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•

.

U.S. ·offers food assistance (o nations
-iJ:S~.,-u
· A_sbc.~..!.!~~~ !s bcin' offered 10 ~venl col1"1ries republics of the former Soviet

•n

·
.
·
.

tn Afnca, the Baltic nations. and Union.
The assistance will enable the
coun1ries to ·overcome food shanages caused by drought, supply disruptions in ·the restructuring of
economies, 'and scarcity of foreign
exchange, Agriculture Secretary
Edward Madi~an said in his
announcement Ibis week.
The countries offered aid
include Zambia, Zimbabwe, Armenia. Azerbaijan, Belarus. Estonia,
Georgia, Krgyzstan, Latvia, Lithua·.
nia, Moldova. .Morilcco, Sri Lanka
and Tajikist8n.o
Most ·of. the countries are
expected to identify wheat as the
product they most need, although
some may request wheat flour, feed
grains or soybean meal to avoid
further reductions in livestock
herds, Ma4igan said.
"In addition 10 meeting humani·
tarian obligations, this is good
news for American farmers,"
Madigan said.
"these funds come liugely
from former food-aid recipients
with improved economies, who
now prefer to buy from us commercially. The net result will be an
increase in grain and oilseed
VI$ITS WITH SC01T • Steve Bennett, principal of Bennett's
exportS
of over 800,000 tons. That
MGIIIIe Home Heating &amp; Coolbtg, Gallipolis, visited WUlard Scott,
gives
a
big boost 10 our economy
lllltiollal spoltes~~~• for NORDYNE beat and cooling systems, in
as
wen.~·
SL Louis, recendy.
us ••

....... ...,

treeS.

An example of this would be

,.vines and spicebush growing

the understory of red oak and
hickory on a northeast facing slope.
The grapevines eventually climb to
die top of valuable trees and cover
. the crown with its foliage . This
blocks the sun and hampers the
•trees growth.
Grapevines often are so res1rictive with dleir vines on trees under
20 feet tall that the tops are literally
bnllttn down. The main stem of a
young sapling can also become
bent beyond its ability 10 straighten
itself apin, even after die vine is
removed.
Other unwanted woody plants
are spicebush, pawpaw, dogwood,
iron·wood, etc. These plants are
beneficial to wildlife and add beauty 10 our forests, but when allowed
to completely take over tbe understory they become a detriment to
the woodlot and can cost the
landowner hundreds of dollars a
tn

The decision on whether a par-

ticular tree should be. CUI depends
mainly on die answers to the fol·
lowing questions: 1.) Is the tree
defective or an undesirable species
according to management objectives in regard 10 wildlife, timber or
other purposes? 2.) ls the tree
crowdmg a more desirable crop
tree 7
If the answer to either of these
questions is yes, the tree is likely
candidate for removal. However,
care must be taken to avoid overcutting to the extent that the stand
becomes poorly stocked.
Consideration must be given to
proper spacing between potential
crop lreeS. A crop tree is one that is
to be grown to maturity and not
removed before the final harvest It
is usually selected on the basis of
its size, quality, and location with
respect to other trees. Crop trees
are Sll'light and tall: they are valuable species free from serious
defect'
Trees selected for removal
would be trees dl!maged mechanically or n1turally, trees of poor
form, diseased trees, trees with
multiple stems, 1reeS that are limby
with a large spreading crown and

Thinnings are most benertcial in
plantations or natural stands where
the trees were planted or started to
grow at the same time. In this type
of situation, die trees are all evenaged and relatively uniform in
height and diameter.
· TSI is the basic forest practice
.necessary to initiate forest manage·ment on hardwood forest area.
:phio timberlands have been pro:ducing commercial wood products
:since the early 1800s. The average
- ~ulltng cycle has been about 20
:years. This means that most estab·
lis~ed woodlands could have had
-as many as nine harvest cuttings.
.: During most of the harvest cuttings, only the highest value timber
wa~ removed . From a timber
buyer's standpoint, this method of
!)peration is economic common

ir;.

Farm Review Sept. 22-24

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOUS • The 1992 Ohio
Farm Science Review is scheduled
for September 22-24 at the Molly
Caren Ag Center near London,
Ohio. Farm Science Review began
in 1963 and has grown to involve
some 2,100 acres to showcase die
agricultural industry. County
Extension Offices in Ohio have
advance .tickets through the after·
noon of Se~mber 21.
.
Show VIsitorS are from all Ohio
counties -and at least 12 other
states. E~tension offices in Gallia
and Meigs counties also provide
advance tickets 10 many farmers in
West Virginia that attend the
"review". The Molly Caren site
near London provides easy access
from 1-70 west of Columbus and
limits those long traffiC jams that
were associated with the former
Columbus sire. ,
The 1992 Review will feature
some 600 exhibitors representing
4,000 plus machinery and livesiOCk
equipment, seed companies and
consulting services. ·
The Gwynrie Conservation Area
has become the ))lace to see the lat·
est techniques for enhancing the

OVER COST ON ANY
1992 HONDA IN STOCK

PONTIAC$

3PARK AVENUES
5 ROADMASTERS

4 BONNEVILLES

SLeSABRES

2GRAND AMs
4SUNBIRDS
1 TRANSPORT VAN

!CENTURY
2SKYLARKS

6 GRAND PRIXS

lREVIERA

Bengals top .
Raiders 24:.21
•
•
tn
overtime

Pick 3:
664 '
Pick 4:
0401
Super Lotto:
2-12-18-30-46-47
Kicker:
662734

Page4

Greer Museum opens
for area enrichment

'
r-.,.·
''

.

:;j

GALLERY OPENING - Tbe public opening
of the Esther Allen Greer Museum at tbe Uni·
versity of Rio Grande Sunday was attended by a
number of people l'rom tbe campus and the com- .

munity. The museum, named for a longtime
benefactress or tbe university, wiD be open dally
from 1·5 p.m., except Monday.

CRUISES AVAiLABLE • The Big Bend
Sternwbeel Festival Committee bas made
arrangements to have the P.A. Denny excursion
boat at tbe Sternwheel Festival in Pomeroy on
Oct. 9 and 10. On OcL 9, tbe stemwheeler wiD
offer an evening ride to see the town at night ror

$10 for adults and $8 for children under 12. On
Oct. 10 rides wUI be available during tbe rac:es.
Tickets may be purchased at Clark's Jewelry,
Valley Lumber, Banks Construction for from
any committee member. Further information
may be obtained by calling Cheryl Thomas at
992-6763.

92 BUICK

GRAND AMS

CENTURY SEDANS

LOADED

Citizens on Friday, OcL 9 at 2 p.m.
with those tickets available through
the senior citizens center. At 7 p.m.
on Oct. 9 another cruise will be
offered for riders to see the lights
of Pomeroy at night and on Satlll·
day, Oct 10, seats will be available
on the P.A. Denny during the stemwheel races with boarding at 1 p.m.
There is limited seating on the P.A.
Denny and Banks encourages those
interested to reserve their tickets in
advance from Clark's Jewelry, Val·
ley Lumber, Banks Consttuetion or
any committee
The cost
of die tickets is
for adults and

Events of Friday, Oct. 9, will
include a performance by the
Meigs High School Marching Band
at I p.m. 1be senior citizens cruise
on the P.A. Denny will begin at 2
p.m. foUowed by the cruise for the
public at 7 p.m. "Ultimatum," a
local band consisting of Jason
Black, Sean Walton, Trevor Peuel,
Chad Carson and Josh Bartels, will
perform from 4-5 p.m. and the
Dave Barrows and the Wheels
Band will provide entertainment
from 8·11 p.m.
Continued on page 3

was known, began in 1991 and was
completed this summer. The building, which served as a general store
and hoarding house, was opened in
1884. A longtime fixture in the
community, it came into the university's possession in 1966 and
was used as a bookstore and classroom facility linti11988.
Hayes felt the museum and
space for classroom instruction will
be a boost for cultural appreciation
in the area.
"We here in southeastern Ohio
do not have the proximity of an art
institution, but we need tl as much
as any living being." he said.
The ceremony included e~pres­
sions of gratitude from Wylodine
"Deanie" Smith, grcat-granddaugh·
ter of Lewis and Elizabeth Wood,
who originally built the sttucture;
Irene Brannon of die Atwood Heritage Volumeers; Margi Wheeler or
the Rio Grande Faculty Association: Rio Grande Mayor Bernard
Murphy; and Greg Hargeu, president of Rio Grande's Student Senate.
The building was turned over to
Dr. Dorsey by Dr. Herman L.
Koby, Rio Grande's vice president
for planning and facilities, on
behalf of the architect and the contractor. Special music was provided
by the Grande Chorale under the
duection of Dr. Merv Murdod,
and the New Harlech Singers
supervised by Wilbur McCormick.
Followihg the official opening
Sunday, visitors were talc:en on a
lOur or the buildin$. The museum's
regular hours wrll be 1-5 p.m.
daily, except Monday.

A MAN AND IDS HOBBY • Every retiree
· needs a bobby and a favorite with Bob Lewis of
Spring Street, Pomeroy, is growing dahlias. He
has about SO dmerent varieties in his garden .
They ran2e in size frnm two lo 12 Inches in

diameter, and include every color, the palest
pink to the deepest purple. Each plant is tagged
with its name. Lewis started growin~ dahlias
soon arter he retired as a Pomeroy mad carrier
several years ago.

Series of incidents result in
Dudding, Barnhart arrests

91 PONTIAC
LeMANS
LOADED

HONDA CARS

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE*
810 E. STAlE ST. •ATHENS, 01.
New Car Dept. 594-8555
Used Car Dept. 594-2114
Toll Free .
1-800-772-8993 .

made a trustee emeritus in 1985
and has since become a Fellow of
the university.
"My heart is still with Rio
Grande, and it has been a part of of
it for many, many years." Mrs.
Greer said. "The museum is a
beautiful job and I think it be wellsupponed by many people."
A Middleport native, Mrs. Greer
is president of the Don Allen Foundation, a non-profit organization
which aids educational, health and
scientific endeavors. The founda·
tion is a major supporter of Rio
Grande.
Speaking at the ceremony was
former Rio Grande president Dr.
Paul C. Hayes, who outlined the
university's desire to establish a
museum and home for art instruc·
tion.
"The concept and idea of the
museum came from a strong belief
that a private university has twb
obligations to fulfill in order to
grow and be accepted." Hayes said.
"First, it must be a discoverer of
truth, it must transmit that truth,
and it must share that truth. Sec·
ondly, it must recognize the people
who have made a difference for no
other reason than the fact that they
love and are devoted to the univer·
sity.
"If a private university doesn't
espouse that belief, then it's not
going to succeed," Hayes added.
The creation of a museum was
approved by Rio Grande trustees in
1982 and Mrs. Greer, "as she has
done everything else, said, 'Let's
go abead with it'." Hayes said.
Renovation of Allen House, as it

$H for chUdren under 12.

$11,990 $11,990 s6,990

ATHENS

A cultural beacon for the region
that had been in the planning stages
for almost a decade became a reality Sunday when the Esther Allen
Greer Museum at the University of
Rio Grande was opened 10 the pub·
lic.
"1 am elated that the people of
southeastern Ohio have a museum
they can call their own," Dr. Barry
M. Dorsey. president of the university, commented as he accepted the
building from the architect and
contractor in a special ceremony on
Saturday in the Fine and Performing Arts Center.
The museum, with its two-floor
gallery, will e~hibit the works of
regional artists until Oct. 9. Formerly known as Allen House, the
structure contains, in addition to
the gallery, classroom space, astor·
age area for e~hibits and the university's lllthives.
The public opening capped off a
full slate of weclcend activities Sill·
rounding the museum, which
included tours, a presentation or
"Russian Cabaret" and a special
service at Calvary Baptist Church
noting the first classes at Rio
Grande 116 years ago.
In attendance for the Saturday
ceremony was Mrs. Greer, whose
first husband, Don Allen, was a
1921 Rio Grande graduate and a
trustee of the institution who
becume one of the most successful
auto dealers in the country, owning
15 Chevrolet showrooms. Upon his
death in 1959, Mrs. G.:eer took Don
Alliin's place OJ.i.the Board of
Trustees. ln view of the continued
support she and her husband gave
the i
Mrs. Greer was

Cruises on P. A. Denny to highlight
'92 Big Bend Sternwheel Festival

FACTORY PROGRAM CARS
92 PONTIAC

Low tonight near 60.
Tuesday, partly cloudy. High In
mid-80s.

1 Section, 10 Pagn 25 c.nta
A llultlmocltl Inc. Newap1per

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY· Plans for the 1992
Big Bend Stemwheel Festival during the second weekend in October
are nearing completion and the
sternwheel committee has sched·
uled a variety of activities for people of all ages.
P.A. Denny cruises
According to Larry Banks, president of the Big Bend Sternwheel
Festival Committee, cruises on the
P.A. Denny will be featured this
year. One of the cruises will be
offered for Meigs County Senior

+
APR FIXED RATE FOR
60 MONTHS

0 hio Lottery

Store promotes
'Hugs for Health'

2REGALS

sense.

·: For a forest landowner, it may
mean that less desirable trees are
left after each harvest. After eight
:or nine harvests in a woodland not
under forest management, it is pos'sible to build up a high proportion
: llf undesirable trees that may not be
::satabie for any purpose.
: Tree values differ greatly
depending on species, size, quality
.:11d end use. Timber prices for
}lladlllber stumpage for black wal·
• nu&amp;. black cherty, while ash. white
bat, red oak, hard maple, soft
:maple, yellow poplar, and bass.:WOOO are more valuable than hick:pine. elm, beech, ccaonwood,
bladl: iJUI!I and sycamore.
· ·If umber produetion for sale as
. stumpage ia your goal, it is impor-llllt to wort with die kind of tree
·'eapltble Of prodUCing a high value
')IIOducL Many 111managed woodlOll in Ohio are 100 denle and have
• a hiJh poponion of defective trees.

_

BUICKS ·

:year.

• There are two methods for get·
· ling rid of grapevines, pest shrubs,
·and weed trees - ~hanical and
. herbic;ides. The two are often used
in con,junelion with one another.
Thtnning in the woodlot is
8IIOtll« form of TSI )hat ean make
dollars multiply. Not only does
thinning free important growing
space for valuable commercial
species, but seDing trees that have
been removed as fuel wood, posts
or poles can yield some ready cash.

Farm Flashes
Ohio S~ience

rural environment Home, Yard &amp; at Ohio State show off dleir latest
Garden Programs feature infonna· research findings 1nd EXtension
lion from everything from roaches education programs. Farm Science
to home-based business. The Review is quality education in an
antique equipment display opened informal setting.
in 1916 and now features about
Edward Vollborn Is Gallla
1.000 items.
, County Emnsloa Agent, agriculVarious academic departments ture.
JACKSON CO. LIVESTOCK MARKET
Ripley, WV
Septembert 3,1992
SLAUGHTER STEERS:
58.00-65.00
Good &amp; Choice
55.00-59.00
Standard
1
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS:
62.00-65.00
Good &amp; Choice
50.00-57.00
Standard
SLAUGHTER COWS:
42.00-46.50
Commen:ial
40.00-44.00
Utility ·
36.00-41.50
Canner &amp; Cutter
48.00-62.50
Bulls over 1.000 lb.
VEAL:
82.00-91.00
Choice &amp;Prime
75.00-88.00
226-265 lb.
HOGS:
36.00-41.00 &gt;
190-240
38.00-40.00
240-260
28.00-31.00
Sows
Boars
25.00-26.00
Pigs (by head)
20.00-32.00 '
40-60 lb
30.00-35.00
SLAUGHTER LAMBS:
41.00
80-90 lb.
YEARLING STEERS:
75.00-85.00 .
Good ll: choice
GAlliPOUS - Big Bear and
72.00-Sl.sO
600-700
Big Bear Plus stores are introduc700&amp;up
68.00-79.00
ing a program called Hugs for
Feeder Bulls
55.00-66.50
Health to educale consumers about
YEARLING HEIFERS:
the iiJiportance of eating five servChoice &amp; good
72.00-81.00
ings of fruits and vegetables every · 600-750
70.00-78.00
trees that have excessive defect. day for better health.
STEER
CALVES:
Some trees called weed trees that
The Hugs for Health program
90.()().109.00
Good ll: choice
have little or no sale value should was developed in conjuilction with
85.00-IOO.OQ
300400
also be removed. Some of these the National Cancer Institute and
400-500
80.00-90.00
species include muscle wood, black the Produce for Better Health
75.00-87.00
500-600
gum, ailanthus, etc.
Foundation.
BULL
CALVES:
Keep in mind that cutting and
"We want consumers 10 realize
Good &amp; choice
80.00-91.00
removing trees from the woodland tht eating more fruits and vegeta·
400-500
75.00-83.50
risks damage to die residual stand bles every day can .help reduce
70.00-80.00
500-600
and soil compaction or other distur· their risk for chronic diseases such
bances, depending on the type of as cancer, heart disease and high · HEIFER CALVES:
82.()().90.00
Good ll: choice
equipment used to transport har· blood pressure," Karen Bennett,
300-400
80.00-86.00
vested material, may result. Felling director of consumer affairs, said.
400-SOO
75.00-84.50
should be done with care to avoid
Produce departments in Big
Cows
&amp;
Calves
(by
head)
500.00-775.00
breaking tops or main branches of Bear stores wtll feature special
Cows (by head)
325.00-585.00
crop trees.
Hugs for Health displays and
BABY
CALVES
(by
head):
An acre of land ean produce a brochures. A monthly newsletter
Beef
certain amount of tree growth. One will include recipes and other
Da'
of the goals of TSI and thinning is information.
to obtain the correct number of
trees per acre to most effectively
utilize the growth capacity.
1f you would like more informa·
tion or a consultation with a
forester about your woodlands, call
446-8687. All Soil Conservation
Service and Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation Dis1rict programs and
services are offered on a nondiscriminatory basis without regard to
race, color, national origin, religion, sex. age, marital status or
handicap.

:Thinning of undesirable growth
lean increase value of timber
by Cindy Jenkins
District Forester
OALLIPOLIS - Timber stand
·improvement (TSI) and thinning
are cultural treatments that require
· the selective removal of undesir·
·able trees, vines or large shrubby
species from forest stands to con.centrale the nUiricniS or the site on
the more desirable trees.
Many of the woodlands in the
Gallia County arc infested with
grapevines, honeysuckle and various shrubby plants and low grade
species that reduce die availability
of growing space, moisture and
sunlight to commercially valuable

September 13, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ott Point Pleaaant, wv

Pill• D8 Sun&lt;Jit llmee Sentinel

DONATIONS MADE· Tbe M~l1s COOlly
Blker.s have donated $!00 each to tbe. Melas
Couaty Senior Citizens Center and tbe Meigs
County Infirmary with proceeds coUected from
tbe group's recent box rOISL The Infirmary wiD
purcl\ase bedding artiCles and lhe senior citizens
center will purchase chairs. Acceptlnglhe dona·
.
'

'I

tlon for tlte iitnrmary Is Miry Lee, froat left,
from Cathy Meadows, with Nancy Woolard presentina the donation for the senior citizens center to Allee Wamsley. Baclt l'liW,l-r, are Brenda
Davis, Anale Capehart, Jane Staler and Marlhall Slater. Standlna ill front is Mattbew Mead·
ows.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Authorities in three Ohio counties are attempting to unravel a
series of events involving a
Pomeroy youth reported missing
last week and a Racine man, both
charged with auto thefL
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department received a report early
Saturday that a mobile hom e
owned by Randy Dudding of Pine
Grove Road, Racine, had e~plodcd
into flames. Laier Satlllday morning, units of the Meigs County
Emergency Services responded to
the William Ritchie Bridge at
Ravenswood. W.Va.• and Lebanon
Township, from which Dudding
was said to ·have jumped into the
Ohio River.
Dudding's 1987 Nissan truck
was found at the scene of the
bridge, but dragging or die river in
search of a body was unsuC~;eSSful,
and it was later determined that
Dudding had not jumped.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Dudding

was arrested in Jackson County, auto and remains in the Jackson
Ohio, early Monday morning in a County Jail this morning, awaiting
stolen vehicle from Athens County. a Rule 4 hearing, required when
He was charged with grand theft
Continued on page 3

Gallia County man

skydiving victim
A skydiver from Bidwell fell
about 7,500 feet to his death Satur·
day after his parachute apparently
failed to open, ofrtcials said.
Daniel Joseph Morris, 37, was
killed in the 2:30 p.m. accident
about three .miles west of Ripley,
W.Va ., according to a dispatcher
with the Parketsblllg, W.Va., state
police detachment who declined to
identify herself.
Witnesses said Morris apparently did not open his main parachute
and opened a reserve parachute too
late, said Jackson County, W.Va.,
Airpon Manager Ralph Dennis.

Morris was diving with mem bers of the West Virginia Skydiving Club, which makes 1rip5 every
weekend to the Jackson County
Airport, Dennis said. He was
believed to have been an e~peri­
enced skydiver, DeMis said.
Ripley is about 40 miles north
of Charleston, W.Va.
Morris was employed at the
University of Rio Gl11!lde and wu
a 1972 graduate of North Gallia
High School.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Wednesday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton.

