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Sunday, May 7,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleaNnt, WV

Business/farm ..• eonunu.c~tromD-1

-

FFA honorees ...

Parsons joins Angus group

• MARIETfA - Robert E. Evans, president and chief executive
omc:cr of Peoples Bancorp Inc:., reported nc:t inc:ome for tbe fust
quarter of 1995 of $1,486,000, a 13.8% increase compared to
$1,306,000 for lbe fmt quarcer of 1994.
First quarter earnings per sbarc reacbed $0.51. compared to
$0.45 in 1994, a 13.3% increase. Previous periods per share infor·
mation bave been adjuSied for a two for one stock split issued to
shareholders of record on April IS, 1994.
Tbi: increase in net income provided for a greater return on average assets, wbicb grew to 1.18%, compared to 1994's f1rst quarter
ratio of 1.12%. Return on average equity rcacbed 12.78% for tbe
fmt three montbs of 1995, up from 1994's first quarter ratio or
12.10%.
The Company continued its record of dividend growtb, paying
out $463,000 to stOCkholders, an increase of 14.0% compared to
fmt quarter 1994. Peoples Bancorp decfared a per sbare dividend of
$0.16 during tbe fll'St quarter of 1995, an increase from tbe most
recent quarterly dividend payout of $0.15 per share

Sports, Page 4
. FORD .
BRYANT
Leslie Hudson, left, was selected tbe owa.ldina firlt year member (Star Greenhand) of tbe FDture Farmen of America duriDI 1
River Valley Hlgb Scbool's 8lUiual fFA awards banquet. More tbaD
130 people attended. Todd Brylllll. center, was named Sill{ Cbaplu
Farmer and Jeremy Ford. rigbt. was named Star Agri-BuslnesSIIWI.

cally credited to your account on the
pey dale established by the issuer. If
changes such as early redemption,
bond caDs. tender offers, mergers or
liquidations occur, your fmn can
nlllifyyouprompdy.And,yourbook·
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one consolidated brokerage account
that summarizes and totals everything
for you. All the while, you maintain
full control and decision-making authority over your investments with·
0111 !!lc risk Qf losing or misplacinJlll

T+3 becomes effective very soon
on June 1. Your investment adviser
can answer any questions you may
have abou.t T+3 and assist you in
taking advantage or tbe attractive
brokerage cash management accounts available today that can make
adjusting to T+3 easier. \..
Bryce L. Smitb Is aa IDvest·
ment broker with Advest ID Gal,
llpolls.
'•'

Burley tobacco farmers
are issued reminder
By LISA MEADOWS ·
GALLIPOLIS - Regulations
tbat began in tbe 1994 program year
require fares witb burley tobacco
quotas to be active 2 out of 3 years
to avoid a permanent loss of quota. .
For the 1996 program year,
fames must be active 2 of tbe 3
years: 1993, 1994, and/or 1995. ·
What makes a fame active? -An
·approved failed acreage or prevented planting acreage filed wilb ·the
county commillee (eg. Prevented
Planted due to weatber condi- ·
lions.). -A transfer of quota by
lease to another fame within lbe
county. -Any tobacco raised and
marketed from tbc farm. (This
includes marketed carryover tobac·
co.)
· ·
The CFSA office mailed lencrs
to all producers in danger of losing
quotas in 1996 and bas posted tbe
names of producers· in danger of
losing quotas on a bulletin board

accessible to . the public . CFSA
stresses to all burley producers that
the 2 of 3 year ·rule will still be in
effect for 1997. Burley tobacco is a
major cash crop in Gallia County
tbat supplies the primary ~~sb
income for seveml fame famthes.
Any producers not wishing to raise
their own tobacco should contact
tbe CFSA office at 446-8686 and
discusS their options.
Lisa Meadows is tbe County
El&lt;ecutive Director of Gallia Con·
solldated Farm Service Agency.

t .

'

'

'1·.

Vol. 46, NO. 6
Copyright 1995

' ".&gt; ., ./

'

NEW EQUIPMENT ARRIVES • Equipment for Ohio's new
digitized' driver license and ID cards bas arrived aDd Is being used
by Gallla County Deputy Registrar's Office employees at Tblrd
Avenue and State Street, Galllpolb. Ruby WUt, deputy register,
prepares a Uc:ense for a customer. WUt said tbe slate bepa lssulaa
DeW state driver Ucenses and ID cards ID February, nec:essltatlaa
the equipment conversion. New security features Include a prima·
ry portrait bnage and secondary "ghost" portrait l11111ge, bar code,
magnetic stripe lllld liOiograpblc overlay.

GET EVEN
. OPEN AUTO REPAIR SERVICE- Randy Jewell, at len, .
and Ralph Fowler wiD run the Car Care Doctors Inc. The new
busiDess opened Its center fust week at Its 808 W. Main St. garage
ID Pomeroy.

Garage opens in Pomeroy
POMEROY - Car Care Doctors evening bours.
Inc., managed by Randy Jewell,
Tbe Pomeroy-MiddleportMason area can be sbuttled back to
opened for business last week.
Owned by Mark's Auto Sales · work if lhey drop tbeir car off dur·
Inc., tbe 808 W. Main SL automo- ing lbe day, be added.
tive repilir center is located oneThe 2,500-square-foot structure
fourtb of a mile from tbe Pomeroy- also houses a 1995 Hunter rout·
Mason bridge on tbe nortb side of wbeei computer alignment system,
an asymmetrical hoist, a Snap-On
lbe road.
Tbe business wiU provide align- scanner tbat has computerized
ments, brake service, balancing, engines and sensors, brake service,
changing tires, andzotber routine FMC computer balancer for wheels
garage wotk, such as cbanging oil, and tires and a tire changer.
tires. brakes, shocks and struts.
The company will offer free
Car Care Doctors wiD also spe- estimates, Jewell added.
cialize in computerized engine
Jewell bas bad six years in lbe
diagnosis and engine repair. The business, while mechanic Ralpb
company invested 11,1ore tban . Fowler bas 13 years of wotk.
$80,000 to open, Jewell said.
The company will operate
To accommodate people wbo between 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday
work during the days, Jewell said through Friday and 8 a.m.-noon
.
•\
he will eventually add Tuesday Saturday.

Even up your lawn

with the Stihl FS 36
Trimmer. It trims
spots your mower can't.

s13 5

• 30.2 cc; IO.llbs. wilhout
cuffing head and defleoor
• Flaw-through primer
• Iorge easy-access air mter95
• Buill-in hanger/stand
• Adjustable loop handle

RIDENOUR SUPPLY.
STATE ROUTE 248

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985-3308

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Business news briefs ·

Your

REDMOND. Wash. (AP)- provi~ an opening forNinrendo's
Nintendo of America Inc.'s next- compcutors as mucb of tbe video
generation Nintendo Ultrn 64 video gaTe indus .cy moves to more
game system will be delayed from advanced systems later Ibis year.
this fall until April, missing tbe
. The company said it wanted to
lucrative Cbrisunas season.
gtve software developers more·time
The delay, announced Friday, to ~orne up with games for Its
devtce.

will start
for the keys to
the
lawn
mower.
·
00 PER
MONTH

MONTHS AT
NOT A LEASE- You Own The Car!
Must Be Qualified Applicant

PETRIE
SHRIVER
HONORED - Brad Petrie,
of the River Valley FF A,
recently won state bonors after
a.second place finish in the Dis·
triet 10 FFA Creed Public
Speaklng ·conlest. at Wellston
High School. Petrie advanced
to the state level at Ohio State
University, capturing f'trst place
gold honors. A freshman at
RVUS, be is the son or Mr. aDd .
Mrs. Bill Petrie, VIDton. Rober· ·
ta Shriver received a certificate
. of appreciation for her contri·
hutions to the River Valley
FFA. The certificate -was
awarded by FFA officers .and
ad visors a't tbe recentFFA banquel.

__

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7.9%

APR avai/(}bU"

'95 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2 DR.

.

Strickland will seek
·6th District seat in '96

'

c

Smith's Smart Buy Program Only Tax, Title, and· $2000 Cash or Trade Down.
18,715 MSRP X 58%: 1Q,852J ~alloon Balance At Note Ter,m. Easily handled.
See us for details.
.
..
·
·

Buick P·ontiac ·
SINCE 1954

1911 EASTERN AVE. GALUPOL,IS, OH.
446 •2262

We 've blurred the lines between work and play. The smooth r1de

and respons1w IJandlinR make .the Jo!-u\ Deere LX Lawn Tractor
as run to use as the farmly sedan. All ar a J!ot-too-luxurious pnct:.

Nonn~&lt; i H~.;l"S

'"

LtKI! ,' \ DE.IlRt::.•

ADDRESSES DEMOCRATS- Stale Senator Jan Michael Long, a Meigs County native,
addressed local Democrats at Saturday's Annu·
·: al Jefferson/Jackson Dinner ID Pomeroy. He Is

v~E

Day

activities
recalled
,

Meigs Countians stopped wotlcimpromptu celebrations and
cljurcb observances 50 years ago
today, wben the war in Europe
ended. .
In Middleport, the fire siren,
Hobson whistles and several
cburcb bells rang out after 9 a.m .
Every business, bouse, bar and groc~ry store was closed an&lt;! nags .
.
were unfurled to lhe j&gt;reeze.
A number of the cburcbes beld
prayer services in ·tbe afternoon and
evening. 1be church was filled for
a union service at tbe Heath
Metbodist Cbur~b.
. Children dismissed from school
formed an impromptu parade
behind tbe school band and
marched through tbe streets of tb.e
ing~ for

town.

Seniors at Pomeroy High School
observed V-E Day at the auditoriumMay9.
·
Tbe~ se.ventb war loan drive
stiutcd May 14. An advertisement
stated: "'!bough·the Gennan War is
won, the Japanese are still to be
defeated. To tran sport men and
supplies such a distance will
require continued adequate financ·
ing."
Wbile celebrations continued,
tbe dead were also mourned.
The Sentinel reported three
more Meigs County boys died in
action.
They included: Harold S. Sarson, from Letart Falls, who died
April ll, 1945. on Luzon Island in
tbe Philippines; Chester 0 . Stobart,
from Racine, who died in. action
April 12 in Germany; and George
M. Gillilan, from Chester, died in
action in April 18 in Gcnnany.

shown here Danked by former U.S. Represenla·
live Ted Strickland and Meigs County Democratic Party Chairwoman Sue Maison.

By The Assodated Press
The Ohio Department of Transportation bas received proposals
totaling more than $5 billion. At tbe rate of current funding, tbey
would take 50 years to fmance .
·'
So transportation officials and cities and Ohio's 18 metropolitan
planning organizations are looking at alternatives, The Columbus
·
·
Dispatch reported:
· = More private investment. The Limited Chairman Leslie H.
Wexner bas promised to contribute $18.3 miUioo in casb and land
for tbe Marse-Stelzer interchange, one of Franklin County's tbree
. largest projects.
- Columbus officials bave asked tbe Obio Turnpike Commission to help pay for what tbe state can't in tbe Morse-Stelzer project
and tbe widening of tbe nonb outerbell
- ' the COffi~!!ission is considering using 1-270 as part of its.proposed 1-13 proJect tbat. would connect Toledo to Chesapeake in
soutbem Ohio. That proje~t. wbic~ would be part of a six-stare corridor, is expected to cost $1 billion to $3 billion.
·
,

•

·GoP leaders add political

tension to summit talks .
WASHINGTON (AP)- Complicating White House summit
preparations, Republican leaders
are threatening "catastrophic consequences" for U.S. ·aid to Russia
if President Boris Yeltsin sells ·
nuclear goods to Iran.
The warning, issued on lhc eve
of President's Clinton's trip to
Moscow, added political tension to
a summit already marked by disputes over the nuclear deal, Cbechnya and NATO- differences
President Clinton is trying hard to
overcome.
"When we have similar goals,
we 'II cooperate. When we disagree
... we must manage lbose differences openly, constructively and .
resolutely," Clinton said Sunday in
an address that set the scene for bis
four-day trip.
In an otherwise conciliatory
address, Clinton denounced "the
tragic war'· in Cbecbnya and
Moscow's plans to sell nuclear

FARM. AND LAWN .
668 Plnetrest Drive
Pli. 614·446·24.12
Between GaiDpolis &amp; Rio Gra.nde on Old Rt. 35
..._.,.__..,.., ,,._,.,._,...~ ,,...,.,.... ..,-~u""~""""'·-·ore•·.."-'"'m•-- ~&lt;MI&amp;Oa.rmon~~&gt;••*"'""'hn.nca•"-t-'""'bo!~~~-'1.. .,......,.
Fw - - • . , . . 0011r orr..
tW!o . .,.,., " - - . , ~"'~"11 til!-• _,.,

-"'~""""""

Another community service of the Holzer Medical Center,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563

.
.

11101 ,.... lO.

.

POLAND OBSERVES V·E DAY· President Lech; Walesa,
len, shakd bands with NikolaJ Klrlenko, a Russian veteran who
, fought In P.o land in ~945 as a Sor!•t officer during ~ meeting
between veteran. and l'olisb leaders In Warsaw Monday. Walesa
Is leading V-E Day commemorations ID Poland after deciding not
to participate In observances outside Poland. (AP)

DNA evidence upcoming in Simpson trial
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mter
five days of labored, complex te&amp;ti·
mony about blood testing and ban. dling, tbe OJ. Simpson trial is
moving to anotber highly tecbnical
phase as prosecuto rs prepare to
release a wealth of DNA tests.
Robin Cotton is tbe ftrst of the
DNA wimesses wbo will attempt to
show lbat genetic information in
blood and hair collected by police·
links Simpson to tbe murder of his
ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson
and her friend Ronald Goldman .
Cotton is the laboratory director
of Cellmark, the nation's largest
independent DNA forensic laboratory.
The testimony is expected to be
highly technical and repetitious. .
The jury was first expected to
hear from two uon· technical wit-

nesses : a photographer who took
pictqres inside Simpson's home the
morning after the June t2·m!!fders
and a tow truck driver who hauled
Simpson's Bronco to a storage yard
are the next two witnesses on the
prosecution list.
Ccllmark, of Germantown, Md.,
tested blood, fiber and hair samples
from th e crime scene and from
Simpson's esJatc. Couon will have
to give jurors an extended lesson in
DNA analysis hefore testifying on
specifics such as ibe genetic composition of blood found under Ms.
Simpson's lingcmails.
Since the prosecu tion' s case
rest s squarely on I he ON A evi.d cnce , !he cross-cxaminalion of
Cotton and oillcr DNA experts is

expected to be bru ~'11.
Ms. Simpso n and Go ldman

were slashed to deatb outside ber
condominium, their bodies left in a·- river of blood lbat provided ample
material for DNA testing . The
killer, prosecutors have said, also
left behind a blood trail alongside
bloody shoe prints. Olber DNA
tests were conducted on bloody
soc ks found at Simpson's bouse
and on blood stains in his car.
Defense lawyers say tbe Los
Angeles Police Department's
detectives and scienti fie experts so
badly bungled collection of·tbe evi- ..
dence that any results are untrust .
wortby.
They also have suggested a conspiracy theory in which police
f~ed Simpson for the murders by
dnbbhng traces of bis blood, and
perbaps his ex-wife's, at tbe murder scene and his estate.

By DAVID CRARY
and British Prime Minister John
Associated Press Writer ·
Major, carne to Paris after attend·
PARIS -In his last starring ing a ceremony of ·reconciliation
rol~ on the wurld stage, Presidenl Sunday in London.
Mitterrand le.d the govemment
Francois Mitterrand played bo~t to
the leaders of ne~ly 80 nauons leaders across a broad plaza to tbe
today at cere=otes_ marktng tbe · Arc de Triomphe, and they stood
·. end of a-war tbat tore F(ance in · sHe ntl.y bC!iTii&lt;l bim as lie ' paTd
two.
homage at the tomb of France •s
Mitterrand, who se..rvcd in ,lbe unknown soldier.
collabol!llio!list Vichy govcmm~nt
· On tbe podium, Mitterrand and
before JOIDtng the French Rests- Cbirac stood side-by-side during a
tance.in-Wo•ld-War ll, was aeeom- rousing rendition of "La Marseilp~ied by President-elect l.acques
laise" by a military chorus, then
Chtrac at lhe, commemornuons of watched a parade by 2 500 soldiers
tbe 50th anni~ersary of tbe N~is' from youthful navy cade1s t~
surrender. C::blfllc,, a c~nservau ve, bearded Foreign Legionnaires. .
won Sunday s prestdenual run-off.
About 10,000 guests, including
They were joined by leaders of many World War II veterans also
the war's victorious. and defeated watched the parade, which' connalli011S at lbe Arc de Tr10mpbe, eluded witb a flyoycr by jcls send-

in World War II. ·
"Tbe courage and heroism., military fe llow ship and high ski ll
demonstrated by tbe Red Army sol- .
diers in battl es, defending their
homeland. will stay a model for all
Rl!,ssilm ~ors forever," Yelt.o;ih
said in a message~ sentlo Russian
troops and released to the ITARTass news agency. · • .
In Jerusalem, hundreds of Sovi_ct Red_A!ffiy veteran§, their cbes~
coxcred by medals, marched along
palm tree· lined streets today to
mark tbe Nazi surrender. Many vcteralis bad come to Israel during the
past six years.
.
. Sunday's ceremony in London
began with tbe soaring bugle blasts
. of Aaron Copland's "Fanfare for
tbe Common Man," wrillj:n by the
I~wi&amp;b Amcri&lt;;an.COJjlposer in~~ as a rebuff to Nazi racist ideology..
Prince Charles, appearing with
his estranged wife Princess Diana,
watcbed children lead politicians to
flagp oles in Hyde Park to sign
olive leaves as symbols of peace.
Earlier, the leaders join ed in
thanksgivmg and prayers for rcconcilialion ~~ St. ·p~ul 's Cathedral,
which stiU bears scars of tbe com.
baL The royal famil y, led by Queen
Elizabetb II , attended the service.

..
•

'.

an a.rm bouquet .o r roses. Named king was
Robert Baker, son of Susan Baker and the late
David Baker. The ceremony took place in the ·
sha~uw of a huge carousel which centered the
audtlorium. Theme was "Uncbanged Melody_
c.arousel or Drealll'l'". (Photo by Charlene Hoe.
n.ch) .

Spain, Prime Ministers Jean Coretien of Canada and Viktor Cher·
nomyrdin of Russia, and Presidents
Oscar k uigi Scalfaro of llaly ~nd
Franjo Tudjman ofCroatia.
.
President Le Due Anb of Vietnam also attended. tbc first leader
of th atCommunis; ·natloii to visli
France, his comnry's former colo·
niat ruler. .
·
Many heads of state were from
fonncr French colonies in Afric!!,_
wliicli proVided triiops for the Free
French forces commanded by war
.
hero Gen. Charles de GauUe .
Miucrrand, 78 and ailing with
prostate cancer. began World War
11 as a soldier who was taken prisoner, and ended it as an important
member of 1he Resistance. In
between, he support.ed and worked
f~- pr.o-Nat~ .:ollahot.-.tiQ&lt;Iig,t
oLred,
w~.md. blu regime"of Philippe Pctain.
. ~-,~~e~~;f~g~f~c~i;i~~~1~t~~~
over the
Cbamps-Elysccs.
The world leaders tben rode 10
Disclosw·es by a biographer last
A huge area of central Paris was tbe Elysee Palace fqr a state lun- year showed tbe outgoing president
cordoned off today by police, and cheon featuring lobster, pullet witb bad performed so wcU as a Vichy
more tllan 5,000 security force foie gras, a pear-and-al mond bureaucrat tbat be received a dcco"
members were deployed. Miner- des sen, and tbree of tbe presidcn- ration from Petain.
rand arrived in .~ limousine esoon- tial . wine cellar's finest vintages.
In Moscow , Preside nt Boris
ed by scores of helmeted cavalry- Most of.the dignitaries were to con- Yeltsin laid flowers at tbe Tomb of
me\1.
tinue on to Berlin for further cere· t~ e Unl\no)"n Soldier t_oday ~nd
Most of lbe digniwies, includ· · mooles tonight.
· ·
•
soldters marched crisply past as
ing Vice Presiilent AI Gore, GerThe guests included Britain's Russia began two days of huge eelman Cbancellor Helmut Kobl and Prince Pllilip, King Juan Carlos of· cbratt9ns commemorating vi ctory.

'

• Physi~::ian Referral

• •Support Groups

technology and material to Iran, a
nation he called the "principal
sponsor of globalrerrorism."
But the president said neither
issue should divid e Washington
and Moscow.
''The interests of our people are
clearly best supported by supporting the transition in Russia toward
a more free and open society,"
Clinton said. •
Adding urgency to tbe .rift over·
Iran, GOP congressional leaders
said Clinton cannot come back
empry-banded after personally urging Yeltsin in Moscow to drop the
nuclear sale.
"If be can't get it done, then
we've got a real problem," Senate
M~ority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
told CBS" "face the Nation.'' "I
tbink it's going to cool relations
witb Yeltsin."
·
Dole and House Speaker Newt
Gingrich , R-Ga., suggested that
U.S. aid to Russi~ could be cut.

MEIGS PROM ROYALTY - Seniors
Sa.rab Anderson and Robert Baker were
crowned 1995 Meigs High School prl&gt;m royalty
in ceremonies Saturday night. Principal Fenton
Taylor crowned the daughter or Don and Bernie ·
Anderson as queen after she was presented with

Near/ 80 nations observe 50th anniversary of V-E Day

From 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a week,
a specially trained R.N. is on duty to answer
your health care questions.
·-- --- - ·~~.~ Illne'Si&lt;&gt;r Injury ~.-~-

1-800-462-5255

silence for victims of lbe recent ter·
ronst bombing in Oklahoma Cit)- .
In addition, he recognized local
veterans and urged people to
remember lhe end of World War II
in Europe which happened 50 years
ago today.
Long also ripped those wbo
attack tbe government.
"I believe government is lbere to
~elp protect people,'' be said. "I'm
grateful (or being raised in a county
where are taugbt those values."
Long appealed for party unity in
combating tbo~;e "wbo want to create an atmosphere of fear."
Quoting Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Long said "We have nothing to fear
but fear iiSelf."
Continued on page 3

Alternatives sought to help .
finance Ohio's road projects

CARMICHAEL'S

• Health Care Events

By JIM FREEMAN
"I look forward to putting our
Sentinel news starr
recnrils before !be public," be
Former Democratic Congress- added.
man Ted Strickland of Lucasville
Strickland said recent events,
Saturday announced bis plans to including major Republican victo- '
run for the U.S. House of Repre- ries at tbe ballot box last Novemsentatives again in 1996.
ber, arc strengthening tbe DemoStriclcland announced his inten- . cratic Party.
tions at the Meigs County Demo"Democrats are coming togelher
cratic
Party's
Annual in a way we haven't for a: while,"
Jefferson/Jackson Dinner at tbe said Strickland. "This forces us to
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen- decide what is truly important. .. to
ter.
come togctber as a party."
Defeated by Republican Frank
State Senator Jan Michael Long
Cremeans of Gallipolis in last of Circleville was guest speaker at
November" s election, Strickland tbe event attended by approximatethanked Meigs Countians for their ly 75 people.
support in 1992 and again in 1994.
Long, a Meigs County native.
"I have never lost an election in opened his address by aski ng
Meigs County," Strickland said.
Democrats to observe a moment of

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_!::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;;~~::::::::::dL~::::::::::::~::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::~

HOLZER
HEALTH
-- HoTLiNE ··

1 Section, 10 Pages as cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 8, 1995

I

•

r · L.

Low toolaltt ID 50s, rain.
Tuesday, r'llil. Highs Ia 70..

