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                  <text>Pags D-B-Sunday nmea-sentinel

October 14 ·1990:

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point PleaiMt. W. ·Va.

'

-

Residents urged to leave ..
those itsy-bitsyspiders alone

Meigs County .
Agents Corner

Thorough vacu umlng Is an.
behavior.
effective way to control spiders
·OUtdoors, most spiders die In
Indoors or remove webs that may
the fall leaving small sacs of eggs
have become dusty and un• ·
to hatch In the spring. During
sightly
. .Vacuum all corners and
spring
and
summer,
spider
popu·
The next time an ltsy' bltsy
out
of
the
way places, lncludlni
lations
riSe,
peaking
In
spider crawls up beside you,
basements
and attics.
.
September.
leave It alone. JuUe Steele, of
The
two
types
of
potsonoua
Indoors,
spiders
breed
through
Ohio State Unlverslly's Plant
spiders found In Ohio are the
the winter. But their populations
and Pest Clinic, says spiders
·
back widow spider and the brown
.
remain
low
If
there
are
few
dese"Ve more respect than they
get.
.
recLuse
spider. They are both
trisects to eat. Late summer Is
rare
and
shy and will not bite
when many InseCts come Inside
The frightening ·portrayal ol
unless provoked.
'
and .when Indoor spider papula·
spiders In the movies has caused
Spiders are not Insects. They
Uons are greatest.
many peeple to think the crea·
belong to a group of creatures,
A maJor way of keeping
lures are poisonous and out to get
called
Arachnids. Members of
In
Is
outdoor
spiders
from
corning
Steele
says.
But
most
them,
a S5 cuh prize li•om the Ohio Valley Publlsblng
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
this
group
have etghtlegs Instead
to
keep
vegetation
from
growin'
g
spiders
are
not
poisonous
and
are
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
fllnn, featured by the Melp SoD and Water
of
the
Insect's
· six legs and two
against
a
home's
foundation.
afraid
of
people.
·
number with your card or letter. No telephone
Couerva&amp;ion DIAtrlct, Is located somewhere In
body
parts
Instead
of an Insect's
Also,
avoid
stacking
firewood,
"Get
used
to
spiders
and
enjoy
callll wiD be accepted. All conteat eatrtes should
Melp Conaty. lildlvldual• wlsblnglo pardctpate
three
·
body
parts.
Crabs are
leaves,
rocks
or
lumber
next
to
them,"
Steele
says.
"Spiders
eat
be t11111ed In lo the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
In the weekly contest may do so by JUesslnclbe
another
species
of
Arachnid.
the:&gt;lUliU.,,
large
amounts
of
Insects.
AI·
Wednesday. In case of a tie, tbe winner will be
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop oil your JUe88lo
though most spiders Uve out·
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
the GalDpoHs Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave. ,
doors, those living Indoors eat
farm will be featured by the GalUa SoD and Wa&amp;er
GaiBpoHs, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
roaches, flies and other Insects.''
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457tl9,and you m~y win
Couerva&amp;loa District.
In some SOuthern states, people
are actually encouraged to bar·
bor spiders Indoors to control
Insects.
·
. Spiders go where there are
Insects to eat. If a home has
many spiders; It's because many
Have
you
ever
wondered
why
crops to tie pianted. Farmers
By Edward M . VoDborn
Insects
are also there.
:'ladybug" Is written as one
often have trouble finding time to
County Extenalon Agent,
Spiders
catch Insects In two
word, and "lace bug" as two
plant cover crops. A limited time
Acrlcl!lture &amp; C.N.R.D
ways.
Some
spin webs that trap
words. How about "sawfiy" and
to. harvest and weather related
their
prey.
Others hun 1 their
"fruit fiy"? Correct usage re·
probleins often limit good lnten·
-EXPERIENCED AnOANEY
G-\J.LIPOLIS - The Ohio
prey.
Wolf
spiders,
lor Instance,
lates to the classification of the
tlons. Farmers may want to
-2 YEARS AS A PROSECUTOR
-VIETNAM VETERAN
Weekly Crop and Weather Sum·
hunt other Insects by running
CRIME AND DRUGS
mary as of Oct. 9 showed seven consider the no·tlll method of Insect. When anlnsectlsa "true" · them down. Jumping spiders
representative of an Insect order,
SERVE A FULL II YEAR TERM
seeding cover crops. This limits
percent of the corn harvest
hunt by leaping on their prey. All
then
the
words
are
spill
as
In
the
amount
of
time
and
expense
complete with an average mots·
"lace bug" otherwise the worc:ls spiders eat only Uve Insects.
In go!ngo{.er the field. Two no· till
ture of 26 percent on harvested
are
joined as In "ladybug". Since · · When a spider Is l'l!ady to dine,
drills are available ·on a rental
corn. The five year average for
ladybugs
are beetles, the word Is It . bites an ·Insect with Its two
Tre••·.•
agreement through the local Soli
Ohio corn harvest at this point Is
4111131
fangs
and
Injects
a
paralyzing
joined
since
ladybug
beetles
are
17 percent. It was the feeling of and Water Conservation District.
venom. The spider continues to
not true bugs.
.
Call the "District" (446·8687) to
the reporters, that a frost woulc:l
Walnuts seem to be In pl\lntiful Injects a paralyzing venom. The
not do major damage to the 1990 . schedule use of the drills .'
Beware of feeding frost·
supply this year. The Southwest·. spider continues to Inject dlges·
Ohio Corn Crop.
damaged annual forages. Frost·
ern High School FFA will be tive liquids Into the victim. This
The 46th Annual Meeting and
damaged sorghum or hybrid
buying them starting on Oct. 15 bre;lks down the Inside of the
Awards Banquet for the Gallla
sorghum · sudengrass forage
and concluding Nov. 1. A huller Insect, allowing the spider to
Soli and Water Conservation
In
the
field
becomes
standing
will be set up near the high school suck the Insides back through Its
District will be Thursday, No·
very
poisonous
to
livestock
They will be open for buslnes fangs. That's why spider webs
vember 1 starting at 7 p.m. This
through
formation
of
prussle
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday often hold only shells of Insects.
year's event will be held at the
All spiders drag a line of silk
damage
acid
from
frost
cell
through Friday during that two·
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
behind
them. This allows them to
within
!he
plant.
According
to
week period. They will be paying
Tickets are . $5 · each and are
higher elevations or
drop
from
John Underwood, DlstrlctEli:ten·
$8 per hundred after hulling. A ·
available at the Gailla SWCD
catch
breezestobecarrledaway.
slon Agronomist, farmers who
special thanks to SOuthwestern
·Office, SWCD Board of SuperviMost spiders wrap their egg
do
not
planted
hybrid
pearl
millet
FFA for providing this comrnun·
sors or the County ...Extension
cases
In silk. Some spiders carry
have to \ con'tend with this
tty service. Nobody gets rich, but ·
Office.
the
cases
with them. Others
problem.
It brings some extra spending
Many of the farm conservation
fasten
the
cases
to their webs or
A bug by any other name!
money Into the community.
plans Include the need for cover
to other objects.
Indoors, most spiders prefer
I
dark, ·d amp places. This allows
them to hide safely. Spiders also
Gohlstar
Funci
EIIIII'IOft
Sylwaftia
eat each other. That's another
reason lor their solitary
Somsung
:•gnawox
Syt.-ic Shintom
By Jobn C. Rice
Co. Ext. Acent
Apiculture

Ohio Lottery

Bengls,
Browns '
both ·lose

Pick-3.: 9()4.
Pick-4.: 3134
Cards:

' 3-H, 8-C, K-0, Q.S
Super Lotto

Page3

14-23-3144-51-53
Kicker 751839

•
Vot.41. No.114
Copyrighted 1990

ordered to use ·ethanol or ETBE

. By Pa&amp;ty Dyer, D.C.
.
USDA-SCS
GALLIPOLIS - All agrlcu I·
· ture department employees have
been ordered to use ethanol or
ETBE blends of gasoline In
government vehicles. Agrlcul·
ture Secretary Clayton Yeutter
said Thursday.
The use of ethanol and ETBE,
or ethyl tertiary butyl ether, In
the department's cars and trucks
Is required If the fuels are
available at prices competitive
to regular unleaded gasoline.
"Ethanol Is produced from
American corn and other agrlcu I·
tural products, and that's good
for American farmers ," Yeutter
said.
It also helps reduce U.S.

dependency on foreign oil, he
said. President. Bush In his ·
spee~h Tuesday night to Con·
gress said that "fuel switching"
would be one way to ease the
· nation's dependency on oil
Imports.
"This Is a great way lor each of
us, as Individuals and as
members of USDA, to demon·
str ate our commitment to Arnerl·
ca' s farmers, America's environ·
ment and America's future,"
Yeutter said In a statement.
The USDA operates more than
33,000 cars and light trucks In all
50 states. If all were fueled with
ethanol·blended gasoline, they
would use about 1. 7 million gallon
of ethimol a year, which would
require 680,000 bushels of corn.

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. WASHINGTON (UPI ) - White
House chief of staff John Sununu,
defending President Bush's
standing with the public, Insists
that Americans blame Congress
for federal budget problems.
Sununu also acknowledged
that some publ,lc support for the
administrations Persian Gulf
policy will erode. He said Bush Is
aware of this.
.
, A New ..York Times·CBS News ·
Poll published Sunday showed
that the con11nulng commitment
of U.S. forces In the Persian Gulf
region and Increasing fears
about the economy are taking
their toll on the president's
popularity.
The poll of 960 adults found
economic fears at their highest
level In a decade and Bush's
overalljobratlngtheworstofhls
presidency .
. A poll by Newsweek mirrored
the slide In support among
Americans lor the president's
handling of the economy, drop- •
ping from a high of 80 percent In
January to Its lowest point yet.of
only 54 perc~nt..
A third poll by Time magazine·
CNN found Bush's - approval
rating dropped 2 percentage
points, from 61 percent to 59
percent, since an Oct. 3 survey.
An Aug. 23 poll found the .

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president's approval rating to be points Tn October from August's
74 percent.
45 percent, the newspaper said.
Also 58 percent of the respond· Disapproval was upS percentsge
ents In the Tlme-CNN poll believe points from 44 percent In August.
the country Is now In a recession
Sununu acknowledeged the
while 34 percent said the pres!: odds of another government
dent Is dolhg a good job handljilg shutdown after the Oct. 19
the .economy. Flfty-stX percent deadline for reaching an agreesaid he ts doing a poor job.
ment are "probably relatively
Tlie New YorkTimes·CBS poU high, as that conference will not
found public opinion of Bush's .. be completed. At best. es11mate,
handling of the federal budget · that conference will have dlffl·
deficit slipping only 1 percentage culty . being completed by mid·
point from the 30 percent re- night Friday."
corded In August. His dlsappro· . The latest poll, conducted
val rating, however, climbed 7 Monday through Wednesday of
percentage points from August's last week, shOwed 60 percent of
51 percent rankin!!'.
respondents approv.ed of the way
sununu, ·appearing Sunday on Bush was handling his job, down
·the NBC News program "Meet from the76percentrecordedlna
the Press," sa,ld Americans see similar Times· CBS poll taken In
Congress as responsible for the August just after the Iraqi
failure to reach a budget agree-·' Invasion of Kuwait.
The number of those who
men!, a problem that forced a
temporary . shutdown of non· disapproved lncreasedl5percen·
essential government services tage points from August to 30
during Columbus Day weekend.
percent, the highest disapproval
"We're not going by the polls, rating of the Bush presidency
but don't misunderstand the fact thus far, the Times reported.
that the Amerlca!l public does
.There was a dramatic drop In
realize that It Is Congress's appr.oval of Bush among citizens
muddling around and trying to 65 and over; whose general
avoid a vote right now that's economic fears were aggravated
creating a great deal of the by proposals to narrow the .
difficulty," Sununu said.
federal budget deficit by raising
Approval of Bush's dealings taxes and Medicare premiums,
with the economy was down 9 the Times said.

Two killed m · Route 33 accident . . -·
WILLOW WORKING - Rick Pra&amp;t demon·
· number of traditional crafts were exhibited at the
, stra&amp;ed Willow fumlture rnaktnc a&amp; the Bob Evans
20th annual festival, Including cooperlnc, broom
Farm Festival during the pasl weekend. Here,
making, buketweavlng and blacksmithing.
Pra&amp;t shows his technique .a t hammering. A · (Tribune pboto by Lee Ann Thompson)

Public forum scheduled Wednesday
. A "Meet the , Candidates tatlve will ' be allowed three
constituents.
:Night" will be held Wednesday at minutes to present his or her . -George Collins, Meigs Republican Party Chairman, and
the Meigs County Multipurpose vii!WS. A fee will be charged for
each additional minute with all
Sue Malson, Democratic Party
:Senior Center In Pomeroy.
· A public dinner will begin at 5 funds being used for the Meigs
Chairman, will determine which
p.m. to. be followed by the .. Senior attzens services.
candidate, Incumbent or oppocandidates' presentations begin··
-Sl.nce this program Is not a
nent, shall speak first by a coin
debate type forum, no questions toss on Monday.
nlng at 7 p.m.
will be accepted from the au· .
The cost of the dinner Is $3.50
dlence. Thlseventlsanopportun·
: The rules under which this
public forum Is to be held are as
tty for the voter to hear the and further Information may be
follows:
candidates outline their views on obtained by calling Eleanor
: -Each candidate or represen:
Issues which concern all Thomas at 992·2161.

By VINCENT DEL GWDICE
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON - U.S. business Inventories Increased 0.5
·percent In August While sales
advanced 2.1 percent during the
month; the Commerce Depart·
men! announced Monday.
In July,lnventorles climbed 0.7
percent and sales dipped 0.4
percel)t, according to the data
complied by the department's
Census Bureau.
Inventories totaled $806.48 bll·
lion In Augustvs. $802.15 billion In
July and sales totaled $551.86
billion In August vs. $540.37
billion In July, adjusted for
seasonal factors.

'

The Commerce Department
also said In Its monthly report
that the Inventory-to-sales ratio,
which tracks product delivery
time, slipped to 1.46 In August
from 1.48 In July.
Retailers' Inventories scored
the blgges t gain In August, a 1.3
percent jump, hinting perhaps
that consumers were more con·
servative with their money lol·
lowing Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait
early In the month.
Manufacturers' Inventories,
meanwhile, were up 0.2 percent
In August, and wholesalers In·
ventories edged up 0.3 percent
during the month, the depart·
ment reported.
,
On the sales side, manufactur~

Two men were killed In il two Athens County Coroner Dr. Ro·
vehicle auto accident on Route 33 · bert Butts.
just north of Nelsonville early
Dead are Kenneth Hronek, 237'
Sunday morning at 1:40 a.m.
Westerville, and Richard N.
According to the Athens Post of Sloane, 21, Athens. A passenger
the State Highway Patrol, dr!v·
In Sloane's pickup truck, Lori
ers of both vehicles were proAdams. 22, · Athens, sustained
mtnor vtsable Injuries and was
nounced dead at the scene by

taken to Doctor's Hospital by the
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service. ·
Both vehicles sustained heavy .
damage and the Sloane vehicle
caught fire and burned.
The accident Is still under.
Investigation.
.

Voinovich picks up 3 endorsements
By United Press International

Republican . gubernatorial no·
mlnee George Volnovlch received a big boost In his cam·
palgn Sunday with the
endorsement of three of Ohio's
newspapers.
Picking Volnovlch over his
opponent Anthony Celebreeze
were the aeeland Plain Dealer,
the Columbus Dispatch, and the
Qnclnnatl Enquirer.
ers saw the biggest increase In
In another set of endorse·
sales during the month, a nearly
ments, the Toledo Blade urged
3.4 percent advance.
.
the re· election of Supreme Court
Retailers sales, meanwhile,
justices Andrew Douglas and
were off 0.4 percent In August,
Craig Wright.
again apparently out of consu·
All three newspapers lauded
mer concern over the state of
Volnovich's efforts to bring
world affairs. But wholesalers
Cleveland out of· default during
reported a 2.6 percent Increase In
· his terms as mayor.
sales for .t he month.
The Plain Dealer said II
believes Volnovlch ·.,Is the candl·
From August 1989 to August
date who can bring executive
1!!90, totav buslness Inventories
skUls, developed during a .decade
Increased by more than 1.9
as mayor of Cleveland, to a
. percent while tots! sales during
position that demands expe·
the l2·month period were ahead
rlence
. In managing a large
by more than 3.8 percent, the
Commerce Department said.
In August 1989, the Inventory· ·
to-sales ratio was 1.49.

Business inventories up 0.5 percent
.

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SununU defelidsBush's
standing ·in public eye

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SEIVKE

All agriculture department workers

On Wednesday, the depart·
rnent estimated this fall's corn
harvest at 8.12 billion bushels.
Yeut~er noted that the avalla·
blllty of ethanol nd ETBE
blends of gasoll
varies from
state to State e also urged the
department's 100,000 employees
to use the blends In their personal ·
vehicles.
·
Spokesman Kelly Shipp said
Yeutter's staff was "looking
around" for a local source of
blended fuel to use In USDA cars
carrying the·-secretary and other
senior officials. SO far, none had
been fqund , she said.
On the local from, Superamerlca and Burlte Oil Company are
the two sources of the ethanol
blend gasoline.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, October 15, 1990

Seven percent of Ohio com
harvested as of October 9

Farm flashes

Low tonight arOUIId 40.
Tuesday, sunny. High near 70.

publlc·sector bureaucracy."
It called on voters to elect
Volnovich "for hiS Integrity,
ab1llty. and proven skUls as an
administrator."
The paper said Celebrezze and
his running mate Sen. Eugene
Branstool have served Ohio well,
but said Celebrezze had !ailed to
demonstrate that his knowledge
of · state government operations
would translate Into Inspired
leadership.
The Dispatch said it believes
Volnovlch, an outstanding
leader, offers the kind Of change
In state government that most
Ohioans want.
It said t)le, task of the next
governor w111 be to extend
econom lc vitality and to deal
with the concerns that Ohioans
will face In the 1990s and.beyond.
"To that . end, Volnov!ch has
laid out of a detailed blueprlntfor
Ohio to meet the challenges of
this decade In ways that show
fresh thinking and a compassion·

ate concern for all the state's ·
people," It said. "In the areas of:
education, health, the environ.;
ment and ethics, Volnov!ch has •
put forth sensible proposals :
during this campaign."
•
The Cincinnati Enquirer called
Volnov!ch the right man for •
Cleveland In 1979 and the right
man for Ohio today.
' 'He has articulated a
cornmon·sense program to build
educational opportunity for
young Ohioans at all levels," the
paper said. "He bas a blueprint
for helping Ohio grow economi·
cally and to produce the reward·
!ng jobs a new generation of
Ohioans deserve. He will fight
drugs, he will combat waste, he
will demand adherence to the
highest ethical standards among ·
all thOse who work for the·people
of Ohio."
The Plain Dealer and the
Dispatch also said Celebrezze'$
reversal on the abortion Issue •
hurt him. The Enquirer did not
mention abortion.

Composer leonard Bernstein dies
NEW YORK (UPI) -Leonard
recurrent pulmonary Infections.
remained active as Its director
Berns teln, 72, a legend of Amerl·
He had been · experiencing laureate for · more than two
can a11d world music as revered
"Increased difficulty In brea· decades after his retirement In
on Broadway and In Hollywood
thing" In thepastfewweeks, said 1969.
.
as he was In Philharmonic Hall his spokeswoman, Margaret Car·
Taking over the baton at the
and VIenna, Is dead only days · son. A private funeral Is planned,
orchestra In 1959, he conducted
after retiring from public perlor· she said.
more concerts with the Philhar·
rnance because of.lll health.
monic
than any other maestro In
One.of the world's most sought·
· Tbe versatile composer, con- after orchestra conductors, Its history. He also was the
ductor, plan 1st, au thor and edu·
BerMteln Introduced a genera· favorite guest conductor of the
ca~or died Sunday evening at his
tlon of American kids to classical VIenna and Israel
Manhattan home with his son,
music with his televised "Young phllharmonlcs.
Alexander, at his bedside. The People's Concerts." Equally
Bernstein leaped Into lnteriut·
cause of death was sudden adept at drawing Inspiration
tiona! prominence In 1943 when,
cardiac arrest caused by lung from jazz and Jewish and Chris·
as assistant conductorofthe New
failure, said Dr . . Kevin Cahill,
York Philharmonic, he pertlan liturgy as from more eonven·
Bernstein's personal physician,
formed
brDIIantly when called on
tiona! sources, he composed
who also was present.
suddenly
to replace the atllng
works as varied as "Weat Side
Bernstein, a longtime heavy Story," Broadway's hlp modern·
Bruno Walter In a nationsl!y
smoker, only last week had
broadcu t concert.
day retelling of "Romeo and
announced that, on Cahill's ad- · Juliet," the Innovative "Mass,"
Small and handsome with a
vice, he was canceling all con· and the "Jeremiah" Symphollf.
leonine head, Bertsteln became
d!lctlng engag~enta and ilving
known around the world as the
He was the flnt American·
up performing at the plano due to born music director of a major · legendary ·:Leapbli I,.ennte," a
worsening emphysema compU·
conductor wbo actually Jumped
American symphony orchestra,
cated by a pleural tumor and
Continued on page 6
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the New York Phllhprmontc, and .

8WINOINO - Two :r-a Ylllton to the ti0t11
aa.al Bob EviDI Fatm Fntlval took a moment
to cellbelr feel off lbe muddy JI'OIIIId 1111d •wtncln
willow furnltllre made by Rick Pratt. Pratt was
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oae of miiiiJ

11ew

tblnp were doae In dora cone by. (Trtllue plloto
by Lee ADD T!IOMIJIIOJI)

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Commentary
111 C::ourt Street

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Pomeroy, Oblo .

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DEVOTED TO THE .INTERESTS
OF TBE . MEIG8'' MAS0N AREA
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.........,._-.-l.........,c:ll= .
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ROBERT L. WINGETT

C::HARLENE HOEFLJC::H

Publlsller

Gea~rai _ManaJer

,PAT WIIJTEJIEAD
Aullllaat P•bllllber/C::Ontroller

A MEMBER of The United Presslnternatlona(Inland Dally Press
Association and the American NewspaP!'f Publ15bers Association.

