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Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

..

Pick 4:
3585
Low IOIIIpt .. 401. Clear.
Friday, partly IUDBy, IIJcb Ill 6GI.

10.26-27-37-40-44
Kicker:
994440

•
YGL&lt;M; No.1t

IJIIIJIItld1tl3

c

1 S.CUon,IO I'.- 25

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 20, 1993

&lt;:.nil

A lluiUmedla Inc.·rw.peper

Lemasters a.ddresses jury during hearing

'

.

Family.testifies in penalty phase of .trial
By JIM FREE~
.
· Sentinel News Staff
During a statement to jurors
Wednesday, William D. Lemasters
ll apologized for the deaths of the
two people the jury convicted him
of slaying.
Lemas~rs. 26, of Racine was
fQUnd gutlty Saturday of thr~e
charges of aggravated murder wtth
death penalty specif1C81ions in the
Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of
Jeffrey I,.. Halley, 36, and 12-yearold JeffreyS. ~cy. both ofGallia
County. In addinon, he was found
guilty of aggrav~led ro~bcry and
~wC? counts of kldnappmg m the
mcidenL
.
Lemast~rs was back iD court
Wednesday as the penalty phaSe of
his trial began. During this phase,
.the jury is to decide whetl!er
Lemasters will spend the rest of his
life in jail or face the death penalty.
In addition, Lemaslers apologized 10 Carolyn Burgess. mother
Of the slain boy, and to bis -own
family.
·
"If I could go back and change
it, I would. But I can't," Lemasters

'·

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.

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1

. wuu... _n. J..emu&amp;VI ll.aDOiotd. .

tor Clle deatlls of JeWrey t.. J!allti, ~.

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S. ~. 12, durin&amp; a beJJringln tbe Melp County .
c-t tl
1'011 ·Plea. ID acldltlo., LeiWten apolOgized lo
tiJr ..... of lite 11aJn 1~year-old and IO bls 0M1 family. (SeD·

.-.. ,._,, J• Freeman)

12-Pack

lb.

.Cot.pll1unity Calendar

12-oz. cans

.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN oav,

U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN"

Diet Pep~; or 'Pepsi Cola

Perdue Whole Fryers
FIRST I
OF THE
SEASON

ALBANY - Phil Dirt and the
Dozers, Fourth Annual Spartan
7 p.m., Rejoicing Life Church in Spring Fling, . Alexander High
Middleport. Lawrence Foreman ·School, Friday, 5:30p.m., car show
and entertainment. Tickets, $5, at
inviteS the public.
the gale.
THURSDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
of AA. Thursday. 7 p.m., Sacred and square dance Friday 8-11:30
Hean Catholic Church. Call 992- p.m. Tuppers Plains VFW Post
5763 for information.
sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary.
Music by CJ and the Country GenRUTLAND - Leading·Creek tlemen . Red Carr and Melvin
Conservancy District, Thursday, 5 Cross, callers.
p.m., a1 the office. Public welcome.
MIDDLEPORT c Dance at the
POMEROY - A rehearsal for all Middleport Legion Annex Friday
alumni of Middleport High School 7-11 p.m. with music by George
who are planning to participate in Hall.
the Middlepon Alumni Band will
be held Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
SA TURDA.Y
Meigs High School bandroom.
KANAUGA • Liberty Moun, taineers perform Saturday, D.A.V.
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Center, Kanauga.
.
Child Conservation League, Thursday, 7 p.m., R(JCk Springs Uniled
POMEROY - Market lamb
Methodist Church. Ellen Rought, . weigh-in for 1993 4-H and FFA
program on M.A.D.D.
market lamb exhibitors, Saturday,
9-11 a.m., Meigs County Fair- .
SYRACUSE • Free immuniza- grounds. Pay $10 Jll:f animal. Call
JUMBO 12 SIZE, TEXAS
lions for children ages two months 992-6696 for information.
through kindergarten age and free
lead screening for children ages sill
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
months through six years, Thurs- Plains baseball and softball associday, Syracuse Fire Department, 9- ation, boys 9·10 year old touma ~
11 a.m. Bring child's immunization ment, Saturday and Sunday. Eight
record.
teams, U"Ophies. $45 and two balls.
.
.
.
Call 667-3653, 667-3342 or 989·~ RACINE -.Free.immunizlUions - 2931 for.information.--........- - -...c;··si/NER P/:AITER' (10-10.5·LB. AVG.J
· . fflr children ages two months
·
I!
...
,_.
throulh kindergai"len age and .free
ROCK SPRINGS - . Rock
lead screening for chi)dreit ages six Springs Senior Youth, spaghetti
·• IJ~t•'/( 1'4
. ,. .
months through silt years, Thurs- dmner. Satur~ay, 5-7 p.m., $4
r'VI 1 \IIIV,
day Racine Fire Department, 1-3 adulls, $3 .50 children six and
p.m'. Bring child's immunization under.
•
POUnd
MIDDLEPORT • New Life

Drama Team performs Wednesday

16

SIIWS

,.:res•• Asso•..ed .

S!li~Wba.everthejurydecideswill

possibility of parole in 20 years.
ly ." Eachus asked. "Be open-mindOpenina statements
ed. Be fair. Be merciful," he conDuring the prosecution's open· cluded.
ing statements, Assislant ProsecuFamily testitles
tor Charles Knight asked the jury 10
Lemasters' family portrayed
recommend the deati!JJCnalty for him as an unselfiSh, hard-working
Lemasters.
young man growing, up in a poor
. "We walk this day on ground family with·a fondness for children
that has not been tr,ead '!}lOR for and his sister, Tina, stricken with
many years in this county, Knight Down's Syndrome.
said.
All the fall'ilY members who
' "I have been asked how 1 can testified said Lemasters was most
enter a counroom and ask for the comfonable around children and
death penalty," Knight said. "I said he had an e~tceUent relationreply, 'How can I ask for anything ship with his own siblings as well
else?"'
as their children.
. Attorney William N. Eachus,
·~when (Lemasters) is around
representing Lemasters, asked adults, he's an adult," brother Donjurors in the packed courtroom 10 ald Barnes said. "When he's ·.
Mopen their minds and hearts" and around kids, he's a kid."
lisren 10 the life of William LemasHis mother, Anna Barnes, said,
ters.
,.
"Bill (Lemasters) has always been
"We !tte here 10 decide punish- the type of person that if someone
ment," Eachus said. "We are here needed something and he had it,
·to decide if William Lemasters will they had it."
spend the rest of his life behind
In addition, family members
bars or race the electric chair."
presented dark images of Lemas"Look at how (Lemasrers) lived ters • slepfather. One described him
and the effect he had on his fami- as "vic1ous, evil, cruel and abu·

Fry's bond set at $10,000

be fine with me," Lemaslers then
_
told the jury.
Brenda Sue Fry, 43, of Middle~mas~rs w~ ~ second man port, was bound over 10 the jurisconVIcted m .the mcident. A former diction of Meigs CoiDity Common
co-defen. dant, Fred Drennen of Pleas Coun following a prelimi1{\\veJ1S"!YOOd, V'f. V~ .• ,pJ,o.adecl,~-tlatJI bearing before County Court
guilty on MarCh 1 10 three counts Judge Patrick H. O'Brien on
of aggrav_aled murcler in ~e inci- Wednesday.
dent and IS currently seMDg three
According to Prosecuting Attorconcurrent life sentences with the ncy John R. Lenles, Fry was 811'est·
ed and charged with attempted
murder following the shooting of
h~r former husband, Mike Hub-

.Meigs graduation. ceremonies
scheduled Sunday
afternoon
.

bard, on May 10 at Jefl"s Carryout
in Pomeroy.
Fry faces a muimum jail sentence of 2S years and a maximum
fine of $10,000 if convicled.
Aitempcecl murder is an aggtavaled
felony of the first degree.
Fry's bond was set at $10,000
with 10 percent cash allowed. She
has been declared indi11ent and is
represented by the Me1gs County
Public Defender's Office.

Juvenile arrested
on shoplifting charge · :
.

.

'

Scholastic Award, the Holzer Clin- · Kefiy t&gt;oidge, daughter of
ic Outstanding Achievement in Sci- Kathy Doidge, Pomeroy, ~ NorSeadltcl News Staff
ence
Award. She plans to attend man Doidge. Pinole, Cahf., who
AJiiJm N. Oannawaale~ Kevin
Ohio
University where she will . wiU attend Ohio Slate University 10
Lambert n the co-v
·ctorians
study medicine.
·
major
in
physical therapy.
Oldie Meip High School lf8tduatLoretta J. Kelly. daughter of ·
Kevin is the 11,0n of James Laming d8scll993.
Je;an
Kelly, Middleport, and Tom
bert anil June Mowery. botli or
~t of their selection
Kelly.
She plans to anend Ohio
- Jllllle 1IXIIy by Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy. He plans 10 atlend Marl·
I*;. ij•l Ilolh will give addresses eua College. A member of the Stare University 10 work toward a
• lbe 2Sdl Annnal Bac:calauteale National Honor S(JCiety, Kevin is degree in aeronautical/aerospace
ud Commencement Eltercises 10 both a Governor and Regional engineering.
Counney Midkiff, daughter of
lie lldd • 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the Scholar. He has been active in football four years, servin!! as co-cap- Cecil and Millie Midkiff, Pomeroy.
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
n..pw Of Thomas and Judith tain of the teani his ilcruor year, and who plans 10 eitter Ohio University
C
way of Vinton, Alli!JOII is a played basketball and baseball in a pre-law program.
Randall Johnston, son of Cecil
IIICIIbcr of the National Honor three years. He is a member of the
Scx:iely. and Ita been a member of French Club.
'" and Becky Johnston, Danville, and
Mrs. Joyce Elis, Columbus, who
die coac:cn, marchins and pep
Hononrlans
has an appointment 10 the U. S. Air
HonOrarians of the class are:
band. HUGS and the Quiz Team
Debbie Alkire, daughter of Mr: Force Academy in Colorado
filr an rom yean or high ac:hool.
Spings, Colo.
and
Mrs. Rflget Alkire, Pomeroy.
Sllc ltls been on the yearbook ·
LotTi
Bumem,
daughter
of
Mr.
Lorena Oil~. daughter of Keith
IIIII fur tltn:e yem, a member of
and
Gloria Oiler, Langsville, who
and
Mrs.
Lee
Burnem,
Rutland.
- Fitiiidl Cub and Prenc:h Honor
will
attend the Technology EducaLinda
'
C
hapman,
daughter
of
Joe
· Scx:iely. TEARS (Teens Educaling
and
Marjorie
Chapman,
Middletion
Cenrer
in Columbus.
Allou&amp; Rmd Safety), in the senior
·
Rusty
Triplett,
son of Gene and
who
plans
to
attend
Rio
pori,
play.ICIM in IPQIU,I Senior Spir·
Karen
Triplett,
Pomeroy, who
Grande
College
10
pursue
a
degree
ils Iader, and in the senior play..
plans
10
enroll
in
a
civil enj!ineerHer awlrds have included the
in
daughltr
mg
program
at
Ohio
University.
A....,W •• Elec:lric: Power sc:holarKatrina
Turner,
daughter
of Dotsbip. 1be Fi"anklin B. Walter All- and Jov Clark, Middleport.
Continued on page 10

sive."
When Lemasters was about 11
years old, Mrs. Barnes married
Harvey Leamond, a man she used
the word "HeU" 10 desaibe living
with. Leamond did not like Lemasters, she added.
"He was 1\ke a dictator . I
couldn 'I even come in the house
and eat," she said.
Lemasters' adopted brother,
James Leamond, said he and
Lemaslers received the bulk of the
punishment.
.
.
Leamond said punishment
included beatings "with a belt or
with anything else he could get
hold of. He hit us in the back while
we were in bed ..• hurt us anyway ·
he could."
.
One night We snuck out of the
house and were caught, Lcamond
said As punishment we were confined 10 our room for three or four
months and only allowed out 10 go
.10 school or work.
.
Leamond was at a college workshop in 1983 when his father abandoned the family.
"I came home for the weekend
and he was ~one," he said . "I
haven't seen h1m since."
Mrs. Barnes said Lemasters
took over much of the work at
home, including caring for Tina
· after Lcamond left.
'
Family friend Shirley Stephensoil commenled, "No matter what
Bill.was doing, he always had lime
io gwe her a hug or be witli her.
"He was a hard worker, constantly clearing brush around the
house because of snakes and to
prorect Tina," she added. "He was
always good 10 help me and never
Continued on page 3

B7 CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ALLISON GANNAWAY
Co-Valediclorian)

KEVIN LAMBERT
(Co-Valedictorian)

A 14-year-old was arrested ·
Wednesday aflemoon by deputies
of the, Meigs County Sheriff's
Department on shoplifting charges '
at Big Wheel.
.
.
Th.e report stated two adults '
with the juvenile, Jeff King and '
Brian Durham, have been ciled 10
Meigs County Coun for contribut· •
ing 10 the deliquency of a minor as
a result or .the incident.
... , .
According to the report, the 14- \
year-old was observed taking a
fishing reel from a fishing raod and
two packages of hooks and then
stuffing them into his pants.
The juvenile was released 10 his
parents pending a hearing in Meigs
County Juvenile Court.

of~-

Pay rai~es sought .for TB,
health clinic workers
a1 JUUE E. DILLON

==

SUGAR FREE DELUXE, FAT FREE
DELUXE OR DELUXE

IXJZ. l'lrG.
Sl.lt

Kroger Ice cream
-

-

"ipS

~

,

Wc~~iark,

cantaloupes

PO~OY

083

PageS

IF YOU USE UNCONVEN· you might ask him or her about
TIONAL MEDICAL THERA- OMT. With .OMT YI&gt;U have the
advantage of a "natural," non-invaPY, TELL YOUR DOCTOR
Oue$tion: I have been seeing my sive procedure being performed by
dociOf for several months bec•nse a d(JCtor who is also knOwledgeable
of headaches. I'm not getting any in other accepted forms of treatbeUrr. Would there be any harm in ment. OMT, by the way, is well. uying massage theraPY or viuimln acce~ withi~ os1e0patbic meditreatments? An$wer: Your question cal crrcles and ts not !In unconvenis cenainly a common one. Unfor- tional therapy. But since it can be
·tunalely, most Americans do not used for headaches, I thought I had
talk ro tbeir doctor about questions a duty to mention it 10 you.
Neither massage done by a
concerning unconventional medical
properly
trained person, nor OMT
!Mzapy. In the January 28 issue of
done
by
a physician has much
The New England Journal of
potential
for
harm. This is not the
Medicine, D. M. Eisenberg pubcase
with
vitamins.
The use of
lished a study about the use of.
large
doses
10
treat
your
headaches
unconventional medical therapies.
The researche' found about one- may tuive serious consequences. As
third of all Americans use some eltlmples, vitamin C can cause kidtype of non-standanl medical thera- ney stones, and vitamin A can
PY every year. In addition, .72 per- cause liver dis~~ when taken in
cent of those that did use uncon- · eltcess. The old adage, "if a little is
ventional treatments failed to lell good, then a lot must be better"
certainly does not· apply to vitatheir docur about it.
Unconventional medical thera- mins. I strongly caution you against
pies are those that have not been this popular unconventional theraaccepled 'into the mainstream of py. In the best case, the extra vitamedical JXBCtice. Sometimes this is mins are elirninaled by your body
because they have not been scien- without harm. It merely creates
tifically tesled, and we don't yet very expensive urine. In the worst
· know whether or not they might be situation, the vitamins can cause
useful. At other times, tliese thera- serious - even life threatening ·
pies are nof part of mainstream illness.
Some forms of unconventional
medicine precisely because they
have been thoroughly evalualed treatment, such as relaution and
. and have failed 10 pass "scientifiC massage, border on being acccpled
by traditional medicine while other
musrer."
therapies
are clearly at odds with
There are inany types (lf unconaccepted
methods.
About one-third
ventional !Mzapy. A few examples
of
the
treatments
reported
in D. M.
are unresled drugs or surgical proEisenberg's
study
are
unscientific
cedures, drugs or surgical procedures known 10 be worthless, relax- in their basic concepts, and many
ation leChniques, massage. special have failed scientific studies
designed 10 measure their efficacy.
diets and mega-vitamins.
In selected situations, unconven- Spiritual healing, energy healing
tional therapies may offer some with crystals and/or machines,
benefit. In your case, massa~e ther- herbal medicine, homeopathy and
apy - panicularly addressmg the acupuncture are among lflese.
I strongly encourage you 10 bUst
muscles of the neck and shoulders
- may reduce the amount of dis- your health 10 therapies that have
comfon you experience from your passed the test of scientific study.
headaches. However, massage is If you elect to II')' an unconventionnot likely , to eliminate your al therapy, join ·the 28 percent in ·
headaches. It will only make them the study that shared tlus decision
more tolerable and reduce the asso- with their physician. Let your docciited soreness in the neck and tor help you "tip-toe through the
shoulder muscles. So, while I'm mine f~eld" of unconventional thernot an eltpert in massage, I suspect_ apy. Perhaps :you will gain some
it might be of some porential value benefit from the unconventional
treatment and avoid the potential
to you.
As a D.O., I should point out problems.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
that ~ manipulative treatment (OMT) '- which you might column, To submit questions,
· think of as similar 10 massage - · write to John C. Woir,. D.O.,
can sometimes bring at least lem- Ohio University College or Osteoporaty relief from certain kinds of pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
headaches. If your doctor is a D.O.• Athens, Oblo 45701.

record.
- Belles and Beaus .
RACINE - Racine American Western Square Dance Club, dance
Legion Poat602,.Thursday. Supper Saturday 8-11 p.m. Meigs County
. at6:30 p.m. followed by meeting. . Senior Ci~s Cenrer. Dal\! Eddy,
Mliriclta, caller. All weslem sly le
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· dancers inviled.

Pick 3:

Super Lotto:

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

WEDNESDAY
ty Democratic E~tecutivc CommitPORTLAND - Revival at Free- tee, Thutsday, 7:30 p.m., Carpendom Gospel Mission, Portland, ters Hall.
Wednesday through Sunday 7:30
p.m. nightly. Rev. Marvin Welsh,
RACINE - Raciiie Fire Depanevangelist. Special singing nightly. . ment, July 4 planning meeting,
Thur.sday, 7 p.m. participating
POMEROY - Alzheimers and organiZ&lt;~tions inviled.
Related Disease Support Group
meets Wedn$y, 1-3 p.m., Meigs
. FRIDAY
RIPLEY,· W.VA . - Liberty
County Multipurpose Center. Rev.
Keith Rader will present "Death Mountaineers, Friday, Skateland,
Ripley. W.Va.
with n;gnity ."Everyone welcome.

.Ohio Lottery

Reds
lose third
straight

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLE~
REGULA&amp; HOMESTYLE OR J. _:.,_
W11H CALCIUM
j

. ··Kroger '
.orange Juice
64-0z.

~~
'

.

..

•

·

•

. . "IN THE DELI~PASTRY 5HOPFr
- - - · , AMERICAN STYlE'()R

Mustard
Potato salad
POUnd

Salitwl Ne1ll Stal'l'
A request for pay raises for
emploJces of the M.eigs County
TJJIIeicukJii:s llld HcaJih Qinlc was·
w "UJ!d • Wednesday's regular
iat 01 tlte Meip County Com-

brina those employees up 10 scale
job.with employees holding the same

Roush also explained that
requests for pay raises must come
from county office holders and in
the case of the health department,
. - s.
that request would come from the
.uo,.t Blackwood, preSident of · board or appoipting authorit~.
• "-11 cllhe c:linic,.and Connie
B~kwood an~ Karschn~ stat~ XanciWt, ~uti vc director o.f_ ed their_request did not con lain any
-"---~·-~ .... diaic: lt8led the department speclf!c llnOQnlllld that they only
•
;.,.. c:aafiad • 10 how requesled what o.ther county
.., . . . . .., • •, 11 eclandlllal employccswereacttina.
a 1 ' to 11e clear Clllhal
The ~er JD:en
f
J.IWitah:e. 111e c:anf11s1aD resulted,
· .
gran I tran0 er o
funds r~quest ~rom the soil and
8 .. .r 1111 Bild:awd becin10 01
receal Jqull repdltqj pay ntiJos • water dutrict m the amount of
1o -ay employees 11 the court S\S.$49.32 to the Fncra1 fund; and
a.-.
.
·
ftDJI! th,e De_partmenl of Human
0
iW•rr Mannina Roush Scrvicea for $29,827.02 10 the genczplabcd me pay raises whlcb crall"und.
·Iaiard 1o &amp;wo coun Jiouse · · . ~lerk Mary Hobslelter stated
r were ,....uc~ 1n order 10 · notification bad been received from
,
·1 '
the Ohio Oepanment of Liquor

die._..

