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I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, wv

Sunday, June 4, 18VS

Natural fungus could reduce insecticide· use
WASHINGTON (AP)- A nat· down tbe first whitefly populations
ural fungus could help growers of infesting spring-planted melons and
melons, cucumbers, tomatoes and other vegetables," Carrulbers said.
other vegetables .j:Ontrol infesta· .
I Jill..
tions of :-"'hit~flies and use less
lflf I
cbeuucal msecuctde.
Continued from 0·1
.
In field tests, the fungus has per- beny growers called Ibis past week
formed as w~ll or beuer than cbem- plus several homeowners. ·
teals, acco~g 10 Ra~mond I. CarObio State University Extension
rutbers, a sctenust ,w•th lbe Agn·
Fact Sheet #2010 suggests placing
c~lllt~e Deparunent s research serflat boards. cabbage leaves, flat
vtce m Weslaco, Te~as.
rocks and wet newspaper as sbelThe fung~s conststenUy re?uced ters for tbe slugs during the day
nwnbers of tmmature wbit~fltes by near lhe infested areas. These slugs
8Q percentto.90 pereent m small are then collected and destroyed.
field plots of can!&amp;oupe, cucumber Protective barrier rings of soot, ash,
. an~ !omato,_ he srud.
lime and olher caustic ·substances
We tbmk most growers may work well when dealing with only
need to use insecticide to knock

Dr. ·

Mycotech plans to market the
strain in a wettable powder aS'
Mycotrol-WP.
•

•te named Spea1\ef.
1.,
•• '•
·

tJ

Magic.
advances to
NBA finals

Our
Lotls
Full

Gallia S&amp; WCD _
donates.fqur
books to Kyger .Middle
School
.
I
•

By CYNTHIA L. JENKINS
District •'orester
GALLIPOLIS· • April 30 · May
6 was Soil &amp; Water Stewardship
Week. ·
In celebralion of the natural
resources which give us life, lhe
Gallia Soil &amp; Waler Conservation
District donated four books to
Kyger Micldk School.
The Beta Club of Kyger Middle
School took on a project to "B uild
a Belter Library" and requested
Ibm the District assist in tbe avenue
of natural resources . The district
answered the call by giving books
which are·directly related to natural

resources and will assist studeniS in tion and management practices
projects such as tbe science fair as
needed to conserve and develop
well as classroom projects.
soil, water and related natural
Mike Hughes, vice chairman of resources, assisting landowners and
the Gallia Soil &amp; Water Board and · residents with natural resource conDistrict Forester Cindy Jenkins pre- servation projects such as agriculsented tbe books to members of lhe ture, -rorestry, urban pollulion
Beta Club arid advisors Janel Stilt- abatement programs and conductncr and Nancy Preston, who is also ing demonstrations along with
tbe school librarian.
technical assistance and ·informaThe goal of the Gallia So il &amp; lion. '.
Water Conservation District is ' to
From ponds and spring devel maintain a balance between man opments to timber harvesting and
and nature.
agncullure, the Gallia Soil &amp; Water
Some of lhe functions of lhe dis- Conservation District has you covtrict are: research relating to soi l ered.
erosion, flooding and sedimenta-

•

.

SAVAGE 110FP TACTI'CAL
ANY CALIBER

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Adkins, Gallipolis, has · beeh
certified as an Independent skin
care and image consultant for
BcautiControl Cosmetics. She
operates Lisa's River View
Salon of Beauty, 480 Stale
R\)ute 7 North, Gallipolis .

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1616 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS
~(614f446·3672"

•

Last week, more than 200 people, man~ with caps and folders bearing
the National Rifle Association logo, packed a.Sena1e chamber for a hearing on the bill .
The commiuee heard from one of the few oppQnents 'at the hearing L
Dewey Stokes, a Franklin Counly -commissioner and national president or
the Fraternal Order of Police .
" More guns on tbe street increases lhe opportunities for more crime, ..
Stokes said. "How does lhe officer on lhe streel delcrmine who lhe good
guys and bad guys are?"
Those remarks prompted heckling abcut constitutional rights from
some supporters and a few questions from lawmakers on I he commitu!e.
"It's law-abiding citiz~ns who will apply for pennits and go through
training, not criminals," said Sen. Bruce JohnsOn, R-Columbus.
. Vukovich said statistics from Florida ·showed lhat of the 274,557 pet'·
mils issued there si nce 1987, only 19 have been rev'oked because the

firearm was usell in a cnme.
"These are law-abiding citizeu
l!l wish to pro1ec1 tl1eir fmnilies and
..,.~
tllemselves:· he said.
OpponeniS, including many la)V enforcement offtqials, argue Ubt more
guns will prompt more violence, returning the country to the days of the
Wild West.
·Supporters say citizens have ·a righl to prOiect lhcmselves from risin~
crime.
Sen. Barry Levey, R-Middletowo, chainnan of the Judiciary Commitlee, said be will schedule more hearings on the bill but has given no indication when a vote could \lC k'lken. ·
If Ute measure does emerge from committee. legi slatwn might .hc
amended to include additional restrictions.
Sen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus, suggesled banning Jirearms from sport·
ing events and possibly other localions.

Ohio ban
on pickets
still out .
WASHINGTON (AI')- The
Supreme Court today refused to
reinslate an Ohio community's ban
on reside ntial picketing, struc!l
down after a free-speech challenge
by anti-abcrtion demonstrators.
The justices, withoul comment,
let stand a federal appeals coun ruling UJat blocked enforcement of the
Upper Arlington, Ohio, ordinance .
Beginning in 1991, a group or
ami-abortion activists from Day\on
traveled to VpjJCr Arling10n al least
Uuee times to picket Dr. Raymond
Robinson's homeln prot.e sr of
abortions he had performed in Day-

By RON FOURNIER
Associated Press Writer ·
. WASHINGTON - · After days of confusion, the C linton administra·
tion finally settled on a Bosnia pol jcy and began trying to conv ince
Congress that U.S. ground troops st:md Iiule chance of getting dragged
'
into the war.
I
But the effort was complicated by Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole's
&gt;t
. strong criticism, bipartisan concerns about a deeper U.S. role in tlle light- ·
~
\
•
ing, and the uncenain fate of an F-16 Air Force pilot shot down by a
Bosnian Serb missile.
• 'There is no clearly defined l)lission \or the Unill:d S.lates or for any:._
body else,' ' Dole said on NBC' s Meer rile Press.
·
"We keep talking abcut all tllcse things we're doing, but what's the
end game? What is our goal in Bosnia ~md what is our interest !here? And
when do we tell the American people and make some. choices'!' ' the
of tbe Meigs Historical Sficiety. Winner for
OUTSTANDING TEACHE:R AWARDKansru; Republican asked.
Meigs Local was Lynn Bookman, unabh~ to
William
Baer,
on
the
basis
of
an
essay
written
by
Clinton tried over the weekend tn clarify his frequently shifting policy,
attend, on the basis of an essay written by Kyle
Teresa
Bush,
was
the
outstanding
teacher
award
saying Saturday that American ground troops would help restructure lhe
right. (Sentinel photo)
Smiddie,
winner
for
Southern
Local
School
IJistrlct
in
the
United Nations force only in lhe "remole, highly -unlikely event'" lhat
annual
"feachers
Make
a
Difference"
program
"peacekeepers became stranded and needed help moving 10 safely.
. Days earlier .. as the administratioll sounded out lhe needs of NATO
allies. the president and his advisers had left open the possibility of a
··
wider role for U.S. ground troops.
Clinton dispatched his foreign policy advisers Sunday to television
news shows. where they promised equipment and intelligence to NATO
allies and played down tlle threat of U.S. ground troops providing emer·
gency help to trapped U.N. peacekeepers..
·
William Baer of Southern Local students who nominaled tl1em. and fcrcn cc in the nominee's life.
"It is becoming more and more clear U1at U1is i., 1101 an evenluality that
The essays were judged on ·the
School District and Lynn Bookman their paretlls· was hosteu by !he
stares us in U1e face right now," Gen. John Shaiikashvili, chainnan of UJc . . of Meigs Local School District' Meigs HisiOrical Sociely, Presidcm basis of con1ent, clearnes; of
Joint Chiefs of Staff, told ABC'~ This Week with David Brinkley'
were U1e recipieniS of the Outstand- Margaret Parker and the Rev. expression. and signilicam achieveProvidin"g a hypothetical example, Defense Secretary William Perry . ing Teacher Awards al Saturday's William MiddleswarUJ, chainnan.
ment or influence shown by lhe
said if a unit of 300 to 400 allied U'Oops was in desperate trouble and
Leachcr.
Winners
were
selected
on
the
"Teachers Make a Difference"
NATO reques1e.d help, U.S. forces " would be . a part ol tllal eniergency
Ten leachers were selected from
recognition luncheon held at the basis of what each student wrote
extraction.'• \
those
nominaled to be honored Satabcut his or her teacher in an essay
Meigs Museum .
1
Shalikashvili and Madeleine Albright, U.S. ambassador lo U1e United
Each one was prcsente~ a
urday.
The luncheon lor Meigs teach- detailing the influence and instrucNations, also criticized Dole's suggestion 10 withdraw U.N. troops and lift
ers nominated for the award, the tion that result~d in making a dif·
(Continued on I' age 3)
the . arms embargo on the Bosnian government. That would require the

1·800·521·0084

0

•

"If We Don't Have .W hat You Want In Stoefl
, We Will Custom Order It For You"

. .---~~-- STATE·wtDE GUNS
69 Sycamore Street (..

614·446·4349
I

Uniled States to supply a large portion of U1e anns ruultrain the Bosni:ms
-and it could escalate lighting, the advisers said.
"It is an option that actually will load to Americanizing the war,"
Albright told NBC.
.
As an allernative to ground troops, Perry told reporters t!Jat t11e United
Stales is widening U1e sweep ol its inlelligence ne1work in Oosnia atJd will
share the jnfOrmmion wilh commander&gt; of lhe new European combat
force .
An unmanned spy plane callell the Predator might gel its first real- ..
world test in Bosnia, sai d Peny. He rctumed Sunday frolfi Paris. where he
pledged more U.S. support - _bul iw u·oo ps· - 1o rei nforce I he U.N.
peacekeepers in Bosnia.

ton.

Robinson's home is located in a
cul-de-sac. along witll just three
other houses.
In response to complaints about
the picketing. lhe Upper Arlington
City ·comicil enacted an ordinance
that states, " No person shall
engage in picketing before or about
the resident or dwelling of any
individual in this city."
The city council said the ordi·
na nce was enacted because "people are entitled to pri vacy and sanctity or their own home."
City police invoked the ordinance in late 1992 when -aboul 20
a nti'abortion protesters tried ' to
picket .Robin son' s home. Th·e '
demonstrators were ordered to
abandon the cul-de-sac but were
allowed to march through adjoining
neighborhoods. ·

Regional businessman ·promotes hemp use ,
Although illegal 10 grow in this
country, hemp ru1d oil from ·sterilized hemp seeds cru1 be era fled inlo
clol~ing, cosmetics , papers, inks
and food.
Wirtshafter, 47, an 'cnvironmcnlal lawyer in Athens County, said
hemp is not a mind -alte1ing dmg.
"We're trying to end the ron fu-

GUYSVILLE (AI') - Don
Wirlsbafter has a growing business
in thi s southeastern Ohio town,
despite one ohslacle: The products
lte sells. arc made from an outlawcll
plan!.
The Ohio llcmpc ry mail -order
company feature s items made of
marijuana , tradi 1ionally called
hemp.

sion hclwecn hemp anU manjuana

Talk show host urges QJJn
owners to 'defy government

$449.95

RETAil PRICE ....................................... $21,456

Gallipolis' Hometown-Dealer

COLUMBUS (AP) - Law enforcement officials say !here are already
enough guns on the street. Some state lawmakers think a few more are
qeeded. •
.
A proposal by Sen. Joseph Vukovich, D-Poland, would allow adulls to
·
carry concealed weapons in order to protect themselves.
Under lhe plan, county sheriffs would issue permils after applicants
passed a background check, a proficiency test on ftreann use and a written
test on state gun laws. Felons, drug addicts and those with a history of
mental illness would be ineligible for licenses. Ftteanns could not be carried on school grounds or into places where alcohol is sold.
A $50 license fee would cover the cost of background checks and I.ests.
Ohio is one of only nine s tates to prohibit carrying a concealed
weapon. In UJ.e la~t few montlls, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas passed
·
laws to letlhetr 9uzens carry handguns.
Vukovich said he has been ovcrwhdmed by suppon for his proposal.

$249.95'

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•

.

•

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4·WHEEL DRIVE ARRIVEW
GENE JOHNSON CHEVY·OLDS·GEO.

OLDSMOBILE

Police proteSt conceBied
weapons bill
.

Southern, Meigs Local teachers
·are honor~d by historical society

...... I

~~

Read all about it •e•

•V·B engine equipped
•Body side moldtng
•Silverado front appeara.nce
package
•LT265f75R on road/off·
road tires
•Aluminum wheels
.Cloth interior
•Rearstep bumper -chrome
•AMIFM stereo w/cassette
•Speed control
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•Dril/lilr's side air bag

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 5, 1995

.,.

~ EXTRA!

..

Plkl-80s.

..•

$139.95

1995 CHEVROLET

Low toolghtln 60s. Clear.
,Tuesday, pardy cloudy, blgh In

GOP leader takes
aim at Clinton's
Bosnian policy

Farmers cautioned
GALLIPOLIS • Every summer ·
· Be wary if someone knocks on
there are report&lt; of groups or indi- your door and cla im s that they
viduals, often called "Irish travel- were "just in the neighborhood" or
ers", who come to t11c area offering "U1ey had some extra paint".
services ranging from bam painting
· Don't be pressured to make a
to asphail work to rural residenl; . .
decision abcut hiring lhe transients
Some of these groups ha vc a on the spot - ask for references
long history of fraudulent practices, and calllhem to check on lhe quali·
including using defective paint ty of work. ,
which is mixed with kerosene. The
• Call the Better Business
Gallia Cqunty F•trm Bureau cau- Bureau to file complaints or to
tions farmers and all residents of check on names of individuals or
rural areas to beware of special businesses.
"deals"otTered by transiem' W!,)rkThe OJtio Attorney General's
ers.
office has similar· services and can
The Gallia County Farm Bureau be reached by calling (800) 282·
and the Beller Business Bure&gt;tu 0515.
offer tlie following tips:

831

Pick 4:
8092
Super Lotto:
13-21·28-35-38-45
Kicker: ·
"' 11908~

''
Vol. 46, NO. 25

ston, advisor; Sean Smith, Derek Gilbert, Mike
Hughes, Gallla Soil &amp; Water Conservation District supervisor. Rear • Jessica Hill, Danielle
Musgrave, Jaime Vansickle, Jessica Mulford,
and Janet Stiltner, advisor.

Pick 3:

The use of beer or any ferment-:
ing food (such as a mixture of·
sugar, yeas~ and.water) put in cups'
in the ground will surprise one in
the number of slugs lhat fall in!(}
the cups and drown. There are
commercially-prepared slug baits
available on the market. Read label
directions before applying.
(Hal Kneen Is the agricultural
extension agent for Meigs Coonty.)
·
·
·

Copyright 1995
KYGER CREEK MIDDLE SCHOOL
RECEIVES BOOKS • The Galliia Soil and
Water Conservation District rocently donated
• foul'.books to Kyger Middle School. The school's
Beta Club is doing a ''Build a .better library"
project. Front row, left to right are Nancy Pre-

Oh.io Lottery

Gallipolis, Ohio

WASHINGTON (AP) - A th ~ Hou se, comme nt ed in a telethousand gun owners and mililia " phoneD sratcmcn t that ''Liddy is
organizers rallied at the Lincoln espousi n g paranoid ext remist
Memorial in a show of defiance for rhetoric to scm·e JlCQple. All Ameriwhat U1ey say is a governmenl plot cans should reject Liduy and his
fear-mongering. He and his friends
to ta!&lt;c th~ir weapons.
"They want 10 di.sarm you. in lite gu n lobby are out of touch
Refuse 10 be disarmed,'' conserva- witl1 the American people .... While
tive radio talk show hos~ G. Gor- no one advocates laking away •mydon Liddy told the crowd on Sun- o ne's gu11. we will conlinue to tight
in Congress for fedeJ .. I gun laws."
day.
Liddy, a onetime -Nixon White · he said.
House ,Ydc who spent more than
"All of the laws of U1e las I 20
four years in prison for tlle 1972 years will stm!d," Schumer added,
Watergntc burglary of the Demo- mentioning the Brady law requiring
cratic Nationai ·Commiuee offices. a waiting period for buying handtold the rally to defy law s they g un s and the ban on assault
believed invalid.
weapons that the National Rille
• 'The Constitu tion is crystal Association wants repealed .
clear," Liddy said . "Any law
Liddy, 64 , one of three dozen
which infringes on your right to · speakers, also advised people to
keep and bear arms, any 'arm of .bomb:ttd lawmak~rs and govemors
your choice, is unco nslilutional , with arguments again~! firearms
just uOtl't Obey tlJC d&gt;Ullll law."
regulation.
.
He said t11erc would be safety in
President C linton himself has
numbers:· "They're not going to acknowledged that vt&gt;les againsl
putiOO million Americans in jaiL" gun con!rol cost I he Democrats
U.S. Park Police estimaled lhe more tlJan 20 seats and control of
size of lhe crowd at 1,100 for U1e the llouse in the 1994 election ,
-half-day gathering sponsored by Liddy said .
the Commitlce of 1776, a coalition · "Let's make Ihat 20 a dnwn ·
of groups against gun colllrol. gov- payment'· for bigger losses next
erwnent intrusion and curtailment year, when, Liddy predicled, "We
1...;.._·-·-----ofan) ~~tilutional right.
won't simply get rid of lhe ... gunRep. Charles Schumer. D-N.Y., grabbers in Congress, we'll gel rid
sponsor df lhe Climon administra- of the Coward-in-Chief (Clinton)
Lion'S anti-terrorist legislalion in and U1e Mrs. (first lady)."

-

Lh e J.!Ovcmmcnt spent 1oo long

·a nd protein .

convincing people !hey \\ere lhc
swne."
Advocate' 'ay hemp could he ·;,
pmcticaJ , ht::nl'lkial crop. II thrives

La.&lt;! year . Wirtshafter and tllree
others grew an expcrimcn~,, plot of
hemp at a U . S . Department of
Agricultun.: research center in Call-

Without pe ~aiciLics or tun g ku..lc~

fornia to dcmonMrale the. crop's

and easi ly replaces u·ces a:. a "oun.:c
usefulness.
of paper pulp, and proponc1Hs say ·
13ut a few month; latl:r, tl1c C'alihcm p is nulritional bccnu~t: the
fomia anomcy gcncml's drug t:L..,k
seeds contain tl1c good fatty ac'llh
(C1mtinued un l'a~e 3)

·Simpson jurors will view
phptos of murder victims
L.OS ANGELES (AP) - The
Jumble of numhcrs ""d lelters tllat
dominated teslimony during the
DNA teslimony in the OJ. Simp' "" tnal gJve&gt; way totlay 1o· grim

. Under the pm,ecu11ou theory,
S•mpson pmncd his ex -wife lo U1c
ground on her s10mach. yanked her
head back by grabbing her hlond
hrur. and slashed her throat. ·
. GQldma!l, prosccuiOI'lo ., ay. was

;Lutopsy p1ctuH!:-i anU coroner
llc~cription~
w o und~ .

of killing k11ifc

l'tJL· duel coroner lor LO.\ Angc ~
.lc:,. County n::turn.s lO th'c witnes~
"tanO tu lh.scus s the autOpsies on
the k!Hic-sl:'(,hcd bodies of Nicole
Drown Sunpson. :1) . and ller 25,
vcar -n hJ lnenll Ron,~d ( ioldman.
· ( 'o roncr Lak~llmanan Sattlyava g t ~ v. aran i\ expe cted to :.. how
JU ror\ photo~ !nun hl'l orc and durlllit th e :IUIOpSl l'!-.

GUN RALLY~ Radio talk show host G. Gordon Liddy spoke
to the Committee of 1776, a pro-gun rights group, in front of the
Lincoln Memorial in Washington Suiiaay. The grulip iScallirig fnr
revision of certain gun control laws. (AI')
·

I

plm l(_l.'l th;-tt lilt!

dctt:n:.c haLl uthurcc:.~l qll y tried to
keep from Ute jury
'fht: COHHK'r·~ g raphi C lt.:.'. tunnny
will be in s tarR contr;p.,t to the
jury ' .s . w c c.kcml · tar e A t &lt;I ... ccrct
!,&gt;calc. lhe 'cq uc q e red panel
watched an impnWI'iatiOJlai coJnCtly troupe 01.1 Sa1urd:1y
Back in .courl. th ey' ll h.t, c a
look ~t the autopsy photo' tllat are
so gn'ily the judge to ld !hem laSl
week IlOilO be shy ab&lt;HJI 3.\king lor
breaks
The prhsccutl&lt;)U comcnd ~ the
pictures graphically illuwatc not
_.g!~U'. tJ~e horro" nl tiiC killings. hot
JUS! how Snnpson allcFc dly c&lt;&gt;lll ·
mitted them .

~

contcrcd m a gatcd· in nrcu and bru ~

tally knifed to dcatJ1 .
The ~msecution also is counting
on the ptctures and the erudite tcsti·
mon y of the respected coroner to
d_ivcrt attenlion from llawed :lUiop.·
stes pcr1onncd m the ca.«e.
Sa!hyavagiswaran acknowl ed~cd Friday that one ol his pathologists, Deputy Mcdtcal Examiner
Irwin Golden . made. errors in the
autopsies.
· Golden , who ;,. cxpccled to testify after S~thyavagiswaran.
emerged as a poor witness during
UJc preliminary hc:tring . In addition
to an edgy manner on Ute stand he
waffl ed in his teslimony ah~ut
what wc:tpons were used.
•..
Rohcn Pugsley, a law prnJCssor
al Southwestern Univer~ity , said he
expects the prosecution .to rely on
SaUJya.v agtswaran and lhc photos
to defuse the defense ' s criticism of
Golden .
"What il wi II do is preoccupy
the jury witll the cn1o1mnal photographic ev!llcnce of what they' re
..;('eing," Pugsley srud.