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LETTERS Of OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words long. AU letters are sub!ecl to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letlers should be In good taste, addresslnll ill sues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Appreciates donations
Dear Editor:
..
The members of the Syracuse
. Fire imd Emergency Depart. ment would like to thank those
people who donated food Items to
make pur chicken barbecue a
· success.
Thanks to the ·people who

Oilers dump Bengals 48-17; Saints defeat Browns 25-20

P.age-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. October 16. 1990

Th~ - D.aily Sentinel ' Bank does brisk business
WASHINGTON- Jim King of . about possible sources of venture
ROgers, Ark., was In deep·ftnan· capital, King learned about Uniclal trouble back In 1986. His ted Balik International In
satell!te dish business was going AngcUla.
under, and he needed someone
According, to King, a UJ3I
with money and faith to Invest In repr,e sentative call!ng himself
lt. King was wUllng to .do almost "Mr. Greene" offered King a $1
anything.
million loan. All King had to do
· He stumbled Into a $2 mUllon was pay a $15,000 fee up front.
deal that was too good to be true, King hesitated, and then he said
literally. He came dangerously Greene offered .another million.
close to joining ihe list 9f people. "They were ~od." King says ·orwho have done business with the sales pitch. He agreed to pay
shell banks on · the Island of the fee, but on a-hunch canceled
AnguUla, a British dependency .the .money transfer at the last
and tax haven In the Caribbean. minute.
.
AnguUia lias only 7,000 res!-..
That may have been the
dents, but has 42 banks catering smartest decision ·or his business
to offshore customers. Tile U.S. career. FBI agents later sllowed
Treasury Department has up on King's doorstep to ask him
warned American banks· about about his close encounter wtth
dealing with the same bank that UBI, They told him he was lucky.
offered King $2 mUllan, and an
A source at the U.S. CompFBI source confirmed that the . troller of the Curency told our
bank Is under Investigation.
associate Dean Boyd that In 1987
· But Jim King dldn't&lt;oknow the the Treasury Department Issued
pitfalls. WhUe asking around

Jack Anderson
and·Dale Van Atta·,

man, Michael De Bella. The
a warning to American banks
Treasury Department and Amerthat UBI was not authorized to do
Ican banks have been watching
business In the United States.
De Bella for years. He has not
The Chinese government has
been charged with anything. FBI
hired a Miami lawyer, John
sources told us they have had
Mattes, to prepare a lawsuit
trouble determining court jurisagainst UBL .Mattes claims that
dictions and getting Cooperation
UBI Is nothing more than a
from AnguUlan au thor lUes. Anone-room storefront with nice
goUla
needs the money that
stationery, but no tellers, no
· bankS br.l ng In, and
offshore
money and no credit.
·
authorities there can't afford to . ·
Sources Investigating UBI told
us that some Angulllan banks shake up their thriving banking
could be -catering to customers business.
who know the banks are a front . .. Qe Bella told us that the
Those customers don't · care, allegations ate "not tl'ue." He
l!ecause they can .u se the banks . said he will Win the cal!f) ligalnst
for their own criminal activities the Chinese government and
Including laundering money or claimed that the shrimp they sOld
using the banks' ..bogus letters of him was "bad." And what about
tile letters of credit from UBI
c~edlt to set up other deals. We
asked a top Treasury Depart- that U.S. banks won't honor? De
ment official whether that Is a . Bella said he discharged hla end
posstbll!t~. "Absolutely," ·he of the d!!al by Issuing the letters
said. "That's w)ly the FBI has - and It wasn't his fault If other
banks wouldn't honor them. ·
been put on the .c ase.''
UBI's manager Is a Miami

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of us or our Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ who died on the
cross so we could have forg!v~
ness .of sins.
.
I too once lived like tilts, but
God has changed all that now.
Maybe you don't rea.llze what you
are saying. With God's help, you
too can change. My famUy and I
go to the Syracuse Nazarene
Church and we would ·love to
have you join. us. The Bible says
In 1st Timothy 2; 4 that It's God's
will that everyone be saved. But
If you choose to refuse God's love,
grace, and mercy, at least for the
sake of your friends and relatives
whO are christians, pi'e ase
''Don't take the name of the Lord
your God In vain"!
Greg, VIckie,
·
Valerie and Jason
.Cundiff
Racine, OH

This is still America.
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Dear Editor:
Unless there has been a .
change, this Is still America. But
coverage by WSAZ·T-V of a
recent move by religious leaders
to remove adult oriented videos
from Middleport Rental Shop
shelves caused me to think twice.
The freedoms we have as
Americans dlstlngusb us from
many others In less fortunate
nations. To think these freedoms ,..
can be eroded by a minority of
people self appointed to decide
what I can view In privacy of my
home, Is quite disturbing.
I value my rights and freedoms
and don't appreciate It when
anyone starts to ta10per wltb
them.
For those Involved In this
movement, I ask them to conalder tile Irony of their actions.
Tampering with .onea basic
freedom by a group enjoying a
freedom that many around the
world are atlll tlgbtlng for;
religious freedom.
I can clearly aee the danger of
~lng cburcb and 1tate.
.
APParently, many of our rell·
IIDU• leaden caDDo!. I, too, am
rellgiOUI but u a laypenon. I
would prefer that religious leaden conc:eatrate on their.callilll
of m!nllterlng to our apir!tual
needl.
Our other need• are taken care
of e!Nwhere, and we're quite

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capable of making our own
choices a8 to how to meet those
needs.
Don't try to screen my movies,
next comes my magazines, and
music followed by my phone calls
and even the news I read.
Leave screening movies to the
motion picture association. Let
me choose based on their
recommendations.
A caveat: Tamper with one of
our freedoms and open the door
to tampering with others. None of
us would like any of our religious
freedom stepped on; but the
generally goes for any of our
freedoms.
. Over-regulating and Imposing
beliefs alid valve Is not well
accepted by Americans. Give us
the freedom to choose.
. Finally, Middleport would be
better depleted on television for
Its many achievements, attrac·
ttons and hlltor!cal points-ofInterest
One tblngla for alire; It won't
be the site of the next world film
festival.
·
And If act!ou like thll continues, Middleport cltlzerls will
never be apoled to even· that
tllm which Is overwhelminglY
considered art by 'the rett of the
world,
Elizabeth AM Nickels
Pomeroy, Ohio

You'd probably recognize VIc·
tor Klam If you saw him. He's the
Short guy In · TV commercials
who holds up a Remington razor
and says, "I liked this razor so
much I bought the company."
However he may become
more famo~s for publicly defendlng five of his employees who
reportedly stood naked In front of
a female reporter, made lewd
commentsandaskedhertotouch
them.
·
Reporters quoted Klam as
referring to the woman sportsw·
rlter as "a classic bitch." Ktam
has since disavowed the remark,
but the damage has been done.
The Klam employees In questlon don't make razors; they are
members of his National Football League team, the New
England Patriots. Details of the
actual event are sketchy excepUorthestandlng-naked-lnfront-o!-the-repprter part, which
It seems several others wit·
nessed - but some accounts
have It that the birthday-suit

boys said the reporter ,;.as
"staring" at them.
As one might expect to happen
when a group of well-qatd profes·
s!onals get naked and malte
llicherous comments to someone,
thelncldenthasllecomequltethe
topic of conversation.
When Cincinnati Bengals
coach sam Wyche barred a
woman reporter · from entering
the Bengals' locker room a
couple of weeks later _ similar
Incidents 1n each of the last two
seasons had brought Wyche
warnings and fines- the Players
on Parade Incident took on a few
more degrees of warmth.
Male sportawrtters have lam·
basted the exlllbltlonlsts, and I
llaven't run across one who put
any credence ln . the players'
contention that the woman reporter was "staring."
"Anyone who bel!eves a
womanreporter,rushedbydead·
lines and the pressure of com pet!ng against rival newspapers 1s
thinking about anything other

than collecting quotes and filing
her .st?,ry. Is as Ul-!nformed as
Ktam, writes St. Louis Post·
Dispatch columniSt Bernie Mlklasz. "Moreover, the locker room
Is nothing special. Reporters go
there out of necessity. There. are
days ";~en I'd rather have a root
canal.
The Ideal of locker-room prJvacy, which Klam purported to
defend, doesn't exist, Mlklasz
says. "These rooms .are filled
with print reporters, mtn!cam
operators, autograph-seeking
ch!ldren, the ow~~I:S' cronies and
other strangers.
Y!!s, the Patriots' Incident was
disgusting. But I'll have to admit
the thought of five grown men
with their pants down, standing
In front of one woman ttytng to
get her to notice them, struck me
as, well, a llttle tunny. Al'e the
poor chaps suffering from feellngs of lnadeq,uacy? Maybe the
problem wasn t that the players
thought the reporter was staring
at t!)em, but that she wasn't

Sarah Overstreet

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staring.
Perhaps what those players
need Is a Uttle rehabll!tatlon
along with their punishment.
Maybe some group therapy with
a sensitive therapist could help
them get at the root of their
feelings of deficiency. Then they
could live fuller lives, secure In
their manhood and .f reed of the
need to bully and demean others
to prove it.
I wonder If Commlasloiuir
Tagllabue understands bow Im·
portant his deciSion Is. Exhibit·
lng one's genitals an~ making
lewd comments to.JOthers Is·
against the law on the streets,
and It's· unconscionable In all
sectors of clvUized society, save
perhaps the Hell's Angels Annual
Debauchery Fest and Luau. U
Tagllabue assigns another stand'
· ard to the locker room, It's a slap
In the face of every sports
reporter In the business, not just
the women.

let one party. at a .time govern us .

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William Rusher

TOday· · m· hi
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Atlanta at L.A. Rams, 4 p.m.
KaDsas City at Seattle. 4 p.m.
Phoenix at N.Y. Giants, 4 p.m .
Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 4

L.A. Raiders at San Diego. 4 p.m.

· Mo""-J. 0&lt;1. n

UPicoll• ·
football ralin@B
NEW YORK iUPI) -TheUnlted
Press International Board of ,
CoachES TOjl 25 coUege football · ·
·ratings, with record and first-place
votes in parentheses, total points
(based on 15 pdnls for first place,
14 far second, etc. I, and last week's
ranking.
Lui
Ptt.W...

T....

1. VIrginia (29) (6-0) .......... 785 3

2. Mlaml(7) (4-1) .............. 736 4
3. Nebraska (13) (6-0) ..... ... 712 2

Fran 5 0 0 1,000 127 94 '

4. Tenn..see (3) (4-0-2) .. .. .. 619 5
5. Aubum (2) 14-0-H ' .......... 584 6
6. Notre Dame (Hl ........... 524 .1
7. Florida State- (H l ......... 458 8
8. Michigan 121 (3-2) .......... 333 1
9. 1111•~· (4-1) ...... ............. 304 12
10. Brigham Young (Soil .....
9
. IL Georgia Tech 15&lt;1! .... .. ... 290 15
12. Washlngt&lt;ll (Sol') .. :.. ....... 28t 13
13. Southern Cal (Sol) .......... 271 10
14. Colorado is-1-1) ...... ....... 24111
15. TOXAI (3-11 .......... .. ........ 51 22
16. lndlalla !4-0-1) ............... 47 18
17. Wyoming 11-0) .. ........ ..... 3119
18. MississiPPI I SoH ............. 26 20
19. (tie) Tex. Christian (Sol) 16 25
19. (tie) Iowa (HI ....... .. ..... 16 24
21. Texos A&amp;M U -21 ... ......... 13 16
22. Clemson IS.2l ...... .. .. ....... 8 14
23. Michigan State (2·2·1) .,. 7 NR
&gt;24. Oregon (4-2) ................... 6 17
~. LouisVIlle is-1·1) ........... 2 NR

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SundQ's rams
New, Orleans 25, Qevetand 20
San Francisco 45, Atlanta 35
• Houstm 48, Clnclnlljiltl17
Kansas C1ty 43, Oelrolt 24
Tampa Bay 26, Green Bay 14
San Diego 39, N.Y. Jets 3
PhoeniX 20, Dallas 3
L.A. Raiders 24, Seattle 17

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The Daily Sentinel
(USI's ltMIII '
A"Divlioloa of Molllmeolla,

loc;

Published every afternoon. Monday
through Frldoy, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vall~ Publlahlnl Comptny!Multlmedta, Inc .•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45755, Ph. 99'1-21116. Second class pc.tage paid lit Pomeroy,

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NK-ollruked
Others recelviJll vote1: Perin
State, South CarGina. Southern
MISsissippi, Toledo.
The Datlonal champion' will recetve a $.12,000 non·ltbletlc IChOiar·
ship from the Gerrits FoundatiOD
and Unltrd Prelslnlernatlonal. .
By agreement with tbe American
Football Co•ches
teams ' bar: red frun
or

,

Member: United Preis International.
Inland Dally Pretl Auoclttion pel the
OhiO Newspaper AuoclaJIOn. National
Advft'tl8lnl Representative, Braaham
NewJPaper Sales, 733 ThJrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
•

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PMrMASTER: Send . - ch._
to The Dally Selltlnel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohlo t!rnlll.

quarter, with Jock Jones recovering for the Browns at the New
Orleans 17. Three plays later,
Mack swept In from a yard out to
narrow the Saints lead to 25-211.
New Orleans eventually
chewed up 2: 50 of the fourth·
quarter clock to seal the win,
boosting their record to 2-3, while
the Browns fell to 2-4. The win
was the 13th straight for the
saints against lnterconference
foeS, tying them with Miami for
the most consecudve against
lnterconference rivaL
Following the game, Browns
head coach Bud Carson said hll
telim prepared to defense the
scrambling Fourcade, not the
contruUed Walsh.
"We had prepared a controlled
pass rush for John Fourcade
because we knew that he would
want to run the .ball more than
Steve Walsh," Carson·said.
"We played about as bad as we
could play and were still In It at
the end."
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One wiet ................................... Jt.40

one Month ........~ ...................... ..suo

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PnWibut'11, Welt Vlfllnla 281 04

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areal where

h«ne carrier ll!rvk:e It ,

-·w-.. . .,:.,. . . . . . . . . . .

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llolll•llo&amp;=

13 Weeltl .................... ,..............hUf
211 Weeltl : .... .............. ............... trl.lll

52W- ............................. ,.... nu.
-tMolpCtuiJ'
13 Weelti .................................. SII.IIO

Ntuo

·52w- ......... ......................... rruo

\

We are Pleased to Announce
our relocation to Oxford Square.
·. located at the corner of
36th, Street and Core .Road
Ej/J:;!~"e October l, 1990

Adult • Child

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level and 16th overall, while the
women were ranked 22nd
overall .
Also placing for Rio Grande In
the men's race were Tim Warnock , 75th, 27:45; Rusty Edens,
78th, 27: 49; Troy Cochran, 124th,
28: 36; Doug Horne, 148th, 28: 54;
Ryan Parker, 177th, 29: 30; and
Bob Ferguson, 200th, 29: 59. The
race drew 258 runners.
Rio Gran.d e's Bonnie Evans
was 40th In the women~s race at
19:19, followed by Debbie Gray,
146th, 21: 25; Kim Edens, 168th,
21: 56; and Nancy Keller, 223rd,
24: 59. The race Included 240
athletes.
"There were some bright perforir)ances, ·but we llave got to
keep getting better," Willey
commented.
The teams will be Idle until Oct.
27, when both host West VIrginia
Wesleyan ln a dual meet at Rio
·
Grande.

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The Rio ladles return to action
at home Tuesday In a triangular
match with Alderson-Broaddus
(W.Va.) and Mount St. Joseph.
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SPRINfi VAllEY CINEMA
446 4514
U.B IAMAIW MTUUS SA~Y. su.y
SZ .75 IMUIM IQIKI' TUESCAY·
(DC£" •ttton· 1

· oc;

IIG8__J

FIIIDAY Ulrv TliUUDA'tl

',

Think
Satisfaction.

• ,.,altOIIIIDII AIIIIU a•tll, ltlo-FMdblck
lndhlllull. M..-.. Pentlly a G - 1'8tallo-..,y
..._. a Neuro PIYOhDIDIY

.

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Guarantee...

Think
Comfort
Heat

Your satisf_action is guaranteed* by
Ohio Power when you install an energyefficient Comfort Assured Heat Pump
System. The air conditil)ning will keep you
comfortable on the hottest days guaranteed. The heat will be wann,
steady and even- guaranteed. Keep
your Comfort Assured Heat Pump
System for a year and if you're not ~
totally satisfied, we'll change it
Now that's a.guarantee.
.Think Aboutlt . .. then
call Ohio Power to find out more
about the Comfort Assured Heat
Pump System.

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304-411·1181 .
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Robert E. B•ma, M.D.
H•rrv J. Coffee, Ph.D.
J01eph P. Norrll. M.D.
J•me1 J. Hey... Ph.D .
Mich. . I!. l'ntmpton, M.Ed.
Thomea R.. Foatttr, Ph.D.

No IUbocrlptlono by mao pormltted In 1'

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PSYCHIAI
..CAisOCIAIES · ·
3111 CORI! ROAD

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· Subo&lt;rlbono not dHirtnc to poy tbecorrler ' m~~y rernU In advaart! ~ to
Tile Dally Sentlael on a 3, tor 12 m&lt;lllil
baoll. Credit will bo )liven carrior ..ob
week.
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Chicago, 111.--A free offer of
special inlcrest to those who
' hear but do not understand
wordshas~n aimounced by
Beltone. A 'non-operating
model of the smalles( hearing
aid Beltone has ever developed
will be given absolutely free to
anyone requesting it.
'. It's yours fbr the asking,
so send for il now. It is not a
real-·hearing aid, but it will
show you how tiny. hearing
help can 'be. The actual aid
weighs less than an eighth of
an ounce, and it fits completely into the ear canaL
. These models are free, so
we suggest you write for yours
now. Again, there is' nQ cost,
and c:el!talnly no obligation.
·Ahhough a hearing aid may
. not help everyone, more and
more people with hearing
losses are being helped. For
your free sample send your
. ·name, address.• ·and phone
number today to: Department
00000, 'Beltone Electronics
Corporation, 4201 West Victoria Street, Chicago, Illinois
60646.

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Hoop posted 14 k!lls, Zempter 12,
Cooper 11, Huston ejght .and
Sharp five. 1n · addition, Sharp
netted seven serving aces and
Zempter. had six. Defensively,
Cooper led the.way with 15 digs;
followed by Huston's nine, five
front Ingram, four 'by Hoop and
three each from Zempter, MIchelle Spears and Tiffany Neff.
Zempter's effectiveness at the
net was·again rea:IIzed wllen she
ended the match with 10 block
solos, backed by seven from
Hoop and four .by Ingram.
"Teresa played the best she's
ever played for us," · Fields
c6mmented. ' 'But the key was,
the team didn't let one another

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FOI
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Hearing ·Loss
Is.Not 'A Sign
Of Old Age.

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available.

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Clncrnnau at Cleveland, 9 p.m.

' Atlanta ........ 2 30 .100 137 139 .
New0rleans.2 3' 0 .400 95 100 .
. L.A . Rams ... 1 4 0 .200 120 149

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142 75 r ·
134 124 .
141169
103 146
116103

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16() 95
141161
125 128
114 108

liNGLE COPY
PIIICE . .

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Ohio.

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Central
Chicago ........ 5 1 0 .833
Tampa Bay .. 4 2 0 .667
Det rolt.. ...... . 2 4 o .333
Green Bay ... 2 4 0 .333
Minnesota .. .. 1 4 0 .200

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Philadelphia at washlngt&lt;ll, I

Nldional Conlerence
East
Team
WLT Pd. PF PA
N.Y. Giants . 50 0 1.000 130 67
Washington ... 3 2 0 .600 121 75
Phoenix .... .. .. 2 3 0 . .400 6() 121 ..
Dallas . .......... 2 4 0 .333 73 122
Phllad~lphla .1 3 0 .250
91 95

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·s plitting the dlffe~ence. This
dooms the president- and Con- ·
gress to fight stralghtthrough his controlled Congress, agreement
four-year term·, like two scor- . would long Bfnce have been
pion's In a bottle.
reached on a budget Ditto If the
It may be objected that, In the
Democrats posses sed the
recent congressional budget ma- . pretldeney. .
neuverlng, It was his fellow
Other factors - gerrymander·
Republicans, and not the Demo- !ng, the advantage of locum·
cratlcleaders, whooftenfalledto bency, etc.- also encourage the
support.Bush. But this fact Is just split. But tbe voters could erid It
a function of the abnormal overnight, next month, If they
s!tuat!onlnwhlehalltheprotago· really wanted to. Give George·
ntsts found themselves. Bush Bush a R,epulll!can Congress that
was forced, by virtue of tbe · will wor!l with him, and hold the
Democrats' control of Congress, GOP strictly accountable for the
to agree on a budget acceptable result. H the voters dOJI't like It,
to them. In the process, he lost throw Bush out In 1992 and give
the support of a large majority 11f the Democrats a chance -In the
hll own party, whose only sin Wlr's White House as wen as congress.
that they were more loyal to But, for plty'ssake,sto11 cruclt:v·
Bush's principles (and promise) tng America on a cross of divided
than he was. H the Republicans government.

By Unl&amp;ed Preu laler..Uional •
·Today Is Monday, Oct. 15, the 288\b day of 1990 with 77 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
·
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
, The evening star Is saturn.
·
::t'hose born on this date are under the sign of IJbra. They Include
Roman poet VIrgil In 70 B.C.; Gei'man phllolopber Friedrich
Nletzche In 1844: ,
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Wesl
L.A. Ralders .... 5 I 0 .833
Kansas City ... .. I 2 0 .667
Denver .......... .. 2 4 0 .333
Seattle ....1"" ...... 2 4 0 .333
San Dlegl .... .. .. 2 4 0 .333

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Witnessing the pandemonium comtc-opera perforbance · we
In Washington recently over the have been witnessing In Wa'budget, It's easy to believe that shlngton can't possibly occur.
the voters are disgusted at tile
Under our system of -g overn·.
spectacle and wlll demonstrate ment, the president. Is elected by
the disgust on Election Day, Nov. the people, quite Independently
6·
of Congress, and serves for a
11 11 on1Y fa lr• though• ·to polnt fixed
term of four years. The
out that the voters themselves members of Congress are elected
bear a heavy responsibility for separately, many of them not
the chaos we have seen. By even at the same time as the
voting, year after year, to give president, and serve for terms of ·
the Republicans control of. the varying length- some shorter,
White House and the Democrats some longer.
control of Congress, American
I.t has always been tecbn!cally ·
voters have practically begged possible for the voters to elect a
for this rldlculousstateofaffalrs. president of one party and a
MOlt democratic societies are . Congress of the other. But
organized on the so-called "parll· throughout _most of our history,
amentary system," under which and especially after the present
thechiefexecutlvelseh!cted by a two major parties establllhed
majority of the members of the their dominance around the
legislature. It natural)y follows middle of the Iut century, It has ·
that they will give him _ the been customary for tile enthusl·
support needed to govern. u and asm that brings a new president
whe!l he Iosee the confidence of to power to sweep In with him
that majority, u demoutrated enougil candldatetl of his party to
byfalllngtowtnakeyleglalatlve control \ Congress: We thus
vote, his aovernment automat!· achieved an approximation of
cally "falla, " .and be II replaced the · parliamentary system: a
by whomever the leglalature chief executive with the support
electl.
· of a majority of the leglalature.
The parliamentary system hu
Since the end of World War II,
Its problema, but at leut If 'however, tbe American people
guarantees that the sort of have fallen Into the bad habit of

Scoreboard ...

Cinclnnatl ...... ..4 2 0 .667 154 153
Houston ......... ..3 3 0 .500 146 125
Plt!sburgh .... ..,.. 3 3 0 .500 102 101
; Cleveland .. ......·.2 I 0 .333 98139

Why locker room behavior stinks ·

Society has lOst .moral standards
Dear Editor:
As we look around us today, our
·society_ has lost much of the
moral standards It once had.
Crime Is up, divorce Is up, bu i
most of all, the way people talk
has changed. Adults as well as
teens and even Iitle chlldren use
filthy lal)guage.
People think nothing about .
misusing the name of God and
Jesus. According to the Bible,
when we are Born Again, we
become chlldren of God (1st
John·3; 1) and Jesus Christ Is our
brother.
Everyone t11kes offence when
someone talks bad about their
parents or any other member of
their famUy. The same goes for a
Cllrlstlan when someone takes
the Lord's name In vain. It hurts
to hear someone talk about my
Heavenly Father who created all

--·--------

"They playi!d super at the
net," Fields said. "Our offense
and defense were superb."
The Redwomen, stung by an
away loss to·Ohto Dominican last
Tuesday, found th~lr ablllties
tested against T!ffl!l, a match In ·
which "both teams played wen,"
Fields said.
UtUizlng her bench, Fields
drew effective perfoimances as

Rio's Cline top men's harrier
at All-Ohio Championships

been

- .....

Cleveland defense, m ~hing 37
yards In six plays to the Browns'
eight. On third down with Walsh ·
In the shotgun, the snap sailed
over the quarterback's head
back to the 30, bu tthe saints were
flagged for a dead-ball (alse
start, moving New Orl_eans back ·
to the Cleveland 13. Walsh rolled
out and spotted Eric Martin on a
curl In the end zone for the TD ·
and a 23-6 saints lead.
The New Orleans defense;
fired up by W~lsh's performance, shut down Cleveland on
three plays on their next series.
On fourth down, Wagner' s punt
· was blocked out of the end zone
by Robert Mas~;ey to give the
Saints a 25-6 fourth-quarter lead. ·
Kosar drove the Browns drive
down the field, completing
passes for 81 yards, and throWing
a · touchdown pass to Wel!$ter
.Slaughter for 13 yards to narrow
the New Orleans lead to 25-13.
Cleveland got Its own blocked
punt midway through the fourth

.'••

Redwomen defeat Bluffton,.Fi~dlay, Tiffin .