�·Commentary

.
·· ber i .,.
Monday, September 14r1 992

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy......-ddleport, Ohio
Monday, September 14, 1992

p ..-, ,. . . .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mild, dry weather will continue around Ohio

OHIO Weather
TueSday, Sept. 15

The Daily Sentinel

Postmaster unde·r fire for staff cuts

WASHINGTON -Though
he's been in office only two
months, Postmaster General Marvin Runyon is performing surgery
on the Poslal Service with aU the
subtlety, accuracy and finesse of a
blunt meat cleaver.
"Carvin Marvin" -as he was
called when he headed the TenROBERT L. WINGE'IT
nessee Valley _.,uthority -didn't
earn his nickname bec$tse he was
Publllller
good with the Thanksgiving turkey.
Today,
Carvin' Marvin is whackPATWIDIFJIEAD
ing
away
at the postal workforce as
Allilllnt Publlsller/Controller
if he has only got until the elections
to do it. He's making few friends in
LETJ'IlRS OF OPINION ate welcome. They abould be leu 11w1 300
the process. ·
wordJ. Allietlm In IUbject 10 ediliD&amp; IDd DIUit be li&amp;ned with Dillie,
One guerrilla artist recently
oddiesl ond r..lepbooe number. No unliped Jettm will be publilbeil. !.ellen
lacked
an anonymous "editorial
abould be ill &amp;ood tut&amp;, addreuin&amp; ilauea, DOt penooaliliea.
cartoon" of sorts on die Postal Service headQuaners bulletin board. It
was entitfed "The Big Picture"
and refers to Runyon's 30·, 60-;
. and 90-day announced cutback
plans for pOstal employees. Above
the 30-day column is the proud
eagle that is the Poslal Service
By ROBERT E. MILLER
symbol looking a bit haggard.
·
As&amp;oeiated Press Writer
Above the 60-day column is an
· COLUMBUS -A glimmer ofbiparti$anship, which is rare in the heat eagle with iiS feathers plucked out.
of battle for conuol of the Legislature, has emerged on key issues affect· Above the CJO.day column is a mere
skeleton of an eagle, looking like a
ing jobs and the environment
.. .
Leaders of both parties waved flags of ttuce and the admmtsuanon or
Gov. George Voinovich, who has been feuding with the Legislature on
budget and other matters, vowed to coopera~e.
The Senate is expected to return from recess Sept. 29 and lhe House a
little later, selling the stage fix' a lest of what they can do.
In the past, little has come from election- year deliberations because
leaders and members don't want to rock the boat too much.
This year could be different because of a proposal on the Nov. 3 ballot
limiting lawmakers' terms. Most incmnbents oppose the proposal.
The ballot issue stems in part from charges that an entmK:hed estab·
lishment dances to the tune of lobbyists and no longer can effectively
.solve problems that ordinary people care abouL
. .
• House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheel~. who opposes tam limits,
has promised House heanngs on a five-btU jobs package that may be
passed late Ibis month by the Republican-oontrolled Senate.
Senate Republicans said they are willing to can~ adding a ~mo­
cratic House biU to the package. Riffe satd he met Wtth Senale PreSident
,Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and they agreed "thai politics has no place
when tl comes to creating more jobs in Ohio."
·
· Riffe and Aronoff wrote a letler to Voinovich, a Republican, and asked
)lim to appoint a panel of ex~ to stan the ball rolli~~ toward picking a
site in Ohio for low-level radioacuve waste storage facility.
They vowed to cooperate on that issue. Michael Dawson, the gover·
nor's executive assistant, said Voinovich will appoint the panel and agrees
that " This is an important, non-partisan policy issue."
There could be sharp, non-panisan differences over the plan for Ohio
to honor its commitment to become the fllSt in a six-state Midwest Compact to provide the site for a regional wasle facility.
Site selection looms as a hot issue. Some legislalotli say no area of the
state wiD accept it and that Ohi~ should withdraw from the c:ompacl .
The governor's committee ts only to recommend cntena for the stte.
The Legislature will pick it Riffe and Aronoff said they would lilce 10
have recommendations by Dec. I.
The jobs bills include tax .breaks for industries creating jobs or making
products to improve a growmg export market. a sales tax exemption on
equipment ~ for research ~development. as weD as f~ding mechanisms for htghways and other )Jilprovements around plant sues.
The Senate a~ to. consider addin~ a House bill. that speeds the
WASHINGTON- After a sepissuance of $378 million m bonds, authonzed by voters m 1987, to build
aration
of 11,000 miles and 25
or replace local bridges and other infrastructure facilities.
years, six of them spent in a Somalian prison and another 14 in self·
imposed exile, neither time nor
space had diminished our love.
There we were, three of us, on a
twilight-blanketed street, only a
By The Associated Press
few blocks from the White House,
Today is Monday, Sept 14. the 258th day of 1992. There arc.108 days exubi:rantly hugging each other and
left in the year.
laughing thankfully for a friendship
Today's Highlight in History:
that once was lost, but now was
On Sept. 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key wrote his famous poem " The found.
The African diaspora was alive
Star· Span~led Banner" after witnessing the British bombardment of Fon
McHenry m Malyland.
and well and throbbing in three
On this date:
hearts.
Later, our beloved friend, Dr.
. In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was acquitted of a misde·
mcanor charge two weeks afler he was found innocent of lmiSOII.
Omar Mohallim Mohamed, SomaIn 1847, U.S. forces under Gen. Winfield Scou took control of Mexico lia's vice president, my wife ,
Louise, and I dined at a modest
City.
In 1901, President William McKinley died in Bufflllo, N.Y., of gun- Italian restauranL
shot wounds inflicted by an assassin. Vice President Theodore Roosevelt
We were not alone. Our dinner
companions were the thousands of
became president.
·
In 1927, modem dance pioneer lsador.l Duncan died in Nice, France, emaciated Somalians silenced by
when her scarf became enlallgled in a wheel of her sports car.
starvation and sentenced to die by a
·. In 1940, Congress passed the Selective Service Act, providing for the mad Somalian general and foot·
first peacetime draft in U.S. history.
dragging bureaucrats the world
, In 1942 50 years ago, the New York Yankees won the American over.
League pe~t as they defeated the Qeveland Indians, 8-3, in Qeveland.
And that was our dilemma. The
, In 1948, a groundbreaking ceremony took place in New York at the food and wine unleashed recollecsite of the United Nations' world headquaners.
tions of happier days during the
In 1959, the Soviet space probe Luna 2 became the ftrSt man-made Kennedy administration, when
object to reach the moon as it crashed onto the lunar surface.
Omar was Somalia's ft.rst ambas· In 1972, 20 years ago, the family drama series "The Waltons" pre- sador, I was a White House corrcmiered on CBS.
In 1985, Shiite Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon released the Rev. Benjamin Weir, an American missionary , after holding him captive for 16
ll)onths.

:Gestures of bipartisanship
surface in election season

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
tar pit fossil.
It's antics like these that may
have something to do with Runy·
on's bodyguard service. Altho118h a
Poslal Service spokesman argued
that Runyon "has no more or less
security than we had for other Post·
master Generals," he agreed that
"there's a lot of noise out there."
He told us thal"there's all kinds of
folklore revolving around Marvin
Runyon. Most of it is not true.
Some of the I'UIIIOill that are placed
are really mean-spirited.' '
Runyon fell mto disfavor following his recent announcement
that 30,000 positions will be
purged from the management ranks
of the Postal Service through early
retirement incentives. Already
14,000 have taken this route and a
total of 40,000 postal workers are
eligible.
Although he's tried to assuage

Accu-Weather• forecast for
MICH.

price seems no object
:
According to the terms of iiS
proposal for the conii8Ct known as:
A-Net, Postal management actually
argues that cost will not be a factor'
in determining who wins the con- ·
tract. Moreover, the contract is
renewable for 10 more years at the
option of the Postal Service - creating a potential 20-year contract
that flies in the face of budgetary ·
realities.
The Postal Service employed
the same controversial criteria in
July when it awarded a $45 million
conii8Ct to Evergreen International .
Airlines to carry expedited mail on
the West coast. Evergreen's bid
was the second highest in that contest. Evergreen also won despite a
harsh 1989 Postal ServiCe audit of
a previous contract between the
company and the Postal Service.
The inlemal repon reviewed by
our associates Desn Boyd and Dale
Van Alta found that a 1987 $68.4
million contract with Evergreen
bloated to $95.6 million as a result
of numerous upward cost adjustments. "However, an audit of the
contractor's accounting records
indicates that little, if any, actual
cost increases were experienced by
the con118Ctor," the report states.
Postal auditors also discovered
some odd amendments to the Evergreen contract - including one
, allowing the firm to use planes
with Postal Service logos to satisfy
"contract commitments in effect
with the Department of Defense."
The clause Slated that "said aircraft
may also be used in any foreign
service ... for humanitarian purposes, such as rescue missions. ... "
The report notes that Evergreen
had indeed used such planes for
non-U.S. Mail purposes and failed
to notify conii8Cting offteials.
In the wake of complaints from
two Evergreen competitors, the
Poslal Service has agreed to review
the West coast contracL The A-Net
contract is also undergoing Fostal
scrutiny.

the postal union that the ax is
aimed at management only, notes
taken during a July 21, 1992, meet·
. ing between Runyon and some
agency officials suggest deeper
cutS loom.
According to 1'10ies of the meet·
ing, Runyon predicted that the ftrSt
120 days would be tough, followed
by 120 days of more of the same.
He argued that nothing would' happen in the next three years to give
workers a "warm and fuzzy feeling," and' that while "some (work·
ers) will gel hurt," postal workers
are not "entitled" to their jobs.
Union employees warn that the
austerity could backfire in the fonn
of bottlenecks this fall, and the real
crunch could come at Christmas
time when the mail volume
explodes.
According to some Postal Service officials, Carvin' Marvin has
conspicuously spared one comer of
the budget - the procurement process. They cite the fact that this
week Runyon wiU award a 10-ycar
$1 billion contract to a private
company to carry the Postal Service's express and priority mail
across most of the country. But

IToledo la2" I

•

• IColumbus!B3' I

W. VA.

~.

-----Weather----Soutb-CentrBI Ohio
storms Wednesday. Fair on ThW'STonight, mostly clear. Low day and Friday. Highs in·the low to
around 60. Tuesday, partly cloudy. mtd-80s Wednesday and in the
High ne;t.r 85.
upper 70s to around 80 Thursday
Extended forecast:
and Friday. Lows 60-65 Wednesday and 55-60 Thursday and FriWednesday lbrough Friday:
A chance of showers &lt;I' thunder- day.

--Area
deaths-James C. Council
James C. Council, 67, Jacks
Road, Langsville, died Sunday,
SepL 13, 1992, at the Holzer Medical Center. He was a river pilot.
Born on Jan. 16, 1925 at Paducah, Ky., he was the son of David N.
Council and Effie B. Patillo Council .
He was a member of the
Langsville Christian Church, a veteran of World War n, U. S. Navy,
and a boy scout leader for 14 years
in the Meigs-GaUia-Mason District.
He is survived by his wife,
Joanna Varian Council, Langsville;
three sons and two daughters-in·
law, Robert and Donna Council,
James A. and Alicia Council, and
Paul D. Council, aU of Langsville;
two brothers, Daniel B. Council
and David E. Council, Sharpe, Ky.;
and grandchildren, Daniel B., Jeremy and Robert D. Council,ll.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Joe W.
Council.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Roben E. Musser
will officiate and burial will be in
Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home Monday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8.

But, in the meantime , the
employees behind the proud eagle
are hunkerinp; down during the
upcoming hunting season.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
lac.

Love from, and for, a dying Somalia

Today in history

Chuck Stone
spondent and he had cultivated a
melodic appreciation for "the way
this man, Ray Char-lez, sings.••
·
dl
But conversatiOn
repeate Y
returned to ~mar's country whose
existence is threatened by a Damoclean sword of famine.
"You gave us the means for
killing ourselves,' ' Omar said,
.
h
a11 ud10g to t e two superpowers
that made Africa a pawn in the
Cold War. "Now we are asking the
means for surviving.
"Our once-beautiful capital, .
Mogadishu, should be turned into
an inrernational museum ... a warning to the rest of the world of the
depths of madness and destruction
to which the human race can
descend . ... Thousands of babies
and children are dying in the viiTh
•
h
!ages.
ey don t even ave
enough strength to get to food distribution centers.
" If there is any criminal in this
world that is a match for Hitler, it
is Gen . Mohammed Farah
Aideed," he concluded grimly.
"Our whole country is like your
Homestead, Florida."

Aideed is the military crony of
the Somalian dictator, Siad Barre,
who was overthrown in January
1991. But Aideed continues to ter•
rorize the provisional government
selected at two ''reconciliation''
meetings last summer.
Omat refuses to dwell on the
past. With soft-spoken gentleness,
he speaks only of the imperatives
10 coordinate massive and protect·
ed food distribution and to negotiale a peace within Somalia.
" The key is the United States, ..
he said. "Your country is the most
influential nation in the United
Nations."
Toward that end, 0mar has met
with members of Congress and
maintained constant contact with
U.N . Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali.
Mter reading the three e~cellent
in-depth articles on the Somalia
crisis that ran recently in The New
York Times and watching a
" Nightline" show devoted to
Somalia, I felt three questions
gnawing at me:
Why has a British non-govemmental agency, Save the Children,
been able to send more food to
Somalia than the United Nations
Children ' s Fund, of which the

United States is a part?
Why can't America provide aircraft to the only agency that has
delivered food since Aug. 19, the
World Food Program? WFP has
only three aircraft, two from the
Gcnnan government and one rent·
ed C-130.
Why can't a compassionate
America take the lead in coordinating the awesome proliferation of
food distribution agencies: CARE,
the lnlernational Medical Cmps of
Los Angeles, the British, German
and .u .S. governments, UNICEF,
the United Nations World Food
Program and World Vision?
Sadly, compassion has limits.
Maybe there is not enough to go
around for Homestead , Fla.;
Bosnia/Herzegovina: Haiti; and
Somalia.
A few days ago. peaceful
demonstrations in front of the
White House prolested U.S. policies that exclude Haitian refugees.
Asimilar march might pressure our
government to help save the babies
of Somalia.
But marches alone won't save a
dying Somalia. Only food will.
Cbuck Stone is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association .

James Hartley

The passing of three American ~heroes

Berryls World

Three good and decent men
recently died witl)in a week of each
other. ln each case, it was too soon,
though the oldest was an octogenarian and the youngest, in his
early 60s, had stared down a fatal
disease longer than most of his
friends had expected. All three
shared an abiding conviction,
which has become muted, if not
downright unfashionable, in public
life. They be~eved that racism was
America's enduring curse and its
eradication the nation' s most
important task.
Their names were Joe Raub,
Harold Fleming and Charles Welt·
ner. All three were white men ,
Rauh a Northerner and Fleming
and Weltner, Georgians. Two,
Rauh and Wellner, were lawyers.
All three operated in the arena of
public service and politics for most
of their lives.
And there the easy comparisons
end. In many ways, some important
and some trivial, ther. could not
have been more dissimtlar:
The mold was broken with Joe
Rauh, a hard-drivin~ liberal of the
old school. l:le fashioned the civil
rights plank at the 1948 Democratic Convention thai drove some of
the Southern delegates out of the
hall and into a third 1!BJ1y. He spent
the rest of his life trying 10 drive all

Hodding Carter III
vestiges of segregation out of the
larger hall of the nation itself. He
saw the tide turn against his lcind of
liberalism, but he never lost heart
He simply redoubled his efforts,
rowing wtth unflagging energy on
the course he had chosen decades
before.
Joe ' s trademark bow tie and
insistent, sometimes grating voice
were easy to caricature. His objectives, as American as the Bill of
RighiS, were not, which made him
all the more infuriating to his
legions of enemies. His base of
operations was Washington; but his
arena was the nation and his goal,
the matching of American preachment with American pracuce. He
was 80 when he died, but his prac·
tical idealism was thai of a 21-yearoldkid.
Charles Longstteet Welbler was
as Southern as his name, and in the
1960s, he was the hope of those
who longed for a new South. In his
still-fresh autobiography, "Southerner, " published in 1966, he
explained how a young white of
distinguished ancestry and excellent prospeciS had turned against
the caste system that nurtured him. ·
Elected to Congress from Atlanla,

he spoke eloquently ol' the need for
racial change, not to the converted
but to his reluctant homefolks. He
voted for the Civil Rights Act,
which took real courage, and otherwise threw his support behind measures designed to break down economic and social barriers to mean·
ingful equality.
Then, suddenly, because principle was more important to him than
power, Charlie Weltnet threw it all
in. The despicable Lester Maddox, ·
an unapologetic segregationist, was
the Democratic nominee for gover- .
nor, and the party's candidates
were required to sign a loyalty
oath, pledging to suppon all other
Democrats on the ticket This Welt· .
ner in all conscience could not do.
Instead, he withdrew from the ballet and certain re-election.
That was not the end of Charles
Wellner, the man, nor even of
Charles Welbler, the politician. In
his last years, he was a state
Supreme Coun justice, and just
befm: he died, he was named chief
justice as a gesture of respect and
love. Years before, in "Southerner," Weltner contended that the
South was free for the ftrst lime lo
break the bonds of its lnlgic history, and this time it surely would.
Events vindicated Ms prophetic
voice. The Lester Maddoxes of the

South arc yesterday's men.
Harold Fleming was 70 when he
died suddenly in his Washington
home. Though never as visible as
the other two men, he knew every- ·
one who ever worked in the civil
rights movement and they knew
him, for the best of reasons. He
gave !I" his ~ult years to the quest
for a Just soctety.
'
Fleming' s life was wmcd upside •
down when, as a young officer in :
World War II, he was named com- :
mander of an all-black unit in the :
still -segregated Army. Being •
"straw boss in a very ugly, discriminatory system" turned him ,
against it forever, he later said.
Not long after the war ended, he
joined the Southern Regional :
Council, a biracial institution in .
Atlanta. Heming refashioned it as :
· the indispensable center for docu- •
mented information about Southern •
change and Southern intransigence, :
systematiclllly exposing segregation' s honors and rebutting its lies.
Hodd1ng Car~r Ill, former: :
State Deputmeal spokesman: :
and award·wlnniag reporter, edi- •
tor and publisher, ill president or:
MalnStreet, a Washiagton, D.C.-!
bued television production com, ;
pany and a syndicated writer ror •
Nempaper Enterprise Associa•;
lion.

PA .

•

James Richard "Dink and Shor·
ty" Hartley, 68, of Mason, died
Sunday, Sept. 13, 1992, at Pleasant
Valley Hospilal.
He was a retired AEP river boat
man, U.S. Army veteran of World
War II, and member of the StewartJohnson VFW Post 9926 of Mason.
Born Feb. 22, 1924, in Hartford,
he was a son of the late Earl
Hartley and Goldie Marie Hartley.
Survivors include his wife,
Evelyn H. (Roberts) Hartley; stepdaughter, Laura Mae Jones of Point
Pleasan~
four ~ns and
daughters-in-law, Cectl E. (Jane)
Peny or Columbus, Ohio, William
T. (Anna Mae) Perry of North
Carolina, Billy M. (Frances "Bobj
Smith, Mason, and Calvin Wriglit
of Jackson, Ohio; a sister, Evelyn
Paaicia McCoy, New Matamoris,
Ohio; three brothers, Charles
Hartley, Galion, Ohio, Harold
Hartley and WiiUam Hartley, ad·
dresses unknown; a sister-in-law,
Arnie Roberts of Point Pleasant;
several nieces and nephews; IS
step grandchildren, and 13 step
great-grandchildren.
The funeral wiU be Tuesday, I
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Herman Jordan
and Rev. Clyde Fields officiating.
Burial will be in the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, where full
military rites will be held.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Monday) 6 to 9 p.m.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .. .................. 32 3/4
Ashland Oil........................ 24
AT&amp;T.................................44 318
Bank One...........................43 3/4

Bob Evans .........................18 3/4
Charming Shop................. .31 1/1.
City Holding ...................... 18
Federal Mogul ...................l6 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................66
J/4Key Centurion ..............19 118
Lands End..........................27 318
Limited Inc....................... 23 1/4
Multimedia Inc..................25 3/4
Rax RestauranL ................... 318
Reliance Electric................ I9 318
Robbins&amp;Myers ............. ... 14 3/4
Shoney 's Inc...................... 18 118
'Star Bank ...........................33 114
Wendy Int'l.. ......................l2 318
Worthington Ind................26
Stock reportl are the 10:30
quoits provided by Blunt,
Ellis aDd Loewi rl GaiUpolls.

a.m.

