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•

r.._esdlily, May 18, 1995:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Se~l

Methodist women honor mothers with r~cipe program -·
The Pomero

u.·~a~ Med!od'" .

flowers.

•

m
•"Tbe·
·
Died widl
Women held iu annual mo.....r·
pop1lll VfU ~
daualuer banquet recently lillie mercnce to rcctpes and filodTh,u
e
church with 58 penons in lllell· well as honoring mothers.
danc.e. Isabelle Wolfe aave tbe npenlna son•
"Break Thou llle
0
tbe
Y
~· ...-t
C
.. The
· bookie11
tbe welcome and mtrodtiCCrl&amp;~ • reed.
rectpe
Tllble favors were recipe boaft. ' n:viewed llld remembrances
lets, containing 68 reclpea c;oa. of 11M? deceased memben wbo bad
tnbuted by memben or lbe UDillld contributed. A cookbook that was
Methodist Women, past and pre. publlsbod in 1959 by lbe Pomeroy .
sent, alona with miniature' violet W.S.C.S. was displayed and dis·
y

h~&amp;llf:U

-r,as

=

~~~a'!'w ~~te ~e~~fn 1ro~~::Vir~s

cussed. A reading "Love Tbem to tbe Na~ional United Mctbodist
Lots" was given by J011111e Robin- Women, tt was announced tbat
r 11 d b •
b 1 donations were made in special
sQn:, o ?we
a n~ t a
mission recognition or Gerald and
~nc sesston, ~~ SO!!gs
men- Fa e Wildermuth for their man
u~ a food m tbe Iitle or wools Y~ service IS church fUUIIIcu.)
0
'=\velker was at tbe piano secretary. A gift to missions to
·tb Alice w 1e as·soog lead· honor Ann Rupe for 37 years of
wt A rcadin ~i A Molbet'l''
service as church treasurer was also
1s
er.
·
g
. noted The honorees were present:Ra.s 8 1 ~0 by1EvelyndCl~~:-d ed wiih pins and certifiCates by lbe
Grandmahce WamsAeyLasre~
en president .
as
s.
· . .
.
As a part of tbe five star giving
Janet Wtlhamson presented

the

or

Ohio Lottery

Magic h

Faye Wilde::nutbEI~I:ie~~:rf::•·
Norma. Par er, 1Z4
,.
and Daisy Blakes~. ~ ~gram •
closed wtth group smgmg of Hall(. •
Great Thou Art."
,.
c~mmittees for the banq~ei
were
Euu"ons,tclll
Jones, favors
ta .e ecora
Martha Hoover, Allee Wamsley
and Paula Welker, program; and
.Virginia Hoyt, Alice Struble an~
Janet Williamson, flowers.
..,
·
•

geraniums to Helen F!Sber, tbe.oldest moiber present; Dtane
Williamson Stanley, tbe youngest
mother present· Alice Struble and
Donna Fi as
mothers wiib tbe
most cbifJren. and Dorolby Down·
ie, ibe second oldest mother pre·
sent
Potted hybrid impatients were
given to members over age 80Dorothy Downie, Helen Fisher.
Alice Struble Edna Scboenleb
•
•

·.1

·.. ~

MargeandReut~~ ~d

•

topp~es

Pick 3:

Bulls

Pick 4:

905
3605
Buc~eye

Sports, Page 4

5:

Low tonfahtln 601, rain•
Thursday rata and lllunder·
storms. Hfah In 6GL

. 1-18-30-33-37

-------Society scrapbbok---"""":"-- r-- Rural demonstration__,
ANTIQUE SHOW
Tbe West Virginia Swe Farm
Museum will host it's annll81 steam
and gas engine and antique automobile sbow Saturday and Sunday.
Gales will open at 8 a.m. Satur·
day and admission Is free. Antique
automobiles will be on display both
days, will! trophies beilig aWIUd¢
Sunday at I p,m; Tbere will be live
enter!llinment, ·a tractor parade,
crafte!!! and flea JIWkets on both
days. 1 oere will be demooslnltiona
of steam engines, quilting, weav·
ing, spinning, broom maklns. soap
making throughout the event.
Meals will be served from tbe
Counuy Kitchen.

'

Residents are also invited to join
in church services Old Zion
Lutheran Cburcb at 9 a.m. on Sunday, will! Rev. Lew Hu~ll; tben
w~'ll bave breakfast in !be Counuy
Kitcben.
GOLF LEAGUE
O~ficers ~er~ elected ~~last
week s organu:altooal m~tmg of
tbe Tuesday Morning Ladies Golf
League. .
El
d
M
B
.ecte were
ary .. owen,
l'res1dent. and tre~surer; Norma
C~st«:r, vtce p.r estdent; Ro!&gt;erta
0 Bnen, secretary. Pl.ay wtll be
eve.ry T ues d ay _mornm$ at tb e
Metgs Golf Course starltng at 9
a.m. All women are invited to take
part.

LAMB WEIGH-IN AND REG·
ISTRATION
The market lamb weigh-in for
1995 4-H and FFA market lamb
exhibitors .will be held from 9 a.m.·
11 a.m. May 27 at !be Meigs County Fairgrounds. Any 4 .H or FFA
member planning to show market
lambs at tbe 1995 Meigs Co~nty
F•'• must rerister and pay picture
money at$ 0 per animal at the
above dale and time.
Again Ibis year, members may
regisrer and weigh-in an additional
market lamb project on May 27:
Each member may bring one
wether and/or one ewe 10 show and
sell at the Fair.
.

For more information, Chip
Haggerty may be ·contacted at the
Meigs County Extension Office.
992-6696.

Vol. 46, NO. 13
Copyright 1995

JAIL STAFF TRAINING

•

Hocking College will offer a
120-bour basic correctional officer
training program f&lt;I jail staff from
8 a.m.-S p.m. June 12•30·
The course will be limited to 30
students, witb registration required
$ 90
by May 25. The fee is 3
per
person and includes notebooks and
handout
materials,
For more
information, call 753·
3S91 for Larry Hatem at extension
2256 or Bu.nnie Begley, extension
2362.

NV Times says McVeigh
confess.es to bombing

Poor suffer when supermar~ets ~bandon_ inner cities

B JENNIFER DIXON

.J.

1 ted Pre Wrl!fp..,
;ASHING.:'ON"(AP) ·- Mil·
lions of Americans pay more for
b ·1
· · d ba '
grocertes an
ve .ewer c o ces
amon fresh and aclcaged foods
becau~ large su~rmarkets have
abandoned many inner-city neighborbilods
d ocac
·d
today
• an a v
Y group sat
R~earcbers with tbe University
of Connecticut and Washington~
based Public Voice for Food and ,
Health Policy used federal demographic information and a census
. '21 of tbe counOr Supennarlccts m
try's largest metr~olitan areas to
document a "grocery store gap."
According 10 Public ·Voice, a
generally liberal advocacy group,
tbe flight of supermatk,ets trom the

Inner city bas forced many poor neighborhoods m H~ston, Dallas, .
families 10 shop at small groceries Newark, N.J ., Detrotl, Cleveland,
and convenience stores, where lbey Hartford, Conn., ~ill!Di . and other
pay higher prices for a less nutri· parts of south Flonda, a:nd the
tious •-A selecu·on
· · Harlem area or New YD!'k Ctty.
'"""
·
"I ·
h
·
1·
d
This, tbe group said, increases ,
t ts muc more comp ICate
family food bills, contributes 10 m ~ u.nderserved area.-. ~onmg
malnourishment and reduces tbe restr.tctmns, .transportation tssues,
purchasing power of federal food all kinds of hcense fees. Just ~o get
assistance dollars·.
!be ~~~d parcels together ts an
"This research conftrms what tssue, satd Karen Brown, semor
most of us have long suspected _
~tee pre~tdent for tbe Food M.ar~t·
that there is an unacceptable gro- mg lnsut.ute, a trade assoctatton
eery store gap in America," said · r~pre~enun.g supermar~et compaRonald W. Cotterill,,director of tbe mes, mcluding large chams.
.
Food Marketing Policy Center at
. Brown s~d groc. ery compames
tbe University of Connecticut.
vtew tb es.~ mner·ct t Y ne \,gbbor:
A spokeswoman for tbe indusuy hoods as v~ry attractive . bustdisputed the findings, saying gro· ness opportum~es because tbey are
eery companies are working to underserved, dense!~ populate~.
move stores into underserved and large stores have httle compeu-

lion. · .
, .
Accordtng to today s study.
!"any ~uper.marlcet chains left
mner-ctty netgbborbood~, over !he
past 35 years for more lucrauve
·n e tm t
o t n't'es and a
t v s en opp r u ~ t
.
more soc,~ busmess clunate m tbe
suburbs.
.
.
.
Cleveland ts a maJ?r exceptton,
tbe study satd. That ctty has more
and larger supermarkets m l~w~ncome netghborhoods than btgb·
mcome ones.
The study does not examine
why stores left, but focuses on tbe
number and size of grocery stores
in low-income ZIP codes and
neigbbor~oods with high percentages of households receiving public
assistance.

ELEMENTARY PROJECf ·Eastern elementary students have
conducted classroom and outdoor projects with the rural demon·
stration grant at Riverview Elementary.
·
Above, Riverview third graders build bird houses. On a daily
basis, the students view nature displays created by their peers and
exhibits across the building, said Cindy Chadwell, Riverview head
teacher.
Inside the i=lassrooms, students work with miniature greenbous·
es, ant farms, rool view farrm, weather instr.uments and the meta·
morphosis of butte rOles. They also need to keep dally track of the
·
projects iit journals, Chadwell said.
The playground area has involved bird houses and feeders, ·
Buckeye tree planting and perennial Oower -~ds. she s!lld.
Actually, the students are ·sent for ''slave labor'' in these Dower
beds; but the students volunteer to dig during recess• .
The teachers, students, parents and school volunteer~, have alllearned from .thls project, she added.

Seven new series, and returning 'Homicide,' on NBC's tal/lineup ·
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A resurgent NBC. which already boasts
TV's top comedy and drama, hopes
to close id on frontrunner ABC
next season with seven new shows.
- These new prime-time entries,
announced Monday witb tbe rest of
the network's lineup, consist of six
sitcoms and one drama. Stars ·
include Lea Thompson ("Back to

tbe Future") and Pamela Reed.
NBC finished this season a
strong No. 2.
Fans of "Homicide: Life on lbe
Street" will be pleased to.leam lbat
the acclaimed police drama, whose
fate was in some doubt, is returning
for its fourth season. But missing
from lbe fall schedule are freshman
series "Earth 2," "Tbe Cosby
Mysteries" · and "Amazing
Grace." as well as midsel)son

replacement "Pride &amp; Joy."
Three olber midseason replace·
ments - "Hope &amp; Gloria,"
"NewsRadio" and "In the
House" -will be back, as .will all ·
three editions of "Dateline NBC."
The demise of veteran sitcoms
"Blossom" and "Empty Nest"
had been announced earlier.
"Caroline iri the City," a new
sitcom about a comic strip artist in
Manhattan,' won the network's

prime slot- Thursday at 9:30p.m.
Eastern, sandwiched between
' "Seinfeld," TV's top comedy, and
"ER," lbe top drama.
"Caroline," which stars Lea
Thompson, shifll Ibis year's freshman hit "Friends" to 8 p.m . Eastem. The previous occupant of lbat
slo~ "Mad About You," moves to
Sunday at tbe same time.
·. NBC's Monday and Friday lineups are untouched , while the

· DA.M..(GE CLAIMS - Meigs County residents-continue to
""" get their property assessed for Insurance purposes. This 102 Union
Avenue Pomeroy home bad water damage Sunday and dirt was
washed away, leaving Ibis 10 foot deep by 10 foot wide bole, resi·
dent George Bunch said. T!te foundation for the borne rests on the
culvert that col.lapsed, Bunch said. (Sen_linel photo by George
Abate)

Mow Open For Thi Season
Bedding Plants, Vegetable
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
4 in Geraniums, ·
Shrubs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

biggest upheavals will lake place
on tbe weekend.
Saturday will be home to a pair
of new sitcoms, as well as "The
John Larroquette Show ," which
had struggled Ibis season on Tuesday nights.
Along with "Mad About You,"
the returning "Hop,e &amp; Gloria"
moves to Sunday 10 join two new
sitcoms.

Meigs storm damage ·
estimated at $1 million

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992·5776
Open Daily 9 am·5 pm
Sunday 12 noon'-5 pm

I

How to drive pesky mice away from ·car
.

ASK ANNE • NAN

By ANNE B. ADAMSs a~d
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Mice seem to be building a home,
1atton
·
· tbe
·
using my car •s msu
m
heate.t blower of my '91 Dodge
Colt VistaWagon. Any suggestions
on bow 10 keep them out? I've bad
10 replace tbe unit twice. Motbbillls
migbf work, but I'm concerned
about tbe smell blowing into my
car when I turn on the beater. MARILYN ROBERTS, Belmont,
Vt.DEAR MARILYN: If tbe mice
are crawling in~througb ibe air
intake (you can't miss it: It's a
large, round cylinder inside tbe
engine comparqnent), you can take
&lt;care (&gt;f. ibe problem yourself by
cutting a piece ofl/4-inch mesh
hardware cloth large enough to
cover the intake with about 2 inches overlapping on all side&amp;. Secure
tbe cloth by wrapp.ing it round witb
wiu. on tbe other band, tbe mice

•

are coming into tbe beating system
tbe filberts out on a cookie sheet in ·
tbrougbtbebeaterblower,tbesame a 350-degree -oven for 10 to 15
solution applies but lbe process is minules or until lbe skins begin to
more complicated and it's best to
flake. Then remove tbe skins by
ask your local mechanic to do it for rubbing them either witb a dish
you.
towel or, as you suggest, a turkish
~AR ANNE AND NAN:
toweL
What can be done to keep white
You can also, just before using.
pour boiling water over tbe sheUed
.polyester white instead of gr·ily?
After a few washings, it always
nuts. Don't let tbcm rest in tbe boilbecomes dingy.· MRS . OLLIE
ing water for over one minute .
DAVIS, Glendora, Calif.
Drain and pour cold water over
DEAR MRS. •DAVIS: Soaking
tbem to arrest further beating and
·' your dingy, white polyester in a drain again. You'U lben be able to
strong solution of bot water and a
pinch or rub offtbe skins easily.
dishwasher detergent such as Cas·
cade or Calgonite will do the trick.
Write to ''Ask Anne &amp;
VTNan':
05048at
every time. We suggest about 1/4 P.O. Box 240, Hartland,
·
cup of detergenJ to I gallon of Questions of general interest will
waler. Then wash as usual.
appear in lbe column. Due to tbe
A word of caution: Don't use volume of mail, personal replies
this "soak" every time you wash cannot be provided,
as dishwasher detergent contains .
~nne B. Adams and Nancy
lye which , with overuse, could
Nash-Cummings are co-authors
~ti~a~ri~NE AND NAN: I of "Ask Anne· &amp; Nan" '(Whetbave been given a 5-pound bag of stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan :
filberts. A long time ago I read lbat Two Prize Problem-Solvers
- after ibey are shelled -they · Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
can be put in the oven . When To order, calll·S00-888-1221,1.
removed from tbe oven, you can
Copyright1995 NEWSPAPER
roU them around in a turkish rowel
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
to remove tbe brown coating. My
(For
information
on how to
problem is: I don't know how bot
communicate
electronically
with
lbe oven should be or bow long to
this
columnist
and
others,
con·
leave them in the oven. - MRS .
tact America Online by calling 1'
TROAS C. WIMER, Roseburg,
8011-817-6364, exL 8317.)
OreDEAR MRS . WIMER: Spread.

''

OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!

The contest is open to all Meigs
All 'cont~stants will be interCounty boys and girls, between 16 viewed a·t 6 p.m. July, 27 in the
and 19 years old on Jan. I of this Meigs 'High School Library . A
year. The youths must not have reception will be held at 3 p .m.
married nor have been married, nor Aug. 14 in tbe Meigs High School
bave borne a child.
library for all visiting royalty, king
Contestants must be a member and queen candidates and area fesof .one of tbe organizations repre· tival royalty,
sented on tbe Junior Fait Board (4·
The king and queen will be
H, F.F.A., F.H.A., V.I.C.A ., crowned at 5 p.m. Aug . 14 at .the
Grange, Boy Scouts or Girl 1995 Meigs County Fair.
Scouts).

., Wayne National Forest. to hold open house
Tbe Wayne National Forest is Wayne National Forest and would
bosting an open bouse ai tbe Ohio like to play a role in shaping Its
University Inn on June 5 to meet future, The group would serve as a
1111!1 visit informally with individl!· _ for!Jm to i~entify and discuss
als who have nn interest. in ibo· iuues, upcommg forest and
futurc of tbe Wayne National For· .research activities, accomplish5I.
.
ments, and to share infonnalton on
e .Accord.ing to Eurial Turner, Cor· vari~us topics . The group will. be
est supervisor plans are befog simtlar to the Wayne Wotktng
millie 10 .fonn group of iodividu·. · Group which :W!IS formed to.assist
a\s wbo have an interest in tbe tbe Wayne Nauonal Forest m tbe

a'

--.

development of the Land and
Res~ce Management Plan, Turner satd.
.
The open bous~ ts scb~dul ed
from 4. to 8 p.m .. at the Ohm Un.tversity lnn._3.31 Richland Avenue,
Athens. lndtvtduals who arc unable
to attend tbe c;&gt;ven .bouse, but who
are mterested 10 bemg a part of lbe
gro~p. should contact the Wayne
National Forest.
.

,••
'

Off

•

'
tl

m

~

'

..

Bedroom Suites
Minimal Charge For
. · . Delivery

Save More: Bring Ropes &amp; Bla·nket, Haul Your
Own Purchase
' .
.CASH--~

'· &amp;· '·'·
CARRY
&lt; ......

.. . .

•

..

Living Room Suites
·Cash &amp; Carry

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
:
:ill ~
MAIN STREET
· RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2211

,

I

'

,_,.-.........""'.. ... ~,.,-~., .......... _

· 1·800·837~8217

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff '._
/)
-, County roads and blrsfi(esses 1
bad more than $1 million In darn·
age from Sunday's rains and the
overall damage figure is sure to go
higher since many properties bave
not been assessed yet. officials said
· WednesdaY&gt; morning.
Estimates for storm damage
include $600,000 for county roads,
culverts and bridges , and about
$400,000 unofficially for businesses, according to Bob Byer, direct&lt;I
of tbe Meigs County Emergency
Servi®s.
Federal officials still bad not
declared the county a disaster area
tO&lt;Iliy.~d Byer.
Dyer said be doc s not understand why the state continues to
ignore tbe county .
"I don't know what it takes at
tbe stale level. They won't take my

'.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Welfare
recipients could receive extra cash
benefits for practicing birlb control
under a new proposal in the House.
The rewrite of Gov. George
Voinovich's welfare reform bill
also would raise monthly welfare
payments up to 50 percent depend·
ing on bow long recipients went
wilbout having children.
Sponsoring
Rep.
Joan
Lawrence, R-Galena, outlined pro. visions of the substitute reform
plan Tuesday for ihe House
Finance Committee. The panel
could vote on tbe proposal next
week.

.... ..... ~-- .. ........ ~~-..~- ....... _,_~ ~:"' _ .,.,_,. ·~+'-~•,....,.

..

-·

0

told ine."; Jones told The Associ- ·
ated Press late Tuesday.
He said he counled 41 people,"
including attorneys, guards and fellow inmates, wbo have talked wi lb
McVeigh since he was arrested on
traffic and weapons violations in
Pe~TY. about 60 miles from tbe fed·
er31 building . He was jailed lbere
for two days before being transferred to a federal prison in El
Reno.
"We seem to have gone from
extreme to extreme,'· Jones said on
NBC ' s ."Today" show today .
"Tbe report for several days was
that all be said was his name, ran
and serial number, and now we
have a report that be' s claimed
responsibility. I dori' t think we
should place too much reliance on

it:'

'

"That sounds a lot like jailhouse
talk," Gov . Frank Keating told
NBC. "But the reality is, the case
against Ibis individual is extremely
strong,"

McVeigh and his friend Terry
carrying the bomb from Kansas to
Nichols -are the only people
Oklahoma City.
charged so far in the April 19·
attack that killed 168 people,
· McVeigh had been in Olciaboma
including 19 children. B'o tb face
City at least once before tbe bombtbe death penalty if convicted.
ing, lbe sources said, but bad not
MeVeigh said be was surprised gone inside the federal building .
to learn .t hat children had died
when tbe 4,800-pOund truck bomb
McVeigh reportedly said the
building's design made it more vulton: the face off lbe Alfred P. Mur·
rab Federal Building , the Times
nerable than any other federal
building . Federal officials bave
said. '
Although McVeigh accepted
described lbe building as uniquely
responsibility, he didn't ihink be
vulnerable to damage because of its
bad committed a crime. the paper large gtass windows and the
said.
absence of any courtyard separat·
The sources. .who spoke on con·
ing it from lbe street, where a troclc
dition of anonymity, said McVeigh .carrying a bomb could be parked.
told them · that planning for the
bombing began at least nine
The sources said McVeigh was
months ago and Oklahoma City motivated by anger at lbe govern- ·
was one of several Midwestern ment's 1993 raid o.n the Branch
cities lbat had been considered.
Davidian compound the 1992
Accordihg to the sourc·e ~.
killing of.,lhe wife and ~n of white
McVeigh also said .he used 250
supremaitst Randy Weaver and
miles of back roads to avoid scrutigeneral hostility tOI\'ard tbe governny when he drove the Ryder truck
ment
'

Ohio's problem: Not enough jobs to go around ·
COLUMBUS (AP)- When a
private development group issued a
report card for the states last year;
Ohio bad a "C" (or economic per·
formaqce. A new card du,e next
week iS not expected to show much
change.
The nonprofit' Corporation for
·Enterprise Development said Tues-

word on it," Dyer said. "I am get·
ling fed up with tbe bureaucracy at
tbe state emergency management
·authority."
· The Red Cross ha$ assessed
about half tbe properties damaged.
Their results include:
COLUMBUS (AP) - House
- homes, one destroyed, 16
with major damage and 47 wiib members have resolved a disagreement over whether legislators
·minor damage;
mobile homes, one should oversee Medicaid by el imi·
destroyed, four with major .damage ' oating one oversight committee and
and 13 with minot damage; and
putting a less expensive one in its
- apartments. four witb major place.
damage and one with minor dam·
The House voted 95-1 on Tues·
age. ·
··
.
day in favor of a Senate bill which
Private and township roads stil~ abolishes lbe Legislative Commitdo not have estimates, Dyer said,
The state emergency manage ment agencies will seod individuals
to assess tbe damage, Dyer said.
glate officials continue to wait
on assessments from local authoriContlnued on page 3

on May 25.
"1n terms of earnings and job
quality, Ohio is well placed,"
Brian Dabson, president of the
independent otganizatioo, told the
Senate Finance Committee.
"The problem is t)lat there are
just not enough jobs to go around,
and there are signs lb~t the dispari-

ulation s is worsening," Dabson
said,
He testified at the invitation of
Sen. Charles Hom, R·Kettering, as
tbe CQIJUJI.iuee continued hearings
on Gov. George Voinovich's proposed state budget that includes.
funding for the Ohio Depanment of
Development.

The corporation's 1994 report
card' also gave Ohio a "C" for
business vitality, which deals wiib
tbe competitiveness and diversity
of the stale •s economy. Ohio
received a "B" last year for development capacity, a third category
that reflects long-tenn potential of
the eco\my to grow

tee on Medicaid Oversight. which
receives reports on programs that
provide the poor witb health care.
Rep. Dale Van Vyven, R·
Sharonville, tbe bill's sponsor in
lbe House, said last week the com·
mittee was a wa ste'Q[ time and
money. He conceded on4'uesday
that Medicaid~ which makes up
about one-third of general revenue

spending, needs ongoing legislative
oversight.
Representatives also approved
Van Vyven's amendment to the
bill, which .creates a 10-lnember
joint legislative committee. to
replace lbe previous committee less the cost for staff and other
.expenses.

"It gives us a oversight role .
That's what I argued for;" said
Rep. Michael Fox. R·Hamilton.
Fox and Rep . Otto Beatty, DColumbus, argued last week on tbe
House noor lbat legislatoo need to
be involved in the Medicaid pro·
gram- panicularly at a time wben
changes are being recommended at
lbe state and federal levels.

H~~;;l;e;j~"t;t,;;nj;;i~/;tlve oversight on Medicaid

•;

'·-~- ... "....... ~

I,

.Sections aimed at preventing
pregnancies met opposition from
some legislators and the Catholic
Conference of Ohio.
Rep. Jane Campbell, 9 -Cleve- .
land, said she opposed tbe proposal
because it was intrusive for the
government to play a role in family
planning methods.
Jim Tobin, associale director of
tbe conference, said lbe long-term
contraceptive procedures o utlined
In tbe bill were morally objection·
able to CathOlics.
Tobin said lbe proposals send a
subtle message that poor children
are not worlby or desirable.

Vinton family .claims
half of lottery-jackpot
· DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- One ~ear_Dayto~.
of two winning tickets sold in lbe
The stx famtly members each
$24 million jackpot on 'Saturday
will receive 26 annual payments of
bas been validated. lbe Ohio Lot$52,692.16 after taxes. lottery offi.
cials said.
,
,
tery said.
A couple and their four children
They used tbe lottety s rand~m
claimed halt of the jackpot on
A:uto Louo feature to ptek tbe wm·
Tuesday at the lottery's Dayton . mng numbers: 13, 24, 33, 37, 40
regional office
. '
aod 46.
·· The tic~et was .pbr~based ~t
No claim h~ been made for the
o~er half of the jackpot. The secColony Vt~eo II tn Btdwell 1~
ond winning ticket, was 'SOld at lbe
southern Obto. The ,store will SI?Itt
Friendly Mini-Mart in tbe Cleve·
the $10,000 sellers bonus wttb
Friendly ~fini-Mart.
land suburb or Lakewood.
Arnold Wyatt. 62, of Vinton in
To wtn tb~ top Super Lotto
Gallia Coonty, and his 5!t-year-old
prize, a player must, have all six of
wife, Glay, split tbe $12 mil. lion
tbe numbers drawn m the $1 game
played each Wednesday and Satur·
prize with their children, Vtrgtl
Wyatt, 40, and Lisa Wyatt, botb of
day .
•
Vinton, and Patricia .Monroe, 38,
The jackpot ~o~ ronight s draw·
and Keith Wyat~ 36, both of River- . ing will be $4 IDillton.
,
&lt;ol

.I

By PAUL QUEARY
Associated Press Writer ,
OKLAl{OMA CITY ~ Timothy McVeigh says he bombed tbe
federal building llecause it housed
several ~ovemll)litt offices, but tbat
( he dido t know a day-care center
was inside, The New York Times
reported today.
McVeigh admitted responsibility to two unidentifie!l sources who
said tbey talked to tbe suspect since
his arrest 75 minutes after the
explosion, lbe ne,wspaper said.
McVeigh's attorney , Stephen
Jones, doubted any such jailhouse
confession had been made. Jones
· said inmates often come forward
with purported confessions in order
to settle a soore, gain publicity, or
cut a better deal for lbemselves.
"I have practiced law nearly 30
years and I was trying to remember
if there bad ever been a capital case
where tbe death penally is being
sought and somebody didn't come
forward and say, 'John Doe confessed in jail and Ibis is what be

'

..

Welfare bill offers
bonus for birth control

o·

ol

•

..
,

Applications available for fair pageant
Application forms for tbe 1995
Meigs County Junior Fair king and
queen contest are available at tbe
Meigs County Extension Office,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. The
forms also are at each of tbe high
schools in lbe county.
Completed Jipplication for!Ds
. must be returned to the extenston
office by 4:30 p.m. June 30. No
applications will be accepted after
lbat date.
.

2 5ectiona, 14 Paget 35 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 17, 1995

I,

.\
HEIDI SUE HUFFMAN

SUlLO DAWN MOORE

JASON ALLEN tAYLOR

Huffman, Moore, Tay,or, Vaughan top students

Meigs se~iors to graduate Sunday
, The valedictorians and saluuuo- -~ and belongs to tbe French Club and
rian of the 1.995 Meigs High Societe Honoraire.
·
School graduating class were
Taylor is the son of Tim and
announced today by Fenton Taylor, Desiree Taylor of P001eroy . He is a
prinCipal.
member of both the National
The school bad a three-way tie Honor Society and the French
for valedictorian - Heidi Sue Honor Society, and the French
Huffman, Sbilo Dawn Moore and Club; He has been on the quiz team
Jason Taylor. Salutatorian is Crys- for tbe past two years, and played
tal Lynn Vaughan,
on lbe golf team.
All .four students will speak at
Vaughan, tbe daughter of Roy
the '2 7th annual commencement and Linda Vaughan of Salem Cen·
prilgram 4:30 p.m. Sunday in ibe ter, is in lbe National Honor SOf;i· ·
Larry R. Morrison gymnasium..
ety, on student council, and tbe
· Huffman is the daughter of quiz team. She belongs to Speech
Leonard and Tanya Htlffman ilf and Drama clubs, French Club,
Shal)e, A member of the National and plays will! tbc Meigs marching
Honor Society, she is on tbe year- and concert bands, along witb the
book staff and student council, has all-county band. She has also been ·
been active will! tbe Fellowship of a cbeerleader.
Christian Students, and tbe Spanish
Honorarians of the cl;\Ss are
Club, and was last year's recipient Sarah E. Anderson, Kelley Jean
of !be Danforth Award as tbe out- Grueser, Kimberly Dawn Janey,,
~tanding junior girl.
',
Mandy Jo Jones. Jamie Renee Ord,
The daughter of Jolin and LenO- Stepbannie Thomas and Amanda
ra Moore of Darwin, Moore is a Ann Well.
•
member of the National Honor ·
Nine students in the class quali:.
Society, serves on student council, . , lied. Taylor said, for tbc Diploma

with Honors, ·having meL ·all of lbe
academic, proficiency and other
criteria set for lbat program by tbe
Obio Depanment of Education,
To· be awarded the diplomas
witbtbespecialbonorssealatcom·
mericement will be Sarah E. Ander·
son. Kelley Jean Grueser, Heidi
Sue Huffman , Kimberly Dawn
Janey, Mandy Jo Jones, Sbii.o
Dawn Moore, Jason Allen Taylor,
Crystal Lynn Vaughanand Lisa
Yeauger.
·
Following a tradition of several
years. the baccalaureate speaker
will be a gra&lt;kJate of /l{eigs High
School - Michael Stan Wilson, a
certified public accountant with
Cummins, Krasik &amp; Hohl Co.,
Columbus . He is a partner in tbat
fum.
\'{ilson is a 1971 gradua~e of
Meigs High School and went on to
earn a bachelor's o( business
administration with a major in
accounting from Ohio Uniyersity.
He is tbe son of Don and Edna Wilson of Middleport

Rebecca Sue Meier. senior class
president, will give the welcome,
and Eddena Jo Russell, treasurer,
will introduce gucs.ts precedin·g
W Uson' s message.
The Meigs High School Band
will play for tbe processional and
recessional along witb presenting a
special selection, "Brighton Beach"
and "Maroon and Gold," the
school's alma mater. The Meigs
Chorus will sing "It's .So Hard to
Say Goodbye to Yesterday" and
"Against All Odds."
· Principal Fenton Taylor will
present lbe class to LanyW. Rupe,
!)resident of the Meigs Board of
Education, who· will award diplomas. Jaclyn Dawn Swartz, class
secretary, will read the roll, and
Amber D. Blackwell, vice presi·
dent, v.;ill prese!'t tb~ymbol of
graduation.
Graduating seniors are Sarab
Elizabeth Anderson, Darrell R.
Arnold, Robby Balcer, Emily R .
Bare , Anthony l osepb Barrett,
Continued Ol) !!age 3

�--1

•

•

•

•

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

•

Wednesday, May 17, 1995
Page~

Ellis Island bridge is trampled under foot
WASHINGTON -Tile Rcpub-

nc.a Coops bu ftaally put ill

fOOl clowl! 1111 a almiiiriiDJ case d.
ialelllale wfae.
Sea. F1811k LaulellberJ, D-NJ.,
bad tried. for ye~n to pt eoo.,_
to provide $15 miUioo for a fOOl
bridse tbat would span between
ROBERT L WINGETT
New Jeney and Ellis Ialand, wbere
Publisher
mllllons of 1mm11rants sot tbelr
first glimpse of America at tile tam
of tile ceDIW')'.
Tbe New York coaareasloaal
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
bad strongly opposed
4elesation
General Ma118ger
Controller
tbe bridse. In part because New
York reaps more tban $1 mlllloo
per
year In tees from tbe island.
LETI'ERS OJ" OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
New
Jeney, aiill:ordins to publlsbed
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, .
reports,
sets only a fraction of tbat.
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
Currently,
visitors to Ellis Island
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
must travel via ferry from tbe
soutbem Up of Manhallan.
Last summer it appeared !IS If
Lautenbers rmally bad gotten bis
bridse after be fougbt off an
• attempt by Sen. Jolm McCain, RAriz., to strike tbe money from an
appropriations bill. But last week.
•
Lauteoberg's efforts weren't
Dear Editcr:
occurred in a more populous or enough'
as tbe project was struck
· · · At about 4 a.m. Sunday, Meigs affluent area. aseocies would be from a congressional spending bW.
County, as well as surrounding scrambling to offer tbeir services.
!lfCIS, was bit by a deluge of rain In too many instances, Meigs
t~~at resulted in serious flooding.
COIInty as weU as some swroundThe resulu were disasuous In as ing counties, bave been relegated to
!OUCh as many lost most or all of the "low man on tbe toletri pole"
... AF~C'MLY
tl)eir possessions.
position.
·
: Only tbe fact that no one perTbrough tbe efforts of Bob
jsbed or was seriously injured was · Byer, aid and relief was obtained
tbe positive 'side of the situation.
from tbe Red Cross, local state,
: Realizing tbat Ibis is not the county and township officials, vilpiagnitude of otber such Incidents lage ofrlcials and a number of other
throughout the nation, I find it volunleers. We applaud and appreexasperating tbat, to my know I- (" ciate their assistance.
·
edge, no one was sent from tbe
Meigs Countians have recovered
stale level to belp assess tbe dam- from otber floods and disasters in
age or offer financial assistance.
the past and will overcome tbis
