 992-2156.
Board President David Woodall
• ...... · - ........ poi&lt;! .. Po .....y.a.to.
said the district is making adjust- , . Alloclal&lt;d ....... ud lhe Oblo
ments in its finances to make an
N........ AIIodltioL
offer at today's session that would
keep tbc district fn&gt;rrl' going further
P011'MAB1'111•
no Dolly Soatiatl, Ill Court St ..
iniO the state loan fund.
. _,,(ll!lo 45769.
Gary, Phillips, chief negotiator
for tbe teachers' association, said
IIUIScaiPI10111ATU
. ., c.ntor • . , _ last week: the dispute with the
oao-.....-.;......................................SI.60
board focuses not only on salary,
011Moldi ............................. ... ............ S6.95
o.. v......,............................................SillO
but other issues such as insurance,
severance pay and contract duraIINGLI COPYPIICI
tion .
..Uy............................................... :.. JS c...
The associations have cstab-'
S. . .bln 1fi1 doolrt.. to porlbo- DJ
lished
a strike headquarters in the
- I a -clhcl to 111t0ollipollllloily
former Gillingham's Drugs buildn - oa a - "' or 12 1001111 toooil.
ing at Second Avenue and Pine
Crd will lit {liM c:orr1oroNl""'"
Street
No •bocripllOI by lltlil pormillod Ia . . .
The associations, whicb bave
wboio,._CIIri....... la aYIIIIblo.
been bar~aining for· new conirac!S
. ,. lowl.sllllcaiPI10111
since spnng, are ~ntcd in the'
negotiations by Ohio Education
1 3 -.............. : ............................ .121.1'
:16 w....................,.-......:................ .so.t6
Association rcprcscn~tivc Tim
52 ..................... - ...........................$k76
Miller and federal mediator Bill
Lewis. The board bas been repret3 .... ~...- ...; ..............................123.40
:16 - ............._.,_ ........................$15.50 . sented by Cincinnati atiOrney 'Bill
52 - . . -....., -......;. ... ..................SI1.4o
Ennis.,,

HOSpital news

Negotiators...

Sold--..

--CouiJ

' ---OooaiJ

( I

.. I
I
......

~'My position is tbst we should
not suddenly unveil it (the Kuwait
cunfrontatiou) as the .sbow of the
c~ntury, to replace the latest hit
movie," Perot declared. "That's
what they arc doing at the White
HJIIIC. You know the game.... This
w.1ole thing is designed- what's
al :&gt;ut to happen? We're about to
hrve an elecuon, right? This is the
olf:l game. The fir$ war (i.e., Haiti)
'Mn't get bim a bump in the polls.
N JW let's try this one."
· Perot also suggested that &amp;SSM·
sination was tbc proper way to han·
die Slddam, 8l1ll ~ the job could
be done in "three days" by "the
d~best boy" in the graduating
cLiss Of Israel's intelligence smool
' To the extent that Perot's irratiXlalltr. gelS exposed nationally,
tt.cy will unde(cut his efforts to
eleCt Republicans this fall.
Clinton aides hope, too, that
Nlftb bas hurt bia Senate campaign
in Virginia by alleging that the
United Slites could not win a against Slddam because Clinton
ckfensc cuts have crealed a "botJc f/ m~."
North touehed on a legitimate
i!. lUe. Many responsible defense
e;..pms believe that u.S. forces, as
p.esently constituted, could nolo
fi.;ht simultaneoua wars in the Gulf
ill.d Korea. But North opened himst.d up to char&amp;ea -p:omptly lev-:
el'!d by Vice Jiioeaidetit AI Ocn......
that lie was encoll@ging Saddam
H•tSSCin by aaying ~u.s. forces

Rutland Village Council will hold a special meeting at 7 tonJsbt
at village hall.
.

'
.J

No Iraq ro.le for Carter, says White House
If Saddam Hussein had any tration apparentl·y :railed to get
notion that former President Jimmy allied support for a ground equiva~ woul~,help defuse his .~ lent of the "no fly ~" in ~uthwttb t!'e Unile!l States 111 he did f« e.rn Iraq. An alte{flallve pohcy 1s
the. ~1ctators 111_ !'lorth.Kotea apd.•
·
·
~u. tile JI!'Cvailing i!Wtudc of.ibe MQrtoD
Clinton White House IS! Forget 11. ·
A fe'! '!eeks ago, we.ll before being developed.
·
SucCessful U.S. pOlicies in iraq·
the ~raq1 dictator sent ~~~ troops
mo,vmg toward tbc Kuwllti border. and Haiti. on top of otltet successes
senior White .House aides in South Africa, Russia, Ireland
expressed '!orry that Carter WOU!4 and the Mideast, should boost Clin·
try to get Involved In Saddam I ton's approval ratings just when he
effort to..secure a lifting of the U.N. needs it.
ec~nOf!11C embargo' that.ls stranClincon also should benefit from
g1ing his country.
,
. . irresponsible pcrfprmances on the
.,~. The White House 1 ~r~cn- part of two of his most strident
s1on was based on Caner s mter· . adversaries, Ross·Perot and Oliver
. ve~tions in Korea and Haiti ~ North,. But some veterans of tlte
w~~c~ . were f~llowed br p~blic Bush administration arc miffed that
cntieism ~ Clin!'- 'and aolic:ilude Clinton administration officials are
toward Chnton a adversaries p,ublicly resolving not to repeat
and Caner' a efforu in 19!10 and ~mistakes of the past,". meaning
1991 to ~ a d!ill between ~· tbeirs.
.
a!,ld Kuw11t and to undercut .~·
Bush·aides also criticized hints
dent Oci:qc ~lllh's . . . .~!~ fromf
.anotherCiintonwaraidewt~ththatlraqin, thetbcen~hntt
a U.N: ~urlty Owii'CII re.ol!ouun
•
autborWna -~'W•.
pOlicr would be to "go to Bagh· There ii 110 ~ - QNr .. da!l.' topple HUSICin and let up i
bjja mo~ ~ intcrvclle aincO tk new regime in Iraq. "They're
,new Iraqi CIIIIJ ~JeP.!!, but aWbile ptonllsing to '!Ct·out-or Haiti in a
• Hou~ _offic:W ~d flllh'! "~·· mat!er .of .months,'' one Bush
not~~ ~.get iDtO ~- He hal_DC! ai!Viset: said. ''How long will it
roleC1n tbiS. · ,
r '
•
•
• .take .to pacify Iraq?"
1 ~
lear1y, the a,dmiDIIlrfllOn . . Perot, irl a lfl!ly despicable w11011 to baodle $1dda!n;t !ts own ·but revealing- Dtrlormancc, ram·
' way~ and ~~!'Bleil q caps· blingly accused tlinton on "Face
ble o~ forocCulactiOn.
.
. the Nation"1recently of either StaJ·
Clinton forced Saddam to ~1 . ini or exaggerating the 1mcJ criSis
!orces..bl!! tllelldlllints- to affect tbc Noverriberelecuons. .

.

Rutland Council meets tonight

Congress not likely Voinovich defend$.j
to eye reform in '95 nee~ to keep tax '

1

rr

• IColumbus 169• I

. A, Long Bottom man was ciled for left of center by .the ~ ~ ·
Meigs Post of the State ·Highway Patro! following a twO-Car !ICC":. , ....
dent Monday on County Road 36 (Sumner).
' ..'f , r1
. The patrPI said Enc J. Hollon, 21, 43739 Riebel ~Ojld,; we . l
southboond, three-tenths of a mile north of State Route 248; at 8:~
a.m. when he went left of center whle rounding a curve and
~ ·
sideswiped a car driven by Sheila J. Tavlor, 38. 37892 State ~
7,Pomcroy.
.
Damage to both cars was moderate. u.e palrol said.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Dunkirk Wesleyan
Church.
·

with bureaucrats, scientists, and
keologues turning our miserable
(!lr wonderful, to be fair) se~ual
Jives into a smoking gun, evidence
of a crime.
What is the crime? We're not as
hip as we thought we were. We're
not as happy as we believed we
shou ld bc. Depen d'mg on your
pc litical beliefs, you can take your
.k
pl 'M:aybe we should just accept.
· w'tat we are. Isn't that punishment
h7 I'd h
h' k h
e~ oug
ate to t m t at ,
JX ,I ling bas replaced sex as a major
factor in our private lives. But.
a1oparent1y, it has. We'd rather vol- .
u .teer a datum, than give or ,
rc :eive pleasiD'C.
:
What does that mean? Polls,
ails, will eventually tell us. And ·
plicy will follow.
1
(To reee ve a complimentary',
II n sboales newsletter, call 1-.·
800·989-DUCK or write Dutk's
1
b 408 B d s
reat •
roa t., Nevada
C!ty, CA 95959.)
.•
1aa Sb oa1es 1s a sya dl cate d ·i
1 ~ N
E
rise
: , : . : ; eWBJIIIper nterp
(F 1 ~·
1
or a.ormat
on· on bow
el
_, to
·ct.ramuil1eate eetron1ca0y ..,til
tt i8 ~lumnlslll!ld otben1 con·,.
u,:t America Online by callln1Jl·
•.
810-8 -6364, ext 8317.)

,,,

Gerald E. Epling, 88, Dunkirk, diet. Monday, Oct. 17, 1994 at the
Green Acres Nursing Home in Kenton. He was a retired self-employed
.~ter and a member of the Du1Jkirk Wesleyan 01~h.
·
· · Born Aug. 22, 1906 in Spencer, W.Va., he was the son of the late
Thomas and Alice Stutler Epling. He r.1arried Juanita Blue on July 26,
1936 in LiUie Hockin .
·
Survivors include tis wife; one son Ronald R. Epling of Reed:sville;
two daughters, Sonja (Roberts) Jones &lt;&gt;f Dunkirk and Sherry (Daniel)
Richard of Ada; five adopted children, Byron and Brent Epling of Kenton;
Less Heacock of Alger, Linda Walter of Ada and Lachelle (Michael)
Crist of Ada; one brother, Benson Epli.1g of Parkersburg, W.Va; seven
.grandchildren and nine great grandchildl:n.
He was preceded in death by tWO scm, one brother, one sister, three
grandchildren and one great-grandchild
.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at the Price
Funer.&gt;l Honic in Dunkirk where service.&gt;will be held 11 a.m. Friday with
the Rev. James Vermilya officiating. Burial. will be in the Dunkirk Cemetery.

No sex please, we're polling
We've already bad a poll telling from this study that the Sexual
us that we're seething with Revolution was just a pile of
ambiguous resentments. Now hooey. Certainly, from my personal
another poll - a landmark study,
no less, from the University of
Chicago - tells us that our sex
lives are alarmingly conventional.
We have sex once a week on aver1
age (whether we want to or itot, I life \which I'dwon't ·go trinto), titthet
suppose), and those of us wbo are anecdotaI evt ence IS s ong a
married indulge the sensual side of the Sexual Revolution never
our nature more often than those occurred at all. I know I have never
who are single. Also, according to met a woman wbo would have sex ·
the Los Angeles Times, the median at the drop of a bat._When 1 Jbink.
number of sexual partners a man . of all the ·money I've wasted on
has over a lifetime 1s six, two for
bats, it just infuriates me. . .
woman.
Otber than perfume com merRush Limbaugh, on a recent cials, Madonna videos and Sharon
television broadcast viewed this Stone movies, sex in America is
stu~y as a victory f~ conservative statistically ins.ignifican~ So what
values. He was in fact, uumpcting were conservatives howlmg about?
· '
F ·1 · o1
' t
l s
gIecfull y.
amr Y v ucs, my swec aun exI don't sec it myself.
ual!y, nothing has changed!
Despt'te the divorce ra•a the .:.A
·
Think abouI IL
u
·
f
11
• ed'"'•d' · ruler all. if this poll says our sex o scxua Y transmut
lseases,
lives are mundane, they must have and ambi_guous resentments, we're
been mundane for quite a while. A still havmg sex at the same old
·
a1
did: that · hen
landmark
study• like this takes
time.
umesk'd
we ways1 ·
ts, w
.
ff
f
th
th
Fust o , you vc got to und e
e 1 s are l!S !lOP• or we ~ound
darn thing. Then you've got t.o some?ody ~dhng, or wbe~ ~e
amass the dats. Finally, .you must weren t too tired, or when were m
·
themood • or (alas) when were
·• not.
co II ate, make bell curves, p1e
"·-«
1
Ia
Th '
rh
cason to 1't
c""""• extri!I,&gt;O ate, postu te, ana.
ere s no Y"!e or r
.
•
lyze - beheve me, creating a there never was, 8nd nc~cr .will ~·
database is no picnic.
· The orily consi8Jlts, near as I can
So, I for one must extrapolate tell, are opportunity, willingness,

•

,,,,,

\\by?

.... ,. '*
•.

words "foreign policy" .are met'!·
tioned mostly as an adJCCU~~ ~­
f) ing tbc noun "disaster.. Elg~­
to:n American soldiers are'killed .m
Somalia and lt is a Clinton "fail·
we." Velcro plans an invasion of
Ha:li and lawmakers wax indignant
and scurry for cover. "People here
a1e just not confid~n! about ~c
p;·:sidcnt's leadership on fore1gn
policy," says Sen. Nancy Kasse·
baum, R-ICan., "People remember
S.:malia." On Oct. 23, 1983, 241
U c;. Marines and sailors in
L banon died in a terrorist bombin~. bn Oct 25, the U.S. invaded
Grenada. Did anyone say, "People
remember Beirut"?
- Vclcro believes in punishing
criminals, supports free trade, and
is a deficit hawk, albeit a reluctant
or1e. Those are very conservative
crnvictions. Yet business views
hi n as a loony liberal and many of
my own correspondents denounce
him as a "socialist." Franklin Roostvclt invented Social Security and
is considered one of the greats. Bill
Clinton proposes national health
in·:urancc and is called a Commie.

r..