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'

Control (ODLC) re~g a permit
for Nancy C. Phillips, doing business as Pageville Grocery, which
would enable the sale of carry-out
beer. The commissioners' office
will hear commenrs on the matter
until June 9 after which the ODLC
will be nodficd.
The board granted a request ·
from Meigs County Prosecuting
Anorncy John Lenlea to appoint a
speCial rrosecutor in' the cue of
Stale o Obio versus Jamet M.
Brown. sraven Story.,... appointed at the requea of Lenlel.
In, a matter invo1vill8 a request
from Mike Wellfall for the board
. to contider approvin~ public
·~ contra:t, the
decided •to again speak with Westfall
before approval is ifUited. Com·
missioner Roush llllllecl his toncem
that lhe polition of public defender
should be fUled by aomeone from
Meigs County.

OUTSTANDING CHAPTER 1 • Meiaa

Local Sdlool Dlltrict rtcenlly received u award

from tbe Stele Deparlmeat ollduattloll for u
oulltaDcllrla ~prebelllve Clulpter l PnJil'IIID.
Receh1a&amp; itte award at tM eoatereace IDCI baa•
qaet beld In Col... bul _..: Dlredor ol Fedenl

Pror••• Wead;r Halar, ·Cilapler 1 teaclltr
Bar Ma"'". Cr-. Bacrrow, Clllapler 1
taelterw T••J C•ap•n Manila R 'II ••
and SuperlateJideat ol tile' Melp Local ld 13i
. Dillrict l•a Carpelder,
·
.·
\II·

�.I

Thursday, May 20,.1993

Commentary
111 Court Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio
·DEVOTED TO THE JNTBRJ:STS OF 11m 10108-IINJOII AREA

· ROBERT L. WINGETI' .
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGAJtET LEHEW
Controller

LETil!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They sboidd be less than 300
words. All leU.n are subject lo editing ond mull be lligned wilh nome,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letton will be published. Lettm
sboidd be in good tule, oddlessina issues, not personalities;

·~

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.

f Excerpts

OHIO Weather

'

from other ·
:• Ohio newspapers ·.

1

With President Clinton's poll
ratings in near free fall (alas,
deservedly 10) the question arises:
" How can this presidency be
helped, 10 help America7"
To offer a constructive answer
one must ask: Why did Clinton get
into trouble? It is being said that
Clinton is "unfocused" or is
•'focused on too many things at
once.''
Don't believe il This president
is in trouble because what he seems
to stand for is troubling.
Clinton, recall, ran for office
saying, "both parties are brain
dead." But he has ttied 10 govern
as if only Republicans are. He's
done a vel)' good imitation of giving away his political birthright to
the liberal wing of his party, and in
some cases 10 the .doctrinaire left
wing of his party. (I do' not know
why.)
· This liberal tilt ls apparent with
regard to his budget plan, which

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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MICH.

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vetoes, in minority fiat, and that all is ri~ht on target: Oumge the 2-to-1
this can be done by interpreting the
rauo of new taxes over spending
law as she sees iL
.
cuiS to 2-to-1 the other way.
But why does she think it is nee- • Other Democratic moderates are
essary7 ~use this ViC~~" of Vic- promoting a varietr of ideas to
timizalion believes m.t "homoge- slow down spendmg and cut
neous majorities" (that is, whites · deficits. The American economy
of both parties) act regularly should improve in direct proportion
mean more taxes, more spending, together IR legislatures to keep 10 how much the existing Clinton
more government, and not much blacks down. Haven't you noticed plan is rolled back to where it
der.cit reduction. That left many of that Sen. Ted Kennedy: (white) and should have been originally.
Clinton should get in front of
his original moderate Democratic Sen. Jesse Helms (white) vote
the wave and put forth a revised
supporters feeling betrayed. They alike7
What can Clinton do?
plan of the sort that moderate
are now figuring out how to woit
With moderate Republicans 10 gen1) Regrou~ on the budfeL Luck- Democrats are proposing. It could
tly and graciously stop Clinton ily for Arnenca, Clinton s current be known as "Clinton II." He has
before he spends again.
plan will likely hit the wall. A another choice: He can fight for his
Even more egregious ate some swirch of only one Democratic sen- old scheme, probably lose, and
of the ideological symbols that ator on tile finance committee watch a new, good plan take shape,
have been set.forth by the .Clinton could derail it. At least two rnoder- possibly to be called "Dole I."
administration. The nomination of ate Democrats, David Boren, D2) He should pigeonhole any
Professor Lani Guinier as the head Okla., and John Breaux, D-La., are · additional spending for old proof the powerful CiVil Rights Divi- consi~ring plan_s ~ do that, c~n- grams until he res11ap:es !hose: i?ffi·
sion of the Justice Department is a . strucUvely, working m concen w1th grams to conform with his onginal
case in point. She believes in quo- Republicans John Danforth, R-Mo., plans to "re-invent government."
tas, in super-quotas, in minority and John Olafee, R-R.J. Their plan For example: no extra monies for
·
·
food stamps until serious "two
years and out" welfare reform is

was designed "to get all the
. Democrats on board.'' That turned
out to mean all the liberal
Democrats. That turned out to

!Mansfield

• IColumbus Iss• I

SUnny

South-CeatraJ Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the low 40s. Friday, partly sunny.
High in the upper 60s.
Extended roreeu~:
.
Saturday through Monday:

•"'
~ Tbe Lima News, May 14
r Powerful congressmen from Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas have pert suaded President Clinton to collect his energy laX from consumers rather
t than producers. That means a higher gasoline laX would sliow up at the
~

··=
• pump.
· · h. term al umts,
· the bas"
You can understand why. A laX on Bnus
. 1c mea• surement of energy, is hidden if collected from producers. PriCes would
t go up and people wouldn't know why. They woufd blame the company or
• inflalion.
t Wharever the maneuvering in WashinJton, a tax revolt is just what's
~ needed. Evel)' oil retail company should publicize the new laX increase.
: Large signs should be posted next 10 each pump, listing the federal laX,
• the slate tax, the new Clinton Btu tax and the total laX.
~
Let the consumers know what they're paying for.

asked fpr pay."
.
Mrs. Barnes said, "Tina needed
taken care of and Bill did it. He
loves her and she loves him."
· .· Lemasters' younger brother,
' John Barnes, recalled a lime when
Lemasters saved him from drowning in the Ohio River.
He told the jury he slid off a
rock and couldn t swim. "As usual,
Bill was lhere 10 save me," he said.
Mrs. Barnes recalled when she
discovered Lemasters' use of marljuana.
"I blew my top," she said. She
reported finding a marijuana
cigaretre in his room and showed it
to deputy who failed to do anything.
·
Mrs. Barnes said she confronted
Lemasrers about his marljuana use
regularly until he was 18 and occasionally destroyed his plants with
bleach.
Other family members testified
that Lemasters began using marl. juana regularly when he about 14
years old.
· l'llycbologlst testifies ·
Dr. Newton Jackson of Ann
Arbor, Mich., said he interviewed
Lemasters in April and administered a battery of tests to detennine
his mental slaws.
Jackson said Lemasters exhibited no signs of mental illness but
scored high in areas measuring
social isolation and suspicion of
othin - scores he said were probably related to Lemasters' current
situation.
.
"Durinjl his first 10 years,
(Lemasters) received plenty Qf love
and attention," Jackson said. "He
was cared fqr and developed a
sense of basic trust."
However, Jackson added, when
Lemasters was 11 ·years old, Harvey Learnond entered the household and alienated him.
Lemasters viewed himself as
rejected and u!'wanted _and these
views were remforced m school,
Jackson said. As a result, he sought
out others who, like him, fek they
were n:jected: drug dealers.
One drug dealer stood up for
Lemasters, gave him the attention
he needed and introduced him to
the drug trade, Jackson said.
"Lemasters applied himself and
was rewanled, he said. ''This took
. him down a road which ended in
tragedy."
In addition, Lemasren' early use
of marijuana allowed him to escape
the necessary lasks young people

Congress begins to make· painful cuts

WASHINGTON (NEA) mernliers of the armed forces and come fro111 cuts in Medicare and
Congress recently passed the f~rst civilian employees. ·
other health ~grams. It will start
budget resolution, which instructS
Banking It.must cut $2.7 billion, by cutting reunbursernents 10 hosthe 13 House appropriations sub- $338 million in FY '94. There will · pnals·for care of the poor, by freezcommittees to trim $343 billion
mg fees 10 hospitals arid doctors for
two years, by cracking down on
over the next five fiSCal years. That R b rt
UT.
was the easy pan. Now the sub0
elderly who lfY 10 transfer assets to
Com\lliuees must r.gure out exactly
their children to qualify for Mediwhere to mate those cuts. That's be an increase in insurance fees care, and it plans 10 raise billions
the hard part.
banks pay the Federal Deposit by allowin~ the FCC 10 auction off
Here IS a loot at where cuts will Insurance Corp., and in the fees news poruons of the radio specprobab~ be made, based on discus- that state banks pay for federal
trum.
sions With araff on all 13 subcom- examinations. Ginnie Mac will be
Foreign Affairs It must cut $5
mittees:
'.
allowed 10 charge guarant~ fees million, none in FY '94. The token
Agriculture This subcommittee on several new kinds of m~e­ $5 million will be saved in reduc1·
•
The (Toledo) Blade, May 11
must cut $2.9 billion, $98 million b&lt;lcked securities, and there will be ing foreign service retirement
Japan and Norway have announced that they will resume whaling, in FY '94. More ~ on most pan- a change in amortization periods.on costs.
·
although possibly on a limited scale. .The Japanese argue that the rninlce els, agriculture -subcommittee Federal Housing Administration
Judiciary It must cut (or raise)
whale stock has now groWn back to a size that would permit the killing of mem~rs are scratching their heads insurance premiums. The subcom- $345 million, none in FY '94. It
2,000 a year.
'
·
as they ·ponder which programs to rnittec also believes substanlill,l sav· will get most of the five-year
Some proponents of whaling assert people have a right to eat what they cut. All represent farm districts, . ings can be achieved by crai:iking increase by raising patent and
wish, without having somebody else's values imposed on them.
and farmers are going to f~ght any down on public housing cheats by · trademark fees, filing fees and from
Fact is, though, that whale meat is sold only in upscale restaurants in cuts. Initial cuts willl~ly come in comparing housing rolls with IRS illa'C&amp;!ed forfeilu{eS.
Tokyo. The population a! large hardly has any remembrance of what it is the Crop Insurance Program, and in records.
Merchant Marine It must cut (or
like 10 eat whale meat, and in Japan only very few people are still engaged the acreage set-aside program in
Education and Labor It must cut raise) $205 million; none in FY
·in the business of whaling.
which fanners are paid.not to plant $5.8 billion, $118 million in FY '94. It will get all of .the increase
· There is no need to n:vive an industry that came close to wiping off the crops in order to prevent oversup- '94. In a very contruvcrsial move, from higher duties and fees on
face of this planet a creature that possesses great inrelligen.ce and is in ply and falling prices.
most of the savings here will come ships and cargo entering U.S. (l9118.
many ways the monarch of the deep as mankind is the dominant figure on ·
Armed Semoes It must cut $2.3 from shifting student loans from
Natural Resources It must cut
billion, $128 million in FY '94. commercial banks directly to the (Or raise) $1.9 billion, $131 million
land.
Many members of Congress think federal government. This would in FY '94. This subcommittee will
the Penlagon has gotten off much save $4.3 billion in fees paid to be a hotbed of action as members
100 easy, so pressure will be on in banks over five years.
ponder a long list of fee increases
the. future for bigger cuts. Until
Energy and Commerce It must and program cuts. One consideraeveryone agrees on a new force cut $64.5 billion, $4.3 billion in FY tion is the outright elimination of
structure, initial cuts will come '94. This subcommittee's n8rne is a grants given to U.S. trust territofrom eliminating cost-of-living misnomer: Health care and Social ries.
adjustments for retirees and possi- Security fall under 'its authority.
Post Office and Civil Service It
bly a pay fteeze for both uniformed Most of the savings is expected to must cut $10.6 billion, $77 million

e . J• nagman

Berry's World

tii\LF

fEN\A.LE

in FY '.94. Look for a major overhaul of the federal retirernel)t sys- .
tern, including the elimination of
the ability of retiring federal workers to take their retirement benefits
· in a lump sum. This alone could ·
save $8.6 billion In five years.
:
Public Worlcs and Transporta- .
lion It must cut (or raise) $296 million, $31 rniUion in FY '94, It will
get m6st of this by raising feeA of
various kinds. It might reform the
way the federal government
finances its coostruclion budgel
Veterans Affairs It must cut
$2.5 billion, $266 million in
FY'94. Any cuts in veterans programs are always controversial.
This subcommittee. is playing its .
cards very close to the vest. All
veterans programs are up for ·
review and potential cuts, but look
for health and hospilals to emerge
inract.
Ways and Means It must raise
$299.7 billion, $29.4 billion in FY
'94. Almost 85 percent of deficit
reduction is targeted to come from
a myriad of laX and fee increases.
The subcommittee would like to
hold down income tax incre&amp;ses 10
a bare minimum, with the hulk of
the new revenue coming from
increases energy laXes, excise taxeS ·
and corporate taxes. Expect a lobbying free-for-all here.
Robert Wagman is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enter- :
prise Association.

Let's not forget about the boys
Several thousand of us partici,
Reporters who visited class- mine, and I'm not sure II ow it some wisd9m .for·their pain, 'does it
paled recently in the national Tate rooms where many of the girls affects future gender equality in · follow that we should start pulling
Our Daughters to Wort Day. Read- were out in the workplace being · this counlr)'.
' .groups of historically disadvanIt's not that I think affirmative tagcd children out of classrooms
ing the newspaper accounts of ~ted like treasures found a group
lucky little girls in law offices, uti!- .
aclion is wrong, that sometimes we for special e11couragement and
ity company bucket-trucks and broS hO
don't need to overcompensate leaving the so-called advantilged
kerage firms, I lived it with them.
.QTQ
VeTS/reet · when people have been denied behind7 Say, ''Tate Our Black
How I would have loved to have
opportuniU'. But the problem inber- Children tb Government Offices
been taken to work 30 years ago, as of scared, threalcned and, in some ent in affirmative action is that it Day," or "Tate Our Low-Incoine
these girls were, as a precious com- cases, sulky boys. 1 can't say 1 had visits the sins of the father on the Children on Cool Field Trips
rnodity my parents wabted to a lot of sympathy for their "The sons. By the time any corrective Day"7 Even if there are benefits
encourage. It might just have been girls get all the good things!'· action is taken, rnaJ)Y of those los· from these programs, what kiflll of
the greatest experience of my F.l- whine, but I sure did understand ing jobs anchcholarihips 10 the dis- message do we give kids when we
hood and caused me 10 constder how it felt to be passed over acfvantaged have no undersrandilig design these activities in settings
of the history tllat led up to this where some kids go and some are
career choices I never dared to because of one's gender.
dream of.
I've been left out of high-school point. History began when they left behind?
l'U acknowledge I had no reser- sports programs while my mal~ were born, and·they believe THEY
I still think that talc in~ our
vations when I heard the plans to · classmates hav.e had all the new are now the disadvanlaged - dis- . daughters to work wu great mrent,
take our daughters out of clau for a equipment '"e taxpayers could crimination's new victims.
if not perfect ex~ution; and thouday and bring them to wort. After . heap on them. I've; been not
Pulitzer Prize-winnin11 colum- sands of little girls' lives were '
all, recent studies have shown that allowed to play in neighborhood nist 1\.nna Quindlen of The New enriched. I just .wish it had been
girls' self-esteem. plummets boys' garnea~·and even lciclted out- York Times made a-wonderful handled within a more "win-win" ;
::7=~:w:s::.~~nandgteac13,hande
·rs of a Dixielanc,t band In colle•e · r.oint when sl)e said there was groupplan, r:!:athanmore
· oneikethatl~!!f.t one ;
because the bandleader was afrlid •something Important we needed
•
~•
unconsciously respond to and male bar owners wouldn't hire a 10 communicate 10 our daughters· ., Quindeedlen also writes that, 1
8 oys n
encourage boys more often in band with a woman wailing on a about their worth in the world...
10 learn many things

THE PERFECT CANDIDATE FOR A STATE
GOVERNMENT :JOB ~IN FLORIDA - BASED ON HIRING QUOTAS

1

c~~w the boys left behind

.

clarinet. Visiting these felillngs on She belicvet the boys' ex,t:t,::
1 00
10
_a_th_in_g_ .;.rcc_tir_y
because
·they "learned what 1111 like to feel
Long Island. N.Y., aboard the "Spirit~ SL LWil" on his historic 10lo overlooked because of your scx.
flight to France.
. . ·
·
My fourth llllder
. hid 10 write an
On this dare: ·
euay lbout how he rniabt feel if he
In 1506, Chrislopher Columbus died in povaty In Spain. · .
·
were a girl, and hla e!ilpathy level
In _1830, the fust railroad timetable was published, in the Baltlmcn was IRII&gt;' high." . ·
_
Amencan newspaper. · ·
·
But even If the boys gained

To.day in his to ry---~-------------a-boy~-doesn--'__·
.;.. ·

.
87 Tile~,!*' Pre.
~oday II 'I1nlrljlay, ~y 20, the 1r' day~ 1993. 1bc:le are 22S days

left IR the,.-.
·
Today' Hig!Wght . Hill«y:
On Ma~ 'JJJ~ 1927,
~

a.....e.

.

.

·

.

The Daily Sentinel

·,

took off liom Roosevelt Field ln

)

~m:r::::i~v;!· ,:~ ~~l~ee-:i

;
addreued in a different fullion.'' • •
Hcro'a to helpina them ditcover
those 'thlnaa. and In a way that
doeanout." 't leave 1nyone .feelina "left

~:a~d!~ ~~~kat;~~

·

Smb OveraJreel Ia a ay~dl·
cated writer 'or Nnnpaper

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..

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Board to meet
need 10 perform 10 grow up, Jack•
Southern Local School Board
son said.
meets
"I feel ... he still has the capabili- school.Monday at 7 p.m. at the high
ty of becoming a different person,"
Jackson said.
Revival continues
"(Lemasters) has sufficient
Revival
continues at Syracuse
intelligence, is a hard worker, and
Mission
with
Saul McGuire, 7 p.m.
has demonstrated strong evidence
ni~tly and Sunday at 6 p.m. Rev.
for rehabilitatiOn. He has demon_strated a strong desire to give and Mike Thompson invites the public.
receive love," he said.
Coin club to meet ·
Following Jackson's teStimony,
The
OH
KAN Coin Club will
Lemasters' sister, Tina, took the
meet
Monday
at Burkett Barber
witness stand and showed jurors
Shop
iit
Middleport.
Social hour
lew:rs she had written to him.
and
trading
sess1on
at
7 p.m. preIn addition, she showed two .
awards she received which resulted cede the meeting. Refreshments.
from Lemasters helping her with New members welcome.
schoolwork.
Revival slated
She said Lemasters helped her
Three
night revival at Faith
with schoolwork and took care of
Tabernacle
Church on Bailey Run
her.
.
Road,
Pomeroy,
Monday through
"Do you love Bill Lemasters,"
Wednesday,
7
_
p.m.
nightly. Jerry
Eachus asked.
Cottrell,
PaleSbRe,
W.VL,
evange"Yes I do;" slie replied.
list
Pastor
Emmett
Rawson·
invites
·
Closing arpments
the
public.
Following defense testimony,
Judge Fred W. _Crow Ill recessed
the hearing until9:a.m. today when
Da!"'e Jl~aned
closing arguments and deliberation
The Galha Twulers. Western
started.
. Square Dance Club wtll hold a
Crow once again warned jurors dance Saturday from 8-! 1 p.m. at
they may not investigate, discuss or !he Henderson Commuruty Ceo~
express any opinion about the case. m. Henderson, W.Va. Albert Alhe
He also instructed jurors not to WID be the caller.
read, watch or listen 10 any discusFestival planned
sion of the case and ordered them
Carthage Township Festito report 10 the bailiff if they are val,The
sponsored
by the Lottridge
exposed to any outside sources of Community Center,
will be Saturinformation concerning the case.
day and Sunday. In addition to
music and arts and crafts there will
be a Little Miss and Mister
·
Carthage.Township Sunday at I
p.m.; a tractor pull Saturday at 1
~

.EMS responds
to seven calls
Seven calls for assistance were
answered by units ofthe Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service on Wednesday and early
Thursday morning.
.
On Wednesday at 2:48 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit went 10 Uncoln Terrace for Nell Graves who was
tran~ 10 Veterans Memorial
Hosptllll.
~t 3:21 p.m. the Racine unit
went to Plants Road for ()pal Cummins. She was taken 10 Veterans.
Another Racine uilitJ at 3:37 p.m.,
was called 10 the Penzoil Station
for Trudy Rees who was transport·
ed 10 VeteranS.
The Pomeroy unit, at 3:37 p.m.,
went 10 Chesler for Helen Will who
was~ to Veterans.
.
The Rutland unit. at 5:13 p.m.,
~ to ROIIIO 325 for Wanda
Gardner who was taken to Holzer
Medical CenJer.
This morning (Thunday) at4: ~
a.m. the Rutland unit went to
Pagev!Ue Reid for Chlrlty G~
who was !Ibn to V~.
At 6:'JJJ a.m. the Rutland unit
went 10 Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Nick WucheVich. He ,w u transported by Lifefligbt 10 Glint MediCal Center in Colunlbus.