�.
Monday, June 5, 1995

·'Commentar
•

·The I;)aily Sentinel
'

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ROBERT .L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Geoeral Manager

•

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETT'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words Ions All leners are subje&lt;: t to edtting aod must be Signed wtth name.
address and telephone number No unsigrJAI letters wtll be published Letters
should be m good taste, addre~osing ISSues, not personaht1es

. Big changes in store
:.for death row appeals?
By LAURIE ASSEO
Associated Pres.• Writer
WASHINGTON - Slate dealb row uunates who challenge thelf convictions in federal court assert a rigbl that bas been called the "symbol
and guardian or indivloual liberty...
Now, Republicans and DemocraiS seem ready to enact some fundamental changes m the way pnsoners can exercise the right wrilten inlO lbe
Consutulloo 208 years ago
·
Fed up with reports of mmales spending a decade or more on dealb
row while pursumg vanuus legal slrategtes, many Democrals are willing
10 limit the filing of such appeals.
Republicans support that, but they want 10 go even further by scrung a
new legal st.111dard that would make it harder for such appeals 10 succeed.
· The GOP proposal ts •'a sea change of a son that withdraws 200-yearold rights," says Columbta Umverstly law professor James S Ltebman,
an expert on lbe process known as habeas COJllUS
The Consutl!tiop allows people who are in custody to challenge the
legality of !heir confinement by seckmg a wnt of habeas corpus - Laun
for "you have lhe body"
That means death row pnsoners and olher slate mmates whose convictions have been upheld by slate appeals courts can go lo federal court lo
argue that !heir rights were vtolatcd at tnal .
It's known as lhe "Great Wnt" In 1968. Ch1ef J usuce Earl Warren
called tbc provision the guardian of indi.vidual liberty.
The scope of !hat appeal nghl has been narrowed m recent years b1lhc
Supreme Court. In 1991, llle jusuces gave most inmates only one chance
10 file a federal appeal .
·
Senale Republicfllls would wnte a similar provtsion mlo (ederal law
Sepilf3le proposals by Senate and House Republicans would set a oneyear time limit for filing federal appeals - and less time if the slate pro. vtded a lawyer for lhe slate habeas aJ?peal. They also would sel SlrtCl time
linuts for federal courts to act on such appeals.
But the most ·far-rcachmg change mtght be the GOP proposals to
require federal courts to deler lo stale courl rulings on legal issues unless
!.hey are unreasonable.
Thai's Ute main 1ssue on which Republicans part company wiUt the
Democrats The Clinlon admmtstruuon and former Senate Judiciary
Ch:unnan Joseph B1den, D-Del , wanl ltme llmtts for filing appeals, coupled wilh incenuves lor shttes 1o provtde adequate Ictal lawyers lor pocr
defendants . Butlhey don't want to curb the rev1ew power ot lcderal
Judges.
Federal courts always bave made their own indc &gt;endcnl declStons on
tssues or law m such cases.
L1ebman says the Republicans' proposed standard would require a federal court 10 uphold an mcorrecl state rulmg; so long as 11 was not unrca-

j

~onable.

Thai could increase the chances ol 'ill mnocent person being executed,
lawyers who defend inmates. Stephen Bnght, direclor of the
SouUtem Cenlcr for Human Rights in Atlanta, says Uta! defcrrmg 10 dcctsions by elected state JUdges can brmg 100 much political pressure on
ac~m&lt;llng 10

cases

•
•
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\

\

WASHINGTON -Two words small companies that applied for
tbe prognm a few years ago claim10 have been left out of tbe
Departmenl of Energy's "small ing to be owned by Native AmeridisadvanJaged business" program: cans, and tbcrefore socially di'&lt;adCommon sense. A review of the
program provides an embarrassing
remmder of why tbe Clinton
administration's review of affumative acuon is long overdue.
While this program was
launched wtlh the best mtentions, it
has evolved mlo a syslem where vantagcd W1tllllut vcnfytng 11
cbeatmg not only goes unpunished Utesc finns were mmonty owned ,
- 11 can often bring multimillion- lhc pnmary contracting ct•np;m1es
dollar windfalls from the federal awarded them a combined $14.5
government.
million in subconlracls.
Tbe "small d1sadvanraged busi::~_ . When DOE audilors b'Cgan
ness'' program was designed t~noopjng around after Ute fat~ the
g1ve nunonty-owned flfms a leg up subconlraCtors were unable to proin winning subconlracling work, v-lde any "documemed proof" of
from lhe governmenl. As a result/ their ances1ry. lnslead, the owners
large private firms like Westing- said !hey relied "mainly on what
house, Boeing and Martin Marietla, IIley had been wid by relatives or
which operate entlfe DOE facili- information recorded in a fam1ly
ues, are required to set aside a cer- bible."
rain pari of lhelf subcontracting
Sadly, thts was not an isolated
work fo~ minorny-owncd firms. mctdent. By fatling to police tis
Unfonnnately, neilber llle DOE nor own policies, lhe OOE has created
lhe conlracting flfms WC(C required a system where subeonlraclors who
10 check if the subcontractors really apply are essenttally on the honor
were as dtsadvantaged as they system when il comes 10 reporting
clauned.
their minorily status. Awards are
Take for example lbc case of 12
out based on ''vendor self-

.

But Texas Attorney General Dan Morales, who backs the Senate
Republicans' bill, says h's entirely proper for federal judges to dcler ~o
reasonable state court rulmgs. "Texas courts arc lully capable of assuring
that legttimate revtew 1~ had," he says
Morales wants 10 shorlen lhe habeas appeal process to lour years. al
inosl Afler that Ute system begms losmg tts legttimacy, he conlends
Settmg June llfmts for filing appeals would he a huge chrutge m ttsclf.
There " no limtt now, whtch means dealb row mmales can wait unul an
execution,dale has been sel to file a habeas appeal.
The proposal would have less effect on prisoners who arc not on death
row They already have an mcentivc to file qutckly m hopes of getung out
ofpnson
But a ltlne lumt would creale one more chance for a mistake that could
doom an mmarc's appeal, no matter how valtd it IS otherw1se.
Robert Morin, a Washinglon, DC .. cnmmal delcnse lawyer, says lhe
process of revtcwmg death penally appeals already appears to be speedmg
up because many legal 1s.ues have been resolved smce the Supreme Coun
restored capm~ punishment m 1976
lndced, the number of executtons has been rismg smce hitung double
dtgtls "' 1984 There were 38 executions in 1993, 31 lasl year and 26 so
far U1is year wtlh 1995 not half over There are more than 2,000 people on
death row nauonw1de
Wtlllam P Barr. anomey general tor Prestdent Bush, says be trted to
get rcvtslons suntlar to Ute current GOP proposals lhrough the Dcmocrauc
Congress at lhc 11me, but would have been wtllmg to compromtsc , ,
" In retrospect, Joe B1den should have cut a deal w1th me, he
quipped
EDITOR •s NOTE- Laurie Asseo covers the Supreme Courl and
legal issues for Tbe Associated Press.

Berry's ~orld

ccnification," where business
owners fill out 'fonns claiming to
be socially or economically disadv;UJ~tged.

According 10 lhe audil, lhe
DOE's "management and operalmg COillraCIOrs awarded $26.3 mtllinn - or 20 percent of the money
reviewed in a random audit'- to
33 ~ubeonlraCtors whose eligibilily
was quesuonable because they
were not owned and managed by
socially and economically dtSadvanlaged indtviduals " The majonty of lllese false self-cerufiduions
were made by "subeonlraCtors who
claimed 10 be socially disadvantaged" but were not.
One business owner wbo pleaded hardship was found to have a
net worth in excess of $750,000.
Four subcontractors who claimed
to be "&amp;mall disadvanLagcd businesses" actually had annual sales
ranging from $46 mtllion to $76
million, even !hough tbc program is
designed for CQ!!lptl!lies with annual sales of less t.hail $4.5 million. ·
In lhts program, however, it
may nor pay to be honest. Before
lhc repon carne oul, DOE nol on I y
failed to check up on tts subconlraclors, 11 also failed to penalize

2UD

SourtDS
1 IFBe iT'l'ROO,
I

T~ GooD To

if ~8LV iS.

~SuSPiCiOUS
• • iF You'Re ToLD

•

Vou''/e Wot-1

WiTHOUi
e.NTe.RitlG
~N'{THit(;.

Tl{e Tay. CUT

iS YouRs. :3LL
You Have. To Do

iS Cl.3iM iT/

:$-J.'t Tl?iLLIOH !'
$9a&gt; 8 iL~iOI'f?
$1S08ii.LiON?
WoliLP VC4J

BeLieVe ...

Helena S. )Vbillock Brickles, 84, of Pomeroy, dted Sunday, June 4,
1995 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born April 12, 1911 in Pomeroy, lhe daughler or the late Hinun and
Sophia Meyers Whitlock, she was a homemaker. She was a member of
the Sacred Heath Catholic Church and lhe Sacred Heart Cathohc
· Women's Club.
Sbe is survived by ber husband, H.C. "Red" Brickles of Pomeroy; sister, Mary Kunzelman of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews
She was preceded in dealjl by four brolhers and one sister.
Services will be 11 a.m . Wednesday in the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, wilh the Rev. Fr Walter Hemz ofucmung. Burial will follow in
the Sacred Heart Cemetery. Fnends may caU between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Home
A vigil will be held at8:45 p.n\. Tuesday at the funeral home.

those who broke the rules. DOE
oflietals now say llw violators will
be punished, yet there are no plans
10 aggressively beef up CQmphance
enforcement
Meanwhile, the DOE says u's
working on the problem. "We're
commg up wilh a process !hal
would randomly check the subconlraclors periodically," Corlis
Moody, director of minonty economic impact at DOE, told our
reporter Aaron Kal]l. "Now that
we know there is a problem, we're
lrymg to be more careful."
In eilher case, programs like Ibis
should provide plenty of grist for
Repubhcans m Congress, who are
planmng to eliminate such selasides altogelher.
UNDER THE DOME - House
Speaker
Newt
Gingrich
euphemistically declared lbe recent
Memorial Day recess a· "district
work penod," yet some members
of Congress and stare were packing
suntan lotion and dreaming aboul
lhe fairways
The latesl JUnkel carne courtesy
of the Cellular Telecommumcaltons lnduslry Association, which
footed the btll for a "Wireless
Leadership Forum" in Soulll Lake
Tahoe, Nev. The "forum" conSisted ul bnef "mornmg businds
agendas" descnbed m an invilation
the CTIA sent lo members of
Congre~s as "both informational
and enjoyable" and "Informal"
Aflernoons and evcnmgs, however,
"are reserved for ,you" and your
spouse or gucsl lo Jake advan1age
of lhe magnificent scenery "
The CTIA, established in 1984,
is lhe national organ11.ation of lhe
Wifeless commumeattons induslry.
It's extremely active on Capilol
Hill, weighmg in on a vartety of
lelecommunicaliOns issues. The
CTIA' s polittcaJ actton committee
gave more than $33,000 lo members of Congress and candidales
during the las! eleclmn cycle
Judging hy the hst of Lake
Tahoe acltvtlles !hat accompanied
lhe invtla11on - mcluding golf and
tenn1s 10urnamenrs, specdboal
charters, and hot-air balloon rides
- we suspecl some lawmakers
didn't live up to lhc spmt of the
"dtSlriCl work penod."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Allen E. Dill Sr.

WVA.

a

•

Pt

Cto:.:dy

Cloudy
C111115Accu--. Inc.

By The Assoclattd Press .
in the '6os.
Tonigbt ... Mostly
clear
Wednesday ...MosUy sunny and
north.. .Increasing cloudiness south
warm . Htghs m the 80s Upper
Lows 60 to 65 .
80s northwest.
Tuesday ... Partly to mostly
Thursday. A cbartce of thundersunny. A chance of of a late after- storms. Lows in lbe lower and m1d
noon or evening thunderstorm 60s. Htghs ·in lhe upper 70s to the
western third. Htghs m lhe lower mid 80s.
and mid 80s.
Friday . A chance of showers
Extended forecast:
and lhunderslorms Lows m the
Tuesday mghl A chance of _ lower and m1d 60s. Highs m !he
showers and tltunderstorms. Lows upper 70s north to the mtd 80s
soulh

Southern, Meigs Loca.l ...
(Continued from Page 1)
cerllficate by Ute histoncal soctety
in apprectauon or their work with
sludents.
In llle honored group were Debbie Roush, .nominared by Aulumn
H1ll and Josh Rowe, James Wtckhne, nommated by Jenn Morris,
Wtlliam Baer, nominaled by Teresa
Bush and Kara King, and Pauline

Hill, nommated by Smcy Wtlson,
Southern Local Dislricl; and Sandra Walker, nominated by
Slephanie Kopec, Mary Grim,
nommaled by Meghan AvtS, Linda
Zarnock nom mated by P J Erwm,
Gay Pernn, nommated by Sonya
Luchfield, Debbie Seber! nmninated by Lucy Howerton, aqd Lynn
Bookman nominated by Kyle
Smiddie

Regional businessman ...

Then there 1s Sen Joseph B1dcn.
Democrat of Delaware, who used
to be chrunnan of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Bidcn teaches
consututtnnallaw m hts hometown,
and I remember reachmg hun by
phone late one night JUSt outstdc
the Senate lloor as be saved the
Fourlh Amcndmcnl practicall)1 smgle-handed from a Republican
auack
But now Btden has supponed
the Democrauc prcstdent' s attempt
10 expand wtretappmg w1thout a
court order Thts was too much for
the u111lted RepubliCan majonty,
which proceeded to teach the
DcmocraL~ a consurutionallesson.
Ncilhcr party, however, can be
conststently depended on to protecr.,
our righls and hberues under lhe
Consltlutwn But lhal shared frulmg ts unlikely to be a major issue
- or even a mmor 1ssue - m the
preSident ial earnpatgns thai have
already begon Too many Amencans nrc largely unaware of U1e1t
constllultonal nghts . We have
democmcy, to be sure, but fot how
long will we have constiluttonal
democracy?
Nat Hentorr is a nationallyrenowned nuthorily on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Rights.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1·
lllHl-827-6364, ext, 8317.)

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__

Emma Jane Searls
Enuna Jane Searls, 84, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, June 4, 1995 at St
Mary's Hospital, Huntinglon, W.Va.• followmg a brief tllness.
Born Dec. 13, 1910 in Sabina. the daughter of the late John Oltver and
Laura Angeline Searls Wildman, she was a homemaker.
She is survtved by her daughter, Alice V. Wagner of Middleport; fosrer
daughter. Rose Haggy of Springfield, brother, James W1ldman of Lake
Ctty, Tenn.; seven grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and five greatgreal grandchildren; and severalmeces and nephews
She was preceded in death by her husband. Cectl Searls Sr; mfant
granddaughter; a brolher; and two sisters
Semccs will be II a.m Wednesday m lhe Rutland Freewill Bapust
Church. Burial wiU follow m the Mtles Cemelery m Rutland. Friends may
call between 2-4 and i-9 p m Tuesday at lhc church Arrangements are
by lbe Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland

Meigs announcements
Bloodmobile lo come
Red Cross Bloodmobile will be
at !be Senior C1t1zens Cenler,
Wednesday, I to 6 p.m Gladys
Cumings, county chairman, urges
residents to donalC.
Eastern boosters
The Eastern Athlelic Boosrcrs
will meet at 7:30 p .m Tuesday at
. the high school. _

day at the ball Meal wtll be furmshed Fathers wtll be recogmzed
All are welcome

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township trustees
will meel Wednesday al 6 p.m. at
the lownship hall.
Chester Gardelt'Ciub - Chesler Garden Club will hold
an open meelmg al the Chester
Mclllodist Church, Wednesday at
7"30 p m. Speaker Hal Kneen .
Rock Springs Grange
Rock Springs Grange w11l meet
Thursday , 8 p m for annual mspccuon Members should plan to
attend

Hospital

Today's livestock report

Stocks

Lessons of history must be heeded
unltkc now - and de&gt;pllc lhc
Forty -ctght years ago thiS
!be world today are as msoluble
1L' feet economtcally," he satd
Republicans' underlymg suspicton
month, Secretary of Slate George
wtUwuL conststent Amencan lend·
Note Uw lllSIStencc un European of foreign entanglement and PresiMarshall skelchcd lbe bare o utline
crshtp as they were then
mwauve. Washington wou ld sup- denl Truman's pugnacious parh ot whm bccrune known as U1c MarHowever, a false reading of Ute
pot t dec~&amp;!On s rn ther than die late "'"'h•p - btpartisanship became
shall Pion Speakmg to U1e llarv;lfd
them ThallhiS was the approach in the lcmchstonc.
Alumm AssoCialton , Secretary
1947, when uS power wa s
Sen Arthur Vandenberg of
Marshall extended the band of
unquesttonabl c, has specta l rcle - M1chtgan, who had been an ISOiaAmcncan economiC assistance to a
past can be as rnasleading as tgno~
vance tci Arnencau torCJgtl policy Uontsl before the war, was offered
devaslated Europe, not to allcv1ate
ranee The Marshall Plan wa~ netm 1995, when tt " not. Whatever and accepted whal amounted to an
a temporary crists but lo build a
!her conce1ved nor execuled as a
Amcnca decides, 11 will succeed equal partnership m lhe Marshall
foumL1uon tor long-tenn growUt It
umlateral Amcnc'm 1111Uat1VC or a.'
only 10 lbc degree tl IS offered as a Plan 's bulh Wtthout him and ht &lt;
was a h1stonc break w11h AmeriU1e sole product ot a DemocratJc
cooperaltve venlure to like-mmded GOP allies, 11 would have hved and
ca's JSolnttonJSt past
__..,_,president. Full Europe''" part1c1paparU1ers
dtcd as 'ill 1ntcrcstmg, but irrcleIt IS no exaggerauon to say lhal
tion was cnucal al every stage of
Gec1rgc Marsl1all's unscnttmcn- van~ idea WiUt lum. 11 became lbe
Uic past half-century of peace and
the plan's developmenl Srrong
tal , clear-eyed humthty is equally most successful foreign policy ini prosperny in Western Europe has
b1par11san support fro"\' lhe Repubrelevant He never found it ncce&lt;- ttattve tn American hislory . At
been tlte direcl result of !hat w1se
ltcan -controllcd Congres~ was
s;lf)' to gtld the lily. As he noted a every stage of the way , he was
exerciSe m enlightened self-inlermdispensable.
short lime afler h1s mit1al speech, g1vcn lull crecllt for lus,role
est It IS equally true that the MarThe lead sentence mlhe Assoctlhc news med1a's "reference to a
Vandenberg, M'lfshall, Truman
shall Plru1's successful unplementaalcd Press account of Marshall's
plan was defmitcly mislcadmg . and theJC contemporaries had
twn ensured Uwt oommumsm was
speech at Harvard on June :5, 1947.
There was no plan. There was a belore them U1e still VIVId exrunple
fimshcd as an econo1111c and politicaplured lhe nature of his proposal
suggesuon Now we arc in the pro- ' of lhc potsonous aftcrmalh of lhe
cal threal in the developed world.
It ts satd !hat he ''ca lled upon C(.'!is of drafting a plan as a proposal posl-World War I Versrulles peace
But !his 1s not a column about
Europe to work out togelher a great ' to the Congress of lhe Untied conlerence.
fast-recedmg lustory The Marshall
new program of reconstructiOn
Srates"
Hodding CaTter Ill, rormer
_ '"·-" Plan cxpenencc e&gt;m ami ~holl)d be
wbtcb lhc U.S. w~~ld suppon so
Both m Ute draftmg and m lhe State Department spokesman
11li!""J&gt;bla1'Stai'1orU.S: poltcy-as we----far-as was"'Jlfl!Cllcal . ------. - -~-· pahtics--of'l:ongression&amp;J. passage, :.O!Id-~w&amp;rd•winning-nporler, ediapproach the mtllennmm The
"II would be netther efficacious
lhe Truman administration made a tor and publisher, is president or
problems !hat confront ns reqmre
not fitting for lhts governmcnl to virtue out ol nccesstty Then , as MuinStreel, a Washington, D.C.underiake to. draw up umlalcrally a
now, a Republican Congress faced based television producllon com- ,
no less '"!'ovauve approaches !.han
tn 1947 fhc dtlemmas thai face
program destgned to pul Europe on 11 Democrattc pre sident. Then, pany •

•
Allen Edward Dill Sr., 88, of Pomeroy, died Monday, June 5, 1995 al
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Born Aug. 8, 1906 m Pomeroy, ·the son of the late Edward and Anna
Ombler Dill, be was a !rUck driver. He was a member of lhe Mount Hermen United Brethren Church.
He is survived by his daughrers and sons-in-law, Gladys and William
Bowers of Cuyahoga Falls, and Doris and Clarence Spurrier Jr .. of Eagle
River, Ala; daughlers, ·PhylliS Bearhs and Kathryn Wildennulb, bolb of
.Pomeroy; and son and daughter-in-law, Allen Edward D1ll, Jr., and Alice
Dill of Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by bis wtfe, Goldie Persinger Dill; brolhers,
Homer and Rollin Dill; sister, Gladys Sntilll; sons-in-law. James Bearhs
and Charles Wildermuth; and two great-grandsons.
Servtces will be I p m Thursday in the Moun! Hermon United
Brethren Church, wtlh lhe Rev . Robert Sanders offictaung. Burial w11l
loU ow in lhe Mount Hermon Cemetery. Fnends may call between 2-4 and
7-9 p.m Wednesday at the Ewmg Funeral Home
•

stalks
The Ohio Hempery IS a partforce plowed U1e piOl under, arguowner
of a fabric mill m China. and Middleport Lodge sets date
ing thai the hemp had tested high
The Middleport Masonic Lodge
the hemp is grown near the mill
enough m lhe necessary chemicals
will
meet al 7:30 p m. Tuesday at
The hemp is turned into clolh and
to be constdered marijuana
the
Middleport
lodge. Work wtll be
the fabnc is imported to the United
The demand for hemp-based
on
lhe
Masler
Mason
degree.
Slates
goods has mcreased, perhaps
The cost ol hemp clothmg IS
"because of concern for the envlfon·
bigber
lban typtcal clothes: $55 for Burlingham Woodmen
ment - hemp IS reportedly an
The Burlingham Modem Woodearth-fiiendly crop - or a love tor hemp JCans, $89 for a Jean Jacket • men !"'ill meet at 6:30 p.m. Saturbanned products. The number of and $48 for a shirt
businesses tn the country has
increased from a few 111 1991,
when The Oh10 Hempery mcorporated, lo more than 100,
Wmshalter smd.
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndtana- pomts 33 50-38 50
Sows: steady to 50 cems htghcr
Distnbutors
such
as
WiriShafter
Obto dlfect hog prices at selecred
1
U.S.
1-3 300-500 lbs 24 00mtport seeds from China, Thailand.
buymg pomts Monday by lhc U.S.
27.50;
500-650
lbs. 27 50-29 50, a
Romant:i and other countries. at a
Deparunent of Agriculture Markel
few
over
650
lbs
30.00
cost of 50 cents to $1 a pound, s:uu
News:
Estimated
recetpts:
32,000
Chns Boucher, a member ol the
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady
Prices
trum
The
Prudut:ers
Hempstead Company, a hemp
to weak, demand moderale.
Li,·eslock
Association:
clolhing company based in Cos1a
US 1-3, 230-260 lbs. , counlry
Cattle: uneven, 50 cents lower
Mesa. Calif.
points 38 50-40 00 , '' few 40 25;
to
1.00
higher
Once the seeds are rece1ved,
plan1.1 39.50-41.00.
Slaughler
steers: choice 58 50!hey are sent to a sterilization cenUS 2-3, 230-260 lbs. , counlry
66
00
,
select
53
00-60 00
ter which the U S Drug EnforceSlaughter
he1Jers
ch01ce 58 00ment AdtmmslraUon has approved
66
00,
sclcct50.00-60
00
They have to be sleruned lor about
Cows:
uneven,
2.00
IQwcr lo
five mmutes, because 11 is Illegal to
2.00
hl£her;
all
cows
48
00 and
have h vc seeds ~apable of germina'
down
Am Elc Power . ........... ......34 718
tiOn," satd David Smigelskt, dtrecuuevcn
,
2
00
lower
to
Dulls·
Akzo
.............................
.
.....
60
7/8
tor of markettng and communica4
00
Ingb
er,
a
ll
bull&gt;
59
00
and
Ashland
011
.
...
..•..
....
.
.
....
36
l/2
lJons for The Oh10 Hempery
AT&amp;T ................ ..... ........ 50 3/4
down.
The seeds are then released to
Bank One... .... ..
... 34 5/6
Veal calvcs:- stcady to lugher,
U1c company Some arc sold whole
Bob Evans
.. 20 liZ
choice
220.00 and down.
' and ground into flour, whtle many
Champion Ind ......................2 1 3/6
Sheep
and lambs· steady to 2 50
are pressed tor thelf otl, Smigelski
Charming Shop ... .. . ..... 4 l/8
lower,
chotec
wools 7R 00-96 50.
City Holding ... ... ...
27
said.
cho
tec
chps
90
00-95 00; feeder
F&lt;'llerul Mogul ......................17 7/8
Some or the oll 1s used for food
lambs
107
00
and
down , aged
Goodyear T&amp;R. ..
.. 42 3/8
product&amp; such as salad dressmgs,
sheep
39.00
and
down
K-mart.. ................................. 13 l/8
and the rest is used for skm care
Lands
End .............................. ! S 3/8
products such as massage oil and
Llmlled Inc. ... .... ..... ..21 3/4
body creams, be said. The fiber for
Multhnedla Inc .................. . 3~ 3/8
cloth and paper comes from the
In a semifinal game of the 1977
P&lt;'Oplc's .............................. 22 J/4
NCAA basketball tournamenl ,
Ohio Valley Bank... ............... 34
Nevada-Las Vegas made only one
One Valley .......................... .301/2
free throw while losing to North
Rockwell
...........................
44
J/4
Daily
Robbins &amp; Myers.... ..... . ....... 25
Carolina.
(USPS ll3·960l
Royal Dutch .......................... 126