Daniel Joseph Morris

Daniel Joseph Morris, 37, Bidwell, died Saturday, Sept. 12, 1992
at Ripley, W.Va.
Born March 15, 1955 at Gal lipolis, he was a 1972 graduate of
North Gallia High School. He
attended the University of Rio
Grande, and was an ARA employee at the university.
Surviving are his mother,
Wanda Durst Morris of Bidwell;
father and stepmother, Daniel and
Joyce Morris of Rt 2, Bidwell; two
brothers, James Morris of Colurn·
bus, and Richard Morris of
LaPlace, La.; three sisters, Mrs.
Bruce (Wanda) Young of Newport,
N.C., Mrs. Dane (Shirley) Miller of
Columbus, and Mrs. Eddie (Kathy)
Ball of Fort Hood, Texas; maternal
grandmother, Kathleen Durst of
Harrisburg; three stepbrothers,
Robert Rowley of Steubenville,
Richard Rowley of Green Terrace,
Ark., and William Rowley of
Wenatche, Wash.; three stepsisters,
Rose Stepp of Racine, Mrs. Danny
(Juanita) Long of Columbus, and
Mrs. Virginia Murdock of Columbus; and three nieces and seven
nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
maternal pandfather,Joseph Durst,
and by his paternal grandparents,
Clyde and Kate Morris.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with Ronnie Lem •
ley officiating. Burial will be in
Fairview Cemetery, Bidwell.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Ruth Tewksbary
Ruth G. Tewksbary, 78 , of
Wellston, formerly of Middleport,
died Saturday, Sept. 12, 1992, at
the Holzer Medical Center after an
extended iUness.
Born in Gallipolis Dec. 19,
1913, she was the daughter of the
late Jasper and Lenora Belcher
Grate. She was a member of the
First Presbyterian Church in Wellston where she was a deacon in the
church, a member of Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star,.Mitldlepon; and a life member of the American Legion Auxiliary 371 of Wellston.
She and her husband owned and
operated the Wellston Store Co. f&lt;l'
44 years. They have been residents
of Wellston since 1948.
She is SllfVived by her husband
of 59 years, Edward Tewksbary,
two sons and daughters-in-law,
Charles and Rill Tewksbary of
Warren, and Thomas and Joanne
Tewksbary of Zanesville; five
grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren, one brother, Oene Grate,
Middleport, and two sisters,
Frances McCormick of Seattle,
Wash., and MaJy B'rown, Middleport; a sister-in-law, Ruth Grate.
South Charleston; a brother-in-law
and sister-in-law, Roben and Joann
Tewksbary, Middleport
Besides her p111ents she was pre·
ceded in death by a brother,
William Grate.
Friends may call at the Jenkins
Funeral Cltapel in Wellston 2 10 4
and 1 to 9 Monday (today). Funeral
services will be conducted there at
10 a.m . Tuesday with the Rev.
Robert Johnson officiating, Friends
may call at Fisher Funeral .flome
Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m. Eastern
Star services will be held at 7 p.m.
Graveside services will be held at
10 a.m. Wedneatlay at Riverview
Cemetery, Middlepon, with Rev.
Johnson olfteiiting.

By Tbe Associated Preas
Mild, dry weather wiD continue
for a few days.
Skies will be mostly sunny
today, with the highs 75 to 80 in
the north to the lower 80s in the
south. Highs Sunday were in the
low 70s north and the upper 70s
south.
It will be clear tonight with lows
in the upper 50s to the lower 60s.
Skies will be partly to mostly
sunny Tuesday, with highs 80 to
85.
Skies were clear Sunday night
Lows were in the upper 40s north·
east and in the 50s elsewhere in the
state.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 in 1939. The record
low was 38 in 1975.
Sunset today will be at 7:41

p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
7:13a.m.
.
Arouad tbe aation
Sub-freezing weather and the
threat of heavy snow hit parts of
Alaska today, while western cities
farther south faced a gray. overcast
day.
Heavy snow was expected today
in the Alaslca Range in the southcentral part of the state, across to
the eastern border with Canada.
Clouds hung over Boise, Idaho;
Casper, Wyo.; Los Angeles; Reno,
Nev .; San Diego and Spokane, •
Wash., early this morning. Fog that
covered some eastern and central
cities, including Pittsburgh, Indianapolis and Louisville, Ky., was
expected to burn off and leave
pleasant weather behind.
Rain on Sunday soaked a good
part of the Southwest and parts of

CTUiS eS••.__:C::on::ti::"nu::ed.:..f;;...ro;.:;m:.!:p.:::ag::...e1:....__ _ _ __
Saturday' s events on Oct. 10
wiD begin with a flag raising ceremony at 9:30 a.m. followed by a
ftremen 's parade from Pomeroy to
Mason, W.Va.
Run-Walk
A 5K Run-Walk, under the
direction of Mike Kennedy, will
begin in Mason, W.Va., at 10 a.m.
on Oct. 10, at the levee and will
conclude in Pomeroy at the levee.
Participants will be returned to
Mason, W.Va., by a slelilwheeler.
The course for the race is mostly
flat and follows the paved streets of
Mason, W.Va. , onto to Route 33,
across the Pomeroy·Mason bridge,
and along the beautiful Ohio River
to Pomeroy.
Plaques and prizes will be presented to the top five male and
female runners. Plaques will be
awarded to the fii'St place finishers
and medals will go to the second
place finishers in each of the fol·
lowing male and female age
groups: 14 and under; 15-19; 2029; 30-39; 40-49; and 50 and over.
All registered wallcers will be el~­
ble for a prize drawing.
A pre-registration fee of $8 must
accompany each run application
and $6 for each walk participant.
Pre-registration forms should be
received by Oct 3. On the day of
the mce the fee will be $10 for runners and $8 for walkers. T-shirts
are guaranteed for the first 100
entraniS. Packet pick-up and race
day registration is from 9-9:45 a.m.
The awards ceremony for the
Run-Wallc will take place at 11:15
a.m. at the levee in Pcmeroy.
A baseball card show will be
featured in the offiCe of Kenneth R.
Utt, C.P.A., on Main Street in
Pomeroy on Oct 10 from 10 a.m.
to4 p.m.
There will be a whistle blowing
contest at II a.m. followed by the
Ronald McDonald show until

the Southeast. Heavier rainfall dur·
ing six hours Sunday afternoon
included 1.3 inches at Leesville,
La., and almost an inch at Tucson,
Ariz.
The Northwest today was
expected to have highs in the 50s
and 60s, while the Northeast, Great
Lakes and the Daltotas expected the
temperature to climb into the 70s.

Highs in the 80s and 90s were pre- :
dieted for most of the rest of the :
nation.
Not all of Alaska faced winter
on Sunday. St. Paul, Alaska,
warmed to 54 degrees, a new high.
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was 107 degrees 11.
both Bullhead City and Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

Storms caused $30 million
in damage in Buckeye State
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio sustained about $30 million
in damage from floods, tornados
and other storms in July, a slate
Insurance Depanment official said.
James Browder, emergency
coordinator, said the damage
involved storms that struck the
state from July 12 to Aug. I.
Farmers, property owners and
municipalities that sustained wind.
rain, flood, tornado or other storm
dam~e have until Oct. 10 to apply
for disaster relief assistance from
the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Eleven of Ohio's 88 counties
have been declared disaster areas,
making them available for FEMA
money. They are Van Wert, Mer-

cer, Shelby, Ross, Franklih, Logan,
Medina, Cuyahoga, Summit,
Mahoning and Trumbull.
Gene Klnn, spokesman for the
Ohio Eme'/ency Management
Agency, ~ Ohio received 1,679
disaster relief applications from the
II counties.
•
He said the Sman Business
Administration has provided $2.8
million in low-interest loans to
Ohioans, while FEMA has
approved $826,000 in rebuilding
grants, which don't have to be
repaid.
The storms caused at least two
deaths. In Ross county, two~
were kiUed July 26 in Massicville,
south of Chillicothe in southern
Ohio, when a stream overflowed.

11 :45 a.m.
Denver Rice will entertain with
his ever-popular music on his toilet
~~ guitar at noon and boarding for
the P.A. Denny race cruise will
begin at I p.m. Another Ronald
McDonald show will be featured
from 1:30-2:15 p.m.
The sternwheel races will be
featured from 2-S p.m. followed
immediately by the awards ceremony . The Captain's Dinner will
begin at 5:30p.m. at the Eagles
Club in Fomeroy.
,
coLuMBus. Ohio (AP)- cows55.00anddown.
The Shady River Shufflers wiU
Direct
livestock prices and receipts
BuDs: 2.00 lower to 1.00 higher,
perform at 7 p.m. foUowed by the
at
selected
buying
points
Monday
all
buDs 64.00 and down.
musical entertainment of the
by
the
Ohio
Department
of
AgriVeal
calves: trend not available;
Crossover Band from 8-11 p.m.
culture:
choice
101.00
and down.
Plans are also being made to
Barrows and gilts: mostly 1.00
Sheep and lambs: Sleady to 3.00
hold a chili-cook off on Oct. 10
from II a.m. 10 3 p.m. with Jay and lower at country points; demand higher, choice wools 48.00.58.50;
choice clips 45.00-60.50; feeder
Sherry Warner in char~e of that light.
U.S
.
1-2,
230-260
lbs.,
country
lambs 59.00 and down; old sheep
event. Those interested m panicipoints,
39.00-40.00,
a
few
40.50;
40.00
and down.
pating in the cook-off arc required
to provide proof of a negative plants 39.oo-4o.oo. a few 40.75.
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
Tuberclllosis skin tesL This test is
points,
37.50-39.00.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The one
provided free of charge at the
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country ticket naming all six numbers
Meigs County Health Department
drawn in Saturday night's Super
Anyone interested in participating points, 38.00-39.50.
Receipts
Friday
11,500.
Est\·
Lotto drawing was sold in Englein the cook-off, or for further informated
receipts
Monday
8,000.
wood, near Dayton, and is worth $8
mation, shoUld contact Mr. or Mrs.
Prices
from
The
Producers
Livemillion,
the Ohio I...oaery said.
Warner at 992-2528.
stock
Association:
The
prize
is payable in 26 preThe Herbal Harvesters Society
Cattle: 1.00 lower 10 1.00 high- uu installments of $307,692.
will host an herb fest in the larger
The jackpot for Wednesday's
mini·Jmk in Pomeroy where Bank er.
Slaughter steers: choice 68.00- Super Lotto drawing is worth $4
One will again offer beans and
·
million.
cornbread, and an antique show by 76.00: select 63.00-73.00.
Slaugh1er heifers: choice 67.00Here are Saturday night's winRuss and Hope Moore of Riverine
75.50;
select
61.00-70.00.
.
ning
Ohio Lottery numbers:
Antiques wifl also be featured. A
Cows:
steady
to
2.00
lower;
all
Super
Lotto: 2-12-18-3046-47
Dower and quilt show is also being
Kicker:
~2-7-3-4
planned at the Meigs County PubContinued from page I
lic Library.
According to Banks there are
presently 32 boats registered to defendants are anested in a county taken place.
come to the festival and he feels which does not adjoin the county
Meanwhile, Rogu Barnhart, 14,
there may be more. Volunteer help where an alleged violation has of Pomeroy, was found in New
will be needed during sternwheel
Marshfield early Saturday. Nearby,
weekend and Banks encoura~es
mired in the mud of a secondary
anyone who is interested in asstst·
road, was a stolen pickup from
ing to conlacl him at his office,
Pike County. Barnhart, reported
992·5009.
missing last week by his pareniS,
Pete and Brenda Barnhart, was
Meigs Emergency Services charged in connection with the
units answered 12 calls for assis- theft and is now incarcerated in the
tance over the weelcend.
juvenile detention center in
On Saturday at 2:31 p.m., Zanesville.
Gallipolis, will host the annual
meeung of the Athens District Racine and Syracuse squads went
According to Soulsby, charges
United Methodist Women on Sat- to Star Mill Park for Heidi are expected to be filed against
urday. Registration and coffee hour Gilmore, who was taken to Holzer Dudding in connection with the
wiU begin at 9 a.m. with the busi- Medical Center by Syracuse squad. theft of the vehicle from Pike
ness session at 10 a.m. Dismissal At 3 p.m., Middleport squad was County.
sent to Railroad St.reet. Richard
wiU be at 2:30p.m.
Dudding's truck was impounded
Rev. L{nette Arthur, district Gibbs was taken to Veterans by the Ravenswood Police Departdirector o program ministry, will Memorilll Hospital. At 5:13 p.m., ment and the stolen trucks have
be the speaker. Her husband, Ricci , Syracuse squad went to Tuppers been returned to their respec1ive
is pastor of Immanuel United Plains. Jecil Baker was talcen to St. counties, according to Soulsby.
Methodist Church in Logan. The Joseph Hospital. At 10:50 p.m.,
The State Ftre Mlrshali's Offtce
theme for the meeting is "Who Is Syracuse unit responded to a rekin· has been called 10 investigate the
died ftre at the Dudding residence fire at Dudding's mobile home.
My Neighbor, Who Am I."
on Pine Grove Road . At II :49 Soulsby said the blaze is being
Dance planned
The Gallia Twirlers Western p.m., Middleport and Pomeroy treated as a possible arson.
Square Dance Club will hold a units were sent to Broadway Street
Soulsby said other factors being
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at in Middleport for a structure ftre at considered in the investigation
the Henderson Community Center the George Stewart residence.
include a handwritten note found in
in Henderson, W.Va. Jim Wilbur
On Sunday at 6:33 a.m., Dudding's vehicle at the bridge on
Pomeroy squad went to Overbrook Sawrday, which could be illletpretwiU be the caller.
Center. Anna Cline was taken to ed as a suicide note, and a report
Revival and homecoming
Revival and homecoming at Veterans. At 7:38 a.m., Pomeroy last week of a stolen vehicle from
Joppa United Methodist Church and Chester squads went to Flat· Dudding, wherein his 1984 Mazda
will be Wednesday through Sun- woods Road for an auto accident. pickup traek was recovered by the
day. A carry-in dinner will be~in Rick Matheney, Jeny Hubbard and Ohio State Highway PA'trol ncar
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. Spectal Gary Arnold were taken to Veter· Portsmouth.
singing nightly and Sunday after- ans. At 10:31 a.m., Rutland squad
Soulsby denied that the dcpannoon. Brenda Weber will be the went to State Route 124. Ruth ment
was investigating the theft of
Buerltip was taken to Velerans. At
guest speaker. Public invited.
any
items
than vehicles by
2:05 p.m., Rutland squad went to Dudding &lt;I'other
Barnhart.
Dexter f&lt;l' Patrick McDonald, who
was taken to Veterans. At 3:27
p.m., Racine squad went to Bashan
1lte Daily Selllinel
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Road. Paul Hensley was uansport·
.
Saturday
IUIPIItl-lll)
ed to Veterans. At 11 :06 p.m.,
Admitted: Paul Houdashelt, Racine units were sent to Third
Pabl11hed ...I'J •Rernoc:m, .Monday
Pomeroy.
throach Frklax 111 eo.t St., Puc:•o&gt;
Street for an auto accident. Bill
Ohio b7 the Ohio Yolto1 Pablioltlai
Discharged: Pearlenc Lee, Morris was taken to Veterans. At
Compan.yiM•Ittmedia Int., Pomeroy;
Luvenia Hayman, and Robert 11:27 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Ohio 16'1118, I'll. 982-21156. ~ ct.U
poM1p poi4 o l , . , Ohio.
Daniels.
Wetzgall StreeL Shaun Carmichael
Sunday
was taken to Holzer.
N.......: TM -•led ..._, uc1 11Ho
Admitted: Paula Hess, GaUipo·
Ohio NeW1pape1' Allodation, NaliGnal
Adnrtiliftl Repre~~nt.aUft, Buaham
lis; Anna Cline , Middlepor~ and
Newapopar Sal•, 733 Thin!
Kenneth Baker.
New Ylrt, New York 10017.
Discharged: None.

---Livestock report--

Lottery numbers

.
Senes,,,

Meigs EMS units
answer 12 calls

-Meigs announcements_
MCCLtomut
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs Unit·
ed Methodist Church.
Revival and homecoming
Youth Revival at the Vanderhoof Baptist Church, Route 2,
Coolville, will be Sunday through
Sept. 23 at 7 p.m. nightly. Homecoming services will be Sept. 27
with a potluck dinner at noon.
There will be no afternoon service.
Pastor Cecil A. Morrison invites
the public.
Wilson reunion
The annual Wilson family
reunion will be held Saturday in
Syracuse at the park behind London Pool. Lunch will be served at
noon.
Homecoming
Homecoming services at the Mt.
Hermon United Brethren in Christ
Church will be Sunday. Sunday
school services are at 9:30 a.m.,
morning worship at 10:30 a.m., and
fellowship meal at noon. Afternoon
services will be at 1:30 p.m. featur·
ing special singing. The church is
located off Texas Road, Pomeroy.
Public invited.
Yearbooks avallable
The 1992 Meigs Marauder yearbooks have arrived and may be
picked up at the high school
between the hours of 8:30 and 11
a.m.
District muting
Grace United Methodist Church, .

Middleport Fire Dept.
thanks contributors
The Middleport F't.re Department
would lilce to thank the following
for tbeir frnancial contributions to
tbe cost of tbe July 4tb ft.reworks
display:
Sears, Dairy Queen,Manley 's
Wrecker Service, King Servlstar
Hardware, Bahr Clothiers, Peoples
Bank of Middleport, Mill Street
Books. Holzer Clinic, Quality Print
Sbop, Feeney-Bennett American
Legion Post and Awtillary, Fisher
Funeral Home, Tri-County Ford,
Blue Tartan, Dr. Larry Kennedy,
Dr. James Schmoll, Middleport
'fiopbies, Mark.'s Auto Sales,
Valley Lumber and Supply,
Heiner's Bakery, Inc ., Meig s
County Chamber of Commerce,
Frulb's Pbarmacy, General Sales.
l!lgels Fumiture, and Columbus
Soutbem Power.

Hospital news

"'""ao.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlsc:harges Sept. 11- Connie
Hollingshead, Mrs. Steve Mathews
and daQghter, Mrs. Joe Pierce and
son.
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Roben
Saunders, daughter, Gallipolis.
Discharges Sept. 12
MicheUe Johnson, Shannon Jordan,
Debra Lee. Maude Logan, Sharon
Roush, Kyle Woodall.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Current, son, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Danny King, son, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. David Shotts, daughter, Wellston.
Dlschlraes Sept. 13 - Florence Allen, Annetla Maynard,
Mrs . David McCormick and
daughter.
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Denney, daughter, Jackson.

POSTNASTI!R: Seo4 addnu ella,_ to
Tht: Daily Sentinel , 111 Court Sl.,
l'!!mo!uy, OHio 16769.
111118CIUPTIOH llAl'l8
·~ c.m.r

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

OM W•k. .............................. ............$1.60
One N..,U............................ .............. M .IIIi
One Yaar.................. ...................._.l83 .20
IIHGLICOPY
PIUCI
Dail)o. ........... .................................23 c... ..

-.:ribers nol4eairiotlte par tho curior ...,. nnrillo
cllncl 1o Tloe
Dailr Sendnel on a lhne, •• .,. ta
-~~~ ...... Cnclll will b o p - -

ana...

-..-.

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No aobaeripd011• b7 Mail pmoillod io ·
anu whera home eai'Tier ""'• ia
llYiillbk
1Midollloill&gt;eo..!7
IS W..U................................ .........$81-U

116 Wooh .........................................$G.t8
112 Weeb. .........................................l84.711
O.toiH ..... Coooooq
13 Weeb..;....................... ...............
21 w.-.......................... ~· ·· ···· ········ .10
112 Weeb..........................................

rctl)

'

�&gt;Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 14, 1992

Pomeroy-MiddleJiort, Ohio

Falcons after an agreement that
will allow him to return to baseball's Atlanta Braves at any time,
then took Chip Lohmiller' s kick at
the I, str~aked up the middle,
through a hole at the 30 and cut
right, then ~ down the sideline
untouched for a 99-yard m.
Rams 14, Patriots 0
At Anaheim, Calif., the Rams
reversed themselves with their frrst
shutout in 60 games and fust win
in 12. After a 40-7 rout at the hands
of Buffalo last week, the Rams got
seven sacks - three by Kevin
Greene - and two interceptions
from Todd Lyght.
Gerald Robinson and Mike Piel
each had two sacks. The Patriots
never got inside the Rams' 20.
Buccaneers 31, Packers 3
At Tampa, the guy doing the Joe
Montana 1mitation is none other
than Vinny Testaverde, perhaps the
most maligned quarterback in the
league.
But under new coach Sam
Wyche's tutelage, Testaverde has
revitalized his career as the Bucca·
neers moved to 2-0 for the first
time in 12 yean!.
Testaverde became the Bucs'
career passing leader, surpassing
Doug Williams, by completing 22
of 25 auempts for 363 yards and
two touchdowns despite a case of
the nu. Testaverde also scored on a
2-yard run, spiking the ball in safety Adrian White's face after forcing his way into the end zone.
Cowboys 34, Giants l8
At East Rutherford, NJ ., Dallas
seemed headed for the most convincing victory against New York
in its history, leading 34-0 early in
the third quarter. Troy Aikman
threw for two touchdowns and Dallas' special teams blocked two
punts and scored once.
0 199l R.J

But the Giants, who had not
scored more than 24 points in Ray
Handley's fust 17 games as coach
and had 53 yards in the fust half,
ripped the Cowboys defense to
shreds on their next four drives.
Phil Simms took the Giants on
scoring marches of 80, 80, 62 and
55 yards before a fmal drive slalled
'BIId Dallas ran out the clock.
Emmitt Smith rushed for 89
yards and caQght eight passes for
55 more.
Steelers !7, Jets 10
At Pittsburgh, Barry Foster
rushed for 190 yards, the best
showing by a Steelers runner in 22
years. He scored from 54 and 23
yards.
Pittsbur¥h also forced seven
turnovers. gJving it 12 through two
victories. The Jets lost three fumbles ~d threw fo~ inlerceptions,
mcludmg Larry Griffin's 65-yard
touchdown reiUrn of Ken O'Brien's
pass la1e in the fourth quarrer, and
are 0-2 after a 5-0 preseason.
Jets QB Browning Nagle was 9
for 29 for 117 yards and one interContinued on page 5

t1ta44
.....