•

In celebration of

p.m. with kiddie tractor pull at 3
p.m.; a baseball card show, a while
elephant sale; a cruise-in Sunday at
noon. Music will be provided by
Out of the Blue, Clark Family,
Southern Gospelaire, Renegades,
Free Country, True Country Ramblers, Bobbie Westfall, Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass and Stoney ·
Creek. Items to be given away Sunday at 5 p.m. include a Middleton
doll and Willie Stargill autograp11ed baseball.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- EIIadene Watson, Pomeroy; .
Harold Sellers, Portland; Helen
Will, Chester; Mildred Hubbard,
Syracuse.
·
· WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Patricia Loscar.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlscbaraes, May 19 - Henry
Thomas, Matthew Norman, Merrill
Rose, Patricia Edwards, Marshall
Farris, Elwood Martin, Dorris
BillY)'. Pamela Morrison, Paul Raybum, William Righthouse, Lidora
Brady, Payton Rippeth, Rachel
Chapman, Dennis Williamson,
Lester Elldns, Irene Richards and
Bertha S(:hroeder.
Biftlas, M:ay 19 - Mr. and
~- Richard Baliey, son, GallipoliS; Mr. and ;Mrs. ADen Moore, 11011,
New Haven, and Ronald Sheets,
daughter,~Jackson. -~ ~

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
IIUAT IEYNOt.DI IN

COP AND HALF P.cl .
ITAJ111110 FRIDAY
BILL II It lAY IN

G.ROUNDHOG DAY P.ca.
One Ewnlng lllow 7:10
'dmle1lora tt.IO• 441 OlD

Enterprlle Alloclallon.

~)}

•

May 24 through May 28, 1993 .

at
Hol~er

Clinic
Eye Department

.,

Call the Ophthalmology Department
at 446-5421 for an appointment

Group to meet
The Racine Area Community
Organization will meet Tuesday at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.
·

(mention this 11d for the specit~l price)

SAtE

J8tJI

20% OFF

STOREWIDE
EVERYTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

FRIDAY 8 117URDIY, MAY 21st-22nd
(CLOSED ,SUNDAY)

Firm named key
producer for group
John F. Musser and The Downing-Childs Agency, Inc., a
Pomeroy-based Independent in surance agency, has been named as a
Key Producer for The Ohio Casual·
ty GrouP. of Insurance Companies
of Hamilton, Ohio. The Key Producer program is designed tO give
special recognition to insur111ce
agents exhibiting exceptiolial product knowledge, professionalism
and service to their customers.

NATIONAL .SIGHT WEEK

. S~lal meeting
. The Chester Elementary PTO
will hQid.a specjal meeting Monday at 4 p.m. in the school cafeteria. All parents and teachers are
welcome.

NOrth ern Oh•)0

By The Associated Pras
Mostly clear weather should
cross the state tonight with a
chance of frost in low lying areas
of northeast Ohio. Lows tonight
will range from the mid- and upper
30s in the northeast and to the
lower 40s in the southwest. A
ttough of low pressure will bring
some widely scattered light showers to the north on Friday.
Cool rempcnwres in the 60s for
highs through Saturday will limit
crop development. Readings will
warm into the 70s for hi_ghs by
Monday with lows rnoderaang il)to
the 50s.

TS Trim Industries will host 1n
open house Sunday 10. observe the •
fifl!l anniversary of the opening of
the1r Athens plant.
.
TS Trim is headquarter~d in
Canal Winchester, and is a major
supplier of interior aim parts for
Honda Accord and Civic models
manufactured in Ohio and Canada. .
Company spokesman Roger Rill
noted that.m employs 380 fulltime associates in Athens generat·
ing a payroll exe«ding $7 million.
The public is invited to visit the
plant located at 10 Kenny Drive :
frQrn 2;4S p.m. to 6 p.m. Tours, ·
~shrnents and gifts will be pro- •
Vlded.

FOR $29

-Meigs announcements-

.• .

may get SOme
t t·ODJg
• ht
I ros
·

Open House Sunday

COMPLETE EYE
EXAMINATION

BOARD MEMBERS DANCE- Two board members f'nlm the
Meigs County Coundl A""l• Velma Rue and Joan Corder; dance
to "Acby Breaky Heart" as part ot the entertainment at Senior
CitizeDil Oily beld Tuesday at the Meigs Counly Senior Cltizen·s
Center. Jane Walton, not pictured, also plll'ticlpated. Tbe cenler Is
celebrating its lOib &amp;DDivel'SIIry and Tuesday reatured a variety of
commical and musical entertainment ror a crowd of seniors and
visltor!N

Fair on Saturday. Lows in the
40s. Highs in the 60s. A chance of
showers Sunday. Lows 45-50 .
Highs in the upper 60s to low 70s.
A chan,.e of showers and thunderstorms Monday, Lows in the 50s.
Highs mostly in the 70s.

Fami!y,.. Continued rrorn page l

SS7; Shelly BarreU. Letart, W. VL,
speeding, $Sl ; Mary Jenninaa.
Georgetown, speeding, $54;
Will~ A. Notungharn, Vinton,
speeding, $55; and George E. Nagicski, Athens, speeding, $S4.

'"

Pt. Cloudy 0/ou(/y

------Weather-----

3) A~int a high-rariking "ide. ologist' to the White House staff:
Any serious, card;-e:arrying New
Democrat would have seen immediately that the Guinier appointment mates PresideD! Clinton look
like President Quota.
4) Pray that voters still believe
in redemption. Clinton would not
be the first president to be politicallybomagam.
Could such a major course correction worlc'l I think most Americans would offer Clinton a second
chance, for now. ·
What happens in the long run is
anyone's guess. There would be
endless arguments about whic_h
Clinton is the real Clinton. But that
· is better than knowing that the real
one is the wrong one.
Ben Wattenberg, a S«:nior rellqw at the American Enterprise
Institute, II autbor of "The First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Prt11 and a writer ror
Newspa~r Enterprise Association.
•

By The Associated Press
Ekcens of recent Ohio editorials of national interest:
The (Coshocton) Tribune, May 13
About 250 Oregonians have petitioned the Senate Rule Committee 10
void the· re-election of Republican Sen. Bob Packwood. The five-term
senator, they charge, falsely denied having sexually harassed women - a
whopper that allowed hirilto narrowly heist the Nov. 3 election. Sorry.
. It's the petition, no~ the electio~. that sho~ ~ lhf?wn ouL
The Select Comnuttee on Ethics, now mve$Ugatmg, may censure or
expel its colleigQe - fair enough if the accusations prove ttuc. But .the
Rules Committee is the wrong courtroom.
HiSIOOcally, that committee has voided elections only because of clear
illegalities - stuffmg ballot boxes or enfranchising the dead.
It should shun subjective standards such as campaign truthfulness.

(: The (Tifftn) Advertiser-Tribune, May 9
;: Thank goodness for the end of President Clinton's fust 100 days. It's
time 10 put egos aside and start solvin~ the nation's ~lerns ..
Ointon was elceled on an economiC platforrn .that mcluded tax breaks
. for middle and lower wage earners and small increases for the very
wealthy .. ·
·
Today the defmition of Vel)' wealthy applies to anyone making money,
any amount of money.
..
.
The issues of women and gays in the military were debate prior to the
election. While close to the bean of some, Clinton's stands on these issues
were not the primary reason he was elected. The economy and health care
were.
The r.rst I00 days have been diffJCuiL The honeymoon is over. America remembers your campaign promises, Mr. President. What are you
going to do now7

Iss• J•

Ben Wattenberg ·

passed,.

••
•

Twenty cases were handled during April in the coun of Rutland
Mayor I;ldward Martin.
Fined or forfeiting bonds were
• James N. Biggs, Route 124,
Pornerciy. consumption of alcohol,
$100; James R. BayIons, Sail Fork,
W. Va.• speeding, $48; Melody
Wheelersburg, Pomeroy, speeding,
$57; Francis S. Cheever, Wuhington, D. C., speeding, $6S; Jeffery
A. Houtz, Hubbard, speeding, $51;
David J. Gallagu, Belleville, Ky.•
. spee~ing, $53: James E. Snyder,
Jr., Route 124, Pomeroy, speeding,
$46; Gale R. Rhodes, Langsville,
speeding, $48.
Lois Clelland, Pomeroy, speeding, SSO; Theodore Strickland,
Lucasville, SIICedlnj!, $SO; Randy
A. Ziemer, tanesvllle, speeding,
SS7; Mark A. Stanley, Pomeroy,
speeding, $S5; Connie Clelland,
Middlepilrt, speeding, $SO; Kenneth Searls, Rutland, exv.ired
plates, '$75; Sabrina D. Wilson,
Rutland,speeding, $50; Rodney
Wooten, Letart, W. Va.; speeding,
.
'
..
'

conditions

IToledo I sso I

•
l
•

Accu-Wea~ forecast for

· Thursday,· May 20, 1993

~

•
t

-Rutland Court news--

Friday, May 21

'Clinton II'
or 'Dole I'?
.

The Daily Sentinel

The -Dally Sentlnei--Page-3

2 BIG DIYI ftl liVE
SINCE 1974

OPEN
' 9·5
MON.•SAT.

290 Iori• Stco•d
Middleport
992·3684

Stop
BOb'S Market
For The Area's Bes.t Selection

-Of Bedding _Plants
4nd. Hangl·ng ·Baskets
.

· BO.a •s ·STOCKS THEIR MASON AND GALLIPOLIS
RETAIL FACILITIES DAILY WITH
FRUH QUALITY PLANTS
·
SJ.RA.IGHT FROi THEIR 80 GREENHDUSESI
THIS WEEKEND'S FEATURED SPECIALS...
.

ALL TREES.&amp; AZALEAS,
RHODOD~:NDRONS

Now 25%Gff

�• 1' ' •• .,. "'

... ·- -

..

·~

.... __ ........... -

J(.

- , .... . . .

_ _ .,... ....

-

""·- ·-

·~

....... -

.......

~

- - -. . -

I

The

Thursday, May 20, 1993 ·

Ohio

Sentinel

Candiotti 's bat helps Dodgers beat Reds 5-2 for series sweep ·
ByKENPEIERS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tom
Candiotti, who had a modest total
of one RBI last year, has a good
chance 10 lqllhat in 1993.
Candioui, the Los Angeles .
Dodgers' knucldeballer who spent
his previous nine seasons in the
American League, already has
equalled his total of RBis for last
year.
·
He ·singled liP the middle
WednC$day nigbt to snap a tie and
the Dodgers walt on to a 5·2 victory over Cincinnati and their first
three-game sweep of the Reds at
Dodger ~~urn smce 1986.
CandiotU (2-4) held the Reds to
two runs, one unearned, on five hits
and two wallcs, with three strilce·
outs in 7 1/3 innings.
He was most proud, however, of
his sixlh·inning single that put the
Dodgers ahead 3-f and swtcd a
lhree;runinning.
''11 fell good to be ~tandi!'g
there o~.fU'St ~. ~.iallY w1th
an ~BI, ~dioui said. .
.
I ~ t swung a bat m years
when I came over here, and last
seas~n I concentrated mostly .on
bunung. I had never faced breaking
balls like these guys have, hard
· pi~hes like they make," Candiotti
srud.
. The Dodgers' righl·han~ bad
m1ssed a chance to help hts team
offensively in the fifth inning
against the Reds, popping up a
bunt
"That made my hit even better,
since I didn't get the job done on
lhe sacrifice and it probably cost us
a run,'' he ~Jim Gott, '(ibo retired four bat·
ters· to earn his fifth save, said:
"Qndy pircbed a rnastetful game.
And that key base hit he got
-sparked things for us.''
Aldtough Candiotli's hil was the
big one fer the Dodgen, Brett But·
ler chipped in with an RBI double
and two singles and also made a
spectacular diving catch of il liner
to center by Bip Roberts.
Buller was back in the lineup
after getting a night off Tuesday,
by manager Tom Lasorda's wishes,
not his own.
·
"1 told, him I didn't think I
needed a night off,'' Butler said.
"But obviously I had a little more
spring in my legs, fell a lillie beuer
at the plate tonight. The man
{Lasorda) knows what he's doing."
The Dodgers cooled off the

Obando helps
O's top Tribe

4 doors, ..... '"""wheel clriw,
I c,l., lir, ..to., PS, PB, ~
wloobwa,~-.po!I!Wiodca,

llpe,ran,-ror·

0 whMI, cruiM, AMIFM • -

WAS

RIVERFRONT BARBELL OPENS Riverl'ront BarbeD, located at lUi West Main
Street Ia Pomeroy, Ill now open for business. The
new businea, co-owaed by Mlck Davenport and
Gary Graeser, offers a wide selection of free
weight and selectorized equipment. Th'e estab·
llsbmeut also offers suppl_emen!S from amlnos to

By DAVE HARRIS
Sett~el Cortespo~ent
Greenfteld McClam scored
sev~n unearned runs off of two
Metgs Marauder errors and we!'I
o~ ~~eat th~ Marawlm 11-3 m
D1~1ston II dt.stnct to~rnament
acuonlast Saturday at Uruoto. .
Both ?f the ~rrors c!lm.e With
two outs 1n .t&lt;lfo different mnm-ds.
The deciSion pushed the tgers
lo ~n 18-3 mark o~ the season,
while Scott Gheen s Marauders
ended lhe
at 9·10.
Green leld. came out o_f the
blocks fast pl_atin!! f~ runs m lhe
lop of lhe fust mmng. But the
Mara~ders .came back t~ sc.ore
thr~ m t.herr half of the mnmg.
SlartUift pitcher Puckett wallced lhe
bases ullfof ~ ~ slart the
botto'!' o the mrung. Bill~ Glaze
' then lined a rare three run ~gle to
clear the bases and make 11 a 4-3 .
cootesCiain~
. .
.
. Me
increased the lead to 63 m the top of the ·second when a
Marauder drop~ ll fly ball with
two outs, the tigers then scored
two IIJieanled runs to take the three
run lead.
.
Once agam the Marauder
def!lllse let them
in the fifth

hear

down

Scoreboat·&lt;l

'l

'
(

X...UCily 13, Ooklolld I

- • Baseball • -

•

NATIONAL LEA!&gt;UE
-DI-

I•

'

T-

· W

l'!tiladdpltia .......... 27

MMirool ................22

ODcaao......... -•......20
Pltllllqh ..............19
SL Loaio ................19
1'16rida ...................l7
NewYad&lt; ..............ll

L
II
17
11
19
19
23
2!5

l'tt.
.711

ray'• aCLEVELAND (Cook 2-1) at Balli·
GB

-~

5.S
6.S

.500
.500

I

.541

I
II
14

.4~

.!42

.,....(Mo,I"':Q.4l,I:Z,3l p.m.

Oau:ost {Wells ~-1) at MUwau.kee

cwc..;(~:fo, .. .;..1),1:3lp~.

Oaklalid (Davis 0-4) at Kansas

(C..01·5~

..,

21

.571
.S64
.475
.436

3.S
..
7.S
9

23
Colondo ...........,.... 12 21

,410
.300

10
14.5

22

~l~~l'1,11.p.n\.
Wiu 1-1) at Chicqo (Fer-

Kana••

New Yad&lt; 6, Pilllburlh 4 (10 im.)

Sm Diqa 7, Calmado 3
Lao Anp1oo S. CINCINNATI 2

- • NHL playoffs • -

Today'scames

Wednesday'• ocore

Colamlo (Reynoto 2-2) 11 San Dq,o

cr.,t.&lt;~&gt;·3~ •,as

p.m.
CINCINNATI (BftiWIIina 3-2) u San
l'no&lt;Wco (lll'obon 1·3), 4,o5"p.m.

.•·

Chi~ao

(Outman +3) at St. Lovia

Friday's c.me

T~a~t.o.Anplei.1~:30 p.m.

Friday's pllltl .

Chicaao (Harkey •·t)

1t

.,
"

CINCINNAn (Belcher 1-3) at San
Pnnc:Uco(Swift 5·1),10:35 p.m.

"

Di...,

~ ....~!0:35p.m.

..'

Saturday's came

Florida

{BOwen~). 7~~- p.m.
"
Monlf'ell (Hill 4-0) u Phil .. elphia
( 1 - 4-1). 7:35p.m.
.
SL LoW (Ma..nne ~) II Jliubwah
(Wuofiold ~&gt;.7:35p. m.
Atlanta (Maddus 3-3) at New Yod
(So....m.,..l-4), 7:40p...
"""""" (Podul'l4-2) " S.n
(WIWdnml 0.2~ Ill:«!_p.m.
Colondo (Nicd 3-:!i) at LOll Aqel..

MmtNII•tN.Y. i.J.IDd•,1:30p.m.

- • Transactions • B-baU
A-U..•
MILWAl/ICEE IRI!WERS• Pl"od
Dive Nillfcm, ~. on 'tba ls-dty ctia·
1bJ.Ilia. a.c.nod TCXD l..aqlkin, catchIN, from N.w Odean1 of dt• Am.UC.n
Auoci•rion. T:ran~femrd Tod Hiauera ,
pitcher, from the IS-to the 60-day dilabledlilt.

Nllllooolla...

..

AMERICANLEAGUE ·
lhiloniM.W.

T-

'

W L

Deaoil. ...................24 14
New Yodt ..............ll 17
B -....................21 II
T - . ..................20 19
MiJ-...:......... 16 :10
16 22
CIEVELAND ..- ..15 :z:1

u.-...............

.
·'

MmtiWilatN:Y.lslmd•.1:30p.m.

(I'IWUINry 3-3).1:35 p.m.

•

Lao Anadeo 3, T......., 2, ..n.. a.4

. Toul2ht'saame

Montrul (Nabhalr. 3-3) at Philadd·

&lt;

'

1-1

p1U (SoiDJlina 4-1), H5 p~.

.•

•

California (F.~rrell 2·5) at Texu
( R - 3·3), 1:3S p.m.
,
le~ltle (JohMaa 6-2) at
City
(lhneyCI-0), 8:35p.m.

o.icaf' S. SL Loaio 1

.,.,•

Dcaah (OulliW• 1-0) at a.EVE:LANDOI- l-3~ 7:05pm.
MiMelata (Delhaiel S-2) 1t T010nto
(Mo.,;, I-I~ 7:3S pm.
MilWlukce (Navuro 1·3) at Biltimore
(llluoolo.o l·l), Hl p.m.
.
New Yad&lt; (l'woz 2-2) at B....., a:&gt;&lt;,&gt;
nondotl·~,I:OSpum.