The

Sentinel

!fbhshed ever~ aflernoon, f'l1ondo y througfl
f'nd ay, I ll Court St, Pomeroy, Oh10 by the
Oh10 Valley f'ublu:h1ng CompanyiMu llun~dl a
In~

Pomeroy, Oh10 45769 Ph 992 2156
Second chm po~t Qge pwd at Pomeroy Ohio

Hodding Carter /1/

ALL THIS CAN BE YOURS

s:my

Warmth, sunshine on tap
in Ohio throug~ Tuesday

You can't trust the Democrats either
Nat Hen toft

Columbus Southern plans outage

Helena S. Brickles

oonditiooa

(Continued from Page 1) •

Readmg the fund-raismg leiters
courts.
and his btll COUld be USed tO VIOlate
of lhe American Clvtl Liberties
But look al what the Democrats lhe constilutional rights of domesUmon and Olher liberal organizaare up to in dtminishmg lhe Consu- ftc polittcal orgamzattons - and
tions; you would lhink that our libtuuon The leader ol tl1e party, our make Amencans fearful of engagerties and nghts are m appalling
mg m legitimate dissent.
danger solely from lbe right wing .
Revealingly, the presidenl's
Especially from the ullraconserva"emergency" wiretap bill was
ptestde nt , used 10 leach constitu- inlroduced-by lhe Democratic Sen
tive Republicans who have seized
tional law at the UntverStty of Joseph L•eberman of Connecttcul
control ol Congress
Arkansas, but hi s text mus l have He tS almost mvanably relerred to
A parual case CaJI be made for
!hat doomsday alann. In lhe I louse, been a comic book introduction to a.~ a thoughtful moderate Demothe Repubhcans have pracucally • lbc Dill of Rtghls. Mr Chnton has crat, but apparenlly Lieberman
deslroyed the FourUt Amendment , already inlroduced a bill thai would does not belteve tn moderauon m
allow legal aliens - suspecled defense of ciVIl libertiCs If Repuhwh1ch proh1h1ts the slate from
"terrorists" - 10 be deported ltcan Je~se Helms of North Carolisearchmg your home or busmess
lhrough
use of mformers whom Ute na had 11\lroduced the same btll,
wilbout a warnmt. And m lhc Senate, Omn Halch of Utah, chrunnan defendants are not allowed to see, U1cre would have been an oulcry in
let alone cross-examine Yct !here . the press aboul radical right Repubof the Senalc Judtciary Comminec,
ts a hne of Supreme Court cases licans embarkmg on a search and
ts determmed to ftn!Sh lhe JOb by
clearly
Slating that legal altens have des1roy mtsston hgamst lhe Consuplacmg lhe Fourlh Amendmenl in
lhc same nghts of due process as lution
an unmarked grave
In both the House and Senate, lhe res t of us
As some ol hts own radtcal
The prestdent has also proposed assaults on the Constllutton are
!he Republicans arc also engaged
extenSive added wuetappmg pow- beaten down by a maJori!y of lhe
m cnppllng the Great Writ - lbe
wrtt ol habeas co rpu s - that ers for lhe FB l. lncludmg lhc usc of Republicans,
!he prc s tdcnl
"rovmg" taps - listening on :uty responds witll worn-out polemics
allows Ute federal ccmrls to revtcw
th e 4.:unviCtiOn!) and se ntences phone a suspect might usc It cnuld In cntiCIZtng what he caJis lhe slow
be your phone. And the FBI pace of "antHerronsm" lcgtslahaudcd down by state couns when
wouldn't have to geL a warr:ml tor tiOn 111 Co ngress - mcludmg the
lhc Iauer appear to be unconstttu·
twnal The Republicans wam 10 each tape
rejection of some of Jus bills Supporttng another Cl tnton Clinlon talk s m The Washmgton
lumt those habeas corpus appeals
to federal co urts lo only one wtreJ.1ppmg demand in tlte Senate Post of ':u1e old pohttcs of dtveraJter a pnsoner has cx hausled bts - permt tllng tap s for 48 hours SIOn and del;ty" !hat play "mto Uw
w1Lhout a coml order .:...._ were many hand s of Utosc who would blame
state court remed1es.
[ have extCIISIVe fil es, however.
Democrats But lhe legtslmor who law enforcement officers who keep
of people on dealh row who were helped ktll lhc proposal wa.,, ol all the law rather !han the Crtl\Hna ls
fmally able to prove then mno- people, Rcpubltc:m Ornn Hatch
who break It "
cence through habeas corpus
He ts not usually regarded as lhe
But law en l o tcement off1cers,
appeals ctght, I 0 and 13 years after champiOn of c1vtl hberlles. but he like ll1e prcs1den1. swear to uphold
they had gone throu gh the state srud !hat Clmlon had gone too far.
the Consltlutmn They do not t.'lke
a n oath to undcnninc tt.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Deaths-- Local News in Brief:

Tuaday, June 6
Accu-W lb-" fcncutt far

Cheats take easy advantage of DOE program
appear

-~INC.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

....

Monday, June 5, 1995

I

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obio

.

Page2

Mtmbtr: 11Je Assocmted Pres~. und the Oh•o
New ~ paper Auocuuwn

POSTMASTER: Send nddress

comcuon~

to

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Uy Carritr or Motor Routt
One Week
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.'

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not de~lflng to pay the cnmer may

renu t m udvnnce d.rect to The Dlllly Semmel
on a three s1• or 12 month basu Credu wtll be
gtVcn earner each week
~o subscnpuon by mual permuted ln
where home earner teno1ce 11 nva1 lable

nrc~

MA ILSUBSCRIPTIONS
lns•dr Mrlgs County
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$2) 92

26 Weeh .
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Jlllttt Ou~ldt Mtlp Cou_n_':':., ~~~

lJWoeks
26 Weeks
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....

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11_.

Shoney's Inc

... ...

news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissmns -none:
Saturday discharge - Irene
Gt~norc, Pomeroy
Sunday admtsston Iva
Denny, Pomeroy
Sunday discharges- none .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges June 2 - Angela
Fersuson , Dustm Jones , Arhs
Thornton, Jemuler Warth. 'Mrs
Carmon L•vely and daughter ,
BeU1el Apple, Andrew Hun~ Nora
Tumer
Uirlh - Mr 'md Mrs Charles
Walter, daughter. Oak Htll.
• Discharges June 3 - Lynette
Newton, Tma Henry , llanwell
Curd, Beulah Swmdler
nirths - jvlr and Mrs Corey
Parsons, daughter. Vmton, Mt and
Mrs Satnuel Wtllt:unso n. Southside, W Va
Disch~rges June 4 Gloria
Petne, Carolyn Ntcholson, Mrs
R1chard .CarruU•ers and son, Mrs
Charles Walter and daughJcr, Mrs.
Waylon Carnley ;md daughter
Rirth - Mr attd Mrs Waylon
Cam ley, dau ghter, Jackson.
(Jlublishcd with JM!rmission)

Columbus Southern Power Co. said tbere will be a scheduled
ouJage for approximarely rwo 10 five minures lllllight ar10:30 .
Tbe affected area mclndes the S1lver Bndge Plaza in Gallipolis
up Stale Route 7 .to Cheshire.
Oflictals said the procedure ts necessary to perform required
mruntenance on eleclrical equipment al lhe Addison Substauon on
Georges Creek Road.

Crash injures Rutland man
A Rutland man was slightly injured in a one-vehicle crash early
roday on Coumy Road 36 (Sumner), the Galha-Metgs Post of tbe
State Highway PalrOI reponed.
Duane 0 . Weber, 36, refused lrealrnent al the scene, lhe patrol
said.
Troopers satd Weber was southbound m Chester Townslup, 2.6
miles north of Slate Route 7, al 2·15 am when his ptckup !ruck
slrUck a lrCC !hal had fallen in the roadway
The ptckup wenl off lhe nghl stde of the road and struck a fence
and bridge. The p1ckup was severely damaged, accordmg to lhe
report.

Child hurt in fall frOm roof
A Middleport child fell ore a one-slory roof Sunday evenmg,
according 10 Middleport Police Departmenl reports .
Crrug Capehart, 4, of Cole Streel, fell at6:38 p.m Sunday, emergency records sbow. The child was flown viif MedFlight Ill lo Children's Hospital in Columbus
Capehart was treated and released late Sunday mghl from Children's, records show.

Trial in Snouffer case postponed
Attorneys representillg parues m lhe attempled murder trial and
felonious assault trial of Danny Zirkle and Sarah Snouffer wtll have
to agree on a new trial date.
•
An evidence suppresston heanng set for Ibis morning was canceled following lhe death !his weekend of a family member of speCial prosecutor K . Robert Toy
Zlfkle and Snouffer, bolh of Pomeroy, were md1cted last year on
charges of attempted murder and fe'lomous assault. The 1wo are
accused of poisoning Mrs. Snouffer's ex-husband, Gary, durmg the
aulumn of 1989 with arsemc, a poisonous heavy me1ai
AtlOmeys representing lhe two are awruung a dec1ston by visitmg Judge Warren J Lotz of Vinton Counly

Squads answer 19 calls
Units of the Metgs County
Emergency Med1cal Service logged
19 requests for assistance mcluding
lour lransfer calls Saturday ani!
Sunday Units respondmg mcluded.
MIDDLEPORT
12:51 p.m Saturday, Mason ,
W .Va, Jack Vance. Veteran s
Memorial HospiJal;
9:20 a m . Sunday, Overbrook
Nursmg Center, Fred Carsey ,
Pleasant VaJiey Hosp1tal ,
6:38 p.m Sunday, Cole Streel,
Craig Capehart, transported to
Chtldren's Hos~ ttal vm MedFitght
Ill helicoprer;
9 28 p m Sunday, Hudson
Streel, Chns Raybum, VMH
POMEROY
12:11 am. Saturday, Rose H1ll
Road, Nicbole Delauder. VMH;
2:30 p.m . Saturday, VFO to
Rocksprmgs Road , smoke odor at
faye Ae1ker res1dence;

'

One dead in subway crash
NEW YORK (AP)- A subway
tram slammed mto th e rear of
anolher !rain today m the mtddle of
a bridge over the Easl River, killing
the operalor of one trrnn and IIIJUrmg 60 people.
The accident shortly after 6 a.m
mvolv ed two Manhattan-bound
trruns commg in from Brooklyn on
the Wllhamsburg Bridge. It closed
the bndge for lhe mommg rush to
subway and road lraffic
The motorman of lhe rear tr:un
was fatally mjured as the nose of
ht s subway car slammed toto the
o th er, satd T ran sit Authority
spokesman Charles Seaton
Sixty people were tnjurcd .
mcludmg 26 Jakcn 10 hosptmls, one
m cnt1cal condllton, Emergency
Med1cal Servtce spokesman Gus
Pappa• satd The less severely
mJured. were taken care of aborud
lhc trrnn, he srnd
"There were people on top of
each olher'' from the unpact. one

-•-•-

.. ...... 19 S/8

Stock reporls are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advcst of

Gallipolis.

You Should Know!

ITCH'S

Membership tn FederaJed Funeral D1rectors ol Amenca
is reserved for tntjependent funer al homes . that
cons1slently meel • establtshed s tandards of
professionalism, eth1cs and sound bus1ness practices
The customized bustness management , cons ullt~g smd
ftnanctal servtces provided by FFDA permtt us to mtntmlze
our costs and maximize the serv1ces qffered famthes we
are .pnvtleged to serve

Straight - Tuc~r- !Rpusli
runera[:Home
Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152

Pren-.•d - At need- Po.&lt; meed

ALL FLATS - $5.00
HANGING BASKETS - $5.00

4\&lt;'·

We thought you should know.

~-'

,, '"""''~

passenger ~at d "Everybody was
calm Tbe serv1ce people were
excellent," another said. Ne1lher
gave a name.
EMS spokesman John Hanchar
srud none of the mjunes was lifelhreatemng . Most were neck and
back injuncs " like m a car colllston." satd EMS Deputy Chief
Ralph Cel"Vp
Hundreds or unmjured pas sengers had to &amp;lay aboard lhe train
unul the V)Cttrns were Jakcn off. All
lhe passengers were off 3 112 hours
after lhe acctdem
, The subway tracks run on a sep·
arate level, 15 to 20 feet above t.hc
roadway, comphcating the rescue
The inJured were bemg earned
from the trail\ or taken down pn
ladders to mnbulanccs helnw
"It's .a pams tak in g procc ss
Each one has to be assessed and
trtag ed," stud EMS s poke sman
Davtd Book,laver.

at

.......... 10 718

Star Dank .... ... ... ···•· ..44 Ill
Wendy lnt'l. ......................... 17 l/4
Worthington Ind . ...

4 · 30 am Sunday, Po~p e roy
Nursmg and Rehabthlauon Center,
Iva Denny, VMH;
7 ·21 a .m . Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Paul Bush, VMH
RACINE
9 16 am Saturday, Rowe Road,
Mable Philson, HMC.
RUTLAND
8.51 p m . Saturday, North Main
Stree~ Jessica Priddy, VMH;
Y 29 a m Sunday, Bradbury
Road, Fred Vaninwagen, HMC;
12 02 p m Sunday, Peach Clf·
cle , Larry Kennedy, VMH;
9:28 p.m Sunday, Me1gs Mine
2, James P. Lambert. HMC.
SYRACUSE
7 05 am Sunday, Bashan Road .
L1zZ1e Wood, VMH
TIJPI&gt;ERS PLAINS
5:20 p.m Saturday, State R011te
7, Herman Carson, Camden-Cl..,.k
Mcmonal Hospital.

~o\S

so,.

CORNER OF SECOND STREET
and WALNUT STREET

While Sa,Pply
Lost
.
WINTERS GAS STATION
Across form McClure's Restaura,ntl

J;u;l\mlo

1

l

�J

Monday, June 5, 1995

The Daily ~~!!!!!.~1

Sports
In the NBA Eastern Conference finals,

_

_

By JOE KAY
· CINCINNATI (AP) - Tbe
changes in Pete Scbourck have
been subtle - a little different
delivery, a lillie more attention 1o
the suikc zone. The results have
been stunning.
A year after the New Yott Mets
simply gave up on Schourek, be's
thriving with lbe Cincinnati Reds .
The left-bander has developed into
one of tbe best starters on tbe staff
with only minor alterations lo his
delivery.
Schourek got bis career-high
founb straight win Sunday by giving up just one hit over 7 213
innings of a 4-0 victory over lbe St.
Louis Cardinals. He matched his
career bigh with 10 strikeouts and
retired 16 consecutive batters.
He's pilcbing completely differ·
ent !ban be did wilb tbe Mets. even
though there's not much different
in his delivery. He doesn't bring
his arm back as far when be winds
up - the one ·Change the Re_ds

_ __

Magic beat Pacers 105-81 - to win s·eries
By STEVEN WINE
ORLANDO, Fla . (AP)
Sbaq's sback remains lbe Magic's
ltingdom.
With a domioruing performance
at borne, the Orlando Magic won

lbe biggest game in franchise bistory Sunday. Sbaquille O'Neal had
25 points and II rebounds to spark
a JOS-81 victory over Indiana in
Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals.

Scoreboard
Orlando lOS, lodi~&amp;Da 81; Orlando will'
Eaitcn Conference fia.o.ll4-3

Baseball

Finals

'

Major leagues

Wedne•d•y

Hol.llloo at Orlando, 9 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Fri4MJ

F.allern Oi\'Won

l!l- L &amp;1.

Ium

Boston. ~········ · ····· ··-23

11

1lJI

.676

Detroit .................. 16 20
Ballim«e ........... ~ .. 15 19
Tomato ..... .......... ..IS 20
New York .............. l4 19

How;um at Orlnndo, 9 p.m.

.444

S~and•y,June

..

8

a

.441
.429
.424

8.S
I .S

WfldDHday,JuM 1'

Orlando at Howton, 9 p.m.

Central Divhlon

Cl.EVELAI'/D ..... .. l4 10
ICa.nial City ......... .. 19 IS
MilwDulee ,. ........... 15 20

.7()(,

Ctucago.. ....... ......... IJ

21

.382

11

MlnDC$olll .............. H

26

.297

14.S

.429

I.S
2.S

.500

4

18

Sun.day,June 18
Hollllon at Orlaodo, 7 :30p.m., ir oec·
Wtdnelday, June 11
Houston at Orlarido, 9 p.m., If
oary

Saturday's scores

Jlt(:tll·

Hockey

CLEVELAND J,' Toronto 0
Bo&amp;ton 10, Seattle I
California 4, New York 2
Baltimore 9, Oakhand S
Cbleaeo 10, Deuoit 6
Kansas City 2, Milwaukee I
Mlnneaoro &lt;I, Tell.as 0

NUL playoffs
Saturday's score
New Jersey' 4, Philadelphia I; New
Jmey leads "'ieti 1-0

Sunday's scores
CLEVELAND 9, Toronto 8
Bo&amp;ton 2, Seaule I (10)
New York I l. CaliforniD 3
Detroit 8, Ol!cngo 5
Kan6u City 4, MilwauUfj. 3
Texas 7, Minnesota 2
Oaldand 14, Baltimore.6

Sunday's score
Detroit 3, Chicago 2: Dettoil ll:adtl se·
rie5 2·0

Tonight's game
New Jersey ut Philudc:lphia, 7:30p.m.

Monday's games

Tuesday's game

California (Sanderson 1· 3) at DoslOn

(Hanson HJ.) , ~ Nil

ir 11ecea-

"""Y

We .. u• l&gt;l•l.lqn
Callfornia ... , .......... :n. 14 .611
TUat; ......... ,, .., ....~ I 16 .568
Seattle ................ , ... l!tl 16 .543
Oak.land ..... , ......... liS

Friday, June 16
Orlando at Houston. 9 p.m..
•ary

S
9.5

.SS9

11

OrlaDdo atHoustot~,1 : 30 p.m

Detroit at Chica~~:o. Kp.m.

.

Detroit (Btrgmun 1-3) ul CLEVE·

LAND (Hershil&gt;er 4-1 ). 7:0!'i p.m.

Transactions

Seultle (Johnson 5·0) at Baltimore
(McDonald 1·2). 7:3' p.m.
Oakland (Dwliug 1·2) ut New York.
(HilChCOCk 2· 3), 7:35p.m.
.
Toront o (Guzman 0 · 1) at Chicag o

Baseball
~merlun lAa(lue
BOSTON RED SOX : Placed A!lro n
Sele, p!tch~:r , on the IS-day disabled list,
retroactive to May 24.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Waived
Chris Sabo, Lhird baseman, for .the pur- .
pose or giving him hill uncondittonal re-

(Abbon 2·2). 8:05p.m.
Kansu City (Appier 6·2) at Tetas
(.ewUbury 4-1), 8:3S p.m.

Tuesday's games
Detroit (Lira 1·3) at CLEVELAND
(Black 1~1), 7:05p.m.
California (SaotlefllUD 1· 3) at Bofiton '
(Looney 0-0), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Fiemill&amp; I· 3) at Baltunoroe
(Moyer O-J). '1 :35 p.m.
Oukhlnd (StoUJemyre l ·.l ) tit Ne w
Yorio: (Rivera I-I), 7:3S p.m.
\
Milwaukee (Sean Jan 2-3) at Minnl'l:ota

lease.

(Roger' 6-2), US p.m.

\

LEAGUE

t:llilem DlvWon

.!!: L hl

.!ll!

17 . .5l8

3
5

PhiladelphJa .. .........24
Montreal ................22
Alln.nt0\ ... .... ......... :..19

New

12 ..667
l6 .579

.189
.26S

22
Florido ................ ... 9 2.S
Y ork. ............. 14
Ctnh'~o~l

Weslnn

l) ..629
I ~ .629
16 .529
23 .395
2 1 .3!12
.568
.556
.4$ 9
.417

3.5
ItS

8.5

.5
4
5.5

San Frunc isoo 3, Ptl!ladelphia I
Aonda 5, ChLcago 4
CINCINNATI 8. St U,u i~o 4
}-louMon 2, Atlanta l .( \0)
Colorado 7, ·Pitlliburl!,h 6
Montreal I. San Diego 0 (1 0)
New York: 5, Lns Angell!ll 1

S\lnday's scores
6, Atlnnta2 ,
CINCINNATI 4, St. Loui~ 0
CoiOJadu 4, Pittsbur~cth 1
U.11 Ange\ez; 5, New York 3
S 1tn Diego 8, Monlleal 4
Sun Fnmclsco 4, Phil twlt.'lphirt 0
Dli ra g11 5. Flnrrcln 1
H uu ~t o n

Ne w Yor k: (J u n e~' 1· 2) at San f· ranc l~ ·
ceo {Mulhollaild 2-5), 4:0S p.m.
Pll hburgh (Neuj!le 5·1) at ClNC IN ·
NATI (Smi lt'y 3-0). 7:35p.m
Chi c a~o jMorgan I I ) :11 Atlanta (Av·
t'ry I · \ ), 7 40pnr

FlotJ d,l (Witt 1· 4) !II ll to&lt;J !ilun
tSwi Ol lcl l 1-4), lS:!t5 p.m
Sl Umt.~ ( Pelk:u~.~od.. Il- l J J t ("!,lorado

game until 52 seconds to go, up 25
points," Jackson said. "You just
don't do that."
Magic coach Brian Hill declined
to respond.11aroaway shrugged ol'l'
Jackson' s complaint.
"We're a young team: and
coach just wanted us to enjoy it,"
Hardaway said. "That's not anything 10 get mad about."

or with

YOUR
FINAL

Tartar Con1rol 6 oz. or
for Sensitive Teeth 4.3 oz .

COlT

IRISH
SPRING
SOAP

POMER
FLOWER SHOP
106 Buuemut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

gge

EXTRA STRENGTH

TYLENOL
Caplets 175's
Gelcaps l SO's

Blue or Green
5 oz. Bar

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
DANDRUFF SHAMPOO

BAN ROLL-ON
· A~g .. Fresh, Ocean Breeze or Unset.