'

· IRONTON • A tocal or $5 million in stock bad been purchased as
of May 4, 1995, by more tban 350 area/residents, ensuring tbat Ohio
River Bank (in orgaliization) will soon be a reality.
"We arrpeciate !be strong community support we bave received,
· " said Daniel H. "Skip Wiley, tbe' bank's designated president and
CEO. 'This is lbe en we amount we were seeking to raise for initial
capitalization, wbicb is well in excess of tbe minimums f!:Quired by
tbe state and fedeml banking authorities. We are tbus concluding
tbe phase out our start-up program," he said. "1be next step is to
open for business later Ibis montb at our temporary omce at 111
Soutb Third Street, near tbe site wbere our permanent building is
under construction."
.
Ohio River Bank (in organization) will be a locally-owned community bank and is the fmt new bank cbartered in Lawre11ce Coon. ty in more than 100 years. It received pre)iminary approvals in January, 1995, from.bank regulatory agencies and held a groundbreaking.ceremony for its 7,400 square foot, 2-story permanent headquarters building at 221 Railroad Street in Ironton on March 10, 1995.

Three..•- - ---c:enifJc:ate or having it stolen.

•

J

Lawrence to get new bank

Continued from D-1

Pick 3:
137
Pick 4:
1398
Super Lotto:
5·14-25-40-45-46:
Kicker:
325198

·triumphs ·

RACINE - Ray Parsons, Racine, recently joined tbe American
Aagus Association headquartered in SL Iosepb. Mo. lbe wociation consists of more than 27,000 active adull and junior memben
and iocludes compulerized recocds on over 12 million registered
Anaus cattle.

·Peoples' first quarter earnings up

Ohio Lottery

Indians,
Reds post

•

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�'

.........

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Conlmentar
·Will Russians join

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

pomero,., Ohio

ROBERT L: WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma~ger

LETTERS OF OPINION ate welcome. They should l&gt;ti less than 300
words long. All leuers are subject to editing and must be signed w11h name,
addresS and telephone number. No unsigne\lletters Will be pubhshed. Letrers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personaht1es.

Going back on ·
the· lobbying ~rail
By JOHN NOLAN
Aaoclated Press Writer
CINCINNATI- It is an annual pilgrimage. But this year, the pilgrims
feel more urgency.
Cooummity activ~ from across lbe nation who live near contaminated U.S. Deparunent of Energy waste sites or nudear weapons plants have
traveled to Washington eacb year to lobby Congress and Energy Department bure:,mcrats to press on with cleanups. •
.
But with Republicans in Congress pusbing for·spending cuts and even
proposing to abQiisb lbe Energy Department, the activists say they arp
afraid their years spent in getting cleanup started will be wasted.
The Republicans say the functions of lbe Energy Department and three
others could be bandied by other agencies to save taxpayers' money.
"It has been something of a downer to sit back and see this happening
10 us,'' said Lisa Crawfofll, president of Fernald Residents for Environmental Safety and Health.
.
"I think we're all just a little nervous," she said. "!just bope they let
us come in and present our case wilb an open mind.''
Crawford and three other FRESH members plan to be in Washington
from Sliturday through Wednesday to meet with Energy Secretary Hazel
O'Leary and members of Congress. Lobbying wilb them will be other
members of the Military' Production Network, a coalition of groups representing neighbors of nuclear weapons production and waste sites.
The Energy Department said in February that it wanJ,S lo spend more
next year to clean up contamination at the Mound and Piketon sites in
Ohio and a little less at Fernald near Cincinnati. The Fernald plant processed uranium metal ingots for nuclear weapons production elsewhere
from 1951 until 1989.
.
Pending congressional approval, the·department plans 10 spen_d ~256.3
million on Fernald next year, a 2 perpent decrease: .$110 mtllion on .
Mound, a 156 percent increase; and $86 million at lbe Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Piketon, a 43 percent increase.
.
C!l'1wford and her group hope to meet with Sens. John Glenn and Mike
DeWine, Reps. Rob Portman, Steve Chabot and John Boehner, among
others.
Portman, a Cincirinati Republican whose dislrict inCludes Fernald, supports the cleanup of Fernald at curren.t funding levels, spokeswoman Julie .
Williams said Wednesday.
Portman, Rep. Tony Hall, D-Obio, and others signed a letter circulated
last month that urged House leaders to support the Energy Department's
$6.6 billion request for the fiscal year that begins Oct. I. The money is for
• : the environmental management programs designed to clean up nuclear ·
• weapons sites and lbe radioactive waste they generated.
. It represents a cut of $235 millimi, or 4.4 percent, from last year's bud· get for tbe same scope of work, House supporters said. T~e money would
·suppon cleanups at 137 sites in 34 slates.
The continued cleanup is needed to avoid additiorial environmental
· hazards and to meet agreements negotiated wilb the slales l!Dd the EPA,
backers who signed lbe letter said.

lioday. in history.

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WASHINGTON - Presideat
CUnton'a bold decision last week
to ban American trade with Iran
WU a &amp;ood fint ltq) in rontaining
Iran's nuclear ambitions. But
another Important goal- eonvioclog Russia. to do t.he sam~ -.
remains elUSive,, des~te ~ear. indications that Iran s objeeUves m the
n:gioo are anything but ~ful. .
After months of daplllmattc
wr~~~~;gling, ~erican attempts to
convmce Russmto drop the sale of
two nuclear reactors to Iran appear
to have fallen pn deaf ears. So have
lbe administration's eff~rts to halt
Russia's plans to tram Iranian
nuclear technic!~ from Tehran.
As part of !hell' efforts, ~tr!can diplomats have shared mtelltgence with Russia about Iran's
secret hostility to jts northern
neighbor. Some U.S. intelligence
offiCinls believe Ibis hostility could
one day put Russia on the ~iving
end of a nuclear or terronst act.
Ironically, much of Iran's rapid
military buildup since its _war with
Iraq has come fr?m Russta at bargain basement pnces.

By J·ac
· k An.Jer.son
a
Ul
d
• lin
Michael Binstein
·
September 1991. The meeting
focused on the recently failed coup
.in Russia and the emergence of
Boris Yeltsin.
The meetiog was chaired by Ira-

~;::: ~~~asbespeccml~~~~

wake of the Soviet Union's
breakup, Rafsanjanl stressed, Iran
must exploit the divisiveness of the
Russian empire and gain 8 foothold

~=pui~~ =..~~

the minutes, he s'a id, "Today,
Communism Is dead. America
wants 10 use Its deceit to bring the
Soviet Union under its rule. We
will not let this
Islamic
government is the
alternative
•

WHE/ilE'D WE

'AIIE ~t-?

LE"V vr",.

. ·
.
-~~cs. and this Is our
tbility.
. 0 furlber bis goal, ~~jani
qutctly allocated $.1~ IJUIIIon f~
propaganda and n:11g10us eff~ m
the Central As1an Repubh~s.
Dozens of mullabs_ have been dispa1Cbed to ~ m ~ neigh~mg AzerbaiJan republ~c o!' Inm 's
northern ~ - which .IS Iran s
key large~ fo,r influence peddll~g.
~enca s pleas for ~uss1a . to
stop t~ cJ:~ngerous dealmgs wtth
Raf'!IDJ~I may bave rung !l&lt;?llo~
constdering our own C«;JJDPI~tly m
be!ping Iran ftn~ce us military
b~1ldup by allowt~g U.S. compamea to conduct busineSs there. Cutling off trade w1th Iran may fmally
restore some moral stature to our
arguments.
Although the State Deparanent
lists Iran as a sponsor of tenorism,
American oil companies have been
~ slngie largest buyers of Iranian
oil for several years. Last y-. they
bought more than 20 percent of
Iran's crude. ~II exports, .v~lued
be~ $3 billion and $4 billion,.
Clinton chose to announce th1s
f&lt;

or

these

~\lEI;)

(\.,.....

.Oi;(.tQIIWlll'lt·
'(ff;.

gutsy new policy It a dinner held
by lbe World Iewish Congress to
hooor Edp M. Jronfman, I\ leadin&amp; critic of Iran whO is not afralil
to use bis fortune 10 back up his
rhetoric. Last month, his famil)'
helped ssure Conoco to abandon
an oil F.'Jd development wilit 1rap
last month. The Bronfmans are
major shareholders and hoard
members of Du Pont, which is th~
parent company of Conoco.
Bronfman, like Iran-watchers
throughout the administratioll',
understands litat the only hope of
containing Iran is through its pocketbook. It's a goal worth pursuing:
Through our intelligence sources;
we have documented Iran' 5 sponsorship and/or assistance in the
deaths of more than 500 AmericanS
since 1981 including the followlog·
.'
_· A Navy diver was beaten to
death by Iranian-sj!onsored terror·
lsts in the hijacking of 1WA Flight .
847 (1983)
_ In t,.;o separate bombings of
the U.S. Embassy · in Beirut,
Lebanon, Iranian-sponsored terrorists murdered 1~ Ameri(:ans ( 1983
and 19!14).
·~
CIA official William Buckley was tortured to death while
being held hostage for years by
Iran-related thugs (1985-1990). ·
- ·Strong Iranian links have
been found to the bombing of Pan
Am 103, which exploded over
Lockerble, Scotland, In 1989',
killing 270 people, most of lbem
Americans.
·
Iran has neither apologized ncir
renounced these attacks on innQcent people. Instead, its president, ·
Hashemi Rafsanjani, persists wilb a
despicable pattern ·of double-speak
and distonwn: He calls himself a
moderate, yet be continues to
defend and justify his country's use
of terrorism in the face of internatiooal repulsion.
Jack Anderson and Mlcbaei
Blostein are writers for United
Fea.tJre Syndicate, Inc.

-

__;,_-.- Area deathsRay Murphy

It's tempting to forget why govemment at all levels is in budgetary
trouble. The problem is.not lack of
money. It is lack of discipline. The
richest man in the world would go
bust if he consistently spent more
than he had . .
That's obvious enough. The
problem for us Americans is that
we think hard choices are for the
other guy. That's tme for Republicans and Democrats in Washington, the place everyone likes to
kick around. It's no less true in
state capitals and citj balls.
A recent edition of lbe Cincinnati.Enquirer vividly illustrates the
point. The Enquirer's front page is
dominated by an account of a
school board bearing on proposals
to close lbe schools' $31.4 million
budget gap. Much of lbe public tes-

you read in lbe papers about business owners who say we will dig
deep to keep the Bengals, we
understand where our priorities

Hodding Carter Ill

are.''
· But there are other priorities in
Cincinnati as well. Yet another
Enquirer account details the
planned $773 million expansion of
. the city's airpOrt. That's 50'percent
more costly than lbe expansion
completed just last year. The
money will come largely from a
federal tmst and the project will be
phased over 20 years, but the timing of the de~ision is the point.
Whether in Cincinnati or Washington, we have yet to understand
fuUy that we can't continue to do it
all simultaneously - and that our
by one ox will have to be gored along wilb
"Unfortunately, the general everyone else's.
·
tenor is 'don't cut Ibis, don't CUI
Nor can we make decisions
that.' And they're sbuUing out the wiUy-nilly.
.
reality that we don ''I have . the
In California, without most peomoney."
.
pie l)Oticing it; ,thef Iedamgislaturelal h~
But that was only one aspect or altered the slale s un
en pnthe Cincinnati story. On lbe Metro orities, almost entirely on a reactive
section'.s front page that same day, basis. Fifteen years ago, lbe slate
a councilman is beating the drums spent four times more on higher
for a new $300 million stadium to education than it did on prisons.
keep the !lengals professional footThis year, Gov. Pete Wilson's budball team from leaving town. "Los- get allocates more money to prising the Bengals would be like los- ons lban to lbe university system
ing a body part," be said. "I'm for the first time in California hiscommitted to doing everything in
tory. Equally telling, the total
my power to keep them here_.''
amount for both (about $4 billion
Earlier expressions of similar each) is QVer three times higher
sentiments had promoled a public- than in 1980. Education spending
scllool parent to comment sourly at has doubled. Spending on prisons
the school board meeting. "When has soared eight-fold.

But caine back to Washington.
When you strip away the camouflage, you discover lbat the programs offered by lbe new Republican majority in Congress are as
cenlered on lbe free lunch as anything the DemocraiS envision. The
chief difference is in the identity of
the recipients.
Unfonunately for the GOP, lbe
time of smoke and mirrors is over.
The ftrst 100 days and their "Contract With ,America" were based
squarely on· the propositio~ lbat the
undeserving poor should be
weaned from the federal trough
while ·everyone else continued to
pig out. Comfort the comfortable
and afflict the aflllcted was the raJlying cry.
Thus there was the pretense that
lbe budget could be balanced by
the year 2002 even while taxes on
upper income Americans were cut,
the Social Security system preserved intact, defense spending was
stabilized near current levels and
farm and veterans· henefiis protected.
.
.
,
But the day when lbe numbers
have to add up is at hano, which is
why Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich
have rediscovered lbe virtues of
"bipartisanship." It is not possible
to keep Social Security, Medicare,
defense and farm subsidies off the
budget-cutting table and control the
. deficit at lbe saine time. It is not
. possible to give tax cuts to people
making up to $200,000 a year and
produce fiscal stability: A similar
message applies to the president. It
was fun to offer a budge~ which
ducked all lbe tough issues. Mak-

In 1987, Justice William Brennan spoke at the Hebrew Unlvenlty Law School in Jerusalem. The
sounds of lbe intifada nearby were
an apt obbligato because his subjcct was: "The Quest to Develop a
. Jurisprudence of Civil Liberties in
Times of Security Crises."
Brennan focused mainly on lite
American experience. He gave us
' poor marks. "Afler each perceived
si:c~is ended..::, be said,..tlte_
·-~ "United States bas remorsefully
realized that the abrogation of'civll
liberties was unnecessary. But it
has proven unable to.prevcnt itself
from repeating the error when the
next crisis came along."
Whether we repeat the error
after the borrm; in Oklahoma City
depends, of course, on !bose who
make the recommendations and the
decisions . According to Harold
Ic~es, lbe deputy chief of staff at
lbe White House, we need have no
wonies about the president's devo. ·tion to tba-BiU Qf.Righcs~
.· "This president " said Ic~es,
"is weD .familiar with the Constitulion. He bas !aught constitutional
law and he is vuy concerned that
whatever is submitted conform to
the Constitution."
This president bas brought to
Congress his Omnibus CountertermrisJII Act of 1995. It allows alien•
accused of supporting terrorist
organizations to be deponed on the
basis of evidence they and their

ing lbe Republicans squirm on the
horns of their own contradictions,
while slaying above the fray, made
short-term political sense. But the
speaker's inflated sense of his own
destiny notwithstanding, Ibis is a
government that can't function
effectively if the chief executive
doesn't lead.
:
The president should join
Congress in doing the unpalatable.
Entitlements must be brought under
control. Sacred cows must be
butchered. Sacrifice should be
apportioned on lbe basis of moral
and economic logic, not overnight
trafficking polls. You don't take
food stamps away from .poor children. You don' 1 give tax breaks to.
the rich.
Mostly, however, you don't
continue to pretend that tinkering
and feel-good contracts can stem
the deficit flood. The time for joint
action is now, before 1996 election .
year politics paralyzes lbe government, The fru:t i§ lb!!t w~ got into
Ibis together - successive presidents, Congress and we; lbe selfindulgent people. We ean only get
out of it together.
Hodding ~arter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, is president of
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.based television production company.
(For information on how to
communicate ele'Cironically wUh
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling J•
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.) ·

•

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'

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lawyers cannot see. Nor, in those
cases, are litey entitled to know the
identities of their accusers.
'
While teaching the Constitution

Hatch, R-Utab, to a jurisprudence phone a suspect might conceivably
of civil liberties, he has proposed a use" - when it is impossible to
deal. As ~rted in The Washing- specify a particular phone number.
ton Post. ' Republicans would not And thi.s "could open lbc: door to
act on plans to seek repeal of the massive abuses of people's rights.' I
These roving wiretaps could
N, f
ff
new ban on assault weapons in
a en 0
.. exchange for approval of curbs on well encompass pay phones an4
.
.
.
appeals by condemned prisoners." . even privale phones used by people
at the Uo_1Vers1ty of Arkansas, proTo try to prevent ll tectllfence of who are nor suspeeiS. U, moreover:;
fessor Clmton presumably devoted the killings in Oklahoma City, Sen. improper warrants are obtained for
a lecture or two to due ?rocess. Hatch proposes that we speed lbe the wiretapping, the .evidence
'\'et, as a scholar of lbe Constitu- kiUings of people on deatluow wmlld-still be ui!Cd-in·court sa-lona.lion, ~e seem_s not'to ~v~ learned and of habeas corpus. I assume lbe as the agents did not act in "bad
.
lbat 10 a senes of decast&lt;!ns, the logic of this proposition is that faith."
:
Supreme C_ourt bas co~ststently future terrorists will scrap their
I expect that J. Edgar Hoover
ruled.- as 10 Kw~g Hat Che": v. plans for fear of being executed may yet be redeemed, for be
Cold10g - that on~e an. ah~n swiftly if they are caugbl This also always believed what Charlci
lawfully ente~ and restdes m lbas assumes - !!ODtrary to history Schumer, D-N.Y., declared after
coun_try, he becomes invested wilb lbat these ideological murderers are what happened in Oklahoma City1
the nghts guaranteed by the Consu- as rationally self-proteCtive as the "In wartime, it's different thai)
tution to all people within our bor- rest of us.
peacetime. In terrorism time, it's
ders .."
Hatch, inoreover, is chairman of different from peacetime.''
:
For instance, freeltpm of associ-. the Senate Judiciary Committee,
This is lbe congressman whl)
ati&lt;?n and ~ue proc~ss, both ~f where be has declared tolal war on introduced the president's Coun•
which are Ignored m the pres•- the exclusionary rule, without tenerrorism Act in the House. The
dent's anli-te~ bill.
.
whicll the Fourth Amendment !lis- ,auguries. ar,e .t!Jat_ ~II.~~more, )"'C
- ~ut, accorlling --to~en , Bob wives:
~- --~
· Will put cival Uberties astoe !i:r·
Dole, R-Kan., .we can take heart
Among other proposals to keep rorism time - and repent at some
because there are proi!JCIOrs of civil us safe, there is the White House's future dale.
liberties right in the Congress. desire to make It easier for law
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
After a bipartisan meeting with the enforcement agents to eavesdrop renowned authority on the First
president , Dole said cheerfully, onourpbo~conversations, among Amendment and the rest of the
"We've got oome constitutional other communications.
BID of Rights.
experts here -Joe Blden and
These plans include an advance
(For Information on bow td
Orrin Hatch."
in scaJtershot invasions of privacy. communicate electronically with
Well, :lite expert Sen. Biden, D- As USA Today put it in llll indi&amp;· this columnist and otbon, o:un&lt;
Del., is co-spons!l' in the Senate of 1 nant editorial, lbe White House ta~t A,.., rica OnUne by caiUng 1;
lite Omnibus Counterterrorism Act. desires ''widespread tapping of any 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
•
•
As for the contributfon or Sen.

H

•

Gertrude Mitchell

t

rn

tbroup south.wesiem Missouri this
een

iDOming, while a Jteady drizzle

iD Oklaboma in the wake ol week·
cad lllftlados that killed tbRie people.
•
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One person was killed llnd&gt;as
many as 40 were left homeless in
Missouri this morning after thunderstorms swept through Webster
County just east of Springf~eld. ·
In Texas, ·three pecple were still
ll)issing this morning after being
dragged down a manhole Friday
night by fierce flood waters in the
Dallas area. Eighteen people have
died in that state in a string of
stoons that started Friday night. At
least five tornadoes struck Sunday
near Ardmore, Okla., about 100
miles sou tb of Oklahoma City,
damaging a tire plant, gas station
and many other buildings, authorities said. In nearby Plainview, a
tornado damaged' or destroyed 35

homes and ripped the ffior off a
school.
A tornado barreled through the
T.e":as Panhandle early Sunday,
killmg one man and injuring live
others. The body of a 21-year-old
Fort Worth man also was found
Sunday alongside a Tarrant County

A few thiiJldmtonns were pos·
sible O'lel' the southern lip of Florida this afternoon and evening,
while windy conditions were
expected in New England.
A few shower~ and thunder·
storms were possible over tbe
mountains of Northem California
Ibis afternoon and evening.
Temperatures were forecast in .
the 50s and 60s in ~ew England, ·

creek.

Areas of rain and scattered thunderstorms were expected today
from the central Rockies to lbe
northwest and w·est central Plains;
from south central Texas and the
eastern Plains to tbe Mississippi
River Valley; and from the western
Great Lakes to portions of the Tennessee and Ohio river valleys .'
Some mountain.snow was expected
in Wyoming and Colorado.
Up to 2 inches or rain were possible from eastern Wyoming and
northeast Colorado to western
South Dakota

the Upper Midwest and lite Nonh- :
west; lite 60s and 70s in the Mid- ;
Atlantic and Midwest; 60s to lbe •
80s in the Soulitwest. and 70s and :
80s in the Soulit and Southeast
:
The nation's bot spot Sunday •
was Laredo, Texas, where it was 96 :
degrees. The bigbest beat index;
was I 08 in Sarasota, Fla. The cold- ·
es1 spot was Clayton Lake, Maine, :
where it was 2 I degrees.
'

Continued froin page 1

Strickland will seek...

. Gertrude Smith Mitchelt, 90, of 238 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died
Sunday, May 7, 199S, at the Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant. W.
-Va.
lbe state producing the most waste
Born on Dec. 14, 1904 at PIDieroy, she was lite .daugbter of lbe ,late to host a disposal site for 20 years
·Ray Chester Smith and Nellie Roush Smith. She was a retired General at wh~h time the number two state
'relephone Co. operator from 1920 to 1970.
would build a site, be explained.
. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Boney The f1rst Slate, Michigan, decided it
Mitchell. Several cousins survive along wilb special friends, Betty Lisb didn't want the disposal site and
and family, foseua, DcOna, Eddie IIIII! Lisa; Lavera and Qlarles Yeager left Ol!io lioldlog tile bag.
JUKI family, Sally and Marty, all of MasQD, W. Va.; and Ann Persinger
Now Obio is ill the process of
and family, Deann and Arnold, Huntington, W.Va.
locating the' nuclear dump, he said.
~ She was a member of lbe Pomeroy Uniled Methodist Church and
"U a low-level radioactive waste
served as secretary and tieasurer of the Sunday s~bool there:. 70 ·year dump is built in Ohio, where do
,
member of Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern Star; Ladies Orl- · you think it will be?''
.ental Shrine of North America, Thea Court 5, Columbus; a charter memOn education, Long said Repub!let and fllSt treasurer of lbe·Meigs County Council on Aging; and orga- lican Gover11or George V.
l)izer and flrst president of the Twin City Shrinenes.
..
Voinovich wants to continue lbe
, Services will be held at ·I p:m Tuesday at lbe Pomeroy Umted existing school funding plan
Methodist Church, Second St. Pomeroy. The Rev. Robert Robin~on will recently declared unconstitutional
-Qfflciate and burial will be in Chester Cemetery.
by a Perry County judge.
'
Since the state board of education does not want to appeal lbe
decision, the governor wants to
appoint the board instead of letting
David Jones of Henderson, N. C., formerly of lbe Rio Grande, died voters select board members, Long
:Saturday, May 6, 1995, at his home there.
said.
.
· Among his survivors are his wife, Evelyn Eichinger Jones of HenderIn addition, southeast Ohio has
sonville, N. C., who is the daughter of lbe late Rev. Charles Henry
Eichinger former pastor of lite Middleport Heath United Methodist
Church, mid bis wife, Zelda Eichinger. Mr. Jones is the brolber·in-law of ,_::.:.,.,;..;;.,.,.;;;.;;..,:i.....;.;..;.;;.;;..__________....;,_-.
:Qpal Eichinger of Chester, who received the word.of his death.
· Memorial services will be held laler at Rio Grande.