Allanlo I, - 0
flodda S, Philldelphi• 3

,.

It)'

1•3l p.m.

IoCR

Wectaesd~~:Ores
s.. fruociaco6,
3

..

c·

Friday's eames

14 . .6!9

II
17

(V'... .

Ia 4-3), 6:05p.m.
n ~~-""
S.lllo (Loo'1 :H) ot Tous ....-·--

Wellem Dlwillol

San Fnncioco ........27
Allaft~ ...................24
floultQn .................22
CINCINNATI........ I9
• I.AIIAnplco ........... l7
San ~N&amp;o .............. l6

--

-

-

Ptt.
.632
.575
.531

.513

.444
.421
.m

w-.DI.W.,.
Oliaa"..·-·.......- ..23 IS .1105
' c.JilvriU ...............21 16 .l6a
T•• .....................2l 17 .5$3
~ en, ...........11 19 .416
21 415
-.. 19
·
Mil ...............
... ..............
16 22 ;411
Ootlond
.................14 22

-

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--'
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Wtdz
y.- 11• K
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&amp;-6,aJ!Vf!LANJ)l .
10

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2
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7

NEW YORK METS: FUed Jcft TorborJ, manaaar; Bury POOle. tint-bue
coec:b; an4 Due l.d.oc:he. bWlpm eo~~:h.
Named O.Uaa Oman, man1p and Oar~
...UJ-co.cb.

Footblll

10

N.-JP-1'-•
CINCINNATI BBNOALl: Sianed
MlbBdas.r
, ' NEW YORit IIIAHI'S: Sianed Doml1
-.a~r-..-..

u

NoilooaiHocbJ!Aoouo

I

2

4~ ,

!
7
I

1992 FORD
TEMPO

1992 FORD
TAURUS

+•._

Hoelle,

CIIICAOO BLACXJIAW!I:S: Sipod

c••- . 1 Wua,
- ~UDUia
•

Cllllotcf, lO. OM· JICit

Colltae .
ATI.ANilC COAst CONFI!REIICii:

1_._. BW Wilhelm; Clemton
_. booio~. !or ori1ioa1 r•n~uba•"ho
....,.. .. , _ . . , Moy 11.
IYUCUIB: -.......J rh• Oloonn
_...boll. r~
....r.
. Sob&gt;ndo,
"
. - s,...,

·

..w

1992 DODGE
DYNASTY

·-·-·---····

inning when again with two outs defeated Federal Hocking 16-S.
another fly ball was mopped. Thai
Meigs came out of the blocks
led to five more unearned runs and and scored four runs in the first.
gave McClain the victory.
The Marauders then added solo
Bolender led McClain · at the runs in the second, third and fourth
plate 'with three singles, Pemwell innings before scoring three in the
added a solo home run and a single, fifth and silt in the sevenlh to coast
R. Anderson two singles •d Puck· to lhe win.
eu added two singles.
Mike Vance led Meigs at the
Brett Newsome led Meigs with plate with a triple and two singleS.
two singles, Mike Welsh, Gary Newsome and Stanley added a
Stanley and Glaze each, added a triple each, while B.i lly Jones,
single.
Nathan Brown, Carlton Drummer
Vance was.lhe s~r and loser and Mite Welsh all added a single.
for Meigs wtth rehef help from Bennett led Federal Hocking with
Jones. TheY. combined to give up two singles.
13 hits, slrike out seven and wallc
Jim Pullins was lhe starter and
two. Puckett, the winning pitcher, winner for Meigs with relief help
scattered five hits, slruck oitt four from Stanley. They combined to
and waited seven.
give up six hits, slt'ike out seven
Innlag totals
.
.
and walt only one. Nelson, the los·
Meigs: 411-130-6 = 16-9-? ·
ing pitcher for F-H, gave up nine
Fed: Hocking: ()()().210.2 = 5-6-7
hits, struck put nine and wall\ed
WP.,.... Pullins
two.
LP- Nelson
Inning totals
Greenfield: 420-05().0 = 11·13-?
In regular-season action Friday Meigs: :)00·000-0 =3·5-?
evening, the Maraudets scored runs
WP-Puckett
in six of the seven innings and
LP _Vance

----··-·
59 495

cyt,.liriUIO.. P S , P B , - -.
cruiM, A&amp;M'I.t • - lllpO, llllall,

,_ wtn. defog.

NOW

WAS
'11,995

I

.

1992 JEEP
WRANGLER
REDI SUPflf CLEAN/
LOCAL TRADE
bhalidrive,4cyl., or.nd. m..o .•
A!.WM radio.

NOW

S11

WAS
2,49$

1991 BUICK
REGAL

1991 BUICK
CENTURY

IIAIIOONt CUAN CAlli

UC. _ , Qllll.f'fO,IIGII MUB/

-·-·Irani--·.
·-------··
-·----.111
.......-.,t.. air, -

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.. PS. PB, -

wtn-

........
~~oraoarow
5101995

c,l.,alr,...,,,PS,PB,--.dr
4

- · cniiO, AWM · - • •

.

....... -iiOwwln.dofog.

WAS

The baskelball coaching slaff at
Eastern High School wiD present
the frrst-ever "Big-E" Basketball
Camp.
The first session, set for June 7·
10, wiD feature insttuction for stu·.
deniS entering grades 4-8. The sec- ·
and session, set for June 14-17,
will feature a girls-only camp for
those entering grades 8-12.
StudcniS should bring loose-fitling clothing, either sh011S or sweat
paniS; white cotton socks, water
bottle and tennis shoes. Please note
thai shoes are not to be worn from
the outside into the gym.
Cam!' hours Will run 'froiD '8:30
a.m. to noon each day with regis11"8lion from 8 10 8:30a.m. Pre-registtation fee for !he camp is $30, or
$35 at the door. Checks should be
made P.!Y!_ble to Eastern High
School (BHS} Basketball Camp.
The camp is open to all students
in the Eas1trn Local School District
as well as open to other students in
other swrounding districts.
All students will be given
insttuction in fundamentals, while
the upper-level session will advocate higber-level skills and the per·
fection of fundamental slcills.
Each day, camp will feature a
guest speaker, most of which will

5101995

J

be coaches from other successful

programs who will offer a wide
variety of philosopbi!l5 to the galile
of basketball.
· Campers will receive 14 hours
of instniction, II cez!ificate of participation, "Big-E" Camp T·shin
and a chance to earn individual
honors.
For further information please
call Scott Wolfe at 614·949-2879,
or write to "Big "E" Basketball
Camp"; ATIN: Scott Wolfe, Eastern Hil!h School; 38900 S.R. 7,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
· RegiS11'81ion information should
include students' grade, shin size,
age and camp to attend. AU checks
should be made oul to "Big "E"·
BaslcethaU Camp."
CIIDp IWards:
-Best free throw shooter
· -H-0-R-S-E tournament cham·
pion
-Hot Shot champion
-Dribbling relay champion
-Fundamental defenstve chliJII·
pion
Features:
-Guest lectures
·lndividnali:red inslruction
~Awards

1991 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD
Auto .• air. caaselte
BEAUTY/

front-.. .

'

8

.,t., olr, ...... '"'win . dofao., PS,
lodla,dk-.cniiO,AI&amp;'FMtPB.-- • ' · - - 1&lt;o711U onlly,
whl11 wlrld ln1.

lllpO, rodlllo. -

NOW

wAsSJS 995
I

1991 NISSAN
STANZA
4 door&amp;, oadan, front wheel clriw,
lir, - ·· PS, PB.IIIIwheel, crulee •
AMIFM llllrao
radialo, _,. .. ·
win. citlog.
.

l pe

.

THE BIG "E" BASKETBALL CAMP
REGISTRATION FORM

1

IIAIIQOH CARl

Wil-l 1001, ...... PS, PB, -

wtn-

dcMt,--.--.lk
..... -.cruloo.AI&amp;'FM~

NUW'

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1

Pleale fin out the fonn completaly.

I

1

-Firat S..nion, boyo ond gi~o ~· 4-8 (entrieolourtl thN &lt;91th)

I
1

1 I

1

June7-to

Second- J..,. 14·17

Gi~a· only IPdM 8·12

In-coming &lt;91th grade gi~a wll alt8nd thia ...,;p
p,..ragiotration Fee $30
$36 the day of camp ot the door

I
I Students name:

I
I
I

age

I Addntos:

I

(-rtng) I

grade .

I

I

I ·Phone number. .
I
1 ShiA Size: (Circle one) Alllhlrllecjulllizea
I
SmdMeclum ·
Large ~

I

1991 FORD F·250
XLTLARIAT

--·--··-·

OWLY JIP,IIGII LOW MUll 4 - ·
ltlw,V-I,alr,lopood-.PS.PB,
CNIM,AI&amp;'FM-..... IIIId"D-

giiM.-..... ~-.--

I&gt;IO!Ipor, lang-

11~:S s1

bJBfl'·

995

1990 FORD
F-150 XLT LA
4 "'-'drive, V·l, llir, aut:t., nning

-.PS.PB.--.-

Iodla,lll-,O'Iilt.AAM'Mt- ·
lllpO, 112Dn,lang-bod,-- : .
bumper,..,, IIMIIOnll, P.'P• ollcl-

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WAS

'11,915

51

NUW'

·

Ex·IArgl

I

·I

p.,.nronoma: ~------------------

I

1 f&gt;....,r. ...,..
a .....;.,,.,

.

I
I

..

TORONTO (AP) - The Los
Angeles Kings are feeling mighty
good about themselves.
Why? Because they split the
first two games of the Campbell
Conference finals against the
Tomato Maple Leafs despite the
fact Wayne Gretzky and Luc
Robitaille have yet to perform up to
their J)OieiJiial
"(know I 'havcn'i played like I
did in the lilst series, but I'm nol .
~01\Cemed about it,'' Gretzlcy said
after the Kings' 3-2 . victory
Wednesday nigbl. "In the playoffs,
you're not going to get three or
four ~IS evety game.
"When things aren't going as
well as you'd like, you simplify
things and that's what I've been
trying to do;''
The Leafs are in uouble if Gretzky and RobilaiUe get going when
the series resumes Friday night in
Inglewood. Calif.
One of the simple things Gretzky did Wednesday was send a
pass to Tomas. Sandsq&lt;~m for the
winning goal with 7:40 remaining.
Sandslrom zinged a wrist shot from
lhe left-wing faceoff circle into the ·
far top corner of Toronto's net

before goalie Felix Potvin could
~el his catching mitt 10 the openmg.
"Greuky J8Ve me a nice pass
and I just tned to hil the net,''
Sandstrom said. "I was as sur(Wised as •yone when it went in.
"Sometimes you don~t bave
time to think. You just uy to do
what comes by instincL"
"European flayers shboi so
weD on the fly,' Gretzty said. "I
think he caught Potvin by. surprise." .
Mike Donnelly and Tony
Granato also scored fer the Kings.
Doug Gilmour and Glenn Ander·
son responded ror the Leafs, who
had a 29-28 shots qe, but came
up against. a bot goalteader in Kelly

Hrudev.

";l'e all seemed 10 sit blck and
wait for the Doug GilmoUr Show,''
said Toronto coac:h Pat Burns.
"111ere w= too many pys riding
the bus.
.
, "It came down to 1 little flip
shot that Felix wasn'.t ready for and
that's what won the game. You
could almost feel thai that was
what it was going to come down
to." .

was released, but not cleared to
drive, after beiag ·taken to
Methodist Hospital for elllltlination
and trealmcnt.
"
· "He has brui~es to his heels,
ankles and kneea, and a very sarc
neck," Coyne said. "He's got a
neck brace on .... He's very sore.
He's had some torn ligaments in
his knees before. and his knees are
very sore. ••
Bubl, wbo was idle for a week
after 1U111iniJta a conclllllion in his
first cnsh, - able 10 walk IWay
from the aecond accldm!.
"He 10 be fine. His spir·
ill an: down, l1111U1'81ly, as every·
one'a (on the 101111) are. It - s
like tldJ ..-111 hll tind of billcn
us tty bani, •• Coyne llid.
driven already In the
tentative atartiag field practiced
with race day letilpl Wednesday.
'1 10 fastetl laps w•re
by driven already in the
May30race.
Emerson Fialpaldi, who quali·
fied in what was bill blcknp car.
had hit fastest lap thil taODth II
226.0!11 mph in Iiiii primary car.
Bac
, who .made the race !&lt;Jie Luyenclyk, who placed his
IIIIIIC
lilt ,... M I rookiD,Iolt CDIItl,'OI of LOla-Pard Coawonh OD the pole
his car 1!1 the liut tlll'tl at about widt a 223.967 mph ...,.. for hill
11:15 LID. He stniCk the wall hard four-lap, 10-tnlle quallfjing run,
·.
twice and the aafety crew bad to had a lap • ~.898.
• cQt Bachelarl out ol his Lola. He

By HANK LOWENKRON
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Malhemapcs and time !Ire against
owner Dale Co"yne al. the Indi anapolis Motor Speedway. Th
.· e
final weekend of lime trials for the
Indianapolis SOO is only two days
away and C~ is faced with the
impossible task of placing three
drivers in two cars.
All three drivers are injured
from four crashes and a ftre which
plaguOd the team's elfcrt to join the
26 cars thai qualified lilt wedrend
for the 33-car starting field.
Coyne, who runs a low-budget
operation on the Indy-car circuit,
had two cars destmed in accldeats
29 minutes apalt'Wcdnelday. The
crashes by Eric Bachelart of Belgium and rookie Robby Buhl came
e~cll~ one week after Bubl and
Coyne s lhird driver, rookie Roas
- - ~ Bentley, cnilhed durin&amp; practice
"'I'IIil II detinitcly a llllbeck for
us. The morale on the ream is probably not as high as it could be,"
Coyne &amp;ald. "W~ jDII have 10 pick
up the pieces, maybe combine

revera1

:!or:!f

=1."

I

I
I, the oboVII otw-, hereby grwll my IOrlldolqlllr pannlolicn 10 partlclptde
I
I in "1M Big 'E" Beliclltooll Cemp".l hereby uncitr*ncl IMII om reapanlible lor I

my 11Udant'1 ac:tiona, ,
.
I
PIMM m. . llll chec:b paoyable 10 Big 'E" Blllkotblll Cemp • EaaiMI Hilt~
I
School. Ratum lorm and check to Big"£" Blllkllball C1111p, Altl.: Scotl Wollt. 1
I Eulom H~ ~. :!11800 SA 7, R11 diMie, Ohio 45772 by May 21 10 1181
I Shl111 can ......
-~ r.c~.
.
.· I

I

I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . . . . . .
--

. I

·. "I havm't seen a game like that,
where we hit the ball so hard. but
right at .somebody,'' Exj,os out·
fielder Larry Walker said.
·Giavine needed just 94 pitches
for his lith career shuiODt and 25th
complete game.
'
Mets 6, Pirates 4
ln Jeff Torborg's last game as
manager of New York, the Mels
rallied with three runs in the ninth
.and Bobby Bonilla's two-run
homer iri the JOth off Bias Minor
(4"1). That stopped New York's
five-game losing streak, but Tor·
borg already was a goner because
of the Mels' last-place 13-25
record.
Less than a half-hour after the
game, Mets general manager AI
Harazin appeared al a Shea Stadium news conference and replaced
Torborg wilh Dallas Green, a for·

mer manager of Pbiladelphia and
the New York Yankees . Green,
who had been a Mets seoul. will
lake over before Friday night's
game against the Atlanta Braves.
John Franco was lhe winner in
his ftrsl decision this year.
Marlins 5, PbiUies 3
A two-out error by Philadelphia
second baseman Mickey Morandini
led ·to three unearned runs in lhe
seventb as the Marlins rallied.
Florida; which had been 0.16 when
trailing after six innings, avoided
its ftrst series swc;ep.
Morandini bobbled Junior
Felix"s easy grounder wilh runners
at first and second. Chuck Carr
then walked on a 3-2 pitch from
Mark Davis (1-2), forcing in a run
and tying the game at 3. Rich
Renteria put Florida ahead with a
two-run single.

Richie ·Lewis (2·0) pitched two straight stan despite giving up
scoreless innings at Joe Robbie three home runs as San Diego gal
Stadium, and Bryan Harver gal six runs and 12 hits in 4 1/3 innings
four outs for his 12th save m 13 off Lance Painter, a fanner Padres
chances.
farmhand making his maj~-league
debuL
Cubs 5, Cardinals 3
Mark Grace snapped an eighth·
Harris finished with a six-hiller
inning tie with a run-scoring single and his second straight complete
game. He struck out five and
81 St. Louis.
Reliever Rob Murphy ( 1-4) walked two.
helped lhe Cubs get staned, coverDaryl Boston had visiting ColinJ. the bag late on pinch-hiller orado's fml two-homer game with
Willie Wilson's leadoff infield hit leadoff drives in the fourth and
and then throwing late to second on sixth iming~. ·
Jose Vizcaino's sacrifice. After
Giants 6, Astros 3
Grace's hit. Ryne Sandberg added
Willie McGee hit a two-run
a sacrifice fly off Mite Perez.
triple in a five-run fliSt inning, and
St. Louis rallied from a 3·1 Jeff Brantley (3-3) allowed seven
deficit off Mike Morgan (3·6), who hils and walked one in six-plus
gave up three runs 'and eight hilS in innings 81 Candlestick Park.
seven innings.
San Francisco sent eight men to
Padres 7, Rockies 3
the plate in the first against Pete
Greg Harris (4·5) won his third . Harnisch (4·2).

Anderson's 4th Annhtersary
.

ANNIVERSARY SALI BEDROOM SUITES
Beautiful Oak and Pine Suites. Poster Beds, Sleigh Beds •
Dressers, Doored Chests, Oval Mirrors, Tri·VIew Mirrors,
· just to na01e a few of the quality pieces.

LOW SALE PRICES!

E
AftRESS BUY!
SPRIIGIII
Thick blanUI kip, - ·
helwy conotrucllon.
630 Coila, Modo In Ohio by
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WH

POOL REFRIGERATOR

•FROST FREE
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•TWIN CRISPERS ·
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•ALMOND ONLY .

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•BUILT IN
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*ENERGY SAVER

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FULL SET
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Ultra Premium "630" Jumbo Classic
Mattress &amp; Box Spring Set

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TWIN SET......... $369.00
FULL SET......... $449.00
QUEEN SET••••• $519.00

4 doort,-- - · • .,. .• air,

r••···~··••••••••••••···~•

1

.

Mathematics, time working
against Indy car owner Coyne

1989 OLDS 98 ·
REGENCY BRC)UGIH.

wln. dolog .. rodlalt.

-Camp T -shin
-Team competition '

•

1991 OLDS 98
ELITE '
4 docn, - ·

1

Reds after tbe7 had won seven
strai1b1, and Cmcinnati;::Jer
Tony Perez was less dian
"You don't expect 10 win playing lilce that," be said with a tone
of disgust. "We ca't Clll:h a ball
and ,..e can't get a piu:bcr out.
"I'm tired of helrina. 'IIricd, 1
tried, I tried.' When ,ou'n: getting
paid to do things here, you're supposed to get the job doile."
Roberts said: "ll's frusttating
(to be swept) after. playing so well.
But ~·ve got 10 give the Dodgers
cmliL They were up for this series
and they ourplayed us."
Cincinnati starter Tim Pugh (34) gave up ftve runs on 10 hits and
two walks in S '113 innings, slriking
out two.
Barry Larkin had three hits,
including a double and drove in
both the Reds • runs.'
In other games Adanl8 downed
Montreal 10-7, New York beat
Pittsburgh 6-4 in 10 innings. Flori·
.d s beat Philadelphia 5•3, Chicago
. beat SL Louis 5·3, San Diego beat
Colorado 7-3 10d San Francisco
beat Houston 6-3.
Braves 10, Expol7
The Atl10ta Braves pitching
slaff is living up to ils rep11181ion.
Tom Glavine pi~hecf a fOID'-hit·
ter for Adanta's sixdt shuiODt, and
the Braves beat the Expos 1-0
Wednesdar night on Ron Gant' s
second-iMmg homer.
"This is the way I want to pitch
all year long,'' Glavine said. "II
was a big game for me after comingofftwomiserablestans."
· Glavine bad fiven up ll earned
runs in 9 1/3 inmnJs in his two previous oulinp, geamg a no-decision
and pitching five innings in a 10.1
victory.
.
"IIhink I had been trying to be
too perfc:c:l,' ' 'said Glavine, who
hadn't thrown a shutout since last
JulY. 3. ''Tonight I auaclced. I threw
strikes and got some spectacular
defense."
It was only Glavine's fourth victory in IS decisions against Mon·
tteal, and the fiQI time the visiting
Expos were blanked lhiJ year,
· "He's one of the best pill:hers in
the league,'' Montreal manager
Felipe Alou said. "This was our
'first shutout of. the season, but we
hit the ball hlnl."
Glavine (6-0), wbo won his first
five decisions in 1989, struck out
three and wallccd one as the Braves
wou for the lOth time in 13 games.