2.5 oz.

15 OZ.
~

ban

UNITED REBATE
t"c.- ~ ,,..~ , . ,

. SALE PRICE

f&lt;OU 0 \ '

LOS ANGELESJX&gt;DGERS : Ac!rvat·
cd Mik:e Pr azza, catcher, (rom the 15-ility

list. Placed Tom Prince. catcher,
on the l S-day disabl~d list
MONT REAL EXPOS· Recall\:d Curtts
Pride, outfielder. from Onawa of the In·
temntio nnl i..t'ague.
NEW YORK METS: oP troned AI~·
to Cas!tllo, catcher, to Norfolk of the In·
ternallunal League. Activ-.ated Bill Spiers,
tnficlllt.·r, fmm lhe IS·day disatiled list.
Pl'ITSHURGII PIRATES:: Agreed to
term~ wt!ll Chad Hermansen, Bri an Scllle
and O r~ nUt;tl Coo k, ptlc ht n; . Acti vated
J11t:ob Brumfield. outfiel der', fro m the IS·
day dtsahled hM.. Sent John Wehner. third
ba.o.ernan, outri ght to Calgary of the P..-ctf·
ic Cnnst ~agu e .
SAN FRANCISCO G IANTS Placed
Mart Will iams. third baseman . on the 15·
day thsnbled list Purchased the contract
of Jue l 01imelie&gt;•. inftelder, frum PhoeniJt
of the Pacific CDall.t l..eaiue.

Montrctt/ (llcrcd i:l :\- Jl Jl Lus A n~c!es
(R. Munme;d ·3), JU 05 p.m.
f'lu larlelplHu (Mirnhli 3-1) at San Di~g{l
~ D ent.:l'i 10-S} , 10;05 p rn .

Tuesday's gamt!s
New York (Bir kbec k 0- 1) al Sa n Fran·
cisc1i (V rm L.'ln~l in[!hl.Lm 0· 0), 1:35 p. m.
l'tltdmrgh tLoa1ta 1· 2) ill CINC I ~NAn (N'iLkowski (}.0), 7:35 r m.
, ~
Lh1 cago (Trnsc hel 2· 2) at Atl a nta
(Mercb:r '2·2}. 7·40 p m
f1orida (Rapp 1·4) ~ ~ Hou.~ tuo (Drocail
1-0). 11·115 p;'m.
St Loui• (Wr.n•on 1· 2) uc ColorUdo ··
(Sw1fl 1·1 ), 9:0S p. nt
Montreal (Perez 5-0) at Los Angelt''
(Valdes 1· 2). 10:05 p.m.
Phil:tdelp hta (Wil li ams 0- 0) at Sa n
Diego (V;~Jcrauela 1·2), l O;OS p. m.

-·

Foolball

I~

·199

t~~~

FREE

MF.G MA IL

di s ab~d

199

REBATE

; ~·~; l~.,;o•/

tnc nL

.

(Acc\;t'dP '\.3 ), 9:05pm

Sunday's soore

Reg.

Baking Soda 6.4 oz.,

pitdnm.
FI.ORIOA MARLINS · PUced Jerr y
Browne , mfieldet , anti D;urell Whnmore. •
IJU t ft ~ I&lt;IW' . nn the \5-da.y dt ~ab lcd lt!il. Ac·
li v:ned Jcre n)y Hernandez, pi tcht"r , fr om
Ute 15-d.. y disabled li s!. Recalled Bob Nn·
Iat, catcher , from Charlotte of the lnlern:i.·
tional League Se nt Chuck Carr. outfield·
er, to Ch arlollc em a reh::tbtlitahon ll~1gn·

Monday's~amcs

NBA playoffs

FOULED - Orlando post- where the Magi_c won 105-81 to
man Shaquille O'Neal (lert) is · earn their first-ev.r trip lo lhe
fouled from..behlnd_by_[ndiana NBA -champioll&lt;hip round
center Rik Smits as O'Neal beats against the Houston Rockets.
him lo tbe hoop in the fourth (AP)
quarter of lhe Eastern Conference championship series finale
"Say Love Wi 1h
Sunday ni!:;~t.in Orlando, Fla.,
Flowers From!"

League

AQUAFRESH
TOOTHPASTE

same.

He hasn't added a pitch or taken
up body building. He is throwing
harder and wirming.
.
"It's probably tbe change of
scenery," Cardinals m,anager Joe
Torre- said. ·~He's throwing a lot
more strilces, geuing ahead of bitters, a lot of tbings like that. They
make a world of difference evt:n
though they seem like smal l things.
"There are very subtle differences between being good and not
being good."
Lately, Schourek has been very
good.
.
Schourek (4-2) has pitched the
best baseball of his career over his
last five &amp;tans, allowing just four
runs while striking out 39 in 38
innings. His ERA over his last four
starts -all wins -is 0.87.
"Right now I feel I can throw
every pitch for a strike at any
time," Schourek said. "I've never

.

Indians rally to slip

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 5 THAU 11 , 1995

JWitic'e, outnelder, on the 15-day disabled
list. Recalled Brian Kowitz. outfiel der ,
fr o m Ri chmond of the Internat to na.l
League. Signed Jim Scharn:r, outneld~:r;
Gerald Vecchioni , .s hortstop; Antone
Broo ks, Eri c. White, Mall McWilliams
and Keith Mayhew, pitchers; Brian Rwil
nnd Ol;cnr Otero, third base~o; nnd TCJby
Anglen , se cond baseman . ARsigned
Scharrer, Vecchioni, Otero and Whil e to
the BraVet or the Gulf Coast League ;
Brooks, M cWilliam.~ . Ru11t and Mayhew
tu Eugene of the Northwehl League; ar~d
Anglen to Dnn~ille of the' Appalachian
League.
CIN CINNATI REDS : Placed Jose
Rijo. pit cher, and Dt.-ion Sanden, outfield·
er, on the 15-day d i11:.~bled list . Recalled
Johnny Ruffin and C,.J. Nilkowskl, pitch·
er s, frnrn Indian apoli s of the Ameri can
Assoc iation A c tivat~· d Mike Jaclcso D,
pitchcr, hOm Ute 15- d:l)' disabled list. Oplioned Steve Ott'lrolh::r, outfielder, to lndi·
unupolis .
COLORADO RO CKIES : Reca lled
Mark. Titnmpson, pil cl 11~r . from Colorado
Sp riag s•or t he Pac ifi c Co ast Leagu e:
StgnW O;~v e Grosec \m e, m!relder ; Mar](
Brozozoskl and Garrt'tl Nttubal . outfield·
ers; Miehucl Vavrel.: and Chri~ Druckr..: y,

made after claiming him off
waivers .- but olberwise looks the

After shaking early 8-0 deficit,

ATLANTA BRAVES: Placed O:witl

Saturday's .scores

Basketball

I

·.
N:~tlon~

14

DiYi.~ion

San Francisco ........ 21 16
Color.ado ................ 20 16
Los Angeles ........... !? 20 ·
S a~Diego ... ....... ... l5 21

O'Neal looked unstoppable-at
times in the biggest game of his
career. The 7-foot-1 center hit llof-15 shots after a night of little
rest.
·
"It was bard for me io sleep,"
be said. "I was just dreaming about
what I had to do. I calle(l (team.
mate) Dennis Scolt a couple of
times arid be just said, 'Relax. man.
let me sleep."'
·
Giving the Pacers Iils at the
other end of the court was Nick
Anderson, whose defense cooled
off Miller. The Indiana guard took
only 13 shots , missed eight and
neverreached the free-throw line.
"I take the burden for this
loss," Miller silid. "I feel bad for _
the guys because I didn't play particularly well. They should have
nothing to put their beads dpwn
about. This is definitely Reggie
Miller blowing it for lbem."
Tbe other Pacers failed to compensate.
Indiana sbol jUst 37%. Tbe
Magic did beller than that from
three-point range, hitting 13-of-27,
including 5-of-7 by Scott.
''They were making shots and
the crowd got behind !hem,'' Indiana fOrward Derrick MeKey sl\id. - For the second consecutive yeat,the Pacers fell one game shy of the
finals. A year ago today, Indiana
lost to the-New York Knicks 94-90
in Game 7 or the conference finals.
''This is probably a little more
disappointing," M1ller silid. "Last
year a lot of guys were just excited
to be in the Eastern Conference
finals."
This year's elimination left the
Pacers bitter. Jackson complamed that the Magic kept their smrters on
the coun even when the oulcome
was evident.
"It's a total lack of class, lack
~f respect, to leave your guys in lbe

.

League..

10

DIYi11ion

Chtt:ngo ....... ... ...... 22
CINCINNATI . ...... 22 .
llot.l.'l!on ................ JH
St. Louts
... 15
P rtl.~ b w g h ............. 13

us."

KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Ploced
Lind, second biueman, on the dis·
qualified list. Sent Michael Tucker, outfielder, to Omaha of lbe Amencan Associ1Ui oli . Placed Jose Mota, infielder, on
the 15-day dt~abled list. Recalled Chris
St)'UI:S, infielder , from Omaha. Deliignat·
ed Doug Union , pitcher, for' assignment.
Purcha&amp;ed the ·cootracts of Dennis Ras muuen , pitcher, and Keith Lockhart, in.fielder, (rom llrna,ha.
·
TEXAS RANGERS . Placed Dt: uo
P.almer, Infielder. on the 15 -day disabled
li!il , Recalled Luis Ortiz, tnfiddcr, fr om
Oklahoma City (1( Ute American A.\~Jcia·
Lion.
TORONTO BLUI! JAYS : Acti v:.ned
Juan Guzman , pitcher, frqm tht! 15-day
di5abled list. Opti oned Pt~ul Me11harl,
pitcher, to Syra cu ~e of the IDternll tio nal

Toronto (Hentaeo 4· 2) at Chi caa:o
(Dere 1-4), B:OS p.nt.
Kansaa City (Gubiczo 3· 4) at Te'llus ·

fum

challenge,'' Magic forward Horace
Grant said. "I think it was lbe best
thing that could have happened to

J oM~

(Radke 2-4), S:OS p.m.

NATI~NAL

!.

"Next season," Pacers guard
Mark Jackson said, "we have to
establish tbat if there's a Game 7.
it's in Indiana."
1be Magie will have lbe homecourt advantage again for lbeir fm;t
appearance in the NBA Finals ..
They face defending league champion Houston beginning Wednesday a1 the Orlando Arena.
The rout of Indiana was serenaded by a deafening sellout cwwd
of16,010.
"They were super," said Magic
guard Anfemee Hardaway, who·
scored _17 points. "TI1ey were lbe
real sixth man for us."
The home team won every game
in lbe series. That made the difference for the Magic) whose ~9-2
regular-season home record was
the NBA's best. The Pacers finished lbe season with a record of 06 at Orlando, including 0-4 in -the
playoffs.
"
Following Indiana's 123-96 victory in Game 6, O'Neal issued a
plea for Magic fans to make plenty
of noise Sunday. They did just that,
and as·Orlando's lead increased, so
did the decibel level.
"Shaquille came to me and said, ·
· 'They're not loud enough,"' Hardaway recalled with a laugh. "I
. couldn't hear him say, 'They're not
loud enough . '_ He had to repeat
himself. So !bey were great."
The young Magic weren't bad,
eithet. Playing in a Game 7 for the
first time in lbe franchise's six-year
hislory, Orlando shot 57% and limited nemesis Reggie Miller to 12
poinls, 16 below his ave.-age for the
series. The Magic starters
outscored Indiana's 89-51.
''!don' t know when I've seen a
temn play bener in such au impor·
tant game," Pacerg coach Larr-y Brown said. "They were sensational"
.-The bottoO:. line: a 51-point
turnaround from Friday's game.
· "Whenever we get our brains
beat out like Uw~ we respond to the

FINAL

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Reds notch _
4-0 victory over Cardinals

Pa e4

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Of all
tbe thrilling comebacks the Cleveland Indians have fashioned- and
lbere have been plenty to consider
_- this may have been lbe most
compelling.
"Today' s the best," Paul Sorrento said Suriday after the Indians,
trailing 8-0 in the third inning, rallied for a 9-8 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays Qn_ Sorrento's
two-out, two-.run homer in lhe
ninth. "It's probably the best
because we were so many runs
down to a pretty good team and a
GOOD BLAST, BRET! - Cincinnati third base coach Ray pretty good pitcher."
Knight congratulates Bret Boone after the !alter's two-run homer in
Off to a major league-leading
the fourth inning of Sunday's game against the visiting St. Louis Car- 24·10 stan that matches the best in
dinals, who lost 4-0. (AP)
·'
franchise history, the Indians have
made a habit of waiting until late to
win. One-third of their viciories
this year have come in tbeir last atbat, and they have won 15 games at
Jacobs Field in their last at-bat
since the stan of the I 994 season.

· In the French Open,

Furlan ·&amp; Martinez
among latest victors

Two i&gt;f the top women's con- ·
By DAVID CRARY
PARIS (AP)- Renzo Furlan of tenders, No. 2 seed Steffi Graf and
Italy overcame a shaky slarl Mon- f'lo. 4 Conchita Martinez, also are
day to win his fourth-round match on bot streaks. Graf is 22-0 this
against Scou Dmper, a little-known year, and Martinez, the reigning_
qualifier from Australia who had Wimbledon champion,. won her
engineered three straight upsets at 25th straight match Sunday.
Agassi has cruised through the
the French Open.
The !35th-ranked Draper, cele- first four rounds without losing a
brating his 21st birU1day on Center set:
"There's definitely a strong
Coun, began tbe match with .seeming invincibility - mixing aces upside to having relatively easy
and ground-stroke winners to build matches,'· be said after trouncing
~a quick 4-0 lead.
Morocco's Younes El Aynaoui on . Furlan, trailing 5-2, took com- - Sunday. "Going into the second
mand, winning 10 straight games week, you sti ll have your legs and
as Draper's errors multiplied. sti ll feeling strong."
Though Draper set~ed down in the
· "ll's a big tournament for me,
final.scl, Furlan rolled to a 7-5,6--1, and I really want to win it."
7-6 (8-6) victory.
Agassi' s quarterfinal opponent
Draper was able to con_nect on will be Yevgeny Kafelnikov, the
only 51 percent of his firsl serves ninth-seeded Russian who defeated
fl(lnd made 64 -unforced errors to 35 Spain's Alex Corretja on Sunday .
/ Thr Furlan .
·
He relished the thought of taking
Furlan, ranked 6lsl, had never on the world No. I_
he fore reached a Grand Slam
ull dnesn'l mauer if l win or
fourth round. He will play in the lose," Kafelnikov said. "I hope I
quarterfinals against either defend- play a great match."
ing champion Sergi Druguera or
Another quanerfinal will match
Magnus Laqson. · · _
· Muster against unseeded Spaniard
Bruguera is among three co- Alberto Costa, who eliminated
favorites for the inen's title wbo two-lime defending champion Jim
have been extending remarkable Courier in four sets Sunday.
winning stre..'lks.
' All four ·women's quarterfinal
His third-round viclory Sunday pairings were determined Sunday.
gave him 17 straig(jt triumphs at ' - No. I seed and defending chamthe French Open since he began pion Anmtxn Sanchez Vicario will
marching toward the first of 1wo play unseeded Chanda Rubin of
sltaight titles in 1993.
Lafayelte, Louisana; Gmf will play
_. .
Andre Agassi, the top seed, has No. 8 Gabriela Sabatini ; Martinez
now won 18 Grand' Slam matches faces fellow Spaniard Virginia·
in a row in a streak thai encom - Ruano-Pascual, aod No . 12 Iva
passe s his U . S . and Australian Majoli will play No . 9 Kimiko
Open crowns_Thomas Muster, who Date of Japan.
joined Agassi in the quarterfinals,
Rubin, Maioli and Rijano-Pasha s won 32 s traight matche~ on cual have never played in a Grand
clay - the longest clay streak on Slam quarterfinal before, while
U1e m ~ n-· ~ tour since Bjorn Borg in Date has twice advanced tl1at far at
1979-80.
•
the U.S. Open.

"It's exciting when you've got
many guys wbo can step up and
contribute," said Jim Thome; who
drove in a run with a forceout just
before Sorrento homered. "I think
.this is as good as it get~.''
The Blue Ja)&gt;s seemed to have
the game well in band when they
jumped on Cleveland starter Jason
Grimsley for seven runs in the f~rst,
equaling Toronto's biggest opening
inning ever.
I
Grimsley walked rour in the
inning and gave up a three-run
homer to rookie Shawn Green, a
two-run single to Joe Carter and an
RBI single to John Olerud. Devon
White capped th e inning with a
sacrifice fly, and White hit another
sacrifice fly off Chad Ogea in the
third to make itS-0 . .
Ogea, however, allowed only
that one run in his 6 2/3 innings,
the longest outing by a reliever iil
the majors this season . That gave
the Indians' hitters time to catch up
~o

!

fell like that before.' '
He mixed his fastball, curve and
change-up so well tfilii the Cardi·
nals weren't sure what to expecL
"That's the biggest key to
pitching -keep them off-balance,
keep them guessing," catcher
Eddie Taubensee !aid. • 'He did that
all game."
·
The only hit be allowed was a
sof~ opposite·field double in the
second inning to Darnell Coles,
1be fly ball landed a few feet fair,
then bounced into th~ stands.
''When be first hit it, I thoughl
it was going to go foul." Schourek,.
said. "I was awfully surprised thai
it landed fair ."
The Cardinals got just one more
hit: Tripp Cromer's ninth-inning
· single off Jeff Brantley, who closed·
out Cincinnati's I lth victory in 13
games.
·
.The Cardinals took their ninth
loss in 13 games, a ·span including
five losses in !s ix games against
Cincinnati. Ken Hill (4-1) gave up

a two-run bomer to Brei Boone, aD
RB'll double to Reggie Sanders and
a solo homer to Taubensee.
After giving up seven homers',
Hill had gone 24 113 innings witlrout allowing one. He now 'has
given up nine, three shy for his
tolllllast season witb Monlteal.
" I've bad multi-homer games in
three slarts . That usually doesn'l
happen ," Hill said. "But when you
make mistakes and you get the ball
up, you're going to get bit. "
That' s been the main problem
this season for the Cardinals: undependable starting pitfhing . They
still haven't won inore than two in
a row even though they have one or
the best team batting avemges and
one of the best bullpen ERAs in lhc

league.
"I tbiak a lot of it has to do with
the starling pitching," Hili said .
''There ' £ heen no con s is,tency
whatsoever. The learn 's been
behind in a lot of ball);arnes. ' •

.

by Blue Jays 9-8
against David Cone.
"If I was a betti~gt·•inan, l
wouldn't have bet on us;i:speciall
wilb him on lbe mound,'' Tbom
said of last year's AL Cy Young
Award winner. "It was going 1o be
a- baUle. We never tried to get ali
eight back in one inning. We got a
run here, two there, and eventually
we won the grune."
The Indians scored a run on
Omar Vizquel's single in the third ,
two more on Keno y Lofton's
bases-loaded single in the rourth.
and two on Eddie Murray's seven&lt;h
homer in the fifth. ~
When Albert Delle si ngle()
home a run in tlle sixtll, Cone was
finished, having allowed six runs
and 13 hits in 5 213 innings - his
shorlest starl of the year.
"!couldn't s10n the bleeding,
justcouldn't close lbe door," Cone
said. "I couldn't really negotiate
my split-finger fastball. I threw a
lot in the dirt, a lot of them for
balls. It's really a shame to waste

that lead. It's a killer."
Still, the Indians trailcd-8-6 with
one out in the ninth when Toronto
manager Cil Qaston brought in
arren 1-!
0- I) to face Belle.
Belle hit a grounder U1at got past
second baseman Roheno Alomar
for a single . It was initially ruled an
error but later changed to a hit,
ex1ending Alomar' s s treak of errorless games to 80.
Murray then singled down the

right-field line. a ball lh:tt U1e Blue
Jays argued was foul. Thome 's
forccout scored Belle before-.Sorrenlo drove tllc next pitch for hi s
121h home run.
"II was a sinker that just llaltened out, and he hit i1 a tOn." Hall
said. "When you make a pilch like
I diu lo Sorren1o, a guy with his
strength and his power, the res a
good c.hance he" s going to hit il
out."
The Indians also starlctl 24-10
"in 1954, the yellt of Lheir last pennant, and in 1966.
:

Norman wins Memorial·Tournament
66 followed rounds of 66. 70 and last six weeks off. partly 10 res1 his hole he played - before cmbarkDUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Greg 67 that left him at 19-under 269, aching back and partly 10 take a irig on a final -round roller-coa...;ter
ride .
j ~st one .shot back of the tourna- break from hi s hectic schedule.
Norman said be didn't want to win
Calcawce hia sho~ a finabround
"It's not easy to nol touch a
ment record set a year ago by Tom
because the last round was canclub ror five weeks then hack it 67 as did Elkington , while Duval
celed, and be didn't want to just Lehman.
"Nobody else really hau a around at home for a week and bad a 68 10 finish at 15-undcr 273 .
win by a stroke.
Standing on the steep slope chance today," said Duval, who- come out and blow everybody Duval finished second for the tl1ird
behind the par-3 I 2th hole, either shot a 68 and sti ll cou ld never keep away . That doesn't happen ," Cal- time thi s season , breaking Erni e
up wilh Norman.
cavecchia said. "It shows you how Els' ycar -ohl record for rookie
option seemed remote.
earning s . Du v ~l ha s no w ·won
It was Nonnan's second Memo- good he is.''But Norman. flopped his chip
.
rial win. He won lbe 1990 tournaout of the deep and wet rough 10
Norman was one of 22 players $699,633 this year.
Jay Haas shot a closing 65 to
within inches to save par, and then · ment without firing a shot on Sun- • sltanded on the course by darkness
day when the fimu_r'bimd was can- Sa1urday night. He had 1o play the join Ben Crenshaw, Tom Watson.
showed his guile down the stretch
t"inal four holes of the third round David Frost and Roben Gamez at
Sunday to win his second Memori- celled because of heavy rains ,
13-under. Nick Price also shor a 65
"I think the second one tastes early Sunday - birdieing the fltSt
al Tournament by a deceptive fourand
was alone at 12-under.
the
first
one
hecause
the
better
than
stroke margin.
lirsl
one
only
went
54
holes,"
Nor"How about talking about the
·man said. ''Every year I've come
other 16 boles I played well?"
Norman j_oked in the Muirfield Vilback here tl1at's been in the back of
lage Golf Club interview room.
my mind. I kept saying to my self I
want to win U1is tournament play:
But there was no geuing ,away
from lbe two or lbree holes where
ing 72 holes."
be avoided disaster to hold off
Norman won uespite taking the
Mark Calcavecchia, Steve Elkington and David Duval. ·
Tbe par at 12 was followed by a
birdie at 14 and drmnatic.pars· from
deep trouble al both I 5 and I 6.-At
ALL FLATS ... Reg. '6.50
15, Norman hit his drive to a wet
NOW$5.00
sidehill lie to the lef~ then bashed
ALL 10 IN. HANGING
his second shot into the woods on
the right side of the fairway .. Next
· BASKETS
he aimed a sHot through a five-foot
Reg . $5.95-$8 .95
gap in trees some 24 feet in front of
NOW $!;.00
him, then chipped up and hit the
short par putt
4 IN. POTS R~g. $1.00 .
On the pa~-3 16th, he hit his
NOW 50¢
drive into a gaping sand trap .
SHRUBS AND TREES
Standing several feet below tile
level of the green, be blasted out 10
20% OFF
three feet and hit anotber par putt.
For more information contact Educational Opportunity
~BARDS ·
- Then he put the tournamem and the $306.000 paycheck Center Coordinator, Mary Luttrell ,- Hocking College,
GREENHOUSE
away with birdies on tl1e lasl two
614-753-3531 , extension 311.
992-5776
Syracuse
holes .
Norman ' s closing 6-under-par
Sunday 1"2-5
Open Daily 9-5

By RUSTY MILLER

You are i11vited ...