:David Jones

::;:c;~~~~~;;:~~~:rnd-

Loca I b r1•efs

Dimples Eakins

Problematic. protectors of liberties

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Ohio to get more showers, thunderstorms tonight

By The AJiociiW l'reA
A frontal 1 yatem spreading
warm, wet air from the Gulf of
·. Ray Murpby, 71, of Mason died Saturday, May 6, 199S 11 Pleasant Mexico will produce showers and
,VaUey Hospital.
thunderstorms in Obio tonight and
He ~a retired welder for Dnlvo Corp. in Pittsburgh. PA, where be Tuesday, (orecasters wd.
'~ m the boat yard. He wu a United Slates Army veteraD ol World
It may be Friday before dry connarU.
ditions return for all of the state.
, Born May 26, 1923 In Huntington, he was preceded iD death by his The rain on Thursday could be con.parents; and two brotbers, Charles and Pete Murphy.
fined to nortbeas1 Obio, the Nation·
. He is survived by his wife, Dcrothy (McDermitt) Murpby; two daugh- al Wealher Service said.
lers. Judy Geagin and Janice Towamicki, both Qf Pittsburgh, PA; three
Overnight lows will range from
:sons, William Murpby Qf Fayetteville, NC, Randy and Wayne Murphy the upper 40s northeast to upper
'both of Pittsburgh, f&gt;A; nlne grandchildren; one ~f.grandchild,; four sis- 50s soulbwesL Highs will be mostters, Louise Bakel'~ Margaret Posten, Sandra Lyons and Carrie Laffenwell, ly 65-7S.
.
all of Huntington; five brothers, Sherman Murphy. of Carson City, CO, · The record-high temperature for
George Murphy of Georgia, Leonard Murphy of Chesapeake, Ohio, and · this date at the Columbus weather
~y and Carl Murphy, both of Huntington. ·
station was 89 degrees in 1936
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, May 10, at Crow-Hussell while the record low was 29 in
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant wllb Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiating.
1947. Sunset tonight wiD be at 8:32
Burial will follow in Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
. p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:23
. Friends may call at the ftmeral bome on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m.
am.
Across tbe nation
Deadly thunderstorms swept

Butcher the budget's sacred cows

..

..

- Evidence of Iran's intentions

can be fouod in a seaet II'IIIISCript
of a key IraiaD Nllional SCI.Uity
Council meeting held in TchraD in

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.~

u.s. trade. ban with l.ran?

~~~"~e~t!::!~o~f~~~~

0

· By The Associated Press
·
Today is Monday, May 8, the I 28th day of 1995. There are 237 days
left in the ·year.
.Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on May 8,. 1945, President Truman announced in a
radio address that World War II had ended in Europe.
On this date:
·
.
In 1541, Spanish explorer HernandO deSoto reached the Mississippi
River.
In 1794, Antoine Lavoisier, lbe father of modem chemistry, was executed on the guillotine during France's Reign of Terror.
.In 1846, the fllSt major battle of the Mexican War was fought at Palo
Alto, Texas, resulting in victory for General Zachary Taylor's forces.
In 1884, lbe 33rd president of the United Slates, Harry S. Truman, was
born near Lamar. Mo.
. In 1886, Atlanta phannacist John Styth Pemberton invented the Oavor
syrup for Coca-Cola
.
In I 944, the fllSt "eye bank" was cslablisbed, in New York City.
In 1958, Vice President Nixon was shoved, stoned, booed and spat
upon by anti-American prolllslers in Lima, Peru.
·
In 1962, lbe musical comedy "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way
to tbe Forum" opened on Broadway.
hi 1970, construction workers broke up an anti-war protest on New
York's Wall Sll'eel.
.
In 1973. mililani American Indians who'd held the South Dakota hamlet of Wounded Knee for 10 weeks s.urrendered.

Berry's World

- Monday, MaY8;1995Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 8, 1995

«&lt;Il.. .

Man cited in two wrecks

· DimpleS Eakins, 62, of Pomeroy, died Monday, May 8, 1995, at her
home.
.
· Born July 24, 1932, in Clifton, W.Va. the daughter. of the !ale Jllhn
'Shelton and Fannie Kathryn Patterson, she was a bousew1fe.
She is survived by her sons and daughters,in-la'W, James and Teresa
Eakins of Syracuse Charles and Freda Eakins of Middleport, Ronald and
'ronya Eakins of pOmeroy, and Thomas and Marlene Eakins. of West Virginia· sons William Eakins of Portland, and Larry ·and M1ckey Eakins,
both Po.:0.roy; daughlers, Norma, Charlotte and Regina ~s. all of
'l&gt;omeroy; sisters, Goldie Reitmire of Racine, and Reba Ann Gtbbs and
NQrrna Joan Roush, both of Hartford, W.Va.; brothers, Hubert Ray Patter- .
sari of Hanford, W.Va., Larry Shelton Patterson of Letart Falls, and
'William Leroy Patters&lt;ln of Middleport; and 13 grandchildren.
.
.
~ Sbe was preeeded in death by her husband, James Edward Eakins; SIS' t~r. Katbryll Milliron and J uanila Mae Hoscber; and daughter, Charlene
'Eakins.
-· Services will be held at I p.m. Wednesday at lbe Ewing Funeral Home,
with the Rev. Jim Hughes officiating. Burial wiD follow in lbe Letart Falls

of

A Pomeroy man was involved in two accidents within three
days, according to Middleport and Pomeroy Police Department
reportS.
Jason P. Ryan, 19, of Pomeroy, flipped his 1986 Pontiac Fiero
four times landing in a creek at 4:10a.m. Monday after he hit some
railroad tracks on Hobson Drive, reports stated.
Ryan was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital were he was
treated and released, records-show. The Middlepon Police· Department cited him with failtire to maintain control and no insurance.
At 3 p.m. Friday, Ryan was driving on Osborne Street when he
· hit a bicyclist that was traveling the wrong way Q)l this one-way
street, Pomeroy Police Department reports -show.
Ryan had topped a hill and left a 67 foot skid of rubber when he
bit Charles A. .Boggess, 35, of Pomeroy. Ryan was cited wilb no
insurance and fictitious tags, records show. Boggess was ~eated and
released from VMH, reports stated.

Police warn about solicitor

A man in the area soliciting for funds should not be trusted.
according to Pomeroy Police Department records.
,
The man- who identified himseU as "Mr. Persons" - said he
was collecting funds for a juvenile program through the Ross County Fraternal Order of Police, records show.
· That organization is not holding a drive and does not have a
member under that nanie, records show. If this individual contacts
you, calllbe Pomeroy Police Department or Meigs County Sheriffs
Department. .
.

~emetery.

.

Friends may call between 7-9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral bome.

:G asoline prices take .
·;another jump at pump
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gasoline prices nationwide jumped an ·
·average of 6 cents a gallon in a
-month and could rise even higher,
·an industry analyst said Sunday.
•· The overall price or gasoline, all
'grades and taxes, was 124.94 cents
' 'per gallon on Friday, according to
· the twiee-monthly Lundberg Survey of I 0,000 gas Stations. ·
That's 2.73 cents higher than lbe
' April 21 survey, and about 6 cents
higher than the April 7 survey. ·
"Consumption is building, but
ihe peak drivin¥ season is still two
months away,' said Trilby Lundberg, publisher of the survey.
The May 5 survey showed the
average price of gasoline, incllK\ing
taxes , at self-serve pumps was:
118.60 cents for unleaded regular,
12851 cents for mid-grade unleaded, 137.02 cents for premium
unleaded and 120.49 cents for leaded regular·

. The Daily Sentinel

.

.

.. (USPS 213·%0)
.
'

-

,

I

Publlshed every afterrlobn, Monday rhrough•
' Fridny. Ill Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohi~. by the
Ohio V11lley Publishing Comp&amp;!lJIMultimedia

,._ Sec~nd
'""" •-roy.puslllge
omo ~57~!1: P~. "992·11~5: ·
at Pomeroy,
ch1ss

paid

Ohio.

Mtmbtr: The Associutcd Pren, and the Ohio
Newspaper A~socintion .
POSTMASTER : Si!!nd address corrections to
The Oail¥ Sen tinel, IIJ Cour-t St., romeroy,
Ohio 45i69

SUUSCRIPTION RATBS
By Carrjer or Motor Routt
Ope \\'eek..........
.. .............................. $1 .7.5

g~~ ~eC:~~~:::::::::···::::··_·::.::::_::::.::::::.::.·:::s~i:~
SINGLH COPY I~RI CE

"Daily .......................... ..................... ..... 3'i Ce nts
Subs£tibc~'"-'lf'lt.der.lr!A&amp;- !'l-JlB)' lbi! _~Cr•~v.
~nUt m advnnce direct tn The Dn1ly Senumel
on a·thr«:. ,ilt cr 12 month ba~is. Credit wilt be
given canier each week. ·
No s.ubscription by rnwl j)(mtined in mas
wheril! ho~ cnnier seNice i! nvwlabk
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Meias County
13 \\'eeh ...-....... ., ............................... $23.92
26 We&amp;.~ ... .,.........................
.......... $47.06
. 52 Wttk.s... . . .:....... ,. ...... ,; ....._........ $92.56
· t Kaifl Oubkle Melp Comuy
'
13 Weeh.. .. .... .. ............................. $2S.61

~~~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::.:::::::::::.:!:~

•
•

At full-serve pumps, regular
unleaded averaged 149,98 cents,
mid-grade unleaded 158.82 cents,
premium unleaded 165.74 cents
and leaded regular 149.87 cents.

Livestock report

House damage,d .in blaze
No injuries were repoi'ted following a hi&gt;use fll'e in Rutland Sat1 urday afternoon.
·
·
According to a Rutland Volunteer Fire Department report, nrcfighters respondqd to the Salem Street home of Danny Davis at 2:55
p.m.
.
..
Damage 10 Davis' two 112 story, wood frame home was _luntted
to one room, according to the report. Probable cause was listed as
an electrical problem .
Tbineen Rutland ftrefighters responded with four trucks while
' Pomeroy fuefigblers assisied wilb eight f~remen and one truck.

PLANNING TO RUN -Former Democratic U.S. Congress.
man Ted Strickland, right, of Lucasville, Informed local
Democrats or his plans to run for Congress again In 1!196. He is
shown here talking to State Senator Jan Michael Long at Saturday's Jefferson/Jackson Dinner.

M •

. e1gs

EMS I

ogs REEDSVILLE
18 calls

Units of the Meigs County

Emergency Medical Service logged
18 calls for assistance including
four transfer calls Saturday and
Sunday. Units ~pending included:
MIDDLEPORT
9:34 a.m. Saturday, South Second Street, Mary Pickens, Veterans
Memorial Hospilal;
11:21 a.m. Saturday, North
· Front Street, Ella McDaniel, treated
at the scene;
8:14p.m. Saturday, Stonewood
Apartments, Betty Way, Pleasant
Valley t{ospital;
10:04 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Lola Bobier,
VMH;
.
2:42 a.m. Sunday. OBNC, Lola
Bolen, VMH.
POMEROY
8:40 a.m. Sunday, Emergency
Medical Services office, Pamela
Richards, PVH;
· 7:28 p.m., Page Street, Margaret
Slay, PVH .
RAClNE
8:22a.m. Saturday. Plants Road;
Opal Cumming~. treated at the
scene;
2:39 p.m. Saturday, Plants
Road, Opal Cummings, PVH.

2:31 p.m. Saturday, state Route
124, Long Bottom, Mary Stewart, ,
PVH.
. I
RU'ILAND
2:55 p.m. .')aturday, volunteer
lire department and squad, structure f~re at Danny DaviS residence
on Salem Street;
·
11:58 p.m. Saturday, Woodyard
Road, Jeremy Jones, treale!l at the
scene;
2:31 p.m. Sunday, Neece Road,
Charles T. Neece, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
11:38 a.m. Hickory Hill Road,
Helen Bates, Camden -C lark
Memorial Hospital.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................-.Jl7/8
Akw ......:.................. - ..........--..58
Asblruid OU ........- ..........--.37 318
AT&amp;T ...... _ ........................ - .51118
Bank One............................ -.313/8
Bob Evans-................... --.20 1/8
Champion Ind ....- .......... --.21 114
Charming Shop ......- ..... --... 4 7/8
City Holdlng.,.. ____ ..... __ .l7 1/2
Federal Mogul ....
Goodyear T &amp;R .......- ........-.39 718
K·mart ___ ........----..--.13 112
Lands Eod -----------·15 t/4
Limited Inc...................- ....20 1/l
Multimedia 1nc. ·-------.37 1/4
People's ..._ ........ -----... -.22 1/l
Oblo'Valley... ______ ........ -.,. .. 44
One Valley _:., __________ .30 1/4

----·------18 Hearing Loss~m
Is Not A Sign
.Of Old Age.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Indiana-Ohio direct bog prices at
selected buying points Monday by ·
One-car accident
lbe U.S. Department of Agriculture. Announcements
Market News:
leaves one injured
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady
A Pomeroy woman was slightly
Job's daughters set meeting
late; demand modCI'llle.
injured
in a one-car accident Friday
The
·Bethel
#62
International
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 Ibs ., country
Stale
Route 1.24 near Salem
on
Daughters
of
Middleport·
will'
Job's
points 33,75-35.00, few 35.25;
Center,
lbe
Gallia-Meigs Post of
hold
their
annual
official
visitation
Rockwell ·-----------·44 7/8
plants 34.50-36.25.
.
the
Slate
Highway
Patrol
reported.
Robbins &amp; Myer&lt;.--.......... --.. :14
at
I.
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
MiddleU.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
J.
Sheets,
26,
270
Union
Royal
Dut&lt;h-.. ----·- · ·--12~ 518
Tamera
port
Masonic
Temple.
All
members
points 28.50-33.75.
Shoney's Inc. ,,. __ .............- .11 518
Ave.,
was
not
treated
at
lbc
scene,
are
welcome.
Sows: mostly steady.
·
Star Bank __ .. __ ;,_ ........ -.41 t/4
the patrol said.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 24.50Wendy Int'L ...................... -.16 ttl
The patrol said Sheets was east28.50; 500-650 lbs. 28.50-32.00, a Burlingham woodmen set
Worthington Ind..... -------... 19
The Burlingham Modern Wood- bound at 11:15 a.m. when she
few over 650 lbs. 33.00.
men will bole! a potluck dinner at swerved ber car to avoid striking a
Siock reports are the ·t0:30 Lm.
Estimated receipts: 32,000.
Saturday at the ball. The deer. The car w.ent ofT the right side
6:30p.m.
quotes provided by Advesl of
Prices from The PrOducers Livecamp will furnish the meat and of lbe road and into a ditch.
Gallipolis. • •
' stock Association:
The car was modetatcly damdrink . .Mothers will be recognized
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower,aged. _
'
.Slaughter steers: choice 60.00- for Mother's Day.
67.00; select 55.00-63.00.
a W4 a a a 4 a a a I a I 4 4
· Slaughler heifers: choice 58.00- Preceptor Beta Beta sets date
Preceptor
Bela
Beta
wiD
meet
at
67
.OOi-.soleGt-51.00-61.00.
·
Cows: uneven, 1.00 lower to 7:30 p.m. ·Thursday at the Episco3.00 bigber; all cows 47.00 and pal Parish House.
down. ·
Bulls: uneven, 2.50 lower to
Membership in Federated Funeral Directors ol Amenca
2.00 bl&amp;_her; all )lulls 54 .50 and ~
' ---------.,
for indepentlent -fjjflerai homes thai
down.
NOW OPEN
consistently meet established standards of
.choice
vea1220.00
calves: steady to higher:
SPRING
.
SEASON
professionalism , ethics and sound business pract1ce~ .
and down.

Chicago, fll.-A free offer
of special interest to those
who hear but do not understand words has been announced by Beltone. A
non-operating· model of one
of the smallest canal hearing aids in America today
will be given absolutely
free_to. anyone requesting it.
.It's YOl!fS for the asking,
so send for it now. It is not
.a real hearing aid, but it
show you how tiny hearing
help can be.
These mooels.are free, so
call or write for yours now.
Benefits of hearing aids
vary by t)'IJe and degree of
The customized business management, corsulling and
hearing loss, noise environfinancial services provided by FFOA permot us to minimize
ment, accuracy of hearing
our costs and maximize the services offered lamilies we
evaluation. and proper fit.
~~[!Hlfi'!(I~!Led,t~o~se~':.. __ ~-·-·. Phomt-1 ~sao. 5~5-7illfl -or
We thought you should know.
.
s~nd your name, date of
-.Straiglit -rJllcl(er - 2{9ush. btrth, address and phone
number today to Depart'
Junera[ Jfome
ment 22525, Beltone ElecRavenswo.od, WV • (304) 273·2152
tronics, 420 l West Victoria
l'rPnPPd · ~lnPPti - f'Q,Ifrti'Pd ':;'~ ;l -''ft' l Street~ Chicag·o, Illinois
60646-6772.

-·-·-

will

You Should Know!

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges May 5 - Mrs. John
Harkins and son, Bonnie Brewer,
._ ~Terry_fiatle.;y., Hooriolla Haymap,.
Palricia Amos, Chelsea Day, Mabel
Ma~an, Deborah Yost, Janella
DaviS.
.
Discharges May 6 - Reva
Jenkins Teni Smith, Mrs. Russell
Gilben' and daughter, Jim Compton, Carolyn Taylor.
.
Discharges May 7 - Joanna
Angel, Jared Saum, Owe~ Marcwn, . Deliorab Haptonstall, Lynette
Newton.
· (Puhllsbed.Jith permission)

• Pansy • Viola

•

• Bedding Plants
H b p
· 1
er S • erenma S

-.J-·--HAR£N.a.S

GR££NHOUS£
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
· 3 112 miles past Southern
High School, St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio

614-949-2682

CI9QS,

8d.x~t

Beeu-ortn

Corpo.&gt;no ~on

�•

Sports

Monda)', May 8, 1995

The DailY Sentinel

)

Monday, May 8, 1995

Paa•

4

Reds notch 8-4 win over Mets
•

of the throw to New York Mets second sacker Jeff
Ken[ in the third Inning of Sunday's game in
Cincinnati, where the Reds woo 8-4. (AP)

8EATS THE THROW - Clnclnnatl'i Jerome
lils beUy slide Into se~ hue ah!Jld

Walton ends

Lofton's RBI single helps Tribe
beat Twins 10-9 in 17 frames
on Lofton's hit through !he drawn- I ason Grimsley, however, started
By CHUCK MELVIN
the Twins' tying rally in the sev·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Kenny in infield.
Mark
Guthrie
(1-1),
Minnesoenth.
Matt Walbeck bit a two-run
Lofton grounded an RBI single up
double,
and Pat Meares singled
the middle with one out in the bot· ta's ninth pitcher, took the loss in
borne
the
tying run.
tom of the 17th Inning Sunday, giv· bis second inning of work.
Jim Poole (1-1), Cleveland' s
Bernardo Brito, recalled by !he
ing the Cleveland Indians a 10-9
victory over Minnesota in the eighth pitcher, worked four score- Twins from Salt Lalce City on Frilongest game ever, by time, for less innings for the win, wriggling day, homered in bis ftrst at bat in
out. or a second-and-thin!, nobody- the second inning, and Minnesota
both teams.
The game lasted six hours, 36 out jam in tile 16th by getting an added single runs off Dennis Marminutes, forcing the two teams to · ou1 at home followed by a double tinez in tlte second on Alex Cole' s
single and in the third on a double
· ·
.
use a tolal of 47 players, including play.
Murray's second homer of !he by Leius.
17 pitchers and all 30 of their posiNotes: Second baseman Chuck
tion players. There were six bome game tied it at 9 against Dave
runs, 44 bits and 39 runners left on Stevens in the eighth after the Indi- Knoblauch returned to Minnesota's
ans bad blown an 8-3 lead. Min· lineup . afte r missing a game
base.
C leveland's Eddie Murray, now nesota scored five in the seventh, because be wa5 bit above the elbow
hitting .442 as ~e moves closer .to . highlighted by Kirby Puckett' s ·by a pitch Friday night. He was bit
3,000 career hits, had two borne borne run, then took a short-lived by another pitch leading off Sun·
runs and tWO singleS, driving in 9-8 lead on Cordova's solo shot off · day but stayed in !he game .... Only
two players have started all II of
. five runs. Murray already has col· Eric Plunk in the eigl)th.
tbe Twins' games so far, Kirby
Tile
four
bits
gave
Mu1111y
2,949
lected 19 of 1be 70 hits be needed
Pucke
tt an d Marty Cordova·....
in
bis
career,
push
ing
bim
past
going into this season to reach
Cle
ve
land'
s Paul Sorrento got his
·
Willie
Keeler
into
22nd
place
on
3,000.
first
single
in tlte third inning. Of
· The teams traded borne runs in the bit li st; the two borne runs gave
his
previous
seven hits this year,
the e igbtb - Minnesota, rookie bim four on !he year and 462 in bis
four
were
homers
and fbrce were
career,
one
away
rrnm
tying
learnMarty Cordo\Cll's in the top half,
doubles
....
In
hi
s
previous nin e
Murray's second of the game.in the mate Dave Winfield for 18th place.
starts,
all
with
Tony
Pena catching,
He singled borne a run for the
i:nittom - but didn't score again
Martinez
was
7-2
with
a 2.03 ERA.
until the 17th. Murray was long Indians in the firs~ and bis threeBefore
Pena
.became
his
personal
gone. by then, b~v!ng been lifted for run home run highlighted a five year,
he
was
6-4
wilh a
catcher
last
run third inning that got started
a pinch-runner m ibe12th:
ERA
in
17
starts
....
Pen
a' s
4.17
. Tbe Twins bad runners tl)rown when Twins third baseman St ott
single
in
the
third
snapped
his
0out a111ome on infield grounders in Leius made a wild throw to fi rst.
for-18
sldd.
l
..
Cleveland
pitchers
Ramirez also homered in tb e
both !he 12th and 16th innings;
bit four Twins batters - tying a
Manny Ramirez s tarted th e inning, his fifth.
Minnesota
team record - includ,
Cleveland 171h with a single, then
·Cleveland scored two more for
ing
a
career-high
th ree by Marstole second w ith one ou1. An an 8-3 lead in the six'th on RB I sintinez.
·infield single by Jesse Levis moved gles by Belle and Ramirez.
Puckett' s two-mn ·borne run off
him to third, and be scored easily

It was that easy much of the
afternoon against the Mets' strug· ·
gling pitching staff. Hal Morris
drove in three runs with a basesloaded single and a triple, and Reggie Sanders and Jeff Branson eacb
bad a pair of RBis.
Tbe Mets gave up 21 runs oo 26
bits the last two games, and that
was just the most glaring of their .
deficiencies.
,
"We made ton many mistakes
today to win the game," manager
Dallas Green Said. "We had a couple of dropped balls in the outfield,
a couple guys on third wbo dido't
get in, bad baserunning once I'm not even counting tbe bad
pitching."
Tbe Reds kept the game close
early by wasting chances against
Jacome, who gave up six bits and
walked seven in 4 113 innings.
Walton's homer and a thinl-inning·
double by Sanders, who was in an
0-for-19 slump, made it 2.{).
Todd Hundley's RBI single cut
itlo 2-1 in the fourth, but Jacome
gave up an infield single and a pair
of walks to load the bases in the
fifth . Pitching coach Greg Pavlick.
visited the mound, but Jacome's
next pitch was lined up the middle
by Morris for a 4-1 lead.
Morris broke out of a deep
slump during the three-game series.
He came in 1-for-24 and went 6for-12 with five RBis. The basesloade(l single was an indication thi!l
Morris, a career .313 bitter, was
getting back· to normal - he did

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Even
before their rltSI swing ol' the &amp;IIII!C
produced a home run, the Cincinnati Reds knew lhey'd become a
dangerous team again.
The Reds carried newfound
momentum Into a second day Sunday wben Jeromt Walton led off
with a rust-pitch homei:, sparking
an 8-4 victory over the New Y orl&lt;
Mets.
The Reds improved to 3-8 by
winning consecutive games for the
rust time. Walton's two-run, ninth'
inning homer gave the Reds an
improbable 13-11 victory on Saturday.
The good feeling was still
vlbrnting in the clubhouse Sunday
morning.
"I felt good early," said Jose
Rijo (1-2), who broke out of a twogame slump. "I saw the positive
attitude guys bad. That got me
pumped up. There were more
jokes, the music was louder and
guys were talldng trash, so I had a
good feeling."
·
It intensified wben Rij9 escaped
a threat in the top- of the rust and
Walton bit the ftrst pitch of the
game from Jason Jaoome (0-2) for
a homer. Walton can't remember
hitting homers on consecutive
swings before.
"I don't think I've ever hit
homers on consecutive days," he
' said. "Any time I lead off, I look
for a fastball (on the rll'St pitch). Ifl
get it where I want it, I swing."

f

As for leaving the lucky dog
hair at borne, Schott said, "You
only need it one time."
She called Bret Boone and Hal
Morris over to see the dog, saying,

Eutem Dh•ltlon

l.c.llll

no
8 01ton ......•.............. :?