A great injustice!
Dear Editor:
I think Ol!r Congress lias dealt
this great nation's service of men
and women a great'lnjustlce and
slap In the face.
We, llere In this VFW tonight
and all over this great United
States, are being discriminated
against. We are EnglishAmericans - · German·
Americans - FrenchAmertcan.s
Italian· Americans, and descend·
ants world wide.
The Japanese-Americans are
being given $20,000 each for those
who were placed In Internment
camps.
·
You know and we know that we
were taken from our homes arid
Interned In our great nation's
armed services where our only ,
answers were: yes sir, no sir, and
no excuse sir. Ol!r pay ranged
from $50 a month for thousands of
privates on up. I doubt that very
few made $20,000 whUe In the

HOUSTON (UPI ) -Sam Wyche
before coming tot~ Oilers hi win.
'
Morten Andersen had earlier
has another coverage problem to
1984.
"I was ready, butl dldn'tknow k!ckt;d a_·52-yard field goal, and
worry about,
wheniwouklgoln,"Walshsa!d.
Jerrty Kaurlc had responded
l'lte Cincinnati coach has been
Richard Johnson returned an
"The 7-for-7 start bu!lds con'fl· wltJ;l boots of 37 and 39 yards In
on a cr11sade to keep women · · lntercepdon 30 yards · tor a
dence In a young quarterback. the first half for Cleveland.
reporters out of the locker room
touchdown and Tony ' Zendejas They (receivers) were making
It was In the second half that
kicked two field goalforHouston,
me lj)l!k good. They were making Walsh showed why New Orleans
to hide his undressed players
from any prying eyes. But which scored 31 -stralght points. . adjustments on the passes I , rnor.tga~ed its future for the
Sunday against Houston, the 'J'he 48 points were the most by a
threw. I just throw them. They ·.former Miami star . .
flaws In hlsdefensewereexposed .. Houston · team since a 49-33 win
make the catches."·
·
On the fourth play of their first
for all to see.
. ·.
over
Diego Dec. 19, 1971.
The Saints held a 3-0 lead early se~nd-half series, Walsh spotted
Warren Moon threw for 369
Es(4son, ttu'ew .one touchdown
In the second quarter when a wide open Floyd Turner for a
ya_rds an(! a career-high five
pass, Craig Taylor scored on a
Walsh entered the game t9, · 45-yard touchodwn and the 16-6
touchdowns, all to different ·re, . short run and Jim Breech kicked _ rousing applause for the Salnts New Orleans lead.
ce!vers, sending Houston to a
a field goal for tbe Bengals. ' fans_who were looking lor· .the
"We went Into a different
48-17 victory over the Bengals.
qnclnnatl, playing .the third of · next signal-galling savior to formation," Turner said. •'I
· Moon completej121of 33 passes five straight road . games, a!follow In, the footsteps of Archie think It confused them. I was.so
with TDs .to Tony Jones, Drew · lowed the most polpts In a game
Manning and Bobby Hebert
wide open that the catch was a
Hill, Leonard Harris, Ernest since giving up 50 to san Diego In
Walsh capped the drive with a · dlfflc~lt one. It's a tough one
Gl;,.lns aild Haywood Jeff!res. 1!!112.
..
four-yard scoring toss to Dalton when you ar" so wide open. A lot
Moon was Intercepted-once In a
The · Bengals- made six defen.. H!lllard, who caught his 38th goes through your mind."
victory that avimged a 61·7loss to slve changes, either because of
career TD - breaking the club
The Saints recovered a Kevin
Injuries ~ adjustments to the
record of 37 held by Danny · Mack fumble on the first play of
Clnc!nnatllast season.
','Revenge was In the back of . run-and-sboot.
Abramowicz.
.
the first quarter, killing a
Sainta21,BI'OW1IS28-AtNew
-Even with the missed extra
Browns drive that had appareveryone's mind, but I don't
thlnk we wanted to rub It In like Orleans, tfte Inevitable replaced point, the saints held a 9-3 iead
ently gained a first down on
they did last year," Moon said. "I the Improbable Sunday ancj the and both the offense and defense
fourth-and-one.
lot of New Orleans _Saints responded picked up noticably.
Walsh and the Saints ripped the
knew there would -be
points scored. The receivers with a 25-20 victory over the
made the right reads aild did Cleveland Browns.
Steye · Waish, the heralded
some pretty exciting t!tlngs after
they caught the ball, too...
quarterback for which the saints
Houston 's run-and-shoot had traded at least a No.1 and No.3
Playing a solid defensive game over the Lady Oilers, with
its best day of tbe season, draft choice to Dallas, responded
at the net, the University of Rio Cooper 'adding 11, Huston six,
and Robin Sharp and Memra
mounting 514 yards total offense by throw! rig three touchdowns In Grande volleyball team swept a
against the AFC's worst defense. less than three quarters to lift the weekend of District 22 competi- Ingram recording three each. In
Cincinnati's Boomer Es!ason, saints. Walsh replaced John .lion on the road and maintained a addition, setter Sharp had three
hold on Its No. 1 spot among Ohio serving aces. Zempter and Huswho threw for a team record 490 Fourcade - whose •hist football
·
yards last week, threw for only job was ·In the Arena Football NAlA schools.
ton each had. nine digs, Hoop
The Redwomen, who received seven arid Cooper fl ve. Signifi130 yards Sunday, was Inter· League '-- with 10: 49 to go In the
cepted three times and fumbled second .quarter. Walsh was ob13 votes . the week before In the cantly, Hoop was credited with
once.
talned less than three weeks -ago, . NAlA's . top 20 team listing, six block solos and Zempter had
"That's thetypeofgamewe've and spent about flve ·quarterson defeated Bluffton 1&amp;14, 13.·15, five.
.
been waiting for all year," said the bench learning the Saints · 15-3, and . Findlay 15-2, 15-8, 15-6
on Friday. At Tiffin Saturday, .
Houston head coach Jack Par· system.,
dee, whose team Improved to 3-3
Foutcade, who has played In
Rio Grande defeated the Lady
and moved one game· behind the four professional football
Dragons 11·15, 15-13, 15·2, 15-3.
Central Division-leading Ben- leagues, had
erratic In the
"All weekend, we wouldn't
gals, 4-2. "Our special teams set satnts' four games this year,
allow ourselves to lose," Coach
the pace early and our defense leadll)ll to the change.
Patsy Fields commented as the
The University of Rio Grande's
saltits head coach Jim Mora Redwomen' s overall record sllot
was getting turnovers. This Is
Mark
Cline was named the top
what we've had In mind all said the game plan was to use to 28-6. The win over Tiffin also
men's runner In the college
year."
-botli' quarterbacks. But after Improved defending· Mid-Ohio
division
of the All·Oh!o ChamConference
,champion
Rto
·
Moon also raised his NFL Walsh started 'J-of,7 tllat Fourpionships
ln cross country Fricareer total to 20,204 yards, cade was going to be watching Grande's standing to 6-1.
day
at
Delaware.
Ohio.
With hard W~rk at the net, the
making hls the first player to the rest of the game.
a
senior
from Chilli·
Cline;
throwformorethan 20,000yards
.Walsh ended . his first New Redwomen defeated. volleyball
cothe,
.finished
12th
overall in
powerhouse Bluffton for )be first
In both the NFL and Canadian Orleans series by throwing a
26:24,
completing
a
"good,
Football League. He threw for touchdown pass; something he time ever w~en Blll.lna Cooper
race,"
Coach
Bob
Willey
strong
21,228 yards In six CFL seasons Wll_Uld do two other times In_tl)e and Teresa Zempter combined to
remarked.
The
race,
which
drew
post 15 kills apiece against the
38
teams,
was
broken
down
Into
hosts. Shannon Huston poured In
the
university
and
college
levels.
.12 kUis and Shelly Hoop had 10 to
complete the offensive scene,
In addition, Renee Peck, .a
Cooper and zempter also led ihe
sophomore from Baltimore,
defense, as Cooper recorded 14
N.Y. Giants :U, Was)IJngtm 20
Ohio, placed 11th In the women's
· digs .and Ze!"pter was credited
NFL standings
Pltllburgh 34, Denwr 17
rac·e and set a personal record
.
,. !
with five black solos.
Chicago 38, L,A. Rams 9
with
her tln\e of 18: 22.9. Willey,
AmeFican Conference
. MoadQ'• l&amp;lnt .
. Huston provided e1!1ht digs and
Eaol
Minnesota at Philadelphia, ' 9
Peck's performance
ca!Ung
Hoop eight. Hoop also had four
Team
W L T Pel. PF PA
p.m .
"outstanding,"
noted the time
Buffalo .. .. .. ... .. .4 1 0 .800 130 99
· TbundQ's cune
block solos and Cooper netted
best
anyone
had com-.
was.
the
Mlaml... ........... 4 1 0 .800 108 73
New England at Ml ami, 8 p.m .
ttu:ee.
Indianapolis ... .. 2 3 0 .400 81108
piled
In
the
women'
s
5,000-meter
The Findlay contest saw Hoop
N.Y. Jets .........2 4 0 ..333 107148
SUndQ, Oct. tl
New England .. . 1 4 0 .200 80 152
Dallas at Tampa Bay, l_p,m .
and Zempter each post 12 kills competition.
The men's team finished third
Denver at Indianapolis, 1 p.m:
Ceotral
New Orleans at Houston, 1 p.m . .
out of 19 teams on the college

san

bought our chicken. The money
will go towards our bu Udlng
extension .
Thanks Again
Members of Syracuse Fire
and Emergency bepartment
Sandra Cobb, Treasqrer

service protecting our great
nation.
Now we must think oft he many
thousands who lost their lives
and their wives or parents were
only compensated with $10,000 or
less. ·
Is It right that our fellow
. Americans who were Interned
here In this great nation, not
facing death by day or night, not
facing enemy fire, not sleeping in
fox holes, not being shot out of tile
sky, why or Is It right to.
compensate the Japanese·
Ainertcans and not our fellow
Americans who served In
combat?
We, ' In the VFW, pass a
resolution, NumllE!r 719, asking
for compensation to be paid $5.00
a month for each mQnth spent In
combat, this to be paid starting at
age 65 when •most people .are
unable to work.
VIctor A. Balir
Long Bottom, OH

The Deily .Sentinel-Pea• 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-S
Q

.,

�•

'

'

Monday. October 16, 1990

· Pomeloy-MiddlapM. Ohio
. The Ladies Auxiliary' met Weclnesday evening • the firehouse
wilh Beclty Edwards pesi~g. She
lead wilh prayer l!ld pledge 10 the
ftag. Paula Wo¢ and Opal Hollon
•
gave the secrewy and treasurer
•
•
· n:ports. Bills were paid and committee n:pons wen: given. It was
:•
decide to serve· lhe dinner for lhe
· : ...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ lractor pullers association on Nov. .

.·

Chester

Personals

11 81 tbe firehouse. Plans will be ·
made at the .,next meeting.
Christmas cards can be JJU!Chased
from members. !'pula Wood and
Betiy Newell served doughnuts and
cider to those named and Cleo ·
Smith, Ethel Orr, Erma Cleland, :
Clarice Allen, Lora Damewood, ·
Marcia Keller, Bonnie Landers,
Inzy Newell, Clara Conroy, Elsie

Folmer and Chelsey Wood.
Tiffany and Justin Eichinger,
Vincent, spent lhe weekend wilh
their grandmother, Opal Eichinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lynds, San
MaleO, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Weber, Doylestown, wen:
weekend guests oC Marica Keller.
They . called on Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen on Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Roben Hutchinson,
Bellview; Ncb., have returned
home af1er several days visit hen:
with her mother, Clara Conroy. The
came especially for Mrs. Conroy's
82nd birthday.
Sandy Wood. Nashville, Tenn ..
spent a week hen: with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Raben WOOil

Mqndav. October 16, 1990

Jean

Laura
Horton, Wonhington,
was a .ecent visitor of her mocher,
Opal Eichinger. .

Herbalists meet

In April 1982. Sir Ranulph Fiennes
and Charles Burton, Britllh explorers, reached the North Pole and be-

during the recent meeting ol lhe
River Valley Herbalists held 81 lhe
home olllorothy Karr.
Mn. Neue made open weave
baskets and staled that the vines

Donna Nease demonstrated lhe
making oC vine cmfts uaing ~·
honey suckle and green llriar.

came the first to cirtle the Earth
from pole to pole.

Poma9v-Midclaport, Ohio
could be used for wreaths and
pyramid sha~ trees.
Coonic H1ll presided 811he meeting and friendship potpOUrri was
made.
Betty Milhoan gave a report on
comfrey. II is known BS the miracle
worker plant and can be used as a
poultic~ for sprains, bums l!ld cuts.
It can also
boil&amp; to procb:e I

was
to bring in fresh .
winter.
Refreshments of peach cinnamon
tea, basil m!~flins, dilllllld herb-dip,
pecan laSSies and Amish brand
muffins were served by the boslcsses Peggy Moon:, Sheila Cunis and
Betty Milhoan.
A tour was held of Mrs. Karr's
garden.

Michaels note_r__________
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Michael hos- Lawrence and Nancy Blossic;
ted a weiner roast Monday evening · Pauline McLean, Lillie Randoug~~
for the Senior Citizens Dance Club. Nanomie Londoo, Evelyn Wrmer,
Anending wen; Eva Roberson, Gntce Welch, Margret McKenney,
Clarence Story, Geneva Ward, Glenn Ruph, Mary Sington, and
Josephine Ritchie, Alta Dill, Sam and Cora Michael.
Genrude. Roberson, Melvin Tracy,

'•

••
•

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPUII!ATIONS, ARGUMENTS AND RESOLUTIONS
FoR AlldDIIENTS TO ttE OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE
GENERAL A88EMBLY AND BALLOT LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS AND THE
FULL TEXT OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED
BY INITIATIVE Pi!IIIION TO liE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT THE
GENERAL ELECT10N, NOVEMBER 6, 1990

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

-{
ISSUE 1
TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Substitute Senate Joint
Resolution Number II l
JOINT RESOLtrrtON

1

PROPOSED CONS'I1TUTIONAL AMENDMENT

To amend Anide

vm of the Constitution of Ohio by adopting Section 16.

Propooina !0&lt;'*' Section 16of Article VID of die Ceo:
SliMion of diC State of Ohio to oltow the s - and
political subdiVisions 10 provide housina for indi~iduals

PROPOSEDAMENDMENT · .. . PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION •• TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
~

•

2

GRANTS, LOANS, SUBSIDIES, GUARANTEES, OR OTHER MEANS AS
DETERMINED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. THE STATE MAY PROVIDE nJNDING BY~ OBLIGATIONS, INCLUDING OBUGATIONS
BACKED BY UPROPRIATIONS OF STATE REVENUES, BUT THE
STATE'S FULL FAITII AND CREDIT SHALL NOT BE PLEDGED TO
RETIRE OBUGATIONS ISSUED FOR THIS PURPOSE.
(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

A IIIIYorlty yes vote is necessary for passage.

SHALL THE. PROPOSED

YES

AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?
NO
EXPLAN~TION

OF ISSUE NO. 1 (as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

The Ohio Constitution presently allows only one method for the state to assist in providing
houSing: to make l0811s available at lower than current interest rates for privately owned
multi-unit housing for the elderly and for privately owned, owner-occupied single family
housing.
.

This amendment would allow the state or any political subdivision directly or through
a public authoriiy to provide or assist in providing housing or housing assistance, including
shellers to provide lemporary housing through grants. loans, subsidies to loans. loans to
lenden, purchase of loans, guarantees of loans, or ocherwise as determined by the General
Assembly or chalnen, ordinances, and resolutions of.olher political subdivisions. II may
include acquisition, financing, construction leasing, rehabilitation, re~ling , improvinl or equipping of publicly or privately owned housing, including the acquisition ofreal
propeny.
'
This amendment would enable lhe General Assembly to issue obligations bac~ed by a pledge
of stale revenues 10 provide or.assist in providing for hous.ing programs, but the stale's
full faith l!ld credit shall not be pledged to retire obligations issued for this purpose.

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Issue I responds to Ohio's current housing crisis, reflecred in pan by the 400,000 working families who cannot afford 10 buy a home,lhe 110,000 elderly individuals who cannot
make .-led home n:pain, and the 140,000 Ohioans- families, children, men and women
- who are boineless .
,
Issue I would declare housing a " public purpose" within Ohio's Constitution, just as that
desiBnation now exists for transportation, utility service, health and recreation. This will
permit state and local governments to provide or to assist in the production and preservation of affordable housing - either directly or through priv81e lenders - for low- and
moderate-income families.
·
Issue I does not raise raxes. It does not cn:lle a new state housing bureaucracy . It prohibits
the full faith and credit of the state from being pledged to retire obligations issued for
any housing .initiative.

.

Under the restrictions of Issue I, the State of Ohio is .!!Ql authorized to issue General
Obligation Bonds for the purpose of housing. Only specific and tar1eted funding streams
can be used by the stale to flll8IICC housing i~itiatives . A limit on state and local use of
tax~xempc n:venue bonds - a potentially imponant avenue for new housinB effons already exists from the privale purpose bond volume cap set by.Congress. A limit on local
issuaace of general obligation debt for housing comes from the local debt limits. set by
the Ohio ConSiitution and by statule. Also, all new housing ~wers · provided to cities.
counties and townships are subject to restrictions to be established by the Ohio General
Assembly .
"
-

q.

Ohio:

De it resolved by 'the General Aosembly of lhc Slate
of Ohio, three-fifths of the memben elected to each
house eoncuning herein,lhat there shall be submitted
.to lhc cleeton oilhc Slate in lhc manner pr=ribod by
law at !he acncralclection to be held on the finl Tues.
day after.the finl Monday in November. 1990. a prOposaiiO c111&lt;1 Seclion 16 of Anicle VUI of diC Constitution of Ohio to read as follows :
ARTICLE VDI
Section 16: TO ENHANCE THE AVAILABIUlY OF
ADEQUATE HOUSING IN THE STATE AND TO
IMPROVE THE ECONOMIC AND GENERAL
WEU·BEING OF THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE,
IT IS DETERMINED TO BE IN THE PUBUC.IN- ·
TEREST AND A PROPER PIJBUC PURPOSE FOR
THE STATE Oit ITS POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS,
DIRECTLY OR THROUGH A PUBLIC AUll!ORI'
TY. AGENCY. OR INSTRUMENTALITY, TO PROVIDE. OR ASSIST IN PROVIDING, BY GRANTS.
LOANS, SUBSIDIES TO LOANS, LOANS TO
LENDERS.
PURCHASE
OF
LOANS,
GUARANTEES OF LOANS. OR OTHERWISE AS
DETERMINED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
HOUSING.INO.UDING SHELTERS TO PROVIDE
TEMPORARY HOUSING.IN l1IE STATE FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES BY THE ACQUISI·
TION, FINANCING, CONSTRUCTION, LEASING,
REHABIUTATION, REMODELING. IMPROVEMENT, OR EQUIPPINO OF PUBUCLY OR
PRIVATELY OWNED HOUSING, INCLUDING
THE ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY AND
INTERESTS IN REAL PROPERTY . LAWS, IN·
CLUDINO CHARTERS, ORDINANCES. AND
RESOLUTIOI'IS. MAY BE PASSED TO CARRY .
INTO' EFFECT THOSE PURPOSES. INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE AUTHORIZATION
OF TliE MAKING OF GRANTS. LOANS. SUBSIDIES TO LOANS, LOANS TO LENDERS. PUR·
CHASE .OF LOANS , liND GUARANTEES OF
LOANS BY THE STATE OR ITS POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS, DIRECTLY OR THROUGH A PUBLIC
AliTHORITY , AGENCY, OR INSTRUMENT ALITV , WHICH LAWS , CHARTERS. ORDINANCES.
RESOLUTIOI'IS, GRANTS. LOANS. SUBSIDIES
TO LOANS. LOANS TO LENDERS. PURCHASE
OF LOANS. GUARANTEES OF LOANS. AND
ANY OTHER ACTIONS AUll!ORIZED BY THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHAU NOT BE SUWECT
TO ll!E REQUIREMENTS, LIMITATIONS. OR
PROHIBITIONS OF ANY OTHER .SEcrtON OF
ARTICLE VIII. OR SECTIONS 6 AND II OF ARTICLE XII. OHIO CONSTITliTION . .

Would you re-finance your car for live more years to buy a tank of gasoline? ·
Do you believe the state l!ld .local governments should build public housing even though
federal programs have failed?
.·
, , . .
If you answer " no", then your voce should bC "no" on Issue I. For, if Issue I passeS,
it is exactly how Ohio could fund public housinB and temporary housing for the homeless
and without limits on the amount of debt Ohio can spend money for those proarams now,
but may not uae long 1erm debt, u Issue I would allow.
.
:
Remember, l,ssue I w~ eliminate a constitul~ safeguard that hu ~ Ohioans
for 140 yean. It prohibttJ state and local governments from lending the1r credit for public
housing and/or to private developers. It wu made put of lhe Ohio Cllllltitution because
of a financial crilis creared In 1&amp;39 by the pusage of the Ohio Legislature's "Plunder
Law." The SWc suffered heavy I~ and approached bankruptcy at that time. Issue 1.
if it passes. oould put us in lhe same kind of jeopardy. Let's not ignon: that Ieason ofhi,..nrv·

2. TO ALLOW THE VOTERS OF THE CITY OF LORAIN TO VOTE ON
TilE CONTINUATION OF THE CASINO AFI'ER THE EXPIRATION OF
TilE PILOT PERIOD.
.

(Proposed by Resoiution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

A ~~~~Uortty yes vote is necessary for

p8!1588e.

3. IF AFI'ER THREE YEARS THE LORAIN PILOT PROJEcT IS DETERMINED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO BE A' SUCCESS, THEN THE
STATE SHALL BE DMDED INTO SEVEN DISTRICIS. A LICENSE TO
ESTABLISH A SINGLE CASINO FACILITY IN EACH DISTRICT MAY BE
ISSUED IF APPROVED BY TilE VOTERS BOTH IN THE DISTRICT AND
IN THE POLmCAL SUBDMSION IN WHICH THE FACILITY WOULD
BE LOCATED.

'~

:·

,.•'

SHALL THE PROPOSED

••

t!'
'•
'•
••

AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

.,'•

..

•.

.

4. TO LEVY TAXES ON GROSS REVENUES OF GAMES OF CHANCE AT
LICENSED CASINOS, ON 11IE SfATE LOTTERY, AND 01'! HORSERA~ING WITH PARI-MUTUEL WAGERING FOR EDUCATION AND
TREATMENT OF COMPULSIVE GAMBLING, AND TO LEVY TAXES ON
GROSS REVENUES OF GAMES OF CHANCE AT UCENSED CASINOS
FOR OTHF.K SPECIAL PURPOSES.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. 2 (as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)
The Ohio ConsliiUijon presently allows the General Assembly to reduce taxes on land
·and improvements for residents who are agc.6S and older and for permanentlY and IOtally
disabled persons by providing for a n:ducllon 1n lhe value of lhell' homesteads.

... -

This amendment would allow lhe General Assembly to continue the tax reduction for sur·
vivil)g spouses who are age 60 or .~lder and who c~min~ to li~e in a qualifying homestead,
if the deceased spouse was rece1vmg the n:duct1on at the bme of death.

.

(~oposed by Initiative Petition)

,..:

A IIIIUorlty yes vote Is necessary ror

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
•

The Ohio ConstiiUiion presently allows the General Assembly to reduce propeny.taxes
for residents who are age 65 and older, or for permanently and totally· disabled pe(sons.

•

YES

,_,. · ,.

Under current law, that exemption ends upon lhe death of the qualifying spouse. Therefore,
a widow or widower may fmd a significant increase in her or his real estate taxes upon
the death of their spouse if they no longer qualify. This would happen if the spouse who
died was lhe only person in the household who was e1ther age 65 or permanently disabled.
This proposed amendment would aUow the General AssevlblY to c?ntinue the tax n:duction for widows or wtdowers who are age 60 or older and who contmue to hve m a qualifying homestead if lhe deceased spouse was lhe only resident in the horroestead who qualifyed
for the exemption.

... ;

..

I

'

JllpiiU"SI'III•~-

SHALL 11IE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

. NO

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

• Issue 3 allows the people of Lorain to vote on whether they wish to have a reson and
' • recreation complex with a single casino in their ciiy. The project cannot be built wiihout
' • their approval.
•
Issue 3 would:
. • Mandate strict law enforcement and regulation.
b'.
· • Allow Lorain v01ers to shut down the facility, Wthey wish.
.,

With a minimal imtJIICI on our stale budgetjOWe could help our senior citizens at a tinie
when they·most need it. This increased expenditure would not lessen the amount received
.
!1y
school districts because the lost revenue is reimbursed 10 the political subdivisions from
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY ALSO MAY
the state's General Revenue Fund for current homeslead exempcions.'
AUll!ORIZE THE ISSUANCE BY ll!E STATE.