I am-aware tbat tbe federal gov- evel)t. Despite this, they would
C!'JIIIIenl will not respond because deeply appreciate some help.
damages of $1 or $2 minion is too
James M. Soulsby
paltry a sum for tbetil to be conMeigs County Sheriff
cemed witb.
·
Pomeroy
I am convinced, too, bad tbis

Let1ers to the editor

:·

County needs help

SYEARS OF

COL~GE"rM

ActRTIHED
PUBLIC ACCOIMTANT.

What other Ohio
: .~newspapers are saying.
•

'I·

'By The Assocltlted Press
'
ExcerpiS of Obio editorials nf national and stalewide interest
:The (Elyria) Chronicle-Telegram, May II
: It is clear tbat Dr. Henry Foster deserves to be confmned as U.S ..sur·geon general. His message of personal responsibility, sexual abstinence,
·:and strong family values, is one tbat America's teenagen need to bear.
· Foster· bas responded to questions about the number of abortions be
·performed. His slight discrepancy in tbe number hardly proved a· cover·

Wednesday, May 17, 1995

•

•

R1tber tban uvln1 tbe money, · jcct will stand 11 1 testamellt to one re11on w.- "die aee4 to JftSCI'VC
bowew:r, Cclnpaa maely dftelecl lawmaker's determination to set and IOCUre •... tile soutb side of tbe
tile Nldonll Put Service to epend wbat be wants no Dlltter what tile Island," even though ibere are no
It 011 otberprojects.
facts are -and tbe reluctance of uses planned for mat side of tbe
otllers to cballenge tbe parocblal island. Tbe secoad reason is perInterest of tlleir colleagues.
haps more tetlin&amp;: "conformance
By Jack Anderson
Wben Lauten berg InitiallY\ witb tlleintentofCOnaress."
At one point during floor debate
sought funding for tile project, ·tile
idea was opposed by a variety of witb McCIIin last summer, Lautenenvironmental and tax- berg was riled enough to re'wrile .
Michael Bin teln bistorlcal.
payer groups, including tile Natioo- · tile bistcry books himself. ''Maybe
a1 Trust for Historic Preservation we should ... return tbe Grand
A Lau~enberg
·admit- and Citizens Against Gover:nmeat Canyon (In Arizona) to its natural
ted ·tbat It looks
end of tbe Waste. Even tile National Parle Ser- state so tbat people can understand
road for tile foot bri e. tbougb be vice, wbich maintains EUis Island, wbat It was like to see the Grand
added tbat Laulell
. "would see or14inally opposed the bridge.
Canyon in Its early days, witb
wbat could be don ' if anotber
'To alter EUis Island's relation- Native Americans nvlng tbere, and
opportunity aune up in tbe future.
sbip witb tbe mainland witb a bave tbe full natural experience,"
•'This is a memil~~~ part!- , bridge would drastically alter its Lautenberg said.
san battle, and I'm
ted In bistoric cbaracter. and change forMcCain wasted no time issuing
tbe outcome," Lauten rg said ever tbe cxperience·of tbe park vis- a COITCClion: "So I alSQ say to tbe
after tbe funding was strucll:. "Tile itor,' • an early report by the park senator from New Jersey for bis
edification, that we do bave Native
bridge to Ellis Island would bave service stated.
been a one-time investment and
After tbe money was approved Americans living in tbe Grand
provided access to one of our last summer, tbe park service Canyon. I encoutage bim to visit
nation's most important bistoric cbanged its tune. wblcb led some tbem."
sites." ·
'
cynics to speculate tbat tile agency
UNDER THE DOME - You
Yet tile amazins thing is not tbat was caving in to political demands. can't blame a guy for trying:
tbe bridge lost Its fundlns; it's tbat In a May t letter to McCain, park ·
At a time wben 'House Republi·
tbe funding was there in tbe first service officials gave two reasons cans are trying to get tbe governplace. Even after it's goae,
for reversina their decision . One meat off people's backs, one of tbe
most flamboyant members of
Congress is urging tbe federal gov,emment to step into tbe ring-. the
boxing ring.
"Wayne' Gretzky and Steve
Youna bave tp wear headgCIU' AFTE~
sbouldn't George Forem~n?"
begins a March 28 letter from Rep.
James' Traficant, D-Obio, to bls
House colleagues. Spurred by tbe
OJJUR~
life-threatening injuries to American boxer Gerald McClellan in
February, Traficant bas inuoduced
a bill to make professional boxers
wear protective headgear like tbe
Jcind used by amateurs. Despite the
critical injuries to McClellan, and
more recenUy to Jinuny Garcia of
. Colombia, professional boxing
inrerests oppose tbe measure.
Even Traftcant's aides admit the
measure migbt be knocked out
before it receives a round of llearings. "We don't .really tbink it's
going to go anywbere at tbis
point," a Traficant spokesman
said. "Perbaps it can lie part of a
more comprehensive bill to clean
up boxing (in the future)."
·
So far, the bill bas two co·spon-

and

( ·pro-

... AFTER ONLY

'"
ONLY
biMNT'NSOF

IJYEAI\SOF
COLLEGE, I'M

SITTING ON THE
XMA
DNA LAB .
TECHNICIAN.

ATECHNICAL

at;IHEER.

scrs.

.

.

Jack And~rson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Women's fashion gets real at last

:up.lt is true that tbe While House.!las itself to blame for Ibis mess. By failTbe fashion nacks at a recent beets alld slacks as they took over consider buying clothe$· at a dis- analyst Alan Miilstein, who does
·ing to cstablisb at the ouiSet all of the particulars about Foster's record of
.perfonning abortions, tbe administration opened tile door on this volatile N.ew York City sbow weren't as tbe jobs left behind by the G.I.s. CoUnt cllaiil are snapping up every- not believe we will see any real
confident as tbey bad been in years Wben tbe men came back. tbe fasb- thing from dress sboes' to blue changes in the fashion industry.
issue.
"Tbey don't design clo.thes to
: The Senate sbould not alto~ bis nomination to be hijacked by anti- past. The tone was somber, cbas- ion industry faced the herculean . jeans.
:abortion activists. Getting a fair'v1lt€001he Senate floor will not be easy, tened. Gone were tbe predictions
Other factors have conlribuled accommodale women. They design
-bowevcr, witb Majority Leader Bob Dole, R·Kan .. and Sen. Pbil Gramm, tbat American women would soon
to tbe slump. The fact tblu tbe pop- clothe'S to create hype for their
ulation is aging means tbat more names." Millstein says that tbese
·R·Texas, pandering to the anli-abo,Uon forces in tbe Republican Party 10 be stumbling around on spike
bee is, or draping tbemsel ves in
women already bave tbe clotbes days tbe big money for designers
"further their political ambitions.
waif-like WlliJIS, or slcipping about task of convmcing women to shed tbey need. And the increased num- comes not from selling clotbes, but
Portsmquth Daily Times, May 10
·
·
such functional clothes for bigh ber of workplaces with casual dress from putting tbeir names on nonA bipanisan trio of senators proposed legislation Tuesday to ease tbe in babydoU dresses.
Instead, tbe new fall lines bad heels and dresses with Jon~ slciriS codes means tbat many employees apparel items like perfume, sheets
•. requdemcnts of the Endangered Species Act and.give administration offineutral colors, discreet bemllnes and small waists (read: gtrdles). don 'I need separate wardrobes for and even cbocolale bars.
c~'lls more discretion in deciding bow and wben to protect wildlife.
.
and
subtle shapes. Tbough tbe Despite initial resistance, tbe fasb- .work and play,
Still, tbere are glimmers ilf
The autbors of tbe biU say tbeq proposal would restore balance to a
ion
industry
prevailed.
beels
were
soU
quite
bigb,
tbey
bad
What's
astonishing
is
that
the
bope.
Besides the aforementioned
law that in tbe past bas ignored tbe economic impact of protecting endanBut
tbose
days
are
over.
TQday,
!Jeen
brought
down
a
peg
or
two.
fasbion
industry
has
been
so
slow
fall
preview,
anotber fashion
gered wildlife.
·
.
·
In
sbort,
tbey
were
tbe
pnd
of
most
women
bave
betler
things
to
to
adjust
to
tbe
cllanging
tides.
Just
reporter
was
amazed
to find tb·at
Environmental groups and Interior Secretary Bruce Babbiu say the biU
do
than
fret
over
Ibis
year's
bernclotbes
American
women
might
this
winter,
Paris
designers
decided
tile
buzz
word
at
New
York's
April
would uash the law tbat bas been credited with saving bald eagles and
lines.
They
have
businesses
to
run,
actually
want
to
wear.
we
were
going
to
return
to
tbe
'50s
sbows was "wearability."
dozens of otber speciesover the past two decades.
.
Naturally, tbe fasbion people advanced degrees to obtain, kids to and tried to bring back tbose long ' Unfortunately, tile great "wear1 Under tbe· bill, tbe secretaries of commerce and interior would bave tile .bated
feed.
it.
skirts and spike heels. Retailers able" clothes turned out to be
1 authority 10 decide whether to save a species from extinction.
"American
creativity
is
at
its
"Across
tbe
women's
apparel
pushed slimming undergarments leather jumpsuiiS, skiriS made out
1 Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., acknowledged that socii a process could
point,"
sn&amp;:ered
jewelry
low
stunning.
reality
tbat
industry,
a
called
"body shapers" (read: gir· of race-car flags and "spring coats
i lead to the extinction or some .species. However, Gonon said tbis process
Robert
Lee
Morris
to
tbe
designer
women
bave
lost
intermillions
of
dies).
And
fashion magazines like that are reminiscent of tbe terrya would also make tbe secretaries directly responsible to people wbose lives
Bergen
(N.J
.)
Record
.
.
"Tbis
is
est
in
buying
clothes
is
starting
Vogne
hyped
stilettos.
cloth bathrobes you steal from
! tbey affect.
to
sink
in,"
reports
tbe
Wall
Street
about
being
commercial.''
The stilettos are tbe most fasci- botels."
i
In response to the fact tbat many species once considered endangered
Well, imagine tbaL A commer- Journal.
nating fiasco. Wbat were they
Well, tbere's always next sea; have made remarkable comebacks. we agree it is time to re-examine tbe
cial
fashion show. One that caters
It's starling to sink in after a tbinking? They obviously bave no son. Until tben, look for the blue
; Endangered Species Actio decide if it's indeed too restrictive.
to what women actually want to three-year slump in retail sales of common sense and they couldn't ' ligbt specials.
, The Coshocton Tribune, May 11
.
:
A federnl court in New Jersey bas upbeld a conuoverslal planlc of wei· . wear, ratber than trying to dictate a women's dotbing. With tbe closing possibly bave done any market
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated
' fare refonn. Tbe provision at issue is the ban on increased cash paymeliiS lot of silly styles tbat tbey don't of many cbain stores. Witb tbe researcb. Otberwise they would writer for Newspaper Enterprise
· want to wear. No wonder tbe . &lt;.!~line in advertisements in tbe ba.,..seen. tbe·surveys, like one A8soelatlon.
·
:' to welfare households after the birtb of an additi()nal cbil&lt;!,
_
·fashion press. And with tbe scores conducted by EDK Forecast, that
Had the jullge ruled the other way, tbe whole movement to reorient tbe · designers.are miffed:
(For information on bow to ·
· Because for years, designers of slip dresses and neon Diinislci.riS say four out of five women are communicate electronically with
welfare system would have suffered an abrupt setback.
·
"totally uninteresled" in wearing Ibis columtilst and others, conTbc judge suessed that the arrangement treated welfare families .tbe COULD tell women wbat to wear. languishing on stcre racks.
Meanwhile, business is strong at spikes.
; same as working people, wbo receive no automatic raise wben tbey bave During World War II, for exaniple,
tact America Online·by calling 1became
accustomed
to
tile
women
"Tbe
designers
don't
have
a
discounters
like
Kmart,
where
800-827-6364,
exL 8317.)
more children.
comfort or irnee-lengtb slcirts, low women wbo previously wouldn't clue about lifestyle, .. says retail
Some 18 states are experimenting witb the family&lt;ap idea For now,
; they bave a green light to pmceed.
:' Tileltistbestatestbatshouldadoptcrrejectsucbacontroversialmeasure.
welfare bill passed by tbe House of Representatives this year unwise; ty mandates a family cap for the entire country. In tbe Senate, deferen~
:' to states' judgment should prevail.
Somewbere out there is a reader nation. For the rtrst time in nearly Bill Clinton's fU'St term were utter- • ' It indirectly slanders a wide
· The Cincinnati Enquirer, May 11
wbo clipped one of tbose columns . three decades, ~e were given tbe ly prediclable. The Republican pro- array" of officers "wbo are out
~
Last month's Oldaboma City blast continues to reverberate as Ameri·. wherein I ventured the opfuion tbat · excruciating details of tile painful posals would result in a "second- tbere, day and nigbt, laying their
f ' cans take a closer look at security in government buildings.
the term "political courage" is an choices tbat will have to be made class bealtb care system • • for lives on tile line."
Short of creating pedestrian malls· as one panel suggested - little oxymoron, and who is now slipsenior citizens and the poor, said
Busb cited an Alcobol, Tobacco
~ can be done to stop the sort of massive truck bomb that destroyed tbe ping it into an envelope with a little
Josenh Spear
White House cbief of staff Leon and Fireanns officer who was shot
~ Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
stick-on nole wbicb advises me to
I""
Panetta. "It exposes tbe macro· in tbe 1993 standoff against Branch
To ·keep vehicles away from tbe federal building in downtown Cincin· eat iL
economy to considerable downside Davidian fanatics near Waco,
nati would require a nine block pedestrian mall.
My critic will bave a point. In to restore our rJSCal bealtb.
risk,'· said National Economic Texas. ·~I can assure you that Ibis
But in local government buildings steps are needed to combat court· any given year, I would be bard put
A hundred federal programs and Council Director Laura D'Andrea honorable man, killed by weird
room scufOes and tbe smuggling of weapons. Just one week, l)efore tbe to cite balf a dozen instances in agencies will bave to go, said Tyson,. whose casual attitude cultisiS, was no Nazi," Busb wrote.
Oklahoma City bombing, a handgun was found bidden under a bencb in a wbiclll think politicians acted witb Domenioi. The annual growth rate toward tile deficit dilemma borders
Finally, a Republican of stature
prisoner holding area in the Hamilton County Courtbouse.
true fortitude, meaning tbey made of the Medicare program wlU bave on tbe obnoxious.
has given notice tbat the NRA is no
Sberifj!s deputies frequently must confiscate guns and knives from tougb decisions tbat benefited tile to be reduced from 10 percent to
Like Sen. Exon, I do not agree longer an organization of respon~i·
: people entering tile courthouse. Statewide, 4S gull8 and 1,197lrnlves were general welfare but W-served tlleir 7.1 percent. "I don't agree with .witb all tbe spending-cut proposi- ble gun owners but bas become a
·
personal interesiS or tbose of tlleif everything," tbe coaunittee's rank· lions put fortb by Domellid and bastion or gun nuts. And rmaUy, 'a
: confiscated in courtroOms in 1992.
•
It's nearly' impossible to stop truck bomb terrorism. But where it's coostituencies.
ing Democrat, James .Ex on of Kasich . But lam in total accord Republican of note bas bad tbe guts
: needed and practical, as in the local courthouses, steps sbould be taken to
During a two-day period in mid- Nebraska, told tbe cbairman. "But witb tbeir purpose, and 1 applaud to point out that the Branch Davidi: beadoffsmall-annsviolencctbatcanbej.ust~del)dly.
May, however, we witnessed, not I've never seen anyone witb tbe tbeircompetenceandtheircourage. ans were a bunch oLwackos wbo·
'
one or two •. bUt three displays of courage to do wbat you've done."
Tbank God, tbe great debate bas murdered federal ageniS attempting
political guts.
.
One day later, House Budget begunat)ast:
•
to serve a legal warrant and
Savor the moment; it will not Committee Chairman Jobn Kasich . Tben from Houston, also on brought tbeir undoing on tbem·
,
.
-a..
recur befcre tile Millennium.
of Obio released bis panel's plan to May 10. came a missive tbat coul\1 selves.
•
On May 10, tbe cbairman of tile balance tbe budget in seven years. lead a body to believe in. miracles.
Pete, John and George. Oxy·
! By Tbe Associated Pre~~~~
·
Senate Budget Committee, Peler It suggested tbe purging of 284 Former president George Bush, a mQron bustqs, all.
: Today is Wednesday, May 17, tile I 37th day of 1995. There are 228
Domenici of New Mexico, present- programs and me eliminatipn of man for wbom I bave seld0111 bad a
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated .
• days left in tile year.
ed a proposal tblit would balance tbree cabinet departmenu and 13 kind word, renouncild bis member- writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
! Today's Highlight in.History:
·
tbe federal budf1:t by tbc yeu lesse&amp;".agendea ..Medicare.would be: ship in tile National Rifle Associa· Association.. _ _.
·
: On May 17, 19S4, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark "Brown
2002. It wa5 a document of historic beid to an annual growtb rate of S.4 lioo witb a stinging denunciation of
(For Information on how to
• versus Board oiJEducation ofT~ka" ruUng wbicb declared tbat ra.;ially
slgnjfieance. For tbe fttsttlme In percefit.
its blitzkrieg on federal law· communicate electronicillty wltb
:segregated pubi'te scbools were mberenUy unequal.
27 'years, someone of knowledge ·
Tbe screams from a Wbltc enforcemel)t officials. '!be NRA's ·this solumnlst and others, con! On Ibis date:
and influence offered a credible House wbose best budJet projec- reference to federal agents as tact America OnUne by caWng 1• In 1792, tbe New York Stock Excbang~ was founded by brokers meetscheme to defuse the defiCit bomb lion to date would add a trillion "jack-booted government tbugs" 1100-827-6364, exL 8317.)
: ipg under a tree located oo wbat is now W~Jl Street.
. · ·
tbat t.IJreatens tbe security of tbls 'dolll\fS to tbe national debt during deeply. o!~~~~, ~im!_!~~ -~~~..:..._..._~. . ,~~ ·- ....__L;..·~~·
.. . . ~ ...... -..-•...,..r- ..__:._..~ 7 ·--'let-........,.........,~-·-.~- ................,. '" ·~- 't, ..__.. _.,..,_,.,..-:-.-.......-:---,..,..~.,..........,_ -,&lt;--~·~...,_,, __ ~...,..,~..,.,,..,....__..., ·• -·~..-·~·.,.., ___ ,,_· .....,.·roo~~·,.,...,...~·.........;- ____~,_.,.
,,.,__ --·-~·..-. 7""
•
. ~
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Sara Eckel

'

Brave pol•·.t 1·c1·ans· bust the .oxymoron

;:1i0 da
• t"0·ry
. .y ··
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
ThW'Iday, Marta
~A~I'QJ:;-~"'~IM~t~~:!~~or~ec~•·~for~~~cxmdl~~tiOIIa;t!'
~-~~~~~~~

Meigs

"

seniors.~tlnued rrom P.g•t

The Dally Sentinel • PIJOe 3

Meigs

st~rm... ~ont'"* rrom .,. 1

Misty Dawn Bircbrteid, Amber D. Frank Musser, Brett Newsome,
Blackwel~ Racbel Micbelle Blaine,
Jonatban· Newsome, Rbonda F. ties including the Red Cross and
•
tbe. Obio Division of Natural
Stacy Elaine Blankenship, Tony Oiler;
.
Lee Brower, Tony Brown, BiUie Jo
Jamie Renee OrtJ, Susan Marie Rtsource~, said Mike Branbam, a
Butcher, Bobbie Butcber, Caleb Page, Jamie Jo Pennington, Sbawn spokesman for Sen. Jan Micbael
Calboun, Dianna Ray Carman, Car- Petrie, Jason M. Pierce, Cleon Long.
Toledo
Long's omce bas contaCted tile
letta CoUeen Carr, Melissa Renee Reginald Pratt III, Katbryo
Clifford, Jessie~ Lynn Cochran, Suzanne Pullin$, Gregory David federal offices concerning geuing
' .
Kevin Dewayne ColUns;
,
Ramey, Sbeni Amsburg. Danny L. tile area declared a federal disaster
. Vanessa Alison Compston, Rees, Anita Cheryl Rifne, Erica area, Branbam said.
"They view tbe chances of get. Jernd Keitb Cook, Bridget Council, Lynn Robie, Crockett P. Roush,
Samuel Jon Cowan, Jannifer Cyntbia Ann Rousb, Patricia Lee . ting federal assistance as very
slim," Branham said.
Renee' Dailey, Jeff Darnell, L. Rousb, Ryan Keltb Rowe;
The state conuolling board may
Keitb DarsL Stepbanie Ann Davis.
Josepb M. Lipscomb-Rucbti,
Cbristy A. Dill, Ryan Neel Dodsoo, Eddena Jo Russell, Sberidan Ray provide relief support for this dis·
Tra.vis Lee Drenner, Jennifer G. Russell, Larry Alan Rutter, aster, be added.
· Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston,
· Dunkle, Amy Renee DursL Phillip Mic.helle Dawn Sampson, Cory
and
his office have remained in
Dale El!monds, Rebecca Ann Seymour, Donald W. Shaffer,
Elliott, Robett Ellis, Tara Renee Joshua Paul Sigman, Brian Smith, contact witb local officials, said
Erwin, Benjamin Henry Ewing II, Brent Silriitb, Kelly Lynn Smitb, Richard Bitonte. a spokesman for
Gabriel Farley, Wendy C Faw, Sban!ftfli D. Staats, Jaclyn Dawn Carey.
Carey's office is trying to gel
• David Micllael Feuy II, Jarrod L: Swartz, Lisa Violet Tlltterson,
emergency
funding througb tbe
Folmer, Daniel Thomas Fowler;
Jason A. Taylor, Stepbannie Jay
state
adjutant
general's office,
Tara L. Fowler, .Gwyndolyn Thomas, Mlcbael Tbompson,
W.VA.
Bitonte
said.
May Freeman, Brian Keith Friend, Molly Anne Toban, Cyotbia Ann
"We've bad so many calls on it
Misty Frum, Travis Eugeoe Grate, Vance Sroufe, Melissa Dawn
this week," Bitonte said. "He plans
Kelley Jean Grueser, Susan Vance;
Jeanette Grueser, Kimberly Rae
Crystal Lynn Vaughan, to come down and see first band
Haggy, William Sedwick Hall, Micbelle Dawn Ward, Amanda himself."
County bomeowners awakened
Dean E. Harikla, Royden A. Ann Well, Sbannon Wbeeler, Amy
Hawkins. William Travis Hen- Lynn Wbite, Melissa Ann Wilfong, to more slibwers today, while many
driclcs, Adalii Wade Hendrix;
Tony a Michelle WiU, Carrie Elaine worry wbetber insurance will cover
Ml ,.. ,,a, 'ar.d Prea Gtaph/t»NM
. Jered T. Hill, Jarrod Christopher Williams, Walter J. William·s. Sunday's siorm damage, officials
C1jjg5Accu--•. Inc.
·
,Holman, Monica Beth Holman, · Jimmy Wolfe, Tyler Jason Wolfe, said.
About 90 percent of the homes
.Heidi Sue Huffman, Kimberly Christopher Adam Wyau, Lisa M.
Soutb·Central Ohio '
Extended forecast
affected
by the storms did not bave
Young
Dawn
Janey,
John
M.
Jeffers,
yeauger,
Julia
Katberine
Tonigbt.. ..Showers and tbunderTbursday night ... Rain ending. David Brian Johnson, Emily and Michael Patrick Young.
flood
insurance,
said John Musser
storms witb heavy downpaurs. Lows 45 to 55.
of
Downing
Cbilds
MuUen Mu~r ·
Micbelle
Jobnson.
Mandy
Jo
Jones,
Low 60 to 65. Soutbwest winds 10
Friday .. .Fair. Highs in the 60s.
James
Kopczinsky,
.Adam
M.
mpb or less becoming variable.
Saturday... Fair. Lows in the 40s.
Cbance of rain is near tOO percent. Higbs from the mid 60s to lower Kraws~zyn, Bryan D. Lambert,
Darrell D. Lee, Charles William
Thursday... Sbowers and occa- . 70s.
sional tbunderstorms witb more
Sunday ... Fair. Lows middle 40s Legar III, Micbael Lightfoot, Cyn·
Units of tbe Meigs County lumber fire, Harley McD9nald
beavy rain possible. High 65 to 70. to lower ~qs.. Highs middle 60s to tbia Diane Litchfield, Kevin P.
Emergency Medical Service logged property.
Logan, Charles D. Martin;
Chance of rain is near t 00 percent. middle 70s.
POMEROY
Christie Lynn Mash Crane, I 0 calls for assistance Monday,
II :27 a.m .. Pomeroy Pike,
Donnie Allen May, Todd Allen with four transfers. Units respondSusan Cotterill, HMC.
J
McDade, Lori A. McGhee, Patrick: ing included:
MIDDLEPORT
2:14 p.m., Senior Citizens CenKeith McGuire, Trisb Diane
12:20 a.m., Fisher Street, Megan ter, Virginia Kidders, VMH.
McHaffie, Erika A. Meadows,
4:22 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Rebecca Sue Meier, Todd A. Evans, Holzer Medical Center.
5:52 a.m .. Palmer Street, Gerald Wildermuth, VMH.
Mitch, Shilo Dawn Moore, Kevin
RUTLAND
Ray Morris, Matthew F. Morris, Dorothy McCloud, HMC.
5:28 p.m., North Second
5:28 p.m ., Pleasant Ridge,
Betty Warner Camaban, 71, of Long Bottom, died Sunday, May 14,
Avenue, Joyce Blevins, Veterans Nonna Parker, VMH.
1995, at St. Josepb's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Marriage licenses ·
Memorial Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
Born Jan. 12, 1924, in Cilester, the daughter of the late Herbert and
5:58 p.m., South Third Street,
9:04 p.m, State Route 124,
Rossi Koenig Warner, sbe was a nursing associate.
The following couples were Marshal McMillin, VMH.
search for missing persons
She is survived by ber busband, Maurice Carnaban of Long Bottom; issued
marriage licenses recently in
II :06 p.m., Railroad Street, unknown names.
and s6n and daughter-in-law, Jon Dee and Cindy Carnahan of Ashville.
She was preceded in deatb by ber .brothers, Charles and Lawrence tbe Meigs County Probate Co.urt of
Judge Robert Duck:
.
Warner.
.
Robert
Floyd
T.aggart,
20,
and
Graveside services were beld yesterday at tbe Chester Cemetery.
Owyndoiyn Mary Freeman.- 17,
Arrangements are being handled by the Ewing Funeral Home.
both of Pomeroy ; Jamie Randall
Barrett, 20, Long Bottom and
Tbe following cases recently ·
Robert W. rurne, ·or Reedsville,
Melissa Deanna Marnard, 19,
the
Meigs
County
was
released Monday on a $5,000
were
filed
in
Pomeroy; Robert Eugene Facemy.
Clerk
of
Courts.
personal
recognizance bond, pender, 29, and Micbelle Renee Biggs,
A Reedsville woman recently ing his sentencing at9:15 a.m. June
Gerald T. Wildermutb, 82, of Pomeroy, died Tuesday, May 16, JW~) 28, both of Reedsville.
pleaded guilty to two counts of 26, records sbow. Riffl e bad
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
"'\'~
allegedly
breaking and entering waived his right to counsel and a
Born Marcb 14, 1913, in Pomeroy, tbe son of the late Wesley and Nell
into
a
home
this February, accord-· trial by jury on these fourth degree
Tracy Wildermuth. be was a retired manager at the A&amp;P Tea Co. for. 42
ing
to
court
files.
felony charges.
years ~d Ebersbacb Hardware for 12 years. He was a veteran of World
Am Ele Power ..............................33
Sara M. Williams, of Reedsville,
A Rutland man recently pleaded
War II, a member of the Pomeroy, United Methodist Church, the . AkzQ ..;. ................................... .581/4
was released on a s•.ooo personal guilty 10 one coont of lrafficking of
Metbodlst Men. tbe American Legion Post #39, Meigs County Senior Cit- ~ .Jl.slulmd ou ........................... .37 112
marijuana. according to court flies.
izens, Pomeroy health care volunteer and Red Cross bloodmobile volunAT&amp;T ..................................... 51118 · recognizance bond Monday pending her sentencing, court records
John M. Wolf, New Lima Road,
teer.
Bank One ..........\"""""'"'"'".323/8
show. WiUiams waived ber rigbtto Rutland, was released on a $1 ,000
Bob Evans .......... ,.,..,................... .ll
He is survived by bis wife, Faye Crary Wlldermutb of Pomeroy;
Champion Ind ..........:.............lO 314
an attorney and a jury trial on these personal recognizance bond last
.(laughter, Donna Jean Nibert of Gallipolis; sister, Ruby and Jerry Hartung
Charml 0g Shop ........................4 3/8
fourth degree felony charges.
, week pend;ng his sentencing at
of Columbus; two grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren .
City Holding .................................26
Also a Reedsville man pleaded 9:15a.m. June 26. Wolf waived his
He was preceded in deatb by bis son, Larry Wildermuth.
Federal Mogul ........................ l9 1/8
Services wiU be beld at I p.m. Friday at tbe Ewing Funernl Home, with
guilty to two counts of allegedly right to an auomey and a trial by
Goodyear T&amp;R ..............:.:.....415/8
the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating.
·
breaking
and entering into a botpe jury, when pleading to tbis fourth
K·mart .................................... 131/8
this
Fe~ruary,
according to court degree felony charge.
· . Burial will follow at tbe Beecb Grove Cemetery, with military graveLands End .............................. 16 114
ftles.
..
·. side rites by the American Legion Post #39.
.
Limited Inc.............................22 518
Friends may call between 2-~ p.m. Thursday at the funeral
Multimedia Inc..................... .38 3/8
People's ...................................22 314
home.
Ohln Valley Bank ..............:...;......33
In lieu of flowerS, contributions may be made to the Pomeroy United
One Valley ..............................30 114
Methodist Church.
Rockwell ......................... :......45 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ :......27 112
Royal Dutch .......................... US 1/4
Shoney'stnc ....:......................11 1/4
Star Bank ............................... 41 5/8
Wendy lnt'l ............................ 16 314
Meeting time changed
.
tional meeting will be held at 6:30
Wortblnglon lnd ....................21 718
·. The Meigs County Commis- p.m . tonight at tbe Subway in
sioners' meeting Friday will start at Pomeroy for those interested _in
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
noon instead of tbe regular lime.
panicipating or helping.
quotes provid ed by Advest o
Gallipolis.
Board meeting moved
Ticket deadline
The Racine·Soutbern Alumni.
The Leading Creek Conservanwill
bold a banquet at 6 p.m. May
cy District moved its regular meet27.
Reservations
must be made by
ing from May 18 to 5 p.m. May 25
·
May
20.
Tickets
can
be purchased
at the county offices.
at· Home National Bank and
Cross's Store in Racine. For .·
Dance to be held
A square dance will be beld at details, call Stanley Stewart at 992·
the Tuppers Plains VFW ball Sat- 4044.
urday, 8 p.m. Music by Ute Happy
Now Open
Hollow Boys witb L. B. Wilson as Blke-a-tbon Saturday
A bike·a-tbon for St. Jude Cbil'
caller.
SPRING SEASON
dren's Research Hospital will be
Soap box derby set
held Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3
Planters of All Kinds
Organizers for tbe annual soap p.m. at the Meigs County FairOur $14.95 plan features low per-minute
• Bedding Plants
box derby need volunteer;v•ntl- grounds, Additional information
rates of just $.30 peak/$.20 off-peak with 20
driyers for tbe even! that will be may be obtained by calling Debbie
• Herbs; Perennials
held June 24 and 25 at GeJ~. Smith, 985-4450; Ronda Davis,
free minutes each month. To experience the
or Debbie Drake, 949Hartinger. Parkway.
....... The
. organiza.
- . 992-6037,
savings of Wireless pae Network service,
2007.

i

lsoo I

Weather

Meigs EMS. logs 10 calls

--Area deaths-Betty W. Carnahan

'M eigs County Court news

Insurance in Pomeroy. MDII of tile
areas hardest bit are localed in tile
flood plain.

In Jbc Laurel Cliff area of
POIIICI'Oy, only one of tbe 10 booles
bad flood insurance, said Musser,
P0111eroy village council president.
Homeowners insurance policies
do not automatically include flood
insurance. Musser said.
Also, those claims with nood
insurance will be subject to interpretation by insur3nee adjusters. be
added.
If tbe water flowed in tbrougb
tbe basement sewer, tbe damage
will be covered, Musser said. Bu~ ·
surface water ·is excluded, be
added.
Cost for a homeowner's policy
on a $50,000 borne is about $200
and the cost of adding flood Insurance would be nearly twice tbat
amoun~ be added.
Overnight and early morning
rains today may threaten area properties again. Rains were forecast
for the rest of tbe day.
Before 8 a.m. today, more that)
a d.ozen county roads bad been
closed by sbowers that began
falling about 2 a.m., according to
emergency officials.
The counry's streamS continued
to rise . Many of the roads with
water on them were located outside
the Rutland area.
Roads witb water over theln
Wednesday morning included
Junior Ward Road, White Hill
Road, Burlingbam Road, Dexter
Road, Swindell Road, White Oak
Road , Nicbolson Road off Depot
Street, Loop Road, Ball Run paSt
Grueser Hollow, County Road 18 ·
at Carleton Cburch, New Lima
Road at Fort Meigs and Loop Road
from side hill .

Carey slates open
door session
An open door session bas been
been scheduled for Monday, May
22 from 10-11 a.m. in tbe Middleport Village Hall by State Rep,
Jobn A. Caney Jr., R-WeUston.
Residents with questions or concerns about state government are
invited to attend.
·

Geral.d Wildermuth

Stocks

~Meigs announc~men~s-

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Me_mber: The Anocimed Press. and ttu! Ohio
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Open Door planned .
State Rep. Jobn Carey will hold
an open door from I0 to 11 a.m. at
Middleport ~illage hall Monday.
The open door foruln provides citi·
zens an opportunity voice their
concerns 3!1d become an active part
of the governmental process, said
Carey.

KAREN'S
GREEMIOUSE
Hours: Mon. -Fri . 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3 J/2 miles past Southern
High School. St. Rt. 124,
Racine , Ohio

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Rates Oul!lde M'lp County
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Huntington West, WV
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Sports

..,

.

._

(AP) _ F

0~

-

'

,.,

~Y n~ht,

Han.'- ·•
'W~kli~~ ~ece'i!~~~

::!tt