L.A. Kings top Toronto
·3-2 to gain split in series

- · - wtn.

Eastern coaches to offer
mid-June basketball camp

L..----------------.. . . ------' .
10

S121995

.-·-·front--· .
1'110 ro CHOrJtJE fiiOfll

high energy drinks. Daily, monthly, three or
sixth month, and annual membership rates are
available. Hours are Monday thru Friday 11
a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pictured on the prea Ill Kansas City Chiefs tight
end Mike Bartrnm as be lifts while Grueser
(left) and Davenport look on.

G reen
· fjIeJd M c CJ
• QUS
' t s M etgs
•
. atn
; ~~:::::~bef~~ from tourney with 11-3 decision
: Hargrove said. "He's going to be
· good- he's ~ing to be a lot bet·
• ter than he isnghtnow."'
,; Obando has started the Orioles'
:~ past five games after playing in
:· only 11 of lhe first 33 games. The
• rookie appears to hav_
e gotten COOl·
: fortable in his new role.
;: "Things are getting better for
-: me right now," he said. "The more
:; I play, the better I gel. So far, it's
t• workiilg lhat way."
'
Before this season he had lao;· guisbed in the New York Yankees'
; system, never rising above the
• Double·A level.
~ · "I feel very excited to see my
;. name in lhe lineup when I come to
~: the ballpark. I feel it's another
,. chance to Jl!OVe !hall can do my
·f, job,'' he satd.
;
"We've been bringing liim
;. along slowly, picking our~·"
, manager Johnny Oates sai •'He
·:: seems to be gaining confidence
·; every time he goes out there, and
· he certainly doesn't seem· to be
: overmatched by anybody's he's
•: faced yet."
.
t Kenny Lofton went 4 for 4 wilh
( a walk for the Indians. who have
lost 10 of their last 12 on lheroad
·

- The Dally Sentinel----Page-S -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NL affairs,

Sports
· By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP) -If Sher·
man Obando and David Segui kce,P
playing like they ~ave lately, 11
migbt be a while before Glenn
Davis gets off lhe Baltimore Ori•
ales bench.
Obando, the Orioles' designated
. hitter, had his seeond sttaight tl~Me­
hit night, drove in three runs and
hit his first major-league homer
Wednesday night to lead Ballimore
past the Cleveland Indians 6-3. The
muscular rookie is baiting .37S
with a sluggin~ percen18ge of .458
in 16 games Ibis season,
~ . Segui, wbo took Davis' place at
( fliSt base last week, had.lhrce dou'
• bles and lhree RBis aJid now has
: five multi-hit games - one more
t than he had all last year.
'
"Segui hit the ball all night,"
~ said winning pitcher Rick Sutcliffe,
: the benefiCiary of lhe duo's offen· .
( sive oulbursL
• Davis, meanwhile, hasn't played
\ in 10 of Baltimore's last 12 games.
· It appears as if the Orioles' second·
•, highest paid player (behind Cal
: Ripten) won't soon get a chance 10
•, improve his .172 hatting average,
·' although Cleveland manager Mike
1 H!u'grove certainl¥ wouldn't mind
.; seeing him in the lineup.
' "We couldn't get Segui out
tonigbL Segui or Obando," said
. Hargrove, who predicted that

.

•

v

"

-·

...

~· ¥

-~

'

... .

.

......

-~

• •

,,

"

ROPER DRYER
•3 TEMPERATURES
•3 CYCLES
•WHITE

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ROPER WASHER
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ASSORTED STYLES
AND FABRICS

.. - ... .. .

.-..

�•

..... -

.• .

J · ... ,_,. ... .......

.• •

..

.... -

.

'
'

..

...

Cu.torn 8Mt
covers, Carpft.

~,

.

are: Tan Barber, Kayla Kolrel, Larissa Blake,
Miranda Buckley, Robert Lawrence and Jessl.ca
McGinnis.

Be I pill fl Jbe fesliviJj(s Her·
itage Weekend by participaling in
the rostgrne Clliiii!SL You may wear
an authentic cosnmoe or reJJroductioa rl a co••
tbal would bave
bcal worn duriDg tbe 1800's.
.

The costume contest will be
held following tbe pmde on Satur·
day morning. The paiade besins 8l
10 a.m. wilb the jud&amp;iug immedi•
ately following. All participants

will be intrOduced and awards pte·
sentcd on SIIF One 11 noon.

Categories includ~ authentic .
costwne 8lld reprodqcuon coslllllle.
There will be SOJllllllle categories
for male and female adults and
.children.
Prizes will be awarded to the top
three entries in each category.
Judsing wiU be based on appear·
ance including accesscries; authen·

Past Councilor's Club . of
" lodge with Erma Cleland and
Dorothy Myers, bosJesses.
- Laura Mae Nice presided 8l the

n.ceting and mid from Psalms. The

Lord's Prayer and pledge to the
American flag were given in uni·

son.
Members ..swered roll call by
naming one special thins they did
that day. The secretary's rqxll'l was
siven by Mary K. Holter, l.'rotem.
The ueasurer's repM was g1ven by
Goldie Frederick.
Alii Ballard thanked the club
for her gift anc1 thanked the mem·
bers for their cards and prayers
while she was in the hospital.
Betty Roush and Mary Jo Barringer will be the June hostesses

COPYDEADLINE

Call 992-2156

Mooday Paper
Tu.day Pape&lt;
W..m.t.y Poper
'ntuncloy Pape&lt;
. Fnday rape&lt;
Somday Paper

CLOSED SUND4Y

rua. 3 day• at DO charp.
• Price of ad for all capitalleuen II doulo prloo af ad •· o7 poialliao type oalpued
,
• S...tmel io aotreope..ilolo for ....,n aftarllntday (cloodr.
forerroro f~nlday ed ruo iil paper). CaD Won Z:OO P·•·
da1 after puLiicatioa to .U.e eorncti6•
• Ad. tbal nn11t be paid iD. ad•uce are:
· Cardof'Thmlra
BappyAd.

ticity and uniqueness.
There is no entry fee, but those
.participatins are ~ ~ prerepter by June 1. Reptrauon forms
are available at .the Meigs County
Extension O(fice, Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 or can be
9btained by calling 992-6696
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday.

. lo M..oriuo

J&amp;L INSULATION

l:OOp.m. ~y
1:00 p.m. MOII&lt;bly
1:00 p.m. n-lay
1:00 p.m. Wedneodoy
100 p.m. Thundlly
1:00 p.m. Friday

FreeEitlmatM

R•placemant
Windows
·

VInyl Siding

Rooting

G.W. Cotmty llelp c-y M_, Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Ana Code 304
4-46-Gollpolio

16'74 ..,.
SD-YWoo
us llo Gnade
2" G , .. DilL
6U hw. lllot.
i19-W..J-a

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• A d01oill.d ed• ..........,, plaeed ill 1M Calllpollo Dally
Tril&gt;uoe (..cept Cluoiflod Dioplay, Buoiilo. Cud or Lopl
Nolie ..) willoloo oppou U. lhe Poial Pleuoat a.p.... aaol
lllo Daily Seotmel, reocW.. • .., 18,000 1oo-

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EVERY THURSDAY

. , EAGLES·
CLUB

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WITH CPR
TRAINING ·
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698

S

TRADE
S17 I. 21111 St.

00Sj,U1·3!32~· ~======S.=S=·t3=·::1~

Backhoe
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and small •••
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ISWIU DOnR WORK, I
DRIVEWAY WORK
.IUMESTONE
DWVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

••

CARPENTER

Homes and

992·7553
POIIEIOY, OH.

USED RAILROAD TIES

........
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s~o~ac..,

Aluminum Siding

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PIIIIIII'OJ, Ohio

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992·3470

985-4473
667·6179

OWNER:
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•EAGLE STAll MOW£RS
Chtck•ttlla12&amp; 18HP

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446 4514

POMEROY • Marli:et lamb
weigh-in fo.r 1993 4-H and FFA
market lamb exhibitors, Saturday,
9-11 a.m., Meigs Couniy Fair·
grounds, Pay $10 per animal. Call .
992-6696 for information.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers

.'

._

~

7

What better tribute 't o

ation, boys 9·10 year old tournament, Saturday and Sunday. Eight
teams, trophies. $45 and two balls.
Call 667-~653, 667·3342 or 989·
2931 for information.

IUJLAIID, OH•

742·2455

7)!

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POIIei'OJ, Ohio

FREE ESTIMlnl

985·4181

•DOZERS

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EXCAVATING

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667·6628

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SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
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16x7-$450.00

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW

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$1.00 PER FT.

TRIMMING and
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New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages •, Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
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614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calla)

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LAND CLEARING
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UNES
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HAUUNG: Llmaatona,

2 Fro•t Struts • Laltor
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1 129.95

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949·2168

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PH. 614·992·5591

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

I

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DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

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numbing

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CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

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31904 Leading

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Middleport, o•lo

36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720

614·992·7144

985-3406

LI.SIONE,
GUVEL &amp; COIL

Auto-Raa,.b

4/29/93 ,,.

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RAISED PANEL GARAGE.DOOR
INRALLID PIICES OPENERS INSTILLED
9x7-$275.00
~ HP-$200.00 ~~~~~~~~

992-3838

Gutters

•• SYRACUSE·

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FREE ESnMATES

NEW-REPAIR

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accomplishment ~n a
gift that makes an .
' educated statement
Uke fine jewelry.

992-?2$9

1881 ........lar wl1h 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
: carpel/Vinyl flooring, docking, oome appjlanceo, part
1 fenc&gt;ed, metal olorage builclng, cenlral alr. Very nice. """"7 hamel Reduced 1o $45,000.

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Plains baseball and softball associ-

Side Hill Ill. (Co.

992-6215

ROOFING

BE REMEMBERED

Erma

IIIWICitiG AVAIIAill

Real Estate General

GIVE THE GIFT
THAT WILL AIJNAYS

SATt1RDAY
KANAUGA • Liberty Mountaineers perform Saturday, D.A.V.
Center,!Canauga.
.

: SA 131 bell\eeu Grear Ba1d &amp; Apple Grow 55+ acreo of
Ylll:lllll ground. Clntat home slle with Ohio River view.

I

Po11ible hunting ohe aloo hao oome fencing -oome

! pa111U19. ONLY$22,000.
&gt;

' SH 124 Juot before entering Rulland V~lage. 98.99 aaeo
:wifl2 hou..o 1-onellary. · l·two otory. lneludeo lhedo,
' brick bulklnv trw

gu wlroyaltleo. Pasture,

;limbar.,....,., 1115,000.

~liable a

hoine with 7 roomo, 4 l!edroomo.
Jr2rll ~ch. ·N!Iwly .palntad

I

LQT'IlUDGB·· Cartbaae Township Pealval, Saturday anci Sunday.
Musil:, uta and crafts, games,

priw,IIIICIDr' pull, re~nts. .
. 'I'UPP£RS PLAINS • Car wash,
Sllllrllay, CillO in Tuppers Plains, ·
by Meip CountY Beuer Beef 4-H
Club, $2 donalion.
'

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

GRADUATION,

Middlepon Legion Annex Friday
7· 11 p.m. with music by George

oiRUSHCUnERS

...... -...ws.

SIH lllf Rd. (CO. 7l

-

...

BULLDOZING

aiOIO TRIMMERS

mitJKIIG AYAILAill

I

Roclc

MIDDLEPORT • Dance at the

' Mowws

MINI KARS

I

12·30-92·111 '