Closeout Specials

We want to help you discover ideas and
plan your future! Information available on:
• ·career paths
·
• Financial aid packages
• Colleges
Tuesday, June 6, 1995
7:30 • 8:30 p.m.
Meigs County District Library, Pomeroy
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..=
ZERO IN ON THIS GRb'r DEAL. With a ¥.11ue One®che&amp;ing account, there·s zero in the way of montwy service fees, balance requirements BANKfiONE.

and checkwriting fees. You'll also receive THE ONE® Card with zero annual fee. For details, visit Bank One. There's nothing we wouldn't do for you. l-Vhatever it takeS.
Bri Onr. ~NA

Mtrnbtot f'[)fC

__

......

�.The Daily Sentinel

ByTheBend

· Monday, June

-.

Strategic planning
builds success

MELISSA WARTH

MICHAEL BARNEY

PNRC TOP EMPLOYEES- Pomeroy Nursing and Rehahili·
tatiorl Center named its. employees of l·be month for Aprll ancl
May. April's lop employee was Melissa Warth, while May's lop
employee was Michael Barney. Wartb and Barney are both siate·
tested nursing assistants. Warth has worked at PNRC for 18
months, lives in Middleport with her husband, Ray . B~rney
recently graduated from Meigs High School nursing class arid has
been employed at PNRC for four months.

··Wilda Brogan, Rutland,
obs.erves 80th birthday
.. Wilda Brogan celebrated her
80t.h birthday Saturday at Snowden
Lake jn Albany.
'
·
The Rutland res ident had
: numerous family members and
att end the celebration.
••' friends
Attending were nine of her 13 chil', dren, one sister. five grandchildren,
! . and eight great-grandchildren.

Those attending included John
Brogan , Jr., of Rutland; Mr. ani!
Mrs. Mark Brogan qf Concord,
N.H.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald King of
Rockville, M.D.; Mrs . Larry Brogan of Gettysburg, Pa.; Steve Brogan of Thurmont, Md .; Margaret
Greene-Jones of Baltimore, Md.;
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Goff of Clen-

,Classmates plan picnic
Allensworth, Shirley Tucker, Peg.gy J
The Ageless Classl)lates from
,Wahama High School had their Edwards, Bcrmcc Smith, Anna S•d·
monthly dinner meeting on May 16 well, Connie Smith. Janel McDermitt, Geraldine Roush, Rose Burris,
at the Olde Dutch Restaurant in
,'
Logan, Ohio. Following dinner, Peg- Hazel Smith, and Ja'Nae Smith.
The next meeting will be a pic' • jlY Edwards conduotcd the busi ness
nic
at the Racine Lock and Dam she!1 · meeting and the group ·exchanged
.
tcr
at
Letart on June 20 at6 p.m. All
secret pal gifts and favors. · ·
former
classmates from W.H.S. are
Those attending the May meeting
cordially
invjted to bring a covered
were Sy.lvia Sayre, Carol Roush, Gin~ish
and
enjoy
the picnic.
. ny Wiggins, Carol _Workman, Pat

During May, the Stralegic Plan·
ning Committee met and several
. more white papers were presented.
We will be meeting again later Ibis
month to wrap lip tbe presentation~
-and 10 review a draft version of the
plan tbrnugh the cooperation of the
Bucke)I4:·Hills Hocking Valley
Regional Development Dislricl.
Many people have asked me
why it is important to have a strale·
gic 'plan for the county. At the
recent meeting in May, I provided
an answer as to its importance to
the members. I feel .that it may be a
wise decisimr to· also share some
excerpts from that explanation with
you also: in case you are also won,
dering why?
"The purpose of a coalition is to
take charge of change rather than
reacting to it. Strategic planning is
a tool to do •this which articulates
goals and outlines steps needed to
create change. Strategic planning is
not a one-shot "futures" report, but

. a continuing process of moniljiring
change."
The term strategic planning bas
to
do
with the major directions for
,
an organizatiun or community.
Strategic planning is designed to
assist an ehtity to make the best use ·.
of its resources in order 10 respond
effectively to change, to take full
advantage of its opportunities, and
to avert threats to its exis1ence.
Strategic plannin.g is about
direction, not time. It could be
eit11er long or short ierm. It deals
with overall community direction;
it focuses on the future; it is concerned with both e&gt;&lt;ternal and internal environments; and it is innovation oriented.
Contrary to most long-range
planning, strategic planning is not a
simple aggregation of functional
plans, an extrapolation of current
programs and budgets, or a set of
goals and objectives based on
wishes or futures.

Remembet Fathet's D
l;;l

Let Everyone .Know
The·Love, Respect,
and Appreciation
You Have For Your
Father In The
Father's Da~

,.'
I

.•
•

'

\..-:-.
•

' .

.·.
••

''·•.

Tribute

•

..

To Be Published
In
.

The Sunday Times-Se~tinel
.. SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1995

' .

Deadline Wednesday, June 14th - 4:00 p.m.
.

. 1x3 Greeting ....... $7 .00

1 ~5 Greeting w/Picture ...... $1 0.00

Ir------------------------------------------~
•
Your Message Here:
I
Limit 25 Words
: Father's Name:

I
: Your Name_(s):, _ _ _ _- " - - --

-----

Rather, it-asks the fundamental
questions of; What is tile purpose
of the organization? Is it the right
purpose? What is likely to happen
in the future that will affect the
community ; that is, what are the
opportunities and threats it will
face? Wbat are its strengths? Real·
istically what are its weaknesses?
And what directions should it
therefore take?
The key to organizational survival or the economic health of a
community lies in the clarity of its
strategic thinking. Strategic plan·
ning is a process. So why should an
organization or community go to
all this work?
Simply because it works . It
works because it forces concentra·
lion on key strategic issues and
questions, because the process promotes creativity and innovative
thinking, because it forces those
involved to face facts they do not
like and to ask questions they have
lacked the courage or knowledge to

ask.
It works because, in today' s

Public Notice
aero, more or loss; and to
quiet title to the Interests of
the Plaintiffs, to preclude
any claim ollntereat by the

located In the Town Hall,

Defendants, and for costs of Wedneaday, June 21, 1995

this action.
You are hereby required
to answer ' the Cqmplalnt
within twenty-eight t28)
day a alter the last
publication of this notice
which will be publish~~
once a week lor olx (6)
aecceaslve weeks. The last
publication will be made on
the 1oth day of July, 1995,
and tho twenty·elght (28)

can be picked up at the
Village of Racine, Town Hall,
Third Street, Racine, Ohio
during .regular business
hours or mail request, with

days for answering will and Specficatlona are on
commence on that date. In file in the Department of
caae of your failure " to Transportation.
an1wer or otherwlae
Jerry Wray
respond as required by the
Director of Tranaportatlon

$10 lee, to P. 0. Box 313,
Racine, Oh 45774.
By Order of the Mayor
•
of Racine
41 (6) 5, 12, 19, 26 4tc

'

al.

Yl.

Lee R.

1

Happy Ads

.Laugfi at this

has been. aaalgned Case No.

Phone=--------------~~------

.

Street,
L-------------~

L--------------~---------------------------~
Fill out above form and mail with payment to:--- ·
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

•

Pomar;oy,

Ohio

45769.
.,'\
The objact of tho
Complaint Ia Ia q~.~leUitle.ta
the real · estate slluated In
tha Township of Rutland,
County of Molgs, and State
of Ohio and and being ono

_.

t) C~1+

·,•J•,r• rc:l!' l.: .•_t'l!"l',

1;1(Pr ~y~;(i'nl

dwd•,

·r:k hf'H~;

8 R&lt;•p!.tce filter t,-Jq

Hl ,tllr'1u·.:li.j p.11L

~....,

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally,
&amp; monthly rental rates.

HAULING
(Specialize In
driveway apreldlng)
.~ · Llmeston·e,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

-t

• • ; : ,1 t

I

• • 1

•.

•.I :

• I

614-992-3470

992-3954
Em e rgency Phone 985-3418

Racine
.Gun Club

SOlV OPEN
Uutlawf ft •t•tl &amp;· f&lt;'urm

Trap Shoot

ft•t' tl for

.til

Supply

t:mr.~

t:o/'11 - Cnll'lwtl ( :om -.'itt// /Hoc/,·

5:30p.m.

Uutlaml Pt'('(/ &amp; Farm Supply
Ut. 121 Uutlar111, Oil 7-12-2656

. Everyone
Welcome

5131

-

DAVE'S
SHOP
. SWAP
One mile out

live aM waltlnglll

Rent a
Limousine for
Weddings, Proms
and Speeial
Oeeaslons
(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

-

r.Big r.Bog!!
le~!&amp;.t.

___. . ..

•rf•

r.Big V)s :Jortg

143 from Rt. 7
Tues.-Wed.·Fri .-Sat.
1·6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
•
101&amp;'1 mo.

1·900-388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
. (602) 954-7420
412lwt5

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparabl~ Sizes &amp; Prices '
New Haven, WV

, ..

949·2192

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

STD-A·WAY

be obtained at the office of
tho Treasurer, Eastern High
School building.
A certified chock payable.
to ,' the Treasurer of the
above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by tho bidder and
lhe JUroty company In ·an .
amount equal to live
percent of the bid shall be
submitted with each bid.

304-882-2996

,__..;;;,;.;;;;.;..;;,;..;.;;.....;....~

Real Estate General

RACINE, OHIO

No Sunday Calls)

l •

,

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer ·

Antiques

A LFALFA
AND MIXED

HAY

..

FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

OFFICE

992-2259

• 949-2512
. ..--

OLD UNION AVE, • Older home sitting on approx. 1/2 acre.
Utilities available.

nice lot

Po~sibie

fixer -upper or tear down home for
ASKING $6,000. MAKE AN OFFER!

NEW LISTING- SA t 24 Entering l'lutland- Recently
remodeled 1 .1/2 story frame home. Vinyl exterior, 2-3
bedrooms , bath, appliances . Plaster walls, wood flooring,
B:ttic space, baseme~t with washer ~ dryer. Large living room
with atrim doors that open onto new front covered deck.
l;iome Includes ceiling fans and new ceiling light fbttures.

Cute home - sma~ lot. IMMEDIATE POSSESS ION,II
- REASONABLE OFftRS WILL BE CONSIDERED!!
·
;•
.
ASKING $29,900

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

NEW LISTING· Syracuse- Ranch Style Home has' 4

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 ,.,.....

992-5251

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
1
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
1 Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473 .

-

_,._

.....

,

-·

Darwin, Ohio

~

7/2219'

1Gr111Mittn .

Kenny's Auto Rental

AB&amp;T AUTO

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION

Kenny's is the place t~ come
when you 11eed a car rental.

3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949·288Z
Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

Carpenter Work

We Have Cars-and Vans!

•AliGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

J\]BiiRUI
Could Be Yours!
1·900-945·61 00
Ext. 1327,
'2.99 per miri.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602·954-7 420

Meet Interesting Singles
Safely And Privately

4120195

H&amp;H SAWMILL

·

Listen tovo ice mail messages left by interesting
singles of lall ages . Leave messages for singles
that interest you or open your own vo ice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
.friendships and meaningful relationships.

Portable ·
Bandsaw Mill
•

Call 1-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752
7 Days A Week. 24 H·ours A Day
· $2 .99/Min Must Be 18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

&amp; surrounding area.

511111 mo.

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

Looking fonvard to seeing old friends
and making· net~!
sl1911fn

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
-Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 . 992·64 71
Mon • Fri 8 a.m . · 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m.· 5 p.m.
Sun. by app!. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport

Just Call

Free Estimates

·Call.for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 4S760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
6.1 4·742-2193
4120/tlo

liNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

Interior &amp;
Exterior

•Sidewalks
&lt;

•prlveways

Take the

• Lots of Fun and
Learning
• Lots of
Experience
_Mon. thru .Fri. 7:00
A.M. tlll6:00 P.M.
992·5388

pain

out of
It for
you. Very reasonable.

palntlng. Let us do

•Patios
•Porches

•Slabs
992-3265

512311 mo.

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.
i;14·985·418D 3124194

•

3/t~fn

FREE -.
ESTIMATES

WHALEY:S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair.
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOL LFREE 1-800-848-007
DARWIN, OHIO FN
7i31191 TF

J&amp;L INSULATION
Hour~ :

Mon.-Fri.

8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m. ·
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding, ·
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates
1/1Mtn

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 1
in Chester across from
the Dairy Queen. Size
10x28 ·store cars,
boats, furniture, or
what ever you wont.
Call 992·3961

uowAtm

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.

992-:1838

Rube, Perennlale,
Everleellnge, Hanging
Baeket1, tt!c.
(Depot St.) Rutland to
Leading Creek, !h&lt;n lo
Paulins Hill . Just 2 l/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from·SR 7
Open ~on . -Fri. 10 a.m .·S p.m.
wtckcnds Call6 14-742-2772

"'·--------' .
TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING

Radiator Repair
Service Portable
alumin.um welding
New ra diators
available ,
recores also.

614·742·3212

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

$2.99 per min.
.• Must
be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

(602) 954·74~, ~.

Lonely? Call
Tonight!
- ] -900-726-0033

Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per

1·900-945-6200
Ext. 2579

Min

Must be 18 yrs.

$2.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420 .

Procall Co
(602) 954"7420

"'"""

12x16 shed in a nice subdivision.

:

5:00- ll :OO
16 for 25.00
· 12 for 20.00

Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;
Diane Hendricks

Joe
N. Sayre :
•
SAYRE TRUCKING.
614·742·2138 :

.

Howard L. Writesel

.

.

Hill Brothe~s ·

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts ,
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168
5: 16-;9-5 TFN

NEVER
BE LONELY
AGAIN
CALL 1·900·945·6100
Ext. 8587

Produce

Flowm&amp;
Vege1ahlt P!Gets
Honging Bask,ts
&amp; Flats ·

$6.00 :
Roger &amp; Tom Hllf '
49534 State Route 338
Letart Falls, Ohio

(614, 247-2015 daytime
(614, 949·2231 evenings

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl
Light Hauling;
Shrubs Shaped

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Proca.ll Co.
(602) 954-7420

and Removed
Mise~ Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

"'"""

ASKING $39,000

MERIT
ANNOUNCEMENTS

__.,_,_

level/s loping ground with a scenic view on Gold Ridge Road.

T?C water and electric is available. Site recently surveyed.

Just minutes from SA 33 off 681.

005

ASKING $11,000 '

\0. •

MEN ANOWOioiEN

Frame/Block building· Curr'ently used as 6ait Shop. StoCk

, end Equipment being sold separately. Older Mobile Home on
•. site is optional. MAKE AN OFFER!!
ASKING $11,000
WE NEED LISTING'SIll WOULD YOU LIKE TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY, IF SO GIVE US A'CALLJI WE WORK
· ' FOR YOU Ill WE HAVE BUYER'S COMING IN FROM .OUT
OF STATE WANTING TO BUY IN THIS AREA SO WE
NEED LISTING'S!! I
'
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.:....................................992-2259
·'I'MC'M:' ·BRINAGEA... ~........... -"'""'·'"'-'·'"94il't43tiSHEAAI L HART.................................................. .742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111............. .......................... 992·6191
:._ KATHY M. CLELAND.............. .,..........:................ 992-6191
OFFICE........................... ...................................... 992·2259

.·

Personals :

ALL IIEWDAT'ELINEI tOOO'I ot

PRICE REDUCED· McNichols Road· 5+ acres with

·-

HAULING. &amp;:
EXCAVAllO"
limestone &amp; Grave~
Septi( Systems, Trone! 11.
House Sites. . :
Reasonable Rates:

Open 9:00-2;00

5118/tfn

1·900·884·7800
Ext. 4466
I

SUMMER
IMAGES

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
(614) 366-9865
24 Hour PagerAnsering Servic
1-SOG-215·2023

·. EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!

Your
Sweetheart Is
' ~ As Close As
Your Phone

EXf:t\ \'ATJN(;
Home Sites, Land
· Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone.
Top Soil; Fill Dirt

MANLEY'S
HOME
IMPROVEMENT

Angie's
Greeriho:ase

b"edrooms, 2 baths, utility area, ceiling radiant/8.8 . heat, AC
unit. Lots of closet space. Patio with sliding glass door and

•

.,

Surrounding Areas

B••r Repelr

State Rt. 33

... ...,.

--- ~ -

'

. ,.,.,;

Office

1/t 2Jt1n

800 column inch Sunday . .

.'

'

•Thanko~go6

~.

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772

FARMS

•Room Additions
•New Garages ·
•Eieclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Pairtting
• Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

· Said Board Of Education
reserves the right to waive
Informalities to accept or
reject any and all or parts of
any and all bids.

9 am · 5 pm

ot1.W. Hootero
-Microwaveo •Diapo-

4121f95

Instructions to bidders may

Garage Sale
Tues. June 6th &amp;
Wed. June 7th
2285 7lh Str.eet, Syracuse
~ean Stou!.Resi.derica .••

•Washers - Dryers - Rangn
-Refrigerators •Freezers
.Oiahwaahera

..

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you!!! We're

Laure{ £inw
Service

•At1Mekeae42Y....
-Fast Reliable Service

Call for all of your storage needs

Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486·1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446·9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631
1Mto

..

\our Auimols

I Jog - 1/or.' I' S -

Every Wed. Nite

Five Points

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
'

304-372-6 144

358 W Molrl St . R plcy, WV

IDIICI

ofoctory A u - . . _
a.Serlice

Open For Business

!:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::;;;;=:=::;::;:;::

.'~

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

WICKS

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

......- .. .

One ycat 'J..\no~nt'~ on work pcrlormcd.
V;r:u on all nat,on.::t!ly advertised brands
We service most rn a.l&lt;;es &amp; models.

....

ICIII'I IPPioiiiiCZ

Chuck Stotts ·
61.4-992-6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

7 C!lt;'C~ clectnc.Ji r,~·~h_;!ll

.i\ll!dlt.r

c)l, (II, COhJITHl Hll_ '' \)! r nlOr11t1

Pomeroy, Ohio

f1

011e Stop Cemplete Aute

(,lid

s. R. 1

Room Additions • Roo ng

1(

All For Only $14 .95 Plus Parts

(Litttestlllt Lni Rates)

95 CV 028 and Ia pending In

the Common Plea• CoUrt of

·.

( 1

.\ C't·

-

VACATON BIBLE SCHOOL
Will Be Held at Mount Hermon
U.B. Church
June 5·9, 9!30 am-11 :30 am
Closing Program June 11 ;
10:30 am

Nelaon,

Molga County, Ohio, Second

-,

~) (,,__ \Ill(::..

:u'

I'

N

.. PRICE REDUCED- Gold Ridge Road- Pomeroy- 8+ acres ol

deceaaed, at at. Thla action
City, State:

(6) 5,12, 1995

(614) 992·5535

otJ•:r ,f1C.Illrlt's

3 (!, , 1r, :i etc,:·~

32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlcklea

614-742·2193

No bids may be
withdrawn lor at teestlhlrty
Public Notice
, (30) days · altar the
---:~;:.:;.;:.-:::-:7:-:-=:-- acheduled closing time for
Notice to Blddera . · receipt of bids. •
-~-------,
Purchase of (1) School Bus
Board of Education of
PUbliC Notice
lor
Eastern Local
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
School District
OF EDUCATION
Eloise Boston
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Seale~ proposals will be
Treasurer of Eastern
COURT OF MEIGS
received by the Board of
·
Local Schools
COUNTY, OHIO
Education of tho Eastern
38900 . SA 7
Case No. 95 CV 028
Local School District of
Reedsvlle, Ohio 45772
John A. Jeffers, eta!.,
_ _ _ __;_:.:...:,:.:,:_ _ Reedsville, Ohio, by 2:00 (5) 22, 30; (6) 5, 12; 4TC
1
Plaintiffs,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
p.m. on June 14, and at that
VI .
STATE OF OHIO
time opened by the .
Leo A. Nolaon, doceaaod,
DEPARTMENT OF
Treasurer of said Board as
· et al., Defendants
TRANSPORTATION
provldod by law lor one (1 J
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION '
Columbus,
Ohio
To: Lee R. Nelaon,
Bureau of Contract Sales
deceued; '-the unknt&gt;wn Legal
Copy Number 95·356
helre, next of kin, devisees,
Get Your Message Across
UNIT
PRICE CONTRACT
legateea, admlnlatratore·,
Mailing
Dolo
5126/95
With ADally Sentinel
exec:utora and/or assigns, If
Sealed proposals will be
any. of Lee R. NelaO:n,
from all pro. BULLETIN BOARD
deceased, whoee addreuea accepted
quallllod
bidders
at the
are unknown.
16 00 column inch weekdays
To:
Anna Florence Bureau of Contract · Sales,

Neleon, aka Florence
Nelaon. decaaeed; the
unknown heirs, next of kin.
devisees ,
legatee•.
administrators, executor•

Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure, tudgemont by
default will be rendered
against you lor the relief
demanded In the Complaint.
Dated this 31st day of
May; 1995.
·
.
Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts
(6) s, 12, 19, 26;
(7) 3, 1o; 6TC
--------PubliC Notice

lor Improvements In:.
M•lgs County, Ohio for·
Improving various sections
of State Route 124, VIllage
of Rutland, by pavement
repair, pavement planing
and resurfacing with
aaphalt concrete.
"Tho date set lor
completion of this work
shall be as sot forth In the
bidding proposal. " Plana

C:+',t'

•••••••11

PubliC Notice
Public Notice
Room 1t8 of tho Ohio 11·72 passenger school bus
Dopa rIme n I
o I according to specifications
Transportation, Columbuo, oflaid board of education.
Ohio, , until 10:00 a.m. . Specifications . and

Third Street, Box 313 ,
Racine, Ohio unlit ·4:00 pm
prevailing )ocal time on the
10 day of July, 1995 for the
Racine Water Project, which
will include Installation of a
water well, meters, and a
water line, in Racine, Ohio.
Bids will be opened arid
read by the Village of
Racine at 7:00p.m.
Bid form specifications

You ore hereby notified
lhal you have been named
Defendants In a legal action
entitled John A. Jeffers, et ·

Your Address:·--------~-----------------

Portable

.,

,

Convenien~ Mini-Storage Units

614•992•7643

Vacuu·m Cleaner Service Special
:;L&gt;:·.- ,11

f:ll' ;ill

New Homes • Vinyl Siding ew
G~ragea • Replacement Windows

F~~~~~~I~ATES

,_~For~Free_Est~imalll_:.:.,:::-~·· '-~(6;.;1_;;4);..;9;.;.92;.·;.27;.;5;.;.3_

H&amp;H SAWMILL

i

•·

CaiiWayneNelf~-4405

.,.,._

•

.

Insured - Experienced

(614) 949-3005

•
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids will be
received by the VIllage of
Racine at their office

. Roor!JAddltionl
Siding, Roofing. Pltlol
•
Reasonable

Service

,.