~~~~

l

0

.. f

Rockets down Suns 103-97.in overtime

'

l

I

BAM! - Orlando forward Horace Grant (54) prepares to score
. two points with feeling whUe Michael Jordan vainly tries to stop the
shot In the second h'a lf of Tuesday night's NBA Eastern Conference
semirinal game in Orlando, Fla., where the magic won 103-95 to
return the series to Chicago. (AP)

Scoreboard
lnd iana at New York, 8 p.m. (TNT)

Thursday's games

Major leagues

Orlando at Cbicago, 8 p.m. (I'NT)
SaD ADtonlo at L.A. L11k~u . TBA
(fNT)
_._ . .
Phoenix at HoUlton, TBA (IN1')

, AMERICAN LEAGUE
E•fern run ...on
fum
:!! I. !!d. Gil

Boston ................... 12
New Yorli: .............. JO
Toronto .................... 9
Detroit ..................... s
Ballimore ................. 6

5 .706
8 .5.56
10· .474
.444

•w
II

.3.S3

Friday's game
New Yorl at Ind iana, 8 p.m (TNT},

2.5
4
4.S

6

Hockey

Ccnlul Divblon

5 .706
8 · .SS6

CLEVELANO ....... I2
Milwaukee .... ......... JO
Kllnsas City ............. 8
Olicago ........... ., ...... 6
Minnao!&gt; ................6

9

.471

II
13

.353
.Jt6

2.5
4
6

NHL playoffs

7

Tuesday's scores
N.Y. Ranacrs "·Quebec 1; N.Y.
Rangers win seriea 4-2
I

Wulrrn Dh•hion
California.. ... ., ......... ll
B .579
Se~lltle ..................... .9

O..t.l:.md ··'········ .... 10
Tc ~as ...................... ,9

'8

..529

1

9 .. 526
ll .4.SO

1
2.5

PhllburQh 7, Washinglon 1;
!·3

.O.icago )It Toronto, 7:Jog.m·

Tucsday•s scores

Calgary at San Jose, 10:3 p.m.
.St. Loola aL'Vancouver, 10:30 p.m.

CLEVELAND 10, New Ycrk. .S
Teus 6, Toronto I

Thursday's ~ame

KlliL~t\S City 4; SeatUe 2 (4.5 inn .• rain)
Califumia 9. Minneaota 6
Oakland 7, Olicaao I (5 Inn., rain)
Do1ton S. Milwaukee 0

Wuhinatou at PiUSbW'Jh, 7:30p.m.

Friday's games
Toronto 11 Chicago, 8:30 p.m., if nec.usary
·
.
.
Vancouver at Sl: LoUis, 8:30 p.m., tf

Today's games
Bo5to n (Selr 2-1) at Milwaull:ec
(H one~; 2-0), 2:05p.m..
_
Ot"troit (Groom 1 - ~) at Balt&amp;more

nec.euary
San Jose at Calpy, 9:30p.m., if De&lt;:·

(Brown 2-1), 7:35 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Martinez 3-0} at New
York (Pt'rez. 1-0), 7:35p.m
·

""'Y

Transactions

Toronto (Darwin l- 1) at Te~a~ (Grou
0-3), 8 05 p.m
Scallle (Johnson 3-0) at Kansas City
(Gut&gt;t(20j 1-2), 8:05p.m.
· Calirornl a (Fi nl ey 0-3) iii Minnesota
(faram 1-1), K·O.S p.m.

Baseball
A.merklln IAague

BALTIMORE ORIOL.ES: Traded Jack
Vo!gt, oulfil:lder, to the Tu~ Ran gerM for
John Dettmer, fitcher. Assigned Detlmer
to Rochester o tM Jtttemational League.
Oeiipaled John Shea, pitcher, for IWiiigDment.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Sent Ruben
Amaro, outfielder. outright to BuCfalo of
the American AKociation.
NEW YORK YANKEES : Ai"ted to
leona: w'ith Jim ltyrill, calchet-infieldet,
on a one-year contract. Optioned Andy
Peltitte, pitchct, to Colurnbul of !he Inletnational League. Recalled Mariano
Riveta, pitcher, from ColumbuJ.
TEXAS RANGERS : Auigned Eric
l;o•. outfielder, to Ok.lahoma City of the
AmeriCIIn ANoc!ation.

Oakland (lbrke.y 1-l) at 0\icago tAI-

v(UeZ 1-2), 8.0!) p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

fum

F. .. trrn Dh·l•lnn
~ I. !!d.

Phi ladelphia .......... 14
.... 12
Monlre&lt;~l
At!11nta ........... ... 10
New Yurk ................ 8
· Flor11Ja ............... l

5 .737

.600
9 l26
II .421
14 .263
8

Cenlnl Dt'"lllion
ChiClljtO ............. \2
6 .667
H uulit~•n
, .........9 9 .500
StloUis ................. 9 II 450
CINCINNATI ........ 8 10 .444
Pi tt.~burg h ...... ......S 13 .278

llll
2.l

•
6

9

3
4
4
7

Nlollon.&amp; Leaaue
LOS ANG.EL.ES DODGERS: Agreed
to Ierma: with Ramon Martine&lt;t, pitcher,
on a one--year conlr.lct.
.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Placed Clirf
Floyd, !nOetdet, on llle 60-day di1able&lt;l
· Jist.
PIITSBURGH PIRATES: Optioned
Gary Wllaon , pitcher, to Cala;ary of the
Paciric. Coa•t lt:aa:uc. Activated Ri ck
White , pitcher, from the IS-day d15abled

Wulun Oivblon

Colorado ................ ! 2 7
L.o~ Ar~gelcli .
10 9
San Fran ci~co ....... 10 10
s'llh DleKO ..............9 II

.632
.526
.500
.450

Jet lea 'ued

Tonight's games

J)ctroit 9, Dallimon:. K ~

·

tr

neceuary

2
2.5
) .5

Tuesday's scores
Olic3&amp;0 2. Sao Franci&amp;eo 0
Ptui!Kklphia 9. florida 7 (10 Ina .)
Montreal7, CINCINNATI 3
At-lanta IS, Colorado :3
New York: J, Houston 0
Pltlllhuf11'1 2.1..o1 Anaelea o
San Diego 1. Sl l.ouii 0

hit.

.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Aulaaed •
AileD Wataoo, pitc:het", and Scod Hemond,
catther- iofielder, to t.ouinille o( the
American Auociatfon . Releued Tim
Hulett. Infielder. Sent Manoy Lee, shclrt·
11op, lO SL Petcnbura uC lhe Florida State

Today's games
Olicaso (Mil let 2-1) at Su Frw::iKO
(Portugal I · !), 3:35 -pm.
rblindel(lhia (Schdlio&amp; 3-0) at Aurida

Leaa~. (or

rehlbilitali&lt;:lo.

Football

1,

(Hammond 0-0), ~OS p .m.

Nall'onal foocbaiiiA•ue
NFL: Named Sue Robichet dlrector of
apecial evenll pla.nnlna and Dan Re.n.zulli
· ditectcir of apeeiaJ neD\1: opentiooa,
CAROLINA PANTIIERS ' Sianed
Dwi&amp;ht Stoae, wide ,receh:ct-iick reNto·
er, lo aone-ytMcoutnd..
'
DETROIT UONS: Re-•i&amp;nec:l Willie

Cl.NClNJIIATI (R ijo 1·2) al Mantreal
(F'uscro +0). 7:35p.m.
Colflfado (Swill \ -0) at Atlama (Maddul 2·0), 7;4() p.m
New York (Jacome 0·3) at Houat on
. (Swindelll· l), 8.05 .p.m.
Pttubur&amp;h (Wiule 0.0) a.! loa An&amp;elea
(~mo0-1&gt;), 10,35 p.m.
St. LouiJ (Jacklon 0·3) at SIUI Diego
(Aihby 1·'2), 10:35 p.m.

Clay,oofdy.

MIAMI DOLPJIINS: Siaaed LouiJ
Oliver, 1aCety, to a rwo·year contrtct.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Slaned
Cbril ThomM. wide receiver.

Basketball
NBA playoffs
Tuesday's scorM
Orlando 103 . Chi~aco 9S. Orlando
lead5 Roes 3·2
· L..A. Laken 98, San Antonio 96 (011;
Sao ADtonio leads series 3-2
•

.'

~- - - - ' ·

~---·

SOME COMMON SENSE WAYS
TO DETECT A GAS LEAK.

call the gas company from anothl!r site.
• Don't relurn until a gas company

Damaged '

Screens This

Week

" '.0
[.
~

'

f

. "-. ... j

In parks br rural areas.

.

'

bubbling or being, blown into the air at a puddle, pond, creek or river; brown palches
in vegetation on or' near a gas line; or fire com1ng from the ground or burn ing above it.
If this happens:

,_

• Leave the area and warn others to s tay away.

Let Us
Replace Your
·' Window&amp;

• CalUhe gas company and the police anQ, fire departments
• Don't try to extinguish a gas fire or operate any pipeline valves ..

Door Screens

Chances are you 'll· never experience a nalural gas leak.

Today

But, if you do , follow your senses .

PICKENS
.HARDWARE

~ COLUMBIAGAS .

..

'0:

H ousMtr-"tfn',-'l'lmf'l'ft~""('6'f ~·......,......_

to make them work

I .