Driver cited in two-car accidenf ·· · ~ ·;

Gerald Epling

MICH. ·

I am aware that columnists arc
supposed to have answers, )lui
fmnkly 1 don't know why. Is it Velcro's appearance? He does remind
u · of ihe chubby guy in class
y; :om everybody picked on. Is it
b cause be tS tbc flfSl baby boomer
p•esident and we sec him in our
minds dancing the boogaloo?
Because be is married to a feisty
and independent woman? Is it, in
B tSiness Week's wools, "the proCl1Slination followed bY improvisatiJn, the vacillation, the immense
sl &gt;ppiness in decision-making?"
I don't know. But I have begun
k think that if he pulls off another
tt:m, he'll have the sympathy vote,
1L thank for iL
Joseph Spear is a syndicated.
"rlter for Newspaper Eaterprise,
A JSOdation.
(For lnformatlon -oa bow to
eo mmunleate eleetroaleaDy wltll
this columnist and others, con-·
ttt·:t America Online by calling 1,
81 0-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

0

o·

~

is the Velcro presidcnL
Consider:
- The economy is humming
along at a pace that is nearly historic in its steadiness. Inflauon is
low, employment is high, the
deficit is down. Other presidents
have enjoyed immense popularity
during the good times. So why is
Velcro's public approval rating
hovering around 42 percent? Why
docs the corporate world regard
him with such scorn? Why does
Business Weelc feature such siOries
as, "Why Business Hates Clin-

Kondracke

Berry's World
....'' .
.

Joseph Spear

N~W~X~URVEY~

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Here's a comforting thought the next time you get
behind the wheel: about one-third of tl.e state's major highways are in
substandard condition.
·
Another 41.5 percent of secondary roads are substandard.
. Those figures and a blizzard of •others were included in a study the
Ohio Consii'IICtion Information Association released.
The groiJp wanled 10 demonslratc the economic benefits of increased
· highway spending, and 10 show bow moch of the 22-cen~a-gallon state
gasoline taX was drained for purposes other than construcuon.
·
Contractcrs unions, consttuction suppliers and ·others who finance tbc
association said the Ohio Department of Transportation bas less money
for consii'IICtion than in recent years.
: legislatorS have asSi~J new uses for some of !It• ~~e
deparlment operating costs have u. :reascd and more money ts gomg
10
ghway Patrol.
.
ccriainly making ~~that the~ th!'t have been available are now being moved legislatively or administratively to other purposes," said David Finley, association managing direciOr.
Pieter Wykoff, OOOT's executive asiis~t to the cfu'co:c~· said he bad
not seen tbc MSOCiation report but bad prevtously heard sunilar statements
from tbc Jl'OI!P that represents interests t f contraccors.
,
'
•'ObviOusly they have a vested interest seeing 10 it that ooor spends
more and more money every year on ro-td consii'IICtion,'' Wykoff said in
an interview.
·
'th
Wykoff said some of the fmdings w.:re accurate, but took tSsue wt

a~84.

minutiae of government
·
It makes no difference. Many
nasty things are said about him and
they cling like burrs to britches. He .

'

'

AccU-~ forecast for

Sticky business: The Velcro leader

.

- -·Area deaths-- Local News in Brlef:

OHIO Weather
Weelbesday, Od.19

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

)

Immunization sebedule
Child immunizations will be
given on Nov. 8 from 9 10 11 a.m.
and on Nov. IS from 9 to II am.
and Ito 3 p.m.
Alzbeimers support group
The Alzhcimers and related disorders support group will meet
Wednesday from 1-3 p.m. at the
Meigs M~ltipurposc/Scnior Citi·
zens Building in Pomeroy. Topic
will be tips for managing confu·
sion.
Chapter 1 meeting slated
Meigs Local School Disoict will
hold its annual Chapter I parent
meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. at Salisbury Elementary. Parents of Chapter I students inviled to attend. Stu·
dents from participating schools
will have a program 10 present to
the audience.

Halloween party planned
The Middleport Child Conservation League will have its annual
Halloween party for children and
grandchildren, Thursday, 6 p.m. at
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
Central Committee to meet
The Meigs Countr. Republican
Centtal Committee wtll m~t Tuesday. 7 p.m. at the Republican headquarters.

Chapter 1 meeting
Southern Local Chapter I intro·
duction meeting, 7 p.m Thursday,
Southern High School cafeteria

EMS units log seven calls
ans Men10rial Hospital.
POMEROY
I :39 a.m., Pomeroy VFD and
squad. State Route 7 for a suspected vehicle fli'C;
3:09 a.m., Pine Grove Road,
Howard Newland, Holzer Medical
Center.
RACINE
II: 10 p.m .• Willow Lane,
Samuel Williams, trealed at scene.
RUTLAND
8:23 p.m.,-state Route 143,
Lawrence Carr, dead upon arrival.
SYRACUSE
9:31 p.m., State Route 124,
Patricia Cleland, VMH.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded seven calls for assista!lce
Monday. Units responding includ·
ed:

CHESTER VFD
10:13 a.m., State Route 7, structure rue at Helen Zigler residence.
MIDDLEPORT
1:22 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Delbert Pridemore, Veter-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ·--------.311/l

Abo---------------.60
SIB
Asbland OU ----------.37 71B
AT&amp;T.-------------5l1n
Bank Oae.---~-----.28 SIB
_Boll EYID1-...- -..-M:9~
Champion Ind.
1ll
CbarmiD&amp; Sbop---------·7 SIB
Ctty Holdlng-----------..32
Federal MCII.ul.--------.22 1/4
Goodyear TaR
SIB
K·mart - ..--..--..----·16 311

MILLIE'S
RESTAUUNT&amp;
PRODUCE

-------...23
--------.35
lac:.----··· 1/4
Mulllnledla lac. -------.29 3/4
Banecwp

'\1 1\ 111 II H.,
l11r \+tllrr t HI\l'llit:lllt

·----------19

Reliance Electric ..-

..

---..25

&gt;;IIIHL'.' 11 11'1 1 &gt;; , lllitd . tl
11 :1111 ; 1111 trr .~:1111!11 1 1

Roblllnllt Mytn..----17 1n

Star BaU.-,..-!1"'"·--..--..--..~

1/4 mile north ot Rl. 7 6n ,
Counlry Road 115
39239 Bracbury Rd.
Middleport, OH 45760

Wtndy lnt'L ----.---.14 SIB

WortiiJJialoa.lnd:-----..23
Stock nporttr en the lG-.30 Lm.

Gl!lllpoliL

/

of

.

I

(Contiaued from Page I)
County Chamber of Commerce.
which is currently seeking a new
office.
• paid a $216 bill from 199&lt;Hor
fl' e training to the Joint Vocational
S ..hool that bad been overlooked.
• allowed Robert Titus to build a
r' ad from his property to Hiland
R &gt;ad as long as he incurs the costs
01 construction. The village will
ti'.entually maintain it once it is
at proved, Blaeunar said
• approved th,e second of three
n: ldings for an agreement with ftre
protection agencies.
• will complete jackhammer
wJrk on Willys Hill Avenue before
Tnanksgiving, Young said.
• appointec;l Councilman Bill
HapiOnstall as a village represemative for the county-wide Rural
Enterprise Zone board since he is a
businessman, Blaettnar said.
• urged the meter attendants
improve their attitude and "be 010re
d:)lornatic" coward merchants, folIc Ning a recent argument, CouncilIf m George Wright ssid.
· • reported the general fund bal'" ce of $89,013.489 and total bal31 ces of $332.105.85.
The largest disbursement for
S' ptember was $202,174.52 in the
fi "C truck fund. All funds ended in
tl.! black. The other funds include•': safety, $7,110.14; street,
S .919.33; state highway,
$',,193.94; fli'C, $28,966.06; cemetery.
$12,262 .25 ;
water ,
$•;3,151.93; meter, $18,326.19;
u; ility, $3,968.63; perpetual care,

H
,,

E

• I

~

Slate Auto's already
'loW premiurr.s can be
reduced even more by
insuril)9 both your car
and home wilh the Slate
AutoCompanies.
'
Let us tell you just
how much your savings
.CliiJOe.

$'1 212.77: ccmeteiy endowment,

$3S,l18 .57; police pension,
$! ,375.21: building fund ,
$5,770.93; recreation, $2,412.89;
permissive tax, $3,690.43; and law
enforcement, $1,168.62.

By
Dave
Grate

of

Rutland
Furniture

~=-..;:;;;.;;:,;,...~I

Anytime you anticipate
something, nifs good, it goes
away, and if it's bad, it
happens.
·

•••

Cred~or's

letter: "If .you don't
pay our bill, we'll tell all your
other creditors you did."
• • •
Every person born in America
is endowed with life, liberty,
and a share of the national
debt.

•••

Well done
Said.

i~r

•••

thap well
'

Doing good turns won't make
you dizzy.

• ••

'

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992·6687,

Sboeey'a lac.~----14 314

quatea prowldtd bJ Adnst

Speed reduction approved

"HolM Styli Cooking"

Lands EDd ..J.--------18 3/4
Limited

Point

COLUMBUS (AP) - For most cases, declined since the tax wu
people, the new state pop tax enacted in December 1992. He
amounts to a penny per can. For traced pop price drops to comptti·
Gov. George Voinovich, it's lion.
·
$50,000. 1'11alis what he is paying
"If you or your kids wgt ,&amp;o
to defend tbe tax from repeal in the guzzle pop you can buy it in IIIIILY·
Nov. 8 election.
places around Ohio for less diln it
Voinovich urged voters o." cost you before our pop taX became
Monday to support the $65 million- ~law," he said.
·
a-year levy on soft drinks with a
Voinovicb said tbc indUSiryvote agamst a constitutional p-eedy and ~ant and wa try·
amendment known as Issue 4.
mg 10 avoid paYJng its fair share m
The amendment that the soft taxes.
drink industry backs would scrap
"They make more money,~·
the tax and prohibit any future ·· ably,lhan any industry in tbc \Jaik
wholesale. taxes on food, food ed States of America. They are a
ingredients or packaging.
ve_ry, very wealthy industry;' \ bcVoinovich minced no words as said.
he assailed the repeal effort
·
To which Steve Lonon, cam·
"1 am outraged at what in my paign coordinator for tbc ~repeat.
judgment is the most deliberately committee, responded: ' I am sur··
deceptive campaign to pass a prised that making money bas ·
statewide ballot issue that 1 have become a crime."
-' ·.
ever witnessed," Voinovich said at
The tone of Voinovlcb'a·
a news conference.
remarks was not surprising, Lorton
He said tbc industry portrays the said.
•· • .
amendment as a way to repeal a
"His peoplC certainly have bccu·
hidden tax on food instead of its commenting in a vein very mucb
main purpose to· ovenum a tax on like Ibis one for wccb now, and it
pop.
. hasn't h:td a significatlt impact on'
Voinovich said soft drink prices the support that Issue 4 bas among
have remained· stable or, in some the people of Ohio." he said.

,,

;./!j
.S tate Auto
1nsurance Companies
"

.7 SIIOWIOOIIS

II WMEIIOUSU

Rutland Furniture
lt.124, ·---.. 742-2211

.. I

�•

"!"!'

4 1he D!!ly Sentinel

Baseball talks tC! start again Wednesday in Washington D.C-~ ·
1bc four - Kansas City nitcller
Tom Gordon, Atlanta P!tcher
Ore&amp;&amp; Olson, Colorado pitcher
0re1 Harris IDd Los Angeles outfielcJer Chris Gwynn need the 52
davs of service time lost to the
stdlce ·to reach the required six

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (~ _ 'l'bere's
fmally movement In the baeball
W1cs _ to WasbiJ!atm.
The sides, as far apart as
lhe issues, will meet
their fust bargainiilg session (n s
2
k
dl t w J
1/ we~ s, new me 8 or · ·
Usery said Monday:
Even as a meeting was ached-.
ulcd, the sides coalinueclto clash
over free agents. Seventeen mCR
players attempted to file for free
agency, but four were rejected by
management' s player relations
commiuee, whach claims they
don't have enouldl service time.

w.mc!d:, ':

Y~· ,

.
,
.
It s obvious we re gomg to
have to chaUcnge their position "
said Eugene Otza, the No. 2 omclal of lhe llllion. "In eli8Cily what
forum we will do that I haven't
decided that." I'll probably wait
until mid-wcclc to file IIOIDCihing"
Four othen were ~ejected Sat~-

day, the fust day of filing: piu:hecs

Southern sextet wins finale
to capture winning season
· Fedml was led by Ktny Hines

The Southern Tornadoes guaranteed themselves of a willojng
season by deleatinl F'edera1 Hoct~
ing in the Tri- VaHey Cooferen¢e
finale 15-12, 15-13 Thursday fii&amp;ht
in varsity volleybaU action.
Southern raiJcd ituecord to 119 overaU and 9-6 in lhe Tri-Valley
Conference.
Amy weaver led Jenni Roush''
Tornadoes in scoring with si~
points and two kills: Jess Codoei
had five points, lhree aces aod one
kill. Sammi Sisson hid four points,
an ace, nine assisls and two tills to
figure in 15 of Soulhem'a points.
Andrea Moore had four points, two
ares, six kills and four assists to
figure in 14 of Soulhem's points.
Jenny Cummins had four points,·a
kill and an ace. lea Lisle hsd fOil'
poibts, an ace and a kill. Jeno
Lawrence had three poiota and a
kill. Renee Turley bid six tills and
one bloclc. Joana Manuel had a kiD
and two blocb.

With eight, Veroni~a CasUe wilh
six, Erin Utt four, Martesa Barnes
three. Holly Radti three and Alison

Pierson.

Southecn won the reserve game
15-3,15-IOtocnd lhcseasonat 173, 13-2 In the league and second In
the TVC Hocking division.
Amber Thomas led the winners
with 14 points, seven aces, three
kills and four assists to fagure In 21
of Soulhem's points. Emily Dubl
had nine points and three aces; Keri
Caldwell three points, two kills and
two aces; Cynthia Caldwell two
points and lhrce kills and three
aces; Brianne.Proffitt two points,
an ace; four kills and three assists.
Erin Utt led Federal with six,
Kecry Hines, Kecry Sheridan, Jen·
nifer Pullins each two and Kristina
Gra&amp;eone.
Southern next plays in the Division IV sectiOIIal tournament Satur·
day at Ross Southeas~.

l'UIIdly, OC~r 18, 1984 ~

. TUetday, ~l0ber18, 19M

Poineroy -MiddlePort, Ohio

.