DIRECTLY OR THROUGH ITS PUBLIC
AUTHORITIES . AGENCIES. OR INSTRUMENTALITIES. OF OBLIGATIONS TO PROVIDE
MONEYS FOR THE PROVISION OF OR
ASSISTANCE IN THE PROVISION OF HOUSING.
INCLUDING SHELTERS TO PROVIDE TEM·
PORARY HOUSINO. IN THE STATE FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES. WHICH OBLIGA·
TIONS ARE NOT SUPPORTED BY THE FULL
FAITH AND CREDIT OF THE STATE. AND
SHAU NOT BE DEEMED TO BE DEBTS OR
BONDED INDEBTEDNESS OF THE STATE
UNDER OTHER PROVISIONS OF THIS CONSTITUTION. SUCH OBLIGATIONS MAY BE
SECURED BY A PLEDGE UNDER LAW.
wtll!OUT . NECESSITY FOR FURTHER APPROPRIATION. OF ALL OR SUCH PORTION AS
ll!E GENERAL ASSEMBLY AUTHORIZES OF
REVENUES OR RECEIYI'S OF THE STATE OR ITS
PUBLIC AUTHORITIES, AGENCIES, OR INSTRUMENTALITIES. AND THIS PROVISIOfo!
MAY BE IMPLEMENTED BY LAW TO BETTER '
, PROVIDE THERFOR.

To amend Section 6 of Anicle XV of the Constitution of the State of Ohio.

CLUDING GAI\PS BY ELECI'RONIC AND MECHANICAL DEVICFs, FOR
PROm, IN THE CITY OF LORAIN AS A PILOT PROJECT FOR A PERIOD
NOT YET SPECIFIED, BUT FOR NOT LESS~ FIVE YEARS, IF APPROVED BY THE VOTERS OF THE CITY OF LORAIN PUiiSUANT TO
LAWS .REQUIRED
TO BE ENACTED BY THE. GENERAL
ASSEMBLY.
.
.
'

1. IS 60. YEARs OLD OR OLDER, AND
.
.
2. CONTINOES TO LIVE IN A QUALIFYING HOMESTEAD.

De il coacted by lhc General Assembly of the S1a10 of ·

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

1. TO AUIHORIZE THE UCENSING OF A CASINO RESORT HOTEL, IN-

'

and farililies .

THE POWERS GRANTED UNDER THIS SECTION
ARE INDEPENDENT OF.IN ADDITION TO, AND
NOT IN DEROGATION OF OTHER POWERS
UNDER LAWS. CHARTERS, ORDINANCES.
RESOLUTIONS, OR THIS CONSTITUTION, INCLUDING THE POWERS GRANTED UNDER SEC•
TION 14 OF ARTICLE Vtu AND ARTICLES X
AND XVID , AND THE PROVISION OF ANY
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS UNDER SECTION 2i
OF ARTICLE VID. OHIO CONSTITUTION . THE
POWERS GRANTED UNDER THIS SECTION DO
Downpayment assiStance to the working poor. 'loans for emergency n:pain oC elderly· hous- , NOT IMPAIR ANY LAW, CHARTER, OR·
ing, loan guaran1ees and low-interest f"mancing an: among tbe opcions made available by DINANCE, OR RESOL!ITION ENACTED PRIOR
TO l1IE EFFEC11VE DATE OF THIS SECI10N OR
Issue I.
·
ANY OBLIOATIONS ISSUED UNDER SUCH LAW.
'
.
CHARTER. ORDINANCE. OR RESOLUTION. THE
Issue I was sponsored in lhe legislature by:State Senator Roy Ray and Stale Represen- POW .:IS GRANTED UNDER THIS SECTION ARE
tative Michael Verich.
SUBJECT TO THE POWER OF THE GENERAL.
ASSEMBLY TO REGULATE TAXATION AND
DEBT OF POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS. IN·
Messrs. Ray. Verich, Roberts, Oelslagcr
CLUDING THE REGULATION OF MUNICIPAL
TAXATION AND DEBT PURSUANT TO SECTION
6'0F ARTICLE Xtu AND SECTION 13 OF ARTI·cLE XVIU, OHIO CONSTITIJTION.'
ARGUMENT AGAINST-THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

W~ld you place a 20-year second mongage Oli your hOme to buy next month's groceries?

3

To amend Section 2 of Article XII of the ConsliiUiion of the. State of Ohio.

TO PERMIT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO ALLOW SURVIVING
SPOUSES OF PERSONS WHO WERE RJCEMNG A HOMESTEAD TAX
.unucnoN AT THE TIME OF DEATH TO CONTINUE RECEIVING THE
REDUCTION IF THE SURVIVING SPOOSE:

•

TO ALLOW THE STATE AND POLITICAL SUBDMSIONS TO PROVJDE
OR ASSIST IN PROVIDING HOUSING AND HOUSING ASSISTANCE BY

·PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL· ~MENT

If staic ~uthorities 'decide'·the Lorain resort casino is a success, the state will be divided
. , • into .seven districts. A single reson casino will be allowed in each district, but onlY If:
·•
• Voters in lhe district and in lhe community where lhe reson casino is planned say yes:
. • The casino is pan of a much l~rger hotel reso'n complex.
.

This amendment is a protective measure for our elderly and a positive change for our
stale constiiUiion. Presently. the Ohio ConsliiUiion relieves a financial burden for our older
and disabled citizeqs; it should not remain silent for their widows anJ widowers.

THE RIGHT TO VOTE.
A yes voce on Issue 3 gives Lorain n:sidents the right to decide whether they want a hOle I
and reson complex with a single casino in their town.

Rep. Roben L. Corbin
Rep. Donald P. Czarcinski
Rep. Joseph J. Vukovich
Sen. Ben M. Gaeth
Sen. Dick Schafrath

A PLAN FOR CONTROLLED DEVEWPMENT.
If Lorain voten approve the project, and If it is later j~dged a success, v01ers in each
of seven resort districts in the state will have the right to approve or reject a single reson
casino.
·
·
• No more than seven additional reson c~sinos - one per district - will ever be
built in Ohio.
• VOlen have the power to shut any unwanted facility .

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOS!i:D AMENDMENT
The Depanment of Taxation estimates that, if enacted, this amendment 'l"ould result in
an increased expenditure of approximately $700,000 by the state to reimburse political
subdivisiQns for lost propeny tax revenues

STRICT LAW ENFORCEMENT .
The state Attorney General will enforce laws governing lhe reson casino, with funds from
• _- a special tax on the operator.
·

by prmidin&amp; for a mtucdon in value of' the homestt_M
of pcrmoncnlly and klllllly diubled . . . - . .....
midcnu si•ty·fi•c yean of qe and older. AND
RESIDENTS SIXTY YEARS OF AGE OR OLDEII
WHO ARE SURVMNG SfOIJSES OF OI!CtiASED
RESIDENTS WHO WERE SIXTY-FIVE YEARS OF
AGE OR OLDER OR PERMANENTLY AND
TOTALLY DISABLED AND RECEIVING A
REDUCTION IN THE VALUE OF THEIR
HOMESTEAD AT THE TIME OF DEATH, PRDVJDED THE SURVIVING SPOUSE CONTINUES
TO RESIDE IN A QUAIJFYING HOMESTEAD. aod
providina for income and other quallfiCIIionsiO obtain
such reduclion. *ll.ldl r
• • • .. I• .-,.
of,....,, 191J, aftlll , : af . _ • _,. •""·
ill... ; ltiDMIIt; Ullilll): Sf tl lllkip ill llil 11!' ; 01'
· itilhhathr ·u••••••Mihfllllpu.,liauh I'
of OAtis IIIII .. w
sf in• a'n ill
iO'I

ISSUE 2
TEXT OF PROPOSED
. CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
Amended Substitute
House Joint Resolution Numher..,l5
JOINT RESOLUTION ·
Propooinato amend Section 2 of Aniclc XD of diC Constitution of the State of Ohio to authorize laws 10 be
passed to pennit lhe s.u~ivins spouse of a penon who
received the · homeslead reduction 10 receive the
homestead reduction if rhe survivina spouse is 60 years
of age or older and continues to reside in a qualifying
homosload.

Be il resolved by lhe House of Representatives of the
Sea~ of Ohio (The St111•• Concurrin&lt;l:
De. il '"'!'l•ed by lhc General Aw:mbly of the Slab:
THE POWERS GRANTED TO POLITICAL SUB· of Ohio. th,..·fiflhs o! lhc momben eiOCicd lo -h
DIVISIONS UNDER THIS SECTION SHALL BE • hoUse concurrinl heroin, thai the,. shalt be submincd
OPERATIVE ON AND AFTER 'SEPTEMBER t, · tothectcaoraofdlc..,.lnthe111111netpmcribcdby
IWI , ORON AN EARLIER DATE THAT AN ACT law at diC gcntn~lclection 10 beheld onllio finiTucs·
OF THE GENERAL ASSEMIIL Y DECLARES day after lhc first Monday in November, 1990. i proSUCH POWERS SHALL BE OPERATIVE.
pt&gt;sal 10 .amend Sec! ion 2 of Article XII of lhc ConSiinllion ol Ohio 10 read u follows:
EFFECTIVE DATE
ARTICLE XII
If adopted by a majority of dectOfl v&lt;ilina on this Section 2. No property, IIXcd accoi1lina to value. lhalt
amendment, the amendment shall take dfect be so &amp;u.ed in e~~:ceu of one per cent ol its true value
immedialtl) .
in money for oil ond local pu._, but laws msy
be polled 111111orizina additional taxa 1o be levied wtsidc of IIICh limilllion, either wlleo II+O•ed 'by 11 lcul
SCHEDULE
•
If lhr:~ is more than one quest:ion to be submitted 10 1 msj&lt;irioy of diC elocto&lt;i of the oulna diatricl votina
the cleeton
the 1111t 11 the acncni election oo IIICh pnllllllilion, or what pnwidcd for by diC chantr
1o be held oo the font Tuesday after the finl Monday
of a DM~nicipoJ· &lt;O&lt;JIOnlion . Land and i.....,..,emenu
in November. 1990, the Sec:-ry of~ lhall pta&lt;e theroon lhall be taxed by uniform ndt accordiq 1o
the quctlion of the adoption of this amend.- as diC
volue, eliCOJII lhollawa may be polled 10......,. taxa
first atdtqualion on ... bolkM.

duou.-

Uslt~~lonl term debt io pay for Ilion tcnn experues is not a good liacal policy. Unlc'ss
Ohioua are preplred to have hipr taxa, it will put public housin' and housing for
homcleu in ~!l(lCtil!on for state _bond money ~itb tnae long term pnor_!tics, such u
Ill bellth f'acillbel, hiaher educat1011 .-11 and 11frutruc:ture fundina. Even without
I, Stile longlerm delit hu increucd 227~ in the last ten yean.

dd

....... "

•

...

&lt;

,.

....

•

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

. , Passage of issue 3,the proposed casino gambling amendment, will legalize casino gambling in Ohio. The constitutional amendment would clear the way for a casino in Lorain
.r • and create a legal way 10 open up to eight casinos across the state.

ofl.,..,, 1913,1MIH" • in•••far .. trk!

JtJ•••

• usn p
·an
lhlll •••n ;t fssm•n ·rn ,
ntul ilhtl1 WITHOUT -limilina the ,eneraJ power,
subject 10 the pfO'Iilionl of Allicle I of dliJ conslitu·
lion, to 'dtlennine diC JUbjc!cu I U I I I - of 11&gt;1·
tion orewslplioi•d•efiUIII, ...,.a~awany be pass-

aroundl:

ed 1o exempt buryinJ
PubliC ochoot """'"'·
houlclllacd e..tlllivdy for public: wonhip, ioJdlulion5
- c'"'llllivdy for.,.... - · ond public p&lt;Openy llacd OI&lt;OIIIIivcly for any public pulp*, but 111
such laws Jllatl be lllbjoct 1o or ..,.at: and
the value of oil propctty ., oxempeed shalt, from time
10 limo. be -wncd 11011 publillled. lillY be diroct&lt;d
by law.
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
If adqilcd b)l a msjority of electara

..a• on this

IIIICI .. Ieolt, the IIIICIIIrnenl lhall ...., oflecl ,_.ry .
t. 1991. and ui11in1 Sec:lioo 2 of Aniclo XU of diC
Constitulion of Ohio shall be itJ 'rd from such ef·
fective date.

-

•
•

Ridtud H. f._, Senllor
Olry c. • t , ' 'k, 5!1111101
Jou W. Llwm!CC, Repteacutative

THE OPPOSmON: RACETRACK INTERESTS MOTIVATED BY GREED.
Horseracing special interests will try to scare you into voting against Issue 3. Don't be
! !' ~ fooled! Remember- the raeing industry is trying to protecl its profits and special tax deals.
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 3 AND THE RESULT WILL BE:
LOCAL CiTIZENS WILL HAVE THE RIGHT TO VOTE ~
' ,.
THE RIGHT TO DETERMINE THEIR OWN FUTURE. .
'
.
· • Alex M. Olejko, Mayor of Lorain
1., ,

' 1 -:

. . . . . . . .,.

.

Thil c:onsiitutional change is imprudent, ili-QIIICeived and very dangerous to the
iltlejiity of Ohio, and opposed by the Ohio Chamber of Commerce.

.,

.

• • ·casino gambling hu destroyed the qualiiy of life in areas where it is allowed. The ex.:.' : periences of other states show that casino gambling will:
; • :· ; • Increase crime, drugs, prostitution and corrupcion;
•·· • . . • Bring false hope for jobs l!ld economic development;
, . - • Cn:aic a multi-million dollar machine for corrupting
Ohio' s political process;
'•
• EncOilrage 1eenage drinking and gambling; and
• Increase compulsive gambling.
"

..

.. · · · ·Taxpayers will pay the price for lhese problems. In Atlantic City, propitrty taxes have
··- · r11en 2l9 percent since casinos came, in pan to pay for a 2'3 percent increase in crime
and a 1,000 percent increase in homelessness. .
'
Casino gambling is not a "miracle cure" for Lorain's economic woes. In Atlantic Ciiy,
"" .it proved just the opposite. Local bull.- were destroyed.
·

ISSUE 3
TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
•

•

De II Rc!Oived by tile ~ of the Slate of Ohio !hal
Section 6 of Anicle XV of the Ohio Conatituliori be
amended lo aulhorizo lhc cataltlilltmonl of • cttiOnainmcnt, ._1 oaon 1o include a •inslc fa&lt;ilil)' 1o con·
d~ games of~ for profi1 in die Cily of Lorain,
Ohio subject 10 _.,..t by a . .joriey of electors of
lhc City of Lorain, Ohio, u port cia piiOI project 10
dclcrmine lhc impoct of such fac~ily oo economic
110\'cklpmcnl and llilvel ond touriom in lhc Slllt of Ohio
and to authorize the General "-nnlty lo .... laws iO
replalt and restric11UCh facilities in die Stale of Otiio
and 10 rud as follows :
A E•cepl as olherwilt provided in this section, 101·
ltfics, and the sate Qf 101101)' licltcls. for any purpose
whatc.&gt;er, shall .foiO.er be prohibited in this Slab:.

The Ocncral Assembly may aulhorizean~acncy ofthl:
statt to conductl011trit1; 1o sell riatulo ponicipal&lt;
lhcrein. and lo awatd prizes b)' chance 10 poniciponts,
J&gt;I'O"idcd !hal diC onti,. net proceeds of any 511C11 1111·
terya,. paid in10 a fund of the 511te ueuury lhol shall
consill solely of such ~and shall be used solely for the support of elementary, ~, vOCIIional
and special educalion Pftllr&amp;ms as dclcrmincd in.IJ&gt;'
propriatiiNIS .-by diC General Ailombty .
. The General A,..mbly may authorize and rqulaltlhc
, operation of bingo ., be conduclcd by chariLttltlc
ha
·
·
'
organizaiiOIII oor c ritablc purposes.

8 THE . GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL
AUTHOR.IZE THE ELECTORS OF THE CITY OF
LORAIN, OHIO TO APPROVE OR REJECT THE
LICENSING BY THE STATE OF A SINGLE
FACILITY TO CONDUCT,GAMES OF CHANCE,
INCLUDING GAMES BY ELECTRONIC AND
MECHANICAL.DEVICES, FOR PROFIJ WITHIN
THE BOUNDARIES OF THE CIT,Y OF LORAIN
BUT ONLY AS PART . OF AN OVERALL
DESTINATIONRESORTANOHOTELCOMPLEX
. AS A PILOT PROJECT TO DETERMINE THE IMPACF OF SUCH A RESORT FACIUTY ON
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND TRAVEL AND
TOURISM IN THE STATE OF OHIO. ONLY
RESIDENTS OF THE CITY OF LOIIAIN WHO ARE
REGISTERED ELECTORS ARE ELIGIBLE TO
VOTE ON THE QUESTION WHICH SHALL BE
SUBMITTED ON THE BALLOT AT A PRIMARY.
OENERAL OR SPECIAL ELECTION AND WHICH
SHALL READ AS POLLOWS:
" SHALL A PILOT PROJECT ALLOWING THE ISSUANCE OF A SINGLE LICENSE TO OPERATE
A CASINO RESORT HOTEL BE AliTHORIZED
WITHIN THE CITY OF LORAIN?':
IF A MAJORITY OF'THE ELECToRS VOTING ON
THE QUESTION VOTE " YES" ON THE QUES·
TJON A SINGLE FACILITY TO CONDUCT
GAMES OF CHANCE FOR PROFIT SHALL BE
LICENSED TO OPERATE AS A PR.OT PROJEtT
ON SUCH TERMS AND CONDITIONS AS THE
GENERAL ASSEMBL ¥ SHALL BY LAW RE·
QUIRE. SUCH LAWS SHALL BE REASONABLE
AND CONSISTENT WITH REQUIREMENTS IN
OTHER JURISDICTIONS IN THE UNITED SATES
(tiel HAVING SIMILAR DESTINATION RESORT
FACIUTIES .
·
ANY LAWS PASSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY FOR THE PILOT PROJECT SHALL BE
CONSISTENT WITH AND INCLUDE TH.E
FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS:

::

· Finally cuino gambling will dalnage our economic develOJIII1Ellt. Curre.-ly, Ohio is seen
~ of Ohio u 1 l!f:!!ized
casino IIIIC, with the ll'""llpiiiYin&amp; comlptiOII and tax burden, will . . . . . . ' " - I I
1nm 1oca11na 1a OUD•

• u a ~ II8IC wilh a lllrlllll work et!'ic. A changed

Cuino gamblins is a bad bet for Ohio. Vote "No" on 1.- 3. ,
Roben E. K(Jpp
Kelley A. Simp10n

C THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL NoT
AUTHORIZE OR LICENSE ADDITIONAL
FACIUilES CONDUCTING GAMES OF CHANCE
FOR PROFIT IN THE STATE EXCEPT ON THE
FOLLOWING CONDITIONS:
(I) THE PILOT PROJECT IN THE CITY OF

LORAIN MUST BE FOUND BY ll!E GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE A SUCCESS ON THE BASIS
OF REASONABLE AND OBIEcrtVE CRITERIA
SET BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND
VERIFIED BY TH,E GAMING COMMISSION. THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL TAKE NO AC·
TION UNDER THIS SECTION UNTIL THREE
YEARS AFfER THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE
PILOT PROJECT AUTHORIZED IN THE CITY OF
LORAIN.
NO MORE THAN SEVEN FACILITIES.
WHEREGAMESOFCHANCEARECONOUCTEO
FOR PROFIT SHALL BE LICENSED IN THE

(2)

STATE.
(3) THE SATE [1icl SHALL BE DIViDED INTO
. SEVEN RESORT DISTRICTS EACH DISTRICT
SHALL INCLUDE ONE. BUT ONLY ONE OF THE
FOLLOWING CITIES: CLEVELAND, COLUMBUS, CINCINNATI . TOLEDO. DAYTON,
YOUNGSTOWN AND STEUBENVILLE AND NOT .
MO'RE TitAN ONE FACIUTY SHALL BE UCENS.
ED IN EACH DISTRICT EXCEPT FOR THE
DISTRICT WHICH INCLUDES THE CITY OF
LORAIN, WHICH DISTRICT MAY HAVE TWO
FACILITIES.
.
THE ELECTORS OF THE POLITICAL SUBDIVISION AND THE RESORT DIS11UCT WITHIN
WHICH THE FACILITY IS PROPOSED TO BE
LOCATED MUST FIRST APPROVE OF THE JS.
SUANCE OF A GAMINO LICENSE, BY A MAJORITY VOTE. IN A SPECIAL ELECTION HELD
FOR THE PURPOSES OF DECIDING THAT QU£S.
TION . BEFORE THE STATE ISSUES SUCH A
LICENSE.
(4)

ATAX EQUAL TOEIGHTPERCENTOFTI!E
GROSS REVENUES DERIVED FROM GAMES OF
CHANCE CONDUCTED BY A LICENSED FACIU- .
TY SHALL BE IMPOSED AND SHALL BE OIVID·
ED BETWEEN THE STATE AND LOCAL
POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS WITHIN THE
RESORT DISTRICT ON THE BASIS OF A FOR·
MULA IN WHICH THE STATE RECEIVES NO
MORE T,HAN FORTY PERCENT OF THE TAX
PROCEEDS. THIS TAX SHALL BE USED ARST
FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT AND REGULATORY
PURPosES.
(6) A TAX EQUAL TO TWO PERCENT OF THE
GROSS J!EVENUES DERIVED FROM GAMES OF
· CHANCE CONDUCTED BY A LICENSED FACIUTY SHALL BE IMPOSED AND SHALL BE
DISTRIBUTED TO LOCAL\ POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS WITHIN THE RESORT DISTRICT FOR
HOUSING. INFRASTRUCTURE AND OTHER
PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS.
(?) THE ELECTORS OF ANY RESORT DISTRICT
WITHIN WHICH A HOTEL RESORT GAMING
FACILITY EXISTS SHALL HAVE THE RIGHT TO
TERMINATE THE RIGHT TO OPERATE ll!E
FACIUlY BY PLACING THE QUESTION ONll!E
BALLOT AT A SPECIAL ELECTION WITHIN THE
DISTRICT. THIS LOCAL OPTION RIGHT SHAU
COMMENCE AVE YEARS AFTER TilE COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATJONS OF THE GAMlNG FACILITY AND AN EUCI'ION MAY OCCUR
ONCE EVERY THREE YEARS THEREAFTER
(8) ALLOFTHEREQUIREMENTSSETFORTH
INPARAGRAPHBOFTHISSECTION6.EXCEPT
SUBPARAGRAPHS 8(1), 8(5). B(6) AND 8(9),
WHICH ARE SPECIFIC TO THE CITY OF LORAIN
ONLY. SHALL BE INCLUDING IN ANY LAW
PASSED BY THE . GENERAL ASSEMBLY
REGULATING FACILITIES AUTHORIZED
UNDER THIS PARAPRAPH B.
(5)

(I) THE PILOT PROGRAM SHALL BE LICENS. ·
ED BY A GAMING COMMISSION AJIIIOINTED BY
THE GOVERNOR. THE GAMING COMMISSION
SHALL ISSUE THE LICENSE TO THE PRN ATE
DEVELOPER/OPERATOR WHO SUBMITS THE
BEST PROPOSAL TOll!ECOMMISSION. WHICH
SHAU CONSIDER CAPITAL INVESTMENT,IOB
CREATION AND MARKETING PLANS IN MAK·
lNG llfE AWARD.
(2) ll!E ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE
SHALL HAVE PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY TO
ENFORCE ll!E LAWS AND ·REGULATIONS
ADOPTED TO REGULATE THE FACILITY .
(l) THE FACILITY MUST INCLUDE A
MINIMUM OF FIVE HUNDRED FIRST-CLASS
HOTEL ROOMS; A MINIMUM OF FIFTY THOU·
SAND SQUARE FEET OF RECREATIONAL
SPACE AND MINIMUM OF TWENTY-FIVE
THOUSAND SQUARE FEET OF MEETING. CON·
FERENCE OR CONVENTION SPACE. FOR
· . EVERY AFfY SQUARE FEET OF SPACE IN THE
GAMING FACIUTY THERE SALL BE REQUIRED D TO PROVIDE FUNDING TO EDUCATE THE
NO MORE THAN ONE HOTEL ROOM.
PUBLIC REGARDING THE DANGERS OF COMPULSIVE GAMBLING AND TO ESTABLISH PR0(4) NO CREDIT OR LOANS SHALL BE PROVID- GRAMS FOR THE TREATMENT AND COUNSEL·
EDBYTHEOWNERIOPERATOROFTHEFACIU· lNG OF COMPULSIVE GAMBLERS A SPECIAL
TY TO ENABLE A PERSON TO TAKE PART IN TAX SHALL BE LEVIED ON ENTITIES WHICH
A. GAME OF CHANCE CONDUCTED BY THE GENERATE REVENUES FROM GAMBLING AC ·
FACILITY.
TIVITIES AS FOLLOWS:
(~)

ATAXOFEIGHTPERCENTOFTHEGROSS
REVENUES DERIVED FROM THE GAMES OF
CHANCE CONDUCTED AT THE FACILITY
SHALL BE PAID TO THE SATE lsicl AND
DISTRIBUTED As FOLLOWS:
(A) FIFTY PERCENT(~\\) TO THE STATE:
CB) FORTYPERCENT(40\\)TOTHECITYOF
LORAIN;
(C) TENPERCENT (IO\\)TOTHECOUNTYOF
LORAIN .
ALL PROCEEDS FROM THE TAX SHALL BE US·
ED FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT AND
REGULATORY PURPOSES.