•

•
'

'

Sou.

Innfntl tOtals
Port. ND .

LP - Badter

201..()()1..()=4-6-3

'

Ml.n"o
beat Mei·gs
II ...d ·sof:tbal''er.s·
I'
1
•
D
/J
d
•
•
5- In - ISt'..lCt tou ..ney opener
I 1

I

·

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Minford scOJed four runs in tbc
eigblh inning to defeat tbc Meigs
Marauders 5·1 in girls district tour·
nament soflball actiml Tuesday
evening at Waverly. .
Minford (18-3) will advance to
llle district fmal against Sheridan at
a date to he announced. Meigs (18·
3) was slated to end its Tri-Valley
Conference championship season
with a conference game at Netsonville· York today.
Tuesday's affair was an outstanding game between two excel·
lent softball programs . Winning
pitcher Jessica Moore limited !be
Marauders to only lllree bits, wbile
beading into lbe eigblh inning !be
Falcons bad only one bit off of
Marauder ace BiUie Butcher.
After a scoreless fust inning, llle
~oo~e leading off tbe sec~md - Falcons took a I.() lead in lhe secmnmng, Perez rettred I 2 strrugbt

~::~r:nr~~:;~;~::ees:~.'·

301-4&gt;1G-~t"'5-5-2 .
WP - Williams

game report

1

I

1

on d . Tena Slusher led off the
inning with a walk and CaJOC
around to score on a double off the
bat of designated hitter Canlly
Keller.
Meigs tied the game in tbe
.fourth. Emily Fackler trip!~ ~~:Dd
scored on Amber Blackwell s stngle . Stephanie Stewart followed
wi!h a single before Cyntbia Cc_&gt;ttenll walked to le~~d the bases wtlh
nobody out. But Moore came back
strong to strike out lhe side and end
llle Maramlcr tbre~ .
.
That ts bow thmgs s10od unttl
lhe eighth, when lbe Falcons broke
the tie. Micah Glenn lead off the
inning with a walk, one out later
Kristy Green doubled . Green was
later !bmwn out at lhe plate for the
second oul. But Tabby Miller
walked before Candy Peifr~y.
Slusher ~d Keller fol~owed wtth
cqnsecuuve smgles to gtve lhe faJ.
·

.

cons the win,
Moore showed whiles~ is con· ,
sidered one of lhe best pttclws iD
the state by walking two and slrik· ·
mg out 17, Moore struck oul at
least one batter in each inning.
Keller led tbe way witb a double
and a smgle. Greene, Pelfrey and
Slusher each added a single.
Billie Butcher .was. !be losing · .
pitcher desptte p1tcbmg a great game. Sbe struck out six, walked
six and ~~ttered live hits, ~Oil!' of ·.
those commg m. !be extra mmng. :
Sophomore Emtly Fackler b.ad a .:.
pair of bits to lead Meigs w1lll r ·
triple and a single, while Blackwell
added a si ngle.
Inning totals
Minford
01 0-000·04=5·5:1
Meigs
000-100-00=1·3·5
WP- Jessica Moore
LP- Billie Butcher

Eastern softball team tops Southern
"''6- 1 t0 Win
• h a /f.-share 0 f T''C
.tl
vI crown

The Expos bit three homers,
including rookie Sb~e An,drews'
two-run shot off Kevm Jarvts (1-1) , in lhe fourth lllat gave Montreal a
Eastern's soflball team wrapped
4-llead.
up a Tri-VaUey Conference Hock·
Mark Grudzielanek and Tony ing Division co-champion ship
Tarasco bad solo homers , while Tuesday night with a 16-1 triumph
Wit Cordero went 4-for-5 \vith a over Southern at F,astern High
pair of doubles in Montreal's 14·bit SchooL
The championship was tbe first
attack,
Jarvis, wbose previous start was TVC tiUe of any kind for Ea»tem,
a complete-game 3-0 shutout over wbicb just completed its tbird year
!be Floriila Marlins, worked 4 2·3 in the conference.
innings and allowed five runs Eastern (15-5 overall and 11-4
four of lhem unearned.
in the Hocking Division) tied willl
Alexander for tbe top spot. Ea»tern
is slated to play in the Division III
district final Thursday a gains(
Soulh Webster.
Eastern bitters were Amanda
Milhoan, Kim Mayle two singles,
Mindy Sampson a double and sin·
gles by Jessica Karr, Rebecca
Evans and Amy Redovian.
·
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt
said, "This was quite a win. Its the
first time we've won lbe league and
its tb e first time we've beaten
Soulhem so soundly . We're still
having some trouble at the plate,
but the hits came when we needed
them. 01tr defense has been super.
We've committed only nine errors
in the last 15 games. Basicall~

·
think we're one of lhe best dcfen·
sive teams around now; if we can
just get our bats going."
Southern bitters were Cynlbia
Caldwell with two singles and Bea
Lisle a single.
·
Eastern plated two runs in lhe
ftrst inning when Radford walked,
Nelson reached on a fielder's
choice and Kim Mayle singled,
Patsy Aeiker walked and Karr hit a
fielder's choice lhat resulied a 2-0
Ea»tem lead,
Evans retired Soutbern ill order
in lhe secoftd, tben led off lhe sec·
ond by getting hit with a pitch . ·
Rcdovian, Tracy While and Rad·
ford walked before Aeiker forced
home another run 1with a walk.
White stole home tor a 5-0 EHS
lead.
S&lt;)ulbern plated a single run in
the third wben Caldwell si ngled,
stole second and third before sbe
came home on Amber Thomas'
fielder's choice.
Two SHS errors led to two East·
em runs in the lhird for a 7 - I score
Evans and·Sampson had two big
hits in the fourth to knock in lhree
runs. Evans' blow was a two-run

single for a 10·1 tally.
Karr and Redovian had two-run
si.ngles in !be fiflll before Eas1em
added a single run in the sixlh.
Evans picked up the win witb
nine strikeouts and lhree walks , while Andrea Moore and Jennifer
Lawrence combined in tbe loss .
They fanned five and walked 13.
Inning toU.Is
Sou.
001.()()().0=1-3·8
Eastern
232-351-x=l6·7·1
WP-Evans
LP ~ Moore

;i:
A,
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I

.,

•

a blowing or hiss1ng sound or see dirt blowing inlo the air; water
.

MONTREAL (AP)- Cincin·
"If a team doesn't like my
nati Reds manager Davey Johnson dancing, probably lhey're going to
says it musl be the genes.
try to bit me when I go to bat
''II runs in the family, same
"But I can't change. Somebody,
kind of antics, all or 'em.'~ Johnson I don't remem)ler wbo, tried to
said after watching Montreal's Car· change me in !be minor leagues,
los Perez befuddle !be Reds witb but I can't change. The people here
his pitching- and ·antics -· in a 7· · are going to love me, just like lhey
3 win Tuesday night.
loved Pascual.•'
Perez (2-0), a rookie left-bander
Pascual Perez pitched for !be
making bis second stan, is !be flftb Expos from 1987 to 1989,
and youngest of llle Perez brothers
Montreal manager Felipe Alou
to pitch in the big leagues - after landed Carlos Perez for his pitch·
Pascual, Melido, Vladimir and ing, not his perfonning.
Ruben Daria.
"It was a big outing, a great
He also might be tbe most job," Alou said, "He bad a better
eccentric.
,
stuff than ever. He was still throwPerez allowed two runs on four ing well when we lOok him out."
bits in 5 '113 innings and struck out
After allowing a single to Regfour - each strikeout punctuated gie SanderS and a double to Brei
willl a Uttledance. ,
"For fans it's fun," Johnson
said. "But opposing ballclubs
don't appreciate it.
" It's all rigb~ I guess, as long
as be can back it up with good
pitching. He gare up balls to bit,
but we didn't bit them."
Perez knows ihat his showmanship bas a grating effect on oppos·
ing teams, but be bas no intention
of loning. it down.
"I'm not scared of anybody,"
lhe 23-year-old said, "I don't care
bow many home runs lbey bave, or
if they're hitting .400 or .500, I'll
come in and get somebody out.
That's all.

•••

Outside some cilies and towns , a natural gas leak may
not be detectable by scent. In lhese areas, you may hear

C.•I"j

:iig!ff~l·iff,·
........... ...
....

,

:~

•
'••
•

representative arrives .

and two singles, Mar!' Kelly a sin·
gle and Monta~on a st~gle,
See ~ Dally ~nltlltl Cor a pre-

r-----------------------,

I

Ptaoe.nlr leadl&amp;ttiCI :J.2

I

•'

Rockets,
Botb teams sbot 38 percent, but ',
the Rockets, wilh Smitb bitting 5-.'·
of•II, had the edge wilh 10 three- •
pointers, double the Suns' total .
It was lbe Rockets' fmt playoff
win in three .games at llle America ·•
West Arena, where .lhey won bolh :
·
games during the season.
The Suns missed I 3 of lbeir ftrst
17 shots in the fourth quarter and •
finished willl 13 points in lhe peri·
od. But Dan Majerle hit a go-ahead
three-pointer willl 2:42 left, giving
the Suns a 91-90 lead.
".
Houston was in the lhroes of a "
seven-minute scoreless speU, but
!be Suns weren't able to capitalize
because of Barkley's second terrible game in lhe last tbree.
Barkley was scoreless in the
second balf before making a free
!brow lhat gave lhe Suns a 92-90 '; ·
lead willl 17 seconds left. Olajuwon tied it willl eight seconds iell.

won," said Spurs guard Doc goals, including a -long three-point- missed a 14-footer.
By JAIME ARON
The Lakers went for two with
Rivers,
who missed a tbree-P9in1er er wilh 10 seconds left that tied it
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The
5.6
seconds left in· overtime when
Los Angeles LDkers are s.till alive .with 18 seconds left in regulation 88·88.
Elden
Campbell drove for a layup.
that
he
probably
shouldn't
have
The
Spurs
seemed
more
deterin llle NBA playoffs because Nick
His
miss
was swaucd around, with
Van Exel round a way t6 revive taken, "We didn't win !be game mined to wrap ur. the series once
because
we
weren't
aggressive
overtime
began.
n
less
lhan
2:30,
Robinson
tipping it away f~om
tbem. ·
down
the
stretch,"
lhey
bad
a
96-90
lead.
·
Rodman
and
Jo(ln&amp;Qn trying to grab
The San Antonio Spurs are still
exactly
have
T~en
!bey.
got
soft
again
and
Los
Angeles
didn't
It
a game away from their first
Instead , Vlade [)ivac got the
appearance in the Wesrern Confer- a hungry look to it, either, Tbe appeared to be playing not to lose,
ence finals in 12 years because Lakers led by nine early in the They tried running down lbe clock, ball and passed to Van Exei, who
put up a high-arching shot over a
tlley' ve suddenly developed an fourtb, !ben went nearly seven 11\in- but didn't take good shots,
Los Angeles lllen began bitting charging Robinson.
aggressiveness problem. With Den- utes wilhout scoring and mol'c lhan ·
"I wanted it," said Van Exel,
its shots, closing 10 96-95 wilh 1:15
nis Rodman on lhe ream, imagine nine wilhout a field goal.
wbo
led Los Angeles ·with 22
lbe
stretch,
Van
Exel
was
to
play.
On
one
of
San
Antonio's
Down
!bat. .
San Antonio 's agony became lheir only hope , He scored seven of last possessions, -David Robinson points. "There was no way I was
Van Exel' s glory Tuesday night as their last nine points and two of faced up Vlade Divac for several going to pass it off. I guess God
be tied Game 5 of llleir conference their three fourtb·quarter field seconds to burn !be clock, then was on my side."
semifinal with to seconds left in
....... ____ ----- - - · tbe fourth quarter. then sank a
------------··-- .. tbree-pointer wilh 0.5 seconds left
in overtime for a 98-96 victory.
The Spurs still lead 3·2, but Los
Angeles takes the momentum home
for Game 6 on Thursday.
"W1-"-ill need to underst&amp;d
tbat we need another win to s y •
alive," Lakers forward Cedr c--'
Ceballos said. "But we did enough
lhings well tonight to stay alive.''
Tbe most important thing they
with a system as safe a nd secure as your natural gas
did wa s grey on San Antonio's
newfound passiveness.
service. a leak could occur. Thai's why you and yourfamily
'
The Spurs lac,ked a killer
shou ld learn some basic safety rules .
ins tin ct, and even !hough lbey
· recovered enough to lead by four
In cities, towns, or suburban areas, ·
wim 1:25 left in the fourth quarter
'
and by six with 2:13 left in over· ·
Your
g{ils
company
adds
a
special scent to the otherwise odorle.s s natural
time, they couidn ' t put the game
away..
.
gas thai's delivered to your home. If you detect !his odor:
.
'
"This whole series, we haven't
· played SpUrs basketball," San
• Don't use matches or operale electrical
Antonio guard Avery Johnson said.
"We've had an awful lot of break·
switche s , equipment or app liances. ·
doWns."
·
• Leave your home , business or building and
"We lost a game we should've

Replace Your
Wornout &amp;

.

Ex.pos notch 7-3 v· ··ctory over Reds

Van Exel_helps lakers beat Spurs in OT

Tunlght's games

Baseball

back in the series, llle way they did points and II rebounds and did a
after Utah took a 2·1 lead in lhc good job covering Barkley. some·
first round. ·
times with belp from Cbucky
Brown.
"There's no. time tO' sit
"The bail is back In our coun.
We have new life and new ener- back and relax like it's the regular
gy," Oiajuwon said.
·
season.''
"It's a tough loss for us. They
Kevin Johnson scored 28 points
did wbat they had to do to lind a and 1Baridey bad 17 points and 20
way to win," Phoenix coacb Paul rebounds, but missed 11 straight
Westphal said,
shots in one stretch, including aU
Olajuwon scored lbe final bas· seven in !be second half and one of
ket of regulation, a turnaround two in overtime.
jumper from lbe lane, to tie it 92"llhink we lOok some shots we
92,
shouldn't have, and tried to make
He scored again 23 seconds into some passes we shouldn't have,"
overtime, but Charles Barkley tied Johnson said,
it 94-94 for Phoenix witb 3:43 to
Kenny Smith scored 21 points
play. Robert Horry's three-pointer for the Rockets.
gave lhe Rockets llle lead f~ good
A.C. Green Jiad a playoff careerwith 3: 12 to go, and Horry got a high 20 rebounds to go witb ll
rebound basket with 2:01 left, points, and !be Suns bad a huge
putting Houston ahead 99-96,
· rebounding edge (68-49), but
"Yo11've got to go out and couldn't offset lbeir 17 turnovers,
play ," said Horry, who bad H
which resulted in 19 points for llle

In tbe tbiJd, Rutbnan rracbed oa

tht:

ra:

By MEL REISNER
PHOENIX (AP) - Tbe Hous·
ton Rockets bave played in so
many elimination games, tbey.
·seem immune to the pressure.
"We're still alive, and there's.
got to be some tbings going on in
their minds now," coach Ru.d y
Tomjanovicb said Tuesday night
·after the Rockets defeated tbe
Phoenix Suns 103-97 in overtime
of Game 5 to stay alive in the
Western Conference semifinals ,
"We're coming aftertbem,"
Tbe Roclcets ran llleir record to
6-0 !be last two years in playoff
games in wbicb a loss meant etimi.
nation, but !be Suns still lead lhe
best-of-seven series 3-2, with
Game 6 in Houston on Tb11rsday
night ·
.
.
Hakeem Olajuwon, who ~d 31
points and 16 rebounds, believes
!be Rockets can come all lhe way

The Daily Sentinel• Pages.

.

an error,~ on • .passed bell
bel'on: Balker SUllied him home to

D!gilt

ft

ue!::

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

tbe sixlll, .and Williams was sbaJp
in !be seveutb. Besides a Barker
single wilh one out, the potential
I~ J&gt;!YUIOD m tourll8lnellt !'-!.411 tie !be same at 3-3. Later tbat tying run, Williams buckled down
diStncliOW'IIalllent action Ill Jack- inning, Williams led Soutbern off andstruckouttheside,
son.
willl a single. Thea willl two out,
Soutbern ccacb Mick Winebren·
The decision advances Soutbern Jay McKelvey's RBI single scored oer said ~This was another nail
totbedistrictfiDalslatedfotFriday William$.
•
.
biter, b~t anomer big win , Tbe
at 5 p.m. in Jacks(Jn . The oppooeot
So~tbern . aot some breatb1g defense made a cOuple. errors, but
is yet to be decided. Tuesday's room 10 !be lirtb when Williams they also made some big plays.
game was originally scbedul¢ rot and Mayn~d reach~ on err_ors. Right now we're riding on. Ryan
Monday • bul was puibed bact • lefe!Dy Smtih advanced both Wt!b .a Williams' shoulders, He's pitcbed
day when Meigs and Jacksoll were · sacnfice bun.t. lll~ Shawn ,Dailey some great games, and our bats
suspended by rain Saturday.
~as wallced totenUOnaUy _still wltb have come tbrougb with some
•
Notre Dame scored fltSt wben Just one out. McKelvey bit a taylor timely bits. It's quite an accom·
Joim Gerken walked. stole second made double play ball to second, plislment for Ibis group to advance
and went to .tbird on a 8j0UIId out but Dailey hurdle himself into the to tbe district finals." .
Ryan Rottman delivered an RBI sb011Stop to prevent a good lhrow. .
To get the win, Williams struck
single. advanced on a JlliSSCd ball M~Kelvey reached saf~ly and out 11 and walked six while yield~te Willi what ing six bits. Barker suffered !be
and came borne on Tom Barker's Wtliiams cross
double for a 2.() tally,
proved to be !be wmrung run,
. loss with six strikeouts and four
Southern came back to take a 3·
In ,the top of the sixth, Joe walks,
2 lead in tbe bottom of lbe frame Glockner reached on an error, stole
Southern hitters were Martin
wben Ryan Martin singled, Jeremy second and scored on ChrisMon- with a single, WiUiams a triple and
Hill walked and Ryan Williams tovon's single, A fielder's choice single witb two RBI Maynard a
hammered a twO-AID triple, Tben and strike out left the tying run on double and McKelvey a single,
Jesse Maynard doubled to give base stranded,
, .
t&gt;jotre Dame bitters were
Southern the lead,
Soulhern was held scoreless m Rullman a single, Barker a double

consistent play every game."
mybody else. burins tbe scric&amp;, a las~ bit of wind_out of !be Bulls,
When the Magic got off to a good game for Ionian has usually Cbteago c8lled umeout. and
the 8:lando
to close
dreadful SWt
Grant
a poor one for his teambopuu.nncptd=
,
tbeir series with tbe Bulls in Cbk:a- · was the one btttmg hts shot&amp;, ..........
S
Pi
added .
, ""S
~
bee se Chicago's double IC81DS oa
This time cottic 'ppen
UOI\·
I ....
go, they wiD need all tbc pose
..,..y
au .
•
left him
'ust 10 md Toni Kukoc bad an6lllIt was a big tumarouncHrom lhe '
cantb m~ter. If~~ can give 11 to Sb~ll=i~ !~ty liel~orlan· ~r one of bis off nights, scoring fltSt balf, when lhe Magi~ missed '
em. omce , can,
. ·
back trong in tbe secoad fhe, B J . Armsttong bad 18.
layups, pulbacks and open Jumpers,
T~e veterans leadershtp ts a doccmTe M s,
lldbe
Leading78-70attbeendoftbe O'Neal even botched a dunk ,
.
tbe bouocin tbe ball off lhe rim and . ,
princtpal reason Orlando has a 3-2 balf. be agtc cootro e t
. tea~ in tbe Ea~tern Con~e~ence tem~.:e.:.,U~oose bills :': ~~g"~ s=riod. sending bounding past midcoun. &lt;;
se.m~linals and 1S in a postUon to andG rant ··-"f, · Orlando Jordan scored· six sttaight points to
Orlando misfired on its first
WID 11 Thursday,
,._ one 0 lOUr
,
,
.
f •"•
the tarted .
G 1 scored 24 ints and had starters to bit for 19 or more. · cut tt to 89-83 w1tb 4:56 to play, otne shots o ~game,
ns
:
nds
Tue~ay
night
In
O'Neal
scored
·15
of
his
23
points
but
Chicago
went
almost
three
tbe
second
~uarter
2-for15
.
•
11
Orl~do~: 103-95 win and is aver· in tbe second balf 'and bad 22 minutes witbo11t a fteld goal aflet O'Neal and Nu:~.t'Q'!CJ:' ~.~I- ,
· 20 4 ·
d 12 rebounds rebounds and five blocks. Dennis his layup witb 3:25 remaining,
gled the most, wtw
uung
~gt::
serlerAtsgai";: and again be Scott scored 22 points and Anfer• 'Momentum just seemed to only two of 12 ~eld goal attempts '
10
~
·
•
Hardawa 19
keep building· their direction,'' · and Anderson gomg O.for-6,
'.
~~:c~~~
~~u~e~a: nee" It was wh~le team effort," Bulls CO!'Cb Phil ~ ackson said,
"T.bat wtbas ~be firs:f !!m ,kn ~ . '
faUin apart
.
.
Grant said. "It's what we need to "and we JUSt cculdn t seem '!J ~p lo~g '!J.De at ~as o •
e .
think be bas been their win a championship.:'
lhemoment~~nceitgotgomg.. , s:ud. I was trymg to get to !be
MVP" Michael Jordan said of bis
The Bulls, meanwhile, got 39
1-far&lt;,laway s Jam over center Bill hn,e, and trying to get my gam,e
fonner teammate "He gives them . from Jordan and not much from Wennlngton gave Orlando a 95-85 got~g and my ralrree thff~~s weren I ~
·
lead at the 3:02 inaril; and took the falhng. I was re 1yo .
"

B WENDY E. LANE

Mag~

In Division Ill district action,

Southern held off a late
Pontmoutb ~otre Dame rally to
c~ ~ ,5-4 ViC!lXY Tuesday

,,

Magic rally to hand Bulls 103-95 loss
ANOO F1

\

·s o-u thern diamond men· get by Ports~Jlouth Notre Dame 5-4

In the NBA playoffs,

Y
0

Wednesd.Y, May 17, 1995

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Monday- Saturday: gam. 9 pm
Sunday: Noon- 6

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Wednesday, May 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

; Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Wednesday, May 17, 1995.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page i

Ann gets lashed for saying deaf people should not drive
Do you hOnestly believe tba11hose

Ann
Landers
• • •, LCI8 .........
Tin*~ llnCI
CfMIOn Syndlellle·

Dear Ann Landers: I read ·a
column of yours in which you ~d
deaf people shouldn't drive. his quite
obvious that you know nothmg about
people who suffer from that
disability.
. .
I am not totally deaf but close
enough to be c~dered so after I
started losing my hearing when I was
in my mid-30s. I have been driving
since I was a teen-ager and have an
excellent driving record.

young people who drive around with
their radios blaring at full volume
(and who will someday be hearingimpaired because of their foolishness) are able to hear a police or
ambulance stren? The answer IS no.
Tiley are the same as someone who
is deaf.
. .
.
Most deaf and heanng-tmpaired
people are exceptionally observant
and will, in all probability, see
flashing lights sooner that so~eo~
who can hear. With today's lack of
public transportation, how do you
suggest people like me get to work
or other places?
.
Get out your wet noodle,l!'ld gtve
yourself a few lashes for saymg deaf

'

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people shouldn't be permitted to
drive. Then uy !6 learn a liule more
about people with hearing
disabilities. Most of us live normal
lives and get by quite weii.Also,l'm
sure we ha.ve better-than-average
driving records because we make an
extra effort to be especially cautious.
-- H.B.·IN ROANOKE, ILL.
DEAR ROANOKE: You are right
about the hearing impaired being
. better-than-average drivers. Tiley are
also better-than-average letter
writers. I received a ton of mail from
people who were highly critical of niy
comments.
Actually, the most dangerous
ilrivers are tcen-agets.This is a matter
of record. I otTer my apologies to

heanng-impaired drivers everywhere. (Now, can Jllput away the wet
noodle?)
Dear Ann Landers: You recently
printed a leuer from a woman who
wanted to know if she•should marry
a man who was extremely devoted
to his late wife. I vote no.
After being widowed for five
years, I met "James," whO had lost
his wife two years before. He was still
grieving. I sympathized with him and
listened patiently- as .he told me in
· detail about what a remarkable
woman she was and all the good times
• they shared \lefore she became ill.
James said that he ~anted me to
be near him always and that he felt a
desire he· had never expected to

experience again. We married. He
continued to talk endlessly about his
first wife even though I told him I
wanted to live in the present and
make this our time. He couldn'tseem
10 let go of lhc pasL
My feelings for I~es changed
because I always felt • second best. •
He never realiwl how hard it was for
me when he talked about his. dead
wife as if she were still living.
If the woman who wrote 10 you
wants a devoted husband, she had
better forget about that genUeman ·
who visits his ftrSt wife's grave "three
and four times a week." Too many
second wives have had to swallow
this same stuff. I hope my leuer lets
them know they are not. alone. --

EDNA IN FLORJDA
DEAR EDNA: You have a great
many sorority sisters &lt;iut there, which
was not surprising. What was
surprising, however, was the number
of men who wrote 10 say they were
sick and tired or hearing about lhe
sainted ftrSt husband of the widows
they had married.
.