Custom BUIIdln; l Remodeling
·NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
, NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING

...,....
Remodllllng
K"chen &amp; Bath Remoilellng

0Wl11r/0pr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio

Harrisonville news notes

II any, of
Anna Florence Nallon, aka
Florence Nellf)n, deceaHd,
whole addre•••• are
unknown.

•

Nicholas Wecks.
.
Fourth grade teacher Cindy Lin·
ton recognized and gave awards to ·
Ashley Boyles, LeAnn Marcinko.
Jeremy Shanks, Thomas Simmons,
Tyler Simmons, Jaime Whitlock,
Carrie Wiggins and Aaron Yost. .
Fifth grade ieacher Beclcy
Edwards presented awards to
Theresa Baker, Bradley Brannon,
Janet Calaway, Darlene Connolly,
Jeremy Connolly, Lindsey Cross,
Tina DeJ_.aCru~. Asb!l:y .Hager,
Tiffany Kidder, Chris Lyons, Jared
Marcinko, Kimberly Marcinko,
Elaine Putman, Stacie Watson and
Billie Jo Welsh.
Sixth grade teacher Bryan Durst
gave awards ·to Dean Alexander,
Matthew Grubb, Josh Ihle, Kevin
Keaton. Dustin Kebler, Joshua
Kehl •. Michelle O'Nail, Justin
Robertson, Wesley Shafer and
Gary Vierling.

To place an ad Call 992·2156

BISSELl BUilDERS, INC.

SMITH'S
COIISIRUCnOII

llauH _ ... &amp;

PLUS ,
Pickup &amp; Delivery

during ihe planned period than Schultz of Burgess &amp; Niple to pur·
those without such a plan. Strategic sue a total of five sites.
I am also looking into develop·
planning does make a difference.
My section of the plan dealt · ing an interactive marketing disk
with locating the most developed for the site and county with the
and accessible sites within the assistance of the Institute for Local
county of which also the owner.is Government Administration and
willing to commit to a finn price Rural Development through Ohio ·
and to sell. of course. As you may University. We may pursue making
have read recently, the industrial . this a joint venture with Athens and
site committee bas agreed unani- Hocking 'C ounties who are also
mously with rhe advice of Ron focusing on the completion of U.S.
Route 33.

. The Tuppers Plains Elementary
School recognized its top students
at a recent awards assembly following a talk by Principal Richard
Roberts.
First grade teacher Doris Well
presented awards to Taylor Boyd,
Brian Castor, Chris Davis, Nathan
Hogan, Adam Grossniclcle, Amanda King, Nicholas Kuhn, Josh
Marcinko, Brandon Roush, Brit·
tany Roush, Ashley Welch and
Sara Wiggins,
.
.
Second grade teache1' Barbara
Tripp gave awards to Brittany Barrell, Adam Dillard, Andy 'Francis,
Jennifer Hayman, Josh Hayman,
Brent Hensley, Jessica Kehl, Bryan
Minear, Dusty Murphy, Darren
Scarborpugh and Sarah Yost
Third grade teacher Anna Rice
presented awards to Jessica Boyles,
Hailee Cline. Chrissie Gregory ,
Ryan Kidder, Katie Robertson and

IliFF RIIIODilllll
SERVICE

flesldentlal &amp;
Office Cleaning

increasingly turbulent, changing
environment, the ability to adapt
properly is key to survival. It works
because it identifies opportunities,
because it concentrates, controls
and directs resources to assure a
future consistent wit.h organizational or community interest.
· Strategic planning provides an
orgil!lized way in which a consen·
sus can be developed that allows
$trategies to be successfully implemented in a community. Strategic
plannin~ is not an ivory tower,
intellectual exercise. It involves
key participants in ways that ensure
tl1eir agreement with the final product.
·l
It has been documented thai
Louise Eshelmann and son visit· Westerville, were recent guests of
tlmse using strategic planning have! ed her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley.
been mote successful in attaining Mike and Nancy Price, her grand-Dennis, Janet and sons of Flori · their goals than those without such daughter and her husband, Randy da, spent a week in this area, com·a plan . In a report to the Chicago and Terri Gilkey, and her grandson ing especially for the funeral of her
Deparunent of Economic Develop- · and his wife, T'ony and Angie father, John Lambert.
ment, the Institute of Cultural Blanton, all of Otway.
Kendra Armstrong, Cincinnati,
Affairs, hired by the city to do ecoMaria Graham who bas been spent a weekend wiU1 her parents,
nomic development planning with employed in Colorado for the past Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue .
46 Chicago agencies, states that several months, has returned to her
' Mr. and Mrs. Gary Haynes and
"groups that were able to produce home here. _ ,
children of Co lumbu s visited
the most results were those which
. Mr. and Mrs . Ronnie Wilt of recently with her parents, Mr. and
had done strategic planning."
Lancaster visited her mother, Mrs. · Mrs. Raymond Donohue and the
In a 1970 study of 67 compa- Mildred Phillips on MoU1er' s Day.
Dennie Don'ohue family.
nies, U1ose with strategic planning
Mr . and Mrs. Don Cotterill
Louise Eshelmann and Buddy
reported a 38 percent greater sales spent several days sightseeing and were recent visitors of Ed Chapincrease. 64 percent greater earn- vacation in Pennsylvania.
· man and Robert Chapman of Syraing s pet share and a 56 percent
Mr. an mrs . J. F. Townsend , cuse.
·
greater appreciation in stock prices

and/or asolgns,

.•.' . .

MY BUSINESS

Tuppers Plains school
announces top achievers

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Ohio

Business Services

M6:nday, June 5,1995
Page&amp;

Pomeroy • Middleport,

5, 1996

an.,.-

you"'"'""' Col-11~

11#1 •..C. II.II+ 81 2ta.
803 cusu.

REFINANCE
PURCHASE
CONSOUDATE

40
Stop in &amp; S1gn·UP for

!;Jankntptcy, Judg~ments, Slow Credit

Our Specialty ...

- ~ ..._

1-800-MERIT-98
MB#0489

-

A FREE VCR

Giveaway

•

�•
&gt;

•.

..

lloncl.y, JuM
Mond.y, June 5, 1185

'Page B • The Dally Sentinel

,. The Dally Sentinel • P-. t

P.omeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1185

·• AI.I.EY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:

~·

'"~~~

ACROSS

PffiLLIP
ALDER

D

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by·Larry Wright

a,_.....,GoodOld loll
11a1e
Kldo.l14-218-

·-·-1 I

IADtllll•

~

p,.,.

I

c•t ·a 2 klnono. FrH. 30-l·lts-

.:IMI.

har1e1, Ind., ahap. t ·I01 ·741-

6445.

Wlpn.

.

-·

EEK&amp;MEEK

ttiO Oodge Ram Van 8·250,
72,000 111111, •e.ooo, Con Ba
Saen At Oalilpolla Daly Tribuno
Ul Third Avenuo, Oollipolli
Ohio. .
t 014 Lumina v.,, fully loodad, .
built-In""'_,.. $11,000.304-

Pleellnl WV, ·Clll 304-87S..1450,
814 4t88118

•A J 8 4 2
• 7 4
•A K J 5 ·2

11188 Ford Renger XLT, 4 whHI
drive, I _.r. 30447141tlef·

No appliances, Hausehald 1ur·
niohing. t/2 mi. Jonlc:ho Rd. Pt

1 HI\01\~QJS ~IJI.A-1-IL .
I lW()D SIT 1¥-L D'k' IIJ ffi!OIJT
1H6 1V 5ET ~CHJ~JS t..txJ&lt;
9IW ~~ "'ltll..aa'!He ~
UJAS QJT. ..

SOUTH
•AQJI0942

•Q .
• 8 2.
•9 8 3

70

4 _.

5•

BARNEY

"Some family actually laid out their plots like this? I"

Yard ~le

Hu.RRY !I
180

Help Wanted

W&amp;nteciTO

IN OUT OF
TH' RAIN,
ELVINEY

Do

Georgeo Porlablt Sawmill, don't
hlut your togo to tht milt )uot Clll
004-G7S..t957.

..

Mike's Lawncara, will do yard
work. cut gratt a trim. All9 wuh

:,.C.:,":M:--:l----:----IJ.oln tht long·ttrm health care
: ary •~ne·~ Grover Road, field. Seeking Certilied Nurolng
C,aahlre, Ohio. Waich Signs
June 4th, sm. elh, 7th, D-S Rain Aasiatanta tar 88-bed tkllled
cancellod.
•
nu,.ing fadllty. AP!&gt;Iy·POWit Pia...
:;--::;.=7--:--::-----lant Nurolng &amp; Rehlbilltanon c ....
Clothing, Curtain•. Toya, Houte· tel", Roull8 1, Bo• 326, Paint Plea,.
hold Item' Molding Sulpt, Elec· anr. WV 25550. (A Glenmark AI·
trlc Fence Charger, Ear Tag I, 10Ciate1 Faciity). EOE.
farm, Misc. And MO&lt;ei June 6th,
NON HIRNG
II-? 3770 State Route
Bidwoll. Wo Are A Growing Compony
Esrate Yard Sale. 3 Oav•. Tuet., Seeking A Mortvaled Pweon For
Wad. &amp; Thur. 10· 4, e•o Second AdvtrdalnQ S.lea. Yau Mutt
Ave.
'
Have Good Cornrramlc:odort Si&lt;Jt~
Rollablo TronoporlaUon And A
Pomeroy,
Wllllnonou To Succeed. 8110
Middleport
Pluo Commiulon. Full Or Part
Tlma. Sand Re111m1 To: The Ad&amp; VlclnHy
verdoor, Ro:· Box 254, Jackoon
OH 451140.
·
'

vinyl siding~ &amp; .do landac:aplng,

Raa1anable Prlcel, Free Ettl·
mateal 6U-37i·8111. Ask tor 3badroam, furnished, '300ma.
Mike.
304-576-2880 OR 304-57&amp;-2835.
Adult Car, Ambulatory Preferred, Two bedroom mobile horne fur·
614-446·324.3. 814·446·6003 nllhld, u~idH plid, two , . . ; . In
Night Or Day.
family, no pelt, reference&amp; and
Vard I Lawn Care, Lawn Work, depollt. 6t4-367.0S11 . .
Reaaonable Rates, FrH Etll· TwO bedroom, furnlahed.
matea, Sadatac:don GuaraniNd, cleon condhion, prlvoto lot, 1
814-2SI82a4.
'
New Haven; no pera, S280' par
.... 304-882·2&lt;186 Oll)'llme.

C:

FINANCIAL

eso.

210

;.::.::;__--:_____::.__1

All Yard Sales Muat Be Paid In

AdYanct. Deadline! 1!00pm the Ohio Based Trucklng'Campany
looking For OTR Drlvera. Single
d bolo re tht a d II
run
Or Team Driver~, Mutt Be OVer

av

440

Buslnesa
Qpportunlty

1 lind 2 bedroom apanmenta fur.
nlahed and unlurnlthed, aeCurlty
deposit required. nD pate. 8U ·

IIIOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that rou do bull·

Equipment Is Late Model Con·

day, June eth, Roger KaH
donee near Cheater, loflow
Girl's clothing, antique upright
plano, toya, misc. 9am-4pm.,
985-4395.
Pt. Pleasant

ventional Tractors W11h Reefer.
Weekly Pay. Heallh lf11Urance

1
M itable. -fl00-..t37..S76ot.

Outalda S&amp;la1man, Full' or Pa~t
time. Experiet.eot O.llred. BeneCl,Y Prell. 814-446-

~ranch

•

Decorated atonaware, wall tale·

l;'i&amp;bysltter Needed In f.tt Galllpo-

ptv&gt;nos. old Iampo. old lhormo.,.. loo Homo. Mull Be A Non-Smoker,
And Atleaat 1B. Mual Have Rei·

tiM's, old docka. anliqLe furniture.
Riverine Antiques. Ru11 Moor•

owner. 614-992-2528: We bu~

erencet, After 8 P.U . 81-t-441-

1195.

:::-=:::::=--'7"':'-:-::"""C:''C""'C""---:--'-I Someone needed evtnlngs and
81111101.

Don't Junk Ill Sell Us Your Non-

~

. Washers, Dryers, Ul"owaves,

Appl~ bv

care lor eldef1y

Worldng Refrigera1011, FrHzera, an in her ".uc'""~~

wo~

•
All rea.1 as late advertising 1n

IJ,s new!paper is Sub]ectlo ·
the Fedora! Fair Hous1ng A ~ t
ol 1!)68 WhiCh makes 11 1ilega1
to advenlse ·any pre ference,
limitation Qr t11scnmlnah0n
based on race. color. /Ellig10n.
sex fam111al status or national
origin, or ~ny lnrentlon to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.·

ThiSnewspaper will -nor
knowtmgly acCept
adver1isemenls lor real estate
which Is in violation of the law.

Our readers ara hereby
informea that all dwellings
advert1sed _m this newspaper
are available on an eQual
opportunity basis .

l

• Color T.V.'.a VCR'I, Air Condition· n&amp;l, clo Box
en. Computett. Office Uachlnes. Ohio 45789,
i
EliC. 814-2:fiS..1238.
refetenc:"et &amp; wage
~J-&amp;-D:-.-,-,...-,-o-Pa~rt-,-a-nd_Sa_l_w_g_e•. 1 Someone with log truck to haul
buying wrecks, Junk au tot &amp; logs ahorl hauls, paying $40 a
trucks. Alao, patti lor aale .. 304- 1000 on ahort hault, ~;all 814·
7'73-5343 c:r 7'73-5033.
985-4121.

REAL ESTATE

310

110

180

Wanted To Do

750

14ft V bottom boa~ 5.5hp Evln·
rude molor, lralier, owtvel -11.
boet eovlt, 1850. Call 304.f'l5-

:m..

UaahN'c:rah Wa~et Per~MI Wa·
WCitlh. 17-428ce. to-4321ic. Oft o

sszs.

3 Bedraoma, Nlca 14•70 Houae
Troller For Rent. Village Of Rio
Granda, S2751Mo. &amp; OopooU
814-3711-2720 AFTER e P.M.
'

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceisorles

wheel' radlat~ra. noor mata, ere.
0 &amp; A Auto, ~;&gt;ey, WV. 304·372·

Furnished 3 ,Rooms With Bath

Air Condlrioned, All Utilities Paid
~xcepl Electrlcitv, Private Park - Concrete I Plastic Septic Tanka
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ro~
ong, 814~21102.
Evan• Enterprlaea. Jack10n, OH
Ful'nishtd Apartment In Gallipo - 1-60().537-9528.
li 1, Uuat Have Refarencea And
Dopo~t614-446-4159.

Furnlahed Entclenc:y $185/Mo
Ulilitiea Paid, Shar6 Bath, 60j
Second, Gallipollt, 61.t-«8-&lt;4418
Allllr 1 P.M.

Electric Wheek:halra And Scoot·

ers, New And Uaed, Indoor And
Outdoor Modilt, Bowman'•
Homecarv, 81•......a.-7283:

Fir8place enclosure, ·chanda Uer
Curtain rods, all antique br-an:
Gracious living. 1·and 2 bedroom good condition S150.00 080.
a~rtmentl at Village Manor and · 614-446-6763 aher 7pm.
RIVerside Apartments in Middle ~
For aale· Lowery Genie Fun Or·

port From $232-$355 . Cali 6t •·
992·5859, Equal Housing Oppor·

rur;dos.

814·448.0390.

.

Nice 2bedtoom Wid hookup. Reference•. Oepo1lt. No' poll.. 30487S..5162.
One bedroom, Middleport; one
and two bedroom, Naw Haven:
tflree bedroom• downtown Po -

meroy; 814·9112·2432 or 814·9112·
7511..
Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting ·
•PI&gt;IIca.tlooo for !qr. HUD subald~~!:ft· tor elderly an-d handl·
. EOH 304-87f&gt;.&lt;l67t.
Upotal,., 3 Roomo &amp; Bath 11 Bad.
room), Furnlahed, Clean, Reference and Deposit Requ ired. No
Pltta6t~15t9.

Vary clean one bedroom aparrment and two bedroom houaeln
Middleport, c.all 614~&amp;a2 ·S30• or
81~3lG1 .

450

Furnished
Rooms

Help Wanted

S'TUl&gt;l~l&gt;

AT

rtt~ F~tT
Of Tt4~
MAST~f!S'..•

lwto. Trana. Flta 318 -380 5 Spd

Trone. For 2.8l ·Turbo FVr 2.8L:
448~16.

3933 or t-800-273-9329.

Block male Poodle 614·742·

25811.

. •

CFA Reglotorad • Malo Hlmo·
layan Klnent·. Several Colora

1983 Mazda RX7, limited odldon,
newly painted, gOod condlllon,

790

oo:x. PI u.s m

,

MERCHANDISE

Pas$ ·

,

66 Brit. Navy abbr.

'

DOWN
1 '!Ype of tree
2 Corn lily

9 Slickest
10 lllllian
money
n Urgea
16-Surlnen
tool

zo Rower'•

5•

LOOK., [WI I~ WAAT 11\E.Y~£
CA.LJ.£0, [ t-IEED 11\E:M

OMNKMBK

Z F G K

EWO

PCKFT

Luis Campos

CWBY

NU

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NK

NWOPKTO

( PC K

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HTKBOCWE .

A K B

EFBBKT)

D J FYKY

Ml

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OCMJZYKT

I

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vJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A good musical comedy consisls largely of disorderly
conduct occasionally interrupted by talk. - George Ade.

......

WOlD ·

0 four
Reorronge
scrambled

leHer~ of the
words below to form four words '

I L L D W.Y

\

I I I I I' . . . _

ZA RR0

I

NE E CH
4

.I . 1
.

':;:

I

I

.

.

AN T u J y

~·
.-

had
apoint
in my life when money was not
a problem. Dad deflated my ego
when he said, "Prosperity is
when we can afford to spend
more for things we don't need

IG)"

f---''fl-;:5"'-,1,.:.....:;.1..;:..,,.!......,1"6~

L._.i.-..J.L..J..._.i. .....:...J.L.J.

(;.;.:;);,e1e .1he chuckle quoted
by t.JI.ng 1n the mtH•no words

you develop from step Nc. 3 below.

$

PRINl NUMBERED lElTER &gt; IN
lHESE SQUARES
•

C)

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
.

.

2749.
•
liquid wormers not doing tht )ol1? 1t87 Cu~au, ono ownor, VB. air,
Aok R&amp;G Ftod &amp; Supply, 814· power, low mileage, $4,000 . Dolo 199.t lnnsbruck camper, fully
gan, played very little, nice condi· 992·2184 about H4PPV JACK Wlt18r110n 304-87S.tett.
load~ lam of extras, take ovet n.
llOn. Haa two keyboards .,., pi!d. Trlvermlclde Recognized ufe &amp;
als. bench and booka. Rela10n lor effectlva again•t hook, round , &amp; 11UI7 L•Baron, nead• repair •nancong. 30H7Hto3.
selling· we need the 1peoe ba'dly
$350 at lo, 814·742·2566 alta; 35' &amp;elf contained, tullv loaded,
ta-mo In dogo &amp; calli
waa $2700 new, asking $400. Cali
8pm.
llko .new, St0,500 firm, call 814·
304-773-5427.
Of Whito Oovoo, With Or
985-4306. alter 8pm. Setious lnCage, After 4:30 P.ll. 1188 Dodge Daytona, auto, air, II'Wi.. only.
Gibson air conditioner, 1tOV, Will 61~44&amp;-1457.
lmlfm CIII8U8, 81,000 mile•
cool 3 rooma easily. S275. 304·
$1400,814-742-2357.
•
SERVICES
882-312, .
Prote11lonal Doa Grooming Vln·
ton &amp; Rio Grande Area, 20 Yeart . 1888 Fard Thunderbiri:l, blue. a
Gravely traclor, exc: cond .. 1825. Experience 'For Appointment cyf., windows, -~ am/1m
304-G7S.3574.
.
Home
614·24S..5054.
• call.etle and more, excellent 810
...-... $5300, 814-011~-3711.
Improvements
Hand Quilted Quilts 1250 To ·Profeulanal Pet Grooming. All
$500; 36 Inch Coppur Tone Col- Breed1, Reasonable Rate1. Guar- 1D88 Gao Tractor,· •wd. new
. BASEMENT
ric Eloctric Range S200. 814-256· anteed Satlafactlon, Your Pett Goodyear Wrangler Redlalo, bug
WATERPROOfiNG
8061 .
.
.
defteciDr,
air
6
elC,
extra
clean
Second Bast Friend. Leave U81• UnCancilional Ufetlme guarantae
llge If I Can't Gat To Phone Or $liOQO,..ft1J.IIII2-7574.
Local referenc-el fCJ1nllhtd. Cali
JET
- - · catt AIUir a P.M: Cal Anytime' For
AERATION MOTORS
11181 Chevy Cavalier 2 Door 5 t (6001 267·0576 or (8t•l 23 7•
Appoi1tmant a14-25&amp;-8550.
Repaired, NM l Rebuilt f1 Stod&lt;
Speed. Tinted Windows. Now 04~ Rogers Waterprooftng. E•·
Col Ron Evan' t-G00·53J.II528. . Rabbitl For Sale, Dutch &amp; Lop Tlroo, Aluminum Rlmo, $3.300 lillllllhld 1975.
at4-3711-1181lS. 81-7-e373.
•
Eoned, 014-3fl8.8577.
1902 Chrylfor Fifth Avonue, llka Ace Vinyl SidIng 20'% Off Sale
Kll ROACHES!
Three AICC Registered Beagle•
Buy ENFORCER OvorNir. ROach $50 86Ch or 3 for $101r 614-~2: Now. Gray, Plush Interior, loaded; Vinyl Sidin9 JReplacement Wind~
Exceliont Condldon, 74,000 Mlleo. o~s. Roohng, 25 Veara E•par.
Spray or Overnile Pasl Conlrol 7285.
•
~
01nca. 814·367·0813.
AIUir 4 P.M. 61....,.-G7S4.
Concentrate. U&amp;ku 2 gallon1.
1&lt;1111 raache1 overnight or Jour Treeing Walkers, ', Coon Hound
C&amp;C General · Home Main·
money back- GUARANTEED! a14-367.Q343.
• 1D02 Cutla11 • DOor Supr,eme
Exeellont Condldon, Air, AMIFM ten~nce· Palntlng, vinyl aiding,
A\lallabla at: R&amp;G Fted, O'dell
Caneue, Loaded! Auto Low c:arpentry, doora, windowa, baths
True Value, C~ntral Supply, Val · 570
Musical
MilooQe, at4-3711-2ee6.
'
mobile ~me repair and mora.
ley lumber &amp; Supply.
·Instruments
~ .. oaumato call Cho~ 814·tt2·
1995 Neon 3,800 Milos. Excellent 6323.
Uavlng-t.4utt Sell. Kenmore aid•
by -.aide refrigerator, 8yfl old, ·7 ""· T.,.: orr Brand Drum s.~ ~~Ilion, $11,500, 614 ·441·
Jqe'a Hom~ Maintenance, vinyl
electronic contto~. lee/Water dia- With High Hot Rldo 1 2 Crash
tiding, roofmg, t11terior painting
pensoro In door, $1 ,200. Cait304- SymbolS. 3 Pc. Roto- Tom Sal In·
power wathing, rree aatlmatea'
$400, 814 14a 4387 Ah0&lt; 720 Trucks tor Sale
875-4882.
~
814-992·4451 .
•
6 P.ll.•
U48 Chevy pickup and Dune
Now 4 Month Old lift Chair, 614Acroaonlc Conl.alt Plano 8~ buggy 1400 both. 1967 Suzuki Ron's TV Sarwlce, .apeclallzlng In
371·2720 AFTER 8 P.M.
Baldwin, E•eollent CondUion ~~~·whoolor t1 500. 304·578· Zenith alae ••~icing mosl other
branda. Houae calls, 1.J00· 7i7·
New Nordic Track rmlk-Fit, $300
..00. 814·..8·4022 Allor e o;
0015; wv 304-576-23t8.
614-9411-2682.
• VJ1 I I idL
'191~ Dodoo 112 Ton Pick· Up
111111, Runo Good $575' 820
PIUillblng 4i
Refrigerators, Stoves, Washera · Orvon. nlot for churdl, 814- 90,000
aI 4-256- t 424.
'
'
And Dryers, All Reconditioned 742·2518.
•
Heating
And Gauran1eedl S100 And Up
1978
Chovtalet
Sc:ottldaiO.
4W0.
WIU Oelwr.614-888.f44t .
' Splntt~console plano. Want r•
Freeman•• Heating And Coottno
oponolble party lo m.ke low ne,ada tranamlaalan work tsoo Installation And Service. EPA
OBO, 7'•2·3011 betwea~ noon
'Sam ·Somerville' I Army Surplus, monthly
poymontt
on plano.
· Cerdflod. Rolidendal, Conmorclll
locoly.tril
,_ _
, .. SH and 5jtm.
used camouflage rurkey clothing
814·256-1611 .
by Sandyville Poll Oiflce. noon:
t983
f·t50
Standard
Shift
vory
«&lt;pm Fri·Sun, (c:aah·no chtteki)
FI'Uitl&amp;
580
Good Condition, Runo Good low 840 Electrlcel and
304-213-5855.
.
Vegetables
Gao t.illoagt, $3 500 614:2'"·
Rafrlgaratlon
• •
-Satellite Dl•h With Bo• 614-258· Strawbenltl, Plclli Your OWn 1134.
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
8970.
Cllude wtniM, 81 4-24&amp;-51 21.
• 11187 Toyota Pickup in A-1 Shtpe
LAWRENCE ENTEAARISES
&amp; Murray AldlnQ Ltower 814-3CI7·
Heel Pumpo, AJr ~ndltlonlng, H
74-41.
FARM SUPPLIES
You Don't call Uo w. Both l 730
&amp; LIV ESTOCK.
_;;.;.
· _.;;;.;_::,;;::,.4-"·.,;:W:,:D:,:S::-..... FrH Eotlml•o. 1·~·287-«108.
• Ch
81' ue """VN0021M&amp;..
.
toe
· •
ny C·20 4x4 350 V·6
Slick. Body Routh, $I,OOOo ROI&gt;uui Rellldentlal o r - w1r1na.
610 Farm Equipment
327 Chevy Englno, $700, 814 . ,_ - • or rapelra.
U:.
~~.!,~141 AJior 8 P.M.. or Wto· cenNd eloetrk:lon. Ridenour
One U·N Ford trlclar. one 801 -~
Elec~lcai, WV0003011 30&lt;1.f75·
17815.
'
Ford f'owe1n.,lll, MHIII:!-7451.