.

A TAX OF TWO PERCENT OF THE GROSS
REVENUES DERIVED FROM THE GAMES OF
CHANCE CONDUCTED AT THE FACILITY
SHALL BE PAID TO THE STATE AND
DISTRIBliTED TO THE CITY OF LORAIN AND
LORAIN PORT AUTHORITY FOR HOUSING
REHABILITATION INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS AND PORT DEVELOPMENT.
(6)

(7) NO PERSON UNDER THE AGE OF TWENTYONE YEARS SHAU BE PARTICIPANT IN A
GAME OF CHANCE EITHER AS A PLAYER OR
AS AN EMPLOYEE CONOUCTINO THE GAME
OF CHANCE. ALL EMPLOYEES OF THE FACJUTY MUST BE LICENSED BY THE STATE.

(8) NO TAX ABATEMENT OR DEPERMENTS
AND NO GRANTS OR LOANS FROM l1fE STATE
OR ANY POUTICAL SUBDIVISION SHAU BE
USED TO CONSTRUCT OR OPERATE THE
FACILITY.
'

. . .Issue 3 is not limired 10 Lorain . Its passage would affect the entire state. Three years from · (9) THE PILOT PROJECT SJIAU LAST NO LESS
THAN FIVE YEARS AND THE INITIAL LICENSE
now lln'tnlidclltllla.l c rtn could be esteNWwt in Ohio 'a major inctropolitan districts. TO
OPIIRATB THE FACILITY SHAll. COINCIDE
~ _ Most Ohioans will have only one chance to Vote - November 6, 1990 - 10 decide if WJT11 THE T1!llM OF l1fE PILOT PROJECT. THE
ELECTORS OF THE CITY OF LORAIN SHALL
' ·~-::-.they want cuino gambling In their backyards.
.
• •
HAVE THi! RKlHT TO VOTE ON THE QUESTION
OF At..LOWINO THE GAMING FACD.ITY TO
_ Casino pmblinJ will threaten Ohio's qualiiy oflife. Tbe ~.'1 ~ IIIII aJmnour ~UI . CONTINUE TO OPERATE AFTER THE PILOT
~. W:':-'~~~~': ~blmg, alcohoh1111 andjob/sdt9ol ~1tee1sm PERIOD AND THEREAFTER EVERY THREE

~

(i2) AN AGGREGATE VALUE OF AVE PER.CENT OF THE TOTAL VALUE OF ALL CONTRACTS FOR THE CONSTRUCTION. OF THE
PROJECT AND FIVE PERCENT OF THE TOTAL
VALUE OF ALL MATERIALS AND EQUIPMENT
PURCHASED FOR THE PROJECT SHALL BE SET
ASIDE FOR MINORITY BUSINESS EI'ITERPRISES.

YEARS. IF A. MAJORITY OF THE ELECTORS
VOTINO ON IHB QUESTION REJECT THE
RENEWAL OP A LJC!!NII! l1fE OAMINO FACDJTY MUll' 81! CI.OIIBD wrrH1M 1WI!NY FOUR
MONTHS OP THE Bl.ECTION.
(10) A SPECIAL COMMISSION SHALL BE
CREATED IY THE CIIINI!IIAL ASSBMJILY TO
ISSUE THE LICBNSI POR THE PILOT PllOII!CI';
TO CONDUCT IIEAIINOS AND TO MAKE AN·
NUAL JlllftlRTS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
REOAROINO THE . OPERATION OF THE
FACILITY

(I) THE STATE LOTTERY SHALL PAY ONE·
TENTH (1/IOTH) OF ONE PERCENT (.1\\) OF
GROSS SALES LESS PAYOUT FOR PRIZES:

ANY PERSQN HOLDING A PERMIT TO
CONDUCT A HORSE-RACING MEETING WITJI
A PARI-MUTUEL SYSTEM OF WAGERING
SHALL PAY ONE-TENTH OF ONE PERCENT
(. I \\ ) OF ALL MONEY WAGERED:
()) ANY PERSON LICENSED TO OPERATE A
FACILITY TO CONDUCT GAMES OF CHANCE
FOR PROFIT SHALL PAY ONE-TENTH OF ONE
PERCENT (.I\\) OF THE GROSS REVENUES
DERIVED FROM THE GAMES OF CHANCE:
(2)

-··

'

Chapman birth.
Craig and Sherry C!Japman,
Pomeroy, are announcing die binh
of their first child, a daughw, Erin
Elizabeth, on Sept. I at Pleasant
Valli'Y Hospital. .
The infant · w\lighed seven
pounds and was 21 inches long.
Palernal
grandparents
IUC
DOuglas and Sadie Chapman, Rutland. Palema,l gn:at grandparents
IUC Woodrow and America Reed,
Pikeville, Ky.
.
Maternal grandparents lUC Larry
and Deloris Sayn:, Rutland. Maternal gn:at gnmdparents IUC Otis and
Mary Pancrson, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Malemal gn:at gn:at gtandmother is
Elva Pauerson, Calhoun Cooney,
W.Va

.Councilors meet
It was nOted that the Christmas
supper will be held at Crow's Resbiurant in Pomeroy for the Past
Councilor's Oub or lhe Chesler
Council No. 323 DaughleR of
America wben the group met
recently at the Phythian Sisters Hall
in Long Bottom. Following the
Christmas supper, member will
return to die hall for the meeting,
program and S3 gift exchange.
. Some of the membeR aqending
came dressed in halloween cos. tumes. . Judges selected Erma
Cleland and . Mary K. Holter,
Sandra While the prettirst; and JoAnn Baum and Elizabedi Hayes as
they were dressed. Each rece1ved a
gifL
Erma Cleland pn:sided 81 the
meeting and read from lhe sixth
chapler of MaUhew. The Lord's
Pray~ and pledge to the American
flag were given in Wlison. Members
answered roll call by naming a past
president and the ueasun:r 's n:pon
was given by Elizabeth Hayes.
A thank-you was n:ad from Marvin and Marge .Keebaugh.
Games were conducled by Beliy
Young and Esther Smith, with
prizes awarded to the winners .
Refreshments wen: served by the
hOSieSses and JoAnn Baum won the
door prize.
Attending were Faye Kirkhart,
Opal Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Lora
Damewood, Ethel Orr, Inzy
Newell, Betiy Young, Esther Smith,
Elizabeth Hayes, Mary K. Holw,
Thelma White, JoAnn Baum, Sadie
·frusseu; Goldie Frederick, · Margaret Amberger, Erma Cleland, Alta
Ballard, Mae McPeek~ Ada Bissell
and guests, Melody Robens and
Sandra While
,. .

Quote of the day
By Untied Press lnternallonal
British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd, In Cairo Sqnday on a
weeklong tour of the Middle
East, declaring that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has no
choice but to pull his Invasion
force from Kuwait.
"He will withdraw. He has no
choice. His choice Is whether he
will do It by his own will or by the
point of a gun."

(4) THE TAX PROVIDED FOR HEREIN SHALL

BE USED BY THE STATE EXCLUSIVELY TO
FUND PROGRAMS TO EDUCATE AND TREAT
COMPULSIVE GAMBLERS .
'
E THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL ENACT
LAWS TO IMPLEMENT PARAGRAPIIS BAND D
OF THIS AMENDMENT NO LATER THAN NINETY (90) DAYS AFTER ITS EFFECTIVE DATE.
THE GQVERNOR SHALL APPOINT THE
MEMBERS OF THE GAMINO COMMISSION NO
LATER THAN SIXTY (ftO) AFTER THE ENACT·
MENT OF LEGISLATION IMPLEMENTING THIS
AMENDMENT.

Now you know
By United Press laler!lllllonal
On an average day. there are
245,727 pieces of mall added to
the dead-letter file at the U.S.
Postal Service.

SCHEDULE
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY IS REQUIRED TO
PASS LEGISLATION ·TO IMPLEMENT THE
AMENDMENT NO LATER THAN NINETY (90)
DAYS AFTER ITS EFFECTIVE DATE. THE
GOVERNOR IS REQUIRED TO APPOINT THE
MEMBERS OF THE GAMING COMMISSION NO
LATER THAN SIXTY (ftO) DAYS AFTER THE
' ENACTMENT OF THE IMPLEMENTING
LEGISLATION .
OFACE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OHIO
I, Sherrod Brown. Sec:rowy of Slalt. do ·hc,.by ccr·
tify thai diC forqoin&amp; II I IJ1It copy oi Sl""'ihdO $tow

Joint Retolulion No. I t. Amended Subllitutt Hwst
Joint Rcaolulion No. " · and die t\lllttxl of a COIIIIilu·
lionat - - ......... .., inilialivt pelilion filed
lnllioOlllce of the Seclolary ofSIIlt pur1111NIO Anlclo DSec:diNIIa ollhe C I rjm olb -elf Olio.
. cer·
IGiil6lr willllhe blllal' .,.., ... a; t 101•
lir.I ., me b)l lhe Ollio Boltot loonl and ....,._.
111 t I• •by dlt ......,....andopponr "ol
the ' - · .. p.-rilloll by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, t have ltcreuiiiO
• I 'II~ . , Md alliiOd my ollicial ... II Co ·
lumbus. Ohio litis 4111 day ol Sopltrmber. 1990.
Sherrod Brown
Seclolary of -

' .

ERIN E . CliAPMAN

AHAIIRI
OF CASH

ISRIIER
THANA .
.URAIE-Rl
OFSTliF
I

�•

•
t.Qr 8

Monday. October 16. 1990

Puma oy-Midclaport. Ohio

Composer...

Squads respond to 10 calls
~ergency

.

WH().().().()
can help
. you?

it

Stocks

BIG CATCH- Pat Aelker, Sr.,and his son, Pat
Jr., Pomeroy, proudly display a large mouth bass
which they look from a local pond Sunday

Super Lltto ~e
has one winner
CL~VELAND

(UPI) - One
winner In Saturday night's Super
Lotto game stands to collect tbe
$5 million jackpot, spread out
during the coming 26 years.
Numbers on that winning
ticket are 14, 23, 31, 44, 51, and 53.
The jackpot for Wednesday
night's game will be $5 million.
Ohio Lottery officials said
$4,693,967 worth of tickets were
sold lor the game.
' The holder of the winning
ticket will be come eligible for
the money when the ticket Is
redeemed. The jackpot Is not
being paid out over a period of 26
years.
Another 116 tickets have five of
the numbers lor $5,000 each;
7,699 have four of them for $100
and 130,503 have three of them for
$3 each.

-Forecast warmer
weather in Buckeye: state Wednesday
.
'

By United Presa International

A few showers passed over the
By Tuesday morning, a high Is
comer of Ohio durtng expected to be centered over
northwest
' With a cool front moving eas tof
Ohio Monday, a period of fair the early Monday morning hours
southwestern Pennsylvania and
weather should cover the Buck· as a col\1 front pushed over that .
section of the state. Rainfall
to
t!Ye'State.
•Highs Tuesday are expected to amounts were very light with
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Presllie ·tn the 60s, with lows Monday both Toledo and Findlay report·
dent George Bush will throw out
nfght and Tuesday night In the lng 0.011nch.
the ceremonial first pitch befOre
*Qs· followed by warming Into' the Early Monday morning Game 2 of the World Series,
70s on Wednesday . No preclpltil· temperatures were mostly In the
Major League Baseball antiOn Is forecast until a chance lor 50s.
nounced Sunday.
On the Monday morning
showers develops Thursday and
It marks the 13th time that a
weather map, a cold front
Friday.
president bas attended a World
Relative humidities can be extended south across western
Series and the first presidential
eipected to fall to around 50 Quebec to central Ohio to the · visit to the Fall Classic since
former President' Ronald Reapercent Tuesday, and wind lower Mississippi Valley. A high
speeds are expected to reach the pressure system was centered
gan attended the 1983 World
over the central Plains states.
Series In Baltimore. The last
teens.
.
president to throw out a first
NATIONAL W'EATHER FORECAST FROM 7 PU 10·1 s.90 TO 7 PM 10..16-&amp;0
pitch was Dwight Eisenhower

Bush

extend from New England to the
central Plains.

throw .out first pitch of Game.2

.

before Game 1 of the 1956 World
Series at Brooklyn's Ebbets
Field. ·
Representatives of the Clncln·
nail area's 'Knothole Baseball
leaagues will throw out the first
pitch before Game 1.
To honor· the U.S. serviceman
In the Middle East, Capt. Alan
Boykln of Wright patterson Air
Force Base In Dayton, Ohio will
sing the national anthem prior to
Game 1 and recording artist
Dianne Reeves will sing before
the second game.

1G Sl

of the fall fantasy rabbit show to ·
be held Oct. 28 a~ 9 a.m. at the
Rutland Qvlc Center. Anyone
Interested In raising or showing
rabbits may attend.

Supreme which was following
A Mason County man was
behind Hughes.
killed about 2: 30 a.m. Saturday,
Assltant Chief Rod Hendrick of
Oct. 13 when three cars collided
the
Ohio River Road Volunteer
along West Virginia 2 near the
Fire Departrilent said about 25
Cabell/ Mason county line,. ac·
cording to The Herald Dispatch emergency personnel from Ohio
River Road and Valley Volunteer
Sunday.
Fire Departments were on the
Leslie Lee Hughes, 44, of 4~0
scene untl about 5 a.m. cleaning
Seven Mile Ridge, Apple Grove,
up the wreckage that stretched
was killed after his car went left
lor more than 75 yars.
of center and struck and oncom·
Hendrick said officials from
lng car In the 9000 block of West
Valley V.F.D at Apple Grove
VIrginia 2, authorities said. That
were the closet agency with a
car then careened Into a third
vehicle that was driven by · jaws of !Ue rescue toot
Hughes' wife, Diana Hughes, 30.
The third car, a 1975Ford LTD,
was driven by Dwanna L. Fraley,'
38, of Gallipolis, who was Injured .
Veterans Memorial
Two pa,ssengers, Robby Cyrus, .
Saturday admissions - None.
36 of 278 Jackson Pike, and his
Saturday discharges - None.
brother Ricky Cyrus, 34, were
Sunday admissions - Gladys
also Injured In the crash.
Smith, Pomeroy; Georgia
Sw!luger, Pomeroy.
Two were In St. Mary's Hospl·
Sunday discharges - Charles
tal In Huntington late Saturday
Roberts,
Keith Musser and Ken·
night.
neth
Hysell.
Mrs. Hughes and Ricky Cyrus
. .·· .
.. ... ·- '"'" -.
were released Saturday, a hospl·
tal nursing supervisor said.
Robby Cyrus was In satisfacDOWNING CHILD.S •
tory eondltion and Fraley was
MUlLEN MUSSER
listed as fair, the nursing super·
visor said.
.
Lt. David Pennington of the
Cabell County Sheriff's' ·D epart·
111 Second St., Pomeroy
ment said officials believe that
Hughes'l978 Ford LTD went left
YOUR INDEPENDENT
of center and hit Fraley's car,
AGENTS SEIYING
just south of Spurlock Creek
MEIGS COUNn Road .
'
Fraley's northbound car then
SINCE 1868
ricocheted off · and his Mrs.
Hughes' 1978 Oldsmobile Cu tiass

. . So•lh Cenlral Ohio
Monday night, mostly clear.
LOw around 40. Light winds.
Tuesday, mostly sunny. High

YAUEY

Exteaded Forecaal
t11rouc11 Frldllf

2

-- like-- ......... ...
-

I .........

-

.......

~~lot

SECOND PIZZA

-·--·

to purchase a 50x100 ft. build·

;Would you like to build a

no

Would you like
• for

lite

S3500?

new home

taxn for
to havt up

real estate

onfy

.·

and pay

FREE

improvements on your building loti

----~If you do,' Contact Jean Tru11ell, Housing
·

Phone (614) 992·6782

HOLZER CLINIC

PINTS

$225

0.._.1 Oftloe .,

•·••cilia.

._

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

_J

NOTICE OF ELECTION
On Tall Levy In Exc.11 of
tho Ten Mill Umitatlon
NotiCe II herebygivonthlot
in purauance of 1 Ratolutlon
of the VII lege Council of the
Village of RudMd. Ohio.
peoled on lhe 14th diy of
Auguit, 1890. thlro will be
oubmltted to • voto of tho
people of uld oubdivloion ot
1 General Election toM Mild
In the VIllage of Rutilnd.
Ohio, It tho regu ler pilcee of
voting therein. on tho lth
doy of Novombo&lt;, 1980, the
queltlon of IIOV'flng • IlK. In
eJC.CUI of the ten mill limite·
don. for tho purpooe of polleo cloponmonl equlpmont
end peraonnel,
Bold tox being on oddl·
lionel tu of 1. ti mill It 1 rete
not oxceedlng 1.6 mlllo for
..ch one claller of vMI1tlon.
which. amaunte to flftHn
Conto t•o. 1 til for ooch one
hundred dolllr8 of Vllluotlon,
for flvto (ll .yooro.
The polio for uld Election
will bo open ot 8:30 o'clock
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. of uld
dooy·.
Bv Orclor of the Boord of
Electlono. of Mol go County.
Ohio.
Evelyn Clerk. Chllrmon
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
Doted Augult 23. 1990
1101 1ti. ~2. 29: (11}5. 4tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
On Tax Levy lri Excel~ of
the Ten Mill Llmltotion
Notlcolo herobyglvMithlt
In purauence at 1 AHOiutktn
of the loord of !duootlon of
tho Eootern Locol School.
Dlllrlct. Roedovlllo. Ohio.
peoHd on lho 2 ht doy of
Augult. 1190, there will be
aobmltted to 1 vote of lho
- 1 • of uld oubdlvt.lon at
o Goneral Election to be held
In the Eelltrn Locel School
Dlltrtat of Molgo County.
Ohio, 11 the regulor pill- of
vodna therein, on tho 8th
deyofNcivlmber.1880.1ho
qulltlon of IIOV'flng o tu, In
. oxcne ol.the ton mlllllmlto·
lion. for lho a.nolt of
hin L-1 for the purpoM of
providing for tho Emorgency
Requl,.mento of the School
Dlltrtct end Avoiding en
Operetlna Deflalt.
•
leld ... beitlll . , eddl·
donal ... ofti.O' mile 11 •
,... not ...,...,. 1.0 mftlo
for uch .,.. dollar of value·
tion. - n t o to fifty
(IO.IOJ for Ollllh one
hundr8d-rlofvoluotion.
for twO 121 Y8lfl·
The polio lor llld ElootiDn
will be ......... 1:30 o'"""*
a.m. end
..,II
7:30 o'oloGk p.m. of uld
" til
of ....
of
ElootiDno. of Melge Co..,ty,
Ohio.
Evelyn Cllrtl. Chlllr,....
J1ne Auaull
M· '""""·
0018d
U, 1Dlreotor
NO
110111, :1'2. Zl: (1111. 4tc

provided ·by

Laurel A. Kirkhart
M.D.

e..

.
Dr. Kirkhart lethe latest edditioo to the Clinic'r
seven phyrlcian Ob/Gyn Department. She will
be practicing at the Middleport Clinic each
Wednerday. and at the Main Clinic in Gallipollr
the remainder of each
. week.
.
.

-------~------~'-----

,.,.In .,..,

.•

lj o,.,

I

l

·r

l

•-d

SPORTSMAN CLUB

· hery Sunday

Yll••·

Public Notice

FeW Appointments or Information CaN:
992·2181
or 446-5311
Holarr Clnlc
150 Mil Str11t '
Middleport, Ohle

I

Public Notice ;

Public Notice

OF MIDDLEPORT

'KENTUCKY

237 ... Strttt, ......rt V..., Offict•

.I "··=·...... .

MORE

EACH WEDNESDAY

.

n...- ': ..!"••lid ,...... , ............... die VUJap

$400

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY

Specialist, for further information.
.

ton cent• (10.101'for uch
one hundred do ..,. of
veluetlon. for fivl (til ynra.
The polio for uld Election
will be open ot 1'30 o'clock
a.m. end remeln open until
7:30 o'clock p,m, of oold
dooy.
, By Order of the Board of
Electiono. of Melqo County,
Ohio.
,
EVelyn Clark, Chairmen
Jone M.' Frymyer. Director
Doted Auguot 20. 1990
(101 1 ti, 22. 29: (11 1 6, 4tc

ANNOUNCES ...

DINNERS
ONLY$3 99

15 years?
to SSOOO

valuation. which amountl to

HOSPITAL

FRIED
CHICKEN L'IVERS

""::::ol"::w _.... ................

in a good location for

MEDIUM

~

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Would you

Said tax being a renewal
of on exlltlng lox of 1.0 mill
at • rete not exceeding 1 .0
millo for eech one d'oller of

PEPPERONI . DOUBLE CHEESE
$799

(304) 675-1244

Wedne~•a,

--

992-2124

11 am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
II am to J am Fli. &amp; SaL

"WE HAVE HEAR.INQ AIDS"

Fair Wednesday and a chance
of showers Thursday and Friday .
Highs In the 70s Wednesday and
Thursday and In the 60s Friday.
Lows In the 40s Wednesday and In
the 50s Thursday and Friday,

near 70.

.

ROlli'S:

.......-----Weather----..-\

Noticolo herebyglvMI '""'
In pur•uence of 1 Re.ulution
of the Wlege Council of the
Village of Middleport. Ohio.
· pooMd on lho 13th doy of
Augult, 1990. lhore wRI be
oubmltted to 1 vote of tho
people of uid aubdiviaion .t
o Gllfloral Election to be ""ld
In the Villoge of Middleport,
Ohio. ot the regular ploceo of
voting therein, on the eth
dey of November.'1 990. tho
question of levying 1 tax. In
exce•• of the ten mlll'limlte·
tlon, for tho benefit of Mid·
dleport Villogo for the pur·
paM of Curr~~nt Expen·a H.

..

Pom,.rn~·

-

..

INSURANCE

.