Is alcohol ruining your lif~ or IM
of a lovtd on~? "Alcoholism:
How io Rt!cogniz~ It, How to Deal
With/I, How to Conqlltlr It" can turn
things around. Send a self-addrrsud.
long, busintss-size envelopt tlnd a
cMck or.mOIItl'j order for $3.75 (this
includu postage and handling) to:
Alcohol, cto Ann lAnders, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago,/11. 60611-0562. (In
455
lif~

------Comin unity calendar -Ca-nada-.s-end...r...~-·&gt;

A Cardinal • Affiliated Supermartcet

__

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bo.b Hoeflich

L-"""';..."

l,__ _ _ _;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'-i.....
The rains came and the down- mark a birthday until September,
pour created havoc in a lot of are using "energizers", apparently.
·Meigs County locauons. Everyone They keep going, and going and
lias a flood story and some of them · going. They do extensive traveling
are really distressing. The Ameri- and have pretty good health.
These days, Patty is teaching in
can Red Cross is on tbe scene pro- ·
viding help as it can. At least we all the nation's largest public high
survi vcd and under the circum- school for tbe severely emotional
stances that's a prcuy fortunate sit- and behavior disordered. The stuuation. And, as usual, tbere were dents range in age from 14 tbrough
places in Ule country tbat experi- 21. Patty comments that people of
enced worse-New Orleans, for Wichita share tbe same concerns
example, where 18 inches of rain about education as people here.
fell. Losses by some have been However, bottom line is tbat Patty
quite heavy but in the long run repot'is she enjoys working with tbe
students and is involved with a
maybe you can color us lucky.
close-knit faculty.
Betty and Orval (Curly) Wiles
So far only four residents have
of Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, will be
marking their ~Oth wedding responded to the request for "white
elephants" made by the Women's
anniversary on Friday, May 26.
or course, many of you will Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
rcmembc'r C~rly. In fact, a great Hospital.
number of you some years back
Of course, members of the orgaprobably perched on Curly's knee nization have contributed and
as he played his role of Santa-rutd undoubtedly hospital personnel
he did it very well- at businesses will contribute ilems for the annual
while' elephant sale to be held on
and schools in the county.
Detty and Curly have three liv- Thursday and Friday, June I and 2.
ing chilllrcn who include I..aJ:ry and
The auxiliary is such a deservhis wife, Ann, who restde at ing, hard-working group and needs
Stiversville; Anna, at home, and your support in holding tbe second
John of Pomeroy. They lost one annual sale. White elephants are
son, James, in death some years !bose things about the house, base" go. There'll be no big celebration ment. or auic that you really don' t
. but the family will have a dinner at like very well. The auxiliary will
Sebastian's in the Parkersburg area appreciate getting them . Please
on Saturday, May 27, to marie tbe drop your donations to the unit in
occasion.
·
tbe lobby. of tbe hospital or if you
I know many of you will join can't make it, just give tbem a call
me in extending congra111lations to at 992-2104 and tbey will picli 'em
Deily' and Curly-a really nice, up.
_helpful couple.
Baseball is trying to woo fans
And a note arrived from Patty back into tbe stands·. Guess no one
0 lakes lee Circle who resides in realiw,l tbat many of us are creaWichita, Kansas.
tures of habit and we have obviousPauy reports that her Dad, ly lost the baseball habit for the
Charles Blakeslee, Lincoln time being. Can't really blame the
llcights, Pomeroy, observed his fans after that long haul of negotia85th birthday today. May .17. He tions. Do keep smiling.
and his wife, Daisy, who will not

The Community Calendar Is Fire Academy's outreach program
published as a free service to to speak. Refreshments.
non-profit 11roups wishing to
announce meeting and special
POMEROY
events. The calendar Is not AJzheimers/Related Disonlers SupJ designed to promote sales or
port Group Wednesday from 11o ~ ·
fund raisers or any type. Items · p.m. ·at the Meigs Multipurpose
are printed as space permits and Senior Center. A program on comcannot be 11uaranteed to run • municating with those suffering
spedfic number of days. ·
from dementia, and techniques for
WEDNESDAY
dealing witb anger, agitation, and
POMEROY Narcotics combativeness by tbe Center for
Anonymous, Sacred Heart Catholic Aging and Health Care in West
Church, 161 Mulberry Ave., Virginia.
Pomeroy, 7 p.m. Wednesday. AnyEAST MEIGS - Eastern
one with a drug problem
Alumni Association Scholarsbip
REEDSVILLE - Meigs Coun· forms for current graduates are
ty Fire Fighters Association, available at the guidance counWednesday, 7:30p.m. at the Olive selor's office. The fonns must be
Township Fire Department, com pletcd and 'returned to the high
Reedsville. Richard Feuers of Ohio . school by Wednesday.

riel! out for the literary program
conducted by Vicki Smith, lecturer.
at a recent meeting of Star Grange
778.
Readings we.re "Mother's day"
by Martlm Dariley; "My Mother's
H[tndl" by Janet Morris; and "The
l'urchase" by Vicki Smith. The
grange mother of tbe ev~ning was
selected through a contest with
Dorothy Dolen being tbe winner.
The oldest mother ·attending was
Pauline Rife, and tbe youngest was
Nita Yost.

BIDWELL - Scenic Hills
Nursing Center, ice 'cream social, 2
p.m. Health checks, entertainment

New Open For The Seuen
Bedding Plants, Vegetable
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
4 in Geraniums,
Shrubs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

POMEROY - Rock Springs
Better Health Club will meet
Thursday at I p.m. at the home of
Agnes Dixon.
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Child Conservation League
spiritual walk set at 7 p.m. Thursday at Rock Springs United
Me&amp;hodist Church, auction of
homemade items set

Parts Plus

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Sunday 12 noon·5 pm

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Star Grange holds
Mother's Day program
Pauy Dyer, master, presided at
the meeting . Morris, women's
activities chairman, reported on tbe
Oliver Hudson Kelly farm. She
also reported that Allegra Will of
Harrisonville Grange won the
banana cakl: baking contest at tbe
Pomona meeting and that Opal
Dyer won the carmelitta contest.
Eldon Barrow, legislative chairman, 'eponed on selling of WI!&amp;JlOR
hill and lawsuits.
Next meeting will be held Saturday with a potluck supper at 6:30
p.m . .

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. William
Ward, Middleport, will be guest
minister, 11 a.JII. Sunday, Naomi
Bartist Church.
1

PRICES GOOD THROUGH MAY 31, 1995

--

1\ Mother's Day theme was car-

THURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Mount
Olive Community Church revival
with evangelist Larry Nix of
Asheville, N.C., at 7 p.m. Thursday
through Saturday.

SALE DATES: MAY 14 THRU MAY 20 1995.

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CARDINAL,.
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"--I• 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Citizens

~--Senior

Wednesday, May 17, 1895

Day-.~
___,

:Wtdnt8Ciay, May 17, 1895

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• j(

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-,.,.•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

,__----Business tJirectory-----. .---------,...--R-C-CO-LA--.

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PRODUOS
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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298 SECOND ST•

••

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POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1995

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"As TbM Goes by" was tbe tbeme of tbe aanual observance of
Senior Citizens Day at tbe Melp Center Tuesday.
·
Susan OUver, director, served u emcee for tbe program wbkb
followed a dinner and Included recognitions and entertalament
The Rev. WIUiam Mlddlcswartb gave a yesteryear commentary,
Sbaron Hawley and a cboral voup entertained, and a king and
queen were selected by popular vote, .
PiCtured here Is queen Gamet Ervine, 93, of Racine, and king,

•

Clarence Wickline, 85, al.oo 111 Racllle.
Speaking brlefty at lht observance were Pat Palmer of l)ae Area
Agency on Aging, Marieltil, center, llld Joann Daniell of lhe Ohio
Department 111 Aging, Columbtu, left, talking wltb Oliver.
Several elected county omclals and repreaentatlves of the Gallia-Jacllson-Meigs Mental He11ltb Board were pr-nt, along with
Eleanor Thomu, retired Meigs County Council on Aging director.

..

Ohio University will be hosting

July 13. For more information con-

lbree summer camps for junior ·and

tact Cheer Excellence at P.O. Box
304 Circleville, Ohio 313 or call
- at
1-800-755-9355. .

senior high school cheerleaders . .
The three camps are open to
junior and senior high school
squads and individuals from the
area. Participants will learn new
cheers, chants, sidelines, dances,
jumps, band dances, several "fun"
dances and partner stunts/pyramids.
They will also participate in various workshops and squad "rap"
sessions.
A camp sponsored by Eastern
Cheerleaders Association (ECA)
will be Aug. 7 to Aug . 10. The
emphasis for ECA' s camp is crowd
· motivation and involvement
The personal instructor program
guarantees squads individual assistance throughout the camp. For
more information cheerleaders tllliY
contact ECA, P.O. Box 475. Soulh
Hill, Va., 23970 or call (804) 9404ECA.
·
· A camp sponsored by rnterna- .
tiona! Chccrlcading Association

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1994 ford ·

Medicine
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John C. Wolf, D.O .

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RENAISSANCE PROGRAM- Erin Casto was cos·
turned as Queen Elizabeth for
the annual Around the World
program held at _Christ
Academy. The subject this
year was Renaissance. Dis- .
plays, costumes, foods, and
program hicludlng madrigal
songs, dancts, and games, carried out the theme ..
f

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GM announces
end of large
rear-drive cars
Dy MIKE McKESSON
AP Auto Writer
DETROIT (AP) - Gcne.ral
Motors Corp. will end production
of its largest Chcvrole~ Buick and
Cadillac cars next year and begin
making trucks at the Texas plant
where !hey are built
Tbe announcement today means
that afler the · 1996 model year, the
world's biggest car company won't
be making the big, rear-wheel drive cars !hat were the foundation
or lhe u.s. industry until fuel-eeonomy rules and changing buyer
tastes made !hem an endangered
species. .
.
.
GM will convert tf.$ Arhngton,
Texas, assembly plant to build
trucks for the 1997 model year.
Responding to strong demand from
U.S. consumers, GM already bas
increased its truck producUon
capacity nearly 25 percent in tbe
past two years.
..
· · ·The decision to eliminate the
Cadillac Fleetwood, Buick Road·
master and Chevrolet Caprice and
Impala SS models was driven by
the market, OM's president of
North American opcrauons, G.
Ric bard Wagoner, ·said in a news
release.
''Our prOduct strategy looks at
the big picture, and that ~cans
being flexible and rcspons1 ve as
• volume shifts between market seg: ments," Wagoner said.
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GM sales of light trucks have
: doubled since 1975, to nearly 2
cmillion a year.
·
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Sales Of the large, rear-wheeldrive me ..:.s have been lackluster,
but they arc staples for police
• deparlments and limousine and taxi

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Andrews, David C
July 10. 1961-May 5, 1980
.

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our beans,
John and Mona.Andrews
and Family

To remember your loved
one in this special way,
send $10.00 per listing .
Picture optional. . Your
special
tribute
will
become
a permanent
memoriui record in our .
paper. All tributes must
be received no later than
Wed., May 24, 4:00 p.m .
Fill out the form below
and mail to:

...

Dar.. of birtb

SENTINEL
With Fondest Memories
Ill Coun Street
Pome~J)y,~Ohio 45769

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Additionallnformolion

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City

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Branch ofservice

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'bone number
Stale

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Rant

Zip

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Make c.becll payable 1o THE DAILY SENJ'INEL

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If you suspect that you have
been in contact with poison ivy ol
·
li lh'
one of its cousms, lhe ll'St mg to
do is to lhoroughly wash wilh soap
and water. Any clolhing !hat has .
come in contact with lhe sticky sap
should also be washed promptly.
Handle the clothes carefully.
preferably wilh glove~. to prevent
any more skin contact wtlh lhe sap.
If more iban 20 minotes have
elapsed since the exposlJI'e, washing may not prevent lhe initial rash,
but it can prevent you from spread-

ing it furlher.
Question: What's lhe best treatment for poison ivy?
Answer: There is no way 10 cure
poison ivy once it develops, but it
can be treated to lessen the discernfort. Mild cases may require no
more !han wet compresses or soak •
ing in cold water to relieve lhe itch·
ing. But pidse don't use the old
remedy of household bleach.· l 'See
. quite a few indivi&lt;Juals. each year
with severe skm tmtatton caused
by Ibis ineffective home remedy.
There are several non-prcscriplion medications on.thc market !hat
can dry up b~sters and help ~elicvc
itching. Your physician or pliarmacist can recommend one for you.
None of lhe over-lhe·counter products should be used for more than
seven days, and some should not be
used on large parts of lhe body or
. on young children (read the
instructions on tbc package).
Severe cases of poison ivy
should be treated by a .physician
who may prcseribe a few days of
corti costeroids or otbcr drugs to
. relieve the swelling, blisters and
itching.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, .
. write to John C. Wolf; D .O.,
Ohio University College of Ostenpathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 4570 I.
,

a problem. She suggested instead
that wilh lhc addition of some lace,
you could use it to make beautiful
pillowcases or shams, a baptismal
dress or a "grown-up" wedding
dress or suit. Doll clolhes would be
the least favorable - or practical
- · use of lhe fabric.
If you would lilce to ask Evelyn
any further questions , you can
reach her at (203) 445-7320 or
.write to her at 391 Long Hill Rd.,
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
Groton, CT 06)40.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: l
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I bave ~me Guardian Service cook
yards of white Japanese pots that I dearly love; however,
have
silk that was bought, and brought !hey do get nasty on the outside. I
· home in 1945 from Japan. It was used to clean them by invertiqg
given' to me by my boss for Christ- them on a gas stove burner arld
mas because I do a lot of sewing. I !hey cleaned up beautifully, but it
would like to have an idea of'its doesn't work on eleetric. Any help
value before l staJ;t cutting (I have you could give me would be greatin mind a doll's wedding gown).- ly appreciated. - WILMA DEA·
SANDRA PARR, Rushville, Ind.
. CON. La Puente, Calif.
· DEAR SANDRA: Although .
DEAR WILMA: If you have a
you didn't mention lhe width of tbe self-cleaning oven, put lhe pots in
silk. our guess is !hat it is probably it and turn th e oven on ~s if to
pretty narrow: between 30-~4 inch-· clean . Remove pots, let cool and
.es. This, of course, makes tt harder wipe. you may need to scrub tbcm
to work wilh.
.
with a wite brush . If you don ' t
We called our fabric restoration, have a self-cleaning oven, !here is a
conservation and appraisal expert, · product called Carbon Kleen !hat is
Evelyn Siefert Kennedy in Grote~. especially recommended for
Conn. She said tbat while lhe fa~c Guardian cookware. You can order
hasn't any particular resale v~ue. II a 1-pint can (a little bit goes a long
is certainly a wonderful .tbmg to way) from The Stevenson Compahave but suggested you NOT make ny, 21~Bircbtree Lane, Lewisburg,
·doll cjothes from it as, once you Ill!! PA 1'1~7 for $14.95; There is-no into it. you are going to find !hat 1t additional charge for shipping and
ravels terribly.· ·
.
As a result. the small cuts you
, would have make for the bridal
· gown'ssleeves, neck, etc. would be

ASK ANNE 8t NAN

TilE DAILY

Dar.. of pusln

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Teen to ·
become

GATORADE

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32 01.

M.D. this

(

week
NEW YORK (AP) - Last
week, 17·year-old Balamurali
Ambati acted his age and got his
driver's license. This week, tbe
gangly Queens teen -ager will do
much more !han act his age- be's
becoming a full-fledged M.D.

BONELESS

Breasts•••••••••••••••••L!~

$ 199

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Ambati will receive his degree
Friday from the Mount Sinai
School of Medicine, school
spokeswoman Leeza Brohman said
iodarJ~unt Sinai believes he is the
youngest ever to graduate from
medical school, but !hat could not
immediately be confirmed. Tbe
average age for medical school
graduates is 26 or 27, according to
the Association of American Medi·
cal Colleges.
Ambati will spend a year as an
intern at Norlh Shore University •
Hospital on Long Island before
.
beginning a four-year residency m
ophthalmology at the Mas·
sachuseus Eye and Ear lnfinnary,
BroiUnan said.
·
The teen-ager said be knew by
age 4 what his chosen 'profession ,
would be.
·
"I Spl
· 'lied a pol of boi!t'ng water
onto myself. 1 was in the hospital
for quite a few monlhs," be said-in
a 1990 Associated Press article
when be was 12 and a junior in college.
·
He said then tbat he wanted to
break a world record and become
lhe youngest doctor ever. ''A lot of
people want to break some record;
don'tlhey' It's a matter of personal
satisfaction," he said .
Ambati 's phone was busy and
he could not immediately be
reached for comment today.
As a fourth-year medical student, Ambati spent two months on
lhe trauma team of :r hospital emergcncy room in Queens.
He told the New York Daily
News that his 6-foot frame often
hid his age from patients, but some
"found out through lhe grapevine
after a few weeks. There was
always a period of astonishment.''

Smooth ,moves tor sewing silk

Ir-----------------~-------~--,
Please publish my tribute in the special Memorial Day Section on May 28. I
I Name of c!&lt;ce.ued
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Associate Professor

of Family Medicine

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Question: I get poison ivy every
summer. I've already had it this
year, and it isn't even officially
summer, yet I try bard to avoid lhe
1 plant when I'm outside, but I still
· get it. What else can I do to avoid it
and what should I dO when I do get
it?
Answer: Poison' ivy and its close
relatives, poison oak and poison
sumac, have lhe potential to cause
itchy blisters in about 85 percent of
!hose who are exposed it. This rash
is known medically as allergic contact dermatitis, but most people
· simply call the condition "poison
ivy." .
.
The body's reaction to the
chemical urushiol - found wilhin
poison ivy's leave~. stems and
roots - is what actually produces
the rash . In order for !his chemical
to ·get op your skin and produce a
rash, the poison ivy plant must be
broken. This is the reason that an
allergic person can sometimes
brush up against a heallhy poison
ivy plant and not break out.
· Unfortunately, in many cases
it's hard to tell whether or not a
plant has been 'broken, since very
small breaks caused by insects or
other minor damage to lhc plant
willletlhe urushiol onto lhe plant's
surface. Urushiol is sticky so it can
also be carried on ·!he fur of ani·
mals, garden tools, golf balls or
anytbing else that comes in contact
. with a broken plant. Touching
these objects will transfer the
offending .chemical to your skin.
Perhaps Ibis is how you get poison
ivy despite you·r best efforts to
avoid the plant.
Once the chemical comes in
contact wilh lhe skin, it begins to
penetrate within minutes, but it
takes from 12 hours to several days
for !he "poison ivy" to appear. First
there· is itching, redness and
swelling, .followed by blisters.

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Calaway of the Meigs County Chamber of Com·
merce. Senior Susan Page worked In the offi~e
part•tlme during this year. (Sentinel photo by
Ge011e Abate)

Ohio University
College ofOsteopathic Medicine

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This Memorial Day, we would like to pay tribute to the
many brave many and women who have·given their ltves
to uphold and protect our country's Ideals.

SCHOOL PARTNERSHIP - Student. In
Meigs High School's se11ior word processing
dau recently compUed lnfonnatlon for a county
business directory, Here, members of Becky
Cotrlll's clas~ pnsent the Information to Patty

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Those Who Have Given Their Lives
To Preserve America's Freedom

On Sunday, May 28, we will publish
a special section devoted to those
who arc gone but not forgotten.
The names will be placed in
alphabetical order and will be
· simi.laf to the sample below.

·.

••••
••
••

-....•

hea'i'J du~. o

LRT U§ NOT FORGET...

12 pk. 12 oz. cans

''..•

f·1504.WD
~s. automa~c~~iles ....... ...... ,.

7-UP
.DR. PEPPER

. .'••
•

cheerleader' camp

12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

handling.
STUMPED: Could our readers
please help us fmd a couple of. crochet patterns? Donna Nielson of
Groom Creek, Ariz :, is looking for
a pattern !hat goes on a bath .towel.
She writes: "My .grandmolbcr used
to make !hem for wedding gifts. It
was a crocheted basket and you
placed your _;,ashclolh in the basket
on lhe,towel."
•
Edilh Ketterer of Willow Grove,
Pa.• is' looking for direction s for a
crocheted Christmas tree . ll is
about a foot high and, in order for
it to stand, it is placed over a cardboard cone.
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at ·
PJ~ . Box 240, Hartland. VT 05048.
Questions of gcaeral intetcs t will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.
Annt B. Adams and Nancy
Nash·Cummings are co·auth~rs
of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem -Solvers
Share Their ·Secrets" (Bantam).
To oFder, calll·800·888·1220.
Copyrlghtl99S NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
·
·
(F.or Information 0 n how to
communicate electronically wUh
this columnist and others, con- ·
tact America Online by calling t ::800-827-6364, ext 8317.)
-

•

SKIPPY
PEANUT
BUTTER
18 oz .

LAYS
POTATO
CHIPS
9 OZ. BAG

CALIFORNIA

89(

.

(

Strawberries••• ~.... ·

--------

Good only

dl

St 39 . .
•

M-

~

WITH COUPON ~ ~ @I
• ONE 16 oz. KRAFT"' Regular
~

STOKLEY
CANNED
VEGETA-BLES

'

LIMIT 8 PLEASE .

s

.
Dressings, KIIAFl"' DEUCIDUSLY RIGifT'M Reduced
Calorie Dressings or KRAFT" FREE~ Fat Free Dressings
RETlllER: tvta!lto Kratt. lnc. CMS Depl #21999. '1 Fawcen
Dr.. Del Roo, Tl&lt; 18840 Cash value 111000
.

soc

'1010 IF SOlD, TR.USflARED, OfllllftiiiOOIJCEb ,

312

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Rl705·50

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

c
.
89

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3,tl '

WITHCOUPON

Macaroni &amp; Ch~ .Dinners
fiETAJLER: Ma11 io K1aft. Inc. CMS_Dept ~21999, 1 Fawcett
~ , Del RJQ, TX 78840 Cash ...alue .l.

!00¢

st

10

?:~u

,...,,,., ·~ c~ n 'f'III•SflflfiED, Ofi iiEI'tWOl,IClO

5

Pl70'&gt; 116

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.CAMPBELLS
.
PORK &amp;
·· BEANS
11

oz.

s
COUPON
GOODFQR
5 TRIPLE
COUPONS.

N\AX SOc
Thursd;ty, Friday &amp;

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Page

10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, Mev 17, 1995

Wednesday, May 17, 1985

Pomeroy ·Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • P~~ae11

Your gard(IJn's microclimate can determine St;Jccess or disappointment .
By JAMES E. WALTERS
PHOENIX (AP)- Tate a walk
around your yard. Aren ' t some
places cooler. hotter. sbadier.
bm:zier?
Tbere, in brief, is lbe basic lXIII•
cepl of microclimates. It also ldls
you wby, wbilc weather ll!ld ellmate of an area are importan~ tbe
localized conditions - called
microclimates - are so likely to
determine your gardening success
or disappointmenL
Microclimates are also wby gardeninl can never be an exact sci-.
cnce. ocal topography or arcbitee:·
ture can create varying conditions

around trees and shrubs.

tures tbat can be expecled eacb
Understanding this'is mandatory
in 11 U .S. zones. While areas
if you're trying to grow plants not with similar growinl conditions
normally recommended for your can be identified, lbe general conarea. It may be crucial even with ditions an; not an infallible guide to
regionally adapted plants.
·
exactly what grows where.
In Jenera!, lbe factors creating a
It is obvious that subtropical citmicroclimate include sun, sbade, rus will not survive outdoors in
east-facing versus west-facing Minnesota but should l1ourisb outexposures, overhangs. trees, walls · doors in certain areas of California,
and topography lbat alJect lempenl- Texas, Florida and Arizona.
ture ~d air patterns.
Even within an apparent citrus
Constant observations of your zone the microclimates can be cru·
conditions are the only sure way to cial. Temperatures at Tucson, in
identify your microclimates.
the Sonoran Des~rt. vary dependThe USDA Plant Hardiness map ing on topography. Winter lows
shows in detail the lowest tempera- average in lbe upper 30s, but some

year

,.....~---- MJ H Academic Banquet - - - -

areas fall into lbe 20s. So citrus can
be grown in some locations wliile a
short distance away it is too oold.
Sometimes just selecting a
deciduous tree over an evergreen
provides lbe required microclimate•.
A deciduous tree will be in ruB leaf
and provide shade when lbe summer sun is tbe botiCSI. yet, after los·
ing its leaves in the fall , it will
allo~ the winter sun to provide
warmth. Evergreens offer full-time
shade.
·
·
Microclimates also can he
ed by such factors as installing a
screen for wind protection.
Less obvious factors involving

creat-

important
Evergreen shrubs borderioa a
street may defoliate in some win·
ters while those ~xl to a bouse
retain their leaves. Temperatures
nex1 to the house probably ate
somewbal insulaled from general
cooditions and warmed by its radi. atioo. Thus microclimates explain
wbY. some plants do fmc lbrougb a
win\er while others nearby are
frozen back and killed.
It helps to learn all you can
about a plant's needs. Trees can be .
located so lheir growth rate will
provide shade when required years

In pursuance to an Order

East 10.245 chains to the

.9f Sale dated Feb. 2111, East l!no of sal~ Section;
1995 In the above entitled North 6.66 chains to the
actlon,lwlllotferforoaleat , place of beginning,
public auction, at the door

containing 7.95 acres, more

of the Sherllf'o Office or less.
·
Building, Pomeroy, Ohio, In
SAVING, EXCEPTING AND
lho above named County, RESE;RVING unto the said
.on Tueoday tho 13th day of Granton, their hehs,
June, 1995, at 10:00 o'clock

Tricla Davis, Kristina Kennedy, and Lacy
Banks, aU eighth graders. Others recognized but
not prese"'t were Jeremiah Smith, Joshua Sorden, and Franco Romuno. The winners of spe·
dal achievement awards, neither of whom were .
present, were Joe Davis, seventh grader, and C.
W. HatOeld, eighth grader. Jon Perrin, Rotary,
presldenl, .and Mark Worry, booster represent&amp;·
tlve, joined Linda Lear, teacher, In presenting
the awards.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Threeyear-old Dana Hutchinson didn't
get a chance to grow up. Instead,
the little Maryland girl died a
statistic, one of some 700 infanls
and toddlers killed on the nation's
roads last year.
The number of young children
killed or injured in traffic accidents
rose sharply in 1994 for t!lc second
straight year, according to preliminary figures released by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Adminisuation.
Proper use of child safety seats
could greatly reduce the toil, uansportation officials say. And Joseph
Colella, who started the Driver's

Appeal for National Awareness, or
DANA, Foundation to remembe~
his niece , is part of an effort lO
inform parents how to use such
devices properly.
''Some of the most" common
seat belts cannot hold child safety
seats ... wilhout aajustments, .. said
Colella, whose niece was riding\ in
an improperly installed child safety
seat. ''If my family bad known in
September what we know now, my
niece might still be alive."
..
Dr. Ricardo Martinez, NHTSA
administrator, said the numbers
won •t be confmned until tl1is summer after lhe states have submitted
final rcpons, but preliminary fig -

ures point to a deadly uend.
''"11le fatalilies .are just the tip of
the iceberg," Martinez said Tuesday at lhe National Child Car Seat
Safety Confc.rence : "The injuries
are also up, and many of those
injuries result in lifetime problems."
According to preliminary numbers, about 700 children from birth
to age 4 died in uaffic accidents in
1994, and 75 ,000 were injured.
That's up from 616 killed and
60,000 injured in 1993. ·
NHTSA said the 1994 figures
appear to he the worst since 1991,
when 743 of the nation's youngest
childryn died in road accidents.

executors, administrators

place

more particularly described

operating thereon. The right

Section 30 ; thence along steam, gas or ol over and
the East line of Section 30, across sold premises. The

North 5' 30' East, 3,630.00 right to erect and maintain
feet to the Northeast corner tanks and other necessary
of a 55.0 acre tract ; thence equipment lor conducting

along the North line of said said business with the right
Weal, .1,544.0 feet io a oplke
In the centerline of the
publrc rdad and the
Northwest corner of an
18.78 acre tract described In
Volume 198, Page 662 of the
Meigs County Deed

and all machinery, oil and
gas- well supplies or
appurtenances of any kind.
ALSO the lollowln9 real
estate being In Section 30,
Town 7, Range 14, Scipio
Township, Meigs County,

Recorda; thence along the Ohio, and described as

centerline of the public follows , to-wit: Beginning
road, South 16., 45' West,

North 220 rods and West 80

196.28 l~et to a point, the rods from the Southeast
true point of beginning tor corner of Section 30, (The
the following described Northwest corner of 55 acre
tract; thence leaving the tract); tl*nce North 84°West
public road , . South 64.,00' 223.4 feet to the center of
East, 329.50 teet to. a point; the public road; thence
thence South 26"00' West along the center of ' the

296.92 leal to a point; public road N,orlh 9' 45'
thence North 64° 00' West, \ West 259 feet;·thence South

TrucJ&lt;ing· Limestone,

11' . Soil Fill Dirt

t)()''
., ... , u
_-,)(),)()

The above qescription was

premises con.veyed to A. C.

furnished by Harold D.
Whaley,
Aegis t ere d
Surveyor No . 4986, per
survey of May,1972.