L

-4

.636

New York ................7

4

.i!i 36

&amp;~.

lill

BalUmor~ ................ .5

S

.5-&lt;IS

I

6

.45$

2

Delroit ...................... 3

8

.213

4

CentraJ Dh•Won

3 .727

CLEVELAND ..... 6
K.anw City ....... ,.....6

•

.600 ·

l.l

Mionuot.. ................ 4

4
7

.600
.364

U
4

Chicagu.................... 2

8 .200

S.S

Well&amp;ern Dl•kion
S~ttl~ ....... ., .............7
3 .100
S · .S4S
1 .364
7 .364

J.S
3.5

3.S

Saturday's scores

J.l

Yor~

.5

4 .6 36

.S

8

4

.333

Salu rday's scores
Aorida 10, Montreal 3
CINCINNAT113, New Yori. I I
Lo' Ana,eleai7.Coloradc 11
Dlicaao 13, Pitt&amp;~urJh 5
Philadelphta 3, Atlanta I
St. Louia 7, How;ton .S

Sunday's scores
Philadelphia'· AUaota 4
Monrre.19. flori da 3
Pitubur&amp;h ~. Olicaao 3

TCJ.al 4, Oatland l
OIPSO 7, Kuau City 4·

c.JiforoJ•7, Seattle.S .

Sunday's sCores
Min-nuotr9~17

Ina.)

Bostocll, Druoit l
BaltJ~ -6, Toronto -2
Milwaukte9,N'ew York I
XaD!Iu City 7, Chicago S
Oltklaad 8, 'few 6

· Tuesday's gaines
CINCINNATI {SmileY 0-0) at.florld-a
·

_

M"rittea! t11enry 0··1) •t Ptilli:lddphia
(QuMUIII I-0), 7:lS p.m.
HoUlton (R eynoldl 0·1) at Pitt1b1.1rgh
(Leiber 0•1J,.MS p.m.
.

Selttle 3, California 2

Basketball
NBA playoffs
Saturd&amp;y's Kore
Co nCereoce .1emirinal: San Antonio
! 10, L.A. Lai.en 94; SBn Antoaio lead.1

Fir•t·rol1nd finale: Houston 95, Utah
9 1, floUllton wina1erlc:s 3·2 ·
Conference a;emifina l: Indiana 107,

New York 105 ; Indiana leads serie&amp; 1·0
Conferenc::e &amp;emlrinal: Orlaodo 94,

Tonight's game
L.A. Lak.en at San Anton io. I p .m.
(TNI')

Tuesday's games
lodii.Ail at New York, 8 p.m (INT)
Houston at Pboenix , 10:30 p.m. (fNT)

Wednesday's games
Cbicatto at Orlando, II p.m tfNT)

Hockey
NHL playoffs

Ph ila de lp hia 4, BuCCalo 3 (OT);
Philadelphia lead&amp; miell-0
New Jersey S, Boatou 0; New Jersey

MlnnNDta (Mahomes 0-0) Ill 0\ica&amp;o
(l'e&lt;""'')cZ 0-1). i:Ol p:m

_ y.,., &lt;PulitJHJ.II OWII!Id Watlma
0-l). I0: Ol p.m.

Tuesday's games
'XaaJM.· Cily (UDtGil 0-0) at CLEVE.
LAND (ll.....ilef 0-1), 7:0l p.m.
Blltimon (McDouald·O.()) at Boatoa
(C«mi« 1-0), 7:0l p.IU
Nf.w Yorlr: (Mc.Dowelll-0} II Toroato
(Hempn 1..0), 7:35p.m•.
MIDII.Ofl (Hawk.iu 0-l) 11 Chic8IO
(Abbott 0·1), 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Wdll 1·1) at Milwaukee (EI·

·

. - - _ - · .dtolli•O)J;0~NJ1,
• __
'
Seottl• (Boolo l -0) at Oatlllld (SIDII!"'
. myre 1.0),10: ~ p.m.

Teu1 (HellfnJ 0·0) at Califarnla

(Lil&gt;pU&gt;O ().0), IQ:OS p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E.l•ml*r...,.

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lil

F1111Jdclphlo .............7

3 .700

AUaltJ ,,.,,.,,,,..,n,.,no6

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l .l45
7 .364
1 .300

1.5
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f1of1ill .....,, ... ,-..,-,]

C•ntral DtrWoa
Cbkqo....................6 4 .600
llo..... ...................6 l .545
$l f.Alult ..................6 6 .500

Detroit 4, Dalla£ 3; Detro itleadt 1eries
1.0
St. Louia 2, Vancouver I; St. Louia
lead&amp; aerie~ 1-0
Toronto S, Chicae:o 3; Toronto le.ada
seriet I ~

San J01e S, Calgary 4; San JoJe lead&amp;

Tonight's
games7:30p. m.
N.Y. Rauac:rs
at Quebec.

(ESPN)

111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE 1868

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·

MEIG_~COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX
BOOKS
ARE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
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1994 COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES,
ALSO FOR.DELINQUINT TAXES.
-- · CLOSING DATi ISJiJNE 2o, 1995 ..,...,.......-~TRAILER TAX DEADLINE IS JULY 31, 1995
HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

4

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'

Reds -notes. ~~o_n_un_u_ed_fr_om_Pa.:::.ge_4..:..&gt;_ _ _ __

1

·Flyers, Devils ·&amp; Red Wings among victors·
This year, the Sharks finished 1-0:
·By KEN RAPPOPORT
seventh in the Western standings,
AP Hockey Writer
Devils 5, Bruins 0
Just when the Calgary Aames 13 points behind the Aames.
Forward Claude Lemieux, usu"We were outhustled and out- ally a defensive specialist, scored
thought it was safe to go back into
the playoffs, the San Jose Sharks worked," Calgary coacb Dave twa ftrst-period goals to help the
King said ''lbey were more deter- Devils beat the Bruins at Boston
were waiting.
mined
than us."
Starting off just as they did last
Garden.
San
I ose spoiled the A ames an
year with an upse~ the Sharks beat
"My job is to keep(Cam Neely)
the Pacific Division-leading early 1-0 lead and then scored five from getting chances," said
· Aames 5-4 Sunday night to take .a of the game's next six goals, Lemieux, who had just six goals 1.{) lead in their Western Confer- including lhe two by Baker, to take and 84 penalty minutes - during
ence series.
a 5-2 lead after two periods.
the regular season. " If I score, it's
"The hockey gods were with us
In other games Sunday, it was a OOnus. ''
tonight," said San Jose center New Jersey 5, Boston 0 , and
Lemieux scored at 16:04 and
Jamie Baker, who scored two Philadelphia 4, Buffalo 3 in over- 19:12 to help the Devils take a 3-0
goals . " T h a t just sum s up tbe . time in Eastern Conference play. In lead after the rust period. Martin
whole night. Hopefully the hockey olher Western Conference games, . Brodeur stopJX;d 23 sbots for bis
gods will s tay with us a little Detroit beat Dallas 4-3, St. Louis second career playoff shutout.
defeat\)(~ Vancouver 2- 1 and Toronlonger."
Boston rookie Blaine Lacher
Chicago 5-3.
Tbe Sharks' performance was to
allowed four goals on 17 shots
The playoffs .continue tonight before bein~ replaced I 4:59 into
reminiscent of last year, when they
finished last in the conference but wilh four Eastern Conference the second period by Craig Billingupset the . first-place Detroit Red games: the New York Rangers at . ton .
Wings in the opening round of the Quebec, Washington at Pittsburgh,
F1ye,rs 4, Sabres 3 (OT)
playoffs. They lost the conference New Jersey at Boston and Buffalo
At Philadelphia, Karl Dykbuis
semifinal to Toronto in seven at Philadelphia. Quebec and Wash- scored the winning goal at 10:06 of
ington lead their ·respective series overtime as the Ayers beat Buffalo
games.

"Hey you two, say hi to 02 ."
When they walked away after petting the dog, she called after them:
''(Win) another one for Schottzie.''
· (See NOTES on PageS)

bear

FOULED- Orlando forward Horace Grant (right) rmds himself
fouled by. Chicago guard Michael Jordan in the sec:Ond half of Sun-day's NBA Eastern Confer ence seml tim~l series opener in Orlando,
Fla., where the Magic won 94-91 on Grant 's last-minule dunk. (AP}

without Eric Lindros. The Flyers'
top scorer bas a brui sed left eye
and isn't expected back for
toni~bt's second game, either.
.
' It hurts when you bear the
only reason you're winning is
because of one guy," ·Said Flyers
center Rob DiMaio. "We have a
lot or pride. We think we can win
without Eric."
The Flyers rallied from a 2-1
deficit, scoring twice in the second
period' s final three minutes to take
a 3-2 lead into the third. The Sabres
•tied the game at 3 on Jason Dawe's
second goal of !he game at 12: 33 of
the rmal period.
Red Wings 4, Stars 3
At .Detroit, the Red Wings'
quest for its first Stanley ·c up
championship in 40 years got off
on the right foot as Vyacbeslav
Kozlov snapped a 3-3 tie at 10: IS
of the third period.

Tbe did, 8-4.
Y
Damage control
Manager Davey Johnson had to
do some damage control Sunday.
After the game Saturday, assistant manager Ray Kni ght said in a
radio interView that he and Johnson
bad wide-ranging discussions lhe
last two days exploring a ll the
options for getting tlte team turned
around. The talks included a mention of resigning.
"In that di sc uss ion, I d id say
that if I'm the problem, I want to
be eliminated from !he problem,''
John son confirmed Sunday. " I
don' i want to be pan of the problem, I want to be the solutio.n. And
if th~ solution is me res ignin g or
getting fired, I'm for that."
But Johnson made it clear be
· wa sn ' t about to qu it. H e was
unhappy th at his comments had
•

_

been ~ade public..
. .
•·r ve never qutt anythi ng m my
life," lie said. "Those discussions
were.in private."
·
lie said one of the conclu sions
from the privat e talks was that
Johnson a nd Knight need to do a
.
better job.
"The main to p ic wa sn 'I me
resigning, him resigning . All those
th ings were bro ug ht up a s
options," Johnson said . " What
basically came out of that meeting
(was) that be and I were pan of the
strengt;,s and !he leadership of this
ballclub and we needed to kind of
get on the same wavelength and gel
this thing rolling."

Just bit
Schou's theory of base ball:
"Great teams. are always bitting
teams. I hate pitching . T hat' s ali
they ever talk about. ·•

.

1 995r·----------r----------,----------~

•

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2.

4.

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rn.

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7.

#lMOM

ss

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ss

cxcxc

~~;;;s;;,i::~;-M-:..;r:;-D:; ~;.;;i;;h;-- . . . ,
Friday, May 12, 1995 Daily Sentinel. ·

I YourNa
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us win. That's whall'm all about."
Sbaquille O'Neal led the Magic
with 24 points and 12 rebounds ,
and Nick Anderson scored 20
while guarding Jordan f9t most of
Center.
his 40 minutes.
· Magic 94, Bulls 91
Pa&amp;:ers 107, Knlcks lOS
For once, Michael Jordan was
Reggie, Reggie ... and Regsie
not tile hero.
oace more.
In a stunning nun of events, JorWith the Pacers down 105•99
dan missed two free throws, had and 18 secOnds remaining, Reggie
the ball stolen - leading to. the
Miller shocked New York. f,.illler's
winning basket- and threw a bad
three-pointer with 16 seconds left
pass despite being open for a shot
brought the Pacers within t4ree.
that could bave won the opeller of Anthony Mason double-clutched
the series at Orlando.
before throwing the inbounds pass
''I take the blame just as I ·as Greg Anthony fell down. Miller
would lake the credit,'' Jordan said intercepted, had the ·presence 10
after a game in which be missed step back for another three-pointer,
14-of-22 sbots and matched a · thenhititwith 13·secondsleft.
career high with eight turnovers .
It was tied . Miller was not
"It was just a mistake down the
thr gh
stretch. It happens to the best of
~fte~ John Starks missed two
us ."
free throws and Patrick Ewing
Former teamma.te Horace Grant f 'I d 0
f 11
M ' ller as
wound up with a dunk following
f~~J~d. ~eacaYmryw~tro~ed b;me
the steal. That capped a big game
two foul shots with 7.5 seconds to
for Grant, who bad 15 of his 16 go to silence the crowd at Madison
points after halftime. His defense
Square Garden.
on Scottie Pippen seemed to throw
Wben Miller, who rmished with
the rest of the Bulls off-stride.'
31 points, left the court, be yelled,
"It was a dunk - two points.
"Choke Artists! Choke Artists!"
We won the game. I'm not going to
But Miller denied saying it.
put any more tmpbasis on it than
· •'No, 1 did noi,' • be insisted.
that," the eighth-year pro said. "It
"Don't even try to start that."
doesn't matter wbo it came against.

illg lnlured Carl Herrera and Vernon Maxwell, on leave to atlald to
personal problems- won Game 4
last Friday In Houston 123-104 to
force Sunday's rmale in the Delta

"

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"

: In the NHL playoffs,

Clly (AJ&gt;pler l-0) at CLEVB-

J.WID (Clark 1-0), 7:05 p.m.

-

euctly what be was ttying to do.
''I was juat uyiQg to bit tbe ball
bard baclt up tile middle," be said.
The Reds pulled away against
the Mets' bullpen, which allowed
15 runs in the last two days . Jeff
Branson led off the Reds' sixth
with a homer, the Reds' sixth in
two days, and Cincinnati added
three in the seventh on Sanders'
single, Morris" triple and Branson's
single.
Rijo scattered seven hits in 5 113
innings and struck out six even
though he still dido 't have very
good control of his slider. Jeff
Brantley gave up homers to Jose
·Vizcaino, his rll'St, and Todd Hund·
ley, his fourth, in the last two
Innings.
Notes: Jacome has walked 13 in
12 innings .... Bobby Bonilla bas
bit safely in six straight games. ... ·
All three of Walton's homers with
the Reds have been a'alnst the
Mets. Two were game wmners- a
three-run homer in the lOth inning .
on June 5 last year and the two-run
homer in the ninth on Saturday. ...
Barry Larkin bas hit safely in all 11
of the Reds' games. Pitts burgh's
Charlie Grimm hit in the fust 25
games of 1923, the longest streak
at tile start of a season by a National Leaguer this century. ,.,. T.h e
Mets stole two bases on Bemto . '
Santiago, who is 0-for-9 at throwing out runners. Cincinnati hasn't
thrown out a runner· stealing this
season.

season s 3.{) 11111111:.
HoustoD trailed 82·75 after Jell'
Honuicek's tbnle-pointer with 5:43
remaining. Then Olajuwon and
Drexler toot over.
Olajuwon had seven points of a
10.{) Rockets run, including a spinon Rockets thrive most when sway- ntns jumper.at the 1:43 mark to put
ing,?ver the abyss.
.
Housion up 85-S2.
· ._We play better With our backs
"We regrouped and said we've
agams~ the wall. We play mo~~ . sot to give it everythins we' vc
sot." said Drexler, wbo also had
.ag.gress1ve, we play on the edse.
· said All-Star center H~ Olaju- 10 rebounds. "We resained our
won, whO· had 33 po1~ts to rally composure artd got it down to the
Houston to a 95-91 VICtory over big guy and be came through."
Utah Sunday.
Karl Malone's three-pointer
. , "When we play to our strength, with 6.5 seconds left cut the Rock. It'.:'~ diffi~lt for peopl~ to beat ets' lead to 92-90, but Drexler hit
us,
d OlaJuwon, wbo btl llklf- three foul shots to Jolm Stock.too's
16 shots an.d pulled dow.n 10 · onetopreserveHouston'swin.
rebounds to lead .the Rock.e~ mto a
The Rockets outscored the Jazz
second-round m.atcbup w1th ~e 31-20 in the final 12 minutes, as
Suns ..Game I wtll be Tuesday 10 Utah could manage just 5-for-18 ·
· Pboemx.
.
shooting . For the game, the Jazz
Two second-roun.d senes. began. , shot40 percent oompared to Hous·
S~~day, '!'nth winding .up m nad- ' ton's 48 percent. ·
biting rmtshes. Tile lnd~a Pacers
Malone led tbe I azz witb 35
stunned the New York Krucks 107· points and 10 rebounds, while Hor·
· 105 :md ~rlando pulled off s~me nacek finished with 19- includ·
· Magte of Its own to stop lhe Cbtca- ing two three-pointers in the final
· go Bulls 94-91.
.
three seconds of the ftrst balf that
Houston's Clyde Drexler com· gave Utah a 44-42 advantage at the
· plemented C?lajuw~·s insi~ game break.
with 31 pomts - mclud1ng five
Stockton, in an off oigbt, bit just
three·p~tnters .- as the Rockets 4-of-14 shots for 12 points.
·
won theu fifth straight game when
After going down 2-1 in ' tbe

Mom 's done a lot of nice things for you, so now is the time to do
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gteeting iri The Daily Sentinel on Friday, May I 2.
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Give her a gift she'll rem ember- a heartfelt greeting iri The Daily
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\eacb 5el'iel ) .Q

Tonight's games
Kans11

-

COay .~reetings

Quebec S, N.Y. R.anaera 4; Quebec
leada series 1·0
Wa&amp;hinaton $, PittsbUJah 4; Wuhington ltfldiiCfle&amp; 1-0

Sunday•s scores

_

~wn by ~en points to U~ lale
m tile decidiligJC of theu bestof:five series, ou~ _was, on tile
brink ol' first-J'!lUIIII eliminatiOD.
Someone sho~d have told the
Jazz: The defc_ndlng NBA champi·

others

Saturday's scores

leriea J.()

· series 1-0

Ch icago 91; OrlandQ leads aeries 1-0

Tod•y's games

(Rapp 0.1)1 ?:M p.m.

San Francisco (Wilson 2-0) at Colorado { Ritz 0-0), 9:0S p.m.
Lo&amp; Angeles (Valdes 0·0) at San Diego
(Sanders 1-0), 10:05 p.m.

Sunday's scores

t1NClNNATI II,Ntw York 4
St. Loula6, Houlton .S
Lo• Anaela: 12, Colorado 10
San Fra.DciJCo II , SaD Diego 4

r.m

3

Atlanta (Avery O.J ) at New· York
(Saberttagen 0-1), 7:40p.m.
Chicaao (frachsel 0-l) at St. Louis
(0sborne0· 1), 8:05p.m.

Ho\lato n (Kile 1·1) at Pitt1burg,h
(Loalzo H). :I:OS
Florida (Witt 0-2) at Monlleal (Martinez 2.0), 7:0.S p.m.
Philllde!phia (We:1t 1·0) at Atlant a
(Giavloe l-0),7:40 p.m
Chlcaao (Bullinger 1·0) •t St. L..ou1'
(WOIIOO 1·0), i :Ol p.m.
Lo•_~aaele• (A4tacio 0· 0) at San .
Di'eao (Hamillon 0...1), IO:OS p.m

MiiLIIctOll $, Cl.£YELAND 2
Bo&amp;ton S, Oeuoit 3
toronto 7, Baltlrmre 3

CLBVBLA-ND 10.

3

.j73

San Ftanclt&lt;:O 13. SM Dieao 6

Milwaukct. .............. 8

Milwaukee:5,New

.300

i

· · Lea Ana:e lct ...... ,.:....7
Sa,o Diego ................4

AMERI CAN LEAG UE

Cal!rontla ...... ........... 6
Oakland ................. ..4
Te.u. .......................4

7

Weltcm DIYilloft
Sao Francisco .: ........ 8 ·4 .667
Colorudo .................. 7
4 .636

Major leagues

Toroato .. .. ;......... ;.....6

Pitb butgh ................ )

CINCINNATI .......... J

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

:fiSBA9LBT£LA~C~!s(AP') ~~i~ ~.!..a~e!!.9!,!!i~~e~i!~W.bdpod

Show Her She'S Speeial Wilh A Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
Baseball

In the NBA playoffs,

Schott uses dog·calendar to help Reds
ByJOEKAY
.
CINCINNATI (AP)- On Saturday, it was.dog bair from the former learn mascot. On Sunday, it
was a dog calendar.
Cincinnati Reds owner Marge
Schott put her unique touch on batting practice for a second day .Sun·
day by taking her St. Bernard,
Scbottzie 02, onto the field along
with a calendar and a poster featur·
ing !he Qj)g's predecessor.
Schott handed a 1986 Schottzie
calendar and a 1991 poster featuring the dog to outfielder Reggie
Sanders, who glanced at them and
then left them on the batting cage
netting. Scbouzie was the team
mascot in 1990, when the Reds
won tlte World Series, and Schott
con siders the dog a good·ll!Ck
charm even though it's been dead
since 1991.
She brought a plastic sandwich
bag wilh leftover Scboltzie balr to
the stadium Saturday and rubbed it
on ~anders and other Reds players
for good luck. Tile Reds rallied for
nine runs in !he last two innings to
win 13-11 .
She l.e ft the hair at borne Sunday, but brought out the calendar.
" I brou ght 'em Scbottzie's calendar to see what Scbottzie was
(like)," Schou said.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

�Page A8 • Tht D•lly sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Mond-v,

llq 8, 1tl5.

·Readers' g~t the ball rolling on animal cruelty case
Ann
Landers
Dear Readers: Remember the
cruel death of the h6g at the '!Yier
Coumy Fair? I received thousands of
letlCI'S from outraged readers. and it
appears that the repercussions of ~t
inhumane act have taken on a life of
CIJeirown.
: Texas Gov. George W. Bush got
wind of that .eolilmn and l'leeided 10
look in10 it. The governor asked the
Texas commissioner of agriculture,
Rick Perry. to investigate the

incidenL
Perry sent two staff members,
Loric Woodward and Katie Dickie,
IOWoodville,Thus,onafact-fmding
mission. The wo'!len met with Carol
Mofrett, supetmtendent of the
Woodville school district, Tom .
)'larvey, principal ofWoodville High ·
School, and Don Shaw,'!Yler County
Fair Association president.
Woodward and Dickie, both
~nowledgeable about animals and
hve~~k shows, sa1d they beheved
the mctdent was. "acc1dental" and the
YO!JIIgman'sacuons.to encourage the
anomaltoeatand dnnk should not be
construed as cruelty.
Rick Perry's letter to Gov. Bush
contained this mind-boggling non
sequitur: "The underlying issue

.