I
. h 0 I H hi
-d
"""
ffi 'al . 'd U .
es pile er rc ers ser an
manage.uent o K:l S8l • mon
Cleveland outfielder Dave WinJ&gt;ol,l_aid Febr met wilh Usr:cy
field. They raised the free lagent ast wee... Actin~ commissioner
IOIIlto 22.
·
Bud Seli~ isn I' expected at
Uaery, appointed Friday by the Wednesday s session.
·
Clinton Administration, was to
."We'D have .to wait and see,"
pu~
·meet today wllh 1J111111CR1C111 nego- Febr Slid when asked what dlffecThe 13 players who were tiator Richard Ravitch, a bsscball ence Usery cbuld mslce. "He's
aDowed to file included Loa Anaesupposed to be very skilled nnd
Jack McDowell of the Chicago
White Sox, Jim Abbott of lhe New
York Yankees Kenny Ro~of
T
and Erik Hanson
':"".
~
of
•
Twelve pl~!!_~ligilheble ~or
agency are alft......, by . dil·

head!

f:·

·

~onta.n.a

' .'
~-~~:-• ""'-• Lvmr:cy persiadiffi~,!,.:.:-uY •..._ ""
IUesPI
and..............
·h
t
J'layer.s
ow~en ~v.e me
formally ]USt three umes smce lhe
strike begin and not at all since
Sept. 9, five days befo!C owners .
canceled lhe World Series for the
li ·
·
1904
ust time smce
.

Eastern top$ Federal Hocking Marion
in last regular-season twlnbill Catholic's
17 gets by
Easiem ended lhe season on· a dink and a kill.
.
high note, def~tins leque foe
Michelle CaldweU was 7-7 servFcdelal Hoc:klna 15-12, IS-9 Moo- inl! wilh six points, an ace, 4-4 on muscle
day night at l!allem High Scbool to spiking and two kills.
·
conclude regular season high
Erin Uttlcd Fcdcnil wilh eighL and p~ayer
school varsity volleybaU play. .
Teammate Holly Rader bad six,

The "Closest to the Pin" winners
were Lew Gilland, $20 gift ccrtifi.
catc; andlohn Ferguson. a $10 gift
certificate. Some of the other win·
ners included Ralph Sayre, the
Hole-in-one trophy for a shot on
July 26, 1994; Harold Clark,
Happy Birthday-Corn Cob Pie.
Award; Luther Smith, Belt
·Dressed; Clark Greene, Travels·
fartbcst-to-play-ach week; Harley
Rice, Annual Mr. Magoo Award;
Jack Fox, Roolcic of lhc year; Jim
Wikoff, Cleanest-Scalp Award: A
new hat; Bill Howard, Lost Cart
Award; Bill Harris and Bob
Sawyers, Oldest Players Awards
(82 years old plus); Lew Gilland,
Tol!acco Spitting Award; and
Chuckie Lester, 1994 50-ylld dash
champion (won by a forfeit over
Feidar Lund, who was a no-show).
The league president also told
several golf stories and jokes that
could easily have been applied 10
members of lhc senior league; and
a video l!lpe was made o1. all lhe
players in action, as weD as while
they enjoyed lhe fun afterward
IWph Sarro. President, closed
the 1994 8Clii101' league by thanlcing
caterer Gene Grccnc, Ty Roush and
Bob Greene for the woeldy set-up
of the players; Gary Roush for
putting up wilh lhe seniors each
week and donating free riding cars
for the wrap-up day, ~ and
every player who participated to
make it a successful yesr.
Sayre also passed out a copy of
the league rules for next yesr and
a~lced the players to consider

.

~!~a~~i:~~~~ :v~:·t~: ~~!~ir ~c~~i=T~uls:=

cnanges for 1995.
The 1995 season will start the

first Tuesday in April and end ~
last Tuesday in SepteiJiber.

HOLE-IN·ONE - Ralpb
Sa:rre, tile lea1ne'a 1!1!14 presl·
dent, emceed tbe ceremoales and
gave away narly IUly dozen golf
balls to aU tbe big wlnnen as well
as prizes to tile nol·IO·popular,
dlstiDguisbed prize winners. The
first tltree places were awarded
$30, $20, aad $10 girt certlfl·
catea.Ralplt Sayre woo tbe Hole·
io-oae troplty for a sltot 011 July
Zll, 1!1!14. Here be shows off bla
form.

SENIOR LEAGUE CHAMPI·
ON - The 1994 edition of tile
Riverside Senior Mea's leape
w come to an ead with Geolp ' ·
Burna of Cllftoa, W.Va. crOWDed
as tbe champion. Buras scored
170.0 polats for tbe 11e111011 to lllp
Jim Wlkorr of Sltade by el11tt
points, wblle Harold Lobse of
Pomeroy took tblrd place by
outscoring Earl Joltnsoa of
Masoa, W.Va. by a 150.5 to 14!1
point difference.
·

The Daii'Ji Sentinel Pial_ 5

leads last-minute march
to
help
Chiefs
win
31-28.f!C

By JOIII\I MOSSMAN . took DenVCJ-39 yards in six plays. certain P.Prt of lhe field 10 us, io
rick Walker, 19 yards to Tracy
DENVER (AP) - Lilcc ldds In ~ ran four yards on ·a quartcrbaclc could throw undel}leath. We d1d Greene and, finaUy, lhc fivc-JIIIIcr
· the Sandlot, ~~yer ~ lhc ball drjlw for the touchdpwn even ~ ~d ltcpt movmg," Montana to Davia:..
last won. Th1a ume, 11 was Joe though lhe Broncos (1-S) hid-only ~ .
.
O.via extenclod hia arm• and
Monfi;DB ~of John Blway. '
10 men on the field, pulling Denver
The last four ,Plays 011 lhe drive CI!Ught ~ baU ll tbc pllino,lhen
Th~s ume it was Mon.tana, . up28-24, .
. . w~l!ll c;omp~ - 11 yard&amp; to .. sliPPed JI!Side \be end,.ZQile pylon
m~g a III8SII'.l'ful· march 10 lhc
The scoring run came one play Kimble Anders, 12 yards 10 Dcr- bellire All out ofbouftda.
cloang St!conds to lift the Kansas after bls apparent touchdown paiS
·
Broncos. . 1
out of bounds before malclng the
·
··
Montana's thiJd touchdown pass catcb, lhus becoming ineligible.
ByRICJ' WARNER
lea-Colorado winner in the Orange,
of the game, a fivc-yardcr to Willie
It left Montana too much time, AP Jl'ootbaU Writer
the Colorado State-Utlh winner in
Davia with eijlht seconds ·left, however. After the kickoff, the
If you -love fo argue about col- the Holiday, Alabanta in the Sugar
enabled lhe Chiefs to snaP. an 1.1· Chiefs had I :22 and two timcouts lege footbaU rsnldngs, this could be and Texas A&amp;M sidelined by progame losing streak at Mile High remaining.
your most enjoyable season ever.
batioa.
Stadium and give coach Marty
The Kansas City quarterback,
Imagine this: Five teams go
Or, if Auburn beats Alabama,
, SchoU.enhcimer his ftrst win here in who missed significant practice undefeated in lhe regular season scratch The Tide and add the
eight tries.
time last week because of sore ribs , and none meet in a bowl game Tillers to lhc list of unbeatcns.
The clinching score overshad· and a bruised hip, moved his team because of conference commitl.ilcc Texas A&amp;M, Auburn can't
owed El~'s trsdemar1c Jatc..game 7S yards '!! nine plays, complc'!ng ments or bowl bans. The debates play in a bowl because of NCAA
drive that ·gave the Broncos an seven of eaght passes and llllll8glllg would be endless.
violations. Both teams are elipble
apparent victory with 1:291efL
the clock perfectly. On~ of the
''It would be wild,'' ESPN for the national championship in
In a wild finish, the teams
Chiefs recetvera got commentator Beano Cook said. The Associated Press media poll,
exchanged ·fumbles before Elway
to SlOp the dock.
"There'd be ar_Buments in every although probation 1eams are
,
concede a bar iJ1 America.'
barred from the USA Today-CNN
It may sound far-fetched, but it coaches' poll.
could happen this season wilh Penn
The last time five Division 1-A
State in die Rose Bowl,lhe Nebras- teams had perfect regular seasons

Burns captures Riverside Senior Men's League title
The 1994 edition of the Riverside Senior Men's league has come
to an end with George Bums of
Clifton, W.Va. crowned as the
champion.
Bums scored 170 points for lhe
season to nip Jim Wikoff of Shade
by eight points, while Harold
Lohse of Pomeroy took thiJd place
by outscoring Earl Johnsol) of
Mason, W.Va. by a 150.5 to 149
point difference.
A total seventy-one differenc
players toOk pan in lhe 1994 campaign. The season began on Aprils
and concluded on Sept. 27 with lhe
seniors' annual bauquct and playday at the Riverside Picnic and
sheltet area.
The senim were served a grest
mesl for their dinn.er wilh a cold
sandwich luncheon·and coffee with
doughnuts for breakfast. The
seniors had a "Closest to lhe Pin"
COIItcst after lunch and this was all
followed up by lhe 1994 awards
ceremonies.
Ralph Sayre, the league's '1994
president, emceed lhe cercnlonles
and gave away nearly fifty dozen
golf·bills to aU the bag wjnnen.as
wen as piz.es to the not-so-popular,
dislinguished prize winners . The
first three places were awarded
$30, $20, and $10 gift CCI'tilicales.

Pomeroy ... ddleport, Ohio

.

'et

" He mide a jreat catch and
made a leal effort to
it 1n the
end zone," Moallliasaid
"We just needed one more play
8lld we couldn't seem to make it ai
the end," Denver .coach Wade
Phillips Slid.
·

4-U) wiD meet and Ktny Hines had five.

ellston,- ut Wla,s to eipre

The Meigs Mllaudec volleyball
team recenUy won two·of lhree
matches. The Lady Marauders
dropped a two set ~h to ~feated Belpre, but picked up willS
over Trimble and Wellston.
In the match against the Golden
Eagles, Belpre won 15-9, 1·5-10~
Billie Butcher had five kills for
Meigs, Emily Fackler ICVCII assists,
Bobbie Butcher six lcills, Cynlhja
Cotterill nine assists and seven for
5even serving, Malldy Jones also
was Ieven of 11irvinJ servinR:
In the reserve pilllC. Meigs fell
15·1, 15·8 Cendenee Miller and
Julie Tl'ift.. sccxed three points each
for M;p:

We
...............................:..- ............ !
Vinton County........................................0
MEIGS ...................................................0

BREAKS TACKLE- Kmsas City running back Marcus AUea
(32) breaks a tackle by Deaver's Keitb Burns 011 his way to tbe end
zcme from aeveo yards out in tile second quarter of Monday aisbt's
AJI'C Wett bout In Denver. The Chiefs wolt 31·21la part by breaking
a nine-quarter scoring drottgbt, which was acldeved by tills toocb·
down run. (AP)

•

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Belpre 42,

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42
38
21
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AMERICAN CONFERENCE
4 3 0 .571
4 ,3 0 .571
] 4 0 .42t
, 4 0 .42t

•

Jl'rlday:
Trimble
at
EASTERN*; Point Plcasant at
MEIGS; Millcr at SOUTHERN;
Wellston at Nelsonvillc-Yorlt;
Alexander at Fedecal Hocking;
Belpre at ViDIOII County;

o~v~~~o~~m

NFL standings

Blllfllo....-. .. -.
N.Y.Itu - ·-·-·
Jndlmopnlo •.•.
Now l!oipod ....

·.

63

.

Football

gained 104 yards in 25 carries in
that game and has provided an
example of determinatioa Somerlot
said has inspired the rest of the

.Mal_.._... ••..,_

'

SETTING UP a return sbot across the net Is Eastern's Jessica
Racllord (U) while tealllmate Jessica· Karr watdles from bebiDd ber
during Monday Digbt's TVC match against Federal Hocldog, which
. tile Eagles woo. (Scott Wolle photo)

rA

ScorelJoar(l

The Irish defeated Danbury
Lakeside 23-8 Friday for their fust
victory of the season after six

.;:•nra 1"

"

HodJIIa Dlvlllml

EASTERN 33, Federal Hocking
15
Alexander 20, Miller 14
T(lmble 31, SOU111ERN 0
Nelsoavillc-York &lt;43, MEIGS 6
Vinton County 22, Athens 10 ·

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tO.WJIBEIJ!IISBUIO (2) 5-1............51

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-graders post
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'

ii

Ialll

Frider'•lallll

ours.''