HAULING
SERVICE

fiiEE EITIIIATES

1

1185-4111

...

~~~--...,_
.......... . ....
&amp; VIcinity

COLLI
ENTERPRISES
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mo

•FIREWOOD

COISIRUaiON

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop

Panleror.

~MillpOrt

loP•ointi1nn Services

•UGHTn,..~ua.

.

eCtl!lllfMII '

TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance Friday 8·11:30
p.m. Tuppers Plains VFW Post
-sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary.
Music by CJ and llie Co~may Gentlemen. Red Cirr and Melvin
Cross. callers.

ROCkYR• HUpp, D•C•U• 8 Agen t
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

YOUNG'S

BILL SlACK
992-2269

'25 HOUR

'
••

..

'

LifE) • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

CHARLIE'S

,

POMEROY. A rehelrsaJ for all
POMERY - Pomeroy Men:banrs
alumni of~Hi~.~ · Association, flower planli!lg, 5
who are plannmg to paructpate m p.m.
the Middieport Alumni Band will
be beJel Thwsday -:.z~n the
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
OAPSE ChaptQ meets Thwsday, 7
Mcip High School
·
p.m., Meigs )IDiior High School.
.
ROCK SPRlNGS • Middlepon ·
FRIDAY
Cllild Conservllioo League, Thurs·
dly, 7 p.m., itock Sprinp United
RlPLEY, W.VA . • Liberty
Melbodist Church. Ellen Rought, Mountaineers, Friday, SkatelaJid,
JlfOIIIIII 011 MAD.D.
Ripley, W.VL

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Flee:::~~•

CHESTER • Special meeting
Shade River Lodge No. 453
F&amp;AM Friday 7:30 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree. Refresbmenrs.

-.a.a.-.,--.ar.,
u , •• - .

5117103

=~~=~::::~

Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Seedtng.
. ShrubandTree
· Trimming &amp; Removal

,••

and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
Larry E. Millar
•

Lice•sed, l1sured ••d Bonded
(111614-992·7878

~0
1 .::::=~;~
1
L.Nn Mowing,

FOR THAT
ONCE
INAUFETIME

•BP Diesel Suprema...Try It, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Catena
•Low ash and aulfur
•Will not gel In winter tim•.

CALL 614·992·7878

992·3577

KEVIN'S LAWN
MIINTENINCE

SELECTED • Doll L Beep, director of plaat operati0111 at
vmnas Memcrial Haspital, lias ·been selected u empl~ or the
J1H111t11 by" !'Witts vi tM IIKllpital's skilled nursing facil1ty. Resi·
de•ts will llolicr Me emplo:Jft each montll in their new prOIJ'Im.
Bftcle is pictar~ recelvillll certificate award rrom the facility's
aCtivilies diredor, Shar011 Vickers.

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.

SEWER PROBLEMS
Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

'lOURS1
Moll....frl. I Ot00.2100
CLOSED THURSDAY

BISSELL &amp; lftKE

. record.
THURSDAY
PORTI.AND • Revival at FreeRACINE - Racine Alller~Clln
dom Gospel Mission, Portland,
Legion
Post602, ThiD'Sday. Sujlper
Wednesday through Sul!daY 7:30
at
6:30p.m.
fo~lowed by meeting.
p.m. niptly. Rev. Marvin Welsh,
evangdisL Special singing nightly.
POMEROY- The Meigs·Coun·
ty
Democratic Executive Commit·
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
tee,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Carpenof AA. ThUrsday, 7 p.m., Sacred
ters
Hall
Heart Catholic: Church. Call 992·
5763 fCI' inf~.
RACINE • Racine Fire Department,
July 4 planning meeting,
JUJi'LAND - Leadina Creek
Thuradav,
7 p.m. Participating
Co 9 f81C)' Disttict, Thursday. 5
organizalions
inviled.
p.m.•• the office. Publil: welcome.

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

- ' t. I I I M - -

Gelling........, ......
flow.,.? Accusorlee?
Check out my prlcee 1m.

HAS

1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST Special farm terms with pavment 4 tlmea a year

Mltldlef01'11 Ohio

'

;r"'

GOOD
IS
OUR GOAL

Steel Sales
No order ·
too small o.r too large
Orders welcomed
(614) 992-7878
· FAX (614) 992· 3053

THE BOOK
BARN

POMEROY

Lie. No.

MARTECH

J

Pt. PI 77 ll
&amp; VIcinity

~

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

BUY • ELL •

&amp;:4&amp; p.m.
Special Early Bird
· $100 'Payoff

•

~

(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992·7878

•

67~"1
.............

937-&amp;.ft'olo

c.ll 111 for
$peclal Pri1=• on
Siding and Wlndowa
992-2772
Ja!MI K-ee, owner

Thi• ad good for 1
FREE card.

and Inzy Newell, Pauline Ridenour
and Ella Osborne will be the
September hostesSes.
· Games were conducted by Ethel
Orr and Lora Damewood.
· Refreshments were served by
the hosteSSes.
Door prizes were won by Elizabeth Hayes and Faye Kirkhart.
Attending were JoAnn Baum,
Laura Mae Nice, Goldie Frederick,
Thelma White, Mary K. Holler,
Opal Hollon, Marcia Keller, Jean
Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes, Erma
Cleland, Dorothy Myers, Mary Jo
Barringer, Betty Roush, Alta Bal·
lard, Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell,
Betry Young, Inzy Newell, Ethel
Orr. Lora Damewood, Margaret
Amberger, Ella Osborne, Faye
Kirkhart and a guest, Sandra
White.

.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

DAYBEFOIIEPUBLICATION

CIQui,fied pOflel COller the
_ fo~Jm.in&amp; teleplwne esc"-&amp;e• ...

, • Free Ad.: Ci-way aad Fouad ado Ullder 15 worcb wlllbt ·

Past Councilor's Club
of D of A has meeting
Chester Council No. 323, Daugh·
ters of America, met recently at the

To place an ad

• Ad. oullldolhe eollllly your ad ruu •uot loo prop.W
. • llocolve diocoUill for ado paid iilad-.

Costume contest slated Saturday morning

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

11201111

MoN. thru Fat. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12
POLIClES

.

(614) 992-7878

110 N. 2nd Ave.
IIJ I part, Ohio

ART RIBBONS WINNERS ·-·Pictured are
studeats from fll'St, second and third IJ'Ide at
River.ww Elealeatary who recelved .rlbboDS for
tllrir projects iD tM school's art fair. From l·r

.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

30yn..•,.._
cr.
11.._...1.,

•

....-

Plumbing Installation
and
Repairs.

HMdlllllfS,
Convertible Top•

'.,.~·&lt;fi);

.........

•

. COIIIUTI&amp;no
UPIOUTEIY
'

....-.-

Glllpolll

...

'

...

...........

..

992·3715

I

..... ·-. -··'•""•rf••
.RODIIRII-1

IHIOI•ble

I
••
••

L--------------------------------------~---------J~I·•

'
JOE N. SAYlE

WtAiooHno
7111,

lpeefal

State Rt. 7

..
'

'

�..

~

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

..

. .,

.

..

•
•

11

Thursday, May 20, 1993

Sentinel

The
Help Wlllt8d

-0 . . . __ _
Warad to Aenl

Q

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

------ ..-...... _
At

5I

Cltr

-

-unity far
typa.l, ..rn up to l350 per WM~
coli onytlme 1-723:1777.

Vondorto praoldo ontorol -~
lng
I oqulpmont 10.
r 11
of IAic.ln Hoop, Llldnl
WV.
Vondor
to
bll
II• lin aT! 7 'd and/Or anr

::'.l:r"'

a

---

....

,.,.. Oporotlouo HOiolul. Sond
- . , . To: C1A 271, c/o CJol.
llpollo DollY Trtbu"!i.IU Third

funeral. He was a 40-long . •

thcna'ty. Knowledge Of S.W.r

more money!
Froo olghl wool&lt; jolt proporollon

~click.

thrM bt*oolu, two

100

a-n21.

2.

koop toying.

Wanted to Do

umm-.

• IIIWIGO.

114 14,.:.5335

DoDr ont1 Bobcat
hour, . . . . ratl,
« 114 143 1211

·

101
II. quiNo only,~

L!

0122. 1 -

, _ Dolwoor.

..

.rtD

UA lliEE SERVICE. '1'~,

01 arv- Portable S.Wmlll. don,
._, ,... lo lho mfll juol
.... 310W71:1t57.
o- high? Will ...-, pftco
rlol..,..noiil by olu of &amp;own, GMIMN12l
Poulo'o Day Clro cantor 1
Block WOOl 01 H11C On Jackoon
Plko II:F I A.M. -1:311 P.M. H
Quollly And bportonco Ia Tho
t1 CGnoom For Your Chlld'o
Cot&amp; Col Uo For A VloH. lnlont
/Toddlem 114 441 .227. p,...
ch a I I I llchoot Age 114-441J.
1224.

bod_,..

...acl:

CA.

oonv..ed 2 II•*•" tNIIIr IIID IIDIIIII
Into~ lla*••• or An hofne lot. ,.... liD I l l dip nR,
$43,100
.
Owner·
llno ......
_ .. ...
to tho• . . . . , . . _

= ..

OIH.

32 Mobile Homo .

In

round-

-m:e.

town-.

cutting brUoh
-ldo woik, odd
jolla, 15.00 por hr. 304-I'IS-7301.

a ....,...,

tor Rent

for 9ale

I

nolng ond ot~ odCI Jolto, fully

~~glrto'

lnoliiH. f14-812-5377.

rol"': okoloo;

INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBUIHINO CO.

X

.
la=
r.::.•:-: ·.: ~ ;_;;:::£ ~~ta

111,1100
~

•

lot' -

JIPIJ -

a...,t40,col 114 IIUUL

-

'II

~-:Ho.~
3011.

Building
~

Wille--

bu1. ·1100
21 _.ho old $12110

·

'II

2

.

, , ,

=-~ i14!

Ill.,_,.... _,llood

...........

,.,..,.,
.....
=

=

ll?lll-- . . .
2 - .. ..oilS
...,
q•

- '"

7

. . . . . . . . .

53
Ant'-....,
i;;r;;-;ii"ii"''""';;;;~;;jia;;;:
B

IIPIIl

_,.,

76

- ,

••c
·~•-• P~~
...
..,
-.
·.:..:'-.,_,
....1--:ne. '

r
:,

-PI
7ne,.........
----.....
""" ..... -

,.
-

I 114 ml , _ t_,, 2 lA. I

__
==:.a.t;J••
---,......
.......... -

I Up I' - . 12"

31"d2"....... util14• ...,, S41.114
- Orw bodmmn . . Furnlllhld,
cloon, no pota, JOW'/I.

;',l,

..._,uleta' mnl.
a.• II# .. ID4-I7J.1'2G.

1

•

...._.

=-=·
AU 1eal eslate adver1tstng In
lhfs newspaper IS sublect It)

the Federal Fair Housing Ac1
of 1968 whid"l makes I ihgal

to aovenise ·any P,eterenee,
UmllaliOn or dlscrlmlnallon

bued on rac:e. colOr, Nllgion,

Ilk familial slatus or natk&gt;nll

origin. or ar, lnlentiOn lo
make 8"1 a~cn prererene..
limllation or discr1mtnatton.'

.

Thls ne-r will nol
knowl"'h oa:191
ac:tvartiMtnenll for real_...,
wn~en 1s in vOIIItlon oi.Jnt
'""·our
trorot&gt;y
lnloi!Md that aH dWOifn!IO

,.lOt,. .,.
o~ortiiiCI .. lhll ~~~-- .
are IYIIIDII on an equal

2

-JII

35 Loti• Acraage

''

Otrol

-~.-

2 TV

.lock

0

I

•
I

~ltK•""'

WOAAYifll'
~- 'tOO.~?

'(00

lor p.u. -

-

"""' . .

~~

"
L

~

~'

'

,;,~t"~·~,

61 Farm Equipment

I

of President Clinton?
...Democrat.")

L~~
AS VIREiH. '6A.ID, 'QUID NON

..v.oRTAUA. PSC1l:lR.A COEiiS,
,&lt;\URI e."CRA FAMES.'

lnrt. ::roo..m.eeet or

Ford
.T""""'"1111
4 Cvllndor,
I Home
w..
,., ....-.
......_ r, 8t
~-. J8poocf, mo. -~~::=!!!.!-.t~~~d
11:;:. br ,.,. 211 •a .

=:... =

lf4.2llollll.
1111 _ ... Fllolllrd

..,.,

....
rtotle,

....

-~

v.- ...

a,,., ,

••
I • -loii,
....
010.11Mt12

.:
•'

...

ASTR0,9MPH

Aon'o TV - . 11 I l?zlr.a
othor _ _ _ _ _
In- moil

••lillna
~ p"·noo .....,,.. wv
.
.
Ohio IMMt 2454.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Room8

"";~~~~~=

You'"iil the y'e&amp;r ahe'aC:t:

send iOf

·

Astro-Graph predictions today by mailing ; Companions ~ you sha~e time witt\
$1 .25 plus a long , sell-addressed •.stamped ' today wilhaYe an ~ronnous inflUenCe on
envelope to Astro-Graph , c1o this newsp~~·. your oullool&lt;. Assoaate _ , . w1to
pef, P.O. Box 4465, New York, NY 10163 .. are tropelul and e•po&lt; tarlwheroirnprooe-

Be sure to state your zodiac sign.

A-

mentS are CDiteliiid.

CANCER (June 21·July 22) Your ability to CI.J IICOSIN (Doc. ZNin- 11)
perceive accurately the outcome of events lhol moghl at fn·st appear to be a small
could be ex1remely acute today. 11 you gel a oppodunily oould adualy be
rnprea·
slrong hunch about somethtng. do notlreal j siveH~is_.-m:m.-pe;specli..,.
il indifferently.
\
1 LookatlllilgSiran s-yangle.
L~O (July 23· Aug. 22) You 'll be doing ' AQUAIISUS ....... .,..,_ 11) People _wilh,
• ypuraelf a disservice il you think in petty wltomyauoor-~....,wilput..,.-· ,
terms today. Elevate your,sights and try to able ·~ :n yow idiM. and •W*4U:•·;
imagine the very best -that could ha_. in ~s 0 Y"U might put . .
·a given situation.
togelllel ltal oould benefi4 Y"U as as
VIFfGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) 11 you know lhom.
- · - whal you're doing and you feel you can PISCES (Fell. 20:MIIrdl 20J ~thing .
"May21 , 1993
Improve your lot in lila by taking a calculal· yauw~ _wallllrgnor•••rge•_- ·
,
. · eo .risk today, this riSk could be wonhy of •so_don I wail for a c:ttence to initiate tho
• lnleresil~g developments could be in the. conslderallon.
·
• lllrill Ycu- • 11 JO!&amp;' own hindi..
.
offing in the year ahead . Two people
U.BAA (Sept. 23:0ct. 23) _
EndeiYPB yau ASU£!1 ( - 2!;_~ 11) Ollters Will
·have known you lor a long time and tru.at OnglnateordevelopatthiS:timehaYeabel- ~
~- youona~
you might Invite you lo participelo in a new · tor than average charu lor 'S&lt;rccess. Don1 ·
--fll!l'l - - n o put
. enterprise.
·
put restraints on wha~S\Hir you ooncap1ua1act
GEMINI (MIIJ 21.Ju,. 20) Thie 1~ ono of, lze.
. accordingly.
. :ittooo deyo whon you
not IJkoiy to go .ICQAPIO (Oct. 24:Nov. 22) Bo o good 111- l T~ (Apo£1.._ Ill .no . _ ·
· ~oliced.. no ma~er wh~re you go. You'll , ten.or today_if, so~eone wlto
. , is_IUCCOIIful 1 ·your pnoti?IIP ...., no ,., . • l2rotP 1ft .
lie·'l_standout In both mundane arid social wants to confide rn you . You miGht be P'O" ~~-·- lyau-lfllll'bool
involvements. Gel a J'""P on life by under· · vlded wtth constructive lnfonnatlon .that hi e4lor1S.- 1111111
aorld P'O"
standing the lntluences which are govemlflA ' or she wouldn'l toll anyone else.·
' duce a lariJ8 yilld.
·
•

"*

,,..•'!1'

4&amp; Spac
~~~x111 1o1, . . . , lor trollor, - . e for Rent
I1HI07.
~- lor rwnt.12ft
A&lt;n lol on Rt. 2 _ . 1 - ::':'don, ..Jl:'..:.~-=

tw P.ll.

ti, .: 11Mo171-_ . . . .
1o1 lot
Lillol-lorhome"
I
· ,:;
ltruclllon on Roy!Kion 1141, ling. 2 mlln
- rent.~
Phllll
,. 1
'IT ,...rlallanl, ooun1y Plant. N1w Niven. 304•
....,, lnlannllllon ,....... an ,..
. - . IOM7I:IIN, p~oooo no ~ Wanted to Rent
olnglo- tro-.

....._u_

wtto:

-Podly... -,.......-..:
__.In

. \

.._.,.,~.·.••.r1ity-·b.a11L_.._.. . ~lquo!DrJI::'I~~

J"

ire

1

;

Earn

•••tjjilhooa

\

38 01 a group of
cline
37 PICiflc lhlrk
39 HlghnpllcSIId .
40 Mldlflrr• ·

51 Glrmatfor
11.11

53 Belweon

58 EIIC. abbr.
sa College deg.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryptogrtmt . . Ct.-tad trom QI.I(QIIOnl by famout peopl!t, pasl and l)f"tltenl.
EliCh ~ett:erln 1t1e Cipher ttendl ror IIIOtt'«. Today·• cNe: G «&lt;Il~ Y.

"P

EMKU

WHMVG

ZH

AHAK

_VXKC

P

VNZWXPCO

VNM

XHO

PC

FPWXNFU

VPAA

VNM

WHIPW.

N
X. P8,

GHECD
P

XKNAKC.

OFGHF .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don"t look cutesy ·cute or have one ot lhooo
Cdte noses that everyone seems to have in L.A." - Liam Neeson. .

_,._,._~_:_:~_',;S__;(Q!~~~~P04~!rS&amp;
R1111rranf10 !otters of
0 four
ICI'Omb*i wards

low

I

10 form four

b.
simple -ds.

STUFE

s ~~

I

WOlD
lAM I

the

I

~,...;K:..'W::;..,.:..A:.,.O~E--11

can~

Granny blew 'out the
dies on her cake and an-

I I

1.-..L.
• ....J.-L.-L. ....J ~ nouncect, "How old you really
,....-------'":, a~ d~nds on how many
., N U R A D 0
birthdays you look ,_,, __ -!"

1 I' I I
7

I

19 Q

'-...l..-.l..-.l..-1.._. ,:....,.,I.
-

'• '

Compleie the c~uckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

-·

SCUM:UTS ANSWERS
&gt;· •&amp;
Coffer • Grave - Pflril , Marshy , HALF your AGE
The young cutie comforted her older gentleman friend
. · by cooing into his.ear, "You're not really old, sweelie.
.. You write bigger checks than some men HALF your

AGEl"
e

1tt3

.

Colo. and Mo.

t...+c4-

don't mean

THURSDAY

~ L__ 2 Door,
Loa ail ..,... WNte. f?IO:

-

(I

A. The word I'm bearing in Wash- ~·
iDgton is CLINTONITE. The suffix ·
m means "follower" or "supporter";
for example, a supporter of Jimmy
Carter's leadership was a CAR·
TERITE. Aaother possibility', though,
the ending ·IAN. Thomas Jeffer·
son's Jut name, which also endS InN,
to the acijective JEFFERSONIAN,
and tbe· same suffix may lead to th
noun CLINTONIAN.

IT MEANS, '0 CJ.JRe!I'P ~OOTOF
· 60L.~ 10 'M-14.TC4.NSI" 'THOLl 1-t:lr
CDW'EI..THE H54.Rr OF JNr..'loJ..'

I

Ford EoOort, outo, ...... 32 .... K.ftry ..... 'TnYol
Ill ~ • 27th St. PI~ ~.::t-.,1 · a• c...

~~~=,..

Lol At Purl Cllooo
FlofldL WNI W For

I

@-. . . . . ,..... -~- I l l Ala.

1171 - · 2Ift ....... tnllor,

:en

. ~1

nean boll :

J

1111 Freo Splrtl Ill _,,.,,
w/ownlna. ..._ I. ''" oartd,

.

CMt'Kierof .

43 Hire
conollllaUon
48 Soli dllrtk
48 A11llonal

'oQJU)M'\

S01VIC0S

::::'

mH

IMPEARL decorates with pearls
or forms into beads. Feel free to adorn
n•P~~·Aoc.Ri.ab. ul~ with the rare verb

111.00, Coll14417-,,.. AJ. :-.::::..:':'=:,'W'l.:..::,·- - - -

Nloo -

.'

,.

-... .

frlrr+-+~

Q. How do you refer to a supporter

........ ~W-old,
IMlG e

111 ..... -

21

33 Loaftlllk
35 Slid

•·

lldrDDIID~menl Qr ftooMd ~ ............ All hDDII \fPI,
llo Erdrioo on To TN!!!• a. Col. o. . 2:DO p.ro., -7'/1.

~

o

•

.7BORNLOSER
,.
WAA~

,

11 Hindu god

er Ieider

p ...

IJM~TOO

1 A&lt;n 1.o1 ~ on """ ~
AIMI AooJ!,__
/Sopllc =.:,;:-...:=::.._...._,..,....-_,..,._
Tonk Ill .._ 2 Cor Go!oP :::
121112 lialo....., lull Con IIi 1 lllllllnl , _ whh ~·

--1171.

•
I

' •
Dovto ~ Moolrlno. Ani!
Yoowm Clio- Ropolr, Froo

,.....,.lor,

-··

·-

0111.

Mobhli home (1111), 18x71, ' ., . . . 2
~
bodt-110, 2 liollro, goo potlflg. . _ ,
1nd atr aoncltUonlna. Price-... tamltj ltm'Sp.,..., on ...
_.,col.__.~.
EDK 1D4o1124711 or
llobllo lorMI or 1o 1ro bv - , , U..rtond Aplo.
......... red.-,
Now:.:Ho:::.::-::::.;·W'l::..::.·_. _ _
..~
_,.., ,._
no. lorMI :"::;h:.;:";:.·=:
Purr• or vicinity, 114- 45
Fumlahlcl
7

4

•

-AddftloM,F-,
Raefln1. ICtloMnl IBitha. lrts
Mtllil, l'roo lotlrnoln. 114-lU

Connly~&amp;Cioon,
· llnlumlohod - - ·
•

i

,.,..._

1 ......

Do

A~ lrfAW. Y
£00~1Jt1G GOOP
fO, ME, - :i

TM,GS'

Clatlo
ololtToo

':::I
·-·'
1
11,.
::o.:=:..~~.;:.-.r

?ollw",- Nollola,loo
Aslarec c11

~F OffOStns ATUAGT.

...
~tona,-lonlluoll
;.';Dl
R~-=-·
1724111w1

5 ,_ 1..-n lay
11 I 1r1ko,
l:lrro,-lumlhn,

I
.........
r""'L- . ftll

_Cil?,..._...

dft~
:~
Undo I

..

.., 1.!1£1 110; Min Aot1
A 7. . ,._RoM. tM41147t1.

- . . , ·- . - . I liP, M

=

___

VISWING ROOM

---.

..........
--Con-r\11014
Cillo---.

lf4.SI.1121.

:=t""1"'t.
d::;::
2
WBfll! II! and olr . _

Auto Parta &amp;

Oklllltomo

All pus

~--..._.m

-.--.

~P'RI--.
UIMIY l'rlllr. Air C PFIII a.

Adcl-

VIDEO
DATING
SSRVICS

.

~ AXC,
. . . . . . . . . . . .~1 ..

I PT II

b

FRANK AND ERNEST

..

Avo.

17, ~3,
IIIII. blnlo,

5 •

Gui-t •

-

eo Actla, OldN Two 8 ll:oom ,..,• •, 2
Trollor, - · Two '""!~.!. IM- tumlohOd.
:II'J.'IOI7,
Twop. N/,100.

•

AcCIIIOrlel

-

-.:m-

'..

=~~~.12200l

- -.z. ••..,.d, ~..
;:.r.e-.

-

VOUWENTTO

lti3111'1.--UYI
LX I • 1 J 111,100 £linn.
~

-...-Trolnocf,

far

~IM

•

..

E.-._,.,

,.., .......... k.~
1124
1k 124
PortMOf. ll.'tW. toO
11.111. 1o 1:00 p.ot., llundoy 1:00
to 1:00 P.ILIM " " " '

$

E"•pment.l--1

[TELL

ma.

...._

_ 2 ... 1M11tdlngo,,_
In 1M . . . 30M'7MIQ,
VENDING AOUTE: For loll. I So
-.oo ""' llonth _ ,.....
HIGit Trdlc, L&lt;icol ~­

...

~;a- _~.~......- riel&lt;
~080, .,...._'1812 ..

forsale

13 Water nympl&gt;

8 Klng .-

5 Playwright

apeople ·
24 UnCIIM,
,
. 28 Alnp o light ·
211 Wtllem farm

defense problems for you to sweat !
over.
!
This is the type of deal that experts J
cet right almost subconsciously be: i
cause lhey bave seen the theme be· ·
fore. Howewr, the less experienced
·player falls to defeat and cannot undentand wbat happened. To test your
card play, decide 011 your line in four
spades after West leads a low heart.
There seem to be 10 easy tricks: six
spades. one heart, one diamond, one
club and a club ruff in -the dummy. The
011ly dancer. therefore, is a bad trump
break. Then you might lose four tricks:
one spade, two diamonds and one club.
The secret is to make sure that you
.-in 10 tricks before they can take
four. After winning with the heart ace,
immediately ruff a heart in hand.
Then duck a club.
·
Probably East will return a trump.
Win .-ith the ace, cash the club ace,
ruff a club iD the dummy and ruff another heart in band. Finally, casb the
spade kin1. When the bad break· is revealed, play a diam011d to the ace and
ruff dummy's lut bear~. Hopefully,
West can't overruff and you will have
10 tricks .
What happened to the fourth of the
defonders' apparent tricks? They both
played winners at trick 13: West's
spade jack and East's diamond king.

WllERE 5110ULD

-llonlbor R....-- 00
liP ........, Ou41ooinl, llt4o44l:

Col-

- • rrollor...,. wllour mo1t11o

I It .....

11111 Fllrorfann 11 R. Bid-loot ·
Wltlt Ill liP llororuloor, 110 11444111•.

II"! D -.

.. .,

1111/11o. All Utllltloo Polcl,

' PEANUTS

1115 Chrto Cntl, 1111. 144 hp .....
boMI I ou«b .all'd lflrcur, cu.
tom • - loW 1touro. S7,200"
~.r.. a:ooPII.. ~·

Dr····· ..__,...

.....

Motorcyclee

'

--····1~4

f

M

Etflcllncy ApMNIII
Ftom Alo Orondo

-.................
_,....,_....:

DolO,
$144.

9 llollom prlly·

bird
11 Citrin

i hr..+-

.;.,;....,-;.;;.;;;;;,;;,;:.;:.;:.;:,;.:.;;,_
1111- ~.!nollonl Con-

75 Boats &amp; Motors

4 -up:
acceler11lea

10 FHghtlell

Today's deal is from a cOmbination ·

Wont~~~
: 114-

tf1l ..... 710, "

abbr.

8 Ancestral
Ifall
7 Father of Jr.

'

of Scotsman Hugh Kelsey's 'Test
Your Card Play 1" .and "Test Your
Card Play 2.' Tbis is another two--in· ·
one book published by Houghton Mifl·
lin (U0.45, The Bridge World, 39 West '
94th Street, New York, NY 10021&gt;- ,
7124). It COIItains 72 declarer·play and 1

2

- Rill
Clklor...
IR.
Ollllr ,..._
Foz- .a

SWA£11

AUCT10N &amp; RIIINII'UIIE. 62

I7I-IDOL

uo

104:7'/1.1111, I
:II'J.ml.

.......

Cllford-

,

Eul

By ....Wp AJ4er

a.w ~ Cob, ...

74

enlmal
35 Fernlnlal
Glofta-

It is double
the struggle

~---- ltal!p
~.ilaiho'"
4ll4.

GA

3 BoxingYlclot'y

ICIIIIIrw

....

' 7_~ti-AIIIPbc
n.
_,.....

y....__.._,,,A4
_....,

31 Homo lor Sale

Autol for Sale

MY ALMANAC TELLS ME
WE'RE IN FER A
LONG DRY SPELL I!

1110 Allra VIII, loodocf, $1.!00.

- . z,fl, DIS -

. 38 Klnda

Fill

Opening lead: • ~

LAW SCIIOOL?

=t,'

Rea l Estate

Tronsportat1on

7t

Adcl....... ........

VldN • l'lr:Wnl bulk
· Woll
lieinqulroolaming
only.
IZD.

....-

BARNEY

73 Yanl &amp; 4 WD'I

1111

•Au
. Welt
Paao
Paao

p , I
. . . . . . . . . .. . . .

I~~E~~~~~~e

n:aa ,....,. tha\ ~ dOi buel, _ wllh ........ you k - , ond
NOr 1o ooitd tltrouvn tho
moll untM you haft lnvflll'll"'od
tho_....
12,100 llonthly Pooolblo ....
...-,g -uotoAI Homo. No
EJ:perilriol N1 IIII'IY, Rulh
llell
110
EnYOIO!Ie To: DU Sullltllotr,
loX tt, H I - , OH 41td:

-

lor ....

~

.... -

t

55

All- a-.. -

"""' ...,.._ ........ ·iiM-'10'
...., :M72.

TV, -

r;:r.

Aoii-211'1.2112TonJE-.
~.Condition. H,IIOII, o!W4i-

-ngage,IMH211110.

1

2 Neighbor of

Vulnerable: North:South
Dealer: South

.....·--- .
---z:

IZ8tl;

C I

1Z

-

.J

. 32 ......
· 34 Burtowlng

+53%

A
. oklng

~~or

DOWN

28 Goollgenua
30 Mortlfted

SOUTH
tAKQI09t

ilor, I llorood,
12,100.
~
Ford Ro- XLT 4 Cylln:
Chwrollt, Fonl, Dodgo:.
tang. NO
•

57 tncompetenl
511 SM1p 11£1111
&amp;Oinle-..nce

coughdropt
. 27 Thankl, In
lktllln

.QU3
tKQV
.K IOH2

•Qas

52 Typeoflu
54LAIH55 -Ike

23 Type of due~
25 - Brolhera

••

tJT

-

l:ltftl

effort
' 20 lllrrll llel
22 1002, Roman

EAST

.KI085

tatli W

GIIB•1.t ~IpS

WlrMll II

UU. priced . . . 1ft..

Wlllla~? pg ............ Nr:ro, ..... MF
~ IIF 210
.... .,, 211 _ - .
...- . •
211 Win Alllocf
~ ...11110. I R. Flnlolllil
J
F-. 1Win lfen 111, ..._.I'Maa.tm

.... - -

I--~-to­
n lown.
OYOIIoblo

aoaa.

Busllllll
Opportunity

.

All CcN. •• ITU All CoilS

II

11'71&amp;,14x7"bnobUe homl on ,._
loci lol. 2BA, I 112 loth. lf4:446.
87111
1171mobllo homo 2 BA 11000.
11111 lluotong.
16tii s.a Conotrucllon Aotoo: 117 SheRe,
utUity trollor, $400. 30W15: 127
IIDtef
:12111.
CloM To Gntn Plonl. AI iiOWI
·-1187.

Fmanc1al

21

:Q

...-y

lumlolllil,

w . 304- g:t,:1.-~.J:...ndor/"~ ::..~t.E~
• ::,::..,:;:::_::.rt--:--.,nno-=,:;:nnolna-::ond::7:t;:;~=-,. 11111
Dock, Foroot
•Uiiilni.Pori!,
114.:141-82112.
ta,:j -oink
_....,, otoln..

0

8oo2 ?l2n;: St Cool Allor opoollon.
t,IM 4• 1cm;-.
iMoiuiiiVw'FFwii1ii~ii'Oion;';i-ii01i1l'oo?roiiior0i

2lldmt. oplo., ,..., ~ .,..

....... I

t4a711, 3 locf_,mo, 2 lotho,

Will rjYo plano loooono In my

ot ........ ..,.._,

•

-= 11.000
aru
==t ! h211:AI\WdDrrw'--= "!i
T.V.
'I

RCA ..... £IPna

£'« -

---l.Mo,-Soo'IO

WI!ST

AlllniiOIIdaJ
50 Cenlfat
Amlilcall ott

' 18 I£IUI Willi

.J7
tJ75Z

a2ll~~~-~-..,....,.-.-.,... =
Four cow. lnd 1 bul tor Mle,

.... Elc a· It
! 1M- :tal..
114 -

...

==-~·
::.. =-I '::::.•~ Jl,t..: 52 Sporting Goods
:liH211.

Will ....... In My Homo floor
GrMn lleiMntarJ .sct:ao~ Full
Or .....Collllorlo , _

loeo~

T au.

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

:-...:: ::;·: ~.:.ftod -...:r

~,hovoC~

Will •

7

-..,~~ongo

DIIYo

!,og Homo For llelo, I 1111•
From H - 133,000 lf4:446.
837.1, 304..'111-U31.
;::.::...:=::.::,..,,...-,---,,..-.,-Ronch ltylo ....... 3 lrod(OOIIIII, :::..~--:::.==
1
'bolh,ottoalllil-$1 "iiion., 114 -w
Andlrloni
wlndclwl: otnnl air, IPornerov.s
Foo4w 8t, - · 304:7'/1.1110. 2117.
- - - - . (Old
Un:
lho11M
- -.,.
n . --~.!..&amp; ,.,_
portly -lor --~··
wllh
•
.......
~..........
~
, H- ~ Fraa -•
•··--·
PoRit.
Work, 44
Apartment
Erwgy Efflclonl,

-lng: jolt d~vlng truek

W

-

&amp;J._; _ _ _

I2ICriMo..
~F~um~tlolr~llil~il~o~:l';1~;;..~~~.~"";;•;
· ;In

........ For 137,000, 114-381- • ~
M44.
Nice z Pd oom lloblll Home

Wanled To ' Cleln: Hou••·
0t11cM, Etc.IM.a0:1211.

Clri:Anauo Block
_,.bly Pwlcocf. Bloto
ltcloon, Ohio 114:

-lloloto.III,IIIIIITU,.,._.
Alii
Klndll
d

,__,A._.,....,
... -~
,... .... •z

....... WV•....-nw:ML
Slolilgw I , - . 2 Door, • :

:.,-:._

c:

..._...

,... ....... Gtllui?
sa
J:.dlllrollltro. . . . 11•-

A.&amp;l.--,-.
...
... hold ...........

~=\;,"'2.~-

3 Houooo ;:I~:DO~.~~~~~~~

o.- Will
loll01All
Wltlt
Monthly
lncoroo
$7003

Fann Equipment

llen:ha..-18

.....

~

U. ..... M

••••._" could be

P~y.

1 e:;.=

54 ..ICII.. IIOUS

-1112 •• ' llonl Col 1M-

....... J
Hor told 'lurr-.. 'liZ rnL
.a.ntcho Rd. Pl. PI
75\ WV,
coli 310W71:Ma

Gold.l

-·h·--·
lnYOitrnoo•

. . . . lltJIII

t~~-~-~.,~-~~..._~·~~= ~~~~~~~~~lltll

:-c:.;;::.-:u- •

~

=.:~2 Ill. 2 lrolh.

lnqulrloo

.ru 2111 "'"

£ ' « - ol

ar-t. lfln
...... n.:-=--

42 Mobile Homee
for Rent

~

-

... 7

!11'1 •• •• 1r1.

PICKENS RIAI«JUAE

RaMJinlt••

=·t::...,o":o ~=•~rlouo

,_ -

...

In GIIIIIMIIa: I R 1 ..,.. 1
loth. Alr Condlllotw, ~~-

Aldgo Aftnuo, OM lllocll -

compuo. Two

fw~r--~ao
N. .....,..

-..,

~-.
I

rwm