~----Military
,
Timothy C. Wright
: · Navy Seaman Timothy · C.
:Wright, son of Anita Wright of
•Coolville, recently relumed from a
~ix-month deployment aboard the
·amphibious assault sbip U.S.S.
~assau off tbe coast of Bosnia:Herzegovma
•: Wright traveled 26,000 miles
:l!Jlll spent 125 days afiDat during .
·~be six-month voyage to the
Mediterranean and Adriatic seas·.
Wright visited Portugal before
)'eturning 10 Norfolk, Va.
He graduated in 1993 from Fedem! Hocking High School.

which has created a whirlwind of
attention is whethei' or not an animal
has the same ri'ghts as a human
being."
Stuiln~ by that s~tenient, I wrote
10 Commtsstoner R1ck Perry with a
copy to Gov. Bush as follows:
"I' would like 10 call your attention
to the fact that what occurred was a
far cry from 'encouraging the animal
to eat and drink.' The boy who
entered the pig in the '!Yler County
Fair competition put a water hose
down the animal's throat in an efort
to add several pounds to its weight
so the hog could qualify for tbe
competition. If this tS not an act of
cruelty, I don't know what is.
"Your statement. Commissioner
Perry, that the underlying issue is

'whether or not an animal has the cansheandotherhOI'rilicdspectators
same rightS as a human' ' is absurd. condemn school officials for doing
The real issue here is that an animal nothing when they themselves stood
was tortured by a young student, by "helplessly" and watched? What
while severaladul~, incl~ding some , made them 10 helpless? Why didn't
teachers of Woodvtll~ H1gh School _, one of thoee ou~ adults rip the
and the principal of that school, SIOOd 1hose out of that boy's hands?
around and did nothing. Sincerely
The message 10 the children wbo
yours, Ann Landers"
witnessed that blrbarous act is that
And here's more on the same standing by and doing nothing is
subject:
.
acceptable. Had the adults stood up
Dear Ann Landers: You printed for what they believed in, 1 · much
ale!terfro!l'awomanwhosawaboy stronaer ~c would have been
murder hts p1g by fC)rciD~ a ,hQSC sent and the pig might have survived.
down Its .throat. I, hke you, was This is a classic exantple of what is
stckened by such behavtor.
wrong with our country. Ton many
What concerns me almost as much people don't wantiO g.et involved...
as the boy's behavior is that the VALENCIA, CALIF.
woman who witnessed this atrocity
DEAR VALENCIA: The problem
did nothing tohelp the animal. How of people 001 wanting to get involved

Monaay,May8,1815 .l

. ~

.

peted bead-to-bead in setting up
field accanmodations and defusing
unexploded ammunition and
bombs.
A belicopte~ refueling site was
set up. The five-day cOmJ?!=titioti
also tested tbe airmen's abiilties 10
provide shelter, food and airfield
support for humanitarian or
wartime situations. ·
Holtz, a pavements and heavy
equipment operator, is the son of
Chris Holtz of Wellston and Lura
Swiger·of Syracuse.
He graduated in 1987 from
Racine Southern Higb School.

cert Band recently earned a superi·
or rating at a competition at Gahan·
na Lincoln High School.
The 38-member Eastern High
band competed against other Class
C bands in tbe competition of the
Ohio Music EducaiOrs Association.
The group performed a march
and several concert overtures .
The Eastern High School band
will bold its annual spring concert
at 7:30 p.m. May 15 in the Eastern
High School gym. The concert will
feature bands from grades five
tbrougb 12.

.

ofloom Addltlo1111
oNewO..~~gee

o£1ecb leal a Plumbing
ofloollng
obthnior a Exterior

:r--River Vall

need to know how much your family wili receive when you die. .
Why is your benefit fuformation
so important to you? Remember,
Social Security benefits are
· designed to replace a portion of
your earnings. not all of tbem. The
benefits are supposed 10 serve as a
base on which you can build your
financial future. That means you'll
know whetber you need additional
disability insurance and life insurance to protect your family. The

information will help you decide within 4 to 6 weeks you'il receive a
bow .much you'll need in savings, Personal Earnings and Benefit Estiprivate insurance and investments mate Statement (PEBES) in the
to pay for such things as your chil- mail: The statement will also
dren's education and your retire- include a year-by-year display of
ment.
your earnings on which your beneIt's easy to get your Social . fit estimates are based. We recomSecurity benefit information. Just mend you request a PEBES every
call oou: toll-free number and ask us tbree years to check the accuracy of
to send you a form SSA-7004 your1earnings record:
(Request for Eaminqs .and Benefit
Contact your employer to corEstimate Statement). Complete and reel' any errors on the last two years
return the form to Social Security; of earnings. If tbe error involves

Licensed

RHETT
MILHOAN

.,

• The ·ohio. University College of world premiers of 13 quanets writFine Arts announced tbe eleventb ten specifically for it. They will be
annual Ohio Chamber Music Fcsti- performing works by Beethoven
val which will be held June 17 and Schubert and Shostakovich for the
30, and July Sin Atbens.
festival.
Opening the festival on June 17
The festival continues witb the
will be the Leontovych String · Kandinsky Trio with guest artist
Quanet. One of tbe leading quanets James VanDemark on double bass
from the former Soviet Union, the June 30. The Kandinsky Trio has.
Leontovych String Quartet bas per- appeared in re,cital, on radio and
formed more than 2 000 concerts in television broadcasts across the
the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, · United States and Canada and has
Germany and Italy.
earned an impressive array of bon- ·
The quartet draws upon a vast ors and awards. The Kandinsky
repertoire which extends from Boc- · Trio is one of only five piano trios
cherini to.Bartok and bas given to ever win tbe prestigious Cham-

.

By KEVIN GALVIN
Associated Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Many
parents aren't making their kids
buckle up, suap on bike helmets or
take otber precautions against acci·
dental injury, tbe leading killer of
children under 15, according .to a
survey released Sunday.
The National Safe Kids Cam-

paign survey found that more can
be done to protect youngsters from
crashes, burns, falls, poisoning and
other mishaps.
"The heartache, tbe nearly $14
billion cost to society of these
injuries, could be avoided,'' said
Heatber Paul, executive director of
tbe campaign.
.
As pan of "National Safe Kids

----------Community calendar--.- - -.-

Th• Community Calendar is ·· Camp. 7~ Sons of Union Veterans of
published as a free service to the CIVIl War, Monday, 7:15p.m..
non-profit groups wishing to at tbe Hope Baptist Church anne~.
announce meeting and special • Grant Street, Middleport. Program
events. The calendar is not will be by David Brennan of
designed to promote sales or Athens on two Wolfe Brothers who
fund raisers of any type. Items servetl il'r tbe Uniotr Army. Plans
are printed as space permits and will be made for Memorial Day
cannot be guaranteed to run a observance.
specific numberofltayr. ·
-MONDAY
DARWIN - Bedford townMiddleport- Brooks -Grant ship Trustees regular meeting Mon:

comp~te

~

11
IN STATE COMPETITION- Matt Morris, left, Is. in Columbus today (Friday) participating In the Ohio VICA (Vocational,
Industrial Clubs of America) electronics competition. Morris qual·
iDed for state co.;.petltlon by receiving first In the regional contest.
His alternate was Danny Rees, auto mechanics, center, who took
part In reglonals along with from the left, Jason Pierce, welding,
Jaclyn Swartz, nursing, and Trlsb McHaffie, cosmolotogy. Erica
Robie and Chad McKinney as regional officer,s were part of the
awards ceremony at the regional contest.

day, 7 p.m. at the township ball.
RACINE - Racine Board,
•
Public Affairs meeting Monday,
POINT PLEASANT- Women 7:30 p.m. in Fire Department
Alive motber/daughter banquet, 7 Annex.
p.m Monday at Shoneys, Point
Pleasant.
REEDSVILLE·- Olive Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30 at the
ROCK SPRINGS - Disabled township building.
American Veterans and ladles ault·
iliary meeting Monday.·7 p.m. at
POMEROY -. Big !lend Farm
Rock Springs Grange hall.
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30p.m.,
at the Meigs Higb School Library.

for scholarship

GREENHOUSE &amp;

AMANDA FETTY

••
Ainimda Nicole Fetty, a fourthgrader at Chester Elementary
School , has been selected as a
finalist in the 1995 Pre-Teen Ohio .

PRODUCE
Corner of Second
Street &amp; Walnut Street
Middleport, Ohio
All Flats $6.95
Mixed $7.95
All Hanging
Baskets $7.95

~·

-.--:.~

1(acine,
ali.
-· -··
"''

P'E/I(Ms J29

95

rJ~9{9{I 9{_(j fJ3f/DS
(O·'Un(imitet(JJ_9.99.•15 125.00

• Singfes2.0~

Prices good May 8 to May 13

•

$2.99 per min.
Muet be ~a·yra.
Pracall Co.

-

(602) 954-7420

mo.

Rent a
l.lmoulne for
Weddings, PNIDII
and Speelal

Oeeulons
(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
-

1 ON 1

(Depot St.) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

'1·9.0Q.656-5000
Ext. 1861
$3.99. per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.
.(602) 954-7420

PSYCHICS
Advise on future
opportunity,
decision-making, love,
success, money.
LIVE 24 HOURS

located 9 miles South of Point Pleasant W. Y. on
, Rt. 2. Turn at Crab Creek Rd. Watch for signs. Mr.
Potts has quit farming and will sell the following.
I

245 M.F. Diesel P.S. 1600 HAS., 6ft. PTO Roto hoe,
. J.D. 2 row corn planter, 6ft. grader balde, 3 pt. Lime
1·900·868·
spreader, New 3 pt. Potato plow, 10 fl. Drag harrow, 3 •
3100/Ellt. 4741
pt. 6 row sprayer wlboom &amp; tank, 16 fl. Lowboy trailer,
$3.99 min. Must be t 8 yrs.
concrete mixer, vinyl siding, Qntlque ptattonn scales,
Procatt Co.
lg. lot of hand tools, shovels, rakes, wire stretchers,
(602) 954-7420
3/4 socket set, fruit jars, lg. tarps, rabbit cages, 8
IIIIHII1110.
Lowboy trailer tires, drag, plus much more !I
Auctlon'ler·Note: Farm equipment sells at 12:00 noon.
Tractor sells w/a low reserve.
MINI STORAGE
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
NOW RENTING

RICK PEARSON AUCTION co·

Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices

New Haven, WV
304-882-2996

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS #A-116
OWNER: IRA POTIS
LUNCH MASON, WV 773·5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH LD.
Not re 0ponalble for aeeldlinta or loa a of propeny ·
· Lleel)sed and bonded In Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
West VIrginia 166

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
. 614 388-9865

Real Estate General

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you Ill We're
live and waiting!!!
•1·900-388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min • .
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420
4/2010S

KEN'I APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Factory AuthoriZed Pans

OFFICE

992·2259

&amp; Service
•All Makes •42 Years

•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers ~Dryers_- Ranges
•Refrigemtors •Fraez:ere
•Dishwashers
•H.W. Heaters
~lcrowavea •Disposals
•Thanks Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Areas
(614) 985-3561 or

NEW LISTING· Pearl St. Middleport- 1992 Modular Home on
Double Comer Lot with beautiful view ol the Ohio Rlverll 6
room, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms. Level Lot. Landscaped. New
Lennex H.PJCA Nice Place.
Asking $61,900.00
NEW LISTING· SA 124 Near Racine River Front Lot. .66+
'acre. Drilled welt, outbuilding, septic. Hook-up for Mobile
Home.
Asking $12,000

992-5335 ,.,,....

NEW LISTING· Letart· Older two story frame home.- 8 rooms,
built In book shelves. This is an older home in need of much
" repair on ,a nice large lot with some river frontage. Nice ri~er
view. Paved road . Great building site or possible fi)(er·upper.
)
Aaklng 520,000

1 Card of Thanks
r~~;;7;:7t=;:=;j
family of

•• ARE YOU SEARCHING FOR A BUILDING SITE?? HERE
~ IT IStl 8+ Acrs of level/sloping ground with a: scenic ~iew on
Gold Ridge Rd. TPC water and electric Is abailabla. Site
recenUy surveyed. Just minutes from SR 33 off 681. ASKING
; $12,000. Owner wants to sell and will accept a reasonable
• offer, MAKE AN OFFER Iff

,~~ wo~ld
J1~;~~~·
t
everyone,

',

will sponsor a FREE
cholesterol screening at the
Meigs County Senior Center
I;riday,_-M,ay U fro..tp_9_~.m. tQ.JJO.QJL.~--- I-~·- 1...
Anyone 18 and older
' ..
is invited to attend.
Fasting is not necessary
for accurate results. . "
' Please call992-2161 to register. .

S. R. 7 Five Points

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Shruhs Shaped
and Removed

Open For Business

Misc. J9bs.

Bill Slack
992·2269
949·2192

RACINE,, OHIO

I'ARMS.

Scherfel

992-5251

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer
Antiq11s

4/4/fiS

Call for all of your storage needs

Chrle

32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Oanny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

"'"""

~---

NEFF REMODELING ·
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
,
Insured - Experienced
Call Wayne NeH 992-44115
For Free Estimates

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949. 992·6471 .

Mon - Fri 8 a .m. · 6 p.m.
Sat 8 p.m. · 5 p.m.
Sun. by appl. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area .

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES .
•ADDITIONS .
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING

NEVER
'BE LONELY
AGAIN

WHALEY'S AUTO,
PARTS

· ,Must be 18 yrs.
. Procalt Co.
(602) 954·7420

(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753 .

4125fttn

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally,
&amp;
rental rates.

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING

$2 ..99 per min.

MODERN SANITATION

Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems, TraDer &amp;
House Siles.
Reasonable Roles

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

CALL 1·900·945-6100
Ext. 8587

FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

·• ., ;

:,.,.,

I

·•

• . e·

•• .,.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

614-742-2138

Kenny's Auto Rental :

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848·007
DARWIN, OHIO

Kenny's is the place to .come :
when you need a car rental.·
We Rare Cars and Vllnsl .
Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus . (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

·'"""'

I

STO-A·WAY

don't wear seat beltS on every trip
and nearly two-thirds sometimes
ride bicycles witbout wearing belmets, according to the nationaltelephone survey of 804 parents with
children age 14 and under.
Seventy-nine percent of respondents allowed children under 9 to
cross tb.e street alone and 44 percent said children under 5 weren't
·
in the bathtub.

Holzer Medical Genter's
MaxWell SO Wellness Prnn-.-"'............ 1

Extirlor

Toke the pain out of
painting. Let Ul do n for
you. Very r-. .....bte.
Free Etllmatea
Bllfore 6 p.m. leave
message.
Attar&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180-

~13115

MAY 13, 1995
10:00 A.M.

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

Light Hauling,

......, ..c.

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

&amp;TOOLS

••••, ••, &amp;

..............
lwrl""••· .......

WICKS ·
HAULING

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

DEE Tll-1111
AIID REMOVAL

PAINTIN&amp; &amp; CO.

LIVE
PSYCHICS

Weekends Caii6J4- 742-2772

· ~1195

UIDI'S

Anale"•
Graalilloute

Open Mon.-Fri . 10 a.m.-S p.m.

•

MIDDLEPORT- Investment property· 2 story brick building
• with 2 apartments. Currently rented.
Asking $13,000

MCNICHOLS RD.- 5+ acres with frame/block building• Currently used as Bait Shop. Stock and Equipment being
• sold separately. Older Mobile holle on site Is optional. MAKE
' AN OFFER
.
Asking $12,000

. t~

••
"

~

NEW LISTING· Just out of Pomeroy on Enterprise Rd. -1 1/2
Story frame home w/4 bedrooms. 1 bath, llvln~ room with
fireplace, kitchen. !'lome hap approx. 1+ acres. mce brg front
yard partially lenced. 1 car garage . Home needs some work
but has lots of potential lor only $24.900. MAKE OFFER

~ NEW LISTING· Great Business Opportunity· Just Out Of
• Pomeroy- Large 2 car bay metal garage on SR 33. Some
: utilities. cement ftoor, access &amp; traffic flow. 1 acre+. Partially
... fenood.A5i&lt;IAQ·$25,500. Make Oltorl... "

••'

'

~

PRICE REDUCED• Pomeroy- Older home that needs some
work located behind it1e n&amp;w Auto Zone Store.
Asking Only $4,500.00

Ada Warner Nease

T~::~~~.G~~:L~N~~:~~.~.:~.·.~.~:~~.~.~~~~~~~t91

•

=

TRA(;Y ~. BRINAGER..:............;...........: .............94&amp;-2439
SHERR! i.. HART...........:..................................... .742-23S1
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 ........ :.... .......................... 992-6191

•

KATHY M. CLELAND ........................................... 992..S191

Dale C~ Wa mer
Ted A.

.

Warner &amp;Fan1ilvl

Lois Warner T~&amp;~~~~~~~~

•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
101'111t ITIO.

in Chester across from
the Dairy Queen. Size
IOx28 -store cars,
boats, furniture, or ,
what ever you want.
Call 992-3961

·Hill Brothns
Produee

110\\'AIW
EXCAVATING

Flowers &amp;
Vegetable Plants

· Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Senices.
llome Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil Fill Dirt

1-6

Hanging Baskets
&amp; Flats

$6.00
Roger &amp; Tom Hill

49534 Slate Route 338
Letart Falls, Ohio
(61 4) 247-2015 daytime
(614) 949-2231 evenings

992-3838

GRAY'S

J&amp;L INSULATION
PLACE
MIODLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Sidjng,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows ·.
· Room Additions • Roofing

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)
2/1 2l92llln

5/1004 TFN

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately

ROBERT .BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New HomeS..
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

Listen to voice rnail messages left by interesting
singles of all ages. Leave messages for singles
th at interest you or open your own voice mail
bnx. It 's fun , exciting;:and :can lead to new
friendships and meaningful relationships.

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A Week- 24 Hours A Day
$ 2.99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

7'22194

B&amp;W

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-3879

Lonely? Call

Buy • Sell • Trade

Tonight!
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
· Musf be f8·yrs.
Procall Co .
(602) 954-7420

MR. RIGGS

l/1Mfn

SUMMER
IMAGES

. ROOFING

Garage and Towing
Service
Automotive and Truck
Repai r
Gas Tank Repair
Radiato r Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson,
St. Rt. 3:::8. Letart, OH .
614-247-3522

539 BRYAN

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

WHATYAMACALLIT

"'

SHOP

Chuck Stotts
614·9g2-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Wprl&lt; Welcome

NEW&amp; USED
'
• Household·
Collectible
'· 9·5 T-Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR 33N
992· 7502 or 992·5805

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

MERIT

~~

101"21/Mmn

-· ~

.

POOR BOYS TIRES

11 7)-.'\.131 - 6 7)-.133~
I kmkrson. \\\
Call Lnn Nl'al For The D.: aI ·\t Th.: !\:ell Stn1c

.. . - ........
_'COMPANY
-,

REFIN~CE_

CONSOLIDATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit
.
' Our Spec ialty

1-800-MERIT-98
M8#0489

..

,

One mile out
143 from AI. 7
Tues.-Wed.-Fri.·Sat.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

Howard l. Writesel

1--------------'----.,...---1

"5~ WE
HAVE ALtnLE BIT OF EVERYTHING, BUT WE NEED
MOREll THE MARKET IS GOOD AND NOW IS THE TIME
'(
,

.STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 7

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

flowers ,
Open 9:00-2:00
I PFiaye1rs, vis[tatlons
5:00-11 :00
Ico•ntributions to the
16 for 25.00 ,
oi . Christ.
I s~&gt;eciial · thanks · to
12 for 20.00
Douglas Hunter,
Call 992-2487
. nurses,
aides,
Owners: Pete &amp;
employees of Ext•endedl
Dil!ne Hendricks
Doclors
of V&amp;l£tran:s I
Memorial . Hospital
Emergency
Ewing Fune ral Home,
Rev.
Underwood, Har·risc&gt;nvillel
Order of the
Stars
and
!l~ll!leare.[~.·'.. Y.P.\!f ""'!'~' J.. ~~--,;;;....;:::.
kindness and love
very comforting.
PURCHASE
George 'Jack" Warner

' · . OFFICE.................................................................. !!f12-2259
·'

..

Reroofing, etc.
614-742-2165 or
304-882-3704
Ask for Mike

Ext 2579

PUBLIC
AUCTION
FARM EQUIPMENT

her Music America award. They mngingl from tbe cl~si~al to tbe
will peffo~m works by Haydn, conte':"porary. The tno will be perBouesini, Brahms and J.-arsen on formmg works by Beethoven ,
June 30.
Schubert and Dvorak. .
.
Concluding tbe festival on July
All (lerfonnances will be beld ~n
8 will 'be the Vienna Piano Trio. tbe. rec1.1ru. hall at 8 p.m .. at Ohm
The trio is comprised of three Umverstty s school ofmustc.
exciting musicians witb stu.nning
T!ckets .ror The Ohio Chamber
virtuosity and musicianship. In M~stc Fcsuval wtll goon sale June
1989 the Vie~na Piano Tr~o ":'as L m th~ Fone Art&amp; Tu;k.et omce
awarded a ceruflcate of distmcuon located m Kantner Hal~ open 12-4
as the best piano trio by the p.m ..Monday. tbrough Fridar.
Academia Musicale Chigiana.
Ttckets wtll also .be avatlable at
The trio bas made tlrequent con- the door one hour pnor lO eac~ percert appearances throbghout Aus- . formance. Call 593-4800 for mfortria and Europe witb a repertoire mation and reservations.

I

•

1~

SAT~RDAY,

earlier earnings, call Social Sccuri- Social Security benefits . Beghming
ty's toll-free number 1-800-772- in October 1995 and each year
1213. You'll be asked to provide 'thereafter, Social Security will
evidence, such as W-2's and pay automatically send a statement to
stubs, to support tbe correction.
people who reach 60 during the
You won't bave lo ask Social year .and are not receiving Social
Security for a Personal Eaminqs SeCurity benefits. By tbe tum oftbe
and Benefit Est'lmate Statement if century, workers wbo are age 2~
you're age 60 or older. By Septem· and ·older will receive a Personal
ber 30, 1995, Social Security will Earning and Benefit Estimat~
bave mailed statements to about Statement each year to help tbe~
nine million persons who are 60 plan tbeir financial future.
·
and older and not already receiving

-

949-2817

MITCH'S

Ft'H Estimates
Porches, Decks,

5 bedrooms, bath, warm moming gas stove . Brick fireplace,

Scholarship and Recognition Pro•
gram to be held June 9- 11 in ·
Columbus. The event recogt1izes
girls 7 to 12 ranking in the top 10
percent of the state academically.
She is tbe daughter of Mike· and
Janice Fetty, Pomeroy.