Public Notice

PUBI.IC NOTICE
NOTICE OF ELECTION
FAIR BOARD ELECTION
On lox Lwy In Eacooo of
The onnual election of the
' tho Ton Mill Limitation
· Molgo County Agricultural · Notlcelo hereby givon thot
Socilty wHI be held Man· In purouence of 1 R IIQiutlon
cloy, November I, 1980, In of the BOI!rd of. Tru- of
the locrotery'o Office etthe the Townohlp of Sutton, Ra·
Felr GrDundo at Rockopr· cine. Ohio, pened on the
l~go, Ohio. from ti· 9 p.m.
2nd cloy of July, 19BO,there
Ouellflcotiono for dlroc· willa. oubmltted 10.1 vote of
tore ere thet they mull be e the people of eeld oubdlvl·
quolifled voter of Melgo lion ot 1 GOMrlll Eloctlon to
County ond muot hive 1 be held In the To-ohlp of
momberohlp ticket In 11id Iutton. Ohio, ot tho rogular
ooclety for 1190.
PIIIIIH of voting therein. on
C.ndldlto'o petitlono mull tho 8th dey of Novombo&lt;,
a. flied with tho Secretory no 1 1!90, lhe queotlon of lovy1- ti p.m.. Monday, lng 1 tox, In oxcete of thlten
Octo'* 29. 1 190. Only per· . millllmltlllon. lor tho blnoflt
10,. 18 v-• of IIIII Mid hold· ot Button Townohlp for the
Jng • memberohlp ticklllltho purpooe of melntolnlng ond
clooo of tho 1990 Foir or ot operating cemotarloo.
· ·INit flft_, (1111 eel.....,
Sold till being on addldlyo before the dill of oloc· tlonol to• of 'AI mill at 1 rete
tlon oro q&lt;rollfi!d to vote. Pill· not oxceedlng 'AI mill for
tlono be obtelned from eech one dollar' of Vllluetlon,
The Secretlry.
which amount• to flVII cent•
The Molgo County · 1•0.011 for 01ch one hunAgricultural Society drod dollero of valuation. fo~
by Mory Gilmore, five Ill yeera,
· Secr8tery
The polio for uld Election
(101 16, 22. 29 3tc
willa. open It 8:30 o'clock
a.m. and remoln open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. of · oeld
dey.
By Order · of the Boord of
Electlono. of Molgo County.
Public Notice
Ohio.
Evelyn Cleric. Chllrmen
Jeno
M. Frymyer, Dlroctor
NOTICE OF 'ELECTION .
Doted Augult 15, 1990
On Tex Levy In Excon of
1101111.22.28: (1115, 4tc
the Ten Mill Uintt.tlon

..

.

'

--

Public Notice

Hospital news

EAR, NOSE &amp; ·THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
WEATHER MAP - A Pacific: from wiJI ualter winter weather
III&amp;P the Nortbwelit. S&amp;rontr southerly wlnda will help tempera&amp;uretl
~- aer01e the PlaiD8. llltrh preulll'e will brlntr fair weatl!er to
~e Ohio Valley and southe~ New En eland states.

;'

ONE FOR

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT

'

Mason man killed Saturday

---Meigs announcements _ __
Rabbit breeders meeting
There will be a meeting of the
Rabbit Breeder's Association
will be held·Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Extension
Office. There will be a discussion

afternoon. The bass was 22 Inches long and
weighed over seven pounds.

•••or

Wilkesville and
Salem Center

'

NOTICE OF ELECTION
On Tax Levy In EJC.cell of
the Ton MHI Umltetlon
Notice lo hereby gillon thet
.In pur•ence of • RaiOiutlon
of tho lo.ord of Edu001Jon of
the Southam Loctl School
Olwtrtct. Recine, Ohio, .......
lid on lho 20th dooy of Au·
gult, 1880. there will 1M
aobmltted to 1 vote of the
people of nld oubdivlllon at
a Gonerol !laqtlon to bl held
In lho Southern Local
School Oletrlct of Matea
County. Ohio, 11 tho roguler
plecn of voting therein. on
lhe 8th dey of NoV11-.
1110, the qu-n of levyIng ...x.ln aoeooofthetlfl
mHI Umltelion. for the ._,..
fit of louthem Locollohool
Dlltrlot for the purpo• of
CurTont ElQIIn-.
Sold tox being on eddl·
lionel •• of 4.0 mlllo ot o
f11tenotUOIIrJng4.0m...
for eech - dolllr of volu1·
don. whlah MDOUntlta forty .
(10.401 for ........
hundred doleN of vllluetlon,
fortlnallll-.
Tile poio lor llld EIMtlon
wll a. open 101 1:30 o'oloclt
a.m. end - I n ilpon until
7:30 o'oloGk p.m .. of eald

va1u-.

•t~y On* of tho loerd of
Electlono. of Melgo County.
Ohio.
E..tyn Cllrlt. Cllelrmen
JMII M. ,rymrer, Dhator
Dltld AM.. II ZJ, 1180
(10111, 22. 21: (1111. 4tc

"'tty

"'lj

The Daily

•ssELL

&amp; BURKE

CONSYRUCnON
•New Hom1s
•Garages
•Contplete
l .emodeling
Stop · &amp; Compare
Free Estintates

985-4473 .
667-6179

..

....,.

~·

14

4

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Now I•
Stoeklf

GUN SHOOTS

1:00 P.M.

ALL FURNACE PARTS
HENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING
Located on Safford School Rd. oft Rt.
i'141 446 -94'16 or 1·800·112·5-911.7

SHOOTS STARY

· SEPT 16, 1 90
Banks
Construction

WASHER$-$100 up ,
DIMR$-$69 up
IEFRIGERATOR$-$100

up

FREEZER$-1125 up

MICRO OVENS-$79 up

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED I
FREE ESTIMATES
10..11 mo.

205 N. Sl&lt;ond Str11t

IIIDDLEPORT, 01110 45760
Office 614-992-2116
HOME 614.'992-5692
DOniE S.
IIOKER

KEN'S
,

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGEf"
' "AI leasonable Prices''

APPLIANCE

PH.

949-2801 ' ..

SERVICE

992-5335 ar 985·3561
Aaoss From Post Office
. POMEROY; 'IIHIO .

. 10/ 30/'B91fn

WANTED

RACCOON VALLEY'

LOW GRADE OAK

SPORTSMAN CLUI

SAW LOGS

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN'
Wed. thru Sat.

$1' 50 Th:u~~ncl
DEUVEIED TO

HRS.: Weti.-Thurs.·Fri.
5:00 p.nt.-11 :00 p.m.
Sat. 12 Noon-11 p.RL ,
Between Wilkesville
and Salem Center ·

OHIO PALlET.
COMPANY
POMEIOY, OH.
9/ 271'90/ t

SER~ICE

We can repair cincl

re • '
core radtators · and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

PLUMBING &amp;
New lo&lt;otion:
168 Norlh Sl&lt;ond ~
Middleport, Ohio 45760 ,

ol Mlddfspo,f
UPHOLSTERY
Hend Tufting
Custom Drapes
· 36 Years Ex.perience

FORD

SALES

&amp; SERVICE

614-992·2328

992-2196

Middleport; Ohi.o
H3·1fc

We Say Whet We Do.
We Do What We Say.
9-6·1 mo.

and 111M

MIC

OCTOBER

O~EN

REPAIR
ALL MAKES

. $PECIAL

Bring It In Or

We

10 VISIT$ $2900

Pick Up.

OPEN BY

KEN'S APPLIANCE

APPOINIMENI

SERVICE
or 985-3561
Across Frem Poll Office
217 E. Sec, Pomeroy
POMEROY,

992-5335

CALL

992-3033

9/27/'90/11110.

2· '90-1 mo.

1

STEWARTS
GUNS

141

BISSELL .
.BUII.GERS ··

USED APPLIANCES
90 DAY WA'RRANTY
,

RANGIS-Gas· Eiec.- $12 5 up

FlY

PUMP~

MOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT

. SUNDAYS
12 Gauge Factory
I . Choke only ·

PAT' HIU.

\

111-COUNIY RECYCLING
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SEIVE YO.....
POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S ,R , 143
ALBANY . OHIO:' Rt. 60 &amp; S . R . 143
NEW ·HOURS :
PoMEROY: 9a.m .-7 p.m. 7 Dove
ALBANY: 10 a.m. ·6 P·r'!l· 8 Dayo, Cla88d Sunday.. '·
PAYING AS OF TODAY. SEPT. 11,1990 :
#1 Copper "1 · per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 46¢ peri)J.
Clean Auto Radlaton 44C lb.; Battarieo !¥.26 ee.
Yallow Braaa 40c lb.; Alum. S!leeta 40¢ ,lb.

.

&amp; TREE
TRIM. and

The

SHRUB

&amp;

SUPPLIES
SH Us For Your
Sporting NHds
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns
1
OPEN MON.-FRI• .10·5
742-2421
36496 SMtiH RUN RD.
RUTlAND, OHIO
10-11 mo.

LINDA'S

G
ROOM'

REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

CoJTtplete Grooming

*FIREWOOD

for

BILL SLACK

PAINTING
INTERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take th• pain out of
painti,. let me do
it or yau.
·
Very Reasonable
have References

USED RAILROAD TIES

614-992-6820
Pomeroy, Ohio
10·5 1

6' 12· 90

CHESTER, OHI0 1
•GRAVEL

·

•LIMESTON i.'
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHINt&gt;
ATAL~

985-4422
1. 1 1

•VINYL SIDING
"
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homot l.,tll
"Free Estimates"

949-2801 .
Res. 949·2860

PH.

CONSTRUCTION

992-6009

141-1 I mo.

Announcements

IRUCKINc; · , .

10·10·'90·1 mo.

BANKS

Breeds

992~2269

614-985-4180

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Re1identlal end
Commercial
REWIRING AND
TIOUILE SHOOnNG
C.rtlfllll Electricians
Frea EtiNatN

All

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

R .. L. HOLLON

or

110 SUNDA.l

3

Announcements ', .

Credit Plus,

a·ord

Credll

Cri,

VIsa/Mastercard Cuan~nt~
Cash advance•. No MCUttit'
deposit No crtdit ChiCk. 1·900226-ll048. $19.95 too.

, : Gold Credit Card, CISh adv1~l
, · program. Visa/Mas1w card guar.
No security deposit 1~0o4410Q40, $25.
•• .
~ Heartsaareh . slnglts network,..!'
An axclling way to meet eom•
one special. Write H•ert. .rch
P.O. BoK 1043, Galllpolle, QH:~l J
45631.

No Hunting or Trespeulng i&amp;n
the R. H. Hickel farm Hartford,
WV. · Vlolatera
will
be- ,.,
pffJHCuted.

t

No lrntpasslng or hunting, :
Hatt ie Reed farm , Vtmon Roaa, :

latart, WV.

4

.

Giveaway

frH kiHen1 to
614-667-11205.

1

good homl-.

Gray, long-haired 7 week old klt·
ttnl to a good home. 1141841- ~
2194 aflor 4:30 p.m.
·

Hall Collie, FrMI LN... 11... •
BUILDING

··~·· 614-256-1821

&amp;

REM9DEUNG
Commercial It
Relidentlel
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows
lon'l I Wri DoiBg 1¥t ·
BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Ba1h1111

lulldlng

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

'I

Linn•• a.. "'""'.,.· Wtlh duck·

In~.

61411192-28M.

1

I

I

Refrigerator Frtezer, IWIOolo, ~
hoi point, 1SI cu. ft. to QIMnfir.

8tH41-i181.

,

To glvt away, BIIMh Hound,
304-8711-4884

'

To glvl ewoy, B•- Hound, Jj

304-8711-4884

•

6:30P.M.
FICtery C_helto

To giveaway to a good ~ , ,
aonllo, tona.,.lrllf ~"'- 4 '

Strictly loferceol

Whho adul lomllo 011, ~
Pot vory oltactlonott, good
wlchlldron, 114-441-2383.
, ••

n ..... Shoflun• Ooly
·.

zz.

t;

Sentinel-Page~

Business Services .

Public Notice

· NOTICE OF ELECTION .
On Tex LIOV'f In Excen of
the Ton Mill Lim-n
RACCOON
Noticolo hereby glvon thet
In purouence of 1 R-lutlon
of the VIlle go Council of tho
Vlllogo of lyriCUII, Ohio,
SHOOnNG
~~~- onthe2nddlyofAu.
gtlll. 1990. there wHI be
MATCH
IUbmiltad to 1 volt of the
people of uld oubdlvllion ot
a General Election to be h•ld
In the Vllloge of Svrecull,
Starting ot 11 :00 A.M.
a:::~~::·~,ofto a.Melgo.
held Ohio, 1t the roguler pleceo of
'..
Between
regulorplec•of voting therein, on the lth
voting ther81n, on tho 8th dooyof Novomber. 1990, tho
dly of November. 1890. the queltlon of IIOV'flng o tlx, In
qulltlon of IIOV'flng • tax, In ••co•• of the ton mllllimlto·
....., of thll ten mlllllmtte- lion. for the benefit of Syrl·
tlon. for the bonoftt of Mol go cuoe Vlllege for the purpooe
County for the purpou of of CurrM!t Expen111.
Bold too belna 1 renewal
MlintMIMCO ond Operotlon
of C.rt.ton School ond of on ulttlng tox of 1.8 mill
Public Notice
Mligo lnduotiioo Warlcohop_ ot 1 rete not exCMdlng 1.8
mlllo
for
uch
one
doltar
of
for J)lrlonl w•h Montel Ro·
tordotlon end Devolop,..n· Vlluetlon, whk:h 1rnount1 to
NOTICE OF ELECTION
·
tol Dl..bllltleo.
eight- ..... (10. 1BI "''
On Tax Levy In Exceee of
Bold ... ....... en eddl· -hone hundred dollero of
lho Ton Mill Llrriltotlon
dOIIII tllC of 1 .I mill ot I roll Vllluotfon. for five (til yooro.
Noticelohorlbyglvonthot .
not aK-.dlng 1 .I mHI1 for · The polio for Aid EJ,ction
uch OM dollar of valuation. will be open at 1:30 o'clotk In pur1111nc. of 1 ReaoluUon
of tho VII loge Council of the
which amount• .to FM1:"n l.m. end remain open until
Vlllogo of Ruttond. Ohio,
7
:30
o'clock
p.m.
of
nld
Conti r•o. 1llllor eeah one
pooled on tho 14th dey of
hundred dolll,. of valuation, cloy.
By Ordor of the Boord of Auguwt, 1 990, there will a.
for 11ch one hundred dolllra
of valu1tlon. for a con.t inu· Electiono. of Mel go County. · eubmitted to 1 vot• of the
people of oeld oubdlvlolon 11
lng perlad o( time.
. Ohio.
o
Oenerel Ep:iion to .,. held
Evelyn
Cleric,
Cholrmen
Tlie polio for .uld Eloctlon
Jane M. Frymyer. Director In the Vlllilge of Rutland.
willa. open ot 8:30 o'cloclo
Ohio. ot the regular plocoo of
e;m. 1nd rem11in open untl Dated Augull 15, 1990
7:30 o'clock p.m. of uld (10} 111. 22. 29: (111 II, 4tc voting therein. on the 8th
day of No•ember. 1990. tho
doy, ·
que.tlon of lwylng • texr in
By Order of the Board of.
oxcooo of the ton mill lim~•·
Eilcllono. of Melgo County, •
1 --------lion. for the purpou of cur·
O~Io.
.
rent expeneet.
Evelyn Clorlc, Chairman 1--P_u_b_llc_N_ot_l_ce
__
Sold tox a.tng on oddl·
Jono M. Frymyer. Director
NOTICE OF E~ECTION
tlonal tex of 1.&amp; millet • r~te
Doted Auguot21 . 1110
On tax Lwy In Exceto of
no\ oxc;eedlna 1 .II mlllo for
(10} 1 II. 22. 29: (1 1 II. 4tc
the Ton Mill Llmhotlon
Nch one dollar of valuation.
"
'Noticelo herlbyglvonthot
which amount• to Fifteen
Public Notice
In purouo... of • Rooolutlon
Conti (10. 1 Ill for each one
of the l011rd of Truateea of
hlndrod dolloro of veluotlon,
NOTICE OF ELECTION
tho T-nohlp of Solem. So·
for five Ill yuro.
On T10 Levy In Eaceoo of
1om Twp .. Ohio. PIIUd on
Thil polio for oeld Election
tho TMI Mill Umilelion
the 28th doy of July, 1990,
will be open ot 8:30 o'ciQclo
Noticolo hereby glv., that there wHI be eubmltted to •
1.m. 1nd remllin open ·until
In pufiUirtce of • Ae110lutlon vo11 of the people of oold
7:30 o'clock p.m. of oold
of the Board of Education of JUbdiviaion .t 1 Oenel'lll
doy.
Molge Local School 011- Election to be held In the
By Order of the Board of
Pa-roy. Ohio, pe111d Townohlp of Solom, Ohio. ot Election•. of Meig~rifounty.
on
8th dov of Augult, tho rogullr plec11 of vO!Ing
Ohio. '
1980, lhere wll be oubmll· thoreln. on lho 8th dey of
· · Evelyn Cleric. Chairmen
ted to 1 vote of the people of
Novimber. 1880, the qu ...
Jone M. Frymyer. Director
- .. bdlvlolon ... a-ret tlon of levvillll 1 tea, In
Doled Augult 23, 1990
Eilcllon to be held In tho oxce11 of tho ton mill llmh1101 1ti, 22, 29: (1 116, 4tc
Mligo Loctl Dletrlct of tlon. for the beneftl of Sol'!"!
Mligo County, Ohio, ot the Townehlp for t11e purpose of
,...tar plli0111 of\rotlng ther- maintaining end operating
ein, on lhe 8th doy of NocemeterMie.
Publlc Notice
vomblr. 1980. the qulltion
Sold lox being en oddi·
of levying • till. in eJC.D811 af
tiona! tax af 1h mill at 1 rate
lho ton mil llmtt.tlon. for
not .,,ceedlna 1h mill for
NOTICE OF ELECTION
lhe a.noflt of Mtlge Local
each one dollar of veluatiQn.
On To• Levy In Exceoo of
School Dlltrlot for the .pur·
which·•moUnte to tl,vecenta
tho Ten Mill Limitation
pa. of Current ExpenHI.
(10.0111 for ooch one hun·
Notice II hereby glv• that
dred dollero of veluetlon, for In purauence of a Re.olutk»n
Sold tox a.tng "" eddl·
lionel. .. x of 1 .0 mille It 1
five(ll yooro.
of the Bo.ord of Tru-• of
The polio for uld Eloctio11 tho To.wnohlp of Olive. OIMI
rote not ••-ng 1.0 mill•
for eech ono dollar of ueluo·
will a. open at 8:30 o'clock Townohlp OhiO. IJIIIod on tho
tlon. whloh amount~ to ten
a.m. and remeln open until 8th dey af Au gull. 1990,
7:30 o'clock p,m, of lold there will be oubmltted to •
cent• r•o. 101 lor ooch one
hundred dolllr8'ofveluotlon.
cloy.
.
vote of the people of aid
for 1 contlnu IIIII period of
By Orclor of the Boord of tubdivlaion at e General
tlmo.
Electiono, of Melgo County. E - n to be held In
The polio lor ulcl Election Ohio.
the Townohlp of Olive. Ohio.
wiH be open ot 8:30 o'clock
Evolyn Cleric. Cholrmon et the regular placet of vot·
a.m. and rern~~ln open untN
Jone M. Frymyer, Director lng therein. on the 8th doy of
7:30 o'clock p,m , of 11ld
Doted Augult 1&amp;, 1B80 .
November. 1990. tho quee·
cloy.
(101 16. 22,29: (1115. 4tc tlon of le"''ing o tox. In
By Orclor of tho lo.ord of
exce11 of the ten mil limitaEloctlono. of Mol go County,
tion, for the benefit of Olive
Ohio.
.
Townlhlp for tho purpou of
Evelyn Clerk. Chairmen
fire protection.
.
Public Notice
Jono M. Frymyer. Director
Said tax being • renewal
Doted Augull 23. 1 890
of an exiltlng tu of 1 .0 mill
(101 11, 22. 2B: (1111. 4tc
end an increeaeof .5 milia to
NOTICE OF ELECTION
con.tltute a till of 1 .6 mills
On Te• Levy In Exce11 of
at e rJ~te not exceeding 1.15
tho Ton Mill Llmtt.tlon
millo for uch one dollar of
Public Notice
Noticelo hereby glvon thet
valuation,
which amount• to
11~=~::: of 1 Re10lutlon · fiftoon cent•
r•o. 1 til for
h
of Educotlon of
NOTICE OF ELECTION
each one hundred dolloro of
the Melgo Local School Dlo·
On Tax Levy In Ex01111 of trict, Pomeroy, Ohio, po111d
valuation, for five (61 veoro.
tile Ten Mill Umltotlon
The poll• far uid Election
on the 8th doy of Augult.
Notlcolo htrabyglvon that 1990. thoro will be oubmlt·
will be open ot 8:30 o'clock
In pureuence af 1 Re10lution ted lo a •oto of the people of
a.m. end remain open until
of the Village Council of tho said IUbdivlsion 1t a Oener•l
7:30 o'clock p.m. of aid
Villoge of Roclno. Ohio,
dey.
to be held In tho
lJOIIOd on tho 2nd dey of Election
Bv Order of tho Boord of
Molgl L-1 School Dlotrict
July. 1 BIO. there wll be of Molgo County. Ohio. at
E.. ctions. of Meig1 County.
oubmltted to 1 vote of the the reauter places of voting
Ohio.
people of uld oubdlvlolon ot thoroln. on the 8th doy of
Evelyn Cleric. Chelrmon
1 Genorol Election to be hold November, 1990, the quto·
Jane M. Frymyer, Dirtctor
In the Vllloge of Recine, tlon of levying • tax. in
Doted Augult 20, 1 990
Ohio. It the regular plecee of IXCIII of the toil millllmhl·
1101 1 ti. 22. 29: t1 1 I II. 4tc
voting therein, on the &amp;th tion, for the benefit of Molgo
dey of Novomber, 1990, tho .Local School Dlltrtct Ill; tho
quolllon of IIOV'flng 1 tox, In purpo11 of Permanent Im·
IXCOII of the tMI mill II milo· prove menta.
tlon. for the benefit of RoPublic Notice
Said tox being en oddl·
cino Vllege for lhe purpooe tlonal tax of 4.0 mills at •
of Current Expenuo .
rete not ex...-clng 4.0 mill•
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Sold tox being • renewal for each one dollar of value·
On Tox Lo"'' In E•ce11 of
of on exlotlng lox of 3.0 millo tlon, which 1mountl tO forty
tho Ten Mill Umltetion
at a rete not exceeding 3.0 cente (•0.-'0) for each ona
Notice II hereby given that
mlllo for eech one dollor of hundred dollera of valuation.
in pur8Uenceofa AeeolutkJn
valuation, which emount1to
for
five
(til
of
the Bootd of Truoteeo of
. (10.3011hlrty conto for ooch
Tho polio for Aid Election
one hundred dollero of will be open 11 8:30 o'clock the Townohlp of Cheltor.
Chetter. Ohio, pa11ed ~n
valuation. tor fiVe (5J year~. a.m. and remain open untH
The poUo for uld Election 7 :30 o'clock p.m. of ooid tho 13th cloy of Augult,
1990, thoro will be oubmh·
will a. open 11 8:30 o'clock doy.
tod to • vote of the people ot
a.m. and remain open until
By Orclor of tho Boord of
7:30 p'clock p.m. of ..ld Electlono. of Molgo County. 11id aubdlviJion at • G'enerel
Election to be held In the
doy.
·
Ohio.
of Choller, Ohio.
Townlhlp
By Order of the Boord Of
Evelyn Cleric. Chairmen at the regular placet of vot·
Eloctione. of Moigo County.
Jono M. Frymyer, Director ina therein. on the 8th dey of
Ohio.
Doted Augult 23, 1890
Evelyn Cleric, Chelrmon (101 11, 22,29: (111 &amp;. 4tc Novoma.r, 1990. tho quoo·
tlon of IIOV'flng o tox, In
Jo.. M. Frymyer. Director
IXCHI·of the ten mllllimltl·
Oiled Auguot22, 1 lBO
tlon.
for the benefit of Chtt·
(1~1 11. 22, 29; (111 II, 4tc
tor townohlp for the purpooe
of meint~ln end operating .
Pubilc Notice
cemeterle1.
Public Notice
Seld tu being on eddi·
NOTICE OF ELECTION
tional tax of 1.0 mill• 1t 1
On Tax Levy In E•ce11 of
NOTICE OF ELECTION
rete not exceeding 1.0 mllll
On Tax Levy In Exce11 of
the Ton Mill Llmhetlon
for MCh one dollar Of VIIUI·
Notlcelo heroby'givon thot .tlon; which omoun1o to ton
U,. Ton Mill Llmtt.tlon
Naticolo horebyglv111 that in purau1nce af 1 Re801ution cent• r•o.10} for ioch one
In puriUence of • Reaolution of the Board of Truot- of hundred dollero of veluotlon,
of the Vlllogo Council of the th,e Townohlp of Columbia. for flvo (51 veero.
Vllilge of . ayrocuu. Ohio. Albany, Ohio. 111111d on the
The polio for Aid Election
llh dey of Auguot, 1810, will be open •t 1:30 o'clock
~~~- on the lth dooy of Au·
gult, 1890, there will a. thoro will be oubmltted to o a ..m. end remain open until
.,bmltted to • vote of the vote of the people of oeld 7:30 o'clock p.m . of -oeld
people of ookloubdlulolon at oubdlvlllon ot 1 Gonerol dey.
I o-..1Eloctlon to be held Eilotlon to be held In
By Order of tho Boord of
In the Vlllege of Byrecull. tho Townohlp of Columbia. Eloctlono, of Molgo County.
Ohio, it the regulor pillaeo of Ohio. at the regulor ploceo Df Ohio.
votlna thonoln, on tho lith voting th•lln. on lho 8th
Evelyn Clerk, Chelrmen
dey of November, 1890, the dey of Novomber, 1 980, the
Jeno M. Frv"l'f•. Dlroctor
quntlon of levying 1 too. In quHIIon of levying • too. In Doted Augult 22. 1 990
- . of the t., mlllllmMo· eXCMI Of tt. t., mlllllmfla· (101 11, 22, 2B; (1 116. 4tc
lion, for the blnoflt of Bvr•· tlon. for tho blnoflt of Col·
umbll Townohlp for the pu,..
CUll VHioge for the purpooe
of Flra Protection.
pooe of lira protection. ·
Bold tax b,lna .., eddl·
Bald tox being 1 renewol 3 Announcements
tlonol tiK of 1.0 mill ot 1 roto of ., oxlotlng tox of 1 .0 mil
not lll-ng 1.0 ·mHI1 for ot • roll not •-ling 1 .o
PUIUC INYmD
- - - o f veluetlon, mUll for uch ono dollar of
whlah emounte 10 ten oento ueluetlon, whlah omountoto
,..._S COUNTY FAIM
hun· ton Dlllta 1•0.101 lor uch
r•o. 101 for llah I ..EAU ANNUAL
dolle,. of velu-; fo• one huildrH dollero of
for ._Ill,...••
~Ill.,.....
.mNG
Tile polio for nld l!lectton
The polio for llld ElectiOn
OCT.
16-7:15 pm
w11a. - n I t 1:30 o'aiooll will be open ot 1:30 o · .
USTUII
H.S. AUDIJOIIIIM
a.m. and remeln open untl l.m, end rem~~ln Op.n untl.
7:311· o'cloclc p.m. of nld 7130 o'clock p.m. of oeld
~IDNIEI
Multt $5.1111 Cllll*oo $J.OO
Orde,' of the loerd of
OniM' of tho loerd of
hiMI* Ill
Eloatlon1. of MlltM County, 1!-no. of Mligo County,
..
....
,.., '1111"
Dlllo.
Ohla.
•
tplloll6o30flilt
Evelyn Clorlt. Chllrmon
E....,.. Clerk. Chlllrmon
Jane M. ,rymyer, Dlr8ctor
Jono M. P'lymyer, 01-tor
For IIlli IIIII• Col
Der.d Augull 20. 1 180
Deled Augulltl. 1180
992·2403 .
(10111.
Zl: (1111. 4tc (101111. 22. 21: (111 •• 4tc

..