Dailey by W. S. Hart, A.uditor
of Meigs County, Ohio, by
Auditor's Deed · dated
February 24, 1913 and

Being the same premises
as described in deed of
record in Volume 250, Page
247, and Volume 250, Page
530 Deed Records of Meigs
County, Ohio.

recorded In Volu":le 109,
Page 253 Deed Records of
Me igs County, Ohio .
Being the same re!BI estate
conveyed to Irvin Ross and
Luverne Ross , by deed
M-eigs'

Me igs
County
Deed
Records
Said Premises 'A ppraised
at $14 ,500.00 and cannot be
sold for IE!ss than two-thirds
ot that amoUnt.

containing 55 acres, more

EMPTOR ,

or·less.
ALSO the following
described tract: Sltuate In
the .North east quarter or

COUNTY SHERIFF MAKc_S
NO GUARANTEE AS TO
STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR
TO SALE.

THE

MEIGS

Section 30, Town 7, Range

Terms of salp : Ten Percent

(Liiln'-low Rates)

last

week.

Include

•tActlona"

lhe

a.dopllon,

modification, or ravocatfan

of . orders · (other .than
emergency orders); the
denial,
modilic~ ,or revocation
of llcenf.ea, perml.., lilases,
varia!'ces, ot certificates;

Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

Top Soil,

business

hours

the ·

transportation

Improvement projects that
will be jmpleniented

Belpre.. Parkersburg area is

the Wood·Washington-Wirt
Interstate

Planning

Commlsslon(3D4-422-4993)
localed at 1200 Grand
Avenue, Vienna, West
Virginia.
Any comments concerning
the
Statewide
Transportation
Improvement Prog ra m
should be in w.ri1ten form
and transmitted to: Mr.

ICIII'I APPLIANCE
IIRICI

-Factory Authorll!ed Pans

&amp; Service
•All Ma~s ~2 Years
•Fast Reliable SeNice
•Washers - Dryers .. Ranges
•Refrigeralors •Freazera
•Dishwashers
•H.W. Heaters
-Microwlvea •Disposals
•Thenka Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Areas

submit written comments or

Irequest

a public meeting
rega•dlng ·draft actions.
Comments or p~bllc
meeting requeats must be

(6141 985-3561 or
992-5335

submiHed within 30 days of
notice ol the draft action.

Larry

F.

Sutherland,

Administrator, Bureau of
Planning, Ohio Department
of Transportation , 25 South
Front Street , ' Columbus.

Ohio 43215.
Written comments must be

•eceived by the close of
business on June 7, 1995.
Jerry Wray
Department of
Transportation

(51 17 1TC

STD-A·WAY
M,lNI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
O:&gt;mparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV
304-Sl\2-2996
3

· American Legion Farm
Bailey Run Rd.
1 till ? May 21
12 Gauge

\

Get Your Message Across

With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
6° column inch weekdays
1 00
8 column inch Sunday

1

THE

(

DAILY

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

SENTINEL
AVAILABLE AT DEALER AND RACK LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT
MEIGS COUNTY, OR BETTER YET, SUBSCRIBE TODAY,
BY CALLING
'
•

'

.

992-2156
.
The. Daily -Sentinel
~·-~~ ..........------... ~-...--..... .. ..._..

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

·· "Your Hoinetown Newspaper"

0

Review (EBRI by a person

MOOSE LODGE #731
OpertEnrollment Thurs. ,
8 p .m . &amp; Swampfox .
from 9·11
Moose Members &amp;·WOTM
·•.

p;:m.

'.,

.

.

CLASSIFIED ADS ·
a$Blll3f.kQt
-·~ ..,. . .,. ...,.Tin everything ............._

..

•

:'

preceded ily ,?~proposed
•

the EBR by filing a appeal
wittlin 30 day$ of issuance
of the final action: EBR
appeals must be filed with"
Environmental Board of
Review, 236 East Town

•

Angie's
AJreenho:ase

Open fvlon .· Fri. 10 a.m.~5 p.m.
Weekends Ca1161 4-742-2772

. 1

Campground, Racine, OH.

card ol Thanks

The

lssue·. Date 05/04/95. Facility ·
Description : · Wastewater,

family

of

Chester R. VanMeter
would like to thank
all the friends and
neighbors who extended their hands
and hearts to Us, oot
only
by
their
prl!sence but with
cards; flowers, food,
and most of al.l with
their prayers and

Application No. 06-4286.
not

by proposed
Lake

and/or verified complaints

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2ND ANNUAL CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

,
IQ...

J
·

.

FOR FURTH~ A INFORMATION CALL
1-304·372·5200
1-304~273-5738
DIRECTIONS: Use Exit 132 on 1·77, take AI . 21
Nonh 500 yards , righi to Cedar L;lkes Drive, y, mile to
•
Livestock Markel.
•
The Sales Commitlee reserves the right lo 'reluse
merchandise lor the sale. It is the cons1gnor's
responsibilily to make rejection bids"at timcl'of sale.
Allclloneers: Edwin Winters &amp; John Jones

.
:
:
+

.

•.

·

·--~·'""lf6t"Retponsible-FGF-A~-Accmems=o:;:....~,-t~l~-~
'

'

. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
. ( No

Sunday Calls)
21 12/92Jttn

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

MOD'ERN SANITATION

S. R. 7 Five Points

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
siles • Cam§ Sites • Fami~ Reunions &amp; Parti

i

Pomeroy, Ohio
Open ·For Business
Call for all of your storage needs

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

~·
949·2192

RACINE , OHIO

We .want to hear
from you!!! We're
live and waiting!!!
1-90G-388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

." ,

One Stop Complete 'Auto Body Repair

FARMS

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

Free Estimates

· and Removed

Bill SIIICk

... _........ .

····~=·····

992-5251

Shrubs Shaped

mo.

Insurance Work Welcome
......,.~

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auclio ne er
Antiques

State

Rt. 33

Darwin, Ohio
1Of2 1f94/Hn

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Radia tor Repair
Service Portab le

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

aluminum welding

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy

New radiators
available.
recores also .

Bric~les

614·742·3212

614-742~2193
4/26/tfn

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
' 1-6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
10o'5o'l

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Cuslom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MO DELS
992,70,13 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800-848·007
DARWIN, Of-iiO
7/Jl/':11 TFN

m(l

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

Eaperienr;;e the ut1lmare in new
age dating. 1·900·825-6000 eJtt

8128. 12.-1'1., .... ~ ec..

802'· D54-743J.

Far

a..,,....,Cfl/l81.o-"'4&amp;-3356

40 ·

Giveaway

1 yellow male u t, very lov ing tc
good home only. 2 klttono, llngO&lt;a,
8wt.o old. ID good ho&lt;re. ~-1175-

..so.

2 female klnen&amp;, 7wks old, 304·
875-508-0 .

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE
• Lots of Fun and
Learning
• Lots of
.(
Experience
. Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till6:00 P.M .
992·5388

'

THE FAMILY OF
. DONALD E.
RUSSELL
Perhaps you sent a
lovely card or' sat
quietly in a chair,
PerMaps . you sent a
funeral' spray,
If so, we saw it there .
Perhaps you spoke
lhe kindest words as
any friend could say,
Perhaps you weren' t
there at all , jus
thought of us that
day,
Whatever you did to
console our hearts,
we thank you all so
much,
·

love. we especially
wish to thank all
those who cared for
him at the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabllilation Cent111.
Your care and

,
.
·

•

Light Hauling, .

992·2269

.t/'lfJl

Room Additions • Roofing

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

~-------....1

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Garages • Replacement Windows

Free Estimates

(Depol St)· Rulland to .
Leading Creek, ihen Ia·
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
mile s from Ruiland&lt;Or 4
1/2 mil es from SR 7

1..,•

Gallipolis,

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Reunion and Dance
Saturday,
May 27, 1995
Meigs High
School Gym
Doors open
at 7:00p.m.
Dance from
9 :00 p .m . to I :00 a.m.
'5 per person

Carpenter Work

Baalceta, ate.

264Up~er River Rd.
0 . .45631

_
•
_
1 800 486 1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

BISSELL BUILDERS; INC.

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

Barba, Per1nnlala,
Everlutlng•. Banglag

$3.99 min. Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7~20

8010 North State Roljle 1
33105 Hiland Road
Cheshire
Pomeroy
or call 992-2222.

Street, · Room
300 ,
Columbus, Ohio 43215. A
copy of the appeal must be
served on the Director
within·3 days alter filing the
· appeal with the EBR.
Final Issuance of permit to
install Maplewood Lab

Lunch Will Be Served

1112/tfn

Misc. Jobs.

1

3745.07 , a final action

~------~~~~~~~--~~~

. I
(

.

•

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741

Applicants may be high schooVcollege students,
graduates, or , out ol school. Successful
a llcants mus
meel . program !!ligibilily,
requirement Including income, age, Gallla-Meigs
resident, and others. Priority income age, Gallla·Melgs resident, and others. Priority consideralion
.will be given to applicants age 16-21 . Pre,,. spplicatiDI1s may be obtained at the following
CAA offices '
·

issuing ,
denying,
modifying, revoking, or
renewing a permit, license,
or variance which Is not

W &amp; USED FARM EQUIPMENT~
SATURDAY, MAY20, 1995
)
STARTS AT 10:00 A.M .
.
Sale to be held at JACKSON COUNTY LIVESTOCK
MARKET, FAIRPLAIN, WV.
TRACTOR NO
A
MACHINERY
MANY MAKES AND MODELS.
LARGE SELECTION OF HAY EQUIPMENT.
•Siart Receiving Equipment on May 1B, B:OO a.m. to
5:00 p.m. May 19, 8 :00a. m. to 6:00p.m. (&gt;.
•Equipn'lenl must be removed no later than May 22.
•Equipmenl Must Be Paid For ful!llr!l Removal.

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

• · Hours per week 32 or 40
Pay rate ·
$4.25 per hour

PUBLIC NOTICE

8

PSYCHICS

Gallia·Mel9s Community Action . Agency is
seeking applicants tor temporary summer
employment as · custodial, secretarial, and
maintenance trainees. The employment would
begin In June and is expected to last lor
approxlmalely 1&amp;weeks.

"""' '" .. .... ~ ....... '•h•ll"

.... ~ ,,,,.,. r. o~ ..... ..,. "''"'h4 1,

Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992-9949 - 992-6471
Mon- Fri 8 a.m . - 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.ni .
Sun. by appt . only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.
Call for rate schedule
Miri. $2.00 .

Meigs Alumni
Association 1995

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical&gt;&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
t
•lnter,lor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pome~oy, Ohio

4120195

Who was a party to a
proceeding before the
Director by filing a.n appeal
within 30 days of n.otice of
the final action . Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code Section'·

Maplewood
Campground.
The following applications (51 17 \TC

. COf!IMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

ATTENTION UNEMPLOYED
YOUTH AGE 16-21

action and is appealaDie to
EBA . Sewer extension fer

Public Notice

YOUNG'S

4/1:w.i

Help Wanted

Environmental Board of

preceded

For Free Estimates ,

Kenny's Auto Center

7 Days A Week -'24 Hours A Day
$2 .99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

CARPENTER SERVICE

KennJ'S is the place to coine
when you need a car ren~al.
We H•ve C•rs,•nd Vansl
I

Calll-900-656-3000 Ext 5752

4/25111n

GUYS!

Ohio Revised Code Section
3745.04, a final action may
be appealed to the

action

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405

Kenny's Auto Rental

Li~ten to voice mail messages left by interest ing
smgl~s of all ages. Leave messages for singles
thai mterest you or open your own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciring, and can lead lo new
friend ships and mean ingful relationship$.

Ext. 2579
52.99 per min.
Mus! be 18 yrs.,
Procall Co.
(6021 954-7420

.'

actions or the Director
which are effective upon
issuance ·o·r a stated
effective date. Pursuant to

final

Announcements
SHOOTING MATCH

Agency, P.O. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 432161049 (Telephone: 614-6442129). "Final Actions " are ·

This

.

12/;..,,

Environmental Protection

action; may lie appe

Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
.
Insured ·- Experienced

•

NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
TO THE PUBLIC
STATE OF QHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
The Ohio Deparlfllent of
requests for a public
Transportation (ODOT)
meeting regarding a
. hereby · notifies
all
.
proposed
action may be
Interested persons that the
submitted
within
30 days of
proposed FY 1996-99
notice of tho proposed
Stat,wlde Transportation
action. An a~judl~atlon
Improvement
Program
hearing may be held on a
(STIPI will be available lor
proposed action if ·a hearing
review and comment In the
request
of objection Is
Planning and Design
received
by
the OEPA whhln
Engineer's Office in each of
30
days
of
Issuance
of the
the twelve ODOT District
proposed action . .. Written
Offices, the ODOT Central
comments, requests . for
Office Bureau of Planning
public meellngs, and ·
located in Columbus, Ohio
adjudication
hearing
and each of the sixteen
requests
must
be
sent to :
Ohio Metropolitan Planning
Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Organi•ationa (MPOI during
normal

a Bath Remodeling

Room Additions

Gravel, Sand,

issuance,

"PrOposed Actions" are
written statements of the
intent . with .
Director's
respect to the issuance,
denial,
modification,
revocation, or renewal ol a
permit, license, or variance.
Written comments and

from May 24, 1995 to June
7, 1995. The STIP identifies

K«chen

Limestone,

and the approval or
disapproval ol plana and
specifications
.
"Dr all
PUBLIC NOTICE
Actions
"
are
written
The annual report Form
990 PF for the Kibble statements of the Director
of
Environmental
Foundation Bernard v.
,
Protection's
(Director's)
Fultz, Tru1tee, Is available
Intent
with
respect
to the
for public lnopocllon at
lssu"ance, denial, etc. of a
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,
permit, license, order, elc.
111 1/2 W. Second Street,
tnteraated persona may
Pomeroy,_ Ohio 45769,

Public Notice

Remodeling

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately .

1·900-945-6200

..........

House Repair a

(Speelallzlt In
driveway sprsading)

Your
Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Phone

CALL 1-90()..945.6100
Ext. 8587
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·7420

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

WICKS
HAULING

were received end the
following draft, propooad,
or llnillactlono were lllued,
by lhe Ohio Envlronmenttll
Protection Agency (OEPA)

Public Notice

258.76 feet too point In the 6' 30' West 315 feel ; thence
centerline or tho public South 51 ' 30' West 204.3 . throughout tho State over
road · thence along the feet; thence South 26' 40' the next 4 years. The
' .
centerline
of said roao, East 315 foet; t hence south ODOT District ·Office
North 11 ' 21 ' East1 (passing 31 ' East 222.8 faet; thence serving your area Is located
a spike al15t.76 feet) for a South 32' 30' East 341 feet ; at 388 Musklngum Drive,
total distance of 234.60 feet thence East 246 feel to the Marietta, Ohio (614 -373.to a spike; thence North Southeast corner; the'nce 0212). To fli'cllitate the STIP
16' 45' East, 70.88 feet to the North 0' 45' 1815 feet to the review, the District Office
point · of
be-ginning place
'o f
beginning , will be holding ap open
containlng2.00 acre$.
containing 18.78 acres, house on May 25, 1995 from·
DEED REFERENCE: Volume .t.ore or less but subject to 3:30 pm to· 7:30 pm in the
237, Page 721 and Volume all legal highways . .As Washington County Public
232, Page 935 Deed 1 surveyed by E. W. Hys~. Library Meeting Room, .615
Records of Meigs County. Registration #994, January 5th Street, Marietta , Ohio.
Ohio.
31 , 1947. Belhg a part oflhe The MPO serving the

the Section; thence South
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
110 rods; thence East to the OPERATED UNDER THE
place of beginning , DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT

...

(51 10, 17, 2~; 3TC

or

as followa: Commencing at lo lay pipe line for the
the Southeast corner of purpose of convering water,

lhe Southeast ·corner of
Section 30, Town 1, Range
14 of the Ohio Company:s
Purchase; thence North 11'0
rods i thence West 80 rods,
or~ 1/4 the distance across

f~r ~·~ lt•aru·r to~-~·

AHorney

and from the

· Purchase,

StateofOhio,-to-wit:
DEED
REFERENCE :
· Being 110 rods North from Volume 232, Pege ,935-9-:16

pl:mninj.l; -'""'"'·'''

Frederick L. Oremus,

Company 's

Scipio Township, Melgo mining or drilling sufficient
County, Ohio end being water, gas and all for

Situate in the Township of 15~, Page 453
Scipio, County of Meigs and rCo unty, Ohio .

llf••mo·il

Bulldodng, Bac~
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Ocaring, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.

ed from tbe hottest afternoon.
Many bome citrus growers in
Arizona believe IIley avoid frost
damage in winters by trirlnning lbe .
lowest brancbes to a foot above lbe
ground.

(10%1 cuh or corllflod
check on day ol ule. Any
delay In deposit.will not bt
permiHad beyond 2:00 P.M.
Tho remaining balance of
purchau price ahalllja paid
within thirty (301 days from
the date oloalt.
Jameo M. Soutaby, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio

IIlVII
BE LONELY
AGAlli

l\4\\\11\f.

Tbe same reflected sun and beat
from a south-facing wall will bann.
roses. Roses flourish un.der morn·
inB sun and so need to be planted a
few yards away in a locauon shad-

·and assigns, all the oil, gas
end other minerals In and
under tho aforuald
promlaoa with the right to
drill and operate thereon during . regular business
And lho right to enter upon hours for 1 period of 180
oeld premises at any time dayo auboequont to
for the purpose of drilling or publication of this notice.
mining. Tho Rlght-of-woy to (51 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23

PARCEL TWO: (Parcel recorded March 7, 1947 in
Nos . 17-00973; 17-00974) Records of Deeds, Volume

The Daily Sc~ti1~el

lit I\\ \1:11

wall

A.M.
tho
following
ducrtbod raat oatato,
situate In tho County of
Meigs, and Slate of Ohio',
and In the · Township of
Scipio, to-wit:
PARCEL ONE: (Parcel "7006351 Situated tn Section
30, Town 7, Range t4; Ohio

55.0 acre tract; North 84°30' t9 remove al any time any

Traffic deaths said rising f()r infants, toddlers

PlacinJ a bougainvillea on a
soutb·fac:mg wall will minimize
win1er-cold damage in Pbocnix.
They lo\&lt;e the bta~ and some winter warmth will be stored by the

r-=Pub=l=lc=Not=lce=::r:=Pub::ll::c"'=ot=lce=:r-==Pub=llc=Not=ICe==r-:::;:Pub:;:l;:lc;Not:;ICe==Sheriff's Sale of
14 of the Ohio Company's
Reel Eatoto
Purchase, Meigs County,
The Slate of Ohio,
Ohio and beginning in the
Molga County
center of the Pomeroy and
FlrotApostollc Church of
Athena Road about 18
E~ot Balo!l Rouge, Inc.
chalno and 96-t /5 links
Plaintiff
South ot the Northeast
vs .
c:ornir of said Section;
Mt. Zion Propertloo,lll, an
thence North so• West 4.75
Ohio Limited Partnership, et · chaine, Soulh 59' Wast 3.75
at., Dolendanto.
chain a; South 85' Wool 2.99
Caee No. 94 CV-281
cholnt, South 6.795 chains;

TOP ACHIEVERS RECOGNIZED - The
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club ·and the
Meigs Junior High Academic Boosters joined
Monday night for a banquet to honor achievers.
Presented trophies for making all A's were
front, left to right; Je,..miah Smith, Kyle Smid·
die, Steve Beba, Wes Thoene, and Stacey Brewer, seventh graders; second row, Rebekah
Smith, Jes.s ica Johnson, Meredith Fell•, and
Tamra O'Dell, and back row, Bridget Vaughan,

later by developing plants.

microclimates may be just as

whatever the part.
we also w.ytt to
thank Rutland EMS
and
l.helr staff,
Doctors and Stall of
Veterans Memorial
Hospital , Staff of
tl
MedFiight , Doctors
concern was gres Y
and Stall ol Riverside
. 'a1ed · We
apprec1
Hospital and Emerth an k 0 r. o· ouglas
gency Room, Ewing
Hunter for his care
Funeral Home , Rev.
during D.ad's llln,ss.
Glen McClung, the
To Rev. Kenny
Pallbearers; Friends,
·
·
Baker, we lhi!nk you
!'felghbors and R.elafor your words' ol
tlves . _ L
comfort and en·
Carol.oyHussell (Wile)
couragement which
Bob &amp; Alice Russell
you· presented to us ·
(Father &amp; Mother)
Carolyn &amp; Tom
in a very special
summerlt'eld &amp; Family.
way. We also wish to
(Sister)
h
E' I
thank I e
w ng
Ron &amp; Nancy Russell
Funeral Home lor •
&amp; Family (Brothert
·tbaii:...servit:ll, aUhi&amp;.. ~ .......:--..JU~n!la ~Steve &amp;
· time.
'
Famlly '(Sisl~r)

~

31151tfn

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!
1-:900·884-7800
Ext. 4466
$2.99 per min.
Must be 16 yrs .
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Interior &amp;
Exterior

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
•AOOITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING

Take rhe pai n out of
painting. Le1 us do it for
you, Very reasonabl~.

Free Esllm~tes
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
AlterS p.m. ·

FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

~14-985-4180 ~24194

FOR SALE
•
House on Pine Grove
Rd .
3
bedrooms ,
equipped · kilchen ,
living
room,
bath,
dining
room .
Full
base ment ,
heat
pump, s un porch . 50 x
50 barn, 6 acres , TPC
'
water. $49,900.
Call 992-6445

Open 9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pele &amp;
Diane Hendricks

5 puppies to giwaway. 304-895·
3325.
Adorable brown &amp; black, longhaired large dog, appro• 1 112 y.r

old, v&amp;fy friendty. 614-~3421 or
614-843-5176.
. FiVe gray ltr lped and black· klt·

· Mobil.e Welding .
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879
111 Oltfn

J&amp;L INSULATION

Hill Brothers

ROBERT BISSELL

539.BRYAN PLACE ·
MIDDLEPORT 992-~77~

Produee

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

Offiee Hours: Mon.-Fri.

Flowm &amp;

8:00 a.m.-3 :30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing , Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows , Blown
Insulation , Storm
Doors. Storm
Windows, Gar~ges .

Vegeiable Plonls
Hanging Baskets

Free Estimates
1/19/ttl'

.....,~ ,

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 7
in Chesler across from
the Dairy Queen. Size
1Ox28 ·store &lt;ars,
boats, furniture, or
what ever you want.
Call 992-3961

SUMMER
IMAGES

&amp; Flots

$6.00
Roger &amp; Tom Hill.
49534 State Route 338
let4rt Fsjls, Ohio

(614) 247-2015 daytime
(614) 949-2231 evenings

let'll, caii61 4-98S-4468, Cheater.
Free pupp(et, 112 Cocler Spen4el,
814-985-3979.
Free puppiea, 1!2 Ronwei~r. 1/2
Collie, 814·985-&lt;309.

Gray kittens 10 glveayta~. Five
~ints ~ 814-992-8300.
Old barn , partially log , parrially
..barn 11dng. 61 ~992...,.1 16.

60

Lost and Found .

Found: SunglaaHt. A. Tl'\omai &amp;
A.. Thomu Cue. Prttcrlpuon
Nea r tnd lal')a M1ssoun Line, 614·
448.0152.
•

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATfS
985-4473

Los1: black and tan tamale Beagle, black collar ,wlttl no· name, reward, 614.Q49-2SU.

70

Yard 5ale
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

LaurdLimo
Service
Rentu

Umouslne for
Weddings. Proms
· nnd StHJelal
Oecaslons
(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
4/21195

Lonely? C~ll
Tonight!