0

8

·1

Week," the campaign is distributing millions of safety checklists to
children through schools and
stores.
· The campaign, fpunded by
Johnson &amp; Johnson in 1987, is a
coalition of national and grassroots
groups dedicated to raising awareness about child safety.
About one-third of families

. Yoar Pho1e

(lllltstone Low lites)

•'

Most kids aren't adequately protected· against injury

'
. · HERB WEEK TEA - A tea in observance of National Herb
· Week was held Sunday afternoon at the Meigs County Public .
: Library Sunday afternoon by the River Valley Herbalists. There
. was an extensive display of herbal products, herbal foods and leas
w·ere served, and those attending were given free fennel plants.
. }'ennel has been designated as the 1995 Herb of the Year by the
International Herb Association. Here, from the left, Eva Robson,
Denise Arnold, Mildred Shumway, and Sbeliu Curtis finish one of
the displays.
·

Fetty to

Auctioneer
35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Cert~led Personal
Property Appraiser
Bonded (614) 992-4079
41411

carpenter Work

Laure{LitfUJ
Service

57-94645v

..
''
•'

MITCHEU'S
CONSTRUCTION

As Close As

1N"""'

Ohio University hosts Chamber Music Festival . :

H

Y01r
Sweetheart Is

Painting
Alao CoRC111le Work·
(FREE ESnMATES)
Y.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992~215
Pomeroy, Ohio

'·

[Knowing how to Use PEBES helps in building a stable financial future
· : By ED PETERSON
: Social Security Manager, Athens
Knowing approximately bow
much money you'll receive in
: Social Security benefits should be
. an important part of your personal
· financial planning, regardless or
· your age. You should know bow
much you and your family would
: receive if yQu became disabled and
· could not work. You also should
: know bow much your benefits will
; be when you retire . .And you'll

lOIII'S
UIPiml SEIVICE

• 7

-----Society scrapbook
FINANCIAL SEMINAR
ness Development Center of South- SpeUing Bee later Ibis montb.
A fmancial seminar on "Access east Ohio in Athens, and Kip
Collins won the 47th Annual
to Capital" will be held at 7 p.m. Tauber of Acenct in Atbens.
Regional Spelling Bee at the Hunt:J'uesday at tbe Meigs County PubReservations arc being accepted ington, W.Va ., Civic Arena by
lic Library conference room. The by Randy Hays, Farmers Bank and spelling tbe word 'medusa' - a
event is being sponsored by Farm- Sayings Co., 992-2136.
word used to describe a type of jelers Bank and Savings Co.
lyfish.
· · Guest speakers will include SPELLING WINNER
An eighth grader at DawsonTyler Collins, 13, of Ironton, . Bryant Intermediate S'cbool,
: Julia Houdashelt-Tbomton, Meigs
: County Economic Development great-grandson of Etbel Arbaugh, Collins is tbe son of Roger and
· Director; I ackie LeBerth, Enter- Tuppers Plains, recently won a Jbonda Collins and the grandson of
: prise Development Corp. in round-trip \ticket and a week in Iretta Parker of Coal Grove.
Athens; Douglas Green , CPA, Wa&amp;bington, D.C. to compete in
EASTERN BAND
. ·assistant director of the Small Busi- the ScripJ?s-Howard National
The Eastern High School Con-

The Dally Sentinel • Pitge A7

hasserioussocialtqlei'CUSSIOIISihi

go beyond spealdng out 10 stop ttof:
torture of a piJ.
·
t
Too many people hive bee~
reluc!P~ 10 ~ their necb ,out ••
and !halls satltndeed. We all need to
remember that we·are our brother's
keeper.
·
. When p/illlning a ~dding, wlw
pays for wltm? Wlw siiJIIds whete?
'The!.nnl..alukrsGuitkforBrid.es"
haJ all the aiiSWtrs. Se~d a s~lfaddressed, lon.g, busl/ltss-sue
envelope mul.a ~heel: or miJMyolfkr
for $3.(5 (this mcl~s postage Oltd
handlr11g) to: Br1des, clo. Ann
lAnders, P.O. Box 11562, Chteago,
Ill. 6061/..()562. (In Canada, sertd
$4.55.)

news---------- r--VICA contestants----

Larry A. VanMeter
degree and 1992 from the UniversiNavy Petty Officer Third .Class ty of Arkansas with a master's
Larry A. VanMeter, son of Larry degree.
·
VanMeter Sr. of Cheshire, recently
graduated from tbe Defense Lan.
Jelfrey F. Holtz
guage Institute.
Air Force Staff Sgt. Jeffrey F. ·
VanMeter studied foreign lan- Holtz competed with 400 other Air
guages at Naval Technical Training Force active, reserve and national
at Goodfellow Air Force Base in guard engineers 10 determine the
"best of tl)e best" in .civil .engineerSan Angelo, Texas. Tbe 1980 McCallum High ing.
School graduate of Austin, Texas,
Holtz tested for combat abilities
joined tbe Navy in December 1992. in war-like situations. .
He graduated in 1987 from OklaTbe crews were tested In rapid
homa Christian University of Sci- · runway repair, defusing unexplod- '
ence &amp; Arts with a bachelor's ed ammunition and bombs, com-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohlct

'·

'

Stop In &amp;
to.
A FREE VCR
a;.;._ay JU110 lstlJSti.n 1or

W1nner on 8 1g Country Radio

�J

MondaY, llq 8, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Deily Sentinel • Page M

NEA Crossword· Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

'

KIT 'N' CARL YLEe by Larry Wrtpt

Announcements

40Accsh

uo

Giveaway

oiO 7 3

-

4302.

:=., ".:1 ::r...:. =~
~r - · ao.ooo -

35 Loti &amp; Ac11111gl

Pu-

ghr_,

ooll 114- · - - - - - - - - -

11

Help wanted
12 W11. old -~~~""""',;,.;..,.~. •
A - 8ELI.81T8ELF1

ldn:=ia

lWo malo
)JIIIilioppy; • .

Lost &amp;

6

,.,_...., . . -411/hr. ,.. w...
, . _ -IIIII - n l a l

l;'ound

Fournf. nMo lomlla 011 1n ta.
Enttirprloa.a..., -~

F.....a: J'"'ng - l o Coilo
near Burllngfiam, hM a...
trained, 114-186-1112.
IAol: molo mlrUiun CGI!Ia In
RuUand Ylclnlly, H plaa•
caii&amp;WN2478CI.

Yard Sale

7

&amp; VlclnHy
Tuoo, Wod Thura, 1072 second
Avonua, ~CA movloa, dra,.a,
lompa, laola, boll oarda, llohlng
oqulpMML tu ..........
grill, mlac.
ALL Yord S.loo 8a Pold In
Adnnco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bolonl 1M ad lo lo run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llonday adiUon " 2:00
p.m. s.turdlly.

loloy 11 •13th. Moot Thi!'G'I .2511
Computlfl', ClothH A Mlec. 381
State Route 211, Galllpoll-.

Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
All Yard S.ln MuM 81 Pakl In
Ad 11nc:e. O..dlll'lll: 1:00pm thl
day beiOrt Uw ad l8 to n.~n,

Sunday edition.. 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:DOa.m.
. Saturday. ·
Public Sale
&amp;Auction
Rlc:k Pear10n Auction Company,
tull . Umt auctlonMr, complete
IINlcl.

' Lk:111Hd

166,0hlo &amp; Wut VIrgin .., 304.

77J.5785 Or 304-773-15~47.

9

wantld to Buy

Cl .. n Ute Modef c.... Or
TfUCka, 1987 Modlll Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontloc, 1900
Ea .. •m.Av•nue, GalllpoU1.

dtcorllted ttonawt,., wall tel•
phon••· Did lampe old lher·
mom.tlfl, old clock., antlqua
tumhura. Riverine Antiquel.

Run Moor' owner.

eM-~2·

2528. Wt buv eetalet.

Can't Junk Kt Sell Ua Your NonWorking
· Retrlgeratora,'
FrM.Hra. Washtrt
Dryere,
Mlc'rowavnl Color T.'v.·, YCR 'a,
Air CondK oner11, Cur(lput•r.,
OUieo Machin•, EIG. &amp;14-256t238.
J 1 D'a Auto Porta ond Safyaga,
buying wrteki,Junk autoe &amp;
truckli. Alao, pa rts tor ...._ 304~5343 ot n:J..50l3.
Wonlad to bur· antiquo and
UHd lurnlture no tt.m •oo
or too email. Wi1.1 buy one pleoe
ot complete Htal•, Oaby Marlin, I'M-982·'JIK1.

•rv•

W.nlod To Buy: Junll Auloo
Wllh Dr Wllholll ........ Coli
Larry Uvoly. IM 388 11301. '
Top PrieN Paid: All Old U.S .
COina, Gold Alnf'!! Sllv• Colna,
Gold Co1na. II. .a. Coin Shop,
1111 ......... QalllpoUo.
Wanted: Good u.d P&amp;.no To
OIVNwaJ, ti4--24J..II87.

Employment

11

Services

Help Wanted

AVOII I AN ArNe I Slllrtor
Spollra. ~75-14211.
AVON to bu)' or ..u, M•f!IJ~.:. ln-

~~;;:· -

4112.
Wll Do lhlarlor, Exterior Pol"" 211 Trocta 01 LaM, Land c....
T~
Oallonll: -P. /Rap. =Ina"-nablo ,Rataa, Ex· troct 8 To M - ; 8 Acroe
1.apo.lQ4131. ·
ncod, Aa ....r-. Fot Fr• III,IICIG, Down,.. ttoo Par
2424::;:H711.:.::'= Mont~,=- oa....County,
.........., ...... .., 1 1 ...... •-;::;:::;::tu,=;:eau:==;:;-:=:
..~
--hove~ "
Jock
, -...-.
tloft. ,......, 01 ,
•
Wll II whb lldtrlr;,dly •hHI. 314ttere lot, lh&amp;lla• HilL J04..
Ughl hoUuwOf'fl
PNPIH 171-4331.
·
Child .... .
~-~· -·~
1.32- :m • - r!dga lop
11 31. . - homo
ay • n building aHa,
Ra;bum
3 ohll . , I 18. Ad, .....,.bla NOtrlotloM. No
tlon ,......... tnl tpo'tOIIon to
olnglo •lda,.:r.l- ....... lnutraounlcut.. aotlvtlln. Apo
1
·~ ,....
pllcant mulll ~· •n exceltomm on
tel on rwqulllt.
7
1an1 drtvtna . - . eou-v. 21
Business
~ w:m.
•
·
13M after lpm.
0p
IODM Co., WY, approa. 242,820
Non..s.nollar 1~-~po:=rt::=u~n:.;;H!.'I__ boord toot - l n g timber
!NOTICE!
IDoyjo), noor ""'""' G. J04.J113.
Sabyalllar In lly Nomo Fot 2 I"
ChlldNn,l Daya A WMII. 'IM- OHIOVALLEYPUIUSHINOCO. l30hflw5prn.
446..utUIIor 7 P.M.
racommanda lllot )'011 do buol- CampoHo 11011100 P,IOG 080,
Ea~...l Excel,_ Payl M- -with peoplo Y'"' 1...., and 304_.112-2412, I To I.
NOT to aand money llvougn the
...,
Proclucta AI HomO. Call mall 1111111 ,... he¥0 lnnollgotad S.anle V-. Applo 0rO¥a,
1~~ Fraa, 1.aoo.4117.a5111, Eat.. the ollarlllf.
. baaut)lul :lao lOta:il'~llo watw,
Clydo - . . Jr,
7S-2UI.
~---¥ENDING: Won1 ~I Rich
- 1 naw:rorta rapollw. 0v1c:k. Wlll Clot A Bloody, Caah SEVERAL 7-ACAE Po\ACEIJI.
em
."'-w:::'ta....... ~how
lncoma, Prlcad TQ llal~ 1.-. ,._,, baalllllul.. ~clgoiOF lond;
''·"""'
-..
fl20.t782.
llalgo County ....umblo Twp.,
llecklii'OIIIld.
putw
llount Union ltd: flWp. Rd, 14),
$1100/acra. Call lor goOd map, I·
llnoWiodga • pi~&amp; Band raauma 23 · Professional
to UlnctV KMrna. Edhor; Point
814 813 Uti.
P I - I Aagistor, 200 llatn
Services
Str..t. Point Pttuant, ·WY
WIIO. No phona oatiL
Rentals
RU'INANCE
Join lhe long-term .hl1fth care ~r Paymanta, Debt eon.
llald. Booking Cartlllad Nuralng· IOIIcfaUon. HoeM Rr:edl•fna, - - - - - - - - - Aaalotanll 1i1r INI-bod akiiiN C..dll - . .
41 Houses for Rent
nuralng lociiHy. ApplY Polnl No 0111 Of Pockot ~1LNva
• 2bodroom, 1112 Hogg Sl.
PI-nt N..,.lng I Aa'hobiiH• w.etiiiO
Uortgago
. DopooH 1 loaaa Nqulrad.
tlon Center, Sial• Route 12. F-tad
·
U75mo. 304-1112-2221.
Route 1, Box 321, Point PtNIInt 1111101101.
WV 25550. lA Qlonmo"' M5 AOO&lt;na /Bath, $3t10111o. $350
aoclataa Facll~rl EOE.
O.poeh, v..r le.aM, 42 VInton
Avenue, ' Gallfpalla, I14-448--

11ar1::2

---MIMI.

•.12.

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

""*·

·

el),= 1::::..:;;:=-----1

3504,1A.M.... P.M.

ol 1968 which makes I! Illegal
tri adve rtise "any prelerence,
limitation or discrimi nation
baSed on race , color, religion,
seKfamilia l status or national
ori gin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
!Hn i!atlon or discrimination ."

.-a.am.

knowllngly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation olthe law.
Our readers are hereby
in formed that all dwellings
aove" lsed In lhls newspapar
· are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

11171 Fotd E180 aoti,~IU,

\'o,...

--Wool VIrginia •-y Not'·--•
"~
_,
-Ouarcl hM lmmldllte openlnaa
lor lndlvldLIOio with f'IGr
military axporklnoo. you
Join, you wort! on • aOod
rwQramonl plan, 0,. ollglbfa 10
•PPIV' tor edUcational ......
11nce, 1nd rKelv• your monthiJ
p1ych1ck. all tor 1 part-time loti.
GO TO GERMANY WITH US IN
AUGUST FOR lNNUAL TRAINI~QI 304-176-5837 ,.. 1 . - 2 3111t.
g,u::k

d'l:'.:::''ad-w.~'i'!'ht=

t....U, mull ho¥0 own ,';,oclcll
oard" ...van daya p.- waalt, oaU
&amp;M-•f7.:zet14.

Clonoral ............. Polrtl!ng,
Yard Work Wlndowe WUMG
Qutl.,. Cloonad Light Houllng,

Using the Classifieds ~"l~r:g:J! -"'""· Stave:

Homes for Sale

Houaa And Ld~ Low Down
Payment, E"-r · "rma, 3 Badroom-, 1 latll, LDcalad N.. r
VInton /Bidwell Aru. Coll1.jiQO.
448-liOV Alk F~ Mal thew.
2,..ory praga. beHit NrM
Hovan Bu=oaimmartlat, bottom
oom
"'" ,.,.,dtlad, 2
....
,
boya: l•onl boy 40 128' • ...,
bay ' :12'1231, 100'•40' lol,
.,a.•-. iiO+eG.z!N.
,.....
houoa, 2 e~~r ,..,. ....., 4
•~
•
•
outbu ldlnfll', 2 wolla1••~ppro•
314oc... A! 33 Lotort, wv. Vlow
of Ohio Alvor, noodl -Ira.
=-~~ *-8&amp;5-3S1J ot

..__::1.

*"

3 Bldroom Home, £xCIIItnt
Condition,
Coowonlont
Rio
Qrondo l..ocotlon, Now KHc:hon
Root, Cllr Bohoola, 31
. .... 1511,000, 114-24U:IG8.

4

I

':.1 n.!J:ar,'
s.- "r.··•
o.. __

Chlldc:ara 11-F l -:30pn1Aoaa
2-1(,
Du•rlng
uo.
-""'~ &gt; ~ C
- ·
lmum • .
.
·

.. -

I

l4&amp;13tltl

..-.....

PEANlJTS

- -·matching

Uao
...,......
.
. . 304
3111101.

S200. Watarbod, q........,.., iUi
wave wn.aadboatd, mil,_ I
....... uc. oond
17s:iiii on.r

17S-i225 ,..,.. "'

......

.,50. -

Rooky

Countrv FumllurH'umMura lw
Evilly Room. &amp;ml.itsAleiJ .North,
Pt.
:J04.8 ' D.

APPLIANCES

~EKE

100o4VWI09.

Transportation

-N44f. · .

Sam lomarvllla'a Army lurplua,

71

Autos tor sale

&amp;ERNEST
118S
Colem..
(crowdac!l,1)'1onllo
00111. hw. 211111
PIPtaaaant.

John-Boll
2 onolnt ·

8f&gt;ruOI An., ·

MULTIMEDIA
fQU/PMeNT

a~~~~·~·~~~~~~~~-­
1173 PtyiiiOIIth Road Ru,_,

BandVvllll Poll Ollloa, I
h no ahacloa).

:£1.J::'.

T.v..

MJcrowav., 011ik. ChaW, 114-

2118-1287, Call Aftw 7 P.ll.

Batallka . , . . . $300. Potoh
awning, lx24ft • - • $200.
Dry• $21. 34144711-1lllll ....
tlpm.
S.a,. .-:trkl hal Wltw hMtw,
atlll In boll, 1300, aaH lor
N&amp;O, IM Ill 3510.

Fum~

lUJW, 6t4-44e..C)Q21,

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowNaad

No appliance~, Ho• 1 hold turnlahlng. \12 mi. Jorrlcho Rd. Pt.
PINHnlil WV, oall 304476-1450,
... 418 -t41.
'

lui a1 lhe - 1 IMp! aora,
24,000 ....... ""· lllap ollc:k

· ·

r
........._ ON/..Y AS A
' ICEST S'TOP.

• SOFTWA,e •

11111 BonnaviUa, ••rr·good • dhlan, aaklng $1,000 &lt;wtrada tor 18111 Ya...... 1150 Jot Sid,
tn~c:k al
nl•. 3Q4.S'M- 12,300, Good Condition, .......1·~
40tll.
.
073.1 •

• TELeVISION·

...a

18112 Buick Part! Avenuo, nona

~

·"• tMICl&gt;w ~~E •

aut-c, orr, am/lm, original
condition, flllr to goad .nlpe.
$2500, 814-fle2o4t11. '

good, $800. 304475-1215.
1g112 Oklo wagon, 21a v.a, un

U.

••rr o-

r ·....._.

- · A d - - . $62,000,
11W&amp;7·72&amp;7.

Fumla...,. Apartmod, Utllhl•
Paid, 1 Bedroom, .Upetalra,.
f~bd
· 8 ~ ~~~~ Bacond Avonua, GoUipolla, No
:;:ytlrM fll l1.f-.441..1H1~ ::.~~cellant Condition, 114-

1

...., 7 a.m. I 3 P.lll.
Fumlthld Eftk:ltncy Share
Modular lor oot. food. Both. All Ulllhklo Pokf, $145/Mo.
room, two bltft. kllchln, DR, 111 fSecond A.... _'11-''~~~ C.M lor &amp;~1141. ·-·""• - ,_..,
I ladr_, 2 I~ 2,000
llq. Fl. Homo In Galli Ia, No
Tu• Fot 14 Yaaral
Down
And Ow._. Flnanolng To
Qualified IIIJW. 11t Ulan
Pliny fllooon Co), .....,room
country holM wllpPM arct.n:t.
Uaotoo. !1114_.17~31.
Mobile Homes

S:M,- -.

111111 14•711 ti&lt;JIIna, 2 flad.
St-, IWIIaarotor1
........_ .... 2 Daolta, llantacl
;:::"':""'dd'':'..":!,
- , t••
- ~
. ~ - · -•~.7D02, .-11-11301.
'

.,D5/Uo.

Fumlohod lltlclancy
Ulllltloa Pold. Shore Both, IICI7
.•Ga.'"'""""'
. &amp;11 II&amp;' 1111
Altar 7 p

· Gradoue living. 1 lind 2 bed--

apertmelitl Ill VlllaQI
llonor
and
Rlvortldo
Apat1mt:RII In Middleport. From
$2324358 • C. II &amp;14-1112-811&amp;1.
room

'

76

..

Equot - n g eppor~..,n~ao;
Nleo :jbod-m wid hookup.
Aolo......, Do,aaH. No poto.
4'/UIIa.
- ·~• '
Nleo oow bodraom opartmont In
Pl. P - 114-11112.UU.
0na llod_,. · - In PI
Pt .... nt, turnlolwd, aloon I
nlcl, ,. peta. Phone .....,.....
138f.

-·
r

. .

1Win
lllvara T - naw oacopl·
ll1a oppllcaUO&lt;W
#W 1br. HUD
auboldllad opl. for _ , and
ltandlcappod. E0H 30HI&amp;1111.

=•

'::l.t~=:~:s·

¥low
..
•
mo.,
-.,w -~o,..
..._n o polo, 114-tltl:l-47114
""

2

4·

·

aowan'e Homu1,..
7281.

~

Q8

I

nt

2
traotoro, Ill l!fii'O
porta. $&lt;lOll. - • '
at 1
~
Daull 1801 Traolat lherp,
ua,
7
Flnloh. ~ &amp;.4084·
111.5110· AC
h,IIU;
Clramy tractot, 40l ohonii\UIII. T020 i'oiauoon ~IIU·71'1. Hor
loddo(. ;!0+17~.
. BltMI SJ,pfll; 114
~h2

For~our
1n1

"'ll home81""···
or ~-

oa-

JET
AERATION IIOTORI
R-lrad , N.. • ·-~ ··M In
·~ _Cfll..fl..,· li¥ana,
- - 1.-.
•
Stool&lt;.
a:IJ-11528.
•
•

63
-

Livestock

I - •••

Ratu:a a·-~ .....

- ...,.Dwaof..-tr!o
_,
"""
• - 111 ·1
_IJna.,
Up, 1 Or All, t14-215-41f11.

endorHiftont

I •

Pass

Pass

•

Not1h
1•

1 Holr protein
2 Golden sherry
3 LHIIe bono
4 Aclrwu

Francis •
5 AbsolUte
6 Spoken

2•

Pass

Eos1

Pass
Pass
Pass

•J

This week's deals are taken from the
February issue of New Zealand Bridge.
The content of the magazine is ai!"ed
at bolh g!JO(I players and the less expe·
rienced. Asix·issue annual subscrip· • 6-+-+-tion may be ordered from The Bridge
World, 39 West 94th Street, New York,
NY 1002o· 7124 for $22 seamail or $59
airmail.
writer recanted !sic!! how he and his
wife won an event. And there was this
deaL !The awful bit 'comes at lhe end.&gt;
' One rebids in a five-card suit only as
a last resort, but it is clearly right with
that North hand.
In six no·trump, there are II top
tricks and two logical ways to go for
number ·12. You can cash the spade
ace , planning to duck a spade next.
This wins if the spades break 3·3, or
someone holds the doubleton queen·
jack. or West has a singleton honor; or
if the diamond finesse works .
Alternatively, you can take two dia·
mond finesses through East.
Mathematically, the double-diamond·
finesse line is better. Also, the spade·
duck line suffers from the potential
drawback that if East wins the second
spade and switches to a diamond, you
don't know whether to finesse. So, you
win the opening lead with dummy's
king and play a diamond to your nine.
When the king appears, you claim.
,
The author ended with one of the
worst jokes I had read in a long time. '
A man goes in1o a bar with a cabbage
·
under his ann.
"What do you think of my new dog?"
he as~ the bannan.
"Dog? That's a cabbage, mate!"
"What' I thought it was a cauli.''

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptog~ms are c:rea!ed trom quolaho•• by ramous P«l91f, paa1 anc1 ~
EliCh ietler In !he opher stal'lds tor ahother Today's au.: R otqu.at~ F

'KVFO

s0 z

LAMG

AVKVOX

SBGJ.'

IANZI0 XON.

'0 E 0 K
PeG

v

PXOK

T· V L . '

-

P B G

SVJJSO,

v

P V S S .V B C

'NORNVLONBJZN'

VONNM.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There are two kinds ol people tho'se who finish h t
they start and so on .· - Robert Byrne. •
'
w 8

G u~,
R
L A F ........~,I.
'I~.;...,..:..,,
2
:;...:..:..1.. , . : . _ 1

I

~

I

NYWD!