four points and 14 assists, Faclcler
had six points and seven assists,
Vanessa Compston had nine kills team.
and two blocks, Jessica McElroy
"He has a bad back, is going to
was seven for seven serving with . a chiropractor for bclp and ill play·
four ~ints and Bobbie Butcher haid inf!'!" But he doesn't mind doing ,
six kills.
· ,
it
use we don't have any other
,
In the reserve contest Meigs feU running baclcs. He made it through
15-10, 15-12. Stephanie Stewart a lot of adversity to have his best
led Meigs with seven points.
game against Danbury,'' lhe coach
said.
Meigs roUed over WeUston 15- . . The school, about 50 miles
1, lS-1.
north of Columbllll, has an enroUJoncsled the way with 16 points ment of 86 students, 44.of them
and was 17 of l&amp; serving,. Billie b.oys, in the tQp three $rades,
Butcher. had seven kills, Cotterill according to this yesr's Oh1o .High
10 ISiists, Compston four kills and School Athletic Association hand·
Erica Robie three 1ciUs.
book. So even such a smaD squad
In the reserve freshman game makes up a substantial part of lhe
Meigs clefeatod Trimble 15-12, MCigs won 15-4 and l.5-0,while · school population.
·
14-16 ud 15-'7. Bobbie Butcher the reaervc team won -by acores of
Sometlot acknowledged that
was 21 of21 ~ wilb 16'poin1S 15-2 and lS-6. Jessica McElioy led !l'ith so few players, he has_to
and six kiDa. Jones was 17 for 17 Meigs .with eight points,_~tewart
improvise a lot durln.l ~serving ~ added 11 points, Cot- Klna~dedg...~~· King five and Libby
"We do a lot ofsax-on-six or
terill n¥~e for nine servinK with
""""'
=~~t-on-eight drills," he aaid. "In
: 11
'lion, we have two pia~ who
1
~tre acad,emically ineligible, yet
they still practice with us evecy
'1 ft
day.Oneasslstantcoachactsasthe
-~
scout team quarterback and we
,
sorlletimes lhrow a dummy or two
MolD bn*oopcn a c1ole JIIIIIC
kouab dciecd out the scoring in jn to act as a lineman, so we.do
wilh :l6aeconcl-bllfpoinlaenrourc the fourth period when he.scored have some scrinuilaging, but not a
10 a 22-0 victory .f Nfll Wellston in from &lt;44 yards out with 7:49
whole lot"
·
seventh lfado fopdJillactioa 1ut rcmaininJ, John Hill added lhe · Somerlot said the possibility of
wedt at MeisS Jlllior HIP in Mid· exua pOints Ill give Meigs lhe 22-0 ~orfeit existed before the fourth
d1
victory. .
epOft.
i l t he - L'1ttJe
\ U a l l - - dro
game
of lhe Season.against Cadiz,
Tbe wj n savea
"..._,.. ve 10 •L""' Malludcr
wbell injurie$ reduced the squad 10
MariUders........_
1 5.,'() mark goiq into l$ wilh 37 ~ left in tbo·t:clll- IS ..1.
bu
one e1se bas got·
,.....,...,,., ...--.. Jactaoo, .......
no "We
..,_..
._ loa tell but Grant AbboU came. •m.w
......., . ilh . · ten· ....,y~.
hlllt sinl;etthen,
have ~
was Qnly lhe.secoad oldie year for the bia defCIIIivc play downin&amp; die }IIIIth pride not to. play, but that
Welktcw! , . '
Goldclt Rnetets fJall carrlec for a was one point when we ahitost
~J~ ' I!iOU .into ~IC4)rial fiVHaid loa to preserve the Shut . didn't,''·he-.Mt;
colllilitl 'llll · ~ . . - . fil'lt ., ,.,, Out. .
! · .
•Somerlot also said dropP,il!g
Aftcf'aliftoo......,. -·~&lt;y,_oalJIO · . R.o1111! continuo!! to r•c~ UJI football- L - .............. an· '-'"- •
!:i; .:;;;4 die.........
111111 ' incre8ible numben for lhe Litlle
•.,..._ ... m'"!CJ1L,4Dd ·· - .
u..-....... He___.,_.
.. _....... __ ~or ·the scbool,
whi~h won !be Obio
blclc.IIJ . . OMI•lO;JIIalift- ..,._..
......,. 12 ......,...
~llled- Piaillllliii-IChool .'
~. c. Q~ta 70-JIId
fll!ll•llllllhc two IOIICbcloWu. 1n I"" · . ~~dare
. ,the CI!!I'Cil. •• o.~.l!'!
run il'llolall die IU'I
~ Witli twO JIIIMllleft, ROiisb llis a s)'SIIeia~ . · ·· " _....,
no iood
111:1 hlf WI a lbot toJIIc* op l,OOO)wdarusbinJ,
"We've 1leeil down in nlceat
6-{)leld..
,
' , ""'dioa 228 yD. Par ibc yqr be vca but have' Jreat tnaditlcli "-•
" slliM ~ • ....... bu c:.urieil tbe.bllUO.timca for Cp.:la!deaaiiMCtide,llldwepiti:
Ilia filii acdlilt.JI ,- wldlo..,.,... · m yards (19.3 yds/rush). Othec crowds and tremendous parental
erina fi'OII lllltrY •end 1M M~rauder rusher~ wore Joab s~" he Slid. ·
.. .
willr Hooten (S-13), H11l (3-10) and
. 'I've been told several times
.a-six Yll'll • , . ·• ~ ..t fil .Loaclt (2-6).
, ·
!hat the only time tbcy won'tltave
t6uWiii.Jil"'lDD, ~ llltled 11". ~ Jlauily Y~. ~ Anlbco8e ' fOOibaU is wbea they don't have a
_.,.._ID .... lf.a14.0 CCI&amp;' , ~ T•IY'Laadermdt all reeov-, stnool here, .and l don't doubt
1iC11L ' • ·
•
'
. . .· •.elcd Wolliton faalblcl
. th'IL"

llll•

I

AlexaJKier....................... -·..····-···-···-···1

:0.£::~~~
which they wm:
Running back Rusty McBride

&amp;

.

Olllo DIYIIdo.

..

in life is
ree

··

win the national championship
because they can' t take lhe last
step, which is winning a bowl :•
game,'' Corso said.
So who's got the inlidc liXk to
the tide?
Is ittop-l'llllkcd Pcm StaiC (&amp;{)),
which .leads tbC nation in miDJ ;,
and just beat Michisan at Ann
Arbor'?
.
Is it No. 2 Colorado (6-0); . ·•
which has already beaten four · ·'
teams that were nD1lccd at die ·
they played?
.. ' '
Is it No. 3 Nebraska (7-0), .
w:ucb continues 10 win desllile die • ·
loss of star quarterback Tommie :
Fr.mer?
•
What about No. 8 Al'lbaml (7·
0). whicb keeps winning close .
g&amp;(DeS with clt*h plays?
.
Nebraska-Colorado on OcL 29 ·
and Auburn-Alabama on lifov. 19
will serve as elimination games. ·
And we'D know mO« about Penn ·
State's chances following the
Lions' · upcoming stretch llflinat
o:uo State, indiana and Dllnois.

Federal Hoclcing ...........-.........._............0
SOUTHERN ..........................................O

Me=·s varsl" beats Trimble
8
1

Phillips said, " You doa't ever
think 1t's over wilb Joe ~
But I didn't lhinlc they bid enoqb
time to score if we executed our "
ilefen.c properly."
·•

Miller...........................- ........................ I

Trimble in the aectionil toumamenl
FedCI'al woo the i\lscrve match
at Ross-Soudlesstillm at 2 p.m. Sat- in lhree sets 15-10, 13-15 and 16urday. Tbe winner of lhat game 14. Federal was led by Amanda
will play Southern (11-9)-at 4 p.m. Beasley wilh 24, Jcnnifec PuUins
That w10ncr will advance to lhe six and Beth Easley seven.
dislrict atLucasvillc Valley •.Soulh·
For Eastern Michelle CaldweU
em ~enUy won its last game to led with seven, Jessica Radford
end itS season on a higb note and seven, Billie Poalec six and Patsy
insuml itself of 1 winning season.
Aeikcr five.
Brandi Reeves led tlie Eagles
Pooler was 12· 12 serving wilh
wilh eight pointa, going 5-6 serv- an ace, Vicki Adams 6-8, Carrie
ing while senior Becky DrigJ.I Newlun 6-7 and Caldwell 5-S.
~six points, aolng 6-10 wtib CaldweU, Aeiku,Jamie Drake and
three aceS, 9-10 llfllldl!R. four tills Brandi Reeves each had an ace.
and a block. Scn1orJesak:a Rad· Adams, Martie Holter, Aeiker,
ford, the SCUing IJICCiali'l bad five - Rccv.c:s and Caldwell each had a
points, going 8-8 wilh an ace, 19 kiD.
sets and 6 8CIS for 1cU1s. Patsy Aeik•
Coach Don Jackson slid, "I was
er had four points on a 5-1 ~t, especially proud of my seniors. I
two aces, &amp;61pilcina and two kills; was ~ 10 see them go out as winRebecca Evans liad four points, ners 10 front of lhc Pwa!IS Night
going 6-8 wilh two aces, a kill llld crowd. The girls played well.
a block. Jessica Karr had three Maybe Ibis wiD carry over Into lhe
J!Oints, going _4 4 serving, an ace a to111118Jl1Cnt Saturday. •

11

Asked if he t.bouldlt the IIJIIC ' ·'

E~'I'ERN....... ,,;,Q .. _,.............,............2
Tnmble............................~ ....................-2

ByTIMPUET ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Marion Catholic's football team
has 17 players, so it's no sutprisc
when its coach ssys lhe one thing
he can't alford is injuries.
"We tape a lot of anldes just 10
prevent people from getting bun,"
Steve Somerlot said. "Sometimes
it seems this team Is held together
by a lot of string, tape and ~yer. "
Lots of weighdifling be , too.
"One of the things t at has
made a difference is that we built 1
weight room when I came in ll!
caach last season and have.a volunteer stn:ngth coach who bas belped
us keep in shape," he said. "Con·
stant weight ti'alning has kept us
almost injury-free and that's !Wiy
important in a program as SmaD IS

'•

TVC football standings

i

' ~!CJ'II (5-IS,

.-

'was over after Elway' a IOUChdoWII,

F•
b
•
•
1ve un eatens provide gr1st for endless debate
was 1979, when Alabama, Brigham
Young, Ohio State, Florida SLate
and McNeese State did iL They aD
played in dlffcreni"bowla 8lld lhey
all lost except for nalioaal champion Alabama. which beat Arkansss
24-9 in lhe Sugar Bowl.
The situation could be more
confusing thia year because of tbc
sanctions~ No. 4 Auburn (70) and No. 6 Texas A&amp;M (6-0).
What happens if tbe probation
teams are lhe only oaes left without
a loss after the bowla?
Cook said he might vote for
Auburn because the Ti$en would
have completed thetr second
straight 11.:0 SCIIOII. They flllishcd
fourlh in the AP poll last season
behind a trio of oncc-beaU:n telllls,
including lllliona1 champion Florida State.
"If they're allowed to play,
th~ games should count," Cnok
said. " You can't ignore a team that
goes two years without a loss.' '
Cook's ESPN colleague, Lee
Corso, disagrees.
.
"Probation teams should not

·~
•

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111 Court Stre~; Pom-roy, Ohio 4S769
·· (Offer Expire• November 15, 1994)
t

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TREE TRIMMING

UCIHE

. AND REMOVAL

GUH CLUB

um;t Hauling,

•·

·vour Message Can
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Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

. For N Utile As
w.tuu Per Inch Per Day

Bill Slack
992·2269

~

Public Notice

GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.
Bac~~Hre,

Jess' Complete
Auto Uphols~ery

Public Notice

.... Covara .. CarJMI
Convertible Tope,

live cents ($0.05) lor each
one hundred dollare of
valuation; lor live (5) ytlll'l.
The Polio lor sold Election
will open al 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of oald
day:
Dated Sept. 26, 1994
By order of tho
Boord of Eloctiono,
of Meigo County, Ohio.
Henry L.. Hunter, CINIIrman
Rita D. Smith, Director.
(10111 , 18, 25, (1111; 4TC

Reaolullon of lhe Boord of . - - - - - . . . , . . _ . ,
Townahip Trusleea of lhe
WHALEY'S AUTO
Townahlp of Lebanon,
Portland, Ohio, paaoed on
PARTS
the 291h day of June, 1994 S
1 llzl 1 C at
there will be submitted to a
pee a ng n u om
vote of the people of said
. Frame Repair
aubdivlslon at a General
NEW l USED p•RJS FOR
Election to bo held In the
"
Township of Lebanon, Ohio,
ALL !lAKES &amp; MODELS
at tho regular places of
voting therein, on lhe 8th
112-7tiS OR
day of November, 1094, lho
·112-SSSS OA
queatlon of levying a lax, In
excess of lhe ten mill
TOLL FREE t-111·141·0071
limitation, lor the benefit of
D•RWlN, OHIO
Lebanon Township lor the
"
purpoao of Fire protection. L-----';;.;"~'"';.;.',;;,TFN.;;..~
Said tax being: A renewal
of an exloling tax ol1 mill el - - - - - - -..
a rate not e•ceedlng 1 (onol
milia tor each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
ten cenla ($0.101 lor each
one hundred doliara of
valuation, tor !Iva (5) years.
The Polls tor said Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. ·of said
day.
Dated Sept. 26, 1994
· - · By order ollhe
Board of Eloctlona.
of Meigs County, Ohio.
'Henry L llunter, Chalrmon
Rita D. Smith, Director.
-~(10) 11 , 18,25, (11) 1; 4TC

PubliC Notice

PUBLIC N'OTICE
SOUTHERN OHIO C:OAL .
COMPANY· MEIGS MINE
N0. 31
P. O. BOX490
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
Pursuant 10 Ohio Coal
Mining end Reclamation
Rule 1501 :13-304, Southern
Ohio Coal Componyl Molgo
Mine No. 31, P. 0. Box 490,
Athena, Ohio 45701, doeo
· hereby seek a variance to
permit tho lnotollotlon of ·a
pipeline within 100 leal of
State Roult 124, beginning
approximately 1.2 mllea
east of Salem Centers Ohio.
The propoaed plpollno will
1 hove no ellocl on lht road.
PubliC Notice
The only disturbance to be
Starting Sun. Oct.
conducted within 100 feet of NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
S. R. 124 will be tho burying TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
tth Raclna Legion
·of the pipeline adJacent to THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Post 1602 6:45 pm
and beneath tho roadway.
Revised Code, Sections
Thla ad good for 1
Dlaturbonce of the area will 3501 .11 (GI, 5705.19, 5705.25
be conducted to the edge of
Notice lo hereby given
FREE CARD
tho public R/W and beneolh that in pursuance of 1
the roodway by boring. Resolution of lhe Board of
lntereated parlin may Township Trustees of lhe
comment at a public Township of Orange,
meeting lo be held on Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
October 26, 1994, 6:00 P. M. paasod on the 11th day of
Uc. No. 0182·27
at the General Office of July, 1994 Jhore will be .
Southern ' Ohio Coal aubmltted to a vole of the
Company S. R. 689, Polnl people of said subdivision •
at a General Election to be
Rock, Ohio.
held In the Township of
(10111 , ta; 2TC
Orange, Ohio, al the regular
places of voting therein, on
the Qth day of November,
812-2088
Public Notice
1994, the question of
150 hge St.,lllicldepofl
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON levying a tax, in excess of
Fr8e Eadm....
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF tho len mill limitation, lor
Jm..tn
THE TEN MILl. LlftiiTATION
the ben alit of Orongo L..----...:::.:::~
· Rtvieed·Cpdt, Sectlona
Townohlp for the purpoae of - - - - - - - - 3501.11 (G). 5705.19, 5705.25 Fire protection. A
I
Notice ; 1 hereby given
Said tax being: renewa
that In purauance of 1 of an exlttlng tax of 2 mills
a rate
not one
exceeding
Rooolulion of lho Board o1 al
mills
lor each
dollar of2
.
Township Truatoea of tho
...
Township of Letart, Letart, ·valuation, which amountolo
.,..
Ohio, paaoed on tho 2111 twenty cents ($0.201 lor
day 01 March, 1994 there each one hundred dollara of
will bo eubmlttod to 0 vote valuation, tor live (51 year&amp;.
of the people ot a old
The Polls for said Election
Un.lppU••cll
aubclivlolon at 1 General will open at 6:30 q'clock
Election to be held In tho A.M. and remain open unlll
Townthlp ot L'!tart, Ohio, at 7:30 o'clock P.M. ot said
the regular placea of voting day.
Dated sept. 26 , 1994
therein, on the 8th day of
By order of the
November,
1914,
tho
• Board of Elacllona,
question of levying 1 tax, lA
of Mo~a County, Ohio. L-----..;tC::,or1100
111111;;;,.
exc111 of the ten mill
be
111
of
Henry
L.
unter,
Chairman
limitation, tor Ih•
no
Rita D. Smith, Director.
Letart Townahlp for th•
, , (1111; 4TC
110111 18 25

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published as a ~ servtce to non~t groups wtsh~g to announce
meetings and special events; The
~is not designed to promote
aales or fun4faisers of any type.
ltims are prinled as space permits
and CIIIIIOt be guaranteed 10 run a
specifiC nll{'lber of days.
•
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TUESDAY
. IiAClNB - Home schooling
mcetina for parents meeting 7 p.m.
Tuolday at 28471 Bashan Road,
near.Bacinc. Fu li!Qfl: inf(I'Illation,

ca11949-3119.
t . .,..

Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

WE~DAY
RACINE - Homeowners and
rental owners in Racine should
attend a 7:30 p.m . Wednesday
mecti!lg at the Racine Fire Hall liD
learn about gnmts for low-income
propelly.
SYRACUSE- Third Wednesday Homemak~rs Club, Wednesda~ , ~0 a.m. Syracuse Municipal
Building. Potluck at
Wcrk on
Christmas tray ·favors, Take 8cissors and hot glue'guns.

noon.

·

RJ.rnm
..:_Alpha
Kappa
·oblc:rve
Day and

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RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
will
Founder's
Its . Department Ladies Auxiliary,
31i!b~at7:30p:m. Tues· Wedn~y. 7:30p.m. ,at Rutland
day the ~ United Methodiit F~ slllion. Final plans fOI' turkey
C1illdL . •
suppq, Nov.. l7.

a

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POMEROY Vetefans
~ Ha.pilll Auxiliary, 1:30
Jlt. ~ in the ·hospilil con-

.fe.ince 100111'

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. ' lEDfORD - Bedford Towli-

.slaip&gt;Voluateer Fire Department
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ito~ hill.
I

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I!QMER,OY.- x;v,.. • '!1"'""'1.'
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THURSDAY
RU1LANP - Leading Creek.
DiStric~ regular meet· ing, .T~w:sday, 5 p .m . at offi'ce.
)&gt;ubiJC 111Ylted.
'

COnservancy

POMEROY - Middleport Literary Club, home of Mrs. WilsOn
Carpenter, 2 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs.·
Everett Hayes to lead program on
Kurt ~onnet, "$1augbterhouse

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:. t:·

Clf\SSIFIED RDS
"

'
ledlyiiiiiMdlty
. . . . . . . . . . Ron;

dlogt'w-.d _ _.......
c:.ol-.da.rlePillllpl;
pid&gt;J1Ygl........
llahtle -.dlluiiMir.

. . U I I c l l l l l ' -. . . . .

Bus. (614) 446-9971

4

llllurlng hind

ontr w111 ·111i -

eua,II14-:11H7110.

VOI'f

614·992·7643

Good

-·

. . 111 111 01117
tor I .
P.M.

(No Sunday Calls)

6

Wonhid To

Sur. Junk AI-.

Col :

Employment Serv;ces
11

Help..,.._.__.

Lost&amp; Found

...,

FIIEE~I 'flAil

DRIVER TIIAIIINGI

To Dllw For A

II You -

~
""' .
And , _ 'IIIII
FomltrCon
.......
Coil

Our "-UUor .....,_ , . _ .

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

113611 To Schdult A " - Ta

T•• ....

w-....

... . . ·;

.....................
-:;=:.:-Nih
... -....... _....,_

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

_,__

•I'J

AIIOII CHIIISTIWIIALU
4 Fomlly: :111121 a . t Houri¥ .... A - n.u... Fri. 10 AJI. -4
.. ~ Soil II .....
P.M. lnlotlor, CN11o, ....
DiehM, Oolhle, lnpn ••• llom1 !C" Temtory ()pdanM ,.
Choir Bod • .,.,_..,_
-Jt2.4731.

,_114M

1C·SC IOits,... ,.... far ftatltlltl caas.
Wa

Buy All Non Fanous Metals

W1 FOR CUIIIII PIICIS

992·5114

1121/M

~-

.

'

__ _

- " hoe ..,...... lor '
Gallipolis
00011 ..... Upilrienol . . . . . . . . ~
&amp; VIcinity
_ , of ..... - . .
train In~ pr
tdlofto. • .
4 Family Solo: Frldor a ,....,..
diJ, Del 2111,~ 22nd, 151 K,... ..h ..........,-~ Pl.
BeCk Ad, .AalltpDIIt, Ott 114-441- llealllor, :100
a, ·
Pl. -....."WV 21110 EOE.
03:11.

OPEN 7DAYS AWEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENa
MON.·FRL 9-6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9-3
Pllyl•l To••J 45 CIll. for cle••

12Galgt

on
Weideateral
chainuw.

......... ............ 1

Lall one cot Nlylorl A101 11M.
blue polnl Himoloyon, IMiole. AIIOII I AI . , _ I ......, ' ·
-,
declo-. long hllr, 814-- ap..a,~~Alt-AvatCiwl.___ ·,
lola liMo, •m lola .......... ,
IGJ 11:3 2141•1IDO - - - I
1 IIHdld To ......
IMdlile Paolllon For
I Doya A Week. . . _ .
ADollcont ....... .
COL Willi DOWM Endooo.. ·
- - 1 , _ OVor 'Ala 11oM ... . ,
llloolno: ..-~... wtthooi callor. milling olnco
Frldoy, Buni*f.IWKinglllury Ad ==..=~=.
I
·
-• 114-~03 or ~
:115:1
-CNIIw.~l ~
............,tl ..... Oflln J
7
YardSala
For
•
.

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

· Available

..... --·~ -­

-Oebyow...
•""IM-4D-'JIML
- Tloli n 4
.........

» -:=:=-::::·
:-::"=·"=.-=~
._ 000 -130.0
F1R1T

YOUftG - - 1 M ll"-~2ll

·Phone: 992·6926

Echo Saw's in stock
Chrllllntw laYBW!IY

Old c:!gonllo l1ghllro, . . """

Spodo Fo. .lo Cal 4 Yoo,. Old,

701 Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio
. 45768

949-2804
Complete Chain
Saw Service .t Puts

-.......a.-.-

•••s

w.:• wllan
both
houll~ . . . .
w/chlkhn. 30W7
•
3 Puptlioa: 1Wo 112 Lib, I 112
HUUv, Ono 112 Lib, I 112 PI

Rlverbend Travel
Adventures .

Mower Clinic

.
-----.- '~

Or Without ...._
Larry t.Wr. hiiU WI.

Giveaway

record,

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

RACINE

~

112 PHbull, 112 Bonr, mole, ond
Coeur Sponill, hoe rhal

• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

ALL Yonl 8olto lluol le Pold In
·boDEADLINE:
tho diJ
.... tho ld 2:00
ill lo ,...
.....

t011WN

---....

--. .

lid In Eonilna .. 414 Mt 11o

DoorToDoar.l.O • l l t l

,......, ldlllon • 2:011 P-Ill.
Frldov.~ _ , ldlllon • 2:CIO
-IIHdld I~-UuToloiANn,llto

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

loS
Evenlngo By Appt.

EnvtioAame ~= ·

... ,.

- ·Ciult,---.

._..../Oonlgo 1111: 101111 . .
.,...: I lillie F - Rod ~ - - !Wol'- WoniiCI AI "
Clleohlr8, IM,lllura, Ftl, M' . 1ho
Or AtiPIJ I n -·
8
Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Hooting, lno.

Pellet Stoves
386 State Rt. 160
wJNetlonwlda lne.
Glllllpolla, Oh.

448-7400
800-757·PEL1ET
7355 '

a
'I
}_

___.,..

-tloo• Oil

i:.ag:-1111 • ~,...=
Ina _ _ _ _ _ ..

1·800-486·1590

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

.· . .

Gone, But Not
Forgoltan,
1n Loving 111mory or

....

~aD··--- ....... ~
-buwlnaJ&amp;,rii-.IINob: I
104-m:DU.
~

113'J!.2441S.

lnMemory .

RU

IIIIIIIICI to 11UJ .............
orplneon_or.., _

...

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAl) 6:30 P.M. .

w.nledtoBuy

I

5 lion-Sol., cnoftld
byNov.1.

Factory Ckke Oily
Basltt.BIIIcllg
2

Card shower planned
' A caid si!OwCr' is being planned
for Ada Morris, who will celebrate
her lOist birthda)' at the Pomeroy

ifead pili Best Seller. ,_.c.HJ,Weight
....,
Lose

A reunion of the family of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Morris, Bald Knob,
Stiversville ROid, was held rccent·
ly.
The five children arrived on a
Thursday ' and spent the weekend.
They are Carla of Racine area;
Cary of Livenn~n, Calif.; Carvl of
New Port Ritchie, Fla.; Carl C. of
Point Pleasant, W. Va., and Clair of
Columbus. It was the rust time in
several years for all of the famlly to
be home a1 the same time.'

M1J

We have Cars and Vans/ .
OH 45631

---_.....,_
II

........... . .
,__,old. ~-

Announcements

-ng or TIIIIOina on
Rlco'o II'OPiriJ, 'l.eoii -

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

Galrlpolis,

·

_.,be....,

9_
49-2168

Kenny's Auto Canter
264 Upper River Rd.

.

Dishes ranging in size hom 10 liMit ct..rclown ID 18 inc:Ma :
- PAYIENT PLANYes, we can lab caohl «· 110 «Mv• u caoh -orpeym.,to lor48 mont.o ulowu $35'nloollh.
" - SERVICE ~
.·
YOUR SAIJSFACDON I Our SUccell beglill I endt with
Mrvicol So, wh1n your .-Aill i111't worlcing rlah~ we'ra
!Mira to help! Ely phone or In poraon - when you C811,

Found: Lien 8odon ...... milo
bloel I whit• dog, no tall. :J04.

614-992•5 515

Morris reunion held

-~a-

Starting at $7.95/monlh lor 13 ciNinnell on up 10 UllllnV U
your heart desitn

lenny's Auto Rental

Befo1116 p.m. laava
me. .aga.
Affar&amp; p.m.
614-985-4110-

D. GEARY'S

AUTO BODY

•riou.,

be

Howard L. Writesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

1tHIM1tM.

Free E•tlmataa

-=======::!

for S.le .
Call

Five" and his autQbiography. Dr• .
Gifford Doxsee will be the guest
spealcer.

' I
J~

,·

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

11..--1111

Buy-Seii-Tra~-

BINGO .

.,

...

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

~

1;r:

Larry Rupe I Auoc.'e

Announcem ents

HAULING

...

91S-447J

614-247-4035

Antlquaear.,

a

that In pursuance , of a

Cal1·800.106-9482
or992-5710

FREE ESTIMATES

Co••ie's o•io
llvtrHerh•••
herluti•p

HaadUnare, Cuatom

valu1tlon, which amount• to

Are You Too Busy for lUlling &amp;relllls?
let Errand Boy Do the
for You.

oComplata

11211114

.'

•!

Complete Une of Errand Service.

-Garages

Stop &amp; Compare

68o Fr..,

I

~ 1 ERRAND BOY .

•NawHornaa

Remodeling

12G.geO.Iy
llmltecl: 740

Said lax being: A renewal
NOTICE OF AECTION ON
of an exlatlng tax ott mill at
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
a rate not exceeding 1 (onel
THE TEN MILL UMITA:riON
milia lor each one dollar of
Flevloed COdt,"Sectiono
valuotlon, whloh omounta to
3501.11 (G); 5705., a; 5705.25
ten conto ($0.101 lor each
Notice io hereby glvpn
that In ,purauance of a , one hundred doll•n of
Resorution of the Boor!! of· valuation, lor live yearo (5).
Tho Polls lor oald Election .
Townahlp TrUatell ol the
will open at 6:30 o'clock
TOWI!Ihip Ql Scipio,
A.M. and remiiln open until
Pagovlllo, .Ohio, poooed on
the 6th dey of July, 1994 1:30 o'clock P.M , of oold
. there will be aubmlled to a
day. · Dolt'd' Sept. 26,· 1994 - - -YOUNG'S
----.,
vote or the peopie or eald
aubdlvlalon at · a Gene;al
Boa~yo~r::cu~~:. . CARPENTER SERVICE
l!loction to be held In the
of Melg, County, Ohio. ofloom Addltlona
Townahlp of Scipio, Ohio, at
Henry L. ljunter, Chairman oNew Glll'llgea
the regular placet of vptlng
Rita D. Smith, Director. -Electrical&amp; Plumbing
therein, on the 81h day of
(10111, 18,25 ('11) 1; 4TC
oflooflng
Novelllbtr,
1994,
tho
queation of levying 1 lox, In
oJnterlor Exterior
el!Ctll Of tho tpn mill
Publlc~lce
Painting aleo concrete
limitation, lor lho bonolil of
Scipio Town·a hlp lor tho
work
purpose of Maintaining and
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
(FREE ESTIMATES)
TAX LEVYlN EXCESS OF
operating cemttertea.
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
V.C. YOUNG Ul
Said tax being; A renewol
Revised Code, Sectlone
H2-6215
of an -existing lox rit .5 mill
Pomeroy, Ohio
el a role not exceeding .5 3501.11(G), 57011.19, 5705.25 ·
mlllo lor each one dollor of
Notice lo hereby given L-----=lll::::tCI'II2::.::u":.l

7

ROBERT BISSEll
.CONSTRUCTION

I

�•
October 1 1994

NEA Cro$tword Puzzle
42Hep

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALI;&gt;ER

.
IClT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrfaht

•

•J 10 4
•Q a 6 &gt;
13
•KI0976

EAST

VH Oil . Loo""'
1-11&lt;,. ~I\"' w~s

•A 3
9AI0' 9874

(1..1./IJN IN4, £A1"£
J~lf /III&gt;«&lt;''IN~ .

t

s...,.,..
.... t400,11Wu.tna " - .....