HAULIN.G $
EXCAVATION

1-900-726-0033

Limestone &amp; Gravel,

Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co

Septic Systems, Trader &amp;

Gutters

House Sites:
Reasomible Rates

Downspouts

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

(602) 954-7420

Howard L. Writesel
,

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIF!

Road. Bidwol. OH, Loll 01 ~·
a.n.c~o ...... s.'"""'Y. I0- 1.

&amp;

All Yard $ales Uuaf Be Paid In

Ad,ance DEADttNE: 2:00p.m.

the day before the ad Is ta run.
Sun&lt;tey edition · 2:oo p..... Friday.

Monda)' edition · 2:00 p.m. SanJr-

da,.

Gutter Cle
. a~ing
. Painting .
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Fri. Sa&lt;. 112 Mile. GOOfges cree~c
vage. Carpel, Dishes, Small Ai&gt;~"'•nee•
•
lhu1oda,, And fTiday, Down RL 7
Tum Rogh! AI C~- WIA~ Follow
Road, OH AI. 7; Colot T.V.. , L~O·

_ _ _ _,_....;"~'::
6194
~
TF
;;;N:, Signs. 1 Mile. Air Compreuor.
1.
Carpet, Stroller, Sw&amp;eper, Lawn
Mowe r, W&amp;slern Book• ~ ChUdren
&amp; Arun

POOR BOYS TIRES

6 75-3331 - 6 75-3334
Call Lon Neal For The

2 Family Yard Sale : 7U Po rter

·

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

H~nt.lcrson. WV

Deal At The New

Clort&gt;ng.

St0rc

A.ll Yard Salaa ~UII Be Paid In
.t.dva nce. Deadlme: 1:OOpm the
day befort the ad ~• t1 run, Sun·

PURCHASE
REFINANCE
CONSOLIDATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements, S)ow Credit
,.

1-800·.... MERIT-98..
....
~-··-

MR#04(!9

Tires I TileS! Tiles\

Big garage

11le~

9am-7 U'ay 20

and 21 , rain or .atlln•. Tools,

Stop tn, &amp; S1gn-up lor

011r Specialty

~t-----····P.·-----~:.-

t

· day e&lt;li!ion· 1:OOpm Friday, Won,
"day odi!lon IO:OO«m. SallJrday, •

A FREE VCR

•

stow, wring., wuher, tractor till·
. tr, tralltr, oardtn tools, po"h
gltder, hot wate r tank, used 2
mos .• chain aawa . some tools,
WHd .. tar and blowet, canning
jara ind Iota Of miac. 488g1 E.
LMart Rd.! RaCine, Oho.

8ig Sale: Way 18-20. 10:00om·

6 -oopm. lots of m1sc: Some furni-

--~:~

.......

,
l

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • P,age 13

NEA Cross:word Puzzle

BRIDGE

rneaeure

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

31 0 Homn tor Sale
Now a 8tdroam 2 Bollia. 2,000

TOIOI For t• 'lllaral t011. Down
And o-r Financing To Quail·
1lod lluyor. 114-4ot8-2857.

full time auctioneer, complete

11.1ctlan Hrvlce. llcenMd
-.Ohio l Well Virginia, 304773-5785 Or 304-773-5407.

90

One

-oom hou• In Now Ha·

-.
,.,.. ••oo dopotll, ••so month

Wanted to Buy

Two '"""·

~ """"" Gdi!&gt;oiL

old.....,._

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Washer~, Oryera, Mlcro•av...

12x52 Homono, gao hoa~ oxc.
cond., "-"! carpa~ •5G50. •••·
448-0175.

Color T. V.'t VCR'o, Air Condlllontrl. Computora. omc. 111c"Eic.114-251-1231.

tlvough DUL now carpal. 3lon -

Oon't Junk ill Sell Uo 'lbur NonWorkinG RtlrigenoiOro, Fr..ZtrL

uxes Homene,

trucka. AJao, pans tor sale.

773-5343 or 773-~.

110

Wanted To Buy, Junk Autoo, Any
Condition, 814·388-G062. Or 814·
~

Wanted to buy- antique and used
furnill.lra, no Item roo large or toa
&amp;mill. Wil buy one piece or complete eatatea, Catty Martin, 6t•-

GG2-7441 .

·

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos With
Or Without Moton. ·Call Larry

Llvoly. 814-3118-9303.

Wanted: Lillie Tykea Ou rdoor
Caatle In Good Condition, 814-

245-5887.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Help Wanted

180 Wanted To Do

French City Ta11 Drlvera, OilGatchlrt, Application• At 1840
aotorn Noraol, Galipoljl.
General newaleportl reporter.
Candidates must have exeaUent
typing akillt ..nd strong English
. background. Compu,. knowledge
a plul. Sand resume to Uindy
Kearn1, Editor, Point Pleasant

IIARI&lt;ETING

ExciUng

.

a Rewarding Career Ao

A Marketing ·Admllllbn·s Olrec~
lor for 100 Bed Nursing Home.
Muat Be Penonable, Self Motl·
vated And Creative. Medicare,
Medicaid KnoWledge Esaenttal.
Requires Excellent Wrluen And
Verbal Communication Skills. Excellent 5alary And Benefit Pack·

Will do babysitting In my heme,

e-lonctd, cai181HG2-5587,
Will do bacllhoe work, pnona 814992-3113 or 61H92-51158.
Will Do Interior, ExtMlor Painting,
Reaaonable Ralel, Experienced,
Reterencea, For Free Eatlmates,

age.

CaH

Send Reaume's To: Scenic Hills
Nutting Center, 311 Buckridge

Paola &amp; Maw Lawn1, Ot4-25e·

814·2~5-5755.

Will Haul Wattf, Fill Swimming

Road, Bld\Noll, OH 4561•, Ann: 1gn Aftor 7 P.ll.
Patridl. /Urson, Administrator, NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
· · Will InstAll Wlndllhloldt 1100 &amp;
Up, 814-388-11082, Or·814&gt;448·
Nood 3 Pooplo To Soli Avon, PART.
0
Applications are t,eing ac:c:epted 614-446-33511
for In-hom&amp; Caregivers. The auc.
WID llow Lawno In The GalllpoUa
ce11ru1 candidate• ahould have On Duty Medical Ia Pleaaed To Anoo. 814-448-2781.

Help Wanted

home health akfe certification and AMounce Our New Office At 995
1·2 years expetience in providing Jackoon Plilo Sulta 0210, Galllpodirect service care to .older lia, Ohio 45631. Come Spend A
adulll. Muat have reliable ttans· Night Or Two In Our Furnlahed
portatlon, telephone In the home Apartment With A Pool. Worlc 2

Yard Work, Will CUI Gran I
Trim. Rtaaonable Prlco, Call Anr·
fme, AIHorllll&lt;e, 37H111.

and willing to work aoma wee. Or 3 Oaya And Earn A Weeki

kenda. Application• art available Pay. All Shifts Are Available For
at the Meigs County Multipurpose Columbus Work. Starting Wage
Senior Center. Uulberry Heights. ,II $7.00 An Hour. For FurJher
Pom&amp;foy, OH. An EOE employlf/ Details Cell HKI0-506-8m.

pruvidet' of aervices.

POSTAL-JOBS

Applicariona are teinq accepted Srart $12.0Mv. For e:.am and apICH' thu poaition ol Activity Direc- ~icalion lnlo. call219-789-8301
tor. The Ideal candld'are will be ext WV548, 9am-9prn. Sun-Fri.
qualified aa .an activity dlrec10r t»r
Reliablo Babysl118r Noedod In My

Ohio, be 1elf starting and direct·
ed, have e11perlence In &amp;11811·
ment and MOS. excellent documentation skills and be able to
' work fteJCibl.e hours. Thla Ia a lull
time poaiUon. Send resume, work
· h1atory and salary ·requlrementa
Clo The Daily Seminal, P. Q_ Box

Pomeroy, Ohio 457611.

A~pllcatlona are now being

..

Gallipolla Home, Ho_U&lt;l Varying
Uondar ·Saturday, Uu1t Have

Raleronceo, 614-441-1195.
Saleaman Wanted At EatabUahed

Cor Lot In Galllpollo, Somo E•·
porionct Helpful, But Not A Muot
Pay Based Upon Experienc::e.
Send Resume To : Box 123, Rio
Grande, OH 45674.

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opponunlty

Sal Upon LDL 814-448-4184 Btl·

-1-8:30 A.ll. Or 8 -1o P.ll.

18871••15 Flornlnp Houoo. underpinning Included, •7~. cell
81,..-31155 ort.llpm.

Doublowidt Rtpoo,

,..,., inl
Financing Available. Coli Run
Murdock. 1.fl00-251·5070.
Make 2 payments and mo¥1 lnl ,
New 14JC70, 2 or 3br. FinancinG

Available. CaD Run llurdoclt, 1·
800-251-5070.
Naw 1HS 14x70, lnclud.. skirtIng, atepa, blocks, one year
homeowners Insurance and till
rnonlhl FREE lot rert Only $1025

dawn and $207.17 par month. Col
1-eoo-«17-323&amp;

AVON to buy or sell, Marilyn. Independent rep. -304-882-2045 or

dlo Reoponalbillty. Good Wages
Availab.le To The Right Person.
Ltu11 Ha\18 Referencea, 81,..446--

330 Fanns for Sale

~514. 8

All. -5 P.ll.

180 Wanted To Do ·

Avon , earn SB-Uihr., lulltparttime. no door to door. 1·800· 76:JJ20. NOIREP
·

AcA Tree Service. Complete tree
care, 20~r1. exp. &amp; insured \ tree
tsrlmatea. 81A -4-41 - tt9t or 1¥

Cook- due 10 lnhouae nn
we
are aseklng a 4took. Prefer•blr
experienced In t~erapeutie me·

800-508-8887.

.

.

C"&amp;S Auto RePair- rePair ol mol t
makea and modelt. Call 614-992·

nuo . All positron In ple1aunq c2843
~.7---:---:---:-:--working environment lor a

-:

mind ed team worker. Pomeroy Care For 2 School Aged Chndran
Nursing &amp; Rehabilnatlon Cenier Ia 6 A.U . -8 P.M. Durl ng Summer,
oft US 33 betw••n Athen• and Breakfast a lunch Furnished,
Pomeroy. Call Jarrr VIckroy, Ole· Christian Home, Referpncea, 814·
ta ry Supervisor at 814-QQ2 -6806. ;2..;'5-:..50;.:.:.54
..;·-- - - -- -

:EOE=-- - - - =- - - 1 Cullom Sawmill Work $100 Por
EXPERIENCED
Thouoand, 614-3118-9354.
TRJCK DRIVERS:

'

Aro VOu Looking For;
• Sleady Pay.-?
• Bonelli?

G~tnera• Milntenance, Painting,
Ysrd Work Wlndowt Washed
Gutttrt Cleaned. light Hauling,
Comm•rlcal, ReskJenttal, ·st8'ole:

614-448-1897.

• naurance?

' • Plold v.calionl &amp; Holldayo?
"Ralltl

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs lo the milt just call

:J0&lt;-675-1G57.

Do'lbuHSYO:
• Clall 'A' COL Lictntt?

Lawr'l &amp; G•rden Service, ftU·
• 1 Year Tractor !Trailer Experi- 258-1033.

onca?
.
• Slabie El1'flk1Ymltl Hiotory'l
• Live Wltlin i$ Miioo Of Rploy'l

Offering FamHy OayCare In my
home. State cenilled wllh. Syrs
tnllning eJiperlence. Manageable
Bring A CurrentiiVR And Appl~ prk:M, fUn ICIIvitifl for lht ChildToday At - tiM and 1011 ol Tl'C . location Ia

SHONEY'S
-·......:~,..~~~lllfllON CENTER

.

.

~n'EXIT13Z'&lt;'

NawHovlf1.304'882·2201.

bttQinners, ad -

to "llfll111; -.loo·

FAIR!'V.IN, WV
EOE ·

transpo1lng.

IIG2--S.OO.

•
.'

'

510

Household

Goodi

Carpal &amp; VInyl In Stock .5.00 Yd
&amp; Up 80 Patternl 01 KJII:hon Cor·

pat In Stock. Over 35 ~atterna

Vinyl In Stock. Mollohan Corpall,

814..c.4&amp; 7-t..u.
Country Furnlture-Furnltu,. lor

Every Room. o&amp;nl., Rl 2 North, Pl.
Pleasant 3Q4..875-6820.

Famllyroom auita, good
304-882-2191.

con~tion.

GE Refrlaerator, Aaklna 1250,
Frost Free 20" Cu. ln. 81,·2•5-

5745 Allar 3 P.M.
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Waahers, drytrl, refrigerator•.
ranges. Skagg• Appliances, 78

Nice lOla &amp; lovttoat $160. 304·
875-2454.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Used

Paved on-By, 614-446-0635.

No appllancea, Household fur-

350 LOIS &amp; Acreage

nlahlng. 112 mi. Jorrlcho Rd. Pt.
Plea..nt, WV, call304-ll75-1450.
814-44 &amp;-6448.
SWAIN
I
i. FURNITURE. 82
II I Ntw&amp;Uitd
Wearern &amp;

VIRA FURNITURE

PAY PHONE ROUTE

.
814-448-3158
QuaHty Houtohald Furrillte And
Appliiii'ICel. Orttllleolt On
Clllh And c.ry; R:NT-2-0WN

50 Local And Ellobllahed Silo•.
Earn .1,500 Weekly, Open 24

Houra. Call HOO 81!6 4588.
Ultima.te Multl-le\181 Market.lng
Ptan- one product • ;old and alfver cotna paid weekly, $2000·
$6000 poaalble, ground floor op-

-~Aiao-.
fnoeDti'-YWiflln251111H.

Waaher, Dryer, RefriQ«ator, Air
Conditioner, Mlcrowav1, Calor

T.V., 814-258-IZ!II.

530

Antiques

Buy or aell. Riverine Antlque1,
1124 E. Main Srraet, on Rt 12•.
Pomeroy. Houra; M.T.W. 10:00
am. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 10

8:00p.m. 81.+992-25211.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
12 Inch. Seart Block Planer; 12

Inch Dr""' Sandor; 10 lnc:II'Radial
Saw; 10 Inch 1111« Saw, 81H48·
1319.

• 10 9 8 7

•QJt05

SOUTH
6K Q J 7 2

37 ~c epic

9 Fiber

38 Crowd

cluater

HE'S PITCHIN'

HOSS SHOES
FER

0

MONEY !I

• 3 2

il;

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiSB

570

!L_~~-,--~~

4• ·

014~7-42·2220

pollto planll,
or 814-742-

2773.

· p.E~NUTS

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

JUST A MATTER
OF KEEPIN6 OtJ~ MINDS
IT'S

lmparlal boat, 200 H.P.
, fuR top and r:ov·
uted le11 than BOJ

' ON THE GAME ..

WE CAN'T LET
OUR MINDS
WANDElL

610 Farm Equipment

Iliac. Equip No Longor Noodod 8'
lmco Hag Pull Type $425: 200
Gal. Sprayer W II Row Booms

$•75; NH 258 Raka $1,850; NH
273 Wlro ·Tie Baler 12.•50: 18'1::;~;::;::-;;::;-:;;;:::-;:::::;:-;:::::;
RefrlgiH'atore, Stova1, Wuheu Alum. Elovator $210; Nl Ground
And Drrera, All Reconditioned Drive Spreader $350; JO -4230
And Qaurantotdl ' ' oo And Up, Tractor C.H.A. Duals ,,200 Hra. 'o~l4'.!h~l~;;g';""''•;',;~
01
w~ Deliver. 814-888-6441.
$15,000; 1:r IH 320 Dloc $1,250; II

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

01'1, SU~f TtiE,f~ A ffW TO/li'IADOf5
· ANt) VOt..CANOfS, ANI&gt; Af'l EA,TtlQUAICf
f'IOvl 'ANI&gt; TtlfN, guT IT w.AS A
tllJ~,Y-uP J08!

Gravity Wagon W /JO Gaara

Sam Somerville's Army Surplua. $850, 614-882-6116 Art. 8 P.ll.

ultd camouflage turkey clothing.

by Sandyville Poaf Office, noon· Tobacco letter $35D, 10' Ford
epm Fri·Sun. (CIIh·no Ghecka). lime apraadar 1200, 4 tobacco
304-273-5655.
bale boxea S40ea. all in , good

Set 01 2 Twin Bookcase Beds,

cond. 004-675-2933.

Mattreaaea a Box Springa,
Matching Dreuer Wllh Mirror

And Nighlltand, Good Condition,
$150,814-247-2532.
Stairway
El&amp;\lltora
And
Wheelchair ISc:ooter lifts FOr
Cara, New And u ..d, Bowmans

HorTJ8G.II'e, 8i1......._.1?83.

WEll I 1'10 ... l
IJou:..Dt-IT EXk..TLY
':JAy Tl-\1\T I

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

Upright, Rc:m Evans Enterprises,

Jacllson, Otolo, 1-800-537-9528.

Three prom dresaea, tize 7 one
weddinG gown, long sleeve,' high
neck, low back, IMt&amp;da hoop, half

02118.

Wlita'a Metal Da1ec1no (qc}
Ron Allison, 1210 Second A\le·
nue, Gallipolis, Ohio, 814··U6·

4338.

METAL DETECTORS
Ron AHiton, 1210 StcondAwnuo, Galliopllo, Ohio, 814-4464338.

550

TRANSPORTATION

710 ·Autos for _sale

Bulllllng
Supplies

Transmlulona. Uaed, rebuilt, all
lnapecttd. guaranltod. 304·875703&lt;1. Abfe to work W/IOmt ape-

1978 Camaro 350 SB; 1981 1-top clal-.
Z28 Camara 400 SB; 1985 Con·

~ITE'S

••

3•

Pass

.

qutotTurbo, otd.;814-1192-2602.

790

Pass

In Good 30,000ml, $3,GOO. 304-458-1783:
1g44 Chovy Jamboree 2•h motor
367~219
home, 16,1l00ml, V&lt;ltY good condiBlack, brick, 1ewer pipes, wind·
.
ow1, lintels. etc. Claude Wirltera, Ul85 Oldo Clorra Brougham, fully tion. 304-458-1643.
Rio Grande, OH Call 6U ·245· loaded, 4 door, $1250. (6141 742- HI&amp;• Wldaa Claaa C 23 Foot :
5121.
2357.
Cab Air. Roof Air, Gaa Furnac~· ·
1987 Ford Escort Wrecked With Generator, 3 War Frldg1, Fuli :
Sk~hawk

Running Condition, $1,000, B1o4

88 Uotar, Low Mileage, $.tOO,

814-367· 7011.

DOWN
5 Colorful

1 -aquad
2--aboul
· 3 Unlawfully
4 Chlf91
color o1

6 - - even keel
7 TV news
source
8 Parfume

vigorous

Braun

38 Sp. title
39 Owned
41 Actress -

PWE~~IOM'-L~!

.

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncandhional liletlme guarantee. :
Local refe,enc:es furnished . Call ·

1 (8001 287-0576 Or (6141 2370488 Rogers Waterproofing . E"l·
tatiilhed , g 75.

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

45 D.o g lreal
47 Trickle
48 Chemical

salts

51 Teat
-..I.......L-..1......1 52 A Gabor

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebn1y C1pher t ryptograms are CfiiB!ed from quolat.oonS by famout people, pasl •nd presem
EaCh Iefler 1n !he c!pher stands 101' another TOday 's clue H ~UBis P

I 8 0 0 P ,

y p

GWM

GWBCM

SJGMOMCG

I W 8

GOBVYZM

·' HESR

,y B 0 0 B I

FMBOFM

IECWSJFGB ' J

Z P B J .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "In some ways , Ame(ica has gro wn up 10 be a
masterpiece.of self·concern .n- Shirtey Maclaine . ·