\./ANNA
HEAb
HEY, ISN'T
CNER 'lO THAT KENNY
THE .. . OVER THERE?

KENI\JY,

MY

SiSTER'S
BOYFRIEND?

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'(UP. ...
THI'-T'5
HIM ·:

Unstop • Newly· Sadly- Island - PUDDLES

STRI&lt;£ A8J.J)W IN lr£ 'oWl ON

--,T

HIGH PRICE.S. ~HOP THE CU.SSIFIE.DS. '

I ~WI WAt;
f'\J~HING IT WHEJol
1 HUNG 0\Jl'lb
SEE. WHO WO~
litE "PRICE ~
1&lt;15HT" HOME
GAME ,..

•

Fo;

ua-

F p

I

1 987 11 112 Ft Sunllnet Trailer
AC, Furnace, Awning, Sleepl a:
Verv Good OondllJan BU·448·

-I

by

I

1974 n~ motor home, 27ft. 440

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

no fine sses.)
·
After ruffing in the dummy, SOltlh im·
mediately ruffs a heart in hand' with a
low SJ&gt;llde and draws trumps safely. His
third low club disappears on ·dummy's
• heart ace.

•Dodge, mtcrowave, awning, genenuor, runs &amp; locka good. $5 .500

1tee while Flrebird, 5apeod with
stereo. 304-G7!&gt;8113 allllr Spm.

63 Orlvero' arg.
64 Short oleep
65 Volume

Pass · Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • 10

F~ Till~ R..IC:&gt;f\T I ·

Fl..f\C£60~ I

ASTRO·GRAPH

ct.-_

Myatery Shoppera Ne&amp;ded Part
Time Exp&amp;ri&amp;nce Prel&amp;frQd 1.80().
35&amp;-5040.

Pass

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

OOH7S..2949.

•ulfl•

3 Copper coin
4 - and downa
5 Fall flower
6 Physical might
7 Yes-reaort
,~ 8 Car ·
42 Shipping lane
assemblers'
44 H8nsel'l slater
assn.

'87 Poco Aro, ·31', 454 ChOVJ'..,.
g1ne, qnly 18,000 miles, air, bl,..
mont model outsido grill . can bo
...., at Royal Ook -~ Pornor·
ov. Ohio, 304-275-8711 or 30&lt;4 27f&gt;.&lt;l653.

Four full blooded Collie pupo Hl88 Nluan Sentra, hatchback.
$100 Mch, 614-3-.
'. new b'allarnluicn &amp; exhauar. C/0
player, 35 fl'llg, StSOO OBO 814•
Labrador Plipplea, Choc:olate, 992·3244.

permont $250, 61&lt;1.f82·7477.

..

... ,.

.

BWfU&lt;,,IT'S TIME YOOKtlCAo.J.rAAT

•

Udlill' Bad FO&lt; Pick-Up Truck A· I
Conddonl $500, 61 ..-.cosO.

Price : 150 A Piece, at4·44a: ottklng $2.000, cal614-992·7619.
3188.
.
11184 Oldo Cuduo Ciora $1 .200
•
CFA Slama,.· Kin&amp;na, Blue Point 304-675-e96B.
$100,814-446-4283.
11184 P&amp;ugot 505Gl $1,400; 1984
$1,400;
197~
LTD
D_og Obedience Cla1111, The Fiero
Right Paw Training ClftiO&lt;, FOf lr&gt; Brooua,am. 2 Door, $595 &amp;14·
388-9906.
•
k&gt;rn1!tlon CoN 614-4411-1 1184.
For aale 5 full blaaded Callie 1985 Mazd&gt; GLC, 4 Door 5 §pd
pupt, 3 malea, 2 female, 1100 AM/FU Ca11ette, sun Ro~i
$1300 814-379-~5• .
-h. 614-742·2050.

AKC 8 Weeks. Health CertiHed
Shot&amp;, Warmed, Excellent Tam:

,

BORN LOSER

or

Uore. 3 Mites Sou1h
Gallipolis
At Juction Rt "7, &amp; Rt 218 814-

448-3767.

62 Oemono

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SOUTHWEST PICK·UP IWITS
Beds, Oabs, Doors. Fenders And

1982 Old• Dalla 68, •500 6t··
445-4283.
. •
• •

I 5 Grid official
17Rotvllgool
18 SpouM
19 Court
21 lnt'l. olrllne ·
22 Riding otrap
2!i ()ornn&gt;lfclata
77G.......t
30 lelrllke
33 AP!IIe 34 Poll and 36 Rip
37 Seaweed
39 Hllo fetal
41 HIN1Hh

However, the recommended play needs

New gas tanks, one ton truck

~mana

Carpe~ $75; NeW Electrl~ 52 Gal.
Hor Watar Tank, $125' 81'·448-6737.
•

IT SAYS ~t

-·2:3511.

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Boota By Rod Wing Chippewa ·40
To -50 Degraat, H. H. Brown
Guaranteed, Lowost Price1, The
sro. Colo, 6\.....a-4222.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

double 82 ........ 131100. 814-741191 2t after 8pm. .

18,000 BTU Air Condi·
uoner, Excellent Condition, $200,
Campus. 814-245- 5885 or 814- 6t4-446-17t7, 6 14~0232.
24S..5992
.
Bingo. Cherokee, NC, June 18 a
3 room~ &amp; balh amall apartment 1~ . SSO,OOO Coverall, $148.00
l 200mo plus electric . Deposit . Tnp and PJ~ckag~• Call 814·448·
1g23.
30H7S..1365.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood ·orlvo
from S226 10 S29t. Walk to thop
&amp; movies. Call 614 ·446-2568.
Equal Housing Qworwnlty.

TI-lE BLOCK ...

Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

360 Cu. in. Engine, Needl Roliult
Parts For sa Ply; Barracuda. 014-

Modern 1 Bedroom A.partment

Homes·tor Sale

2-llory aarage, beelde New Ht·
ven Supermarket, bouom floor
completely remodeled, 2 bays: 'Top Prloet Paid : All Old u.s. Tul Driver Wanted Must Be 25 , (fronr bav 40'1128', rear bay
Coins, Gokt Rings, Silver Coins, Year1 Old, Pay 40% Of Intake.
32'x23'), t00'•40' lot, $18,500.
GoidCDina. t.A .T.S. Coin Sh•P. FrenchCII)'Taxi,81 ..- 1.
304-852·2183.
151 Second Awnue, GallipOiia.
Tlia West Virginia Army National
3 Bedtoomo. 2 BatN, Heat Pufl'll,
Wanled to buy- antique and used Guard has immediate openings Gaa Furnace, 1 .Jtcre, Garage.
furniture, no Item too lafge or roo for Individuals with prior military Addloon Ataa. 182.000, 814·367·
amal. Will buy one piece or com· experience. When you join, you
121l7.
.
plate eStates. Osby Mattll)r614· work on a good rel[J_mant-plan
1192-7441---/'
oro eligible to·~y k&gt;r oduca~ 3bedroom Ranch, 2baths, tamll~
al aulltance, and receive your
room, lsnced f1 yard, Taylor Road,
Wanted To Buy: Junk A.u1os With mon1hiV paycheck, all fof a part· Camp Conley: 102.000. 30H7S. .
Or Wlr ..oul Uators. Call Larry time job. GO TO GERMANY 5300 pm.
Llvely. 81~368-9303.
WITH US IN AUGUST FOR AN·
NUAL TRAINING I 304·1175·5837
Wanled To Buy : Uaed Mobile 0( 1-0tXl-642-3618.
Hornet. 814-446-0175.
Wanted : Someone To Clean
Wanted: lllllt Tykes Outdoor Pari-Time, A1 Galllpollt Poll or:
Ca,ttle In Good Condition, 814- fice, Call .61.t-368-8S32 AllBf 4:30
245-5887.
P.M.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

540

2BR, Apt A)d)acont to Rio Rando

1.o Bo• G·3, Pt Pleasanl
:::~-=-~,..--::-,..---1 fletlotlt, 200 Main s~ Ill Pioll-

Public Sale
ant. wv 25550.
___
a_n_d_A_u_ct_lo_n___ .Peroon ••perienced In · uolng
1green machine. chain aaw, for
AJck Paar10n Auc:llon Company, c:lear'ing farm land. 304-117S..2658.
full lime auclloneet, complete
· POSTALJOBS
auction
service.
llcenaed
Start$12.08/t't.
For oum ond ap166,0hio &amp; Weal Virginia, 304·
plication'""· caii211FIBG-8301
773-5185 Or 304-J73.5447.
;
ext WV548, ua...9pm. s... FtL
90 Wanted to Buy
POSTAL JOBS
Ctean lata Model Car• Or Start $12.08/hr. For E•am and
Trucks, 1D87 Models Or Newer Ap'plicatlon Info.' Call 210·769-.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East: 8301 Ell 0H 581, llam-9pm, Sunom hlonue, Gallipolis.
Fri.
,
·

260 Yamoho Dirt Blko, Wllar
Coolod, at4-367-03G.

Aluminum topper k&gt;r Che¥y S.tO
$100 ; •'•o 22 cubic foot cheai
freezer, $155; both In good condition. 614-1192.0513.

VENDING: Won't Got Rich Ouk:k.
Will Get Steady, Cash lnc:'ome, 2bdrm. apts., total electric apPriced To Sell, 1·800·820·4353, pliance~ furnished, laundry ;oom
laciUliet, cloat to school In town
t ·IKXHioO-G 782.
•
Appllcationa available at: Vl11ag8.
Green Apta. •4Q or call 814-802·
3111.EOH.

sume

80

Pomeroy. Houro ; M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to a:ao p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
e:oo p.m. &amp;14·1192-2526.
.

288 IBM Compodblo Computer,
Color Monitor, Keyboard, MouN
&amp; Printer,
81~130.

61 O!mlnutl""

from Jennifer, telling me that George
had died. So, the next two columns. are
dedicaled to his memory.
In this deal, South is in five spades.
West leads the diamond 10. East over·
takes With the jack. cashes lhe diamond
ace and plays a third diamond. How
should South continue'
Seeing no dan ger. at Jrick three.
South discarded one of his clubs. while
West tprew a heart. After ruffing wit h
dummy's spade king, declarer cashe d
the heart ace and led another heart.
Now it didn't matter whether he ruffed
high or low. West had to win a 1rump
trick for one down.
.
South spent a long time complaining
about his bad luck. How could E-ast:
who bid diamonds twice . have five
hearts? But, as is so often the case . the
perso n making all the noise was t he
one in the wrong.
·
The right play is lo discard the heart
queen at trick three.1 (With thi s layout
ruffing low in hand works too assum:
ing South later takes the club' finesse.

M'&lt; LIFE DIDN'T 6ET
AN'&lt; SETTER 50 ,I
"''·'~CAME 140ME ..

I 14AD TO ... I WALKED
ALL TI-lE WA'&lt; AROUND

NOT TO LEAVE HOME ..

2 Michelin llreo XH4. Pta&amp;· 75·
SR14, .,;th leu thin 13,000mliol,
$115.

c:lean, nice, alngle oc:cupanc:y, ~
pets, no HUD. References &amp; De·
pooit30H75-21l51. '

1-r ----•••-..

Bur or sell. Riverine Antique-.
1 124 E. Ualn Street, an RL 12•,

2 Year Old Ou- Size Wawtilll
Waterbed Manren and Huter
E•eallont Condition ••oo ·oad
614-446-631 a,

141-

over a week later, I received a letter

I SEE '(OU DECIDED

3 Ton Cenral Air Conditioner
Pacl&lt;lgo, Syotem Or Spilt Syotem
St,250 lnalaiiod, 5 Yr. Warranty
All Poria, t-600·267·8308 814·
ue 8308.
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I bedroom furnished apartment

':"':',..-,-,-.&amp;-:-V=-Ic..,..-ln-:Hy..:..___ Part·dme receptionln Computer
1
~ Family Yard Sale. June 6 &amp; 7. knowlodga hllplul. Good oorrvnu·
--cornet ol 4th &amp; Rollins. New Ha· nlcallon aklltt a mual. Send re-

ven.

992·2218.

ne11 with people you know, and 1 Bedroom Sacorid Floor, Unlurnlthtd Aparlment. In Gallipolis
NOT to oend money throuoh tht With
Stove, Refrigerator $220i
mall until you have lnvestfgated
Mo.
Oeposlr.
Relerencia Ae·
tht otlarlng.
.quirod, No Po" a1.....a-4425.

dd~ay~od~il~io~n~·
~~:~OO~pm~~~·i:_] perlence
25 Year• Old With 2 Yearl Ex·
~V editio.n 10:00a.m.
And Good UVR. All

TWo family basement 181&amp;-

Apartmants
for Rent

PEA. NUTS

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

58SiudyoflrMt

Last November 21, a letccr was
mailed to me from Scotland by Jennifer
and George Arnott. They had used sui·
fici~nt P?Stage for delivery by ainnail,
yet 11 amved at ouc house on March 291
The wail was apparently IYOrthwhile
because the letter contained two good
declarer·play problems. Howeve r , just

Lawn Gildon And Gonn Homo
Malnrananc•. H VoU Ne•d It,
We'll Do Ill at4 H8 ~ .

AVON to buy or Mil, Marilyn, In·
dependent rep. 30•-882-2845 or
1-800.Q92-11350.

wds.l

12 Holchel

By Phillip Alder

II

lawn &amp; Garden Service • .11-4·
2:5&amp;-1033. ...

All Yard Salea Mual Be Paid In
Advon&lt;:e. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day ~fora the ad 11 to run.
Sundlly odotlon • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
llondoy edition • 2:00 p.m. Satur·

..,_

• Homely

Better late
than never

COME ON

110

Allan50 Franch coin
52 Olrlgl Job
56 Concerning (2

Vulneral1le: Both
Dealer: West
Soulb
West North Easl
Pass
1•
2t

Motorcycles

RENTALS
Loot young rodbone .-!While apec:ka on h"ont ltgl.
Apple Grovt area, anawere
"llan". 301-57&amp;-2718.
.

·

•B

lWII tnttmatloNI Scouta, 1171 &amp;
1070, •800 for both. Rugar 44
lllg. lUper -11300. 875-78110.

740

....
EAST

•Kt!f963
tAKQJ953

rx

175-1~1.

Sc:enle Velley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lata. public: wa1er,
Clydrt i., 304-57&amp;-2338.

lorihOrt

4 CerUrof

Wif--

•K

a-.

j

47 Rellnquloh
ole Edglr

I ......tOt,

13 Cal.-.d

--llul.liD

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Campleta home furnllhingl.
- - high Otio ..._
I lacre optllln, 40•10 otHI Houro: lion · Sat t·S. 814·440·
2Sl1100-. 2 11ern1.
ti 0322, 3 mlleo out Bulavlllo Pike
Sat poWid, - • 30&gt;50 2-ttGry Ft.. ~.
PICKENS FURNITURE
for hooM,
cllr 135,000.
Ideal ....
for Cit
Warehouae:
NowiUIId .

t8to, .... 2 Doc .... llo... On

ole-How

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
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'Birthday
. Tuesday, June 6, 1995
In the year ahead, you could be unusually lucky In progressive , imaginative
endeavors. If you think you have a wtn·
nlng project, talk tb people who like 10
market futuriSiic products .
- '"'
GE;MINI (Moy 21·June 20) You are an
inClately perSistent and tenacious indiVld·

ual when it comes to achieving practical tasteful tas~s will not 1mprov~ with time;
ObJectives, but today you m1ght back finish them now.
away from 1hongs that don't come easily . SCORPIO (Oct . 2~-Nov . 22) When
Tryir)g to patch up a broken rorTiance ? socializing with friends today , do no~
The Astro-Graph Malchmaker can help judge IMm harshly If they disagree wt1h
you undersran~ what to do to· make the
your opintons or. views. They probably
relaltonshtp work . Mail $2.75 I O · wiU.
Mat c_hmaker. clo thiS newspaper. P.O . SAGITIARIUS (Nbv. 23·0ac. 211 Th1s 1s
Box 4465, New York, NV 10163
one of those days when you mighl not
CANCER (J4ne 21-July 22) Re.sist the work welt ~nder pressure. Schedule your
inclination to pul down
ideas and
wisely to allow adequale wiggle
suggestions ot others today just because room.
you dldn'l lhlnk of lhem ·first. Others will CAPRICORN (Dec.. ,22·Jan •. 19) Do nol
see lhrough your linle game.
,
discuss promising ne~ ideas prematurely
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Slay on your today, especially w1lh a close friend who
guard t~y in business or financial mal·
lacks your imagmation and vtston .
ters. Avoid making any commitments that AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Fob. 19) Trying to
have not been thoroughly researched.
be a nice guy is an admirable effM. buC
VIRGO (Aug. 23 •Sepl. 22) AIIMugh there 's no need to be easygoing when
· your Intentions will be for the good of all,
dealing with someone who is h8rd-nosed
let companions share in the decision- and selfish.
making process today. Whalthey have to PISCES (Feb. 211-March 20111 you nego·
olle~!lli!J~I ~~~ baUel.
tlal~ an imP,?rtanl m6ner on~ one-1o-one
LlliRA (Sept. 23,0et 23) Res~onsibi··- 'baiH!t'IOllay;Tem~lrnll811$tlo about.)'.PUr
lilies you have failed to anend to might expectations. You mighl gel a good deah
need co bo completed today . These dos·
bu~ nola 9reat one .. ,

the

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lime

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Our son is a big daydream!!r. His head is always in the.
clouds . My husband tells him thai if he is always stargazing , he will be at the mercy of mud PUDDLES.

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P-ae10 • The Dally ~entlnel

Monday, J·une s, 1885

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Farmers, workers must report earnings

Beat of the Bend ..

By Ed P't'rson, .

Manager of the ·
Athens District Oftlce

by Bob Hoeflich
resident who was a neighbor or the
Cooks on the Terrnce for a number
of years. Evelyn is now a resident
in a Columbus nursing home .
Another card came from Carl D.
Kerns, formerly or Middleport and
now living in Georgia. Dorothy
says that Carl had worked with Joe
during the days of the WPA . She
comments that Carl married the
"When you're a long, long way former Marcia Duckworth of Syra·
cuse and !bat she died last Septern·
fromhome........
·
And former resident, Dorothy ber after the couple had observed
Cook Corcoran of the . Brooklyn. their 53rd wedding anniversary.
Dorothy asks about a Noah
Connecticut area for a number of
· years now, is far from her Meigs Pomeroy or Connecticut and WOII·
ders if be was one of the Pomeroys
County roots.
I received a letter from Dorothy who founded ·the couununity here. I
written on the evening of the don't know-perhaps, you do.
· Dorothy writes:
l&gt;omeroy High School Alumni
"Another interesting note
Reunion. The letter was not written
for publication but I'm sure appeared in our community news·
Dorothy won't mind my using a paper, The Journal Inquirer. It is a
few excerpts from it since I feel picture of Tiffany stained glass
that it reflects the thinking of many windows at the Unitarian Univer·
Meigs Countians who have had to salist Church with cullines noting
leave for economic and other rea- that for more tlian 100 years the
Tiffany strained glass windows at
sons.
the Unitarian Universalist Church
The leiter stales, in part:
"I received an invitation to the have balhed the pulpit in shades or
Pomeroy High School Alumni· purple, blue and rose. The set of
. Banquet which is scheduled tor th.•s five panels, which depict the para·
. evening. Wish I could be there, but ble of the sower from the Book of
distance and circumstances keep Matthew, have always been a
me from attending. I run forever prized possession of the church.
·grateful that I was brought up in a
"They were !donated in 1893 in .
small community such as Pomeroy.
memory
of one of the cily's most
We could walk to school, to
influential
Universalists,. Noah
church, to the grocery story, to the
Pomeroy.
The
windows could net
library, and shopping was so simfrom
$300,000
to more than $1
ple.
"I had excellent teacher~ from million."
Dorothy writes that the congre·
Miss Siuuns in the ftrst grade right
up through high school with Miss gation of the church located in
Dye and Mr. Robens. I taught busi· Meri~en. C1., has opted to sell the
ness subjects for 20 years 10 beau!iful Tiffany artwork to secure
Rockville High School at_Vernon, money badly needed for repairs at
Ct. I had such a nrm f(mndation in Lhe church. Too bad.
·Now you're up to date "sorta"
these subjects and felt comfortable
on what's cooking with some of
Iteaching Ll•cm."
: DoroLI•y writes of your response our rcpresentati ves in Connecticut.
So what's new with you and
10 the recent 74Ul wedding anniver·
sary observance of her parents. Meigs County? "Lemme" knowCaryl and Joe Cook, who lived on and do keep smiling.
Lincoln Terrace in Pomeroy for so
many years, but are now residenL~
United States men won six of
of a nursing center in Brooklyn, Ct.
the
fir~t seven.IQO-meter races in .
And I thank you for your response ..
the
Olympics.
i'm sure Caryl and Joe were glad to
bear from you "back home folks".
The ftrst collegiare rowing race
Among the congratulatory cards
was
between Cambridge and
received by Caryl and Joe wa&gt; one
Oxford
in 1829.
from Evelyn Ingram. also a former
Before we dash up~ Connecti·
cut, let.me mention tb-you that
Lelah Delores Hawk, Long Bot·
tom, entered Mount Carmel West
Hospital in Columbus on May 31
io undergo lung surgery. Cards
may be sent to her at the hospiml,
793 W. State St., Columbus, Ohio
43201·99.