GOAL LINE FUMBLE - Los Angeles
Raiders receiver Tim Brown rumbles the ball
into tbe end zone as be is tackled by Cincinnati
Bengals derender Kevin Walker at the one-yard
line during the !bird quarter or their NFL game

in Cincinnati Sunday. Bengals ddensive back
Rod Jones (25) recovered the ball for a touch·
back. 'Cincinnati held on to win tbe game 24·21
in overtime. (AP)

Norman claims Canadian open in sudden death playoff
OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) Greg Norman got the gremlins out
or his head and his golf career back
on track.
He chased those uoublesome little demons that had plagued him
through 27 months, beat Bruce
LieiZke in a playoff and closed the
longest non-winning strealt of his
life with a 2 112-foot birdie pun on
the second hole of a sudden death
playoff.
"II got all the gremlins out of
my head," Norman said. "It's been

a horrible two years.''
When that little pun rattled into
the bouom of the cup at Glen
Abbey, Norman thrust both arms
high in the air as the Canadian
Open champion.
He and Lietzke finished regulation tied at280, eight under par.
Lietzke, who blew a two-shot
lead with bogeys on three of the
first four holes then made up five
shots on Norman over the last five
holes, mau:hed par 72.
Norman had a 70 that included

an eagle-2 on the sixd1 hole, where
he found the cup with a 183-yard 5iron sho~ and a double bogey from
the water on the 14th.
Norman had 10 drop a 12-foot
putt on the 72nd hole to match
LieiZke's two-putt birdie and called
it "the bil\¥est putt I've ever made
in my life.'
Af1er both parred the rust exua
hole, Norntan won it with the birdie
on the next.
Nick Price, lhe defending tideholder and PGA champion, and
Masters champ Fred Couples also

were in the sw-srudded scramble
down the stretch and each led or
shared the lead over the back nine.
Price, however, made nine consecutive pars on the back, shot (fl
and missed the playoff by a strolce.
Couples had the lead alone at
the tum, then saw it all go wrong.
He played the back in 42, including
a double bogey from the water on
the rma1 bole, shot73 and was four
shots back.
Joey Sindelar, Jay Delisng and
Corey Pavin tied for fourth at282.

REYNOlDS TQII,t,CCO CO.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - In his
second major league stan, Cincinnati right-hander Bobby Ayala
learned the difference between
Double-A hitters and major-league
sluggers.
":
That lesson came courtesy of
Gary Sheffield, who blasted his
31st home run on a pitch that ~ot
away · from Ayala in the thtrd
inning of the San Diego Padres' 31 victory Sunday.
"I left a slider out over the plate
and got hurt," said Ayala (0-1).
" In Double-A, you can get away
with a lot of thaL If you come here
and leave a pitch out over the plate,
yougethun."
Sheffield's homer was the
Padres' fust in five games and left
him three behind reammate and NL
leader Fred McGriff.
After going I for 2 with two
walks, Sheffield also moved back
into a tie with Andy Van Slrke or
Pittsburgh for the league s top
average at .331. His 94 RBis ranks
third behind Darren Daulton of
Philadelphia (99) and Terry
Pendleton of Atlanta (95).
"You can't let up;' said
Sheffield. "You can't say, 'Oh,
I've had a good season,' and just
call it at thaL They pay me to play
162 games and that's what I try to
do.''

Frank Seminara (8-3) allowed

Idle Miami retains top spot in AP poll

How top 25 fared

season.

"It's obviously a goal we've
been working hard to get to,"
Aztecs coach AI Luginbill 6aid.
"We believe San Diego State
belongs in the upper echelon of
college football
"It really only matters where
Y?u are at the e~d of the season, but
11 s 1mportant for us to get in there
early. If you don't break in now it's
hard to get in at the end."
Faulk, who rushed for 1,429
yards in 10 games as a freshman
last season, had 299 yards and three
touchdowns as the Aztecs ended
then-No. 25 BYU's lxlme winning
suealc at 17 games.
"He's special,'' Luginbill said
of his outstanding sophomore. "In
my opinion, he's the best player in
college football. No one has performed like he has week in and
week out. If someone else has, I
sure haven't seen iL"
San Diego State is off Saturday
and faces No. 15 UCLA on the
road Sept. 26.
Notre Dame fell four spots to
No.7 after tying Michigan 17-17 in
a game that ended with Irish fans
booing !heir own team for conservative play-calling on the final
series. The Irish are now one spot
belcw Michigan, which remained
No.6.
Miami. which didn't play Satur-

UP AND OVER • San Diego Padre's Darrin Jackson slides in
under the tag or airborne Cincinnati Reds second sacker Jerf Bran·
sons during third inning National League basebaU action Sunda7
in San Diego. The Padres downed the Reds 3-l.(AP)
one run and four hits over six
innings to send the Reds to their
12th loss in 18 games. Cincinnati
fellJO 1{2 games behind Atlanta in

the NL Wes~ its largest deficit of
the season. The Padres trail the
Braves by II games.

Colts' game.
"Things started snowballing on
us and just kept on going. When
lhey realized they could get some
pressure on us, !hey started bringing quite a few guys, just laying
their ears back and saying, 'OK,
here's a pass rush, let's go do it.'
That's not a good situation for an
offensive line."
The Browns made instant stars
of Colts' rookies Steve Emtman
and Quentin Coryau, the top two

players taken in this year's draft.
The pair combined to get three of
the Colts' sacks.
The picture doesn't get much
brighler for Cleveland this week.
Next up are Miami's Troy Vincent
and Marco Coleman, two more
first-round defenders ho~ing to
make just as big a splash m their
NFL debuts. The Dolphins did not
play last week, their opener postponed while south Florida recovers
from Hurricane Andrew.

FlOrida State jumped two pWcel
to No. 3 aftl:: beating Clemson 2420. The Seminoles got two fustplace votes and 1,361 points.
Florida, which defeated Kentucky 35-19, is still fourth. Round·
in$ out the top 10 are Texas A&amp;M.
Michigan, Notre Dame, Syracuse,
Alabama and l'eM State.

day, held onto the top spot with 47
first-place votes and 1,534 points
from a nationwide panel of writers
and broadwtm.
Washingtllll remained No. 2 following a 27-10 victory over Wisconsin. The Huskies received II
first-place votes and 1,481 points.

By The Associated Press
Marshall Faulk carried San
Diego State to its fust appearance
in The Associated Press college
football poll in 15 years. Co&amp;c;h AI
Luginbill hopes Faulk's running
can continue to fuel SDSU' s run up
the chans.
San Diego State, which opened
with a tie against Southern Cal,
moved up to No. 23 on Sunday
after beating Brigham Young45-38
on Thursday night. It's the Aztecs'
first appearance in the poll since
finishing 16th foUowing the 1977

Cleveland needs to protect Kosar
in tonight's contest with Miami
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - How
does an offensive lineman feel after
watching his quarterback get
sacked II times in one afternoon?
a) Depressed.
b) Aggravated.
c) Angry.
d) All of the above.
The answer, says Cleveland
Browns' offensive lineman Dan
Fl'kC, 'IS 'd . '
" All day long, I've just been
thinking about what happened,"
Pike said . "You're severely
depressed, aggravated, angry .
That's not the typical way we've
played." .
Indianapolis sacked Bernie
Kosar on the game's ftrst play from
scrimmage last Sunday and never
let up, falling just one sack short of
the NFL record in the Colts' 14-3
win. Kosar was knocked to the
ground soother half-dozen times
shonly afler releasing the ball.
The performance was so pitiful.
it's likely to inspire opponents for
weeks to come, Fike said.
"The films get uaded for three
or four weeks," he said. "The next
three or four teams we play are
going 10 have the tape from 1he

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Padres stop·
Reds, 3-1

Jlills edge 49ers;,Bengals
win second in a row~ 24-21
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
It doesn't get mpch crazier than
this, even in the zany world of pro
football.
"At times, I thought both teams
were a liule delirious," Buffalo
linebacker Darryl Talley said Sunday after his I! ills and the San
Francisco 49ers combined for
1,086 yards. 65 points, 820 yards
and six touchdowns through the air.
Oh, yes, the Bills rallied for a
34 · 31 victory, a significant win for
the losers of the last two Super
Bowls.
" We have a long way to go, but
the 49ers are a great· team and
there's Ibis AFC-NFC thing," said
Pete Metzelaars, who caught two of
Jim Kelly's three touchdown passes. "To win a game against the
NFC is a great thing for us.''
And to do it on the road was
even more impressive. Many critics
felt the Bills were ready to slip this
year. but their rll'Sttwo games have
been offensive showcases featuring
the usual starS such as Kelly and
Thurman Thomas and substitules
like MeiZelaars.
"We had a lot to prove to ourselves," Kelly said.
They didn "t prove it before
goins. lhrough what Talley
descnbed as "60 minuteS of hell."
Mike Cofer was wide righl on a 47yard field goal in the final minule
for San Fransisco, reviving memories or the 1991 Super Bowl, when
Scou Norwood did the same thing
and Buffalo lost.
"I feel a bit of urgency (to win
the Super Bowl this season), after
all the rurmoil and lack of st£cess
in the Super Bowl the past two
years," DE Bruce Smith said.
Elsewhere, it was Washington
24, Atlama 17; the Los Angeles
Rams 14, New England 0; Tampa
Bay 31, Green Bay 3; Dallas 34,
the New York Giants 28; Cincinnati 24, the Los Angeles Raiders 21
in overtime; Pinsburgh.27,the New
York Jels 10; Philadelphia 31,
Pl1oenix 14; Deuoit 31, Minnes01a
17; New Orleans 28, Chicago 6;
Kansas Cily 26, SeatUe 7; Denver
21 , San Diego 13; and Houston 20.
Indianapolis 10.
· Tonigh~ Miami is at Cleveland.
Ben gals 24, Raiders 21, OT
· At Cincinnati, Dan Land fum bled the overtime kickoff and
Antoine Bcnneu recovered, setting
up Jim Breech's 34·yard field goal.
The Bengals are 2-0 u.nder new
coach Dave Sbula.
The BengaJs, rocked by scandal
as 20 former and current players
were named Tuesday in a rape law·
s)Jit. withstood a strong perfor·
mance by Raiders quarterback Jay
Schroeder (24 of 37 passes for 367
r.'rds).
: Schroeder hit all five of his
passes for 73 yards before Marcus
Allen's 1-yard touchdown run with
r: 56 lefl tied it.
Bills 34, 49ers 31
At San Francisco, Thurman
11tomas' ll-yard run gave the Bills
the lead and Cofer then missed his
kick.
The wild game featured 400yard passing games by Kelly and
Sieve Young. Kelly, despile missing tight end Keilh McKeller, was
22 of 33 for 403 yards and three
s~ores. Young, without Jerry Rice
(sidelined with a concussion in the
first period) was 26 of 37 for 449
yards. and also had three TO pass·
cs.
Redskins 14, Falcons 17
At Washington, Desmond dazzled and Deion shined on consecutive plays as the teams erupted for
3'5 points in the second quarter
af1er a scoreless opening penod.
Washington's Brian Mitchell
m:lded a punt at the Redskins' 42
and threw a cross·field lateral to
rust-round pick Howard just before
being tackled. The Heisman Trophy winner raced down the sideline
and avoided 1wo Lacklers at lhe 5
for his firsl NFL touchdown.
Sanders. in his first game for the

Monday, September 14, 19!12 .

By The Associated Press
How the top 25 teams in the Associated Press' college football poll
fared Saturday:
I. Miami"(l-0) was idle. Next Florida A&amp;M.
2. Washingtllll (2-0) beat Wisconsin 27-10. Next vs. No. II Nebraska.
3. Notre Dame (1-0-1) tied No.6 Michigan 17-17. Next at Michigan
Stale.
4. Florida (1-0) beat Kenb!Cky 35-19. Next at No. 20Tennessee.
5. Florida State (2-0) beat No. 15 Clemson 24-20. Next at No. 19
North Carolina Stale.
6. Michigan (0-0-1) tied No.3 Notre Dame 17-17. Next vs. Olclahoma
State.
7. Texas A&amp;M (3-0) beat Tulsa 19-9. Next at Missouri.
8. Alabama (2-0) beat Southem Mississippi 17-10. Next at Arkansas.
9. Syracuse (2-0) beat.Teus31-21. Next: vs. No. 22 Ohio State.
10. Penn Stale (2-0) beat Temple 49-8. Next vs. Eas1ern Michigan.
11. Nebraska (2-0) beat Middle Tennessee State 48-7. Next at No. 2
Washington.
12. Colorado (2-0) beat Baylor 57-38. Next at Minnesota.
13. Oklahoma (2-0) beat Arkansas State61-0. Next vs. Southern Cal.
14. Georgia (1-1) lost to No. 20 Tennessee 34-31. Next vs. CaJ-Swe
Fullerton.
15. Clemson (1-1) lost to No. 5 Florida Stale 24-20. Next at No. 24
Georgia Tech, Sept. 26.
16. UCLA (J-0) beat Cal State-Fullerton 37-14. Next: at No. 25
Brigham Young.
17. California (1-1) lost at Purdue41 -14. Next al Kansas, Sept. 26.
18. Mississippi State (1-1) lost at Louisiana Stale 24-3. Next at Memphis Stale.
19. North Carolina State (3-0) beat Maryland 14-10. Next vs. No. 5
Florida State.
20. Tennessee (2-0) beat No. 14 Georgia 34-31. Next vs. No.4 florida.
21. Stanford (1 -1) beat Oregon 21-7. Next: vs. Northweslem.
22. Ohio State (2-0) beat Bowling Green 17~. Next: at No.9 Syracuse.
23. Virginia (2-0) beat Navy 53-0. Next vs. No. 24 Georgia Tech.
24. Georgia Tech (J-0) beat Weslem Carolina 37-19. Next at No. 23
Virginia.
25. Brigham Young (1-1) lost to San Diego State 45-38. Next: vs. No.
16 UCLA.

MHS golfers up record to 17-2

Wikoff continues
dominating seniors
of 108.5 points..
A prolesl was filed by "Whispering Roy Crawfonl's" chaufteur,
Harold Clark. It seems that the
Lulher Tucker's team had hit three
balls in the water on number 14
when the founh player, Lulher
Tucker, skipped a ball off the water
and onto the green for a birdie
which put his team in second place
for the day. This eventually
knocked Clark's team out of second
place for the day.
It seems the "Angerony Flash",
SEVENTH GRADE FOOT - Chuckie Lester, missed Tuesday's .
BALL-at Vinton County
round for his first absence of the
EIGHTH GRADE FOOT- season.
BALL-Vinton County at home
Only three weeks remain in Ibis
Thursday. September 17
league season. There is now
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL-Nel- ayear's
total
of 74 different players insonville-York at home
cluding
lhe addition of former
GOLF-TVC Meet at Belpre
teacher,
John
Teaford, joining lhis
VOLLEYBALL-Belpre at home week for the first
time this year.
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEY BALL-at Miller
Following is a list of the lop 25
Friday, September 18
leaders:
VARSITY FOOTBALL·Nel- point
!.Jim
Wikoff, Shade, OH 124.0
sonville-York at home
2. D. Winebrenner,Syracusc 111.5
3. Ralph Sayre, New Haven 108.5
4 Don Wilson, Middleport 108.5
5. Bill Hannum. Chester
107.5
6. Pete Grinstead, N.H.
107.0
7. George Burns, Clifton
104.5
8. Clark Greene, Hurricane 104.0
NATIO.NAL LEAGUE
9. Earl Johnson. Mason
102.5
East Dlvlllon
10.
Harley
Rice,
Reedsville
99.5
..... R.W--L PeL
GB
II. Herman Knapp. N.Haven 99.5
!'!~buriJl
...........82 .. .60 ....571 3
12. Chuckie Lester, Evans
97.5
......uoil
.......•.19 ...61....556
13. Elmer Click, ML Alto
97.5
SLLou.is ........•.,.?1 ...69 ....507
10
CN.ooo
......... .'10 ...71 ... .496 II 1/2
14.
Carroll
Norris,
Syracuse
96.5
New York
.........63 .. .78 .... 447 181(1.
15. Lew Gilland, Mason
95.0
Philadelphia ......... 58 ... 82 .... 414
23
Wut DIVblon
16. Sonny Chandler,Gallipolis 93.5
·····"'w --L PeL
17. Roy Crawford, Millwood 89.5
Gl
AllanLI
.............t:7 .•.55 .... 613
18. Jack Young, Cottageville 88.5
Cincinn•t.i ...........n ...66 .... 531 10 112
19. Luther Tucker, Mason
86.5
Son Diec• .......... 16 ...66 ... ..515
II
20. Lawrence Crotty, P.P.
85.0
Hounm
....... ....67 ...76 ....469 20 lfl
Sanfnncilco ........ 64 ...79 ....448 23112
Roush,
N.
Haven
82.5
2l.Jim
lAo Anplao ........ 51 ...!6... .399 30 1/2
22. H.Ciark, Ravenswood
78.0
23. John Ferguson, N. Haven 76.5
24 . Milt Maxwell, Chesler
73.5
25. Bill Howard, N. Haven
71.5

Jim Wikoff of Shade, OH., is still
sporting a twelve and one-half
point lead in the Riverside Senior
League. Wikoff has a tolal of 124
points for the season to lead Dana
Winebrenner of Syracuse. who has
a tolal of lll.5 points.
Tied for thin! place is Ralph
Sayre of New Haven and Don Wilson of Middlepon with twin tolals

By Dave Harris
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauder golf ream
ran it's record to 17-2 on the season by winning a Tri-Valley Conference maleh last Thursday at the
Elm Golf Club.
Meigs won the match with a
score of 153, followed by Alexander (159), Belpre (169), Southern
(170), Wellston (174), NelsonvilleYork (186), Vinton County (190),
Trimble (194) and Federal Hocking
(270).
Jay Cremeans had an outstand-

ing evening with a par of 35
including 3 birdies. John Bentley
carded a 38, Jay Harris and Adam
Krawsczyn a 40, Jason hart an 45
and Benny Ewing a 46.
For coach Jim Anderson's
Southern team. Michael McKelvey
carded a 41, Mark Allen a 42,
Andy Grueser a 43, Bracken
McFann and Ryan Williams a 44
and Andy Fields a 50.
Meigs will play a TVC match
on Monday evenmg at the Ohio
University course hosted by

.

.

Alexander. and Belpre will host ~
match on Thursday at the Oxbow
Golf Course.
The Meigs reserve team lost a
tri-match lasl Wednesday at Hidden Valley in Pt. Pleasant. Barboursville won the match with a
186, Pt. Pleasant carded a 188 and
Meigs a 193.
Reggie Prall led Meigs with a
43, Todd MilCh added a 47, Benny
Ewing a 50. Jason Taylor and Jerrod Douglas a 53 and Jerod Cook a
57. Ryan Click of Barboursville
won medalisl honors with a. 42.

KENMORE 65th ANNIVERSARY

Meigs sports calendar
Meigs High School Spons Calender for September 14-19
Monday, September 14
GOLF-TVC Meet at Nelsonville
VOLLEYBALL-Trimble at
home
Tuesday, Seplember.l5
VOLLEYBALL-at Wellston
. CROSS COUNTRY-at Gallipolis Invitational
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEY BALL-Miller at home
Wednesday, Seplember 16
VOLLEYBALL-Southern at
home

(.)%~~fl~A
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Scoreboard
•-n

llloJw t.eapo
AMERICAN LEAGUB
Eut DIYIIIon
WLPct.GB
.......- .114 ...60 ...~1!
• Toronto
Blhimore ........71...64 ....549
5
6
MilweW:ce .......11 ...65....542
New Yodr.
.........~ ...14 ....413 141/2
16
C\ewlond ..........61...75 ....412
llouuit
............6'1 ..•17 ....46.1
11
a....., ............&amp;S •.:n ....4.51 u
WeetiNvllton
W L 1'&lt;1
GB
OUland

Minnelota
Chicago

COLONY THEATRE

Ta.•

............:'70 ...76 ....479 171/2
Cal.i!omil ...........64 ... 79 ... .448
22
""""Cily .. ......63 ...79 ....444 22 1/2
SuaJe
.............56 ...81 .... 319 JO l{l
Salunlat• C.ma
Minta:tU ?,C&amp;lifomia 2
Detroit 9, B..lDI !li
New Yelk II, Kwu Ci1, 9
Oaklaad S, Scaale4
Clcvellnd 5, Otk:a1o 3
T010r110 ... T•li.U 2
Milwallkoe !i, BlltitnorcO
SundaY'• aaDcboit 1, BOII.On 2
lCaDiu Cily 3, New YID. 0
Milwaululm 3, Bdlimore I
Mildla&amp;a6. Calitomi12
CloMiood 2, au.... I. 13 inninp

FRI. THRU THURS.

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MCftdaJ11 c ••
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(Swliioton

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MUwiUl:ee (Bones 1-9) 11 Bolton (Darwin 1·1). B5 p.m.
Kanau Cit_l (Reed 2-6) It Blltim«c (Sut·

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Cleveland (Men 6-10) It Toi'Uito (Cone
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-.u(Toponill· IO) ato.Jdond
(S ..wotl 11·9~ I ~Ol p.m.

Only pm• odlodWocl
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*Based on mfr.'slist price reduction.