SOUTH
•KQ9885

:::r:.a.-.
---~· ...
,~~-..,-­
..._.,_.
•• •ann door eamds:'• while

Fumllllld I Rooono I llolh,
Cloon, No Pola. ll*w• I

Dopaoll n 1.-&amp; -1111.

..... . ,.. ..... .
=
.-···1111-.
_.........,,..,,
- ...
I

Fumllllld Aportnwl: I Rooono,
IIIII.
All
Des: ''-L

c.m...,...lo
I •• ··~

:

-_

114 . . . . . ~

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

1'1111,

..

'--"?!-I

.....,

•

~

--

IG\
No riiW'w• llu
To MO · Wooldr

rl 11011 ·
lhllllllll.
Pt II 11"1 . . . . . llofllnd&amp;

=',r; =.,1_ 1.,.._

.....,..,
•.•... ,.........
ue a•
EOII.

----------1--------wanted to
Do.

Ne ._.1011
le -llllytllli-

w.

]110.24'-8.
"'--'- ...

u.

.. .--

Home--::. A:; (""'1~' W.

111

54 ..ecellsi'I80UI
. Men:handlle

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

=~

p~!tl!: ~-

11un1na _,.on

1, 1

... 441-1048.,

.:::-·~'$
P,Poooo"'•-~ Qloeo a II
TIIne ,., r. . . . . -

In _
...... 10 .... ~ joio
-=-.m.li'
........
_ iii
IIIII• ""'"""
I lho T e l - wll be
lot •••"• ..... 0 . . _ . . wlh torr
pnr II n •i4 lor-. .. 'Tho !lair -..ot,
PO
... m.o
411W.

=

...._.,,OhiO

Ow=

Ilion

~~

Couot. , . _ T""' - . , . .

44~41~1~10~·~0r~I1~!:4~U!!I:!:ol~i~t~~

~

-homo.~-

34

......,...., , · , . - . AaG~v

21

Business
0p
portunlty

45

1:::

Furnished
Roome

I ~;;;;ii;~t.~~;;;~
I!

- ..... ==r,
.
,
.=.............
............. .....
- .-w-.==~
-.-/Cool-

, , _ ....

.... 143.115,114-112-11111.

._

Com~

2
Wllh : : . · -

CllrJirr 1111 Iron I ....... to II
l!l!r - · -...._In
111-11121 or1..oo:;;;;t

........ .........:t.--

· - For IIIIL 401100, II 4 Oil"~-~~­
· - lqUI_,r!, ~··
--·
IIIIICI lot
•IL - O f - Tnll And 1f01111h 11.,
Ha-. Rood, f14.000. _,.7111.
lllrlaut lnqulrlol
~
oton· in'
pill• S300otlll-22!\
Ooliol "8':. .mi.
-~
""::::..
~ i1i1 ijil~ Vl-.o ROUTE: Won, 0t1 ~rlw,:., llptll'outd eoptlo
__.......
_..__._
.:;:; Gulcll. Wll 011 A Sllldy -•-·•
bollld!ng, _ , .
;.;;:..,
i
-..-_,__
c.h Pllctd lo IIIII. f- :: '=-~~~hOmo.ooo -.elle;
M2l
................20-1712.
~-- .,
tr

.......

-·
--

only.- - ... ....

.,..,.....

~-~-iMituiUipoiii=iiiiii·iii·;-;-;;,di•.idtl

.... """' torr

..
,-..·

W
m; Gil

I::-;..:..,=:,;;..--=,...,..-=-

• ,__

-·
8wMl
to:~'Thowll
111111'
llllllnll,

P.O. ... 12f.T, P - , Olllo

:::Ci!Z.... ~

ll!d

73

-._

c.n ..... Hordtop,
446-4217 Aller I 'P.II.

-::it

I

• Rio Gnrndo.
OPENHOU!IE

~1erchandrse

IUN. OCT. !._

G: 4 P.ll.; MOM.""'' 17,

, .. ,.11.

:.r":l:lv M:;t"a...=

11tt

Houlehold
Goodl

5I

Ohio Rlvw' lnlnllalrl II oncl ...
111111 lloolle 331, AntlauiY, Ohio.

Ev-~~­

74

Chliaer•

Whlllehalr • a
Good
Cloolr,LIU - · 114-4l11211l
lEI...-., tl0.111 IN

, _ ""!.~. ~ICJdo..
'ltuoll~.-r...

od

,.,

.....

-

-.

t4flrS 16

· ~1

ou~, .

wt4AT'S T~turs

!=~==~~-=-

1---Tr~l

~

WOOL!&gt; ~EUR. PW'€:R
~ OR IJHITE WIN£
\oltT\1 Ht~ I'UL?

AutoPerta&amp;

Acceaoi'IM

I

:11110.10 Trucll nr. ... Ill
Whllo ' - ' 11 tw '
IIO.GO. 114 141 1111
.

..... Ill. 2,
· 10U71-

ludalil Prloed ,.,..,..IIlJa-.
Ulllll ......... ~ • . ,

.

tna••=-· ...

lllnlna Tobll I I Chain,
1214,l'IHU MOl.

·~. 11W71:2aa.

77.

~

I
I 1~ I

r

..

~

s

My brottl'er-in-law was turned

1 16 1 -; · down for a second mortgage. "I

I - ' - ·....J.I.-.J::: guess when you hit hard times,"
L.--l.'--..1..
.-----,.......-,...,...--, he sighed, "it's hard to. borrow
EN I D I 0
rroney for things you ---·- • ~ --:

•

I

IQ

ln-;..~i,......,l"'e-·"'1-'TI-.,.1--1

. .....J.I-..1.-.L.-'-·....J
1.-L.

--·

c.-ov., DIM lot 31111 Ford,

Complele !he chuckle quolod
bv filling in the miiSing WOfds
you develop from Slep No. 3 below.

~0111-Rd.

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

.._ Ca allreW Air Condtllonlr

:!;000 IITU,_ -~. ~ _ ,

blllh,_'!!IJ ,...., .._

112-u1L

.

. _ on ar~o~go.,.. Ollllnod .. VII .... Of I
'
AI lluniCirlol l'orll
~ ~ UIJIIIIII I
~ ...,_,.AI

pr,'ii

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

Conlg~, 821M1o. P1uo

Ut..lll, DotiOIII

l IIIRw : 1

·You'll be floating on a cloud with
' the buys you'll find in the
..
classifleds.

let of r11111oo oarvtoo lot
Elttlll. S41.oo eo.. .-..1110
ow. 1 0 - -Klolrwr ClrpJI
In llaoll. so hlllme Vlnvl In
aoo11. llolahln Clrplla, Ill. n
N.,l,._lll44,

tt. I llwlr...o ""'- In Qol.RENTAL • CHESHIRE 2 - .

Kelaeene

::7.- -Cook,

-i.~c.
,,.. ~
.. 11211~ - .

._In NowHo~."""'• I

~-- - ~

50'

.........

FCII 1

Transportation

Houuhold fur.

. . ·-- -

~ Wool. .tomoho Rd. Pl.

81

..

torRent

;

., ;

,,

=c-. ....

_ll....,tovt.,ra.,N,

... lnllrlor', 142110. :IIIW7Io
1110.

1111 fold P * - 2 ~ I
=--~~,-..,..

~.

,.,.
,...
010 114
441 ~,,.,
. 1100

ASTRO·ORAPH

,.. a-to .... 11444&amp;-120!

torRent

...

NYPO Blue (PA) (CC)

........

Apartment

''

Improvement•

PllooiiC. WY, 11110U71--,
~.,......~-~~14~1.~~;~;

ar.lumlohrl-..........,
., *'"'• at;,
oal_llt- l'llil-.
.,..
,.
.......
~

OCTOBER 18 I

...-

Home

=·~-~~~~~....: -..,..
~
...... =:::,...-=
42 MobiWHomel

Domain - Ruddy - Clerl&lt; - Fungus - GROUND
I wanted to find something nasty to say about a new
classmate. •J.ust remember,' my mom lectured, "when
you spread dirt you will lose GROUND."

. , . . . 1" . .. ~---· -· ·

!TUESDAY

Servrces

JIQCEHII'URNITVRE
No

-·
,..

u.~

.......

:•

aood eondllli&gt;n, • • .... ,,..

:::-~=-~LAYIE'II'URNI'IUR£
c..'"''
- luommlohlroaa.llilln•
- . ..........
..,..,,

"

...-

HET D

--,N.,...E""T""P-.,0:-Y-r---ll·~

Cloevr. 310 - . . . • ....
,-....,II--.
fw4WD.ICIW1H404.

aood
oondlllon. tt00.01111o441-71101
GOOD IIIEO APP1.WtCE8
~~!::.a, Nhlgw-:e

·

0

~

:-·

..............Wid-·

---=::::::;:::;~:::::;::::;;:;;::;;~~
l.

'::~~:~' SCC~cj}~-l£f.,~S· :::

IS' OlJfrf •.•

BORN LOSJi:lt

---Nil

41 Houeee lor Rent

~·

,

0111MbfNEA..II'Ie

11=

~

~'"

/ ~r·s vo~r: .~ :::: ~::r: i

Motorcycle•

.....
.. llurldrl Good 111111
_.,_on_-.._
::22::.'::.'------. , . , _ .,.,._ Poopono

:••.::.""aaioi-.=
':I
...... aofaohlft, .... .....
-.. Pl. -

G,AMMA,:

110 · - ......

t40 A Load. 141 It
-UiColll14 -.Go.
lllllor. 'lhlnnn4M
~a ad IDW7IoUII.
Dtllvory,

.

f'""'VES 10 •18

U'DaorllUO-Homo Nllllonll .............
coutmiY I'UIINITVRE
RMI,., Ohio 45771.