Reporting agricultural earnings
for Social Security purposes is still
sometimes misunderstood. Social
Security continues to fmd a significant number of wage reports for
farm workers to be in error or in
some cases, not tiled at all.
The amount of monthly Social
Security benefits that a wt&gt;rker
and/or the worker's family can
receive in case of retirement, death,
or disability is based on the earn·
in¥s that are reponed to the work·
er s Social Security number.
If your earnings are not reponed
correctly during the years when
you are working, you and your
family could lose money every
month when it comes time to collect Social Security benefits.

Here is bow farm reporting
works . If you work as an employee
on a fann anll earn more than $150
a year, your employer should be
talcing money out of your wages
each time you get paid and sending
it to .t he federal government to
cover yeur payment to Social Secu·
rity.
At the beginning of each cakln·
dar year, he or sbe should give you
a W-2 form, a statement that sbow'
the totai amount of money sent .in
during the past year for Social
Security.
What should.you do if you own
a farm and have employe!ls? In
general, you must: ·
keep records of the wages
and make the required payroll
deductions;
~_report those wages to the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on
"IRS Form 943 and pay Social
.

Security taxes; and
- provide a pay statement for
each or your employees ~well as a
W-2 form after the close of each
year. If you don't repon the wages ·
and pay the taxes due, you may be
subject 10 a penalty from IRS .
You should also note that you
are required to report a worker's
earnings if you pay the ·employee
less than $150 in cash wages, but
your total expenses for agricultural
· labor are $2,500 or more in a year
(unless you employ seasonal hand·
harvest laborers who commute to
wotk daily from their homes and
are pl\id on a piece rate basis, and
who did less thllfl 13 weeks of farm
work in the previous year).
As a farm owner, you must
report your own earnings to Social
Security. Farmers are covered
under Social Security just as other
self-employed people are. This is
true whether you are1an owner.

operator, paruier, renter, or shan:
farmer. You are required 10 report
. your earnings if your net income
from farming is $400 a year or

'·

more.

You report these earn1ngs on
your federal tax return. IRS 1040,
using Schedule F and Schedule SE.
If you live in Puerto Rico, you
must file form 1040PR. You can
contact the Internal Revenue Ser·
vice if you have questions about
filing any of these forms.
If you need more information
about agricultufal work and Social
Securily, call the toll-free number ·
(1-800-772-1213) and ask for the
panaphlets, A Guide to Social Security for Farmers, Growers, and
Crew Leaders (Publication No. 0510025) or If You Are a Farm
Worker (Publication 'No . 05·
1'0074). These pamphlets are available in Engli$h or Spanish.

'

come after which Margie Grimm
gave the invocation. There was
group singing of a mother-daughter
song, mothers were recognized and
hanging baskets were presented to
Garnet Ervine, the oldest mother
present, Kathy Pickens, the mother
.

of the youngest baby-, Debbie
McKnight, the person who tr~veled
the farthest, and Elsie Smith, the
mother with the most children .
Barbara Gheen and Cookie
Salser ~ang "Cberish the Moment".
A humorous skit entitled "Birdwatching" was presented by Tonja
Hunter, and Sue Lightfoot had a
poem, "When Great·Grandmother
was Young".
Mrs . Dixie Lusher of Rio
Grande was the speaker and was
introduced by Gheen and Salser

-Communmity ·calendar.
MONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW'
Ladies Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. Mon·
day at the hall. InstallaUon of offi·
cers. Potluck,

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Ea&gt;tern Star, 7:30
p.m Monday, at the hall.

REEDS VILLE - · Olive Town·

SJ499

ship Trustees, Monctay, 730 p.m. at
the township building.

PER CARTON

SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship trustees will met Monday at
7:30p.m. at the Syracuse municipal building.
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, Monday. 7:30
p.m. at the nre smtion.
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, Monday , 7 p.m . at the
ofnce building.

1369
BuckeyeS:
3--6-21·22-37

•

•
:voL46,

• 26

_Copyrlg

1895

.

Pomeroy-Middleport~

..

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Ohio, Tuesday,

: By JIM FREEMAN

I

Blaetmar why skate boarders have
: Sentinel news slaiT
· been run out of places where they
• · Local skate boarding enthusiasts have peonission to skate by village
• may soon have a place to practice officers.
.
: their skills, after several parents and
There is no village ordinance
· members of Pomeroy Village specifically targeting skateboards,
: Council sought common ground at Blaettnar said, but officers do have
; Mondlly night's council meeting.
the authority to stop what they con·
Options discussed included let· sider to be unsafe acB.
. ling skate boarders use the side·
Blaettnar and the parents agreed
wafk on Second Street after 5 p.m. that youngsters need a pla.ce to
'10. opening "the dip" in. the parking play, but added the interests of
lot to skate boarders between 5:30 property owners must also be con·
,p.m. and dusk. ..
.
sidered'
. Parents as!ced Mayor John W.
"We're talking about good kids, .

..

16 mg "ta( 1 I m~ nn:ot1ne n . per crgereue br FTC mer~od

FRUTH PHARMACY

!age resident to keep a pygmy goat
providing it does not &lt;.lislurb neighbors.
- · Accepted a bid from lilc Ashland Petroleum Bulk Plant in Min·
ersville for gasoline and &lt;.Iiese! fuel.
- . Approved placing a weight
restriction on Pleasant Ridge Road.,
Clerk Kathy Hysell reponed the
following balances: general ,
$48,148.73; safety, $8,659; street,
$6,394.11 ; state
highway ,
$9.953.29; lire. $17,009.48; ~em e_­
tcry.
$13,511 .50 :
water.

$23,012 .88 ; sewer. $60,039 .25;
guaranty meter, $18.355.89; util!ty,
$8,380.03; nre truck. $282.22; per·
petual care (cemetery). $7,228 .52;
cemetery endowment, $38,1 18.5J.;
police pension , $539.97; building
fund , $3 .060 .55 ; r.ecreation,
$3 ,46 2.89; permissive tax ,
$2,004 .51; law enforcement,
$1,802.98 .
Present were Dlaettnar, Hysell
and co4ncil members Scott Dillon,
Bill Haptonstall , Larry Wehrung,
George Wright and William
Young .

Rep..Cremeans:. I will
support whatever~s. law
any dec ision that will unilaterally
disarm the citizen' of U1e lsi Dis·
trict ." sai&lt;.l spokesman Gary Lind·
gren.
1
Rep . Frank Cremeans, R-Ohio.
sai d term lim its art: a goad· idea
because ·' I think after awh(lc you
do lose it."
" I campaigned on term limits
and l voted fo r term limits," he
said . ' Til support whatever comes
to the floor ru1d whatever's law.".
But Cremeans al so declined to
promise 10 step down after four
term s - the limit set in tlie now·
defunct Ohio law .
' 'I'm not wed to any particular
number. " he said. ·
So, does that ,111\l'Ul.the new congressman envisions limited tenure
but hasn' t de'cided what a .selfimposed [imi t should be?
Continued.on page 3

WASHINGTON (AP) -Now
"Unless you have a uniform
that the Supreme Court has thrown progmm among all U1e 50 states, it
out all congressional term limit puts any state Umt would have term
laws- including Ohio's- the limits at a gre·at disadvantage so
prevailing view of the Ohio delega· long as I here is seniority ," said
lion is one of caution.
Rep. Ralph Regulr~ R-Ohio.
Freshman
Rep .
Steve
" You'd lose people like John
LaTourette said he would depart Kasich, who's chairman of a very
· after four terms, should vOters rc· impormnt commiuee (the Budget
elect him three more time·s, and Committee.) You'd lose John
second-term Rep. Sherrod Brown Boehner. who's in leadership . I'll\
said he would limit himself to four chairman of a subeomiuce with a
more terms.
$13 billion budget. h"s very imporSome other term-limits support· tant to Ohio."
ers said they'd like to see a consti·
Rep. Bob Ney. R-Ohio, "won't
tutional amendment th1at applies to be stepping down after the term
all slates rather than individual limits would have expired," said
term·lirnit declarations.
spokesman Neal Volz . ''That
"I don't see any reason to put would put Ohio at a disadvantage
Ohioans at a.ilisadvantagc.b~-bcing .. in lel:lns of bow-well he can serve
the only state that gives up our the district."
seniority," said Rep. Paul Gillmor.
Freshman Rep . Steve Chabot,
R-Ohio.
R-Ohio, also "4s nm going to make

.

o~......,. ,..., ,~

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992·6491

786 H. 2ND

/.

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Is Coming

0Uerllllllodlos•obrs!lorol4ler.

i

not juvenile delinquents," said for flood cleanup.
group membei Maureen Hennessy.
In personnel matters, council
Blaettnar said he would investi- approved the retirement of police
gate what liability, if any, the vii· secretary Patsy Thoma effective
lage would incur by allowing skate June 30.
boarding.
. . During open discussion, council
Council also gave second read- members discussed potholes, high
ings to resolutions placing a two weeds and a broken guardrail on
mill re11ewal levy for fire protec- Lincoln Hill.
't
tion and a one mill replacement
In other business, council:
- Approved the minutes of the
levy for current village expenses on
the November ballot.
May 22 meeting.
..
In addition, council approved · - Accepted the mayor's report
the emergency purchase of a jet of$3,185 .
.
.
sprayer for approximately $)5 ,000
-Allowed a request from a v1l-

The Marlboro Van

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING Smok ing
Causes Lung Cancer. Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cenlli
A Multimedia Inc. News~

6, 1995

:Porheroy ~Quncil, hears parents' requests

MARLBORO PURCHASE

June 8, 1995, 11:00 am to 7:00pm

Ju~e

"

roundbreaking ceremonies---.

UPFREEFOR
GEAR WITH

RACINE '- Racine Village
Council will. meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Star Mill Park.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Town,ihip Trustees, Monday, 7:30
p.m home of Clerk Patty Calaway.

singing "Is it True What Tbey Say
About Dixie?". Florence Adams
had the benediction.
Flowers decorated the social
room, and chests were filled with
treasures of mothers presents.
Flowers donated by Cummins
"Down to Earth Farms" were given
as door prizes . The event was ho~t- .
ed by the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society, planning committee
Lillian ~layman, Sue Lightfoot,
Martha Lou Beegle, Joy Young.
and Barbara Gheen.

Pick 3:
638
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

Mother-daughter banquet held in Racine ,-ecently .
"Mother's Treasure Chest" was
the th·e me of the annual mother·
daughter banquet of the First Bap·
list Church of Racine held recenOy
at the churcQ. About 120 persons
auended.
Mary Kay Yost had the wei·

Ohio Lottery

Reds in
first all
alone

'

Police money will cease in three years
'

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P

r1ces
0

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State Highway Patrol and
government officials break
ground Monday on a new $1.5
million headquart.rs for the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the SHP ·
(above). From the left are: Lt.
Dan Gibson, SHP post com·
mander; John Carey, state representative; Capt. Forrest
''Frosty" Freeman, SHP district
commander; Col. Warren
Davies, S.HP superint.endent;
Chuck Shipley, state direCTor ·of
highway safety; and Frank
Cremeans, U.S. representative.
At right, Gibson and Cremeans
talk before the ceremony.
·The 6,000 square foot facility
will be built at 396 Jackson
Pike and should be completed
by May 1996. The h eadquarters will house an operational
center, meeting area and
garage bay . The Gallia-Meigs
Post employs 14 officers and six
supp'lrt slafT members.
The post has been at ils pre·

I
•

Y

..

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
• e~tended ChaSSIS '
• Antt-Lock Brakes

• A1r Cond11J0n
• AutomatiC OJerdnve
• V•sta Bay Wmdows ·
··PIS, P/8

• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• T1~ Steerm~
• Cru1se ContJol
• AMIFM Gassene

•l rld1rect L1ghhng ·
• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
• Full Convers1on
• Alummum Runnmg
Boards
·loaded'

·.Captain Cha1rs

S10,219
- silo

GMAC 1st hne Bvver

lioec.:t"!
Sale

Allowaoce To
Ouawtied Bvte~
Tom Pet!e11 OIStounl

• Rear Ant1·Lock Brakes
• Power Steenng

350 V· 8POWEJV COLOR T.V.

·,

..... _.

.

'

• 350 V-8 Power
• Long Wheel Base
• Ratsed Roo!
• Co~r T.V.
• Or1ver S1de A1r Bag
• AnHock B•akes
• A1r Condtlton
• Automattc Oyerdr1ve

-

llsr Pnce

StU99

Factor')' Rebate
Tom Peden Discount

• $500
· S1,41 1

'

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cklth lnteuOf
• Well Equip\)e(ll
No Oa:: F~ Oel1wred'

'

1Save'1911l

• Power Brakes

· Pow.er Door locks

.

• S~led Wheels
• Well EQUipped!

· AWFMStereo
' Steel Betted T1res ·

liS! Pnce

S24,45B

Opllon Pkg Disc .'

~·

•. • ' .

8,488
BRAND NEW '95 BUICK LESABRf
•Atr CoN:I!IIOn
• Oual Aubags
· 4 w~ Ann-Loci&lt;
Brakes

•Power Sleen"J
•Po-wer Brakes
•Po-wer Door Lcds
• Power W1rOOws
• AWFM Sleleo

•T~ SleenriJ
•Custom Cloth lntenor
• Styled Wl'oels
· WeftEQ•PI"d'

·$21 488

~-------r~
• 4x4

• Extended Gab
·AutomatiC
• Aw CoOOIIOn
• Dnver Side A•rbag
• Rear Antt -Lock Blakes

• PSIPB
• AMIFM Cassene
• TtiVCrutse .
• Custom Cloth
tnteoor

. '

4x4 PICKUP

• Ch10me Rear
Slep il&lt;Jmper
• LT265175R t6"·Sieel
. Belted Ttres
• Alummum Wheels
• Wol Equ~pedl

NO Doc Fees ~oo·

:!l!lo&gt;?Tto~~~

TOLL.FREE 1·800·822·041 i • 372·2844
344·5!147. 422·0756 .

(lliotll#)~~':t'\:''

Monday· Saturday: 9 am :~'91tm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

l

4

'

be reviewed carefully: Voinovich

CLEVELAND (~P) - Gov .
George Voinovich said his aides
will work with Senate leaders to
make sure the Republicans' budget
.pro!'Qsal wi II be a{lequat~ to take
care of the state's needs~
The Senate version runounts to
$33.56 billion, a ·little less than the
$33.76 billion the Republican gov·
,
emor recommended.

- S700

Tom PedeoD,sc;oonl .. ·S2.270

·AutomatiC

No Dot fees

f

Continued on page 3

Budget will

$21,3W

• • $531

• 16 Valve Power
• Onver SKie Airllag
• 4Wheel Ann-LOCk Brakes
• Power Steenng

• Sota!Bed
• lnd&lt;recl L~hllng
• Premtum Wood Pkg.
· • Full Conversion
• Alummum Wheels
• Loaded!

S31e Pnce

$8 888

Price '

• V1Sta Bay .Windows
; PIS, PIB
·Rower Windows
• Power Lodts
• Ttl! Steermg
• Crutse Cor\lrol
• AMIFM Cassene
• Captam Chatrs

Sale Price

· :S500

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S-SERIES PICKUP
•DriVer S1de A1rbag

.

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 3/4 TON RAISED
ROOF CONVERSION VAN

\

.U~ .luUlLl~ llUUUU[UU . ll~tt[luUlU~~
. '(i

ISave $5000 I

·Sola/Bed

Ust Pnce
Factoty Ret\ale

ISave '1331 I

suooo

..

CONVERSI~ VAN

• Onver Side A1r Bag

1894 c rsion Vans

All

\· .~

'f'

.,

WIST VIRGINIA'S lARGIST CUSTOM VAN DIAliR!
ISave $5000 I

'

-..

Du1 $250 million was placed off.
Later Mon day, Voinovich told
budget as a reserve again&amp;! polen· the Federation of Tax Administratial increases in Medicaid costs.
tors that more needs to be done 10
Then the Sena te offered its return legislative power to state and
revised budget of $33 .~6 .billion local governments.
·
_
last week . Republicans said they
Voinovich, the mayor of Cleve·
held U)e line on spending, added land from 1979 to 1989, was a pro·
mor ~ money for schoo ls and _ ponent of th e "unfunded man·
included a tax cui, all while build- dates" (eforms signed into law by
ing a surplus, or ''rainy day '' fund, President Clinton· it1 March.
of $873 million.
.
The measure, an element of the
The Columbus Dispatch reportllut Voinovich said he wants to Republican Party's "Contract With
ed Monday that Republican leaders be sure to avoid "a situation that America," limits the ability of the
are divided over "off-budget"' could 1eave us f acmg
· a d e fiIClt.
· "
_federal government to place new
accounting· - moving income or
The Dispatch, citing sources it law s and regulations on U1e states
expenses off the formal budget 10 did not identify, said the Senate wilhout including money 10 pay for .
lower the stated total.
placed $244 million in ex pcndi· them.
"One thing that I want to shy
ff b d
ak th
tal
away from is one-time revenue tures o • u get tom e e to
. The PTA is ~n associa.tion of
look smaller than the governor's stale tax collectiOn agencaes and
ituck in the budget to take care of re uest
: · .
'
some lobbyin g group that is unhap·
q
·
off1c1als: The gr&lt;~up on Monday
· · h sru·d
Monday .
.
·
gave
Oh10 an achaevement
•
r
.
ts . tax IIaward
u·
py, .. v OIDOVIC
0
. When Hou se Republicans
Stale Budget Directqr R. Grego·
• '- unprovemen m
co ec on
passed "OleTr versiOn 'Of Ul&amp;obudget .... q~ll-rowning-sant1asrwt:ek·tlrdt hiS.- ..~Jflc le nC.)I._.l:be Qh•o.llcp;U:)~1le9t_
in April, they came up with a bot· office was reviewing the Senate of Taxatmn processed 8.6 m•lhon
iom line of $33.48 billion for Lite budge t rewnle "to see what as on·
1994 tax returns, .up from 7.7 rml!wo budget years starting' July I . budget and what is off."'
l101{ 1993 returns.

. COLUMBUS (AP) - Cities
that take advantage of the federal
community policing program had
better watch the clock .
Wh en !he grant program runs
oui in three yerus, communities t!lat
hired officers will be left on tbeir
own to me et salaries and other
·expenses, said Mark Weav er. a
spokesman for the Ohio attorney
general· s ofnce.
. The State Controlling Board tin
Monday re leased $1.5 million that
will be used to match federal
money 'for the community polici ng
progmm.
President Clinton has set a goal
of putting 100,000 more police
officers on the·nation's s~ets.
· Weaver warned that the pro gram coul4 CllQ up .being an
" unfunded mandate ."
:fhe $1.5' million. part of $9. 1

Development. s~id the center and
million budgeted for co mmunity
policing programs, will provide I 0 an cven_tual 60&lt;i jobs was worth the
percent of U1e required 25 percent invesunem . Kentucky, Georgia and
North Carolina had all courted the
match of federal mon ey from the
New York-based company. he said .
crime bill passed last year.
The company will not have to
The $1.5 million will be used to
cover applicalillns for matching pay interest lor the first three years
money received throu gh the end or . of the 20-year loan. and will pay
June. Unspent money will roll over imeresl on ly and not princiral for
imo the next hudget year for coin· the two follow ing years.
An 80 pcrcen~ 10-year tax cred·
inunity police, Weaver said.
In other busines s, the hoard it and a $700.000 ~ran t for equip·
approved a .$1.0 million loa n to men! were also used 10 sweeten th.t
[ntcrnmional Paper Co. for a $13.5 pot
The compan y must create 2 10
million research anti development
center in Loveland, a Cinc innati johs in the nrst three years. an4 430
a&lt;.lditional jobs by 2001, or give
suburb.
.
Sen. Alan Zaleski relc1Ted to the back rart of the loan . The company
loaia. at 3 percent inlercst., a.;.; ·:very .now .e mploys 1,660 people in Ohio.
Zaleski snid while it is imporgenerdus.' ~
George Kaitsa, chief financial tanl 10 encou rage economic dcv.e1~
nfflccr ·ror tire· Derartmeni of ·Opmcnt, "We have to be careful
we don'l.givc away the store."

Progress
being made
in AT&amp;T talks

.

•

·w ·A SHINGTON (AP) - A
union representing 90,000 workers
at AT&amp;T Corp. is a step closer 10 a
strike, but the company mainL'lins
that progress is being made in con·
·
tract talks.

.
•. .
•

'
•

•

''
• •
., '

I

.,

••

&lt;l

.

The exec uti ve board of the
Communications Workers oF
America gave permission Monday
for its president to call a strike at
any time.

"I think il means U1a1 certainl y
tbe progress that we had seen a
week ago has diminished,·' CWA
spokesman Jeffrey MiUcr said. ''I
think it reflects our frustration at
this point." ,

)

..•
f

But AT&amp;T spokesman Herb
Linnen cal led the vote procedural
and sai{l the compaqy did not think
a strike was inuilinent.
" We believe that progress has
been made in these negotiation s to
gel at the concerns of both manage·
ment and the union s,"' he said .
"Ohviously, more will be needed
to get a signed contract.'·
The two sides planned to meet
again tnday .
Company and union negotiators
met during lbe Weekend, but talks
we&lt;~ susvended· Montlny- bc.causc
CWA negotiators had a prior com·
miunent to testify at trbearing out·
side Baltimore. Miller said.
•J

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•• •

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DUCKS FOR SALE- How can you hope to be a lucky duck
when it comes to winning nne of 30 prizes to· be awarded at Saturday's Heritage Day notilla if YIIU don't buy • duck? Owner of the
first duck to cross the lini&lt;h line near the levee will be awarded a
$1,000 savings bond. The other '"!l•jor prizes are a $500 bond for
second and a $250 bond for third. The other prizes wUI be...:ash
and merchandise provided by merchants. The first and third place
prl2es will be provided by the Pomeroy Merchants Association, the
second place prize by Don Tale Motors. Laum:hlng wUI take place
at 1 p.m. in- the Oblo River near PometiJY village hall The- IIU111'bered ducks · are $5 each and can be purchased froJ. any mer·
chant, including Jim Anderson of Anderson's, above.
•

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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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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>whitlock</name>
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