.... ....... 86 ...57 ....601
.. ....... 8(! ... 61 ....559
6
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Chiclp (Fcmandllz 7~) 11. New YOlk
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Mibn..UC (Bolio 13-5) n 8011.011 (Violl
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Tlllll (1o.Ow:mu lH 1) II Dcuott (Oul·
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Continued rrom page 4
ceplton before leaving with an
injury to his right hand. Nagle
threw for 366 yards last week.
Eagles 31, Cardinals 14
At Phoenix, Herschel Walker
had his second strai~ht 100-yard
rushing game, a fust smce 1987 for
him. The high-priced free a~ent
rushed for 115 yards on 28 carnes.
Fred Barnet! broke loose for two
TDs, one a 71-yarder, and had a
career-high 193 yards receiving.
Philadelphia's defense, No. I in
the league last year, capped lhe vic·
tory in the fourth quarter. Seth
Joyner knocked the ball loose from
Phoenix quarterback Chris Chandler, and Reggie While caught it
ana went 37 yards to score with
2:021eft.

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I

I

~wilh ....
dea;liug, CPdarnalic

'

... .

�The Daily Sentinel

.,nday; September 14, 1992

The Dally 5enllnei-Page-7

Monday, September 14, 1992
Page-6

)

~Employers

who are cpoperative
~ tend to have haRpier employees
.

I

De.- AH Lallden: This is for
: • Any Parent, Anywhere" ~ho
· compllincd lhal she doesn't get bme
: off liom work when her kids ~R
: sick.
· • I 1111 afemlle superviJar in a large
: office. Our em~ n also 1101
: CIUled tQ lllditional time off when
·. • &amp;niily lllel'lbcr is in.
:; . Since we n -.laried employees,
:-we am pllid f&lt;1r sict days. •ecxpo.
Canada" says il cannot afford
· lhc expePS" or lddilional sick leave.
However, tile bottom line is
this - whether it's sil:k chilcben,
.Uinl JlllaiiS or a penonal maner
that rcquiles time off, employers
YfhoaR:.....,..ative will end up with
.happier, poductive workers.
·-ONTARIO, CANADA
. DEAR ONTARIO: You've made
Some ~ and valid points.
· Hae's I1IOIC onlhc same subject
· Dar Alia: TIIIC off work bcaM•se
. a tid is sict? Solllds fair enough,
:. but let's get practical. If "Any Par·
· ent" had me chikken, would she
w.~~ 25 days off a year'! ·- D.H.G.,
BOTHElL, WASH.
DEAR D.H.G.: Kwitcherkiddin'
and read on f&lt;~r a le.w that makes

:

:''*

more sense:
Dear Aaa Landers: That lcuer
fiom the WOIII8II whose sister-in-law
: brings her sick kids to family
: gatherings had me fuming. The
· writer also denounced )limits who
: dulllp their sict kids at day care
: brneJS': IIIey can't spare a little time

. .

,~~~~ PRECIS!~~~~~~ FRAME
9 Year•
Experience

. . .

,our ~ldleil and our jobs.

Ann
Landers

ASk your readers to urge
P.lesident Bush to sign the Family
· and. M~ Leave Act which wiD
provide 12 weeks of unpaid leave to
working people who must C~R for a
new baby &lt;~r.sick ~dative. Please be
our lldvocate, Ann. We need you. A WORKING MOM IN sn.VER
SPRING, MD.
.DEAR MOM: I believe in what
you are !lying to IICC!lfllplish and I
wint to help. .
Hear ye all readers who want 10
proii!OII: justice and family Values:
Clip this cohimn and send it to
President Bush. No lCtiU is neces·
sary. ~ 11e ~ees lhc co1umn. he'D
get'lhc message. ~address is: The
Plesidenl, The Whi'reHouse, 1600
Pennsylvania Ave., Washington,
D.C: 20SOO. A blizzard or lcuers
can't help but get his atlelllion.
Gem of'the Day: A young boy,
ready for bed, inlcnupled an adult
party in the living room. •rm going
to say my prayers now. Anybody
want anything?"

ANN LANDERS
"tm,Loo~ .

Tlll!a SJD!Iial&lt; ..t
Cftlllon S,adi rt " .
' '

10 Slay hol)le With them•.
Let me set something straight,
Ann. lt is one !bing to drag a,side
child to a.party -- tllat's just plain
selfish and inconsiderate. But
staying home from work is an
entirely differcnt mccr.
~ere . are not, tbat many
enllghrened employers out there.
For many of us ii's a mauer of
heavy-duty negodation with our
bosses to use· pe(sonal days to
take ClR or side children. So what
do parents do? They eilher eall
in sick themselves or take the
child 10 day care 8nd hOpe the kid
doesn't get siclcer.
Working plll'CIIts ·~R in a serious
bind these days. fiot all employers
arc required by law to grant
maremi,ty tcave. and most or diem
don't. This country · needs· more
powaful provisions nationwide to
mist W&lt;lrking p&amp;ra.ts who must care
for newborns &lt;1r side ·children, as
wen as for older family members.
We arenUooking to be ooddled. We
just want reasonable policieS that
wiD enable us 10 do justice 10 both

To place an ad
MoN. thru FHJ. 8A.M.-5P.M.- S.t.T.B-0
CLOSED SUNI(}U

POLICIES

R

• Prieeof ad for aU capilalletten iJ ilo.UIIIepiioed . . ...a.
• 1 point lme type only u.MCI
• Sentinel i1 aolrapon~ihle for enor:t.ahm-if'll!ll8J' (( _ .
for error• f1r1t day ad nmt1 in papet-,). c.11WDftl~pna..
day after publtcatioa to make eorrediioft
• Adt that mu.t he paid iD .dvuce are:

Card of Thanko

Trillune (u•ept Cluaif..d llioplay, ll·-!Cod-a..pt
No!kea) willalao appear in the Pom!l'lleuan1 IJI.polor oonil
the Daily Satin~, I'St:hiftA: over lS.OOO ~

·TO PERFORM • The Rinr Valley Boys or
LanciiSier, a soatllero g01pel quartet, wUI per·
form at tile Carmel United Metllodist Church in
Racille on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. Rev. Kenny
Baker Invites the public. Tbe prligram will be
part or tbe churcll's homecoming celebration,
which begins at 7 p.m~ on Friday with a hymn

sing. The 'River Valley Boys is comprised or Don
Lemley, lead; Steve Hayes, tenor; ~~eve Peters,
baritone; and Terry Peters, bass. Sunday scbool
wiD be held at 9:30 a.m., with worship service to
begill atll a.m. with Rev. Paul Sellers. A carryin dinner will be held at S p.m., with evening
services at 7 p.m.

: lime)

·• Finally, an adventure movie
:: with action instead or just mindless
:. violence.
·: Not lhal all mindless violence is
&gt;bad, but Sne/IUrs is a breath or
;. fresll air for tllose who prefer
: action that stimlllales the neurons
: m&lt;lrC than the .....
' • 1'here are zso car chases, zero
· explosions llld a limited amount of
: gunfire. But this doesn't mean the
·. mOVJC
· ..............
•-'- ......:.- It's still edge·
· or-lhe-at enwuinment.
· The Sneakers are a group of
· computer hackers with long crimi. nal records involving computer
· "pranks" such as breaking into
, Ricluwd Nixoll's personal c~lcing
account and donating aU of his cash
to a group lobbying for the legal-

ization or Jlllrijulna.

'

The hackers no longer pracuce
such iJleplactivities. but they m
far from being mellowed out. They
. now mate their living resting banlc
. securitY. systems by biealcing into
· the facilities, robbing the place and
. lhen reporting back to the_ owners:
Leading the group IS Marun
Bishop (Raben Redford). a hacker
hiding behind a raise identity to
keep the CIA from nabbing him for
his mischievous college days.
Rounding out the P.OOP are ex. CIA spook Crease (Sulney Poitier)
: and hackers "Mother" (Dan
Akroyd), c.t (River Phoenix) and

"WhiStier" (David Strathaim).
Bishop is approached one day
by two agents of the National Security Agency who threaten to
divulge his secret identity _tq,.the
CIA if he doesn't do a little job f&lt;1r

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -Candice
Bergen says she used to lhinlc Vice
President Dan Quayle was kind of
cute, but she foiDid his di~ng
remarks about her televisiOn persona "Murphy Brown" and singlemotherhood "really offensive."
."In the beg1iming, I was
amused by all this. I always
lhought the vice president was kind
of cure, you know, in a defenseless
way," Bergen said in an interView
for the larest issue of TV Guide.
"But now that he's come back
with this new persona that they've
invented for him ... The (Bush)
administration has taken on such an
arrogant, aggressive tone, and I
find that reaUr offensive."
Bergen wd lhe Quayle controversy increased the pressure for
!hose involved in the show's hour·
long season premiere Sept. 21. It
won't be titled "Murphy's
Revenge," as reported elsewhere,
TV Guide said, allhough Quayle
wiD come up.
The producers denied rumors
lhat the vice president was invited
to appear.

Weffi.
.
A Russian mathematician who
is worlcin~ in the U.S; has developed a "httle black box" lhat .can
crack lhe security codes of even lhe
most sophisticated compurer security systems. And the NSA wants
iL
The agents promise Bishop
$175,000 ancf a clean record if he
steals the code.cracker. The rest or
lhe group jump at the chance to .
split $175,000 and the box is lifted
rrom the mathematician's office
with little trouble.
It isn't until after Bishop turns
the box over to the agents that he
learns they are not who they say
they~R.
• ·
The men actually work £&lt;1r Bishop's old college. hacker buddy,
Cosmo (Ben Kingsley), who has
become connected with organized
crime since his faked death in
prison.
Cosmo is a little cracked and
plans to use the box to destroy the
world's economic system. It's up to
Kevin Pinson is a reporter
the Sneakers to retrieve lhe box wltli Ob!o VaHey Publishing.
from Cosmo's well-£ortified office

MiDPark.

CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Kr.ger Creek Club House. There
will be a devotional $PCiker. Mrs.
George Jodon St. will be the craft
MONDAY
demonstrator. Refreshments, salad
MIDDLEPORT • International bar and name exchange ror secret
Order or Job's Daughters will meet sisters will be held.
Mondsy at 7:30p.m. at the Middle·
port Masonic Temple.
POMEROY • The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies
CHESTER • Chester Elemen· Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
tary School P'10 meets Monday at p.m. at the hall, 124 Buttern!Jt
7 p.m., sclllol cafeteria. All parents Avenue, Pomeroy. The Ninlh Disand teachers urged to atrend.
trict Commander will be at the
meeting.
POMEROY • Salisbury Ele·
mentary 1'1'0 will meet Monday at
DARWIN - Bedford Township
. the school. Open house at 6:45 Trustees meet Mondsy 81 7 p.m. at
· p.m. to meet the teachers. Meeting the town hall.
.: at 7 p.m. The fall festival will be
: discussed. Ev~ welcome.
RACINE • Southern Local
Chapter I introduciOrf meeting,
RACINE • Racine Board of Monday, 6:30 p.cit., htgh school
: Public Affairs will meet Monday at cafeteria. All Chapitt 1 patents and
10 a.m. at couacil chambers at Star friends invited.

Boy catches toddler
falling from window

TUESDAY
'POMEROY · Annual steak
meeting of lhe Pomeroy AmeriCan
Legion Drew Webster Post 39,
Tuesday, dinner at 7 p.m., meeting
at 8 p.m. Membership drive IDiderway.

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -

Javon Saucier was playing football
when he made a 30-yard dash to
comrlete the greatest reception of
his ife: catching a 3-year-old
neighba' falling from a window.
"I knew I could cau:h him," 6year-old Javon said. "People were
calling me. 'Javon, the hero."'
Brandon Ellison's mother had
told him Thursday evening that he
couldn't go oul because no one
could watch him. He tried to sneak ·
out through his second-floor win·
dOw, about I 5-reet off the ground.
lavon was playing football in
lhe parking lot below when he saw
Brandon ·squirming to pull himself
back on the ledge.
"Brandon, you get back in,"
Javon shouted as he ran over.
When he realized Brandon was
stuck, Javon told the youngsrer to
hold on while he went to get Bran·
don's mother. But Javon realized
he.dida't have time before the boy
would fall and shouted, "Let go,
I'~ cau:h you."
Braildon let go, missing a lower
window ledge by inches as he £ell
into Javon's arms. Neither boy was
injured.
'.
BetSy Park, a nurse pracuuoner
at Community Health Care Plan
where Brandon was seen, said the
boy could have been gravely

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND • Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary meet
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the rue
station. All members urged to
attend.
. BASHAN • Services, Red Brush
Chwch of Christ on Bashan Road,
Wednesday thrOugh Saturday, 7:30
p.m. nightly. and Sunday 10 a.m.
an~ 6 p.m. Guy Mallory, Winter
Garden, Fla., will be the speaker;
Public invired.
POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
Boosiers meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.• Meigs High School. Public
mvitOd.

Study conducted on womeQ. 311d menopause
· NEW YORK (AP) - Most
: women tnow very little about the
long·term he.lth concerns of..
meaopltliC, ICC&lt;Irding to the First
Ailnual Menopause Report just
relclled.
: While 83 pcteent or women said
i tlley n illfonned lbOut the sub· ~ Ollly S pen:en1 or women read: ily associate menop~~~se with any

women, with m&amp;le partners and
with their physicians.
.
One e~ouraging survey fincJ!ng
is the high level of fmnlc discUSSion
or this once-tilboo topic between

long·term health problems such as
ostcoJlOlosis and heart disease.
The study included I,OQO
women, 1,000 men and SOO physicians to learn their perceptions and
understanding of menopause.
The survey, commissioned by
Wyeth·AycrSt Lal!oratories,
explores the way women C&lt;~rRm!llli·
cate about menopause wilh other
.I

-~·-

women and'men.
Two-thirds or the men said they
~R "very. j:OIIIfortable" discuaiag
menopsuse, although virtually none
are able ·to idcnlify' long-term
health crincerns relaled to ~t.
'

... --·~--- .

ARCOLA, Dl. (AP) - Humor
columnist Dave Barry returned 10
the Arcola Broomcorn Festival to
redeem himself, but says his perrormance with tbe Lawn Rangers
precision mower drill team was
e11e0 more abysmal that last year's.
Barry and about 70 rangers in
Saturday's parade were filmed for
a segment of the syndicated televi·
sion special "Visions or America"
to air in November.
"They contacted me about
doing "Visions of America."'
Barry said after the parade. "I
didn't have a vision of America,
but I had a pretty strong flashback
of America involving Arcola."
The ~al also includes seg·
ments w1th Gloria Steinem, author
Amy Tan, Hank Aaron, com menta·
tor John McLaughlin, Barbara
MandreU and Jimmy Carter. .
Barry said he came back this
year to rectify the mistakes he
made as a1rookie marcher last year.
But he Sl!id it looks as i£ he will
have to try again next year.
"I may have to march ip.a cof·
fin," he said. "And I want to stress
thai the level of ability involved in
the maneuvers is such that a corpse
could perlonn lhem pretty much as
well as a living human."

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) A film starring Danny Glover and
direcred by Mar~ Freeman has
become embro1led in a row
between Zimbabwean viUagers and
local officials, a newspaper reponed Sunday.
The independent Sunday Times
said villagers at Goromonzi, 15
miles east or Harare, complain government orficials grabbed jobs for
themselves and their relatives as
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) extras in lhe movie "Bhopa," a
j:lolitical drama about racial injus· Tanya Tucker's two children and
their £alher appear with lhe country
lice in neighboring Soulh Africa

Community calendar
Comm•alty Calendar items
appear two days before au event
and tile day vi tllat event. Items
mllllt be received weD in advaace
to ~S~Ure p•blication in the cal·
endar.

Community spokesman Fanuel
Malara said unemployed villagers
should have been hired instead of
orricials he said were neglecting.
.their duties to appear in the film.
Malara said lhe viUagers asked
their locallegislat&lt;lr to intervene.

[

injured if Javon had not helped
him. Park gave Javon a $10 reward.
Sandra Crenshaw, Brandon's
mother, said, "I hugged him and I
thanked him . It had to be quick
thinking on his part."

singer in her latest music video
"Two Sparrows in a Hurricane."
Presley, 3, and Beau, 11
months, m in the production along
with actor Ben Reed, their father.
Tucker plays herself as a young
mother, with Reed and the children
included in those scenes.
The video traces a couple's love
£rom teen-age to elderly years.
Songwriter Mae Axton. portrays
Tucker as an older woman.
Tucker was voted the Country
Music Association's female vocal·
ist or the year in 1991. Her hits
include "Walking Shoes" and
"My Arms Stay Open All Night"
The Massachusetts legislature
authorized the incorporation in
1870 of Wellesley Female Seminary, which later became Wellesley
College. .
PUBUCNOTICE
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY· MEIGS
MINE NO. 31
P.O. BOX4110
Athone, Ohio 45701
Purouonl lo Ohio Coal
Mining and Roclomotion
Rule 1501:13-3-414, Southern
Ohio Coal Compony, Meige
Mine No. 31, P.O. Box 490,
Alhana, Ohio 45701, dou
hertby auk a variance ID
permll 1 ventilation ahott
within ton feel of Molga
County,. Salem Townahlp
Roed 1DO, beginning
opprodmaloly 300' Soulhoaal of the inloraection of
Salem Townohip Rolld 1110
and Slate Route 325 In
Solem Townahip, Meiga
County, Ohio. Tho propoltd
ahalt will heve no eftect on
ll)e road. The only diatur·
bance Ia be conducted willlin ton feet of Townlhip
Rood 1110 will be the conatruction of the occo11
road, groding of tho eholt
aile ond porklng orea.
Dlalurbance of the oru will
be conducltd to tho edge of
the atono rood aurloco.
lntornlad porll• moy com·
mont 11 1 public muting ol
lho Solem Townahilp
Truetua on Stptombor
211, 1H2 et 6:00 P.M. to bo
held 11 the Slltm Townlhlp
Hill, S.lem Conlor, Ohio.
(tl) 14, 212to

\\&amp;R B\oc\(
onets \ncome
1al coutse~
CALL
NOW

• l~arn a new skill
• Increase your tax knowledge
• Convenient times &amp;locations

HtR BLOCit
For Mort.lnfonnatlon 0111:

I·IOO·TAI·2000
1-614-992·6674

EXCELLENT '
EXTRA INCOME NOW!

c..Jiia C
t Meip Coun1y M81011 Co., WV
lilftac..IJ,614lbe,. Code 614 Area Code 304

Tf CW!l,.. DilL
6Q . . &amp;H

1

2'4'Z=-I..e1Ut Fitlla

882-New Haven

94~Lelne

895-L.Jerl

T&lt;l%-ludand

93 7-Buffalo

DilL.

:13-W'allnu!

I

3
6
10
Monthly

Rate

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

1 M7..Cool'rille

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

NORION
CONTUCTING

Ower 1S \\\ads

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15
15
15
15

Muk:al ln1lrWnenu
Frull.l &amp; V~etahleJ
59- For Sale or Trade

$.)li)

$ .ttl

I· \1\\1 "ll'l'l.ll·.',\ I I\ I ~Toe 1,

$&amp;!1

$J(i)5! day
!

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken "l'&amp;J'S d~

charged for each day as separate.ad~.

1

Carpentry

Electric

Plumlllng

R.,~acem.tr

887-1108
Free Estimates • Low
Rates for Se1ion

~ Li•ettoek

IIWllllnp
:&amp;-lido&amp;.._

64-- Hay &amp; Crain'
65- Seed ·&amp; Fertilizer

m;;;;;;;.,-----i - ... ~11'-

No Job Too Small
INI2 ' 11110. pd.

11; I \'1'( &gt;t; I' I I ll&gt;\

e--...a.-~J~tR'eat 7~

G-tw-.....

Va111 &amp;4 WD'•

7~

Moloftycle•
75-- Boak &amp;: Moton Cor Sale
76- Au"' Parlo &amp; Atteooori"')
77- Auto Repair

.tp-01.1&amp;. lra.t

4-- Giveaway
5-HoppyAd.
6- Loo! ucl Found
1- Loe1 aod Found
8- PublK: Sale &amp;

13- !l.... -

HoMelmpo"e~~~ea.u

14-llluo'-1lroOaiJw
15- Sol.oollo.alb•....,_

PlwobJas &amp; HealinB

16- - .

___s,..............

w .. (]JIIIIqpU

=

9--'

17-J!i..O!t-18- ~a~..aT.. IDo

Auction
~Wanted to Buy

Exeavatins

Ele.:Lri•el &amp;

~

t;J'

UNDA'S
PAINTING

&amp; co.

"Tab Tltt Pli• O.r Oll'alnflng
- t..l U1 Do It for r..•

:iii- ••llllnai3'unh

81211t211 mo. pd.

Ell!llatl

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • Chai• Saws.
• Weedeaters

614·949,·2804
• T,.,..
:•
!

•

. . . . . . "'ID DEIDUIE

-

4c3l P. a Ill IEFORE

~JAYMAR

Qualit_y
Stone Co.

IJIIIICIJIOI
Dig KidS &amp; Baby
Pmgram
FcrDiildl!en Becoming
IJ[g B~otlhers &amp; Sisters
T111esday; Sept. 15,

G•
...
.......
5·14-92-tla

Bl LLLTI\ BO.\ RD

Real Estate Gener.il

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

1mtln

6.c3€J•PM.
Pl~mt

Valley Hosp~al
llllwiiiStairs Conference
Room
Qi~~o. ext. 230 to .
fegjster
litE'

2

_,.