--Area deaths--

PorNI'Oy-Middleport. -Ohio

NOTICE OF ELECTION
On Tax LIOV'f In Exceu of
the Ton MDI Uintt.tlon
N-il hereby g~v., thet
In puriUMIDI of 1 Rooolutlon
the Bo.ord of Comml1- ·
of tho County of
P-ov. Ohio,
on the 1 lth dey of
"~:~~~1890. lhero wll be
f'l
1· vote of the
oubdlvlolon II

.H ULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE .
4:30 P.~. DAY BEFORE
fUBLICATION

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
I
AT ss.OO PER DAY

.

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD

. Continued from page 1

; Unlta of the Melp Qlunty · was called to Route 7 for Jane up and down on the podium at
Medical Service re·
McArthy who was taken to moments of musical climax.
spondee! to 10 calls for assistance Veterans. •
.
The culmination of BeMUiteln's .
.,.ver the weekend.
.
· At 10:20 a.m. the 1\ilddleport career, both as a musician and
• At 9: 53 a.m . on Saturday the unit went to Noble Summit Road pollt\Cal activist. came early this
RaclneunltwascalledtoTrouble for Mary Btrchtteld who was year when be conducted Gentian
Creek Road for Mary Kerns who transported to Holzer.
symphony orchestras In Bee'as taken to Holzer Medical
The Pomeroy unit, at 11:23 thoven's symbolic Ninth Sym·
lf.nter.
a.m. , was called to Pl!aocock phony and "Ode to Joy" on both
Tbe
Middleport
unit,
at
10:19
Avenue for Gladys Smith who sides of the Berlin Wall within
1
lim., went to Bailey Run Road was taken to Veterans, and at weeks after It had beeri ruptured
lOr Velsle Roush who was trans· 11:59 a.m: the unit went to East during East Germany's break
P.Orted to Holzl!r.
Main S!reet for Georgia Swager · • with communism,. .
·
• At 1:10 p.m., the !taclne unit who was transporte to Veterans.
Shortly afterward, he suffered
~ponded to a call oil Route 338
AI 12:0!1 p.m. the Middleport
a
bout
with pneumonia and had to
- lpr Ralph Shain who was taken to unit went to Overbrook Center
curtail his busy Schedule. Never·
Holzer.
.
tor Bessie Rose, who was trans· theless, lie went to Japan during
· On Sunday the Middleport unit ported to Pleasant V!illey
the summer to 'open a musl~ll ·
· went to the Middleport Pollee Hospital.
festival and school In Sapporo
Department at 2:40 a .m. for
The tina! call l~r assistance . modeled on the Tanglewood
Cheryl Ferguson who was trans· came at 3: 11 p.m. when the
Music Feslvalin Massachusetts,
gorted to Veterans Memorial Rutland unit went to New Lima
with which Bernstein was asso·
Road for Carrie Wears who was ciated for 50 years.
Hospital.
. .
: At 9:41a.m . the Pomeroy unit transported to Veterans.
was
to
·muslc
what a
Bernstein
.
triple-threat halfback was to
football. He not only was a great ,
. conductor but also an accomp,
lished pianist .and · \1 prolific
GalUpolls, daughter of Eliza beth composer. He suffered· Inner
Neil Sloane
(Libby) Masters of 150% Third friction, even anguish,. over
•. R. Nell Sioane,O l , Athens, Ave.
whether he bad sacrificed his
She · was a seventh grade potential as a composer In order
f~rmerly of Syracuse, died early
F,rlday morning, Oct. 12, 1990 l.n student at Gallla Academy Jun· to fulfill the tremendous demand
lor High School,' a former fifth for his talents as a conductor.
an auto accident.
and
sixth grade cheerleader at
:Born In Gallipolis, he was a son
He appeared as guest soloist
Bidwell-Porter
Elementary , with many symphonic orches·
of Allee L. Crandall Newsome,
Syracuse, and Charles R. Sloane, served as a crosswalk guard at
tras, often doubling as lnstru·
Washington Elementary School,
~thens . He was a -1988 graduate
mentalist and conductor.
of Southern High School and was · and attended the New Life
Victory Cente.r In Gallipolis.
attending Ohio University.
She Is survived by maternal
' In addition td his parents he Is
grandparepts,
Hazel Camden
. s~ved by a special friend, Lori
Sr., both of Dally stook prices
and
Stanley
Jones
Adams, a brother, Charles P.
Gallipolis;
maternal
great- (As of 10:30 a.m.)
S)oane, Syracuse; maternal
grandmother,
Opal
Plants
of Bryce and Mark Smith
grandmother, Mrs. Robert
GalUpolls;
one
brother,
Eric
of BlUnt, EUIB" Loewi
(Esther) Smith, Stewart; and a
Masters
of
Gallipolis;
and
sev·
step-father, Auston Newsome,
era! aunts, uncles and cousins.
Am Electric Power ,........ , ... 27'4
Syracuse.
Funeral
services
will
be
con·
AT&amp;T
... ................. ....... .. ... .31% .Arrangements are being
dueled
1
p.m.
Tuesday
at
Willis
Ashland
011 ........... .. .......... .29%
handled by Hughes Funeral
Funeral
Home,
with
Pastor
Bill
Bob Evans ................... ....... ll%
Home In Athens. Memorial servi·
ces will be announced at a later Turkovich officiating. Burtal will Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ 8%
be In Campaign Cemetery.
aty Holding eo ..................15%
date.
Friends may call at the funeral Federal Mogul .................... l3~
· In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to Carleton School. home from 11 a.m. until the time Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ...... .. ..16%
of services.
Key Centurion ................ .. .. 101!! '
~elgs Industries, P.O. Box 307,
Pallbearers
will
be
Charles
End .... ... .. .. ............ :. 9%
Lands'
Syracuse, 45779.
•
Masters Jr. , Paul Rodgers, Ron· .·.Limited Inc ......... .. .. .... ..... .. 12%
'
nle Evans, John Queen, Fred Multlmi!dla Inc .................... 56
~lacey R. Lucas
McNeal and Scott Mahan.
Rax Restaurants ......... .. .... .. 1%
Honorary pallbearer will be Robbins &amp; Myers .......... .. .. .. 16'h
,Stacey Renee Luca5, 12, of Stanley Jones Jr.
Shoney's Inc ..... ................... 10
1SO'h Third Ave., died Friday,
In lieu of flowers doi!Btions can Star Bank .... :: ......... , .. .. ....... 15'h ·
Oc~. 12, 1990 In Gallla County.
be made to the Missing Child·
Wendy's Int'l. .,................... 5%
:she was born April 22, 1978 In ren's Fund.
Worthington Ind ......; .... ..... .. 20~

•·

Monday. Octobei 15, 1990

25.'99. n

moe. ald. 11ot/102-73a..

••

S

I

'

�LAFF-A·DAY

Lost&amp; Found

6

All Yard Saltt Must Ba Paid In

Advance. OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.

the day b4fore the ad Ia to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

2 00
ldtuon • '

~~.;~n~~·~ ~hll'tr!.MWl~t.~
Cloth•. ToWell, 1oya, 1hMtt,

dishes,
hondmodo
qul!to.
Nolghbc&gt;rhood Rood, 9-Sp.m.
Reschodutod Yord Silo ot: 145

Fourth

Avenue, Mon., Tutt.,

Wod. 11-? Many homo. R•ln cancell.
8
PubliC Sale .
&amp;. Auction
Rick Pnroon Auction Compony
n~w booking auction~, ax·

ptrlence m•k•• the difference.
Llcanttd Ohio, Ktnti.ICky, WMt
Vlrglnlo, 304-773-5785.

!t,

Wanted to Buy

Wa.,.M To Buy: Junk Auto,
with or without motors. C.U

Larry Lively. 114.:11!8-9303.

Wi:nled To Buy: UNd mobl..

h9moo, can 614-146-0175.

Employmenl Services
Help Wanted
$2,!500 CREDIT CARD!

Ai•o

Mmt day approval!
dopos~

quallly tor NO

VISAJMC and cash advancn. 1~

800-2711-81115 Ext. G2524.
AVON • All artas, C.ll Mlrllyn
Wfaaver 304-882·2645.

-to-·

"It was about here when
1hey started to investigate

~t

Nowt

Excellent wagHI

Spare time asumbly. Easy work

at•homt. No oxptri•nc•. Call 1-

5Q4-641 -777B Ext. 5214. Opon 24
hOurs, Including Sunday.
AVON I All Areas I Shlrtey

Spoo,., ~04-675-1429.

Babysmer/houseketper,
full
ttm1 In my home, to star1 In

Japuary, call 304-675-7129.

CUrrent!~
accepllnQ
appUcatlone for, full or part-time
dental hygieM po~ttlo n. Must
bt llc:ensed to prae1Jce In the
state of Ohio. Rnumn may be
sent: era 048, c/o Gallipolis
,Da lly, Tribune, 825 Third AYI,
Gall poll•, OH 45631.
Doctor'a assistant Must Ilk•

...,rklng wHh pooplo bl offl- \
. cltnt and hal/l lnsufanc• ex·
parlance. . Exctlltnt working
condltlons, ~ood ulary ana
fringe ben• Its. Outstanding
career

opportunity.

Send

resumt to: Doctor's Assistant
P.o.
4576&lt;).Box 164 Middleport, Ohio

Earn money by the week. Join
the number• to demonatratt
"Christmas- Around-Th•World".

July-Dec.mber. LHvt nama,
add rna, 1nd phone·numbtr on
llltw ... ing ••~let. 614·9ft.8318.
Easy Work! Excellant lncamt!
Anawer phonH lor Nationwide
Co., now hiring, will lr~ i n, 304675o-77&amp;1, Ex1. Ef·11 ·
EI~rilnced

hNllng . and AJC

lnatalltrw, Hnd rnume to BoK
P 12 CJ0 Point PIN.. nl R~hl·
ltr, 200 Main SlrMt, ' Point
PI .. Nnt, WY, 25550. Our
employ•• know of thla ad.
Ex~rllnced
media
HI"
Npr... ntatlvt. laM piUI comminion. 304-727-78&amp;5 call far In·
tervln.

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING $18,000-$62J.OOO yoor.
Coli 1105 584-6!00 •lii.GB HI
ror Immediate rHponH.

Govemnwnt-Stat• JoiHI1._excel·

lon4 . poJ good bln!lno, for

deiiUI call 304-675-7761, ld. 0..1

HOME TYPISTS, PC uooro
noodod. 13.1,000 pojonllol.
Detallo. (H 805-6$7-liGOO Ext. 114562.
..
HOME TYPISTS, PC Ulll'tl
needed.
S35,000 poltntlal.
a.tallo. 11). SOS-687-8000 Et. B·
•f0188,
INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FED,
CIA, US Cuotomo, DEA, ttc. "
Now Hiring. Uotlngo. (1) 1106667-eGOO E&gt;rt. K-101811.
Un-ln llltter; over 18; one child
olcoy; up 1o $825/month. Rllocatton to - n wll!-lle-plld.

. 7'13-TH-2310.

Maklro boby '"tor betort and after eehool, eorne
...unct., Plrk Drive .,.,, call

bllono 3:00 PM. :IOU"II-7341.
NHd penon to do light ctoonlng &amp; anawer phone, 114-441-

4604 Cell Ennl9t between

5p.m. &amp; 7p.m.
INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US
Cuotomo, DEA, otc. Now Hiring.
COil (1) 105.e87.eGOO Ell. K·
101ltl.
Now taking opp!ICotlono lor lull

:.=;::.r.-A:,":~

ror

2. Lorobl'•, SliVer Bridge Aua.
ook Clnlor hoi ,,.._

g,....,

medlete oPCKM"tunHiel for perttime l,.lned .nd tMttd nuralng
...lltan... Silary commen-

.uratl whtt •xpMilnct and
abOVI ~e~~ll. For addlttonll ln.
tormatlan plent contad Ktrll
Hunter, autltant Otrector of

to.:;r:

=:.::·---....,.------

R:l':!n'or

·•-lon•.

______-,,-...,-,-

Count&amp;

rw:

r;Xt:'."Wl

•-Ill•.

!':"

-r

n_.

'""'""-

---Font

Nu,.lng ol &amp;14-lt2-t472. EOE.
OWNER/OPERATOR NEEDED: '1-100-727-1300.

St..cfy work IVIIIIblt. Uuet

hovo l!otbldo whh tarp. &amp;l4-884- 22 Money to Loan
Rent&lt;Jis
85ft
Poolfitln tar full time wohrtM CREDIT PWS. GOLD CREDIT
;,pp~y 1n ponan. Vlttog• Pt- tc:-'~ 0 - - c ..6
..
____
, 1!'*""" 41 HouHS for Rent
3004 , . _ Avo, Point - -·-~· no
- n l . WV.
2 bedroom-.~1 ~":
too.
Now point, carpatod. Olpoalt
!lool1lng _ , , to t =~o poll.
~:,l.=ool~:mons.~ Up lo
W.
ond Childs._~ E n t _ , ,... ,_ go1 • _ , . . !.~":'.--·
1 •
• gtna.... PNitloM
Lain lr IIIII. 1400-2G4100. •-·
Oiil
, ' no
t-IIIIIIJ In Au.,. ond
..... ..._
3bot,!',::"1:'.,k -of- -•"l'!!/Z;
Ito COimlln. p.,_ wHh lroln!ng oxpor~o ond nporl..,.. In
_Hutl-.;:--c;::::*::-=-171-=:;:;=n:::;l::;l
:-::-..,...
rtrt¥em Human Services and
ar ....... ~CSEA progromo ohould opply to
· - · II MIN c:r..11,
tho Humon Sorvlaoo Dovolot&gt;-1-----.:....---- t"~-=::f."'l·
men! lnltMulo, r:lo Poroannll 31 Ho
• Sale
om-.~- Hocklna Collolfl, mes .or
a bod com Ill eonntt, OH l5714; 114·713,.,.._
.&amp;- t210.
Jt
;1111. D••- to · - Ia ac. 2 ola!J - . 1 112 .._
.... troo.:
toblr 1~, 1110. ·An ~tiiJAL QP. bulldlngo. ~,.:with
INd .. ...,._., ro'-owooo
rf¥• lrOnlago.
•
- -· catt boloro 1:00 Pll,
POATU NITY EMPIDYER.
. J0W71..3111 or lOt • 11 at.

-~--~
::I~ .:::..r~·=ll fn

...............,...
-

apena

f

•

por

1. . Tor!* Cotl1rj, ~~ !IItty

--·t··-~·
lllllliM
• . . . lp.IIL.at.OOO - .
11t
111 -,..,
For -

1m T·llnl. 11,000
ooncllllon, 114-448--

-:w;.:-..
=::.-.. = ·....
1111. -

t;taoh:lllll , _ .............,

•-

'

Cloupo,

•":.:

=- =...

IIUIIO or 1214

- ...r.-.-.
Turbo
-..
.ooo.--

='

::"U:
=:'-:ftl.:O.,.._

OCT.

MON ..

15

'

1172~0r)l.!,L~ ¥-8, o,_.o, ·
..
Ill. 304-471-•

111l1t Wltlta Rood Commoncttr:.
dncob. lllnJ , _ porto. ,
1141181 33114.
.·
1817 T~. 4xl,. i&gt;.U.; 1H4
Chn. 5-to~~-~·; t1115 ~ 8-15, ·
P.U., bo ; 11111 Chn. 5-10, ·
Btozor: t18Z Ply. Yoyogor, Pooo;
Van; itici Che¥. 81tnriodo, P.U.; ·,
- 18711 Ford P.U.; 1177 Chow.
ltozor lloO Auto - . 'HwJ.
teo, N. 4 mil• N. of - r, 8t4441-tll5, 8-.etll8.

'fES, I NEED
TO TALK
TO '(OU ...

---'"1·

YES, AND PLEASE
.STOP SA'I'ING.
''ME?''

No*i Q
CZl Wild America
(!) 3-2·1 Con1act
.
1111 @ . Ces NIWI Q
liD .. Andy Qrtffllh
.
1D Spor11Look
1111 Maniac Manolon
6:~ (IJ Ancly Ortlfitll
7:00 wa llll o Wheel ot
FarblneQ
(!) I Dream of Joannlo
(J) Cll
lnalde Edition
CZl (!) MaeNaD l.ehrar
-•Hour
liD 18 Night Cour1 "
llJ .. C~rmrt Alfli
I!! MaeOyvar Q

d,:,:._~a:.'"ti::

"Mom IIIIY8 lhe only lootblllin]urlet you got

w.a splinters from !llttlng on tile 'benCh."

I

..._
Ill. 'II

to11:01priL

•·

o=:

Cll
..IIIDI
Open 7 - 1:00 ....

014-25e-6854,
111: 6&gt;4-21U:ui.
·
For Sell: 1tml Ford PICkup, 4x4,
runa good, 814-441·1708.

'ltl Chow Aolro lllniV~f!. AII-F.M
a.utte wletock, M;, Mini·
bUrtet.. curtain•. 23,000 mll11,

304.e82-375Ciaftori:OOpm.
'
11118 Bronco 4x4, 302 llandord,
-•1 tOJ!r_ RJno good. St95.

1141247..2fJz.

112 SporlaCenter

· a Monarltne
1111 Scarac:row and Mrs. King

'

1171 Chovrolot CUllom Von,&gt; .
$800. 304-e71-1393 or $75-3766. ·

Q
7:05(1) Happy D1y1
7:3G W II 1111 @ Jaoplrdyl Q
® Night Cour11;1
Entertiinmon1
Tonight
·
Cll 11 M1ma't Family
liD Threa'o Company
112 Motorweak lllus1nltecl
a Cronflre
7:35(1) The Jalfenon1
1:00 w
@ Frelh Prince of
·aa1 Air Will and Carlton
arrange a media stunl to gal
out of lall. Q
·® Ktnnadj, Pan 1 (1 :57)
(J) (J)
MacGrvar
MacGrver searches Africa
tor a missing employee.
Stereo. Q
CZl (!) American Exportonco

1171 Font Bronco. 460 motor..
Exollllnt cond"lon- 614-mHOt.
•

oo 1121e

11111 Dodae, 4x4, holl ton, 51,000

mil•, 11,7'00. 114-256-6301.
--.A
Motorcycle,.,
~

a

\!'
0'

-

1182 Ooldwlng lntorstlto, 17.000
mllet, Ukt new, new tl,.., &amp; lott
of ctworne.J A acca..m., 114-~424, o1+211-1180.

a

Motors
·for Sale

Boats &amp;

e

1172 17 ft. Slon:roft Tri~ulf
- · 121 HP, EvlnnHII Engine,
oompttto top. now upholotory.

Cal tl4-28~1311after 7:00p.m. .

iBuck1!21111
Uncle Buck Uncle
.and an old name

Alumn 12 ft V boat, 3M-882·33'111o

.......

nowWINTERIZINCipo~o••

~IIOt'ila.

reunite . C
llD .. MOVIE: Muqueradtl

w. rnttall

SHRIN~WRAP.
RIVERSIDE
MARINE Galllpotlo, OH. 614-oiA2424, 1-«)0.72!1-GZN.

76

(R) (2:00)

-

I!! Murder, She Wro1o 1;1
1211 Funny Bualno11 Witll
Charila ChaN V Charlie·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Chase plays tricks on
count,;- stars.
112 ESPN'a Zenith NFL
Monday Night Match-Up
QI!PrimeNew•
Clll MOVIE: Wild Timft IPt 1
of 2) (2:00)
I :Dfi Ill MOVIE: Tho l.encl That
Time Forgot IPGJ (2:00) ' 8:30 W 11 iUl Ferrll Buellar
• Farris is left In oharg0 of tho
campus canine with drastic
results.
llll 1!21aJ Major Dad The
Major and Polly plan a qule1
first anniversary dinner party.

1177 c.-o po~o. :tou75-11~7;

VInton Auto Salvago. Forllgn &amp;·
Dom Po~o buylnjf junk coro.
114-:1118-1082.

..

,.
Campers&amp;
Motor Homes
11 n. camper,• $700. 814--141- ,

79

7322.

·-

11171 Dodge Sprlntor, · 21ft.,
34,000 1011111 mllll $5,000. 814- •

'

a

01-i, REALLY I?
HO..U 00 lHE:Y
PRC:RliE 10 CO

'

_ ..,55.

.

g
NFL Monday
Magazine

1HM'1

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFI!'IQ
U.-ndRional llfollme guorontM. Locll reloroncoo tum-r·
F- llllmat-. COli collact 1·
11+237.o488, dor or night.
Rogoro BuOmont Wotorprooflng.
::
Fl,., Smoke, and Sootl Don't Ill ,;
wlntor bum rou up. Ool thot ''
ohlmnoy chocked during our ~

"l:r.·

~

chllllnty

t.

iBossPrime
Time WreaMing Big
Man vs Haku (L)

MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP
I ASKED .MRS. M IL.L.C.PDee
11=-eHE THQ 161 IT I'D l!&gt;e
~,SOMEOQ.Y.. ,

IB Naahvllle Now

IB Workl Sertoa,Spec ill

AND6Hee.AJD
NO ..•

ohockod &amp;
Spoclol Indo ,.
Ool- 31, . tnlortor &amp; Ex- •'
t - Com-. 4 Mill CrMk, ,.
Ooftlpolll, Ohio 411U1, 8,..._ ..
2113.
..
Compttto Moblll Homo 1t1 upo •'•
aeltctrlcal, rooting,
1110 plumblna a. -~
.... odlllng,
patloo &amp; d..ko ole. REMODE~­
INOI Aefwlnoll. Eatlmltll.