Rentals

a...,

-

~~~:::..:~d·•:o=
,,..~_.,.,_
nton,

I'll

-llora,(IMl7iWUIL

·~s

vans e. 4 WD'a

1fil

s "- Olllo1 ...... Wllh
LANG AUCTION
Prmrlo Tollol In IIOclom Ph
Rea l Estate
"'
In Jecbon
Co. Qt.
Clrl lllonlo Hollllnl
flrld- ln44 ~I
M Wholl
....
11tt1
Or~
1 roiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii
IAT.OCTD
NOON
llolllloHamo ..... FotIDCATEO On 81. Rl. :1127; 1 Ill
011 US Rl. U; . . _ . . _ M17.
Hoipllll, · -

I am writing this column with our
male cat. Max, sound asle~p on my
desk. His half-sister, 99, is asleep upstairs. Cats spend about two-thirds of ""',-t---1"each day dozing. And so far I have
spent some 14 years asleep. Although
1t ·was mostly enjoyable , just think
what I could have accomplished in
that time.
At the bridge table, it doesn't pay to
fall asleep. You need to stay awake, .
l
because at any moment you might
have to make the critical bid or play.
East was visiting a slumber party at .
·'
the wrong moment on today's deal.
Against four spades, West opened
'NVLB
liP
SFCFLB?
HDBVIIHX
with the heart two: five, ace, three.
~.
Knowing his partner had led a singleTWB
FSWULBMD~ ,
HDBVMHX
TWI
ton, East returned the heart eight. He
' ·~·
selected the middle c~rd because he
1
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B
P
B
F
1
.
B
0
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D
E
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wasn't sure whether he wanted part,ner to switch to a diamond or a club.
T
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.
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F
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The back is nol made to do the lhi~ we golfM do. ~
return in hand and played a trump. He
• The only thing won;e i&amp; rodfo," - (Pro!t!!SJ2M! gq!!!r) Fr~ ~·
: "'
lost only three tri~ks : the spade ace,
0 1814 by NEA, 1n:t
18
I!!"
the heart ace and a heart ruff.
East should have paused to assess
the situation, trying to find the four
tricks that were needed to defeat the
14llotl lty tiAY I. POUAN
contract. Then surely he would have
•.
noticed that a club switch at trick two
Reorrongo '""'" ol llle
could pnxluce the necessary.
four ocromblad words beDeclarer wins with dummy's king
low to form lour wordr .
and calls for ~he spade jack, trying to
_..&lt;'
look like a man about to take a finesse . .
U .NPRYE
\
•·.
But East isn't fooled. He wins with the
2
1 ,......,...-1-r-1.....-41
spade aee, gives his partner a heart
\
ruff !leaclfng the four as a suit-prefer·
ence signal for clubs) and receives a
club ruff in return.
I?
Keep your eyes and mind open at all
3
times.

.•.

~-

Rolla II!!.....112

8 Director' I order
9 co- furniture
10 Prejudlco
11 Grolhod
(heraldry)
16 Attontlon,

Stay awake
at the table

eomo;, 1a =~=---=-'~.,.----- 35 .Lot• a Acreage

!!lll!og_....... iiledOTA'IIoMI
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or puling lnttar,
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GOOSE BUMPS
STAND ON
END!!

&amp; Lrvestock

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81 flml Equipment

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Colllr ID bo1, 14 ..IIIOIJ', bnncl.

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Ollero
olnglng group 48 Flnloh
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50 Edible
12 Comliaili pt.
'rootllock-'
13 Nally
52 frOIII
14 - - armo
lie Amphibian
15 Roughest
lie Nevill
17 Not thla
61 Labor
11 ChooHI
62 ~·
19 Ending tor cash 63 Canine cry
21 Graver ridge
64 - Domini
22 Simich acrou 65 Snare
25 Cloth measure lie -to lunch
27 CaveatDOWN
30 Phonograph
Inventor
33 Without end ·
1 Architect fDOII.)
Saarinen
34 Raving fool
2 Brook audclenly
parts
3Try
36 Diminutive
4 French friend
oufflx ·
5. Spelling
37 Proporty claim
contrtat
' 31 Wrlilr llettow
6 Sink
41 German one
7 Poker otake

By Phillip Alder

iiOOillt ...._ ... -

.,....17111.

Bullneaa
Bullc:llngl

For - . •••, _ -ton.
INOTICEI
olllloln It, .._,._ Pl.
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. STAND ON
END!!

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BARNEY

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Allwl-111 lll"tt:r'i~ • Clll ,,. __ •••

"I've been making stools as a hobby for 30 years! Thought I'd try something different and
make a TV sla.nd th1s time!"

18

~

PAW II I HAD ME A
NIGHTMARE
WOULD MAKE
YORE HAIR

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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Soulb
West North East
Ia
Pass 2•
3•
4•
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening leacl: • 2

Sill fw ill;_ HOI I l l . - Ave,
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Plumbing &amp;

. '-tlng '

YI'RA I'URNITURI
' ....
Out II\ 141
.,. 4411111

4465. New York. N.Y. 10t63. Be sure to who, as you know from e•perience ,
state your zodiac sign.

doesn't always deal in facts. Take whatev-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Your peers er he/s he says wilh a gra1n ol sail and
1
wan·r appreciare illoday il you behave · make your own decisions.
like a ·self-appointed super•isor. Don't I TAURUS (April 20·May 201 Try nor lo
BERNICE
assume authorily in areas where you permit orhers ro put you in a position' ·
loday of working under pressure . Keep
BEDE OSOL · have no clout. ·
' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 211 lhem our ol your affairs and regulale your
Members ol lhe opposite sex mig~t not own agenda.
lhink you are as.charismatic and ch~rming GEMINI (May 21·June 20) An acquain·
as you do today. Be carelul that someone tance mighl quore you our or conlext ·
today Ia look good in lhe eyes ol others. If
does not puncrure your ego.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon. 18) Do nol you hear you've been malignelll, defend
srray Irom your sphere of influence loday . yourself.
II you try to pojecl your aurhorily inlo CANCER (June 21 ·Ju1Y 22) Do nor be
other areas, yc•u·re In dflger ol being oul ~ iniriator ol a domeslic squabble roday.
II you assume a ' do-as-1-say-nol-as-1-do"
at-bounds .
WedneSday, Oct 19, t994'
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Ill Try ro be poslure, you will be lagged as lhe cause
In lhe year ahead, you might fare better in loleranl Of peiJlQnS 1101 in accotd Wilh yo ur 01 friCtion.
enleiPrises or imdeavors In which you are ,ideas tQday . Som.eone important wliose LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This is nol a good
the middleman inJtead of a partner. Think .help you'll need later might be among mts day to impose your ideas on olhers. A phi·
losOphy that hes proven benelicial tor you
IWice betore enrering allia~s.
-group.
.
•
mi!Jhl
not be effeclive in meeli~g lheir
LI8RA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) In a situalion PISCE~ (Feb. 20.Mwch 20) Jnatead ol
needs.
today where you share a vested interesl ~pendong extravagantly . try to sta~h
with eomeone. bend over bacl&lt;wards robe somelhing away tqr a rainy day: II y0u VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Business
fair. S.Htariness could .'ruin the relation· don'l, when you need lunds lalar the only dealings could be much more complicatedtoday than they appear. If you're not care·
ahip, Libra, treat youraeiiiO a birth!*ly gill. lliing in your waller-might be faded
lui,
you might have t!l-awilch
blacllc lo_
Send for yOUr Aslro-Grapfl predlctlor)s tor nes.
1
!
,
lh4l year ahead by moHing S12Sio Astro- ·ARIES (March 2t·Aprll tl) T9day you rei:l ink:
CJIIII NEWSPAPER ENTJ:IU'Il"~E A.'iSN.
'Gr.aph. c/o this newspaper, P .0. Box•mighl have to depend upon someone'

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Pllge 10-nle Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, October 18,1994

Deputy grand matron is . _,
ho11ored at Hawaiian Luau·:;

.•- -Showcase
•

•..

A Hawaiian luau was held
.recently , at the Harrisonville
Masonic hall honoring Betty J!ish·
op, deputy grand matron of District
25.
Ziba Midkiff, worthy psuon of
Pomeroy Chapter, ·had the dinner
grace. In the chapler room, GlliCie
Wilson. association mauon of Har- ·
risonville Chapter was welcomed,
and distinguished guests were pre·
sented. They included Mn: Bisliop,

•

Becl!:y Phillips, deputy grand
matron of District 23; Diana Bowman, deputy grand matron of District 2A; grand representatives in
Ohio, Joan Thomas, Arizona and
Jean Moury, Massachusetts; Ilo
Armstrong, grand page; Alvin
Pience, grand aide; Don Muse,
Pam Diddle, Ita Armstrong, Sylvia
Midkiff, Ziba Midkiff, David
Christmas, and Joan Thomas,

•. LIVELY MUSIC·- Loatl musicallaleDt was
a feature of Sllowc:ase Meigs Coun ~y held at
Rock Springs Fairgrounds over the weekend.
Ro1er and Mary Gilmore sanji several
Appalachian songs during the· . rilbb~•n-r~utlinR

ceremony Saturday. Performers were featued
both SaiDrday and Sunday afternoon in lhe tent
provided for the occasion by Melgt County's
four banks.

with proper care ana netp from
1\I.Jther Nature, garden mwns offer
th : potential to flower again and
~ain every autumn.
.
She said they need fertile well.dl lined soil in a sunny location and
th 11 for bushy plants, they must be
pi lChed back in the spring as soon
a! the new F,Wth is four to six
in ;hes 1811. Pinching should be contiilued until mid July as this makes
fc r stUrdy plant s full of flowers in
the fall. Plants 10 be mul.ched with
straw or evergreen branches for
w'Jtter protection.
Mrs. Will's arrangement of the
month was tided "Back 10 School"
and used yellow and bronze mwns,
pepPer grass, yew and fern with a
Jll&gt;lllred school bird house.
·Other arrangements were by
D rothy Smith, colored mums in a
b.ack container; Evelyn Hollon,

yo llow mums, dutch iris, corkscrew·
w llow and flowering pear; She:
111 ~ had a pink peace rose specim .:n. Janet Theiss had a bouQuet of
b. onze spider dahlias; Peggy.
1\l,oore, yellow mums and golden .
r&lt; .;1 with gourds; Evelyn Hollon,
rd dahlias and marigolds; Mrs.
E berfeld, yeUow and brown mums ·
woth inpatielice in a heart-shaped :.
vase; Bettr Milhoan, goldenrod
with baby s breath and joe-pye
week in a glass pitcher; Carrie
Efoerfeld and Shane Milhoan, booquell of marigolds.
·
New officers were installed . .
They are Evelyn Hollon, president;
Mrs. Will, vice president; Dorothy
Sr.tith, secretary; and Heidi Elberfe d, treasurer.
Mrs. Milhoan won the door '
p1 JZe. RefreshmeniS were served •
b: the hostess.
. .

- - - ···Alfred·News Notes--

"Jobn·
son, Pomeroy, left, took the trophy ~~r best of
show modilled, IIIII Doug Ford, Mill 'i!ld, took
bat ollhow orl&amp;lnal wllh Ills 1967 Sh··lby, in the

elaasle ear show se.aed as a part of Showcase
Meigs County Saturday at the Roe\ Springs
Fairgrounds. ·

The Alfred United Methodist Denver, and his daughter, Tislityti Wilbur Robinson were their daughter, Leah Ann Fick of Columbus,
Church will host a community in Germaily.
wiener roast on Saturday night at
. Doris :and Lloyd Dillin11er and their grandson, Larry Ritchie,
6:30 p.m. Everyone in the commu- returned from a Florida vacabon Caldwell.
Martha, Joe and Will Poole
nity is invited to attend.
·
where the touri:d Magic Kingdom,
Recent visitors of Delbert and Universar Studies and Daytona auendcd a picnic IIIJI)IISOreCI by the
West Virginia Sheep Producers
.
'
Marguerite Stearns were their Beach,
daughter and granddaughter, Laura · Weekend guests of Marilyn and Association at Waterford.
and Leah Cohon of Akron, and ·q '
·:
their
daughter, Donna, of Centerville, Va.
•
Ruth Brooks.is recovering from
knee surgery at her home. .
DR. A. JACKSON BAnES, OPI'OMETRIST, is HIJlPY
Sarah Caldwell attended the
to announce the re~ation of his Meigs County Office to
crowing of her granddaughter,
224 E. MAIN STREET IN POMERC)Y (Formerly
Crissy Caldwell, as homecoming
queen at Grandview High School.
Pomeroy Health Care). The office will be CLOSED
Crissy is the daughter of Peggy and
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21st THROUGH nJBSDAY;
Charles Caldwcll, Columbus.
Meghan Avis is recovering from
OCTOBER 25th. Emergencies during this time will be
pneumonia at home. Her aunt, Kay
seen 'at the Gallipolis office, 228 Upper River Road, 446:Spencer, tuld neighbor Pam Yost;
assisted in hei care.
3300. 'the Pomeroy office will RE-OPEN on
Michael Weber went to
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26TII at the new location
Charleston, W. Va. where he has
accepted employmenL
offering full-service family vision care including glasses
Joseph Poole receive word that
and all types of contact lerises.
his mother, Louise, reoeived a successful pacemaker implanL
PHONE 992·3279.
John Tarior, Dutch Ridge, .
recently visrted his son, John. at

jp!!v----------------!i!llll!-

Missionary
society meets

SCOUT SKILLS - Ande NeuUing pre·
· pared food over an open fire for tt.t! security
. crew at .Showcase Meigs County. Pomeroy
Troop 1110 members, B9nnle Rutter, Missy
. : Houer, Ande Neutzling, and Priscilla Lilley,

along with leaclers BreDda NeutzUng .mel Terrie
Houser, spent FridiiJ..;nd Saturday nJibts at the
fair~unds protet
displays whlcl1 bad been
put m place for lhe weekend.

D of A plans distric~ rally ·
· .i'tans for the disbict"rally to be
lidcf at 1 p.m. Saturday at Chester

her hpnor, and extended apprecta- .
tion for the gift. A reception for
were diacusaed at the recent district Carolyn Wise was announced for
meeting of tlic Daughtel'll of Amer- Nov. 5.
il:a held at'Logan.
Betty Biggs. district deputy, ~
·Punlose of the meeting was to Mary Moose of Perry Council
.
consoUdate Logan Council with spoke briefly.
Perry &lt;;ouncil. The session was folAttending from h~re were Jaruce
towed by a friendship meeting. Zwilling, Betty B1ggs, ,Nathan
Me·rgaret Cotterill, councilor, Biggs, Esther Harden, Bob Harden,
presided with pledges to the flag, Margaret Cottrill, Betty Spencer,
~F and scripture beil ·~ included
E; een Clark, Guiding Star CoonIii ~opening.
cit; Everett G!llllt, Charlotte GIJIIlt.
· Margaret Kissler and Pauline Marcia Keller, Helen Wolf, Jean ·
Forbes were reported ill. and the FMderick, Elizabeth Hayes, Esther
cSeatb or Mary Wines was noted. S. lith, Scouie Smith, Thelma
Jo111n Baum thanked those who \\ lite, Mary Holter, Erma Cleland,
illended·a recent reception held in · JC' lDD Baum, Chester ColDICil.

.

Race Street
Walk-up Window
is OPEN

Our men in service

...., I

•

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•

_,...,..

%OFF
EVERYTHING
•Except Department 56, Thomas
Stahf Artwork and Sale Items.
SELECfED ITEMS
30%·75% ,OFF

Great Selections of:
• TretS • Ornaments • Lights
• Collectibles

Pl'l

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:::§)

REGISTER TO WIN
DOOR PRIZES ·
• Limited Edition Dol • $SO Gift Certiftclte
FraJmed '.'AD Aboard" Limited Edition Print by 'l'bGmas
. • 6'h foot SlimUne Tree

'

Office, Banking Center &amp; Motor Bank
97 North Second Street • Middleport

112....1

Sunday October 23rd

. . w..........

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FDIC

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1220
Buckeye 5:

Pap5 .

• llallooaa • Milk
Brill&amp; the kids

'
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STAHL
· -~::w,:;.U71

Nursery &amp;•vr---..

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VaL 41, NO. 1tl

2'14-14 . . . . . . . . .
A llultlmoolo Inc. rt. IF IF rr

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 19,1994

Cop~1-

Strickland t~kes offensive in second debate
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
.
IRONTON- U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland demanded spedfics
from his challenger in the Sixth
Congressional District race while
Frank Cremeans countered by
questioning Strickland's voting