NEW USTING- IIIDDLEPORT- ~ floartran. iii:JrM
with 3 bedrooms, I balh, lull b.-nt wilh illl"9· illltit
space, F.A.N.G. hea~ new hot watarlll1k. $22i011).
NEW USTING - Pomeroy - Vacant 'lot •on " M .
AI utilities avaiable, • gnN!t mcbilo , _ ·ailil $$
VERY NICE HOlE - Po-•DJ- SR 33,2 * " r home with 3 bedroom•. ~· 'hi• been _,,_.,
remodoled and lncludea moat .opJililnon, _ , a,
largo front poidt, decl&lt;ing &amp; gor.ga. $31;500.
CHESTER- Gtnll-'ellnn -l6.:U. .0..\lllilll1~
sto;y home, 3 bodrooma, peslu18 lllilliilllo- ,...._
lhld, allo, ail, milk houl8, bem, cihiCk.ln ihOiiM., Mil &amp;

-

LETART - One aere building site on ,WJan..-1 11114.
POSSIBLE OWNER FINANCING! $3,500.
HENRY E. CLELAND..................,.... _..... ...
ISII
TRACY BllJHAGEA.............. _ ..,_.__,___ _. . .. .
JEAN TRUSSELL.........:......- ....... " ..- · - - ' •

OFFICE.......................- -..--..· - - -

II M

SHERIFFS SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The State ol Ohio,
Meiga County
No. !12-CV-67

.,ot

BtaiCH

-..r

w

NEW USTING - Nichola Rd. - Frame moCI:i lllillh ll
bedrooms, 2 balhs, h&lt;ta! pump, ded&lt;ing, !~boa !llfl'lllllll
pool, appliances, storage buildings •on liOSS . , _,
ASKING $46,000.

Public Notice

com=•

POMEIOl-

NEW UBTING c- TUPPERS PLAINS - ~ lllifP.
43Y. IICn&gt;l with 1 floor hamo home with '2 1bellooun•.1111'1C
&amp; dug well, new 18pic, lool building &amp; tutm. G8o 1111111...,
property that can be run to home ·to •protiidt rt.. - ·
ASKING $40,000.

TPC - ·· $1011•.000.

.,

..... - :"

992~2259
'

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
SMall DOIII Work
$2S.OOPIIII0111'
RWOIIAill UTES

992·7553
POMEROY, OH.

8·1 1·'92·1 mo.

,__,

' -veDWIGHT P. MEDLEY, et al
Dolond..ta

PI 14,19Ul

.....
c.....lla+
.......
_.,

_...._

...__.......
"" .......
14

,_

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

.......... ' alf,f,
...lil
....

iJ? •

...........

s- ...........

-

I
Ill
as .......

992-7093
Mon.·Sun. 9 am-8 pm
Set ua lor your hunting
1nd blck to echool
nttdt. Art1'a lorg11t
aolectlon of milllory
eurplua llem1l
8117pd.

SpadaiiJing In Custom
Frame Repair

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE

1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7/31f91/tln

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
n~~!llng

I

fU Till

;al

ol S.le in tho above entiUed

Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

8/31/~2tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homas
•Gorages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6179

2-7·92·11n

For •Pews• Oalr

Prafn. . . Dot Gr.....
lir CIIIIW Cln.or
SAND~ IIOUIWTlHOUNG
127 Ha-t Maw Mini. W'l
P•• 304-1~2·3421

11!1

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
lnd TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES ond
TRAILER BITES,

action, I will offer for ale at

Quality Hi Effidency
Air Conditioners, Heal
Pumps, Furnaces &amp;
Now Water Healers.
Bennetts Mobile Home
1391 Safford School Ad. :lj

II

&amp; Cooling

Gallipohs, Oldo :
Call (6141 446-9416 or 1·800·872-5967

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. .
New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 • 949·2860
or 985·3839

•
•'

IHo S1nclay Calls)

2112192/lfo I

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, two baths, 1Y. car
garage and breezeway, central air ,
and heat pump, many extras. On 2
acres of land.
Eastern School District. Blacktop,;
roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32
.,

ROOFING .,

WI DO
AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH _
GARAGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING ·

TROMM BUILDERS :.
8117ntR

38904 Leading

EXCAVATING

In punuance of an Order

public 1uctlon, 11 lhe door
of, the Court Houee In
Pomwoy, In tho ebovo
nMied County, on Monday,
September 28, 1992, al
LANDCLEAR..G,
to:oo A.M. the lollowi ng
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UIIESTONE-TRUCKING
dncribed reel Hlala, allu·
otod· ln Township ol
FREE ESTIMATES
¢heellr, County of Melga,
end Sllte ol Ohio 1nd
detcriblld n lollowa to wit:
s.glnning al lho oouth·
Public Nollce
•••· comer ol Fraction 23,
llanga 12, Town 3, Section
23: of Lot 257 of tho Ohio
Collip111y'a
Purch11o ;
thence woet to WlliiMI Racine, Ohio 45771.
Slid prtmlllt oppraletd
Blgtp' comer In the center
ola1brook; thence north to 11 $40,500.00 1nd cannot be
llio center of Shade River; aold lor 1111 then 213rdo ol •LIGHT HAULING
thence. down center ol lhlt amounL
M. Soullby,
Slilldt•River to -uon line;
•FIREWOOD
Shlflft
thence aauth on ula IR·
SLACK
lhige County, Ohio
lio01&gt; Una to lhe. place of
beglnnlilg, conlalnlng thirty·
Lomw, s.mpeon •
Rothtu.e, Attomoye
tllr• (33) ecr•, moro or
Rick D. Dolll11ia, Attorney
lod)lelntin USED RAILROAD
Property Add,..., Route
1, Box 184, Twp. Rd. 67,
(o) 7,14, 21, 3tc IL---~!:!::~~.

992·3838

&amp; TREE
TRIM and

REMOVAL

J•-

.....

~~FREE

•A Ouolity Assured Coltfrodor•
20 Yr. Exp.
Coli AI, 614·742·2328

Plain tift

1i1lllll. .

.......... I

PARTS

SOUTHBANK

~,.....

-,

WHALEY'S AUTO
.

Peechlqrk Ad.

Wlllltr Alltl'

•

A-E.---

608 EAST MAIN

CHARLIE'S

County Rd. 19·

•

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OH. 457&amp;0.
OFFilUCARY
On Sop....,ber I, 1992, in
lho Melge County Prob1ta
Court, Call No. 27568,
Weyne Milhoan, 40031 SR (t) 14, '211, 21:ft:
681, Sh1do, Ohio 45776,
wn eppolnt.d Executor of
tho oolite of R1lph K.
Smllh, dtco~tod, 1118 of
Villlgl llanor Aportm..ta,
P.O. Box 303, Middleport,

Doer Plus Opeaer

FREE EsriMATES

HAVE REfERENas
Before 6 P•· Loan Mossap
lhor 6p•. 614·985-4180

RACINE OHIO
(Fonnorly Ea'Ja Ridge W

P.O. lax 894-W... Alley

•
•• -N-'•

PubliC Notice

With Pure•••• of

_

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

Relr;gonol;.~

General Haulins
Mobile Ho•e Repair
Uphobtery

With 2 Transmitters

~

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

lA-Rine: Equi..-ent .
U-IB.!Ip'IV1.2-:Si.-11'-

INSTALLED PRICES
9x7-$275.00 16x7-$450.00
OP~IIERS I~STALLED-Y, HP-$200.00

~

1'1'- Au.., for Sale

GET RESIJD'S ·FAll'!

2- In Me111.ory
l-- AnaouncementJ

Windows

Roofing

JIJ-IIJid;lt.llll!no-&amp;oSale· 61:- Farm Equipment
62- Wuted to Buy
:u- rr-&amp;rSiJJI.

II ~· · .

RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

JEFF STAATS
(304) 773-5346

RAT£S
Words

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
~ TRY OUR NEW . r.'!!1!1!1
lllB STEEL INSULATED IDlmiJ

Free Details: SASE to
International Inc.
1356 Coney Island Ava.
Brooklyn, New York 11230

12·5·tfn

Days

..

ENVELOPE STUFFING - ,$60D-$800 every week

67 5-1'1. 1'1-nl
458-l.eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon

•The Area's Nu•nher I
Marketplace

I

WV Lie, IWV 020343
FREE ESTIIIATES
ROBERT BORING
(614) 992-3541

O,.,ified' pages cover the
fl.' •iltl: leleplione ex.changes ...

Happy Ado

In MemorY.rrt
Yard Sa1.
• A clauiflCd advertile111eDt placed •in llhlf'....'IIP&gt;'Iii~~Wf'

complex before he sends everything back lo the dark ages.
The cast is an interesting mix of
actors. With the dramatic Poitier,
the comedic Akroyd and Brat Pack
alumnus Phoenix, it would be logical to assume the actors would be
tripping over each others styles.
But the cast fits like five Lego
blocks.
Probably the most interesting
character 1s "Whisper," a blind
compurer wiz who shows lhe rest
.of the ream ,that having eyes can
sometimes get in the way of find·
ing the answer:
Dan Akroyd is a little stale in
his charactenzation of "Mother."
His role is a hacker who seems to
have smoked a few too many issues
of lhe National Enquirer - he con·
stantly babbles about how the govemmeni faked the lunar landing
and covers up alien cattle mutila·
dons.
It sounds like the perfect
"Ghostbusters"-type role for
Alcroyd, but he down-plays it so
much he ippears bored wilh the
whole thing. Deflilitely incomparable ui one of his classic Saturday
Night Live roles.
·
Ir Y\IU're looking for a Steven
Segal punch 'em, shoot 'em and
!)low 'em up action flick, this is not
the one to see.
Sneakers involves deep, Tom
Clancy-style espionage that
req"ires a viewer's full attention;
you can't just watch with your
eyes.

PINSON ,

a••

• Ada ouLiide the couly your ad ruDI ....tlbep.
• Receive diacount for ad• paid in advanoe.
• Free Ad.: CiYeawayandFoundadi..-...ISIWDd.dlte
run 3 day••• DO eharp.

Is life passi11g )'Oil l!y? Want 10
improw )'OUT sociDI skills? Write for
Ann LluuJus' MW booklet, "HITW 10
Make Friends and Slop Being
Lonely.· Send a self~. long.
business-size envelope tutd a cited
or moMy ordtr for $4.15 (this
includes postage and hiwlling) to:
Fr~nd.r. do !tntt LoNJers, P.O. Bw.
11562, Chicago,IU. 6061l.OS62. (/11
Canada, ~nd $5.05.)
·

eview
llyKEVIN

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thuroday
I :00 p.m. Friday

Call 992-2156

104 Beech Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"Call U• for All Your Building NIHid•"
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Livestock Buildings • Machine Shade - Hay
Barns - Carports
Garages - Storage Buildings - Roofing Windows - Siding

•

·'Sneakers' makes for a stimulating
•adventure in computer espionage ---People in the news--· s-ters

RltedPG-13
:: •••(OIIt olfhe)
· Ullhei5111'ktves
: (Now playing at tile Spring Valley
: Cirtellia 1. Cited: local listings for

"Any Size Available"

"Pooe """"'""'"

'

BILL
992·2269

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY
Pipe for Water, Sewage
.,
and Gas
Rutland, OH. :·
742·2656

NDWDPEN

CURIO

BARN
45633 ST.RT. 124
RACINE

OPEN MON.·SAT.

_,,
9
.
••

8117/Pd.

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
ALl MAliS
Iring II 11 Or We
Plok Uj!.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992·5335 or
985·3561

"-• Ire• Peat Ollie•
217 E. StctoUI.
PO.IOY, OliO
3/231!12ltln

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Additiona
-Guller Work
-£1tctrlcll end Plumbing
-floofing
-lnllriof • Extorior
Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

9·10·92-tln

OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY ·
112 W. Main StrHI
PolltrOJ1 ON, 45769

1614) Y92-6376

Office, School &amp; Art
Suppliea, Office ·
Furniture, Advertising

Speclahies, Typing,
Laminating, Copy, Fax
&amp; Nolllry Services

CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PRICESS FIRST ·
8-11·'12·1 mo.

SPEt::IAL
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Manlhs of September
and October

s35oo

CALIFORNIA .'
TANS
949·2823
KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2398 or
1·800..837·1460;
La.wn Mowing,

,

Fertilizing, Weeding,.
and Seeding.
;
Shrub and Tree
Tflmmlng &amp; Remove~

R-'dtntlol &amp; Ccmmorciai :l
F,.. Eltlmti.M

�0 four
Roorrango lottor1 of
tcrombted word1
~ form

low

I

.,

GIRIIIN

I I' I I I

EVENING

=·c
....
~ ="&amp;:-

·-.

lour olmplo

1:00 ()). Ill. (I). • •
11711 Clrrlage Houst, 2 B•d·
roomt, 2 -lltha, 12x65, All
EIKiric, 55,500. 614-446-1511.

11175 Pork Villa. 2 bedrooms

Nlco Ono BR Unfllmlollod
Aponmont. Ringo, Rlfrta.

total llec1 1 blth, $5,500.
cond, 304-llS-41505.

Witt~

good

Provldld.

Prtv1t1

L.lNUS SAVS WHEN WE GO

Plrldni.

G1rbaD1 P11d.

Depoe~~

Roquuod. 1-.o341 Allor

11171 H..chinlon 12d5 2 Bod· 6p.m.

room, 1 111h, Gas F.urnaet And
Stow, Very Good Condition CompMI:I,

FumiiMd

-.

1081 Shultz 14x70 3 Bedrooms
1 112 Bathl Good C.rpe~t, Par~
tlalty Fwn{shld, Central Air,
Ollhwuhlr Microwa ve, Good

I

~-=
__ ,..,...

mobile

. home, 1 milt betow town our·
looking rinr. No Polt, Cl. 114-

614-38H021.

111
TV 1L

PEAMJTS

=:!
M

TO HEAVEN.TJ.IE'( TAKE US
IN A GOLDEN CJ.IARIOT..

(J)RE'"
...
~C,: Slerao.Q

TI4AT MAY
NOT BE
TRUE..

al Chtclt«ecc

from Richmond, Yo.

One bldroom 1pirtmtn1e. fur.

nlohod, utllllloo Included.
llopooM roqulrod, no
CondMion, Outbuilding. 814·245· Security
polo;
814-192·2211.
8127, 114-441-3257.

I
r----------. everyone was
J I
If--,1,;:..•;.1....:....=-1_,1,.:T"l

The boy bragged about his
-L...-'-·--'·--'· •
part in the class play and how
jealous of him.
SE T ER
His teacher told him that ft is
--1 baUer to know how others
5
L-.L-.J..-L.-i.-L......J value us than to know how val·
uabte - ·-

NASCAR

. -.~..
L..

QIIW-Todly

0 Rln nn Tin, K·l Cop Q
1:05 ()) TII!M'a Company
1:30()). 11)1 NIC- Q
(!) lllr htnch

Cioo...,
.....
l---·_,....

441.0338.

Ill. (I). AIIC C..
Cll Wild ~ St!!,ao. Iii

·-~-

(J)

I

IIOKNN
~-~1--T-1-.I='-!. .,. .-l ~

8quoN Dna~ .Iii

a• az• C88New1Q
!Ill. Andy Orttllth
OUpC..

0-ZorroQ

1:35(J) AndJ Ortlilth
7:00\iiD 01 WhMI of FOliuM

I fAKE If fU,,:f'!l A"00'1

SCI'MniiTS ANSWERS
, ..,
T!Buma • Meocs • Round • VIOlin • LOUDER
During a very heated town counsel meeting one voice
could be heard above the rest. My friend made !lis
observation, "People who are wrong usually talk
LOUDER than anyone.'

as Tho ...,_,. a..

I l l · · - -....

~-~
~~...,._ -·With

E.i:;Ne~
i J.

Fumlshed
Rooms
Handy

Wttl•bl1bUihld

Aul Ellatt

Firm Opening An Otll~ In Gal·

man1

dr1am,

t2x65

Wlr'Mittor, 2 porchu, 2 SIOfage
bldao, ..... $10,000. 304-115-

3110) or 304-475-2407. ·

llpotlo. S-ry ·Rocn!='iot1 U&gt;oklng For A Dool? Conoldor A
8t'llnch . Mlnaglf,
.... ~iled lloblio Homo, Largo
Soloo
Agonto,
U.Unft Soloctlon Low lloMy Down,
Spoclollolo A Priority. A Froo Sol~p And Dotl•ory. 1-aoo.
ANum• Conf!Hnt111. Mall To
P.O. Box 230, Jtkcaon, Ohio,
45140.

Business
Tl'alnlng

SIN710.

Wanted to Do

Avollablo. Rodnoy Aroo. Coli
114-24WIIIT.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, T,...

Aemova~

3 AcrM s.noyod, Ufllltloo In·
ataMod. North Galllo Hlah
Sci-', Thampoon Rood, alia

Trailer Iota fot ,.,., In RadM,
614·912..sa58.

114 441 ~1.

47 Wanted to Rent

7111.

Wanl:.d To Allll: Motor Horne
-rvctlon on Rorbum Ad, For Wookond Trip To South
homt

rwMONIM rwtrictkml, Willi,

Trimming. Froo EoUmotool 114- - - - - - - - - - 51
3I1'715TAftor 4lr.m.
41 Houses lor Rent

Household
Goods

1ml.

north of Ctwltlf, Ohio. NO ptta, 9~~:12 C.rptt, 160; Mollohan FurPaUl A. KarT: Chester, Ohio; 614· nih••· 114-446-,.....,

...

. . . hull's Dly ea.. Cent•. NWW.

,.,

Beton, tftw tcmool . 'Drop-Ina appllancea,
dtpo~ll
and
~ralcama. 114 441 1224. New In- l"'flrMCM n.qulred, no pels;

AI Yard loloo -

8o Pokl In

_,.

....- . odllono 1:00pm Frklly,
10:00o.m.
llondoy odltlon

M.f'

foro Toddler Coro, 114-04H22l 114-Hl-3080.
S l L Trucko, loa hauling; call Nlco 21ir Houoo Complololf
aftw lpm, 114-112-3220, 11k tor

Good Location, No

Woft.
Worood To Do: Bobrolltlna

Poto, ....,..,1Mo4Q.2300.

Umlts. Collll4-441·1221.

Soriouo lnqulrioo Only. 114-256·

In
My Homt. Hue Nuru A11l11tn1
Tl'lllnlng. locll:ecl Mthln Cily

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Aelu~~~~~f!!IJ

Nk:e Neighborhaod, 381'1, 1
Both, Fomlly Room, Utllllr
Room, Kitchen, Front Room,

-,

~

L"eotoc'

c

Doublo Bock Boat Soot, Now
:,:: Nlco Looking, lt4-25e- , 61 Fann Equipment

burner -tormuf"a1. Awallable u ot Alit Aid Pllormocy.
Tho Alo way lo dlot.
Hondo Oold Wlna OL-· 111 '
Nomod Camper; 72 Chivy ~lck·
~ 12' boot; utHhy trollo!i round

clullvol)r

for Rent

Will provktt chlldc1rt In mr

home, r~~sanabll prius, non· 1 BA Traller fUI'nlshM Eltctrlc
somklr, call anytime 304-675- lnctued.
w.t•,IIWIQI,Irssh
211'1.
. removal he. 1200. ,.r monlh.
$150 Dop.I14-25HIOI

Financial
21

Business

Opponunlty

2

cond, 304-89

•

-

. llorgon form, Ill. 31, -

11-hOkl-.-_lul

rocommondo thlll ,... do bull-

4381, 30W75-:z3:lo.

2 BR

446-431S.

po~lolly

Thru 10 Inch In Stock. Ron

Evono, Jackoon, Ohio.

!3'1-152S.

1z
...._ ,.rrea c:orn --.-·

Pr••

t

poltUCII buslnHa 1dverta.lng

''*'&amp;

- -

-

11-'!11

River, In Kansuoa.

Folt•'•

Jerrk:ho Rd. Pt. PINNnt, WV,

= ..

~-··

al NFL - J Night

JUST VJ.lf.IJ &lt;,OJ 1f\INK r ·LE.
HAD · ~~ I REACH
OOU4J Rl'!.lHAT LAST'
VE.~TIE£ a= I&lt;ES!U£1JCE
NJJ Fam1UCE ... I OCI'JT
QUIT .1

...

:l::l.~a.i.

lrlatchnUp

11 P1lni6Newa a_

0 Young Rldtri liJ
I:OS(J) MDVI!:
(2:00)
1:30(Il. 0 llo11am
Blossom's total 11tontion to
Vinnie clouds her rlilllonShlp
wMh Six. Slerao. D
D NFL Mancllr Night
~alne Former Miami
Dolphin Larry Csonke.
Dolphins quanerback Dan
Manno, Cleveland Browns
nose tacklo Mlchatll ooan
Perry: history ollltl AAFC.
1:00 (J). 11)1 MOVIE: '... Alld
Tltetl h Wu Gone' NIIC

a-

Fe

4a

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Chc•••·-.......,.....

-r.:.:

NO .. . WHe-1 HE

WANreiO

~------------~--~
He ~De ME THE L-IFE
S'lt)Ry'OF ~LJY' LCWaARD::I.