-G,.-U_,J.,....E-r-D-r~/::;:,'

I

Truck bado. Chev., Fotd, Dodgo, :

j
.

I

1

I ~~mplete
-1-0-

and S.10, ehott &amp; long.

1288.

304-871:-.

' -- -

.

Truck toppor lor 8' bod.
304-175-24111.

79

Csmpers

?"

rhe chuckle quooed
b y l tllm g 1n the missmg WOfd5
you d~v elop f rom step N o. 3 below

-.l..-.l..-.1..-.l..-.1.--l. ,

L..

8

m:

PRIN1 NUMBERED LETTfR S IN
THESE SQUARES ·

1•
I

r· .• •

I' 1•
I I

&amp;

Motor Homes
=...,.:,..,:,.:.:.;,.;,.:.:..:,;,;,:.:..
__
1174 2T Titan motorhome, fully
aall..ontalnodl
doub....,_
"trlgtrator, m crOWive, roof air,
"rga genaralor, 20' awnlna,
IO,OOOml. $8,000. 304_.75~1411;

" ...or'\ our,
am 1

mo·" '
01'1'\~

1875 2&amp; FL $oll.contolnad,
C.mplng Troller, $2.800, 114446-3485.

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS

1m Cll¥11cado 10 112' !ruCk
camper, Mlf-contllned. AIC,·
mlcrow1v1, •mlfm Cauttte. ..,
ceUent condlllon, $2500, IW'
1112·2:151.

MAY

1988 Gaorvla Boy mocor 11om1t
wJcar dolly, 18.~ml, loaded,
ilka now. 304_.75-21111.

Services
·

5, 5 , 9 5

Docket- Lapel- Bravo- Campus - PLACE to PARK
. "You , could ' save more time if you drove on the
freeway .' a colleague iold his pal. "Yes ," his pallaughed
"but I would only lose that time looking for a PLACE to
PARK.'

•

11'1 !

Home

Improvements

'-Your
'Birthday
-·-

As lro·G ra ph Ma t c hm ai&lt;er rn s l a nta'y
reveals which s1gns are romantically per·
feel for you Mail $2 .75 to MatChmaker ,
c/o thiS newspaper . P 0 Box 4465, New
Yo rk, NY 10 163.
GEMINI (May 21 · June 20) Your resolve
-wtll prob-ably s ta rt ou t as strong. today,
bu l un fo rt una te ly , 11 m1g h t d 1ssi pate
betore too tong. Strive to be consistent
a nd persrstent.
·
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) Face chal·
leng1ng development s op t 1m1SI 1Cal ly.
. today, but not unreallsllcally . The hne of
demarcat ion between these two factors
could be a bll blurred
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) If you are care-

fuliSdiW.f&gt;fav ~~..,.9~-~~ ....-!.~!i~~~ckl~~n th ~.

' In the year ahead you can put le_ssons

qu pme

pompoully

s0 GL y5
1--T~..:.TI
. 5;.-;;..,..:...,:.....~-,

Aoglolwod llborlan Huatry, 11
lolonta. Old For Sola Or Troda,
·-18110, -~11131, PtwL-.

61 F nn E

DOWN

From the didja ever notice
department: "Those who are
qu ick to judge others try hard·
.
.
.
.
.--------~ est to get out of serving - • a

BER('·JICE
BEDE OSOL

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

57-•et

28-C-ord
28 8pMk

• j

Com~lolo zg a.~ Flail Tank 1
Stand. 3 Lg. Shor• 8" ·111" 4
Catft.h, PICDIQmla 114-44811650.

=...:-

· ~

'bO MlflU\E.~1·

ASTRO·GRAPH

End To 1 11oo, 30Hl'J.7711.
cuototn 210wort ..,ptlflor liNd ·
4. Cualom 2·11" ...,_.
•· · • • •·-81&lt;ftat- dolr.aia S150. 304·773'5304.
Elactolo
WhHtc:holrw
And
Scool- Now And llaad, tn.
dOot And OulcloO&lt; Uodata,

.

I !:l(...ltfo.R IT TOO&lt;.~ ~cu:_ AN.D
A. f.\i'-J..f TO 1-!A.TCJ\

Boola Br Rod Wlng Chi-•
--40 To ~0 ~I'Ma, li.H. Brown
Guarant•, I.Owoot Prloaa, Tho
Shoo C.fo, .,... 41-1~.

Couch:., ~alr1 _ Cofloto Toblo I

••

-BQRN-WSER

2 Twin Slzo lolonr- 114-441-'
11301, 1-400.287.. 308.
.

Conc:nta • Plaotle Saplle
TanS...&amp;. 300 Thru 2,000 Ckllane
Ron lll'l8nl Enterprt.-. .taoka
.... 0111-IONJ74521.

41 Mllooge
lndle81or '
51 F rult dllclly
52 ActorGu'-&lt;
53 Winglike
54 INMII airline
(2wdo.j.
55 Afllrmotlve

56 DopHd !

21 t:;ozy room

The magazine isn't perfect. One

8aoond outtlng hay "" ....
IICfUOra ....... , _ , .... 814MWO&amp;I.

AofrlliOJOttwa, ... And llrpra, All Aacondlllonad
·And Gaurantaodl $100 And Up,
Wlll DoiiYOt.

LAYNE'S RJANITURE
Complete homo lumlaHinga.
HoUN: II...Sol, N. ~0322, S mil• Dill Bula¥111a Pika
F - Qallvory.

2 criba, 2 car .ota, play Fin, fn.
fant carrW, bottt.. diaper
Hai, l'fiobJii", tloeha MNiiVm
to 12 month. boy 0&lt; girl, 114-1'122112.

..

81., Moo!!', wv. a.Poa.-.
-'111-1341.

And Choat 01
-- ·
... Aat.tnii080, 114·3&amp;7-04113.

rang•. !lkogga Appll.nc., 711
Yll1i Slraal, Clll114'441-na&amp;, ..

·Moving S.lo: Houaahold

CRAZ'{!

on

Wo..._ d,.... r o l r l . -

LDYelut Loynge Chair.

ME

Aad Ualll luhk 1Win On
Top FuM
Bottom~ With llot1-.oa, lndudao ....... Wllh

p-

USEO

- · ...

A&amp;S Furniture. Wo lruy, aall and
•. . .
a~/1 J
how 1holcl
WMI buy
any arnaunt, 1ort1
• 101

-

0000

·

s~e's
!=lf;I~TIN6 .. 11M
JUST 51TTII'I6

AND '(OU DO IT ALL
THE TIME! IT rJ~IVFs .

~.4-nlghla.

aholr,

.... ·~
... ~-·

By Phillip Alder

Goods

Couch

.

Which breed
.is that'?

Rae........,.

Carpet &amp; VInyl In SlaCk $5.00 Yd
I Up 80 Pattama 01 Kitchen
C.rpot In Slack. Ower :15 Pol•
lama 'llnrt In Stock. - . . ,
Carpota, 414o441'lll44.

West

lead:

Gao Fumaoo- lloat .,..,_,
Vary
p~ Clnri
UoOd 25KW Elaololo " ' " control
Eo'
llmotaa,"l'~m:-~Or 114o

Houuhokl

South
6NT

,._ tOO.OOO ITU HI lfftahnai

Merch andise
51

MIICilllneoutl·

LET ME RUN
HOME AN' FETCH
MY STEWPOT,
ELVINEY!!

MllrchanciiM, ·

ft. ne dilL AtlipOftd' In wrllfni
to&gt;P.O. lol72ol.-. OH.

Merchandise
11.1 cu. ft. Hotpolnl refr1g. .tDt,
whlta. Phone 304-476-7171

!I!

54

....
-....
ond

OOW::l"

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
$18,100, _...,Ill.
UTATEIJ &amp;2 Wo ........ Drlva
ln&gt;m N&lt;lo to Uti. Walk Ia ahop
I leclroonw, 2 B..,_, He8t ' mow•a. Call 114""*25611· E·
Pump, Gao Furnooo, 1 AerO. qual Houalng ~unHy.

J::

lun Valley Nu....., School.

.... -

I'LL BE HAPPY
TO HELP OUT,
LOWEEZ.Y!!

KINFOLKS COMIN' FER.
, SUPPER AN' I DON'T
KNOW WHAT
.
TO FIX!!

SWAIN
wh..l, power . . - l more. $100.
Unfumlthed
two
bedroom . AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
St., Galllpolla. New&amp;
304-47114571.
houu, •poeh and retef11nc• Ollv•
lumhur~~, hutera, WHtWft •
rtqulrad, no ·.,... ,IIJM-It2..3Qi0.
)'lortl boolo. 81.,......3151.
42 Mobile Homes
VI'RA FURNrrUAE
114-448-3158
for Rent
DLIIIIhy HouHhold Fumfture · Slalford Ova ptoca Uvlng nrom 11t4 Ponllaa Floro, looU I runo
aune tor Nle; new JltV'If' Und
rut. 200ml an "bultt engine.
2br trailer. Rtt.rwncea &amp; And Appllanco. G,.at Oaala
Cash And Carry I RENT.Z.OWN boby Cladlo; 114--tlll2..13l
2,100 OBO. 304-4511-1728.
o.poeh. No PilL Allio tr.~ller lot.
And Uyawsy AIIID Avallabl..
AI 12N, LocuM Ad an right, Pt Fr
STORAGE TANKS 3~000 . . Oallvery Whhln ,2 5 Mil-.
'1G85 FO&lt;d Tampa. .,,200. Phone
Upright, Ron E...,. ~........_
Pl.... nl. ~1-1078.
304..71-2833.
.
Waohor G.E. HooyY Duty .,50 JOokOon, Ohio, 1400-61UI28.
Small Mobile Home, Partly Fu,..
Orand
P~x
2 doO&lt;, v..,
To SUi G.E. Wathar Cut To Thre~ pt'Of'n •
, .a. ·7, one auto now lronl tlrN I ahocka,
nlahecl1 • A•flf'Wnce &amp; Dlpoah, Cut
SD5;
Dryer Kanmo,. Wu t110
1
No Pete, I'M~.
...... o - condhlon, aiay on goo,
CUI To .,25; Whl~~ Drvar -ding-·~
ft450, 114.flll2o411t $75; Kenmor11 Dry• 175; l{ol.. high neck, low lloc Tralllr for ...... You P11Y utiUUaL
point Elact~c Ron~ 40 Inch ~~~or Ul87 qtaY)' Cl'lalllr, pe, pb, IC,
$SO dopoalt. ~~35.
$75; 30 Inch EIKtrfc Range $a&amp;;
1Wo
bedroom lnllar on Whirlpool Rof~(lllrolor Slda By Topp.- For 1 Fl. Bad, Fot Small 80,0fl!)inl., Jood oond., $2.000.
Sldl, $185; O.E. Rafrlgen~tor Truck, Black, 114-241-07114.
Klngsbuf)' Ad., IM-IV2-6031t
::304:::::'"'-7U:::":1-1.,;.·=:-=-::---,,$125; Whirlpool Waahol uu
1&amp;117 Olda Dona II Aor,:lo
44
Apartment
New, 1 Yatr Winanty, _$201;
, Brougham, loaded, lront-w 11
•
Ken~ Dryer Uke NeW 1 v..r
d~ ......a.a, v ... axe. cond., Mfor Rent
Warranty $205; . Skag1111 Ap.
klng .. ,1115. :J04.81111-35111.
ollancoa, 71 Vlno SlrMI, Cl...
1 and
bodroom 1po~mon11, llpolla, o14-148-731i8, 1-«JJ.4IIfl.
llliB Marcury C01111ar 1.8,
88,1100ml., goOd cond:, P100.
lllmlaa.d and unlllmlahad, 3188.
304_.7H8~
- " ' " ' •-11 roqulrod, no
W.ahor, Dryor, Ralrtg... tor, 55
palo, 114-11112·2218.
Building
Stove, Mlcrowav., CofOr T.V.,
tUG ca..rotat Z-24 ea.. uar
1 Bodroom Coowonlant To . 114-258-1238.
conwrtlbl•,
red, lolided, auto,
Suppl~s
Aotlanoo Eloc:lrlc And Holzer'•
11&amp;.1100. 3~75.
Blook, brick, Nllllllo. Plua Utllltlaa, DopoaH 52 S!!q,rttng Goods
_ . , wfn.
Aoqulrwd, 114-44&amp;.2115l
llntala,
....
Cloilda
Will- 111111 ~ C.potca SW Loadod,
-:~--'---::--:----,­
1100 S:a Gauge Au.... 10 tara, \11o Granda, 011 CaM 114- Good CoirdHion, $4,700, 1141 hdroom. Dlpoelt. Oalllpode Model
448.;)777.
Yearti Old, Uk.a New, 114-446- 24Ut21
11650.
0A7'-'7':..;*.:.:.24'-;S..:758::;113.:::,:---1180 UHaublaHI Ulrwgo, alllo,
1bed~ I N-w H•ven area.
Clro¥OIII
8ldara
l185m0 pn.tl e-=tr1c. Rlll•ren- Moesburg 12 gauua pump aftal.. drainpipe now In
Fa. pb~~:"!'- -.. low
gun. ••ntllated barrel, al10 .tug Equlpnionl, 30447S-llln
miiM.
·t~•fterlpm.
010 1 •pooh roqulrad. 30WII2· barril,
maple checked llocll.
222\
18110 Toyota Tarcat, I apaad, AC1
llka now, $275; 20 gaugo Tad
:;:-:::::--:-::::--:-:-:--:--:-7-2bdrrn. a pta., lolot aloctrlo, op. Wllllem•, pump ahafgun. venAIIIFII · . . PBOO; 1188
ooncthlon..
aUing
" " · - · ... -~·-~
.......... tilated barrel, good ccn:lhlon,
· ,..__
" - • - · - • · .,75, 814-247.. 2Ga.
Nl•on ptck..,p, I aooad, AC,
- l o a - t o achool
56 Pats for Sale
AMIFU - ·tw·
ukfno S2800,
In town. Ap:r.!catlona avtllable · UHd golf clubl. 304.eTS.2722.
IM-l'l2-2i62.
·
614-'lll2-2728
ot VUia
•
:
~ roan Apia. t41 or
11113 Eaglo Vlalon Till 214 HP,
0011114 112.;)711. EOH.
53
Antiques
Aad.Hnl Ull•. Mint Condition,
2bodroom 11 lo
=-~~-::-=:..,.--,,...,;.-tte;..,. Will Conaldar Troolo Fot
tum&amp;.hed,· ~iltti.:CU, Buy or .. u. Riverine Antlq~a,
Vohlclo Of ~r V.lua, 614Ref1rtnca 1 .acurlty deposit 1124 E. Main Stt'Mt, on At. 124,
3111'5044.
r.qulred. 304-m.IOOI.
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. lo 8:00 p.m., lun•r t:OO
Baoch 81., lllddloportiiJ 011, 2br. lo 8:00 p.m. &amp;14-iV2-252tl.
lumlahod opl., utll •
pold,
301 8112
54 Miscellaneous

Sa........, 2 Bolha,. ' Wotl BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

IMOfiiM ~n~.dan1 · ~=-:::":-·-:fo~r:O:
· Sa
;;::."~-....
_.;;··:::·~ .
hout
toGa to the mon •·•
colt
711-11157.
,.... 1.131croa, oldor lbadroom, 2 luU
bolh - - . go-. 0111•
Hou-laanlng In Galllpollo blllld.,.., llbovo Qtouricl 11001,
Aroa. 114-~leM.
city MW I oabla TV, aft Cuor
Profonlonat
T,..
Sorvlca,
at Appto Clnwe.
TrH C.., luckat gur281l:
Tr
_., R. lloach, 10118C1 mollllo """'.!,. aoad oonct.;
Stump Ramon!, frM Eo' ~lurlll•had. ..,!00. """"·
11-toal lnauranca, ' 24 Hr.
•• ooo """ """~-=
Emorganoy 8aMoo .caJt And
"• . _ . . . , . ..
Sa... . No T,.. T!&gt;9 Jig Dr T1&gt;41 '1171onobU......... '••d - . 2
BlnoUI · 1M 211114'1, - iM:atJ. ~~~~~~ oond"lall;' ;
mo.
810-ifl:i Ull.

=Jet•

------~~:

hlndlcap
whh.
_

24 N.Y. hockey
loom

41Cfoea

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

I GOT A MESS OF

.....r-·

..-Jog lor -

23 lllorth8nd

42 , _ l o r two
44 Short jacUI

•J 5

Wantld to Rent

~:-~~~~... u~

32 ·

~.--

1:100 "'1........ ~ .....
buldlng "" ....... oftlcalrolal,
11a1n s•-· Pomotor. Ott. 11411112·7314.
'

z.

----------:
31

•A K 6 5
•A Q 6 2
oA Q 9

on

This newspaper will not

,.,ll'ei1CM. •

.......,"' 18

. .•.

All real eslale adver1Jslng In
!his newspaper Is subject to
thE! Federal Fair Housing Act

Now AcctDUI'Ig AppUcallont AI
Domlno'a l&gt;lult In Golllpolla I
Pomatoy, Apply In Paraon.

POSTAL JOBS
Start $12~08/hr. Fat eum and
appUc•tlon Info. can 211-7118301 ut WV548, Oam-lpm, SUit'
Fri.
Small Unn ...k~ullln.d. legsl
IIICrMiiry lo
onn gen•ral
office dull•.
nd rMume to
801 0-1. 'Mio Pt. PlaiMnl Atg..
ter, 200 Main Sl, Pt PtM1111M,
WV 25550.
Someone need.d evenlnol •
wHkende to care tor .rderly
woman In her homl nNr
l'cHnaroY· Appl)' by wrlllna Tho
Dllllr Sentinel c/o Box 721-0,
Ponioror. Oh1o 457111, giving
uperlerice.
W.QI
roqulramant.
Slyllal Wanted Fui Dr Part Tfmo
For luar Shop, lnqlll,. At:
Fl.- Styling Salon 13110
Eaatarn A..,ua,
T'!"'&amp; dit•• """od "" 1ooa1
houl, homo Mary night, Claaa A
CDL WihiL mat l lank ondor....,.ntL Pay: 30tJ', or _...,,
3 04-615-67IO b o - 1'
pm.
TMm Wlhtad, mulll have CIIIM
A COL wlhlz. mot., ba willing to
ba out 2-:Jw~y: .32'11o al
wMkty groae.
75-a71D bit• - 1·10pm.

.

Thraa llod_,. """" In ct....
t"!o mony uodol•, haualng
,.,.,..,... ••pooN roqui...S
114-145om1 aft.. Spm.

No Exparlonco Noco-ryl 11100
To SIIOO Wookly /Polanllol
P-ang llortgogo Rotunda.
OWn Houra. c.n 110f.71S..2300
Ext. 1311. (24 Hou,.).

Wantld to Do .
~,.....,;...,....,~.;-:-­
Avon Eam $8 -t14 !Hr. No Doot '\llllhy Wort! DonO' Landoc;apTo Do&lt;Qt, Full /Port Tlmo, 1.-. 111al· PalnUng; A90llng,Etc. FrN
731-01881nd Rep.
la"\ mat•a.. 114 U8~2 fOI
'
IIO&lt;alnlo.
CAREERS AV-'!LABLE In ta.
Wool Vlrvlnla Anny Notional 24 Hour ' Cola Fot Eldolfy Dr
Guard. 1M port~llne JoN Handlcaooad Ganl-n In llr
wbh lui lima banei!W IIU Nomo, • - • monthly porchodl, oducallonal
...wane.. rr.. tQlJ tralnlna.
,,.., f'l(lrlfMnt pan, and tnuc"'h
...... Coli t. .y ond .... W. can hll"' with your cilt"Mr
plana. 104.,75-6837 or 1-IOOM2.;lfl8.

-~-· ].s.Jl5.

I :':=*:::11112~.;):;:11:::3-::"':.::·':.:,*:.:•:=.:.aasa.~=:--:-

u,.., .. * ·

Pomeroy,

IUCIIon

,.:;,_,..;:=.:=,:....:::...=:..,....,..1112ocN

-blo

Gallipolis

8

1.71 .... - - lol city
· - - - - - - - - - l • o14,100......,.......,
t• I TV ovollo.biO.
18 WBntld to Do
~. WV, - I
Will do llocllhoo - . oiiono oopllo, N,IOO. Plleno 717-aM-

a.•

11 Story
20 hrdrlnU
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

A8 • The Dally Sentinel

learnad from past expenences to excel·

lent use . Th1s new dimension of w1sdom
w ill significantly enhance y.our possibili ties for success.
TAURUS (April 20· May 20) Bas1cally
you are a modest unassuming individual
a n d you onl)' rarely exagge rate you r
accomplishments Today . hvwever, ~ou
m 1ght bEt" tempted to boast Know where
to took l or roma~ce and you'lr f1\1t ~h~

~

.
of
your resou rces today , you 1
pa~ a stiff penalty. Treat your money as a
consel'\lattve banker would
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22)' Before do1ng
somethmg demandmg today . you may
feel tempted to consu lt eyeryone for an
op1n10n or suggeshon only to later 1gnore
what each has told you .
LIBRA (Sept. 23;0ct. 2 3) G1ve crodence
to yot.~untuJIJon today ; bu-t cton'l .Jet 11
overcom e your logi c If you have to
choose between the two, select the later

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 ·Nov. 22) Try to k~ep
the old adage "nettner a borroWer nor. a
lender be" 1n mmd today when deahng
w1th friends !I hnances b ackf~re. 11 could
hurt th~ l nendsh1p
SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23· Dec . 21) Yo u
may be- chsappaUltad t.c.day lf yQ.!LhoQe ,
th at others will do th1ngs tor you th at you
'really should do tor yourself .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jen . 19) KeeP .rn
m1nd today that al though you a re enl1lled ·
ta·yaur op1n1on . try1ng to 1mpose 1t on others w1ll be about as welcome as fire ants
are to a p•cnic.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb . 19) Guard
aga1nst .the 1nctmat1on to make small
tasks d1fficu_lt and 1

'

tod~y·

Try

1

PISCES (Feb. 2Q.March

GeneroSity
is one of your n ob ler tra1ts , but do n' t
carry 11 to extremes today You moghl leel
tempted to give away someth1ng you 'll
later w1 sh yo u'd kept
ARIES ~March 21 ~Aprll 19)' E\l alu at e
things carefully today. Even though .you
could hav~ a lair .QV&gt;SP ol the b1g picture .
yo u m1ght tolaLiy- ove.rlnbk gerttnent
I details .

."

.