~~~:rv:.

M '-

For Slllll 1Nik ~ c.11r
Gnlr. Lilli - . .W!!I!L I •

-.SJB.IM 4..

EEKANDMEEK

·
- 14,400.
-. 1711-71211
...... I:DO PM.

Ani ~~:·

Ad.. uot oil
I mllotrof
, HOlM NMIDMI
Dlooel, A I awr
Bonk, _..
ONo
46771. ...
_
•
2773.IIOqUIIod. IS7B/IIO. - -

Trll.w::•ng, 1Ne R.movlll,
.1)1awnlnit. ,,.. EotlmotMI e
..,_1111"Aiw 4p.m.

7

lr&gt;o

llofM!OII.
........
, ••, 1400After
.....
114 2411211

~~r:;;~·~~~-ocf...:,~

';;:"i 4by3-1123
tho

o

I Rooo!o1 M I I .L.o
1or - . - . , 14,

:::"."l'r,- ....... ..,

nM. 1-

111 ••

llonS"I.

=i·~:::.tr=
~roc:.==-u:.:
ro no, haroo 10'1112' IMIII6' 114 U' 1211 A._ 3 P.ll.

or ,,..,

.::::.:

cor.,,,,.
....,_
Moura:

lrodroo~ 1:1111. inontlt ,..,.
$210. ....... Ono -

441124.
-·
· 2......
112
tt.tt..- fuU ..
•....
with
~~.&amp;'.1:1: :ue
1~ ~ - • 8111,.,...-

COrl I Tom'o Aocllno, !roo ...

~-

E
-

2

1m.

All typoo ol ropolro or romodol

l ··~.:0 Cll.........

LAYJE'I FURMl'URE

41 Housel tor Rent

~ lrodraom lrrlck 1011D!t, I ...._
fnlnl Pt. Pll on AI. 11/ll botllo,
tronl porch. dock,-~ yonl,
2 - lor
dotochac!
gotiiiiO, 117,000.
oofl
Oppalnl- :IIMol7l-

lion
........1M
~~-··"
oolloal
·~
tof .....
8,;5301,
,.....

Dlrl M1.

411out1Mut

; 17 eyHiye

.A7U
tA.IOUt '

a=.· ·-

.~- ..-...
..,,._,
"'"1

45 l!aat oS,Minn.
47 Wllkt

I 11 Folded

NORTH

1117 N-il 2 WD King Cob
plolwp, . . . . . .

f·lo

-

I GOOD U1ED APPUAHCES
--d
2 • ... - .
~·-App'
rotolgor-.
11 1ng?oliJo_I04_ -

2bdrm., full b111men1, eiOH to
, _ , largo ~· 111,0110 or 1 - - - - - - - - 111111111 otrw, 14-la-7117, 114- 1•

lnlamtotlon on !toby crodlo IMIIn
-·-choot,-otOUC•

11n
.... . 2 ... 1Da1Z1.

::..:
2 P,,
OponiA.II. ToiP.M.--

- . - o n ID4 In Racine
nMr
ect:oc11, ·~ nice.
~~ 114-Mg,.2203 or 114-

1-

Situation
wanted

18

1

CI!!Jion loctlonol, -

_ . . . , - . . nontrodMionol

12

........, Dr 4 -

35 Loti &amp;

31 Homes tor Sale

w-: Moko

(ONOW},

=~ao...:c;.:,-::
,._• . -

11.00. 21

=
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
r1~
:.~==

Golllpollo,"" 4M31.

:!":~!"~..___..
........ - .

.WF•-

i af:~mo..

'""===;I
.. 15 no~~
~
- -

Anewer tG Piev'h n P'llulll

not

Ready~

42 Outer

bll~

'· 14 Outclo'a:Ow

..,

DodaO .......... 414,111304M2 .44 .,..,

Motor, Sol i!Oi 12,100 Dr Tredo
For C•ro.•ro _Roro, Othor car
Of Eqjll Voluo, 114-21611a4.

'

41

· 12 tllrrY I. -

ttll OIIC Soli, I Cyllndor T.,..
...,, lunnlof: lunwtlor, 1 1 'II nt

'

1 Holl81on

PHILLIP
ALDER

1115 wtnnolroao - - . 1 •
Ford ltyttlldt TruoiL 1tl7 Fold
~ Tluak. Porklna
.. - CobliwW..
Lol,
8:3011m-1:00pm. -~-

_.,.,

--llol;4
144.ti;Cirllod'o,

Uno 01 ....

' I'd like to rent one
· for my uncle's

~~

___
... .

--lloi$11,Ful
......... ,__Ful
t- -

...
-

-

=== .....

- - Wrtr'li$1211AO

FuU-Ttme PoeiUon, ~-:cad
ln-lng/IJCIE*IrlcaiA

.._

Cow=•
......
-- .boll ....
.,_
..

. . . . . .~

=. . . .

'(..rol•"'·

...

......,.. ....... P...'

FURfB •1'oa·
Wl-.e - T - Wit a.otra;
FMIIialtR '14a.lrlll;

.... :10 ., ~,.8:DOAII-4:00PII,
llonoFrl lot DIG tarm. Doadllne
lor applying .. J .... \ 1m.
Molnteranco

/l'f'rliNfr•N,
'fooJ

ACIIOIS

ton,- ._...

N1JTIIID,

1'o 4.-. Mv

._.

YrAA RIANilUAE
.......,..Or lit 441 . . .
'10 DAY SAllE AS CASH
OR AEHT-2-0WII (NO IIEPOIIIT)

1111 Chovr I

oT~fll. WAy~

-----

......

DUISIDE

·-party-·
.
_
.
.
........
Wrtntocf:
P-&gt;

"fllt:flE" "~

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

. . . AC
J§aMC
- · 1 , 114 • • :2t11 IIIII' ......,_ T11111. t A ~

G- -

....

NEA Cro•aword Puzzle

1111 Ford 1'210, 4WD, 1:11110,

=--•-•4•

HouUIIOid
Goods

I~'COOM

TYPIST

_
--

The

,
·•

~~--NC,

'

l.'crc·1;:11:J '"

1993

72 TNckl ,for Sale

Ill rchiUIIII

. . . . . . . _.,. ..

- -........4 .

.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Sl . . . . .. .

tv DIUI t

l.P.

Fl Wont\ TX

MAY 20

�High schobl
graduation
•
ISSUe

0 hio Lottery

Congratulatiom,
Graduates

Pick 3:
336
Pick 4:
I

Inside today.

5226

•

•

WENDY CLARK

e

KELLY DOIDGE

Community Calendar
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bottom Community AsSociation smot.psbon1 Saturday 5 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults or $2.50 for children. ·
r

REEDSVILLE· Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Tbird Annual
Fishing Derby, Saturday, 8 a.m. 10
1 p.m. for ages Q-14. Prizes and
free hotdogs.
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club, dance
Saturday 8-11 p.m. Meigs County
Sen, Citizens Center. Dale Eddv.

.
.
,.. VoL 44, No.17 .
CoFI'flllled18a

Marieua, caller. 'All western styie
. 'ted,
.
dancers IDVI

· J.ury imposes 96~year penal~y · .

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
IaN""' Open For
Th• s.........
&amp;
"-~!~~Wets,

u.. ,, •••• •ry

....,.,_.,

PlusAm.a&amp; II•••• • -.
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
. (

( Jll -

By JIM FREEMAN
· County man c:onvicted of killing a of Common Pleas.
Seatblel News S1alr
Gallia County man and his son
William D. Lemasters II of
. Following a 4 1/2-hour jury · received two consecutive life sen- Racine sat with his attorneys,
deliberation Thursday, a ¥eigs tences in ~ Meigs County Coun. William N. Eachus and Bill

1

!.15 ..L

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYUCUSI

OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

992·5776

LORETTA OILER

Meigs graduation ... ContiauecHrompqe 1
tie Turner, P~mer'?Y• ~urrently

e~lled ~. 9hi~ U!llvemty where
she IS IIUIJOOIIg m biology.

·D£BORAH ALKIRE

Beat of the Bend.._.
bY. Bob Hoeflich
Seems to me that
John Curtis, a stu.de11t at the
· Chester Elementary School, is
·about ro become a real hero.
. Young John, the son of Larry
and Julie Curtis, who reside on
Eagle Ridge Road, will be going 10
the Cleveland Clinic on May 31
where he will be the d9nor for a
bone marrow transpon for his half·
sister, Terri Nutter, 27, or the TupJil:n Plains area, a leukemia victim.
Terri must have the marrow
tranSPlant and if it is successful she
ti8s a 95 percent chance of recovery, Her tWO full brothers and full
sister were tested at Cleveland
Clinic as donors but didn't match
and couldn't be donors. It was a
one in 25,000 chance that John
could be the donor and with those
odds, personnel at the clinic were
hesitant 10 test John. However, he
insisted and what do you lcnow?
He matches and can and will
become the donor.
Terri will enter the clinic on
May 24 where she will undergo
lt8tS and treaunent for a week until
John arrives on May 31. The next
day the transplant will be done.
TC!Ti. of course, will be confined 10
the hospital for about three weeks
followin~ the procedure but John
will be dischar$ed right away, barring no complications. And John
has no misgivings about this. ·
Members of the Curtis Family
feel that they have been handed a
"miracle". I know you join me in
wishing that all goes well. By the
way, I don't know John, but I'm
sure proud of him.

Otha and Lois Ciltle of Racine
the son of Rosemary Circle, a 1946
graduate of Racine High School.
His wife is a pharmacist and they
have a three-year-old daughter, Jessica.
·

Incredible that the annual Heritage Weekend is again right on us.
So-a cOiiple of notices dealing
with the event.
Staff members of the Mei$s
County Senior Citizens Center will
be holding a quilt show and sale in
conjunction with the event, June 12
and13.
If you have quilts you would
like 10 display or se11J11ease contact
Alice Wolfe at 992-2161. She'll
tell you how 10 go about it. Quilts
can be taken to the center the week
before the show.
Admission 10 the show which is
open to the public is $1 and
desserts will be available at the
show site. Hours of the show and
sale arc 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and from 12 noon 10 4 p.m. on
Sunday.
Meantime at the Meigs County
Museum plans are being made for
Meigs County members of the
Railrol\d Club of Southeast Ohio 10
again feature another display of
miniature trains , And that should
be outslanding.
By the way, David Robinette, a
member of the group, reports that
canceled stamped envelopes of
1975 and 1976, the Freedom Train
Series, are now available at $1 S a
set. A set includes a box of many
envelopes. Each envelope was canceled at a different city during the
A big day coming ' up for Eric run of the Freedom Train which
Bradley Raas.
traveled through 47 states. If you're
On May 28, Eric will receive his interested in a set give Robinette a ·
Phd in mechanical engineering at ring at992-7541.
the Massachusetts Institute of
'--Technology in Boston. He has
I KNOW . you're disappointed
already accepted a teaching posi- that the Ku Klux Klan rally schedtion at a college in Michi8B!J come uled for this Saturday in Pomeroy
September.
has been canceled. But hang on
Ratts is a grandson of the late anyway and do keep smiling.