record in a frequendy slwp d=bate
between the two Tuesday. .
Strickland, D-Lucasville, and
Cremeans, the Gallip&lt;ilis businessman running on the Repubhican

ticket, held their second face-to- high!,Y-publicized Republican."conface exchange of views before a tract with die Amencan people,
packed house at the Ohio UniversiStrickland argued that provity Southern Campus. The event sions of the contract, such as balwas sponsored by the Greater ancing the budget by 2000, are
Lawrence Coonty Area Chamber of impossible 10 mret without cutting
Commerce.
needed social programs such as
Taking more of the offensive Social Security and Medicare while
than he did in the first debate last giving lBlt breaks to the wealthy.
month in Marieua, Sbickland chal- ' "Thi.s conttact is unreasonable,"
lenged Cremeans to be more Strickland said. "I'm glad my
detailed about his proposals and opponent signed it, because it
criticized Cremeans' signing of a showed that he's more interested in

following the dicwes of Newt Gin·
Cremeans often returned to his
grich than those of the people of argument that reducing laltes and
southern Ohio."
· freeing up money that would be
Cremeans countered that the paid by business will pave the way
contract's provisions do not include to prosperity. He defended the
cuts to Social Security . Bill if GOP contract and said it would
allowed to continue under the Clin· include provisions for the needs of
ton administration, the program southern Ohio.
,
will be in jeopardy, he added.
.
Stricldand responded that while
''I'm here to ensure the Social , Cremeans iS proud of signing the
Security system, not add additional contract, he "won't accept the"COD·
laltes.to it as my opponent would," . sequences of iL"
he said.
"If you can show me where it's

The annual Meigs County Soil
and Water Conservation District
dinner honored area farmers whco
have made efforts 10 preserve om·.
natural heritage.
The 1994 Meigs County Out·standing Farm Family is the Lee
family, who operate a 3SO-acre
dairy farm in Suuon Township.
the Lee family has operated the
(8f1ll for six generations. Owned by
Robert B. and Martha ~ee, it is
operated by their son-in-law, Keith
Bentz. The family has a herd of 31
Holstein cows.
In 1991, the Lees entered a
long-tenn qq:ement with the con8en'81ion district, completing 18.8
acres of reaeedl.ngs and grassC&lt;I
~y. Tho tas use a conserva&amp;ioia Clopping 8ystem for wheat,
no-till com and hay.
·Other farm family candidates
were Joe Bolin, Betty Lou Dean,
Truman Grim and Marco Jeffers.
The Goodyear Farmer of the
Year represents a fanner w!to has
continued conservation efforts for
nuinerous years. This year the
award went to Don and Mary Battrell.
The Battrell family has cooperated with Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District since 1988
by practicing conservation methods
on their farm. Metho4s include
crop rotations, no-till and chisel
plowing, residue management to
prevent crosioil, grassed waterways

done, I'd like to see it," the fll'llt·
term congressman said. "It can't be
done."
Crem~s argued that Strickland
and President CliniOn have "eroded
the standard Of living in Ohio" and
promoted himself as the "job creator" in the district, while SbickIand enumerated how many jobs in
the area were saved due to the
,intervention of his office.
"I am the job creator in this dis(Continued on Page 3)

Unions
will vote
on accord

SWCD banquet
honors Meigs'.
top farn1 famil_
ies
and subsurface drairlage.
Plaques were presented to 1994
hay show winners at the Meigs
County Fair. They were Roy Holter
who won in the categories, 75 percent or more alfalfa and all grasses,
and Brian Windon, who won for 49
percentorlesslegumes.
Opal Dyer of the Meigs SWCD
Office thanked all those who
entered the hay show.
The annual fourth ~de poster
and essay contest wmners were
also announced at the dinner.
Poster contest winneJ'll included
Tara Pickens of Racine Elementary; Roger Chadwell of Riverview
ElementaJy; and Heather Hysell of
Pomeroy J!Iemeritlry. Essay wioners were Erin Struble· of Racine
Elementary; Cinda Clifford of
. Chester Elementary; and Stephanie
Pullins of Salisbury Elementary.
This year's soil judsin~ contest
with the vocational-agncultural
students was held at the Richard
.snd Patty Manzey farm in Scipio
Township.
The annual agricultural land
judging listed winners as:
• fust place, Cluis ~m;
• second place, Jess1ca Sayre;
and
• third place, Jason Lambert. _
The annual urban land JUdgmg
Iii:' Is winners as: .
• first place, Jess1ca Sayre;
• ~ond place, ~e,ffRose; and
• third place, Philip Hamm.

dinner. Pictured are Martha Lee and her son-inOUI'STANDING FARMERS- BiD Quickel,
at left, presents the Melp Cwnty Q!!Uta!!dilig . law, Keith Bentz. In the front r!l'll' ill Amy Lee.
The Lee ramUy operates a 350-acre dairy farm
Farm Family with a sign at the UDual Meigs
In Sutton T~p.
Count7 Soli and Water CouerV!ItiOD Ditt~lct

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - Most care important but sometiiing
Ohioans surveyed were divided on which cannot be guaranteed, 0.77
whether it was more important to percent said they agreed with both
change the nation's health care sys- asi:essments, 1.5 percent agreed
tem to control coslll or to gUarantee wi lh neither, 2.9 percent didn't
health care for all, a newspaper know and 0.2 perc.ent didn't
reported today. .
'
ans.wer. . .
•. ·--:r
. The Plain Defier said its survey
When asked if they would pay
showed 42.1 pen:tnt of those ques- higher taxes to assure all Amentioned thought the health care sys- cans of aceess to health care, 49.2
tem most needed to be.changed to peltent said yes, 46.2 percent said
control costs. Another 48.6 percent no, 4.6 percent didn't know and 0.2
said universal coverage was the lOp perc'ent didn't respond.
.
priority.
.
The Gordon S. Black Corp. con. A total of 5.1 percent said both ductC\1 a telephone survey of 962
issues were important, 1.6.percent regi~tered voters Oct 3-6.
said neither was important and 2.9
The survey, which used a compercent didn't know. ,
puter pro8!'11fllmed with Ohio teleOn the issue of whether access phone prefixes 10 generate a list of
w health care was a right or some- telephone numbeJ'll, had a margin
thing imponant which couldn't be of error of 3.1 peltentage points.
~teed, 62.8 percent saiil it was The percentages don't add up to
I 00 because of rounding. ·
'.
8
~-two percent called lrealth

-·

GOODYEAR FARMER_- ,Joe Bo.Jin, alteR,
awards Don Battrell the Goodyear Farmer of
the Year award. The BattreU fBIDUy bas cooper·
steel with Meigs Soil and Water Conservation

District since i988 by practicing conservation
methods on their farm. (Sentinel photos by
George .t.bat,) ... .

Feds report shrinking trade deficit
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's trade deficit shrank by 12.9
percent. in August despite the fact
that Japanese importS to America
surged to a record high, the government said today.
The Commerce Department said
that the U.S. trade deficit in 6oods
and services feU 10 $9.74 bill1on as
U.S. exports hit an .all-time high, ·
reflecting bit~ increases in exports
of commerctal aircraft, industrial

machinery, computer chips and
cigarettes.
The overall improvement was
likely to calm financial markets.
which were unsettled by the sharp
widening in the deficit in July,
when it had jumped to $11.19 bil:
lion,· reflecting the second wont
goods deficit in !Jistory:

Despite the overall improvement in August, the U.S. trade
deficit with Japan continued 10
worsen, climbing to $5.8 billion,
the third highest on record, as
imports from Japan hit an all-time
higli. Half of the import increase
reflected higher shipments of
Japanese cars.

GALLIPOLIS - NegotiaiOrS in
the contract dispute between the
Gallia County Local School District and its teachers and suppon
staff associations have reached a
tenlalive agreement that may avert
a strike that was to have started ·
today.
The agreenient is 10 be praent·
ed 10 tfie Gallia Local Education
Association for a vote a1 4:30 this
afternoon and to the Gallia Local
Sup port Staff Association at 6
t.onighL The Votes will be taken at
the associations' strike headquarters in the former Gillingham's
Drugs building at Second Avenue
and Pine SlllleL
An afrmnative vote by the asso. ciations will end the thrcateacd
work stoppage by the IISSOCiatiom,
which luive been laboring without
conuacts. The support stairs threeyear contract with the board
expired in 1unc aild the teachers'
two-year pact ended on Aug. 31.
Gary Phillips, chief negotiator
for the education association, said
the ~ent was reached at 8:15
p.m. TuCsday, ending more-than six
hours of lasHiiiCII bargaining with
all sides in the dispute.
"I think both sides gave it their
best effort to avoid a strike, •
Phillips said. "It's now up 10 the
mc:mbership."
· ''The talks went very smoothly,"
Board of Education President
David Woodall said. ''The teachers
and the support staff were understanding of our financial condition
and reached an agreement that both
sides are satisfied with."
Neither Phillips or Woodall
could discuss specifics of the
agreement unlil the vote is taken.
Classes in the Gallia Local dis·
bict were in session today.
Negotiations with the associa·
·lions began last spring and reached
impasse by mid-summer, spokesmen said. The board issued what
Phillips called its "final" offer on
contracts on Sepl. 29 and the ~
ciations rejected it on Oct. 4. also
voling to authorize a strike.
,
At a special board of education
meeling last week, the board authorized closing the schools for a
month and lakin!! other measures
should a strike occur,
.
Tuesday's session, held less
than 2A hours before the sbikc was
to begin, was called by the board.
Woodall said previously that the
district was making financial
- (Continued on Page 3)

Aristide expected to break silence
PORT-.\U·PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
The Haitian people, still cele-,
bnlling the return of their president,
may soon get a firefighter as army
chief, cheaper fuel in their tanks
and a reverse flood of boat people.
President Jean·Benrand Aristlde
schedUled a news conference for
IOday, siepping out of the.sheD that
has Surrout!lled him since he ,came
home from U.S. exile on Sa&amp;unlay.
· · Aristide is expected 10 replace
in!aim Prime Minister Robert Malval. The buiittcssmlllncver was his
Cllldidate for the jot&gt;, ·but was the
favorite oiU.S. diplomats who saw
him sa a moderste in the long-running conflict between the rightc
and the leftist priest/
they d
in 1991.
The 1interim amy chief, Maj.
Oen. Jean-Claude Duperval-

.wing=

named just last week io replace "attaches," civilian gunmen used.
coup leader Lt. Gen. Raoul Cechs, by the army to terrorize and-kill
now in exile in PanJrna - is also people.
cxpect::d to be replaced.
· A spokesman for the U.S. miliBernardin ·Poisson, promoted tary command, Navy Lt. Mark
Tuesday from colonet to brig.mer McCaffrey, said other Haitians arc
~eneral, is the front-runner for the simply apprehending suspected
Job, diplomatic soun:ea said. Pois- paramilitary members and turning
son, 46, is the French-ttained chief them over to the Americans for
of the fife dep8runent - the mill- quesborung.
tary is i1n charge of fircf~ghting in
Elsewhere on the streets of PortHaiti - - and is consiclezed an apo- . au-Prince, Haitians were looking
litical professional.
forWard to the cud of the gasoline
.Besides setting new policy and black market - and the return of
appointing new pcnonnel, howev- reasonable prices - later this
er, Aristide must fi11d ways to calm week.
t1ic anger of orllinary Haitians, who
The first commcn:ial petroleum
continue 10 sect reven~e for three shiplllent was due to arrive today in
years of military reprcsSIOII.
the capital, u a resuh of last week,
In two incidents Tuesday, end's lining of U.N. trade sanecrowds seized and severely beat lions imposed ,to pressure the fortwo me1n they accused of beint mer military regime to resign.

/j

•

. . 1.- IIIIIIIPt Ia $01, dolldy; ·
Tbunday, clOudy.IIIP

3·11-16-29·32

New poll finds Ohioans
divided on hectlth reform

14th ANNUAL

while our Motor Bank
, is tempo~ly closed for renovation.

June.
,JoiUaE.Heck
· 'Marille Pvt Joshua E. Heck, son
Jeffrey H. Sltlflet
or· Michael and Susy lleck of
Navy
Petty Officer First Class
PuiD&lt;ioy, recently compleled basic
·
Jeffrey
"H.
Shiflet, son of Jack and
tllliDiag at Parris Island, S.C.
Elizabeth
Shiflet of Rutland,
· ·Hect graduated In 1994 from
recendy
was
promoted to his cur;Jrle!p High School.
rent ~ Shiflet serves at the Tri'• '
dent Refit Facility in Kings' Bay,
. . ·.
NadlaDF.Baloy
Ga.
·
· NalbanF. Baloy, 1011 of Stephen
Shiflet
graduated
from Meigs
JtaJoy "d Palteroy, recently enlistHigh School in 1982 and joined tl!c
oil lit the ~ Force's delayed entry Navy
in 1986.
li!OJr.llli. B~~· a 1993 Mei~s
lflib Scbool
lllle, will cn1i$ m
tk~ Porco Deltt February;
Natlianlel A. Aklr
M.nne Lance Cpl. Nathaniel A.
,
Todd A. McDade
Ator, 1993 Aleunder High School .
. TOdd A. McDade, s'on of Mr. ~uate, recendy completed trainand Mrs. Wayne McDade of Mid- mg in an aviation mechanic course.
-~ ~tly cnlisfed in the Air He was stationed in Millington,
·,Jiorce'a delayed eotry program. Tenn.
;MC:Dad~, a 199 !l M~igs High
He joined the Marine Corps in
:Scllool graduat,e,. w~l enlist ~xt 1993.
I
...
-~ -------

Bandages for the ovcneas missionary work were made when the
B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society
met recently at the. First Baptist
ChwchofMiddlepcrt.
The bandages will be rolled at a
later date. It was decided 10 purchase the Overland White Cross
quota for Murrow Indiana Children's Home in Muskogee, Okla. ··
Helen Bodimer was devotional
leader and Marjorie Walburn
served light refreshments following
lhe meeting. Women of the
Pomeroy Baptist Chwch are invit·
ed to the November meeting.

Pick 3:
606
Pick4:

-

.

A memmial tribute for Kathryn
Miller was given by members of
th~ Wildwood Garden Club during
a ·ecent meeting at the home of
HJidi Elberfeld.
Mrs. Miller join~ the club in
I' •76 and was president for eight
yt.ars. A monetary conbibution was
m tde in her honor 10 the Middlepo rt ~byterilm Chl!lth.
Jaunita Will presided at the met•
ing which opened with devotions
by Dorothy smith who read "Our
D.tily Bread" and a poem, "Love
i.and Care". For roll call members
nmed their favorite fall flower.
Tile fall regional meeting was
announced for Saturday at the
McArthur Community Building.
For .the program, Mn. Elberfeld
had "It's Time to Enjoy Garden
~.ams". She said that millions of
gHden mums are planted each
srring, summer and fall, and that

Cavs
defeat
Celtics

emeraldS and diamonds; and Pam
. Diddle, district vice preai4ent. ..
Family memben. pi"CIOnted by
Mrs. Bishop were Mr. and MrS.
Glenn Kennedy and children, Mr.
an Mrs. Kentoo Davis and son, and"
Mr. and Mn. TimOihy BishOp.·
A program was presented by
members of Harrisonville Chaoler.
for the approximately 70 memflas.
and guests attending.

Wildwood Garden Club
pays memorial tribute

Ohio ·Lottery

·-

...•.

,.

-

-

"

i'-~

--

CAPSIZED 11tUCK -Troopers ol the Gallla·Melp Pllll 'ol tbe Se.te Htpway Patrol an
currently lavestlaatlng this one-truck accident
oa State Route 331 Tuesilay morn~. Michael
Johnson was transported to Jackso'l General
Hospital by the Racine squad or •he Meigs

~

County Emergency Medical Service. Also
respondlna was the Racine Volunteer Fire ,
DepartmenL The I!CdciHt was approxlnrately 1- .
1/l miles west ol tile Ransswood Bridp. (PIIoto
courtesy of RadDe Voluteer Fift l)epartlrlftt)

'- ·..- --.

I . .

.

~· ·

{ I

,,

'

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