:.Oofl,:~~ l i t e Ill •

Dolphins at Cleveland
Browns (L) Slerao. I;!
1118 0 . Murphy ilrown
Corky lnvital leading
broadcast newswomen to
Murphy'~~: shower. (RI
Stereo.

caii30W75·1450.

wane

lo buy •ubmerv-abl•

wstw pump, 304-e75-2117.

Waler HNter Sale 52, 40, 30 Gil,
ton ellctr~ •nd 40 Oalllon
Na1ur11 gilA. Yaure choice.

Wnoolllng

Hordworo. 114o441-0185
WHITE'S liETAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon, 1210 Socond

Awsnue, Oallipoll•, Ohio, 114,

VENDING ROUTe: Got Rk:h,

Top Pokl: AI Old U.S.
Colno, Goltl - . Sllvor Colno,
CIGld' tolno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

Qulr:k? No Way! But Wt Have A
Good, Study, AHordable, Bust~
n.... Won 't Last. 1-800. 2M~

8363.

11t lloond Avenue, oanlpoll•.

Real Estate

-

:.;:o. ....=.r"m.- .....
-~-. lipoid,

T1roo,

1117- 4,ooa-. 14.-,

~~~······

6

1111 Larry King Uvel

BARNEY
WHO SENT YOU
TH' BODACIOUS
PRESENT,
ELVINEY ?

ME It

I GOT IT
. FROM MY

MAII..·ORDER
t!ATAI..06

GLORY BElt
STORE·BOUSHTEN
AIRH

'

tAKQI06 2
tQB 4 3

Vulnerable; Neit.ber
Dealer: South

By PbiUip Alder
The Cardiff Bridge Club in South
Wales keeps a book of memorable
deals. Most of them feature blunde,rs
by the top players. Even I am In the
book. One evening, when I was only 16
years old, an "e•pert" doubled me in a
slam because he held two aces. I was
void in one of those suits and made my
slam. The doubler's friends thought
this was extremely funny and savored
adding the deal to the book.
Today's deal would have been inclutl'ed too, e•cept that it occurred
during the Championship Pairs at the
Pan American Championships, held
last June in Corp"" Christi, Texas.
North and South were Canadians
David and Evelyn Kirsh . David made
a cautious pass on thelirst round. Evelyn knew her h""band was short in
spades, so she decided to sacrifice in
five of a minor. After North couldn't
resiSt showing his hearts, six dia·
moods doubled was the contract
Against a tacrifice, a trump lead is
usually best. Here it leads to five

Soo,.

Wnl

Nor,.

It
INT
6•
Pass

It
Pass
Obi.
Pus

Pass
Sf

Dr loUie.

ACROSS

,,

'

42 lllld Ollh, In

Brltllln

t Flowor
5- populi

43 Hoi ctroal
46 Oatil

B Angllrl
12 Runway
13 Age
14 Fury
15 Currencyaxchollgo

49 AclriA
Chartotll50 Aclreoa

'"

18 Stt

18 Lilt inning
20 Smlltltland
21 Aug. llmt
22 Le11t hard
25Womhlrlrttll
28 Court lturlng
21 Artb country
33 Rodent
35 Satn1thlng
r111tark1blo

31~

Wltlon1-54 Dlfllcull to
chill VI
57 Small
quantity
58 Ponce de58 A Gerohwln

eo SeMtor Som
81 Hnot
62 ActriA
CharltH

63AI,..

OOW1II
I 011 llfl(lrltr

37 Progrtm

40 Emerald-

....,.

5 Colllr ohlpa
e Dtcor1tt.,.
7 lltlllcllft -

2 Cereal grut
3 - -lltl
lloocllor
Lo¥1
4 Loclllono

3t lhkt I Iaiii

.,
ltTr~ · .

17 That "*'t'w

t 8 Shout of
Contalllpt

~~-~6
addr11111

r- .

81nvlli0tt
10 Conctlll

=·-

32 CaMp .. ni7
34 Tlitt.-t

37 . ......

31CoewiiHI

40 Ole type

-.........

41=,

oMPtrloh
45 Fibbing

-

... eouro.

10:30 !Ill. SomtJ llllltr

531kN11y'e

51Sultn
52 Spirit"""'

(2:30)

-

.,

... ConiiiOjlllblt .
471ntlbllar ~

10:05 (I) MOVIE: -~~~~~~ (PO)

D Aula Rtclttg From

i J.

·~

H lldiGUIIilftt.,
27 no.. al tit,:· :
30::;11 ..
31 Actor Attn :...~

during a live broadcast. (R)
Stereo. Q

Cltovolancl (T)
t 1:00 (J). ·® • •

,

-'

2311MoaMw. ; .
24 T-place ·
26 Colorlllo *I

aMurphy
• ogoes
•~~u~p~~y 11rown
Into labor

,:
•

55~-pt. :

se;;;rj"

11)1

-bar

.

101:.=.,~ Stsrao. Q

.

·.

ID Croolt
and iS.H
r·nbrl Tonight
Qll 8parta Tanlght

0 8 0 1 - and II... King
11:11Cll Ntwe

t1:30~=sL IIIII Sllrao.

.

iCrtm4J
.................
.
111M Afllr

:S:Si

G Tanlght lllow
,0., Lana Sllrao. C

LT . .

Wfih

11:41{%) lurrpr111 JcMmll

12:0011Je m•-

........

Ill".::":!
'

0 - T h o LOll
!~ludn

bcfltlnlr

'A I

11::11(2).

With

-

CELEBRITY
CIPHER
. . .....,lrorn,. 1·

In"'**""*

~CIIItllf t~ iP lc;:w••

Plllne

MFUIPJ

ZltKKPJ

NRCPMU '
A p, ,

0 P K K,

E F II •
HFL

,_..._N ....

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

tof~.

HEEHVPVL

ZMPIIA

II

It

v

FVKHV

J

8.

AP
X

YHL
LH

ZKRXIIHMVP

PVJHMUP
E P K K .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "" not do 10 IMve I ilwl dtogon 0111 of ywr
catculattono, II )'OU i1w1 him." - Toltlan.

't

304.. 1H282·or S75-3150.

..

•,'

Aatnrteon

I

..
.

The World Almanac ~ Crossword Puzzle · ~

0 700 Club Wlllt Pat

•

Pass

Declarer won in hand, ruffed a··
spade in the dummy and led !be heart~
king, Miffing East's ace. Back in dum· :
my with another spade ruff, Klnb :
star led playing her hearts from the: .
top, West having obUgincJy dropped
the el&amp;bt aDd 10. When Welt coaidD't .
ruff the third heart, declarer discard.':
ed au four of ber club loaers. Some
'aecrifice' - si.l diamoado doubled •
and !""de missing three aces!
.: ;

D...,_,_.,alnt

THE BEST

6t

down. But West couldn't resist leatlinc
the spade ace. Then be swill:hed to his
trump, which certainly ww't best
now.
•

IIIIW--

lion Involved. Know where lo look lor PtSCE8 (Feb. 2CJnMirch 20) Somelhlng
romance and yo&lt;~'ll lind 11. The Aslro· you're f)t'etenlly Involved In wllh a lew
Graph Malchmakor lnslanlly reveals lrlenda can luncllon bettor - II you
which signs are romanllcallr perlecllor lake pains to reorganize II properly. All
BERNICE
you. Mall $2 plus a long, self. ad· lite partlclpanlo will. bo happy you did.
BEDEOSOL dressed,
stamped envelope 10 Match· ARIEl ( - 21-Aprtl 1t) You may
rnaker, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box have ....,., opportunllles today 10
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
mol&lt;o up lor any financial downlurns
LIBRA (lepL 23-0ct. 23) You tend to rou've r11C8rtlly suffered. Be enlerprlo·
benelllfrorn cltengesloday where your lng, bocause you musl earn whol you
work Is concerned, avon II you do nol get .
lnlllolelhem yourtoell. Flow with ovenls · TAURUS (Aprii:!Hhy 20) You ohould
and bo alert lor advanlages.
be able to operata tree from Interior~
SCOIIPIO (Oct. 24nlloY. 22) Abide by ortC&lt;I today. This could enable you to
your cleclllonalodoy, especlai(y In lltu· . gel a bolllr handle on olluolklns you've
atkins you 've otudled In doplh. Your had a - grip on ,.....tly.
judgmenlls good; all )'OU need Is sell· I G l - (liar 11.,.,. 20) II you can
confidence.
Iconduct your llllalraln waya thai don'l
SAGmAIIIUI (Now. 23n0ec. 21) Try 10 ' allract loo much allenllon, you'l be
.._, 5,
,
give prlorlly loday lo slluallons lhal mort lllecllvetoday. Oblorvtng ovento
....,.. 1 1112
could make or tave you money. Your lrornllteblckgroundwlllltelpyoumoko
thl •
luck Ia focused In tha rn'lortsl realm.
·tM right movet.
Rogarof how lrualrallng
nos · CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jon. 11) Arrange CANC!II 1"- 21..,.., 22) Your warm
may _ , on lite surfaCe In ll!e xear your llllaln todoy so Ihat Ihoy are nal·.. wit and outgoing personallly ~I be wei·
- · don'lthrow In the lowel. There titer dtvollld all to work nor alllo play. comod by all you oncounler loday.
c:ooltl be dramotlc developments fOU I For personal grallllcatlon, you need ,,You 'rellteroyolounohiMpeopiellkeln
mlgllt be unawon of boltlnd llttl.~· : balanoo In your 1111.
· lltelr lives.
·
WIGO (Aug. 23-leP'· 22) II .Y""ve ! AQUAIIIUI (M, ....... 11) Olhers LEO(.ItiiJII-Aug.21) ,Yourclt-lor
-.toying with the Idea ot partlclpal· ' · will bewil~ng to step In and help you ll)n . lullllllng yo&lt;~r ornbHious objecllvet look
lng in • , _ toc1a1 pasllml, now 11 ll&gt;o day, once IIley- you're doing every. very good today, provided you don't tip
, _ 10 r;ve H• try. And you're 411tto
hlng you can 1o 1te1p yo&lt;~r-..
-~ s trlve to your l'land prematu.~,
- .. Save your big
-~." moro 11 11,...e·s lrlendly compel!· I\l8 sei1·SU111cienl.
guns tal lite ftnll¥olloy.

Eut
1•
Obi.
Obi.

Opening lead: • A

on

,,

I

1:30

A slam deal
i
out of the ordinary ·

,. Dtclt Cilii:
lite · ·
Rtcanl R1ipll Emery
lntii'VItws music snd
sntenelnrnent mogul Dick
Clark. (1 :00)

~0-GRAPH

'

... .
SOUTH
tJ 108

)10:00111.
Eopaaure The history of
Clcely II told In IIUhblck
18&lt;1ULncet.LRl Slerao. Q

- --ilod,

S.ch·ded t btdfoom homs 8
-~ ,mlloo ou1 Sond Hill Rd,

t9

ol

F - Do ling M y -

11111 lllldo Rl; ...... l Oood, er-. IUr, - root, I Spool!, ·
ts.ooa
Or
Trodo,I,.,_L:

WANT AD

Glllillh-D Pro iiNclt Vollaybal
From Santa Cruz. Celli. (T)

.~

31 Homes for Sale

ISA

nne

OWWF

11158.85 Wameldortf I Thom11

446-4331.

m• Ali:_,

Night Foolblll Miami

Pt.JNISH ME .•.

~

MOVIE: Allen (R)j!30)

Gil Croolt and CMM

...........
-.....
:tm.!f~~~~ii:i~~
=' \t fStaC.J..
a.••

Tondr 1000 Computor
..... $1211. tm
EX Tandy Doily WhMt Prlntor tm DWP230, Tandy 5 114 3IOK Tlf· .,. . . . . . . . . IMIIRMr.
miMI D&amp;lll Drlwe, MOO. Uke
Nowi114-41H037.
tm- 4
I I,
114-44f.Ot31.

R.

o -..... w... ~;~

EEKANDMEEK

- . a.a Air
c1111\ ..-:111 •uiZ
1114 ......... •a. a, 2 3

~·

Autos lor Sail

CIO•olollll lngliio, I

_..,ng
lor a senator ahara
a homo and olllca. Slerao.

-w.--=-=
:'L'::.

Transportation

1111 c - :11M liZ 3411.

,...,

a•
az • - Attre
(Pr111111re) Two people

=u

lw My, •Oflll allfrl' tt
wlt~MorpnF-,111.!

Su~ue army pan-.. cam~:~Pt•
cloth!~ packs luther
1.

-'11Mioo, motchoo, olgno).

c

IIIACalll:li I
n •·
,

304·77UI21 1111 1oi Bolly.
14-446-8125.
2bf Unfllmlohocl Cablo, Air1
PICKENS FURNITURE
Cloln And Dulol, DopooH Ano
N1wiU11d
o-1 ..... a-. j
114Roloronco, o..rlooldng Ohio HouNhold fllmlohlng. 112 mi. Tondy DIIP 2100 24 Pin Printer .:M.=5=-1221:;: ::· .._-=-:--:c-:::-:-

Vending Route: Local. W1 Hav1 Mobile Home Park, "l14-441-1802.
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121150
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(unlon mad•
Reftrtnos ReQulrtd. 814-446- Cablnlls, Starting: $115. 114- 3044"1'3-IIU

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n~ lol. Rovlh Lane, Cheshire,
roon, ITS. SOON l:olcl- rot,
IN&lt;mCEI
Hom fnear, c:opp..tone, $50.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO. OH, Also eHicltncy 1p1rtment.
, _ with _ , . rou know1 ond
NOT to oond money tlvougn tho
moll uroll you hove lnvootlgotod
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LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sola, $50; 2 Bar Stool•, 31,
Comploto homo film~~~~· Sl..,.,
$15 Eoch. 114-215-!1213.
Hourt: Mon-981, 1-5. I
0322, 3 mlloo 0111 Bulovlllo Rd.
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44«1 9814 Of 304-875--3734.

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�· Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, september 14, 1992

Names in Your Social Security
the news
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Comedian Soupy Sales is going
home for a slint as a morning disc
·
· the
where he
Jockey 10
town
grew
up.
Sales, 66, will do remote broadcasts this weelt from Marshall Uni·
d H 1
H' h
verslly an
unt nston tg
School and from a hot dog stand,
said Mike Killner, genenl nianager
of WRVC-FM.
Sales auended Huntington Hiih
and received his blchekl:'s degree '
in journalism from Marshall in
1949. His nickname is a play on his
given name, Milton Supman.
He became famous in the late
19SOs and early '60s for his pie-inthe-face television program "The
Sour,y Sales Show.'
• I have so many friends " he
said "If all my friends listen 'we'll
be No. 1 for the weelt.''
'

LAUGIUNG WITH THE HOST ·Miss Ohio,
Robin Meade, right, laughs at a quip made by
Miss America co-host Regis Philbin after a IUD·

NEW YORK (AP) - Garry
Shandling has ooe of TV's mosllalked-about talk shows - even
though it's not the real thing.
Shandling, 42, plays a talk show
host on the HBO sitcom, "The
Larry Sanders Show." As Larry,
Shandling teases talk out ci guests
such as Carol Burnett, Robin
Williams and Billy Crystal, all
playing themselves.
"There's no difference between
what goes on in 'Larry Sanders'
and what really hapl'm.' on a talk
show," Crystal said ut the Sept. 21
edition or People magazine .
"That's what makes it so greaL"
Shandling, a stand-up comic and
former substitute host for Johnny
Carson on "Tbe Tonight Show,"
told the magazine be fantasizes
about having a guest appearance by
Carson's successor, Jay Leno, or
Lena's rival, Arsenio Hall.
"I'd really love to get another
big host on the show and Start slugging it out in a fistfJBht,'' he joked.

cbeoa wltb tbe 50 contestants In Atlantic City,
Sunday. A new Miss America will be crowned
Saturday, Sept.l9. (AP photo)

For many children, Andrew is
a demon who could come back
By CHRISTOPHER SULLIVAN
Associated Press Writer
FLORIDA CITY, Fla.- It's
hard enough for their parents to
make sense of Hunicane Andrew's
destruction. But for many children
who lost homes, toys, everything
famitiar, the storm was a personal
enemy - and remains ooe.
In a tent city here, 6-year-old
Alvin Phillips drew a picture with a
red marker: A coiled line was the
hunicane, a rectangle with a ragged
edge his broken window, but what
about thai large smudge of red?
"That's blood," Alvin
explained. "Hurricane Andrew
lciUed the woman. And he's on the
way to till some more."
Child psychologists say time,
reassurance and a gradual return to
normal life will restore the emotional equilibrium of most of the
thousands of children who went
through the hurricane. Going back
to school - which starts Monday,
two weeks late - will help, they
say.
"You have to let them talk
about it," said Dr. Jose Vargas of
the Pediatric and Adolescent Center in Kendall, at the northern edge
of the woot damage. One in four of
his patients has lost his or her
house, said Vargas. He has treated
many cases of "night terrors," in

which the children are awakened
by sudden, extreme fears.
Parents may recognize their own
anxiety and depression, he said,
"but frequently they don't feel
their kids have the same type of
feelings. They do."
Though parents and counselors
note more crying, clinging and
aggressiveness - or sullenness in
adolescents - outward signs of
children's waries are subtle. Most
children Slill run, laugh, play,
sometimes making toys of the hurricane's wreckage.
At day care centerS set up in tent
cities here and in Homestead,
dozens of children last week played
Simon Says, clapped hands to
hap~y songs or challenged their
Marine guards to two-on-two l!as·
ketball.
One of the ballplayers was 7year-old Ariel Enricos, whose
smile dissolved as he told what
he'd been lhrough.
"The house was broken like
this," he said, pinching a bit of dirt
from the ground into dust on the
hot breeze. He remembered hugging and praying with family members in a bathroom as the roof tore
away. "I needed air," he said.
Now, his family occupies a few
cots in an olive-drab military tent
and his c'ollection of toys is

reduced to a pack of baseball cards.
"A lady gave them to me," Ariel
said.
.
I
He worried: "When I go to
school I can 't be in second grade
anymore ... 'cause they don't know
my name."
And there was another, deeper
fear he'd extrapolated from what
grownups had said. "Every month
a hurricane comes," he said ominouslr.. He would not be dissuaded.
Sull, a moment later he was
back playing ball.
"They change channels," said
Vargas, a former chief of pediaaics
at Miami Children's Hospital, who
said he expects most children to
recover fully - "unless they were
already emotionally damaged; it
wiD be harder for those.''
Psycholo~t John Freedy of the
Medical Umversity of South Carolina in Charleston, who treated
many children after Hurricane
Hugo, said research shows shanterm psychological recovery from
such a disaster takes three to six
months, and some effects can
linger for a year and a half.
Fewer than 10 percent of chi!·
dren will suffer long-term problems, he estimated, but given
Andrew's vast destruction "you're
talking about hundreds of children.''

NEW YORK (AP) - Bill
Cosby has bumped aside teeny-bop
stars New Kids on the Block to
reclaim the ~ he briefly lost as
the world's h1ghest-paid entertainer, a magazine reiJ(XUid.
Worth more than $300 million,
Cosby is expected to earn about
$98 million in 1991 and 1992 combined, Forbes magazine says in its
Sept. 28 issue.
Cosby, who collects a one-third
share of the syndication revenue
from "The Cosby Show," heads
the magazine's sixth aruiual list of
the top 40 entertainment moneymakers. He retired from the show
this year as TV's superstar dad.
Slipping to No. 4, New Kids on
the Block are expected to earn $8
million in 1992, com= with
$54 million a year ago,
said.
Last year, the PDJl group bumped
Cosby to No. 2 on the list
Oprah Winfrey, whose TV talk
show is broadcast in most U.S.
cities and 55 nations, is second
with earnings of about $88 million
in 1991 and 1992, the magazine
said
Kevin Cosater, director and lead
actor of "Dances with Wolves,"
jumps from sixth place to third,
with about $71 miUlOll in 1991 and
1992.
The magazine considers two
years' worth of income to smooth
out big earnings swings.

Maggots provide valuable clues
By ROGER MUNNS
Associated Press Writer
DES MOINES, Iowa - Most
people shudder at the image of a
maggot-infested body, but Ken
Holscher figures those bugs can
help solve a murder.
Holscher, an assistant professor
of entomology at Iowa Slate University in Ames, says insects can
tell a detective how long a body
has been dead and even, sometimes, where it carne from .
"To me, forensic entomology is
a valuable and useful science,"
said Holscher, who plans to lecture
on his findings Wednesday at the
third annual Insect Horror Film
Festival here. " There 's nothing
horrifying about it except the murder itself.' '
For years, forensic experts dismissed magg01s on a body as a disgusting nuisance. To change that
attitude, nine forensic emomologists published " Entomology and
Death," a field guide to camivo·
reus bu~s.
William C. Rodriguez, a foren sic expert at the Penlagon's Institute of Pathology, said insects are
useful because many indicators
experts use, such as tissue changes
and chemical tests, are only useful
during the farst 24 or 48 hours after
desth.
Holscher said that in the past
decade, scientists have found that
insect.s come to dead bodies in pre·
dictable s1ages. Thus, the presence
of a _certain insect helps to pinpoint

the time of death.
"First come the flies. They'll
find a body within one or two days,
sometimes within hours," he said.
"Then a few days later, probably
two to five days, you 'II still have
flies but there will also be certain
wasps and ants."
In five to 12 days the beetles
arrive, he said. In 12 to 16 days,
most of the fleshy parts have been
devoured and the flies depart.
Mites are the final creatures to
arrive.
Holscher said the technique
helped solve a double murder in
Louisi~na, in which a forensic
entomologist estimated the slaying
had occurred 60 hours before the
bodies were found. The information helped police direct their
investigation toward a man who
eventually confessed to the crime,
admitting he had done it 63 hours
before the bodies were found.

From clocks to stamps
CATSKILL, N.Y. (AP) James Bogardus (1808 -1874), a
prolific American inventor, started
as a wau:hmaker's aPJ¥entice.
Bogardus' inventions included
new clock mechanisms, a banlcnote
engraving machine and a dry gas
meter.
In 1839, he sold the British government his machine for engraving
postage stamps. He also invented a
pyrometer, a deep-sea sounding
machine and a dynamometer.

Holscher said he helped solve a
crime when he was studying with
another entomologist, Jerry Butler,
in Aorida 10 years ago.
"Investigators brought the maggots in and told us they had found
them on a body that had been disr.&gt;sed of," Holscher said. "Butler
tdenlified them but dido 't say anything and gave them to me. I tdentified them the same as he did.

Dog unit officers
need aifferent
kind of bravery

Workshop set
The University of Rio Grande
Through the Office of Continuing
Education is offering a two hour
workshop on being~ to sell.
This workshop ts scheduled to
be held on Thursday, Sept. 24,
from ~ -5 f..m. in Anniversary Hall,
room 20 . Cost for the course is
$10. Instructor for this workshop is
Jerry Gust, Director of the Loren
Berry Center, on the University
Campus.
This mini -seminar can aid people with the process of selling a
product, a proposal or an idea to an
mdi vidual or group. A video presentation produced by Toastmasters International and the Whanoo
School of Business will be used as
a centerpiece for this seminar.
For more information and registration contact the University of
Rio Grande, P.O. Box 878, Umversity of Rio Grande, Rio Grande,
45674 or call 614-245-5353 extension 325 or toll free in Ohio at I·
800-282-7201 .

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Police officers applying for the
city's first or~antzed dog unit
found out that It takes a different
kind of bravery to do the job.
· Forty officers have applied for
the four-member team, which is
expected to be trained for patrol by
December.
"Tbe dog bite test is designed to
test their fear of the animals," said
SgL James Wagy, a supervisor for
the Columbus Police Department.
"Will they shy away from the
bite?"

During the test, officers first
were attacked by a muzzled dog.
Then they wore a protective arm
guard while being attacked by a
dog that wasn't muzzled. Finally,
ther. wore a full-length "bitt suit"
while being attacked from behind.
An ambulance crew stood by.
Instead or being shaken by last
week's test, the officers mostly
laughed as I 00-pound German
shepherds knocked over their colleagues.
Officers picked for the post
must agree to lceeD the dog at home
for a minim11111 ol' three yean. But
officers are urged to uy with the
team longer so they can bave tbe
most effective illljljliJil with the q .
Police dogs, some which COlt 11
much as $5,000, can only be
retrained once effectively to
I'CSflOitd to • different handler. Tbe
working lifo of a dog is about cipt
years.

Fall quarter registration begins at SBC
Registration is underway for the
Courses offered this quarter will
fall quarter at Southeastern Busi- be: Accounting I, Ill, Cost
ness College, which begins SepL Accounting, Payroll Accounting,
28, with both day and evening Intermediate Accounting, Math
classes offered.
100, I, II, C~municalions 100, I,
Two year associate degnee pro- Economics, Business Law, Busigrams, approved by the Obio State ness Psychology, Sociology, PolitiBoard of Proprietary Scbool Regis- cal Science, Personnel Managetration and accredited by the Career ment, .Professional Development,
College Association, are offered in Introduction to Business, Introducthe fields of Accounting, Business tion to ComputerS, Basic I, Cobol I,
Administration, Executive Secre- II, Spreadsheets, "C" Program tarial, and Microcomputer/Data ming, Data Base Desifn, Data
Processing.
Entry, Word ~ing , Typin~
Diploma programs are available 1, 11, ill, Shorthand I, IV, Secretariin Junior Accounting, Medical al 'Procedures, Medical Insurance
Office Secretary, Data Entry Spe- Coding, and Medical Terminology.
cialist, and Secretarial. ·
Faculty members include feff

I

(

Adkins, Millard Cassidy, Lenoir
Frick, Jaleh Hojat, Mary Lundell,
Ronnie Lynch, Brent Patterson,
Mike Putney, Cheryl Roush, Jeff
Steele, and Louella Stover.
Adminiatrative ataff members
are Robert Shirey, Walter Stowen,
Jeanette Shirey, Alice Parley, Din
MiDer, and Beth Clppelll. .
Financial assistance is available
for those SIUdeniS who qualify.
Admission appointmenu are
cwrendy being sehl!duled by phone
at 446-4367, or !If sl0ppin1 It the
college durina businel8 houri Mon·
day through Friday. In addition to
the ~usiness hours, appointmenll
may ~e scheduled for evening
.hours or Saturdays.

At least 33 U.S. police departmenu have canine units, police
said. Prailldin County deputiel fint
began using cklgs six ye~rs ·ago,
said S,L James PeiJOiky.

'

By ED PETERSON
Soclal Security
Manager In Atheas
The Social Security Administralion reports that some genealogical
researchers are worried about the
destruCtion of the original government forms that people completed
to request Social Security numbers.
"We can understand the concern
about the loss of information of
jl?Ssible historical value when the
Application for a Social Security
Number Card' is destroyed," said
Ed Peterson . "However, we .can
assure everyone that precaut10~s
have bee?. taken to make. certa~?
that no cnUcal inCOfi!!aUon ts. lost
Tbe Social Secunty Admmistralion, which is reqlli!'ed br law to
keep. records conf1denllal, can
release c~pi~s of Social Sec~rit_y
card apphclltlons for deceased mdividuals because the dead are
deemed to not have privacy rights.
Therefore, if a person has applied
for a Social Security card, SSA can
generally provide a copy of the
application that shows the pc:rson's
name, date and place of birth, and
parents' names that were given
when he or she applied for the
Social Security number.
Genealogists -often find this a
valuable starting point in their
research.
Peterson notes that while federal
agencies soch as SSA may select

records for destruction, the .records
may not be destroyed unless the
agencies have received written
approval from the Archivist of the
United States. This approval is
granted only after the records have
been appraised and it has been
determined that their historical
value does not warrant keeping
them~tly.

"S1nce the Social Security program began in 1935," Peterson
explained, "we have issued more
than 355 million Social Security
numbers, This is a huge volume of
paper, and we found it very difficult to maintain all of the original
paper documents."
In 1977, SSA obtained approval
from the U.S. Archivist to destroy
oriJinal Social Security card applicabon forms.
"But we entered the information
from all of the original application
forms into a computer data baseand filmed the 'face' of the form,"
Peterson said. He explained thai the
reverse side of the document is not
filmed because it contains only the
instructions for completing the
form.
Anyone interested in conducting
genealogical research through SSA
records should write the Office of
Public Inquiries, 6401 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, Md. 21235.
FC!ls are charged for' researching
agency records.

By SUSAN IDGHTOWER

Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston One of Endeavour's seven astra·
nauts squeezed eggs from frogs and
sopped them in sperm today as part
of research into how tadpoles
develop in space.
Mae Jemison fertilized eggs
from four female South African
clawed frogs ancl dunked them in
simulated pond water. Then, she
spun some of the eggs in a centrifuge to mimic Earth's gravitational pull.
The experiment, which began
late Sunday, is meant to compare
how frog eggs develop in wei~t­
lessness and on the ground SciClilists also want to watch the swimming of the tadpoles that they hope
will hau:h before the flight ends.
Jemison also continued biofeed·
back tests intended to help avoid
nausea and other motion sickness
symptoms.
Space agencies around the
world are anxious to learn more
about the motion sickness that
strikes most astronauts durin'- their
ftrst few days in orbit Tbe 1Dness

Top 10 country
singles named
The following are the best-selling country western singles of the
week, according to Cashbox magazine.
I. "Runnin' Behind," Tracy
Lawrence
2. "I Still Believe In You,"
Vince Gill
3. "I Wouldn't Have It Any
Other Way," Aaron Tippin
4. "Could've Been Me," Billy

Ra~~ove's Got A Hold On

You," Alan Jackson
6. "Warning Labels," Doug
Stone
7. "So Much Like My Dad,"
George Strait
8. "You And Forever And
Me," Utile Texas
· 9. "Yard -Sale," Sammy Kershaw
10. " What Kind Of Fool Dq
Yau Think I Am," Lee Roy Parnell

affects flight planning; critical
activities like spacewalks, for
example, are never scheduled early
in a mission.
Jemison, a physician and the
fmt black woman in space, is the
only member of Endeavour's crew
trained in biofeedback, a process
that involves using relaxauon and
mental exercises to control body
functions.
At the start or each 12-hour
Spacelab shift, she has forced herself to relax and mentally Died to
control her heart rate, sweating and
skin temperature.
As Jemison toiled in the lab, she
wore a tight, white shin with holes
for electrodes; a headband with an
instrument to measure head movement; a pinkie ring measuring
blood Dow and skin temperature; a
wristwatch with a display on which
she could keep track of her pulse,
sweating and skin temperature; and
a belt containing a data recorder
and batteries for the cquipmenL
Astronaut Jan Davts, the control
subject, wore similar gear as she,
too, worked in the lab, but the data
display on her watch was blanked
out. Davis and her husband, payload commander Mark Lee, are the
first married couple to go into
space together.
Earlier Sunda', Marnoru Mohri,
Japan's fm professional astronaut,
squinted at flashing lights while his
head wu wired with electrodes and
gripped in a vise for another investigation into space adaptation.
Mohri, a nuclear scientist, was
ptopped in a restraining chair rightside up, to the side and then upside
down as he kept his eyes ftxed on
lights attached to two perpendicular
bars.

DOWIIH CllliS
MUIIII . .II

IISUUIICE .
Ill be••• St. P...-.y
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•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NE(K SURGERY
Metllcare &amp; UMWA Asslglllllenf Accepted
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE1 PT.

975

Page4

1105

Vol. 43, No.1 DO
Copyrlghled 1Q82

Low tonlgllt In mkl-'08.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. Hlgll
near 85.

1 s.ctlon, 10 PIQH 25 011111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 15, 1992

Allulllmldll Inc. Newptoper

Work on Middleport housing
project to begin within 30 days
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentillel News Staff
Eight three-bedroom houses will
be built on the Betsy Ross lot on
Fifth Street, Middleport, by Valley
Lwnberand Supply, Middl~
Meeting Monday night, Middleport Village Council accepted the
proposal of Valley Lumber after
hearing Council president Dewey

Everybody to blame

Astronauts fertilize frog
eggs, study space sickness

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

Poet's corner
In the sliD darkness, a trap springs ment, so for them a little respect
For without their effort, no more
and caught
Some fur bearing animal, a mink, animals would be left
To stop them now, diseases and
skunk, or fox
A lar~e white tail deer, gracefully poison 11 would be
No more animals for your chilleaps m flight
dren's
children to see
As it tumbles to the ground, the
hunter had him in sight.
So why blame the hunter and the
Cruelty for management, that's the trapper for cruelty
way it's f!t to be
· While sitting at your oak dining
Some artimais have to die, so other table, as you driak your tea
Mr. and Mrs. Squirrel and family,
animals can eat
Your homes, factpries, and roads, died or starvation
They also dined at the same tree.
once grew grass so green
Animals use to eat there often, now
By Franlc Drehel
it's asphalt and concrete
37496 Leading Creek Rd.
The liapper and bunter is manage- Middlepon

Ohio Lottery

Dolphins
rally to edge
Browns 27-23

Horton's report on a meeting with
the three bidders earlier this month.
Horton recommended acceptance of Valley Lumber's bid on
the basis of housing style, better
arrangement on the lots, option
packages available, and agreement
.to construct all eight houses without a requirement that they be sold
in advance.

VOINOVICH MEETS DABS • Ohio Gov. George Volnovlcb,
right, calls on Malayslaa Deputy Prime Minister Gbafar Dabs at
his omce in Kuala f.umpur Tqesday. Voinovlch is there to lead
the first business trade mission fti Southeast Asia. (AP)

Construction, Jean Trussell,
housing specialist, reported will
begin within 30 days and be completed within 120 days.
Applications for the low income
housing are still being taken by
Trussell at Middleport Village
Hall. FHA funding is available to
purchasers. The lot.s are provided at
no cost by the village. There is also

Racine Fall
Festival will
begin Sept. 25

Ohio considering trade
office in Southeast Asia
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
(AP)- Ohio is considering its ftrst
trade office in Southeast Asia, Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich said Tuesday.
Voinovich told reporters such a
trade office in one of the capitals of
the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations would not only help
increase trade and investments
between Ohio and the region, but
also between the United States and
the region.
Voinovich said the ASEAN
countries, including the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Brunei and Malaysia were
growing economically at a very
fast pace and would present vast
opportunities for American businessmen.
He said that if an office were too
expensive, it would share space
with an exisling Ohio company in
the region or worlc: through one of
the Ohio companies in the region.
Ohio companies already in the

region include Goodyear Tire and
Rubher Company, Reliance Electric, Dry-Air, Procter &amp; Gamble.
Voinovicll said Ohio exponed
$70 million worth of electronic
components, industrial and commercial machinery, chemical products and other goods in 1990 to
Malaysia.
He said that out of 172 trading
partners in 1992, Malaysia ranked
29th with Ohio.
Voinovich arrived here from
Singapore on Friday, with a trade
delegation representing 14 Ohio
companies mfood processing and
packaging, machinery, machine
tools and plastics production and
processing machinery.
Voinovich said it was estimated
that for each $1 billion exported
annually, 25,000 new jobs are created.
Voinovich said Columbus,
Ohio, has been selected by the
United Nations as the site for the
world's second Info Port.

Area leader says federal law
chips away at coal mining
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
Clean Air Act will continue to chip
away at coal mining in Ohio, an
industry leader said.
Coal production will balance out
at 20 million to 21 million tons
annually in the next few years, said
Neil Tostenson, president of the
Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association. Current production is
29 ml'llion to 30 million • he said in
a speech at Hocking College on
Sunday.
However, chances are good that
mines in Southern Ohio Coal's
Meigs Division will stay open, he
said.
Tostenson said he expects
approval for a plan to install scrubbers at the Gavin power plant

rather than to swiu:h to low-sulfur
coal from other slates. Miners have
been worrying since 1.990 that
mines s_'}Pplying the plant would
close 1 scrubbers were not
mstalled.
However, th~ Cenu;aJ Ohio Coal
Co. m Zanesville w
. 111 not be
. so
! k T
d H
d th
uc y, OStenson SBl ·. e SBl e
company probably Will be out of
busmess by 2000 because the
M sk ·
Jan
u mgum power P t, which it
supplies, will change to low- sulfW"
coal.
.
,
The Clean Air Act of 1990 will
hit the coal industry hard between
199 5 and 2000 because a second
phase of regulations wi~l be even
more stnct, Tostenson SBld.

Barnhart released; Dudding
f:aces aggravated arson charge
Roger Barnhart, 14, who was
reported miss~ng last week, has
b~n released mto the custody ~L
h1s parents after he was found m
Athens County over the weelcend.
It was incorrectly reported in
Monday's Daily Sentinel thai Barnhart was charged in an auto theft
incident In New Marshfield. Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
said Monday that Barnhart had not
been ch8rged and was expected to
be released from the juvenile dentention center in Zanesville sometiine yesterday.
Soulsby said an investigation
will continue into the theft of the
pickup truck recovered with Barnhart m New Marshfield Sunday,
along with the theft of another

truck driven by Randy Dudding of
Racine . Dudding was stopped
while driving the truck in Jackson
County, Ohio, early yesterday
morning. He is in the Pike County
jail, where he faces a charge of
grand theft auto.
In addition, a count of aggravat·
ed arson was filed in Meigs County
Court yesterdar against Dudding,
accusing him o burning his mobile
home on Pine Grove Road early
Saturday.
Barnhart's parents, Pete andBrenda Barnhart of Pomeroy,
reported him missing last week.
Soulsby was unwilling to say
whether he expected charges to be
filed against Barnhart in connection
.with the weekend's events

..---- Local- bri·ef
Postal exam scheduled

An examination for l'lll'ai mail carrier positions in Meigs County
is being plailned, and applications for the exam are now available.
Acconlins to Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Reuter, those applications are available at the following Meigs County post offiCes with
rural delivery routes: Langsville, Lens Bottom, Middleport,
Pomeroy, Ponland, Racine, Reedsville, and Rutland.
Reuter said that those applications must be turned in between
· September 21 and September 25. After all applications have been
received, notice of examination site and date wiU be mailed to all
applicants.

available ·down payinent assistance
TrusseD said.
'
Council voted to name the street
in the new subdivision, Covert
Lane, in honor of the family which
for many years operated a bakery
on the lot. The street will run from
Palmer to Williams.
The $22,402.50 bid of the
Continued on pa(lt! 3

LmRARY AUTOMAnON HERE· Norma
Hawthorne, seated, md Librarian Rutll Powers
begin some tataloefnl as tbe Meigs County Public Library moves toward automatloa. Eight

computers at the main
and two at the
Middleport building.will give
public access
to information on books available as well as provide technical search services on topics • .

Meigs Library automation underway
By CHARLENE H.OEFUCH
Sentlael News Staff
Automation of the Meigs Coonty Public Library is underway.
Th
h
h' · ed
roug a sop lSllcat compuler system the nearly 30,000
books available are bemg call1 d
da · be'
. ted
age • patron 18 IS mg 1IS •
and a data base link is being established between the library in
Pomeroy and the branch in Middlepan.
Ruth Powers, librarian, reports
that the computerized system, to be
·
completed in early 1993, will
::;,1~N~~ access computers at
Meigs County is the final link in

er terminals will be linked to a
printer.
Once the system linking the
Middleport and Pomeroy libraries
together is in operation, then the
next phase will be tying all II
libraries of OVAL together via
computer.
Stnce the Meigs County library
moved from the Carnegie Building

on Second Street, Pomeroy, into
the spacious new building on Main
Street, about 10,000 new books
have been added to the collection
and circulation has aipled. Currently figures show circulation of
between 8,000 and 9,000 a month.
The main library is now open 72
hours a week, including evening
and Saturday and Sunday hours.

Plans for Racine's' Annual Pall
Festival on Sept. 2S and 26 have
been announced.
The feslival will kick-off Friday
evening, Sept 25, in the town with
a variety of gospel entertainment
including The Hart Brothers,
Shammah, Russ and Southern Hills
Singers, King's Harmony Quartet.
Faith Harmony Quartet and the Joy
Singers.
On Saturday, Sept. 26,1here will
be a parade at 10 a.m., a pie eating
contest and a pumpkin growing
contest. Entenainment during the
day will include Howard and
Friends, Ivan Potter and Silver
Wings, Country Grass, Stoney
Creek, Middle Branch, Big AI and
Friends and the Midnight Cloggera.
Thost: participating in the pumpkin
growmg contest are requested to
bring their pumpkins to the lot
between Sonya's Country Kitchen
and the Gun Shop 011 the day of the
contest Those participating in the
pie eating contest should register at
the Racine DepariniCnt Store.
Craft spaces are available during
the festival with those arrangements under the direction of Bill
Nease at Home National Bank in
Racine, 949-2210.
The pumpkin growing contest
will prove to be quite interesting
this year with prizes to include a
large trophy that wiU be presented
to the elementary school which
raises the largest pumpkin; and a
trophy and $50 United States Savings Bond to be awarded to the
child in elementary school who
grows the largest pumpkin.
In addition there will be a Harvest Festival Queen crowned who
will reign over the weeltend's festivities.