. Michelle Young, daughter of
Dtane Young, Pomeroy, and Ron
Yo~g. Paduoa!', Kr .• enrolled at
O~to Sta~ UJ!tverstty wher,e she
wtll, .maJor m pre-vetennary
medicme.
Commencement
~~ speaker for .SliDday s graduauon pro~ wtll be
James
.
~let, supenn~n~t of
the Meigs tocaJ Sc~l DISinct f~r
the past five years. His address will
be one of !Jis final acts in his .career
Of educauon. Carpenter reures ~t
the end of May, He has been m
t~ch!ng ~d administrative J!OSiuons tn ¥etgs Local for the~ 13
years. Prior to thai he was pnnc1pal
of Federal Hocldng High School
for J1 years and prior to that taughl
eight years in sevcnl schools.
Spec:ial music for commencement will be ~_led by the band
ul!der the, direction of Toney
Dmgess, direc~, ~ by the cho~:vbnder the direcuon of Teresa
Th~ class will be presented b~
. . 1 .
F en ton Tay Ior, pnn~tpa
• wu
Larry W. Rupe, .Pres•dent. of the
Boar~ of Edocauon, handmg out
the diplomas.
T..,..,~ Graduates .
Members of lhe graduaung class
are Gary Wayne Adams, Deborah
Ann Alkire, Kevin Clay Amott,
Larry Wayne Ashburn, Terry Dale
Ashbury, Kandi May Bachtel, Timothy H. Baker, Nathan Frederick
Baloy, Jennifer L. Barnhart,
Michelle Renee Barren, Neil .
Edward Barrett, Carrie Elizabeth
Bartels, Megan Leigh Bartels, John
Stewart Bentley, James Nathan
Biggs, A])by Rut!) Blake, Richard
Lee Blankenship, Tessie Lynn
Bradshaw, Nathan Mauhew
Brown, Lorri Ann Bumem, Karen
Renee .Burns, Richard David Carson, Paul Jason Chadwell, Anna
Margaret Michelle Chapman,
Linda Louise Chapman.
Jennifer Chasteen, Tabitha
Michelle Clark, Wendy Jaylene
Clark, Brooke Ann Coates, Tracy
Dawn Collins, Verna Michelle
Compston, Matthew Cook, E.
Matthew Craddock, James Lee
Cramer, Jr., Jay Christopher Cremeans, Kimberly Dawn Cremeans,
Leanna Cundiff, Twaina Renea
Cunningham, David A. Curf'man,
Ginger Marie Curtis, David
William Dailey, Todd A. Dill,
Kelly Patricia Doidge, Elizabeth
Renee Downie, Carleton G. Drummer, Russell W. Edmonds, Ben
Fackler, Lawrence S. Faw, Kimberly June Fetty, Heather Marie
Franckowiak, Allison N. Gannaway.
Rebecca L. Garnes, Wesley
Shane Gilkey, Billy J. Glaze,
Autumn M. Griffith, Mary Ann
Grueser, Tracey Renee Grueser,
Michael J. Hall, Raben Jason Hall,
Robin Dawn Hall, James E. Har·
man, Lisa .Renee Harr, James
William Harris, Trevor Jon Harri·
son, Richard Shane Hatfield, Brian
Roger Hoffman, Bryan Todd Hoff.
man, Dennis Jay Hoschar, Tonya,
Lynn Hudnall, Jason Leonard

They go with all your clothes.
(Including into the
washing machine.)

ScottJBJ(HI Moore, ChristophUW:
Nee!, Raben M. O'Brien, Lorena
Lynn Oiler Lessie Mae Osborne
Heather J~ Pauley, Tom M.
nington, Kelly Denise Phelps, Bil·
lye Jo Pherigo, Michael E. PhiUips,
James A. Powell, Rick Prioe;
S,llanie Lynn Price.
.
ames P. Pullins, Tammy Jo
Queen, David L. Rees, Vincent
Lance Reiber, Lorena Lrnn Reit- .
mire, Steven W. Reitmtre, Amy
Elizabeth Reynolds, John Roger
Reynolds, Courtney Denise Riggs,
Marcia Anne Robinson Elizabeth
Ann Roush, Kelly Re~ee Salterfteld, Lisa Diane Schuler, Angela
Rae Searles Tiunmy Lynn Searles
Sherry Jo Seddon, Kyla Ren~
Sellers, Virginia Marie. Shuler,
Kyle Arthur Simpson, Melisa
Marie Sisson Rebecca Ann Snowden Rian Spencer Lonnie Lee
Sro~fe Pauick Scott Steele, Jason
L. ~te.;,an. Chris!Opher M. Swanson, Steven P. Swatzel, Sheryl
Renee Thoma, Donny Ray T'tllis
William C. Touitdas, Rossen' E
Tr_iplet!, Katrina. R. Turner:
Mtchael L. Van~e, Paul Thomas
Van Cooney, Michael A. Welsh,
Scott Wesley Whitlatch, Holly
Allyn Williams, Randall Zean Wit·
son Tonya Lynn Woodard Todd
•
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Matthew Workman, Jennifer A.
Wright, Michelle L. Young, Vic10r
Charles Young IV Yvea.e Young
t...:•==.DD:::,:L::::IPO:_=::IT~------'----__!92·5627
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Peri:

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The SHDoi"'CAPLACE

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EXTRAIEXTRA

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on

s

~uth

I!Ahe youth choir presented sev- ef[ihe conclusion of the service

· mJ IOIIP and readings. During the all mpther's were recognized. Spe-

I

sinJing o~ "Ha-la-la-la" the .youth cia! potttd plants were presented 10
MDI out mto the congregation and Maye Mora, Ruth Francis, Mildred
brought their mothers to the fronl . Ward, Mary Harris, Evelyn Laoof the church and had then\ ~oin in ning, Mary Kau!Z. Dorothy Sheets,
acti vily of the song. The junior Carol Adams, Barbara Weeks, Car. cbolr presenled a short program on ric Kennedy, Barbara Riggs and
the life of a mother and her son. Nola Young.
They concluded the program by

••

Friday,
June 4, 1993

- Hurry, Picture Deadline is Monday, May 27.
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographS of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
'
The Baby Sentinel will ~ppear in the June 4th issue in celebration
·of National Baby Week.
·
Be sure your chUd, grandchild or relative is included. Complete
the form below and enclose a maps~ot or walle( size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)

.

McLane, scparared from courtroom er with a mitigation hearing in the Barnes said .•Tile deputies have
been nice, she added. •
· spectators by a wall of uniformed rtrSt place?" ·
"We are pleased the jury CaDle
officers and deputies as the bailiff
Following closing arguments,
back
with ·a life sentence," Lemaspresenled the jury's decision.
• Crow instructed the jurors and
ters'
auomey,
Bill McLane, said.
Lemasters, 26, was found guilty released them for deliberation.
"(Lemasters) has indicated that he
Saturday in the Fell: 8, 1991, shotJury i'etums
gun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley,
Courtroom doors were unlocked wants 10 file an appeal and we have
36, and 12-year-old Jeffrey S. Hal- shortly before 3:25 p.m. and nine been appointed by the coon to repley, both of Gllllia County. In addi- . uniformed officers and deputies resent him."
"It's a long way from over,"
tion, he was fOUIIj! guilty of aggra- filed iniO the room and poSitioned
vated robbery and two counts of themselves between spectators and McLane said.
"We are truly grateful for the
kidnapping in the incident.
the parties involved, making a
He received a life sentence in human barrier separaling coun offi. cooperation we have received from
each killln~ and must serve 30 cials lnd the jury from the rest of the sheriff's department and the
court," McLane added. "I believe
years of eac before being eligible the courtroom.
for parole. In addition, Lemasters
Other ofticers then brought the case was well and fairly tried
received three 10-year sentences Lemasters, wearing shackles, into by the prosecutor's office and we
for lhe robbery and kidnapping the courtroom where he was seated tried a dam good case."
Prosecutor John R. Lentes said
convictions and 1wo three-year with Eacbus and McLane:
he
was ·satisfied with the jury's
terms foc mandatory
speciDeputies locked the courtroom
decision.
fications.
at 3:51 p.m. Crow and the juty
"I'm satisfied with the verdict.
Another man, Fred Drennen of entered the hushed room at 3:52
It's
difficult for jurors... 10 sign the
Ravenswood, W.Va., pleaded p.m. at·which lime Crow asked the
death
penalty." he said.
guilty on March I 10 three counts jury foreman if they had relurned
of aggravated murder and is serv- with a decision.
Lentes said Lemasters' family
in!' three concurrent life sentences
At 3:53 p.m., Bailiff Teresa played an important role in saving
wtth the possibility of parole in 20 Tyson-Drummer read the jury's him from the death penalty.
"The family members had an
years for his role in the double recommendation of the two life
effect
on the jury," Lentes said.
· slaying. ·
sentences and Crow thanked the
'IJ believe the death penalty was
me~t.~r~~:/~rg~;~~~t:fJ:Y· jury which consisted of six men an appropriate sentence based on
and six women.
against Lemasters- which he did
"The United States has the the cold-blooded murder of Jeffrey
.on May II.
. finest cour:t system in the world and L. Halley and his 12-year-old son,"
Drennen told .jurors that Lemas- . you helped to guarantee il will Lentes said. "However, I understand the jury's difficulties in
ters traveled 10 Gallia County on remain so" Crow said . .
•
imposing the death penalty aAd J
llebv
8, 1991,
1oCoun
bring -"the elder
Cro w th•~n ·f.l!....,-:""'•~d th e :Jur
.· o~
u......
....._
the
•••
·
colimend
them for coming ba~k
10
·-~
·''""'" · ty ...,._
who opted '10· remain for sentencwith the serious penalty of life
guise of a drug deal during 'whic)l .
Drennen would appear ··and then mg.Before.· passing sentence, Crow imprisonment. I am complerely Sat·
pretend 10 rob Halley and Lemas- asked Lemasters if he wanted to isfied that William Lemasters will
never be released from prison and
ters. ·
comment. Lemasters declined.
According to testimony, upon
Aftermath
that he will suffer evety day for the
crime
against these two people."
PortlanarrivalatRthe m!l"dLeerbscene oTn Old
"The ball gan1e ain't over until
"I am also satisfied because
d oad tn
anon own- the fat lady sings," said Anna
ship, Dreruten and Lemasters shot Barnes, William Lemasters' moth- now, the release date is not in the
hands of the parole board. Instead,
the older Railey and robbed bim Cf· "She ain't sang yet."
the
prison system will teq&gt; LemasbeforeLemasterslrilledtheboy.
We have the support of good
ters
in prison for at least 96 years,"
Attorneys for Lemasters said counsel, investigaiOrs and friends,
l)rennen shot and killed the two
Lentes concluded.
Halleys while Lemasters sat in the

rm:arm

REMOVED FROM COURTROOM •
WIDiaa L=••n,--.. by cleplltles of 11te
Melp Couty Sberlff'1 Departmeat, II sllon
ltei'J helnl remcn'ed from 1ft COUI'trciMI slor1ly

after nceivinc two llle ~ateaees for Ills role In
1ft kBHnc of a Gallla COUDty man and his SOli.
(Sentbtel photo by Jim Freeman)

• d ·
.. p Jb • . d• d . ~
L. ODdOD
00 ,etng rea Ie tOr opentng . ay
·

By Kathryn Crow
Sealbtel Coa '"f lllldeat
Reports on the ·London Pool ·
fund aalllng pojr.un IIIII diC May
.SIIlli~whlch
_..__ .. t npriJmoted:-lhat
•"'~ b ......,I
and ·aIso u..........
.........,.,
f~U.Dlll!illilllhfed a recessed mee:t·
mg of!lyracuse VilJ•cre
... Council
Thursday niaht.
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer,
reported that as of ~ay 17,

ments have beCn made for nece8sary repairs and materials. He
reported that the pool is just about
ready for the opening-on ~moria!
matlll....
r r,
ar
D'ICJ(lillif leo~ "" the
progress and items which need 10
be purchased prior to the pool
opening.
Council hired seven lifeguards,
Heather McPhail, Roberta Caldwell, Rod Newsome, Michael
Smith, .Don Schaffer, Courtney
Knapp, and Chris Weaver. Hired as
a lifeguaid on an as-needed bas"
was David Deem.
Several prizes wen: awarded at
.
the May 8 activities and the winaggravaled felony of the first .ners were Don Goodson of Welldegree.
·
ston, a table; Barbara Stahl of
Whaley shot Samuel 0. Hoff- Pomeroy, as ba*et; Donna Peterman, 49, 4350 State Route 325, son of Syracuse, a frog; and DonPatriot, in the head with a small aid Karr of Middleport, a pizza.
·
caliber ha,dgun. Hoffman was
Mayor Pape commented on
b'IIISPOtll!d to Holzer Medical Cen- absenteeism of council members
ter after the shooting and was hos- from meetings. He said that council
pllllized for moie dum two month# members are elected to serve, that
before he died Dec. 1!1.
they should be doing that in fairlk
ness 10 those who elected them and
po~t
serve with them~ and that if they'
1 ·
II
don't want 10 serve, then he will be
glad 10 accept their resignations.
.. Kathryn Crow discussed the
do not want 10 jeopardize."
need
cleanup of the Snowball
AI Bradbl!fY'S residence, 4345 Hilf for
Cemetery
and the mayor
Centntl College Road, police found reponed it will be
taken care of
a.pproximatcly 25 planiS, 11:owing
before
Mefttorial
Day.
hghts, tuned·and other cqu1pmcnt
· George Holman reponed on
used to gmw 'marijuana. In an adjas.
o
me
vandalism taking plac~ al
c~nt house, which is being ,1entcd
some
property
be owns on College
to Harold L. Copley, Jr., 36, police
SlreeL
He
said
the po,....ty is postfound procCSSIIil marijuana.
ed
no
trespassing.
The incidents
No charges have been filed from
will
be
investigated
by police, the
the raid. The case will be sent to
mayor
said.
the Franklin County grand jury.
. Attending lhe meeting were
Bradbury bepn his career with
Mayor
Pape, Clett-l'reasunl' Law·
BEF in 1957 and became an officer
son,
Council
members Crow,
~f the company'in 1963. Accepting
Kenny
Bucldey,
Dennis
Wolfe, attd .
·~teri~ l'l'Sp~nsibilitics as chief
Bill
Roush,
and
a
resident,
Don
fmanc1al off1c:Cir and treasurer is
Schaffer.
Donald J. Radltosti, 38.
$1,191 .27 bad been received
toward lhe opening of London .
Pool. Shd'ISiid that the IOia1 came
from personal donations of
S662.4kb"·~;c.~oas of
3,750, Iiebe
.,.
, and
spaces collections $195, the
fuemen's barbecue of $1,07!1.21,·
and craft sales of $436.65.
Mayor J•es Pape estimaled a
~of about $4,000 after pay-

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t • H ff . n.,
SUspec In 0 ma
J y
murder Pleads\'gu•Jt

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A Columbus woman charged
with the Oct. 13 shooting of her
boyfriend pleaded guilty Thunday
in the Gallia County Court of Common Pleas to volunlary manslaupter.
•
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Diana Whaley, 26, 1169 E. Innis
Street. was sentencid to six 10 25
yeitrs in prison and was fined $250
plus cOurt costs. The charge is an
.

BEF executl·ve ..esa·.glor..s
A Bob Evans Farms executive
who had IJI'arijuana seized from
two of his. houses lasl week has
·decided 10 ~c an early retirement.
the compant announced Thursday.
Columbus area police raided
the homes, owned by Keith P.
Bradbury, 59, chief financial officer and ucasurer for BEF, May 14
and recovered marijuana plants and
equipment.
The release quoted Bmdbury as
saying lhat his "grea~ respect for
t~1s company, its employees and
stockholders will not allow me to
co:&gt;linue my employment with Bob
Evans Farms at this time. The company's positive reputation is one I

=·pool

·\ll;j·ff:'!;
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ca".

The body of Jeffrey L. Halley
was found about seven months
later near the crime scene while the
body of the boy was recovered
about 14 month later in a wooded
area off Sellers Ridge Road several
miles aW!IY·
.
Closing arguments
Prior 10 jurors ~ginning deliberation at 11:22 a.m., atiOmeys for
the st8i.e and Lemasters presented
c~~~ents.
·
lant Prosecutor Charles H.
Knight. saying the ~ggravating factors outweighed the mitigating raetors, recommended jurors request
the death penalty for Lemasters.
Defense anomer Bill McLane
!Old jurors that life m prison would
be the worst possible punishment
for Lemasters.
•
"For someone with (Lemasters')
Jove of the outdoors and the woods,
it would be the worst punishment,"
he saicl
.
.
.·
"The decision to take a man's
life should not be based solely on
tho worst act of his life," he said.
''The rest of his life sbould be taken
into account. Otherwise, why both·

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PARENTS NAME·----------------- :
cnYa~TE~/------~----------~-----

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Meigs seniors honored
during annual assembly

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stalf
Scholarships rotating more than
$40,000 were a~ 10 25 Meigs
High School seniors at the annll81
awards ass~mbly held Thursday
morning at the high school.
The recipients included!
Allison Gannaway, American
Electric Power Co.. $6,000, Ohio
Board of Regents, $4,000, the
Holzer Hospital Science Scholarship, $200, Ohio University Man·
assah Cutler Scholarship, $750. .
Kevin Lambert, American Eleetric Power, $6,000.
Michelle Young, American
Eleetric Power, $6,000.
Randall iohnston, Rodney Paul
Harrison Award, $500; appointment to U.S. Air Force Academy.
Sheryl Thoma, Hocldng College
Principal's Award, amount not
announced.
Nathan Baley, Meigs Student
Council Scholarship, $125, and
Rodney Paul Hamson Award,
$100.
Lori Kelly, Parter Long Memorial Scholarship, and Student Council Scholarship; $125.
Debbie Alkire, Meigs Senior
Class Scholarship, 5200.
Abby Blake, Meigs Local
Teacher'S Associalion, $250, Louise
Morhart Music Grant, $S5().
Tammy Queen, People's Bank,
$500.
'
Grande
Town-

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Imboden,
Sayre is music direciOr -Gf
and is assisted by Ralph

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CHILD'S NAMI(S) A A G " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - -

special
worship

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Is Coming
Soon!

\

· Lem·asters gets two life s.entences

..
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,n.
....
Y_'J'hiWt),
Pene4
1'11111, c..pleit

Inc._,......

3 ~tlo... , 32 ,,... '21 c:.nt.
A lluldmedla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May· 2~. 1993

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Sherry Jo Johnlon •. ABD~•

Johns!OJt, Keith Anlhony
Jeffrey J: Karr, l.,oreua Jean
Kelly, Gary L~ Kerr, Charles
Willian) King, Misti Dawn King,
ChrisiOPher Ladd Knlgl!t, Yea Ping
· Kong, Kevin Andrew Lambert,
Adam LitUe, Billie Jo Marcinko,
Kelly Michael Marcinko, Jolin
Emmett Martin, Jr., Meljisa Deanna Maynard, Michelle McDaniel,
Coney Cam illli Midkiff, Bryan- ·
S. Molden, Precious Ann Moore;·
(

I

Submtu.ci'BJ

·····················~·················
SEND TO:
: · .-Dally Sentinel

.' P.O. BOll 729 - Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!1

.I

BABYSEN11NEL
Pkturel Mlllt Be In By May 'l7, 1993 .
.· Plcturea can be picked up after June 7tb.

~~~
and Rod-

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Music
ney Paul Harrison, .

I

• Dlld row:,~M Blloy, v... C.JIItGIII Deblllt A1ldn. ~
. a.,..., II. . 'tn'r Plb, I a - Olllr, Tolay Qaeell, Vlrtlldi

S. .ler, ud llact row, J....._ Dle~&amp;l, Kevla Lambert, S"teve
Swabel, s::n T-.a, Ca.rhley Midkiff, Mary Grllller, Jay .·
er.=w,
RaecleD Jollllltoll.
·
·

Lorena Oil!r, !\(o!IJ• lligh
School Plculty 5c1101anhlp, $250,
Rodney Paul Harrison Award,
$250, Tecllnolo&amp;Y llducadan Cen- ·
ter, Ccilumbu, ~
• Verna &lt;;:ompaton. Rodney Paul
· Harrison $100. '

Kimberly Fetty, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Kelly Doidge, Rodney Paul
Harrii!Oil, $100.
'
Jay Cremeans, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Virginia Shuler, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Kyla Sellers, Rodney Paul Harrison, $250.
Stephanie Price, Rodney Paul
Harrison, 5250.
JoshiJR Dickens, Technology
Education Center, $2,000.
Mike Phillips, Technology Education Center, $500.
Special Recogaitloa
Presented Presidential Academic Fitness Awards by Principal
FenlOn Taylor were Kevin Lambert, Allison Gannaway, Michelle
Young, Debbie Alkire, Randall
Johnston, Rusty Triplett, Lorri
Bumem, Katrina Turner, Linda
Chapman, Lori Kelly, Counney
Midkiff, Sheryl Thoma and Jennifer Chasteen.
Allison Gannaway and Katrina
Turner were .recognized as the outstanding French students having
.mainlained the highest averages for
four years. Others recognized for
academic extellence were Linda
Chapman, Courtney Midkiff,and
Allison Gerlach, !ldvanced American His10ry; Allison Gannaway, ·
ciiiCulus; Jon Vance, introductory
algebta 1'111 2; Chad Burton,
al science; Cindy Stewart, A
II, and James White, Algeln .
Industrial Technology Awardl
went to Tom Cremeans, Thomas
Israel Grimm, Wood

F

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>May 20, 1993</text>
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        </element>
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