':~~:~:~' S©\\.~}A-~"E~S"
::!:
Edllod
CLAY I . ,OLLAN - - - - - - ~y

0

Rearrange letters of the
four Krombled words below to form fovr word5

1

AI L NE G

1· I I I 1

I

2

I

GICNI

I

. f-...'T':''""I...r-1-i-1...:_,.1,- 1

~~~ "'

~

_,B_RT:E,.....,P_O-r-~/::,,m .
~
· Is 1
.I _ .

"I've always wondered .'
the cutie said to her beau ,
"why men makemilesofh ighr--------~ ways,then complainbecause
....,N_ATXo--Pr::-=E:,
·
they have no -.- .. to: . I"

17

..:0-,--11

0

Complele the chv(kle Quoted
by 1111l1t't g '" the m1nmg words
you develop lr o':" step No 3 belo w

P~INT NUMBE~ED LE TTE ~s

IN THE SE

SQU A~E S

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FO R ANSWE R
'

•
1

I

I

•

3

•

I I I

s

•

I

I I

Medium • Wafer · Lofty · Future - TIME LEFT
"It doesn'ttake much to make me happy," the lady told
her friend . "I feel great when I can fi nd a pa rking meter
with TIME LEFT on iti"
·

'-'
STRJKE A8/.0W IN TI--E. 'Mil ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CUSSI'IEDS.

w

SERVICES

810

b-+-t-+--1

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

OUR5E.LIIES LIKE

AMIFM Runt Good, 11;250, 814- 30' travel trailer wtrefrlgtrator,
otove. Nico. Call304-e75-5088.

.

-:+~+-~ 44 Famous clinic

8
0

YOU KNOW WHY ' ·

0olll-110311.

1988 lincoln Town Car, loaded,

Adoree
42 Rear
43 Russia ' s - ·
Mountains

6
I I
I 1 -..1---L.__J
'--.l..-.J.L--L.

BECI'IUSE \JE .RE
GOI N~ TO (,() OUT
THE.RE AND cbND\Jc.T

11 Favorites

29 .Refired
30 Scarce
32 Contended
~+-1---1 35 S1Upld.
36 Wernher -

r

I

Bed, Microwave, Crulae, Full
Bath, Sleeps Six. 31,000 Miles,

814-~ Evening~.

12975. 1989 Mercury Tracer,
11800. 1989 Oodge van, $4100.

Only if trumps-are 4·1 should South
try heroics in hearts.
You might end up a hero by trying to
put out a fire or by drawing trumps immediately, but you must be careful to
pick your fire/deal.

9 Rober1
De- ·
10 Paradile

19 Paa holder
21 - Aviv
....,,.....,._ 23 Jazz player
..
Kld24 Sisters
M,..-4-4-~ ' 25sapiens
26 Wife of
....-+-!--1
Gerainl
~-1--..:j--.1 27 - a (not any)
28 Makes
·

Pass

..

1988 Ford Escort 5 Spee~ . Air,

304-675-2440.

deP-'-

.Pass

Campers &amp;
,.otor Homes

1981 Ford Granada Great lnterl·
or. And Elllterior, Low Mileage, 1974 Dodge motor home, GOod
~1 ....256-1012.
condidon Inside I out, ·lleepa 6,

1983 Buick

Baoeb.lllteam

55 Shroud
56 P.O.
57 Fencer a aword
58 Vlpon

2t

nee but makes his contract.

SIOkormaoc Hoadng Stove E)colloniCondllion, 814-2~5-5424.

price, 814·949-2481 or 814-367-

••

3•

In l'slamabad Ai~port, Pakistan , a
large sign details what to do in case of a
fire. Topping the list is "Try and put it
out." Although firefighters might not
agree with that, it does soun ogical.
In bridge, some plays see
gic
ut
occasionally tum out to fatal. One is
drawing trumps as quickly as possible
In today's deal. East hardly had a
classic two-diamond raise . But he
wanted to make life harder for South.
who might have been able to bid one
spade but not two. North was right to
bid three spades.
West started with two top diamonds
before switching to a trump . South
drew three round s of trumps . cashed
his heart king ·a nd played a heart to
dummy's 10. East produced the queen
and switched to the club queen. South,
knowing West had the club ace, played
low on all of East's club leads This resulted in "only" three down . ·
That was a pitiful performance by
South. Rather than gamble on We st's
having the heart queen, South should
have won trick three with hi s spade
king and cashed th e spade queen .
When the trumps break 3·2, South continues with the heart king , a heart to
dummy's ace and a heart ruffed by the
spade jack. A trump to dummy's ace
gives ae&lt;:ess to three heart winners, on
which decl~rcr dumps club losers.
Declarer concedes a Irick to the club

--304-773-5341.

Rad a whllo -

54

The obvious isn't
always stated

R&amp;S Furnlturo. Wo b«y, ttll and
trade anllqul, newluted hauee- Factory Sale, • All Slttl Build·
lngo, 24•33, 33x•s. 41a9G,
hold furnlshlnga, Will buy any
75x18B.
Inventory. 1 It
amoum. larg..omoll. 505 Stcond Come, 111Limited
Sorvod. Cal Now: Pr•
St•• Maaon, WV. Owner-Rocky dllon Pull Frame
304-773-5348.
call

52 Mf. Cornell
53 Negative vola

By Phillip Alder

Queen Size Waterbed, Frame

With lllrror, 150, 814-448-2751.

50 P.-

Opening lead : o K

~

Musical
Instruments

Uttd 25KW Electric Furnace,
Central Air Condldonar, Fret Elllmalla, 1·800·287·8308 Or 814·
Pump Jacko, like .-. •175, 814·
892t5248.

....led
- bling
SIMplng apot
Payctoe
.componenta
49 Author Lavin

41
42
45
46

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
South
West North East
2•

Now 100,000 eTU HI Elficlenc~
Gaa Furnace New Heat Pumps,
Very Reaaanably Priced, On-.

Oolll-8308.

40 F-

•K 7 6 4

KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE STAKE,
SWING YOUR ARM
BACK NICE AN'
El\!l AN'--

15 Nat King 16 Large
vehicle
17 Solk (flax)
1a Beforo
19 Brooch
20 Short
leckell
22 Not bad
24 Compa11 pt.
25 Senoed
. by ear
27 1'/po ol !emily
31 SOle
·
32W..Indlcelor
33 Knlcka' org.
34 Wlro

•K 3

t

Furnished
Rooms

MERCHANDISE

•Q 9 8

K Q6 5

hook~upt. Call after 2:00p.m.,
304-773-1!651, lllaonWV.

,

69 3

~

Sleeping roama . with cooking.
Alto trailer apace on river. All

recommend• that you do bull·
nell whh people you know, and
NOT to send money lhrou;h the
mall until you have lnv.stlgated
the olfarlng.

31 o Homes for sale

1-800-992-e:l56..

10 8 6

9 3

Roomo for rent • - k or monlll.
Starting al t1201mo. Gallla Hotel.
814-416-GSSO.

13 Acral And Barn a House, 3
Bedrooms, 1 1/2 Baths, LA, &amp;

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

REAL ESTATE

(AU..OOR~ ...

(1 111&lt;1-

OAKWOOD HOliES, NITRO. D~ Vine S1rtt~ Call 814·448·73G8,
RECT FACTORY OUTLET, NO 1-800--4119-34911.
IIIDDLEMAN, · SAVE $10001,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
FREE DELIVERY l SETUP, Complete home furnishings.
LARGE SELECTION.OF SINGLE . Hours: lion -Sat, g.s. 814-448I DOUBLEWIDES. WE OWN 0322, 3 mll41 out Bulavllla Pike
THEil, WE'LL FINANCE THEil. Frea Dollv•r. •
304-755-5885.

Rent

Sptall, :Jlo~-&lt;~75-14211 .

450

311411.

accepted at Pinecrest Care Cent«,
170 Pinecrest Drive, Galllpolls, Secretary IReceptlonllt Must
Computer Skllla, Emphaaiz- portunity. Callllark at (6141 1192- 410 Houses for Rent
o·H 45631 for lull time and part Have
lng Word Proceulng, F"rench 1841.
time, atate tested nursing assia3 Bedroom Hause New p_.Jnt,
City Preu, o423 second Avenue,
tants. Conipetitive wages, diller· Galllpoli~
.
Carpet,: centra1 Heat. Air, ReferVENDING:
Won't
Got
Rich
Quick.
ential with experience. Equal OpWill Got A Stoady, Cash Income, anceo Raqulrad, 814-446-0893.
porunil)' Employer.
Someone n&amp;ad&amp;d 8\/anings and Priced To Sol, 1-ll00-820-ol353.
One bedroom (o4 room hbuae),
weekend~ to care br ekierly womApplication• Are Now Being Ac· an In her home near Pomeroy.
$200/mo., depoaitreqyiredb 128
eepted At Pinecrest Care Cent9f,
Union A\lenue, BU-992·2009 or
Apply by writing The Oaily Senti170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, nel, c/o Box 729-0, POmeroy,
,.304-773-5707.
Ohio 45631 For Full Time And Ohio 45789, giving eJCperience,,
Part Time, State Tested Nuraing raferences &amp; waoe requirement
420 Mobile Homes
.
Anistants. Competitive Wages,
for Rent
Ollterential With EJCperience. Somoono To Pull Auto Parll With
Equal Opportunity EfT'I)Ioy,.. ·
o-m Tools, For Car Cruther, 814·
2 BedrOom Trailer, Unft~rnlahed,
388·9062, Or 61H""-f'MT.
No Pets, Relerences, located On
ARE YOU A HIGH SCHOOL
,.SIL35, 61~·245-5582, 614-245All real estate advert1srng in
SENIOR IN NEED OF A PART, Someone To Rebuild Old Barn,
5600 Allar 5 P.M.
TIME JOB? Check into th&amp; Weat 614-367-!156.
th1s newspaper is subjec t to
Virginia Army National Guard.
the Fedefai Fa.ir Hous1ng Act
2br trailer. Referenc:ea &amp; Deposit.
Our jobs corfiA with benafits like Taking applications for dozer opoi 1968 which makes 1!1llegai
No
pels. Alao nailer lot. Rt 62N,
educational assistance. monthly erators; backhoe operatora; truck
to adverttse "any preference.
lDcutt Ad on right, Pt Pleaa,nt
pa~c heck {staning ' pay is more dri'llera. Must be willing to work
. 30-4-675-1076.
.
hmttation 0 1 dtscrimtnatton
than S6 por hour), al'ld free job pon-dmo. Daily Santino!, P.O. Box
based
on
race,
colO!,
rehgton,
training. Stay In school and join 729.07, PomerO'f, Ohio 45769.
3 Btdtoom Double Wldo, Loc 1od
SB)( farntltal slatus or nahonal
rhe Guard. 304 -675-5837 or t Kerr Road, Oepoait I Lease, 1-4·
TOURISM DIRECTOR- Part-limo
800-642-361 g,
ongtn, or any intention to
446-2565
20 hra./Wk. Nood dependabk1 ear,
·make any such preference,
ARE YOU MISSING YOUR DAYS willing to learn word processing/
limitation or discrimmation •
Far Rent 2 Bedroom Trai r In
AS A MEMBER OF THE MILl· computer, organized, salesmanSmaU Trailer Park, 3 112 Mil
1
TAAV? Check out the part-lime thiplgood penonablity, high
Bulavllle Road, No Pels,
posit
This newspaper Will not
jobs available in the West Vlrgi· achOol d iploma or higher, resident
Required, 814--4-t6~1104.
knowltngty accept •
nia Army National Guard's 3664th Meigs County, able to travel int
. advertisements lor real estate
Maintenance COmpany, Pt Pteaa- out M·elga County, handle qHice
440 Apanments
whi~h is in vo
otaHon oltt'le law.
ant, Wll. L•t Ul PfO'Iide ~ou with work. Sen4 resume to Meigs
for
County
Chamb4r
of
Commerce,
a monthly paycheck, educadonal
Our readers are' her·eby
Tourism Commlnee, 238 W. Main,
aulstari~:e. a areal rellrement
intormed th_al all dwellings
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furplan , and much more. Your e•· Pomeroy, OH by May 28.. (This Is
advert1sed tn this newspaper
nished and unfurnished, security
perlenca 11 important to UL OUR a readve r" tlaement, previous
are avatlable on an equal
depoalt required, no pels, 614·
ANNUAL TRAINING THIS YEAR IVIUn181Sb0 being considered.)
992-2218.
opporiuntty basis
IS IN GERMANY IN AUGUST I
Call 304-e7~5837 or 1·800-642- Want&amp;d Gwge Door lnltaller Or
With Mechanical Abilities And
3619.
Wiling To Work Alone, And Han·

• AVON I All Areao I Shirley

EAST

'

1872 N.,. lloon lrallor, 12x85,
two bedroom,
Inquire 01
Brown'o Trollar Park, •••·882-

IIIIlS •••70 Skrllna. 2 Badroorno,·
Big Or Too Smalll 814·388-G8ol3, Stova.
Rttlgaratar Window, AIC,
81,..387-7010.
2 Dtcllo, Ranted Lol, Addlton,
:S~u-n-·"'v-al.:.lo.:.y_N_u_ro_o_rr_S_c_h_o-ol. •• 2.000 •••-347-11103, ........
Rogltllr, 200 Main S1reet Point Child
F
23112.
Summer. 3 Qaya per Week lllnl""m 81H48·3657.

68 2

OBI hear. new

J,.. Service, com· •an Uborry 2 Badroorna. s - .
pl1t1 Tree Care, Bucker Truck Relri9ora10r. Wallher /Dryer,
So&lt;-&lt;ict ·50 FL Rtoch, SUimp At- Good au- Size 8td Included

Pleeaant, WV 25550. No phone .
care M- 81m.5:30pm Agaa
calla.
,
2·K, Young School Age During

Al-P If ttOlJ HAVE:

~ FRIE.IJ~ 'tOJ (J:y.J

once ond Depoolt Required, No
1'1111814-416-15111.

Prolesaional

mav~l. · Fr.. Eatlma1a11 ln.
auranca, 24 Hr. Emetaency Serv·
Ice -Call And Savel No Tree loa

3 Roomo • -

•

roam), Furnlahtd, CIHn, R•..,·

•sooo.

30•-

Top Prlcu Paid: All Old U.S.
Colna. Gold Rings. Silvor Colno,
Gold Coins, II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 s-nd A - . GallpoliL

Ur&gt;otolra.

air, 118950. 814-448.0175.

J ~ D'a Auto Por11 and Solvtlge,
buying wrecka, junk auto• I

72G~.

Furnl- Elflclolicy Slloro Bath
All UtiiiUN Paid, tUIS!Mo. t11i
Stcond Avanuo, Gallipolis, 11•·
-..'3815. '

31l4-875-&amp;1(18.

Antlquea ..Ru11 Moart,
ownar. 814-882-25~8 - Wa b«y

110

~~t.lor~:Jl:.nd hondl·
EOH
78.

Very nice country home, 3S.c.

Al~rlne

.SW\TCtl 10 US AUD (l&gt;t(.(.
AU. "'WR FRIE~D~
l..c)JG OOTA~ A'T
HALF PRKE . ..

l'wt~ Rlvwl TCJWII, now KUQdna
appllpotiont for 1br. HUI.I eubokj:

3&lt;131.

Oec;grated 11Dneware, wall lelephonee..
oW fMtto••
toto. old ciocka, anilque llmla.ro.

-

~ bedroom, 2 - .

2 kllchono, 2 &amp; 3 car garage,
2 acraa land. Jull a loor mlrullt
lr11111 PI PltuonL Call SomorYIIIe
Rtalty 304-1175-3030 or 304-875-

Cl"n Late llodel Caro Or
Trucllo, 1117 llodolo Or N.,.or,
Smllll Buick Pontiac. 11100 Eall·

•A 54
•AJI0762
• J 4

Anaw to ......,loua Puuto

5 VIva - (orel)
12 Hoi
outwardly
13 LodDM
14 Frfthwllle{ flail

Sq. Ft. Home In Galllpollo, No

Rlcll f'Nr- Auction Compony,

1 Null 1nd-

run..

35
38 BW!II'Ve

WH/. , 1 GU~S liiER~I$
NO $Y./SE 1N ~TRUG6LII\IG

10 MAIWT/l.IN 7UE fllLIT!;
V€ME€R. Of CIVIUTY

~NVMO~E , ~OWOoP 1H/6f/5.

7

�J
~

I

.... ,.~

I

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P'!'ge 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 17, 11ts

.
•

COPYRISHT 11M • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
lUNDAY, -14, THROUGH SATUAOAV,IIAV 20, 1tll Ill PO-OV I

.

GALIJPOUS.
WE IIESEIIYE THE RIGHT TO Ulll'r

DEALERS.

OUANTITIE~.

NONE SOLD TO

Always Good. Always Fr~sh.

.

Ohio Lottery

Knicks
•
remain
alive

Pick 3:

374

Pick 4:
3485
Super Lotto:
1·10.22-33-39-45

Sports, Pap 6

Kicker:

6860'75

Always Kroger.

Masi€~Card

••

Your Total Value Food Store!

a1

I

Lesser Quantities

;

Porterhouse
. or .
T-Bone steaks

•

Pound

VoL 46, NO. 14
Copyright 1985

•I

..

©
..

SIGN AGREEMENT ~ Signing the official
aff'dlatiun agreement between Veterans Memorial Hospital, Consolidated Health Systems, Inc~
and Holzer Clinic, Inc~ Wednesday ·evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, were,
seated left to riglll W. Sc:ott Lucas, admlnlstra·
tor of Veterans Memorial Hospital; J, Craig
Strafford, M. D., president, Holzer CUnlc, Inc.,

Whole Beef Short Loin

.'

(approximately
12·18-Steaks)

!!!!!!!!!!=!!!
U.S. GRADE A (4-7-LB.)

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Start
.. Taped telephone ·conversations
will DOl be admissible during tile
' trial of alleged poisoning victim
Gary Snouffer, according to
"'Wednesday's bearing iu the Meig~t
County Court courtroom.
Visiting Vinton County Com-.
mon Pleas Judge Warren Lotz slat·
ed the pretrial bearing should be
contiimed until 9 a.m. June 5. The
trial bad been set 1o begin on lbat
date.
The trial could follow · soon
after, defense and prosecution
attomeys staled.
Sarah Snouffer and Danny
Zirkle, both of Pomeroy, are
. accused of conspiring to kill Mrs.
Snou_ffer's then-husband Gary ·
Snouffer. Snouffer was allegedly
poisoned in Septe111ber, October
and November of 1989 with
arsenic, a heavy metal that accwnu·
lates in lbe body until a lethal dose
is reached.
· Mrs. Snouffer and Zirkle pleaded innocent lo the charges of
attempted murder and felonious
assault.
Mrs. Snouffer was represented

PREMIUM CALIFORNIA

Fresh Kroger Diet Rite or Red, Ripe
Turkey
Breast.
RCCola
strawberries
Pound
2-Liter

Buy One
Get One

Free Sale.

1/2Fiat

FIIOZEN ~N. PEA~ BIIOCCOU, OR MIXED VE(;ETABI.ES

Lay's
Potato
Chips
·6-oz.
Buy One
Get One

Green Giant
Vegetables
· 16-oz.
Get One

·.Preet
IN-STORE BAKED
ASSORTED VARIETIES

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The purchaSe of.new lextbooks
was discussed at Wednesday
night's regular meeting of tbe Eastem Local Board of Education.
The board will pay $15,800 for
social st~dies books, along with
other junior high literature and
social studies books ;md a fourth
grade workbook, said Clayton But·
ler, Eastern High School principal.
Landis &amp; Gyr Powen; was hired
on a one· yenr contract. The company provides beating and on-line·
ventilation syslems. The proposal
was originally for three years, but
ibe board opled for a one-year contract since the savings on the longer
contract would not be great. 1
· abe company wiD provide technology and training for $5,328.
The b(lard also a:pproved an
SEOVEC agreement for computer
online for student enrollment and
treasurer's office on line. The main
fraine is located in Athens. The
system cosiS $.2.1 0 per pupil, with
850 stvdents in lbe district.
Tuppers Plains Elementary will
build a concession stand and may
hook up electricity for lighting and
Chester Elementary will be oonsid·
ering adding a 30-by-75 foot bas·
ketball court at tbe edge of the
parldng lot, it was reported.
· Superinlendent Ron Minard said
the boanl tilbted action on the basketball court because of ibe number
. of parking spaces !bat would be.

BuyQne
Get One

Jumbo Deli

tookies. . . . . . . . . ::-oozen
Butter
$1.69 .
DEU

Pretzels.......................s-oz.

Preel

BuyOve ·
Get One

Preel

If you have suggestions, C(lmments
· or questions please contact your
store manager or call

1-800-853·3033

............ up.ttl50tt

-.-

by'atiorney Charles Knight. Special
prosecutor K. Robert Toy, Atbens,
was present at the hearing for the
criminal case.
.
Both Zirkle and Mrs. Snouffer
have been accused of the pOisoning
in two civil suits. One suit was dis·
· missed ill 1992 because the amount
of money Snouffer sought was not
specified. Tbe other case bas not
been resolved.
According to the Ohio Revised
Code', attempted murder is an
aggravated felony of the first
degree punishable by a maximum
prison lenn of 25 years wbj(e felonious assault is an aggravated
felony of lbe second degree punisb·
able by a maximum prison tcnn of
15 years.
Snouffer was the ~nly willleSS to
testify in yesterday's bearing.
Knight question~d when tbe
taped converSations occurred.
Snouffer said be bad taped until
the time of his divorce. But, Snoutfer was granted immunity for these
taped conversations only until Feb. ·
I, 1991 . The couple divorced that
October.
· He began taping in July 1990,
but allegations st.ate be started in

Eastern board to
buy new textbooks .

B~One

Preet

and Thomas E. Tope1 chairman, Consolidated
Health Systems, Inc:. Standing left to right are
Robert ,E. Daniel, administrator, Holzer Clinic;
Verlln L. Swain, ConsoUdaled's vke chairman;
Louis R. Ford, Consolidated's secretary and
treasurer, and Arthur R• ."Bill'' Nease, Jr.,
chairman oi' the board of trustees, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
·

Taped conversations won't
be allowed i.n Snouffer trial

16·2D-I.b. Avg.

See store For details! .

3 s.ctlona, 32 PagM 3 5 A Muttlmedla Inc. Na•• piper

y, May 18, 1995

H signs affillation pact
with Consolidated Health
Systems, .Holzer Clinic

,

When purchased as a

(

·.v

•
•
•

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thurs

'

II

fiMII llllod wakllllol a sll
tanlcJtL RaiD. Law Ill 5GL
Friday, nlD,IIJcll Ia '7tl.

August/December 1989.
Snouffer remotely tapped tbe
telephone copversations at 172
Nortb Second Avenue in Middleport.
Laler, Snouffer.,Jook the tapes to
then-Meigs County Prosecutor
Steve Slory.
Snouffer also made copies and
gaye them to special investigator
Gary Wolfe . These copies were ·
eventually destroyed.
AlsO Knight probed about what
happened · to allegedly missing
tapes. .
A total of 75 tapes, recorded on
both sides, were saved by Snouffer.
But, only 46 tapes remain, (\night
said.
1, Knight said thatlbcre must have
been information that was damning
on lbe tapes that disappeared. ·
During the next pretrial bearing, ·
the court will question Gary Wolfe.
Wolfe may have assisled and heard
conversations from Snouffer's !aping.
The defense bas contended the
tapes were conlliminated, but this is
not true, Toy said.
. Although Snouffer may have
bad immunity, Wolfe would not
The conn also will allow toxi·
cology repo(tS to be taken from
Snouffer at no more than $2,500.
Carson Crow. attorney for Zirkle,
.made this request .
Crow asked for a special prosecutor since Snouffer's lestimony
may have changed from earlier
depositions.
,
Toy bad said be would like to
have Story present to testify at the
next bearing.

The affiliation of Veterans
Memorial Hospital of Pomeroy
with Consolidated Health System'!
Inc.. and Holzer CUnic, Inc., is now
official, according to W. Scott
Lucas, Administrator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The agreement was made public in a joint announcement by
Tbomas E. Tope, Chairman of
Consolidated's Board of Trustees,
J. Craig Sttafford, M.D., President
of Holzer Clinic, and Lucas. This is
the culmination of ongoing discussions to acbieve such an agreement,
fonnally initiated through a memorandum of understanding signed by
lbe three parties in late December,
1994.
The joiut announcement stated.
"Veterans Memorial Hospital is
pleased to have successfully completed an affiliation agreement with
Consolidaled Health Systems.lqc.,
and the Holzer Clinic, Inc., to not
only maintain the excellent care •
now offered to VM patients, but to

further enhance and expand Ule
quality and scope of health c:,~re in
Meigs County. This was the prima·
ry intent and objective when dis·
cussions officially began a little
over four monlbs ago." .
Veterans Memorial Hospital is a
69 bed facility, currently employing 125 beallb care workers. Consolidated presently includes the
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipi&gt;·
lis, a 24!1 bed cQDIDlunity oriented
not-for-profit acute care hospital
with a 20 bed inpatient Rebabilila·
tion Unit; Oak Hill Community
Medical Center, a 68 bed facility in
Oak Hill: Jenkins Memorial Health
Clinic of the Holzer Medical Ceo·
· ter, providing ambulalory care in
Wellston; the Holzer Foundation
for Tri-State Health Care and Holzer Vanguard.
Holzer Cliuic' s main offices are
lOcated on lackson Pike, adjacent
to lbe Holzer Medical Center. with
branches on Sycamore Street in
downtown Gallipolis, as well as in

Pt. Pleasant and Charleston, W.
Va., and in Jackson, Proctorville
and Middleport. Holzer Cliuic is an ·
80 physician multi-specialty group,
practicing ill 27 medical specialties
and sub-specialties.
Lucas said, "In today' s health
care market, we must be able to
reduce health' care costs while·
improving and expanding a wider
spectrum of services to reach a
broader base of residents iu Meigs
County. Through our affiliation
with Consoiidaled and Hol:\er Clinic we have a much greater opponunity to achieve Ibis slated gual. We
are excited and anxious to move
forward, now !bat our a·greement
bas been finalized.''
Commentinll on behalf of Con•
solidated, Chairman Tope said,
· "Health care continues to be of
prime imerest to citizens of.all
ages. In these changing times. we
must successfully seek innovative
ways to provide cost-efficient qualContinued on page 3

n--r-------.,iT':'T.

"
MORE FLOODING -More roads Ooodcd
in Rutland and across the county yesterday and

early Ibis morning. Rutland's Main Street was
covered with more than a foot of -ter most of
. Wednesday. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Governor declares state of
emergency in Meigs County ·

By GEORGE ABATE
township highway system."
Septiliel News Staff
·
The sheriff's bfflce and the volMeigs County, along with Gal- unteer ftre deparunents will not gel
iia, Ross and Preble counties, were refunded for ibe extra staffing .and
declared state of emergency areas overtime, he added.
. jeopardized.
by Gov. George V. Voinovicb
With this proclamation. the
State and federal programs were
Wednesday.
national guard and the Civilian
approved for Chapter One and speTbc Ohio National Guard and Conservation Corps could help
cial education programs, Minard
other state agencies can be used to clean sll'eallls, Byer said.
said.
.
assist local governmental .officials
Also, the governor's order will
The district bought a lawn
reclaim
i&lt;?CBI
property.
(
let
t~e. fed~ra l Small 'B ~siness
mower and slated it is to 00\Jsed by Volunteers sought
· But, Me1gs County Emergency Admm1strat10n g1ve low·mlerest
the district only. ·
Services Director Bob Byer said loans to the county's residents.
for storm victims
The board a8reed to begin
Volunteers continue to organize , Ibis declaration will accomplish lit- · "They don't realize that a small
advertising for a school bus, which
tie for those people who lost county with a high unemployment.
should be purchased within two to help families devastaled by the homes, cars and :valuables to Sun- · rale can't afford what they have let
recent storms, according. to Ule
months.
day's l1asb flooding.
alone new loans," Byer said.
·. Calamity days for the village Rev. Kenny Baker, director of lbe
"The
only
thing
this
does
is
it
For the federal government to
Meigs County Cooperative Parish.
were also approved.
says
a
slate
of
emergency
e.xists,"
decfare
lbe area a disaster zone, at
The debris and desolation left
The district will pay bills and
Byer
said.
"It's
just
like
in
the
least
$8
million in damage would
by Sunday's storm need to be
amend appropriations for this year.
snow
emergency.
It's
mountains
of
have
to
exis~ be .added.
The board also considered get- resolved, Baker said.
Today, State Rep. John Carey,
The Fanners Bank, 211 W. Sec- paperwork, but the controlling
ting ibe high school painted at min·
board
will
only
belp
tbe
county
and
"'
imum wage, although one company ond St., Pomeroy, and the Home
National Bank, Third Street,
estimated it at S12,000.
Racine,
have sel up accounu
The copier in the superintendent's office needs to be repaired named "Meigs Cooperative Parish
By The Associated Pn!s.•
gist AI Randall. '.'It's been worlced
and cleaned since it is seven years Relief Fund". These funds - rep· A day after tbunder$howers over· several limes and more rain is
old and bas not been working well. , resenting donations from private
caused emergency declarations in just going to complicate things."
The copier was already used when . citizens- will provide emergency
·assislance
for
Aood
victims,
!Iaker
four counlles, isolaled flooding,
Gov . George . Voinovicb
it was purchased, Minard said.
scattered evacuations and a handful declared a state of emergency in
The district approved the said.
The sifts will be considere.d . of fires, Ohioans prepared for , Preble Couniy in west central Ohio
calamity tlllys and a make-up day at
charitable
gifts, be added.
another stonn to move lbrough tbe and for Meigs, Ross aQd Galita
RiYerview Elementary.
Also.
victims
may
apply
for
southern
part of the state.'
counties in southern Ohio,
· A school cmistruction seminar ·
emergency
assistance
beginning
The
National
Weal.ber
Service
The declaration authorizes the
wilJ be held on May 25 arid 26 in
from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. May 23 at the
predicled anoiher 1 1/2 inches f!_f use of the Ohio National Guard to
·columbus." ·
rain this morning, with up to an help local. governments deal with
The boanl also commended the ' cooperative parish office on 311
Condor
St.
in
Pomeroy.
·
I 112 inches expected lbe flOoding.
additional
·
.
high school band for its perfor·
Additionally,
volunteers
are
illrougb
Friday
morning.
no
plans
to
use
,Ule
There
are
mance at the staJC level.
needed
to
remove
carpet
and
clean
Early
Wednesday,
storms
guard,
but
they
may,
be
needed
lalet
'The district alsn aorPerl '" •h~
and move furniture . 1'1!ose iudivid·
dumped as much as 1 112 inches on to rescue residents from rising
Ohio Schooi Board Associations'
w,ho
cim
help
uals
and
groups
the area.
wa1ers or provide security and trafworkers compensation group rating
tbe
parisb
office
at
should
contact
"The
.ground
is
just
totally
satn·
fic control, said Nancy Dragani,
program.
992-7400,
'
rated right now," said IJl.eleorOJo- spokeswoman f'l the Ohio Emer-

R-Wellston, along with other state
officials will tour the county.
Currently, county roads and
businesses had more than $1 mil·
lion in damage, Byer'estimaled.
Estimates for storm damage
include $600,000· for county roads,
culverts and bridges, and aboul
$400,000 unofficially for business·
es, Byer said.
The Red Cross bas listed:
homes, one destroyed, 16 with
major damage and 47 with minor
damage: mobile homes, one
destroyed, four with major da!na_ge
and 13 with minnr damage; and
aparunents, four with major damage .and one with minor damage.
Private and township roads still
do not have estimales, Byer said.
At least 25 residences sustained
.uninsured losses exceeding 40 percent of their fair market value.

Ohio residents ·prepare for another storm

0

gency Managemept Agency. •
In Preble County, about 100
people were evacuated early
Wednesday as five roads were
closed.
Sheriffs dispalcher Gloria 'fay.
lor said today that all of the evacuees had been allowed to relurnl...._..
home. She said the waters
receded 'from the roadways and
roads reopened. Two small bridges
remain closed because of water

damage:

In Buller County, creeks spilled
over their banks, forcing four fami·
lies and people in 30 campers Jo
leave the area. Four Mile Creek
Continued on page 3

I '·

...

'

'

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