'

•
1

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 8, 1995

DR.OOTT

Museums .---Hands-on lab---. Tachycardia syndrome
~~~· linked to medicine
.
take on a
new look
'By PETER U. G01T, M.D.

DEAR DR. GO'IT: Wllat C1D
you tell me about POTS - poslll·
raJ orthostatic tachycardia syndrome 7 Information on the cause
and treatment would be greatly
appreciated.
DEAR READER: Sometimes,
in the presence of heart disease or
drug therapy for cardiovascular ailments people experience a sudden
drop ln blood pressure whi:n they
quickly sit up or stand. This causes
weakness, Ugbtheat!OOness or fainting, associated with tachycardia
(rapid pulse, as the heart Uies to
compensate by pumping more
blood to the brain ~ainst BJllvity).
The causes of thts syndrome are
legion, 'but the end result is the
same: postural (orthostatic) low
blood pressure with compensa!IIIY
tachycardia - that Is far more pronounced than the usual iigbtheadedness we all may occasionally
experience upon rapid standing.
In patients talcing medicine to
reduce blood pressure, the syndrome can be prevented by a simple reduction in the dose of the
drug, under medical supervision.
For those wbo are not medicat·
ed, the thempy is somewhat more
Uicky and complicated. Regular
exercise will belp by toning up the

EDITOR'S NOTE- Thoae
hulwarlu of tradltlqn, the
workl'• mueuiiiOI, are •nderplaa wlde·ranglna expaaaloaa,
offerlna entertainment , and
pnnet fOjld with theaters, audl·
torlums, shopplag and under·_
around parJdnK.
By JOSEPH VEITZMAN
Assoclaterde Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Museums
!hroughout the centuries were hallowed repositories of history and_
culture, bringing the pa,st to new
generations with virtually mono·
lithic rules and programs.
1
Not any more.
In a matter or just a few years,
museums worldwide have been
undergoing uemendous chanses,
and at such a rapid pace that their
usual slaid cbaraCief and solemnity
bave been changed for good.
The basic dictionary definjtion
or a muSeum is "im institution,
building or room for preserving
and exhibiting artistic, bisiOrical or
scientific objects."
.
And indeeil lbey did, amassing
arcbaeological objects, works of
ar~ documents and other samples
or' the past and preserving them for
scholars and students, b'istorians
and the seneral pubtlc.
But as coUections increased and
demw1ds grew, ,the original struc·
tures were supplemented by new
balls and galleries and even whole
wings.
It didn't take long for auditoriums, or sculptUre gardens, to make
· their appearance, as at the Museum
of Modem Art in New York, the
Hirschhorn Museum in Washington D.C., the Museum of Modem
Art in Fon Lauderdale, Fla., or the
Fondation Maegbt in Vence,
France, among others.
Even faster was the uansforma·
tion of what were little more than
stalls inside the museums, selling
postcards and posters, into small
shops, then stores, and lately yeri •
table deparunent-store complexes
selling reproductions of works of
art, jewelry, textiles and clothing,
toys, books, stationery, and even
household and decorative items.
Modest ·snack counters became
coffee shops, then full-blown
restaurants, followed by gourmet
menus; arid places to meet socially
for lunch or dinner. And finally
museums began catering and renting their balls and galleries as the
settings for parties and book
Wlllouncements. '
Also, small rooms for lectures
and recitals became auditoriums for
·discussion panels, audiovisual presentations and film showings,
·deriving shortly thereafter into
facilities for courses and seminars,
and whole departments for art and
history classes and theaters seating
hundreds.
On the occasion of the opening
San Francisco Museum
of the
of Modern Art, The New York
Times' art critic Michael Kimmelman noted last January that,
''Museums have increasingly ·
become multipurpose emporiums,
places to shop and eat. Tbey
depend on tbe income they get
from these businesses, and their
buildings are designed according-

\

y·It supplements more traditional
sources of funds from government
subsidies and corporate and individual donations and admission
fees.
New installations and facilities
at a museum complex undoubtedly
attraCt a larger public, and tourists,
· said George Passwell, a spokesman
for the Meuopolitan .Museum · of
Art in New York.

By FRANK FISHER
· Associated Press Writer
CENTRALIA, III. (AP)
Dhananjay Natu came all the way
from India to Jearn to fly American-style, mortgaging his apartment to pay the $18,000 tuition and
leaving bls fiancee bebind for a
year.
It's worth i~ Natu says, because
be can get more done at Airgo
Inc.'s flying school than be could
in twice the time back home in .
Bombay - and at about a third of
the price.
"Hardly we have two aircraft
per flying school there, and the
number of students who wisb to fly
(is often) more tban 20," the 27year-old form~r manager said. "So
we hardly got an hour or two in a
week to fly. By tbe time you take
your lessons, go to the sky and stan
recollecting what you've been
taught, it's time to land."
Airgo, which bas Uained hundreds of pilots at Cenuatia Municipal Airport for more tban 20 years,
is seeing many foreign students
like Natu at its school in the rolling
prairies and cornfields of southern

kin~~~~~~~!f::~
bad SOOie
1 shepa•sed
unique
thai sbe
Oil

tome?
DEAR RE~~R:Absolutely.
Most cases of baH ·s (bad breath)
are caused by bacten . action on ·
food particles that are caught
between the tcetb. It is entirely possible that your Iarmer panoer rransmilted large numbers of bacteria til
your mouth during your intimacy.
See a dentist to discover if you
have 1.) a dental abscess that is
unrelated to your past fling, 2.)
signs of py.orrhea ("trench
moutb," a common Infectious
mouth disorder), or 3.) a problem
with food particles between your
own teetb.
Your problem might be solved
by a course of antibiotics, coupled
with renewed attention to dental
hygiene. The dentist can advise
you.
Copyright 1995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRJSE ASSN.
(For information on how to
communicate elecuonicaliy with
this columnist and others, contact
America Online by calling 1-800827-6364, ext. 8317.)

.illinois.
The school, with a fleet ofl8
planes, graduates 80 to 100 students in a typical year, owner
Leslie Erb said.
This year's student body
includes five students from Indonesia. two from India, two more from
Bangladesh, and several others
from Portugal, France, Britain,
Andorra and New Zealand.
Other aviation schools across
the counuy also are seeing a rise in
the number of foreign students.
Some, like Airgo, have been
aggressively marketing their progrwns overseas.
Foreign students are "clearly
the fastest growin~ section of flight
training in Amenca \oday," said
Jim Coyne, president of the National Air Transportation Association.
Coyne estimated there's been at
least a 10 percent annual growth
over tbe. past five years in foreign- ·
crs learning to fly in the United
States. Today, about 15 percent of
the enrollment is foreign, be said,
and this year's enrollment likely
will increase 25 percent over last
year.

On~

big reason is that the more
than 2,000 U.S. flying schools are
much cheaper than their overseas
counterparts.
Stephen Ash, a native of England who is Airgo's cbief-insuuctor, said a 250-bour commercial
multiengine rating would cost
about $90,000 in his home counuy,
while Airgo offers the same license
for $18,000. That includes six
months accommodations and pickup and dropoff in St. Louis. Tbe
rating is a prerequisite to a job with
an airline.

EASTERN SCIENCE - Tbe Eastern Local School District is
te.acbi!'g children · about science through hands-on land Jab,
R1vervtew second grade teacher Lea Ann King said. "{he students
studied a nature path, bird houses, bird reeders, growing frogs,
herb gardens and use of indoor and outdoor thermometers. The
projects are funded by slate grants. (Top) Riverview sixth graders
Amber Baker and Chris Barringer measure the growth of vegetables in a hydro-greenhouse. (Middle) Riverview fifth graders
Danielle Rucker, Rachael Hupp and Thomasina White tested
which plants grew the fastest. (Above) Riverview second graders
Morgan Weber, Casey Smith, Charis Collins and .Jamie Reel
watch the growth of butterrues, which were still in the pupa stages• .
(Sentinel photos by George Abate)

5 days only May 8th to 12th.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m ..
• All Wrapping Paper &amp; Cards. 70%
• Southwest Blankcts ................ 50%
• T~Shirts ............................. :..... 40%
• Selected Gift Items ................ .40%
MARIA SHARP

10% OFF HAND CRAFTS

Sharp birth

• Country Cubbards • Shadow Boxes
•Shelves

. . Mike and Pam Sharp of near
IuppeR PJams announce die bitth- .-1-1- -~-·-of their nrst cbitd, a daughter,
•
Maria Christine, born April 7 at
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed eight pounds, three
ounces.
Grandparents are_Richard and
Eileen Mees of Darwin ·and Glendon and Patricia Sbarp of Ironton.
Great·grandparents are Heuer
Houck of Pomeroy anll Mary
Akers of Ironton.

BANKEONE.
vv.hateverittakei.
Member FDIC

• Tater Bins~·--

Bread Boxes

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-~

.. _ "'""

• Misc. Items

-

-H-1

~[.

·~

:

I

I

C1rrus

••

:

•

.•

Pick 4:
7380
BuckeyeS:
2-5-9-24·34

Sports, Page 5

Vol. 46, NO. 7
Copyrlght1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 9, 1995 .

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. N~per

Council's goal:·

Improve quality of life in Middleport
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Neww starr
Middleport Village Council
took two steps to improve the vii!age's quality of life at its regular
meeting Monday !light.
Council unanimously approved
the first reading of a revised build' ing code ordinance.
,
Last fall, Councilwoman Beth
Stivers pushed legislation that
would bave increased the rules put
·on landlords and levied a fee to pay
for inspections. After complaints
from landlords, the new rules were
tabled.

"I want to see a better quality of exempt from these rules, since they
life of Middleport. It's a needed will be grandfatbered. But, all
improvement" Slivers sai!!. pf the _ dwellin_gs mgst bave smoke detecnew rules. "Tbe rental properlies tors, Stivers said.
•
and tbe village as a whole needs to · . Originally, landlords were upset
take notice."
about a $25 fee placed on the land·
Last nigbt, the 11ew ordinance lords each time a renter moved out,
was unveiled, nuiking cc;&gt;ncessions Stivers said. The fee now will be
from the original ordinance.
$12 a year, for each rental uniL A
Some wording removed in tbe rental unit is considered an ·apart·
new ordinance included: not requir· meat, not just a bou_se.
ing Insect and pest removal; not
Currently, the vtllage has about
requiring screen.s an~ S'?f'D doors; 440 rental units.
and not demandmg hgbung of pubMtddlepolt Mayrn: Dewey Horlie balls.
ton commended Stivers for the
Current rental properties will be countless hours she spent develop-

ing and reworking the ordinance.
"If you have rental units that are
kept up it will help the landlords in
·controlling bllgbt" and sustain
property values, Horton said. "And
it will pro(ect tenants from not baving to live in unfit conditions."
The village bas not had the
money to tear down several blighted homes, be added. The fee will
pay for periodic inspections and
any left-over money could be accumula ted to remove these eyesores,
be said.
.
These rules will be enforced
with inspections following com-

plaints from tenants or other indi- cinder blocks, Horton said . .
viduals, Honon said. Landlords
The coUection wiU begin at the
will need to pick up the ~1, mt _city limits. fll;llf Hu~on Sueet anQ
it out and pay for it at the village work towarrl the other end of the
offiCe.
.
village. Only one pass wiU be made
In other village improvement during the two days, be added.
action, Council also .clarified the
Middleport Council President
guidelines for this week's clean-up Bob Gilmore said the lrasb should
of the village. "The Pride in Mid- . not accumulate and should be disdleport Week" will include free posed of on a weekly basis.
uasb pick-up this Wednesday and
have never gotten as many
Thursday,_ Horton a.dded. .
p~one calls _as b~ve _this spnng,"
The v!llage w!ll not. ptck up Gtlmore, said . . It s btgb time we ·
automobile P.arts mcludmg axles take a little pnde m Middleport.·
and motors, ures or building mate- People should be forewarned we'm.
rials, such as boards, bricks and going to enforce the ordinances."

:·r

!.

Construction work resumes on PNRC project
By GEORGE ABATE
PNRC bas not and does not plan that job with substandard wages Patrick Day,
Sentinel News Staff
take the union to court on this and benefits, we will be there with
PNRC is building an $800,()()!)
· a public infonnation picket."
Construction crews at Pomeroy action, Mervis said.
· addition to bou·se a speech lab,
The local carpenters' union
False rumors bad circulated that occupational therapy training area
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
carpentry
work would begin tomor- and a physical therapy gym. Tbe
returned to work this morning after · began passing out leaflets on the
work was balled for a week by an project last Monday. The union row, Day added, according to cor- project bad been set for completion
informational picke~ company offi- members· presence batted the respondence with attorneys from in June.
both sides of the dispute.
work.
cials stated.
When the carpenters picketeSI
"We're hoping to get something early last week, some members of
The unionized carpenters will ·
The company will employ union
not resume their informational worked ou~" Day said. "I can'l say ' the District 1199 of Service
plumbers to work on the project,
said Mike Mervis, a spokesman for picket if they are employed for the I'm optimistic.... At this point we' II Employees International Union
project, said Patrick Day, not picket."
PNRC.
supported the picket.
About 10 members of the Car"We bave a tentative under- spokesman with the South Central
But, since Tuesday's 3 p.m.
standing with the carpenters," he Ohio District Council of Carpen- . penter Local Union 650 in shift all employees had returned to
ters.
Pomeroy passed out leaflets work, Mervis said. Patient care was
added.
''We'd like to have a fair shot at because PNRC hired non-union not affected by this picket, he
Carpenters will not return to
that work," Day said. "If there are constrUction workers for· an addi- added.
worlc today, but all other laborers
people
doing carpenuy .work on tion Monday and Tuesday, said
are set to return, MerVis said.

Judge appoints new attorney for bombing suspect
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - A sents one of Oklahoma's most
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building by McVeigh's family will not bankilled 167 people and injured more die the case . McVeigh said last
judge bas appointed a new attorney · notorious death row inmates.
··we honor the memory of the
than 400. A grand jury is investi- week that he didn't wanktheir help.
for bombing suspect Timothy
In Washington, Lucas met in a
McVeigh because his original victims by granting the accused gating the worst terrorist attack on
effective
closed
assistance
of
counsel,
due
U.S.
soil.
·session with Republican
lawyers said they were too affected
·
PEN PALS • Don Hoblit, 71 GreenvUie, points o~t some World
process,
a
vigorous
defense,
and
Rep.
Ernest
Istook, Democratic
McVeigh
was
charged
April
21
by the attack to represent him.
War II souvenirs he presen,ted to Nathan Appleton, 11, Riverview,
uial
by
jury,
not
bysteria,"
said
Rep.
Bill
Brewster
and Republican
under
a
federal
anti-terrorism
Also Monday, members of
during ceremonies Monday outside the United States Air Force
Jones,
a
former
judge'
with
the.
Sens.
Don
Nickles
and
Jim lnbofe.
statute
that
carries
a
possible
deatb
Oklahoma's congressional delegaMuseum In Dayton to Mark .V-I£ Day. The two became pen pals a.
Oklahoma
Court
of
Civil
Appeals.
·
All
five
men
support
building a
penalty
.
He
is
being
held
at
the
tion said the federal building
part of a student project to thank World War II veterans for their
memorial
park
In
an
interview
today
on
NBC's
at
the
site
of the
Federal Correctional Center in El
should not be rebuilt at the swne
service. (AP)
·
"Today"
show,
Jones
noted
that
Reno.
·
devastated
federal
building.
site, even if it costs taxpayers more
McVeigh bas not yet been 'indicted
His original attorneys were John
"I think there's consensus that
money.
·
the building .needs to come down,
"That's ju st not an option for and said a " trial by leak is inappro- Coyle III and Susan Otto. Coyle
and it probably. needs to come
the folks back home," said Repub- priate and -unfair." He said the pub- said his golfing buddy died in tbe
lie should withhold judgment on blast and a law parmer was injured:
down soon," lnbofe said.
lican Rep. Frank Lucas.
· The General Servfoes Adminis:
McVeigh's new federal public --his client. He .also said be and Ms. Otto said she kne\1&gt; at least 10
tration
estimates ibat demolishing
McVeigh
"Conned
the
basis
for
a
people
who
were
killed.
Stephen
Jones,
was
defender,
DAYTON (AP) - Students ·different," Cody said. "From a ·
working
relationship."
Russell
also
reaffumed
that
two
the
ruin
and rebuilding on another
appointed
by
U.S.
District
Judge
·
eager to learn about World War II real person who wrote it, it makes
The
April
19
bombing
of
tbe
altorneys
who
say
they
were
hired
David
Russell.
Jones
also
repreContinued on page 3 ·
and thank the soldiers who fought yop feel kind of sad.''
Adams, 74, of Kettering, was a . ·
it may have given the veterans as
pleasure as the students got as part
of a pen-pal project
sa!!!!nr?rrLefa!!YPbillis
. Project organizer Bob Tbum
"How much do YOU agree or
"111\portan~y._ no state serv1ce
said.
said a theraplst at a veterans hospi- and spent more tban three y~ars as all the Ohioans questioned in a poll
tal in Cleveland told him the stu- a prisoner of war.
agreed that edUcation was a funda- disagree with the statement that:
has a btgher ~nonry wnong the Cl,';
Burke Marketing Research in
dents' lellers had. served as therapy
Adams enjoyed his correspon- mental right. But a majority also Every child in Ohio should have a
IZ~ns of O.bw than ~ducauon,
Cincinnati conducted the poll from
for some of the patients there.
dencc with Cody.
said health and police should share fundamental right to a level of eduWlllllllll Phillis, coalmon execuuve April 17 through April 23. It 'bad a
"They bad bottled this up for all
"I told him don't thinlc of me as the same government spending pri- cation that prepares him or bee to
dlfector, swd at a news conference.
4.9 percent margin of erroc.
these years, and now by writing to Rambo and that kind of stuff you ority as schools.
·
be a productive citizen?"
But 60 percent of those quesThoma s Needles, executive
.the kids, it was coming out, .. Tbum see on TV. I'm not," Adams said.
Those were among tbe results of
Seventy-five percent agreed
tioned said health and hospitals assistant to Gov. George
'said. .
"I said I was out there to cure men, a random-sample telephone survey
strongly. and 18 perc~nt agreed should enjoy the san1c priority as Voinovich , re sponded tbat th e
On Monday, some of the stu- not to kill them."
of 400 people that the Ohio Coaliso!Dewbat. Two percent neither funding for education, and 53 per- administration recognized ·there
dents were able 10 ineet their pen
He said youngsters must be lold lion for Equity &amp; Adequacy of agreed nor disagreed; 2percent discent said police _-protection should were serious problems in school
pals during ceremonies at the Unit- what happened during the war and School Funding released Monday.
agreed somewhat; and 2 percent ha~e the same pnonty as schools.
fundmg,
ed States Air Force Museum mark- why it happened.
.
Respondents were asked if tbey
disagreed strongly. !)De percent did
"Now remember, this su rvey
"The system currently perpetu. ing the 50th anniversary of V-E
not know.
was taken in the context of the ates a statewide system of poor
Former Army soldtcr Don thought the opportunity for a qualiDay. Some 1,400 children, veterans Hoblit met 11-year-old pen pal • ty education was a fundamental
Another question asked respon- Oklahoma situation. It was taken in schools and wealthy schools. And
and others attended.
Nathan Appleton and presented right thai couns protected, similar
dents to place a priority on funding
the context of tbe Medicaid crisis for those reasons, ·we have taken
Cody ~eece, 11, of suburban bim with miniature flags, German to freedom of speech.
of education vs. other uses of gov- and all of those concerns that
Continued on page 3 ·
Riverside; got a chance to meet bis. money and uniform patches. ,
"lie told me about be was a
pen pal - Robert Adams. Cody
·:
said Adams' letters brought the war prisoner of war and how be got
home.
captured. I feel it's kind of scary,"
"From a book, il would be a lot said Nathan, of Riverside.

Ex-soldiers mark V-E Day
with student pen. pals

~~~!a~~~:~z~~~~~ ~~tt[u~~~a!~ar~~ta!~u~!lenci~s s~~!f!~.share

Productivity
up 0.7 percent

Simpsonjurv hears ABCs of DNA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- With the co-author of O.J. Simpson's
·genetic material looking on, prosecutors began showing bow Simpson's DNA blueprint could place b'im at the scene of a double murder.
Lanncbing the most critical phase of.the prosecution's case, a·
biocbemisl took the stand Monday to demystify DNA for the jury
and explain .bow one blood sample can be matched with 1111otber.
Coincidentally. Simpson's elderly mother, Eunice, returned to
court for the fir.;t time in weeks. She sat in a wheelchair near the
front of tlje couruoom just a few feet from ber son.
'
Robin Coiton, director of Cellmark Diagnostics in Germantown,
Md., used diagrams and band-drawn pictures to explain bow the
body's "genetic blueprint" is passed fr&amp;m p"arents to child, and
bow the storehouse of this infonnation - the DNA molecule CIID be unraveled, diced up and photographed:
.
Time ran out before Cottoo .got to ~tual test rcsul~. She ~as to
·~I· - return·IIHKIUCH00a)'7. Legal expens gave Cottori bigb mwks for her thoroughness and
clear delivery, and said her explanations are crucial to whether
jurors acoept DNA evidence.
"I thought she was spectacular. I thought her axplanation was
lucid, was clear. She was really a teacher much more than a tradi. iional witness,'' said Erwin Cbemeririsky, a law professor at the
. University of Southern Catlfomia.
.
Mostjurors appeared to pay close attention, as they bave tlp'ougb
all J.!ut ihe most tedious parts of tbe trial. Those in tbe·l&gt;ack of llie
jury box craned forward to get a better view· o( the charts. Many
took notes during tbe afternoon.
\

..
.'

Low llliiJ&amp;bllll 601, partly

cloudy, nln. Wedllelday pariiJ
cloudy. HJ&amp;bs In 70..

I'

I

Syracuse
992-5776
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
Sunday 12 noon-S pm

I

""

615

. Hubbards Greenhouse

Whether you live nearby, work bridge. Now you have yet another
nearby or just happen to be passing convenient place to withdraw cash,
by, banking just got a whole lot easier make deposits, check your account
balances, transfer funds and pay
in Pomeroy.
your bills.
.
Our newest
-Easy access to your bank
Money Access
i
Center is located -· = ,= ·1• . accounts 24 hours a day, seven
at the-Marathon ill iii • ·
days a week. Our commitment to
doing whatever it takes to make
Station'parking
·~a
your life easier has put BankrOne
lot near the
on the map.
Pomeroy-Mason· · "' -··~- ·-·-

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Announcing the newest Bank On€?®
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announced
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Also, doctors may encourage
more dietary salt (to increase blood
volume and blood pressure.) Finally, elastic support stockings, wbicb
prevent pooling of blood in the
lower extremities, may stabilize the
circulation so that faintness and
tachycardia don't occur.
In my opinion, patients with
POTS should be examined by cardiologists and .may need special
eardlac testing, such as stress tests.
To give you more information, I
· am sending you fm! copies or my
Health Reports "Hypertension"
and • 'Understanding Heart Disease." Otber readers wbo would
like copies should send $2 for eacb
report plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P .0. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title(s).
DEAR DR. GOTI: Is it possible
to catch bad breath? Out of loneli·
ness, I began a relationship with a
horrible older woman wbose teeth
were loose and whose breath was
unbelievably foul. I ki~sed her
often. Now I find my own breath ·
stinks in the same way hers did. No

Ex-R.ed
66, dies

•

,...\ r-

•

bed.)

GOTl', M.D.

Small midwestern flying school
attracts students from around world

new

' ..

cardiovascular system. (POTS· is
much mom frequent In sedenwy
individuals and is common in people who have been confined to

PETER

Ohio Lottery

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
productivity or the American workplace rose at a 0. 7 percent annual
rate from January through March,
the slowest advance in a year. Unit
labor costs hit a two-year high.
The Labor Department said
today that· seasonally·adjusted,
non-farm productivity was much
stronger in the final .three months
of 1994 than previously though!. It
revised the earlier 1.7 percent gain
to a 4 percent increase.
. The advance meant productivity
rose 2.3 percent during all of 1994.
rather than the earlier 2.2 perceqt
estimate.
the
business
since
increases mean companies are
making their goods more efficiently and at lower costs.
·The report said unit labor costs
rose 3.4 perccn~ highest since a 4, I
percent gain in the flfSl quarter of
1993. Costs bad dropped in both
the third and 'filurlh quru:ters or
1994 and rose opiy 0.8 percent for
the year.

WAHAMA PICKET- Laborers from the
Local ii54J be&amp;an an lnform•ttonal picket In
front of Wahama High School Tuesday morning; Wuam Comtruction-Co •.bepn working un
the hlgb scbool's multl-~urpose gymnasium and

·-'

cafeteria two weeks aso. The Chester contractor
has not employ~d union laborers, said Terry
Albright of the union. '"We'd like to see them
sign a c:~ntl'Rt -with 11s,"' Alb~ighl sald.''We•re'
not here to kMp tht kids out of school.'' (OVP
photn hy George Abate)
·

•

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