~~~i~h~~~e~f~or;~s?vAL

According to Powers, getting
information on all of the available
books into the computer, and barcoding each boot for scanning purposes will mean that each one will
have to be removed from the shelf
and transported to the basement
where the server is located
Once all that information is in
the computer, then the work on
registering patrons wiD begin. New
informatioo will be taken on each
patron borrowing books even
though the patron holds a library
card.
For several months the card cat· alog will remain in place, but once
patrons become accustomed to
usins the public access computer
termmals the card system will be
discontinued.
At the main library, four P.ublic
access computerS will be avatlable,
one-of which will be in the chi!dren's section. and two will be
used at the circulation desk so that
employees can lllsist patrons.
. -At the Middi!',PDrl branch, there
will be one publtc access terminal
and one for use at the ·circulation
desk.
By entering a title, an aUthor, or
a subject, a patron will be able to
determine where the specific book
they 'fant is located and • which
library building, what books are
available from a specific author,
and what materials are there on a
specifiC subjecL All of the ~put-

tbe Captain's Houe Ia Middleport. Pktmtd, 1r, (boHOta to top) are e~lldldates: Julie IKk,
Nora Eastman, Amy Rouse, Aaale Searle.,
Linda Cupmm aDd MIDdy Harris. Ia adclldoa ·'
to a queeD, a lint I'UIIaer-ap Md I M.. C.....
nlaUty wiD alia be ~elected.
. ··

QUEEN CANDIDATES • Oae of these
q - coa~IIDts wll1 be CIViliied 199Z Middleport Fatlvll O.eea durlq ceremonies on Sat·
u:,:at 12:30' p.m. fro• tbe ftatbed atap on
N
SeCODd Avea.e durllll tbe Calfllh Festl·
val. Judafag took place lut nlabt (MOitday) 11

-4

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