""*'·

a

.

.

applllnee ropalro. WV

304-fll-2311 Ohio 814-441-2414.

-:::

I:r

THAR'S A LOT

OF THAT

GOIN'
AROUND

Ouantntlld wRh roltror&gt;, :
- - con, blot lh- prtcoo, '
LW'Inl•. 11t-t46-7202 or 304-· '
!'

~~~------------~·
"
AOiary CH' cabl1 tool drill~. ";
MoM wll• c~pllled Rmt day. !!

Charnptonahlp• From San
Diogo, Calif. (RI
aE•aningNewa
Clll 700 Club Willi Pal
Roltartaon
10:06(1) Abortion Danled
Shattering Young Women's
Uves
10:30 1B Crook a Chaoe
10:35 (1) MOVIE: Smoltty and tho
Banclh (PG) (2:00)
11:00WB llll a~• @ Nawa
(j) Nlgllt Court Q
(l) Newowaloh
llD. Arlanla Hall

Pump ..... and eervlce, 304- ·~
8Mll02
:1

S.pllc Tonk Pu~ng fiiO ..Gollll '•
,_
Co, RON EVANS ENTEAPNIS£8, '•
JoocflMn, OH t-aGN37-e52ll.
•''
Davit CrMal
-VIc
-·
·
OIDIJI!
Ad. P.ne.
lup-

I!! Mlltml Vlca

all Funny

~lineN Willi
Charila ChaN V Charlie
Chase playa tricks on
country stars .

••

plfoa; plakup. ond dlllvory. 114-

112 Scuba (0:30)

441.02G4.

82

Plumbing
Heitlng

&amp;

ca~•'oPMnblng

and Hilling
Four1h ond Pine
Oalilpollo, Ohk&gt;
111 ue :1111 .

84

Electrical 1r
Refrigeration

L~Yet

Genoratlon

Roofing, ,.lntlng, carpentert'. •;
plurnll,. lnd accoiaeorilo.

I71-711114.

Ktng

112 World Aoroblca

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, opeclollztnG:" ·
In Zonhh alta ...lolng """' ; •
Ott. ...nda. Houle cane, al.o

-

~.errv

t:3G 1111 1!21e Dollignlng Woman
Julia finds herseH stuck on a
sequestered lury. Stereo. Q
10:00® Nawa
llll 1!21111 Trialo of R...,.
O'Neill Rosie"s defense of a
young man gives him the
wrong ImpressiOn . Stereo. Q
liD B Star Trak: Tho Nut

j •

114-211-1111.

Night

9:00 W II II)) MOVIE: 'Daniello
StHI'a KalaldoiiCopo' IIIC
Monday Night at lila Movloo
(2:00)
Cll CIJ f1 AaC Monday Night
FoolbaHC
llll .1!21111 Murphr Brown A
labor dispyto causes a
change in lhe on-air talent.

Services

epeclaU $U.OO

ICIAM 1.111 ANIWIIS

a

Monayllne
Clll Maniac Mention
11:30 W.B lfJ Tonight Show
Slereo.
(!) To 11a Announced
CZl Europe1r1 JourMI
llll Night Court !;!
1D B 'Wiuguy' CBS l.ela
Night

veals which signs are romantically per- you'rolndeclslve II could be caused by
teet tor you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o • anllclpetlng the worst ease scenario.
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cia,.. Don't let nogallvo prolecllons lesaen
land, OH 44101-3428 .
your possibilities tor success. Think like
SCORPIO (Ocl24 Nov. 22) Incorrect or a -winner.
Invalid lntormollon might be making the TAUIIIIII (April 20-M., 201 There Is a
rounds today, so take what you hear big difference today - n construe·
BERNICE
with a grain of salt. Verify whal you've tlve suggeallons and purely crltica!
112 llparlac:-r
BEDEOSOL been told before passing II on to others. comments. If you cannot dlltlnguloh be11par1a Tonlant
SAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) There '-"the twO, you could create HI feel·
Clll MOVIE: Witcl Tlmft (Pt 1
Is a poSiibl!lty you mighl become In- lngs with co-workers.
of 2) (2:30)
votved In something at thlo limo which QEIIINI (..., 21--.lune 20) H could be
12:00 (J) (I)
Naw1
you will work very hard 10 attain, only to · extremely dtltleul1 lor ~ to keep Bellll Mlgnum, P.l.
later discover what you gained wasn"t crlts loday, IJIPOCfally those ol a btJII·
liD • My Tllk Show
worth the price you paid.
ness nature. Thoro'e a poSiiblllty you
I!! Tho Equelller
CAPRICORN ~~- 22--Jan. 111 Usual1y might talk abOUt thin~ you shouldn't 1o
. all Nnhvlh Now
you're a ntlher mothodlc:al and reason- ' the wrong party.
c= NI'L'a o.....at Momenta
ably well-organized person, and lheaa , CANCER (.lune 21--Julr 22) Rlhuhlng
!lett Ever Colohes
are lhe asoels thai help you auCCM&lt;I. old, unreeolvecl llmlly 1 - could got
Now8NIQIIt
Oc1.1i, 111G.
Today, however, theM splendid virtues . everyohe ~plight loday ond -mike
12:30
(J)
8
aJ l.ett Night Willi
might not be operative.
'
thlngo a bit ~nplouant In your
David
l.etlannln
Favorable conditions wtll .be developing AOUARIUI (.Jan. l!IH'eb. 11) Jusl be-- hold. Try to plllf.lhe role ot a ,._,ak·
(I) MOYIE: Rhrthm Hila ~
In the year ahead that could make It ca- you've had • bed experience with ar lnlload ot 1 contributor.
poSiible lo!' you to aucceod In lhreo or- 10n1eone prewloualy Ia no reason lo LIO (olulr D-Aug. 22) lnltNd of
~ -where you ~illy flliled. Timing .. think things WIII(IO W.ong again today. llbout your prodUC11vo :::~:~=~~
and luck wHI 1111 big contrlbtJUng factors . However, K you anticipate edvertl!y, act upon them and let 1hlit
GBI'wiiM.....
LI8IIA (lepl. 21o0c1- 21) Guard ogal,.t your lh0Ugh11 could bring It .Into being. apelk lor ltlllll. _,"':....,...-..wed:
12::11(J)
N..DIIII ~
tendenclol todllY lobe nypercrlllc:al of PI8CI8 (I'._ 20-Mt all 10) Thl811 not lllct&lt; b y - you'll be m
141DI'I'I
·people you love. Straighten up your own a good d" 10 try to mile b u - Wllh • VIIGO CAul. 13 Stpl 22)
Ill ,....... Q
IC1 nrat beiOr1l you lt..t tilling othera piNIUre. Commercial affelnt ohould be out of your liald of axpertiM
nqw to run their.,__ Know where to conducted In proper aurroundlngo, not tlkogarnbleoonthlngubOUtwtlldl,liOU I 1:00 (I) lntD 1110 Night Stereo.
lOOk lor romance 1r1d you'll flncl it. The on a
course or tennla court.
know IHtle, there it a good chance
ill MOVII!: TIIO Ruling Clttaa
(PG) (2:30)
'
Allro-Graplt Matohmlker lna1antly ,... ARII _(Mitch 11·Aprll 11) Todly II · II"' your fingers bt.lmad,

a

a

a

il:z2..

..
,

r:

a

••I

OC•I'L

Chubby- Exist- Motor- Status- SHORTCUTS

a

Vane. &amp; 4 Wl)'a

We oro

8

(J) (J) 8 AIIC

ml~ Doya:

7.:;

•

. 11. Abbotllftd Cott.lla

e.

73

uau

1:00(2)11 (J) ())8 !Ill
lfJ Nawa'
® cnartosln ~ Q
(ZJ3-2-1 Contact
.L
(!) Squa"' Ona
Q
II]). ALF
IIJ Ca- I!XpraiJ
1D Moto-'11
Ill Workl Today
llllllabnen
I:Dfi.(IJ llavarfJ HlllbiMIH
8:3G CDB 1111 NIC Nlgflll}' Nawa

11W17-771fo.

:a.

-

=·

EVENING

72 Trucks lor Sale
1117 Cho¥Y Truok, I OJI., $450•.

f4,000. 8
4 . ."'~·~aio~pd;, ·
~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;~.,~~~;~~ ~18~88~R~·~~r;~
11811 Dodgaf.:~~~c~nd~
Dokot.o 13,000

,---.,.----=

8

H

Goodl

.......... 11.

·

':1.

t•. -··

----

The Daily Sentinei- Paga 9

Television
Viewing

~ redi

- - · - · 21-. lnoy. .....

Fum._
- · 3 1--,...,=;,.:,;,:,~,.,,...raomo, both, Srnlll
ctMn, nice
lor OM.
LAYNE'II'URNITURE
No ·poll, rot, Dlpool~ 814--146- Solu ond oholrw , . - from
•
l
2543..
T - f50 ond up
Oonmment HomN for ., (U- to $'121. Hldt a bide $380 to
f'tPIIr). 011~ tu lf'DI*IY. $181. At aiMrw t221 to P78i.
"-oolono. 24 hiou.O. j . Lampo. Ul to 1121. Dlnoll•
~~
- · -~·~ R5214
Sill ond up to $411. Wood tobll
803'··~·· ~·
w.e Cll&gt;lro f281 to fNI. Dllko
H.- lor nont.: f271. marOh, t14l up to U11. Hutchoe tt00 &amp;
.I
$200. dopoolt , c,.:on bo -n .44 up, bunk oomplolo with
I
Burdolto ~"' 1-t14-775-1'138.
mott,_ $215 and up to 1315.
baby- $110 M o • - or
I
In oilY, 3br, unlumfohocl, CA, box oprlngo fUll or twin 171, nnn
/
toneocl yonl, aood nolghbar- .... ond 111. a.-&gt; -12'11 a
hood,
ottocllod
up, King 1310. 4 droww c w~kohap $375/mo. lilt I 111. Gun Coblnoto 8, 8, I 10
Dip. Roqulrod. 814-37S-2773.
gun. Bolly - - 131 a
1 ~...-., , ('! 1
I
• bod
•--!141. Bod fro- Ul, 0....
J•·6
Pomoroy. •
room ~._ 'SIM13.11 ld~1nm1 !110. Goad
Q'v
dP'\':~ t.n.·
$225 monthly. Dlpooll roqulrld. •1011on of oodo _ , ·aultll,
I.
&amp;14-tn-1551.
· -•1 cablnltl, hold...,.rdll f30
and up to $85.10 d•JII . ,... p
42 MObile Homes
rKrl BulovUia Rd. ODin I A.M. to
for Rent
crwdiL
mi.
5h
P.ll.wRh•Pfi'O•od
lion, tl1ru Sol.
Colia.....
"
14x52 unfumlahtd Moblltl home,
US.
no pota 322 Thlnl AVMMII, 114- 441.0322.
br """o,_ptuo box oprlngo · 54 Mlsi:ellanaous
61 Fann Equipment
r---------~r:=========j 448-311to1 or 11+2511-1110~ bltaro I4pc.mott_.,
Exc. eoncl, utdng
:::IIP:::-m::.7.-:-::--;:
.
priOI $700. 614-448-1155.
Merchandise
2 Bohton 2,200 bu com oribl
31 Homes tor Sa.le
14x70 Mobile Home, aha,. rwnt
llko Patillo 7S. $100. ooch, wtl liar - n tar
2
. old . ~-- - •
d I rMponolbll~y~ wit
. h high"' Boaui!M counlry bluo ftonl Far RlaDon•lbllt
rtstau11nt
etory
.,. .--....,a- oan ' lunelton~ MJk maJt, F~ couch. H•• !Ufflod okh1 and 5 MCh OBO oontroct rock 304- 1200- utra. 304-213~$41.
workoro. Apply In _ . ,,. aftor- .-oJbl• lond oontroct wllh
ruH!od plliowo. Ouollty modo, &amp;71-1lll0 oxt. 2t7.
l.-or: Alita thot.,_ c with
noono. Contact Tommy Hupp ot 11-. poymont, 304-47HII30.
-~~cat 1,..._2115.
aood. condition. $300. 1141H2·
Cl
__,
Ill
~~~~~ - • liH 44 2 CUhlvoton.
oon, NM or-·
Mom'•
Smorgaabord 3 . _ . _ hauae, land con-- 2br unfumllhed air cond, cable 75&amp;3.
,.
- -··
. $700.114-211-1111.
Rovo.-d, Woot Vlrglnl.o.
troct, ~04-875-5104.
ovolloble, blout!tut rlvor vlow In County Appllanco, Inc. Good . womon
ooot•
oill t-10. 12 polr
.
·
·
Kona~,
f.'r'or'o
Mobfto
lforno
liMd opplloncoo, T.v. oeto. 0oon. dropoo1 now · 41 .wldl M
63
Livestock
Stoking • poroono to troln 3br, brick llomo, 1 112 botho, Pork,
-110l!.
a a.m. to e p.m. Mon....Sal. &amp;14- Box wtnt• you~ mene cl
tmploytH
In
County total ellc:. full IMHment, 1 acra,
Blook AngUI RoglltiNd Hord
Otpanmenle of Human S.rvlcN ahadld kit. 7 milia lotftr Rt.7. 2br, 4 miiM from Galllpot ... 441-1111!1• 127 3nl. Aw. Gol- lng. 304-t71-41141.
II polio, un
lkln. l'cMir ,...ro old. 8on of
and Child Support Enforcement 114-245-1141, 114 441 4031.
1235/mo. No 11:1'•· 11t 448 8038.
0 ,_, olm wolarbod wllh .mlr- Slltl
Run Rovolullon with
Agoneloo. fllioHiono opening
rorocl bookcaA hold-rd and
·
"'lOO 114-Vll2 l'llt
lmmec:Uatlly In AJhene and oar- 7 room 1-112 beth, 1.3 acr., ad· 3 bedroom mobile hom• on Do you llko to oovo .,_.,
Chock uo .,.. lor quollty tuml- oldl podo, 304.e7H331 call ol- ~· •• ·
•
"
l!o C:O..ntilll. p.._. wHh 1rotn- dltono133 ocroo hunting ond Klngobury Rd. 114IH2•5038.
turo ond carpolo. llotlohon Fu~ l~r 4 p.m.
lkll- hoa tor 1111. Wotghl
ox--ond
ox-~- In tlmblr. 114-Vll2·7'118 ar 1·3841110 tbl. 81W4~.
,... ·~
zm:
3 BR In - r y. VInton Aroo. nhuro &amp; Corpolo, Rt. 7 North.
Rooondftlonod WUhoro, DrytN. 1=:..::::..::::::=:::::::.....----,,. IYint Human · Servfcee and
Stove, ~. • ' •· ~r;uh !!_ald. Phano 814-448-1'144, Qoll!pol!o, Quarontood
prompl ....leO for a ... Colt ChiVAnguo 81mCSEA program• ehould apply to 7 rooma f 112 bathe, country Yarv nice. 1210/mo ly. uep.
Ohio. .
oil ""koo, modolo. Tho WUhor rMnll~ flllro black, 11+2511tho Humon Sorvlc• DOveiOp- living but claoo to 1111111 School roqrod.. 814-388--ment ln81hutt, CJO PerMnnet and town. Rl. 3S4 lint,
000D USED APPLIANCES DIY• Shoppl.l14 41&amp;:1144.
I,1140~2.~----------Oftleo, Hocking Colllfll, Not- Townlhill Rood 27. Flrot rood to 3br mobtlo - . , country At· W•ah. . , drY•r•, rerrfgtl'lton,
and
frNZIII', $7!1. 8hcnl Oul.llty Quart• HorHI
oonvlllo, 0H U784; 114-753- ri hi C1 lll14 ~2 71 18 1 ... t!~ Bethlf Chun:h Rd. ca11 II· nongoo. Skoggo Apl&gt;iloncoo, s
114 oftorl:30p.m.
For Soil. 814-21111122.
••111. ~•ttno lo opply Ill Oc· .ngm..
·•• •
ar ~
M - • • 4 446 "6111
0
Upper River Ad. BMidt Stona
i*r 1i:'1e110..AN EQUAL OP· 201'1!
lor p.m. o~ot. • 1
•
Crwot Mottl. catl&amp;t4-4411-73118.
Warm Momlng Wood Bumlng Wonl to .board lor lho
PORTUIIITY EMPLOYER.
. GOVERNMENT HOliES from $1 44
Apartment
_Kenmo,. Portebll . Dl8wuher. Ston, 1200.114-388-8804.
wlnler. $121 a month. Fed and
(U rooolrl. Dlllnquonl In
Butch block lap. $15. 114-882· WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS oxoralooil dally. 814-1'124320.
Ttmpory part Unw mornlnge,
Atr c
Your
for Rent
pwNr eorneon• whh ltcretrlal lrM (1 t I05-M7-eGOO Ext. GH'
Ron Allll"!!..1210 Second Avo, 84
1909,.
·
1x...-_ Colt Sondro 304- 4M2 lor curronl . _ 1111.
1 IR fum. till. In .VInton. Dip.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Golllpollo, ut1 814 448 4331.
I.:__:__;H:.;,::ay!..,;&amp;:;,.G.:::.;ra;:;l;;_;n;,..._,_
662~23 olor12:00 noon.
roq'od. &amp;14-4411-11845.
Now!Uood
Zorox coolor tilaoo. Fu Ill- lily tar Soli. C1ovw ' Tlmol~
Tt. llolgo Coun!J Chomber of Big Dokalo finn HaM: BuiH an
1!"', ~ove &amp; refrigerator fur·
H.-hold klmllhlng. 112 mi. chlno$1aob. h - 1 moo. old. I ,R~oilnd~~~~-~~~
___"'_t_ho-:-Fiold-c--::.,.-1-,Com"*"' praloollonol ;;:;-:
. . tot. m,HI I up. 114-IN- naanea, near hotpllll, S235, .torrlcho
Rd. Pt. PINNnt, WV, COli oftor 7 p.m.lt4 448 2lltl. I~5-t501
to ttrw u ExecUIIve and
VICini Oct. 151h. 8M 448 2857.
ooll 304-615-t450.
Hay: Round hill, 810.00 Eoch.
Dlvalopmlnt Director. Salary For • l l or rwrt. 3 bedroom
mid 1o high 120"o ptuo lncen- - . 405 Boring Avo., 2br Apl. Lolayotto Moll $3110 Ia Rofrlgorolor, 2dr, Whfto, $85; 55
Building
e14-387-TIIO.
tlv•. Send lett• of lnt.,..lt and ~,. 11414U.731D dayil, $425 por monlh. lncludoo Ill Rofrlgorator,
Copj&gt;lnono,
Supplies
rnume to: Ltnny Ellleon, a•••
321
fn~'~l WUI fin- ulll"ln, Dopod roqulrOd. 114Frootlrol, $125; Rofrigorolor
CIIolrmon Motao Co. Chomblr ~·
""' • ·
--.77'.13, 114--148-4222.
Transportation
aldoxoldo, Whit•,•. Uko . ,._, Block, brlcJo4- afpoo, wlnof COmmei'CI ~ E. Main StrHI ~·-=·_.;
$250I
·
Kenmorw ft'uher, $91!1; ctow. lntelli, eta. d.udl WinPom•roy, OH 45781. Application Houu anl:t 10 !&amp;Cra1 Broed Run APirtment.!'L 2 btdr~, nice, Whir pool Waohor, Uko Now, foro, RiO Grondl, OH can 81+
·
dlldUno Octoblr 31; 1890.
Rd, Now Hovan, WV (M.- 304-t75-81uo.
$185; Goo Rona•~ 30 Inch, Hor· 24Ut2t
71 Autos for·Sale
Wtnttd lndlvldutl tlperllanced County). Aural w.ter, cable Apl. Mlddllpo~. Ohio, 117 N. viii Gold, $85· 011 Ronfll, ~
In m•rk.tlng akllle, Nlary, apply tlllvlalon, black top road. 10 Fourth. 2 - - lumlohod, Inch, WhRo, S9S: Eloctrlc Rongo, 56 PetS fOr 5ale
11ltl
·por~~lac
~-~­
g.12 noon Monday thru Frldlly mfnutea from town &amp; turrou,.. rollronce ond dopaofl. 304-182- 30 Inch, Whitt, $150; Electric - ;;_;_;;..:,;.~;...;:;~~:-;::~ outo. .flc, wlo~t!o,:ODOO; 1184
Range, 40 lnc~L~!•coto, SOli Groom and SuppiJ Staop.Pec Dlvtono Turbo :~J air oond,
608 22nd -'ratt, P~nt Pteaunt, lng power plantl. $25.000. 304- 2!68.
WV. 25550
882-2428, 304-8G5-3553 .or 304Wllllf19hO- ..,.,.r, US; Kon· Groomlnll- All br-. AI otvtoo. t2,b00; 1111 ..,., Rangor,
,
.
175-t815.
BEALmFUL APARTMENTS AT mo,. Dryer, Ntw Modtl, t125· liN Pal Food O.llr. Julie $3,000. For oalo or trldl, 11+
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON All In Elicollont Condhton And Wobb. Coil eM o441-o23t.
Won4od: Borl&gt;or. In ColumbUI
REPOSSES.SED HOUSES
2111--1210.
ESTATE~. M8 . Jockoon Plko
ar~. Oood working conclttlona.
Gourontudl
Skoago
Ap61~8887.
·
Poroct lor Hondym~n
tram $1.-.umo. Walk to ahop 1:
pll•nc••..~...571 Upper Rrv. Roed, AKC
ml,.turo
Duhlund 1m Chlvrallll Non, 350 aulo,
t Bul•vllle Pike (OM •ere) MIL movloo. COli 8f4:141-2511. EOII.
114-448-T.JBI.
c;ockor Spanloll, ahOhl oiirl bodr rouah, runo ....~ 14G0,
2. H011dty Rkige. (one ac,.,
wormed, :toul'S-21113 or 30415
Schools &amp;
M/1.1500 Down with Appro.-.1 Fum. oHicloncY. All ulll"loo
RENT TO OWN
5ae.:JOII.
~·Crodlt Ft..t Poymont. Jonuory. paid. Sharo both. $135/mo. tte
8t~58
Instruction
11177
Conlllto 23,000 mltn,
5th. COntact: John BolloyJIII 8ocond Avo. 814--146-31145.
AKC
rogioloNd
lllnot~n
8 pc. group $14.01 por
$12.~t!-:l
EoaOit ar, sa.~;
Booldi:Hplng/accoc.mtlng,
wMk.
4
poster
bedroom
eultt,
WALTER HOMES
fii!PPIM, $100. - · 1lltlt
Etllc:loney, $175, campl.tt $11!1.20 per WHk, Sclmouur
LX, P,~k ~­
Hot.Umotel
manag..nenl, 1~48-8910 or HtOO 448 Fumllll«f
304.e75~233 or 571-2483.
~1100;
114-4
101,
UtiiHioo Pold, GolllpOIIo, 114- dlnltto with .4 cholro $7.50 por
alrllnll travel, nYriH akle, lrac- 6909.
_
8
,
7
p.m.
wMk. . Mogle Chof 14 cu. ft.
tor trailer training,
real·
. RotrlgOrator $12.118 por Mile, 15
1m Ford~ blue,
dontnlomo otudr. Flnonctal •Ill 32 Mobile Homes
cu. " · .._... $1G.90 fill
bluolnlorlor'-$4GO· o r - onor.
available If qualified. Placement
for Sale
.w..k.VI'Rt Furnhure. Rt. 141, 4
.• ••Iatino&amp;
Schooll lo- .,.,,_.,=,_;.....;;_____:-,11177 Olda .... -~r
mil• on Rt. 7-Ctnten•ry.Open 7
IIJIII roily -11.
I
cal omce, 230
m~":: 1$40 DOWN on enr new alngt.
dlyo IWMk.
:;,~··~~~~og'
ram• ·cor:.pl~i wldt, ~lUI tax and tide lo Groclaua lYing. t ond 2 bod·
1m Tr.n..tm. Chnorna -11,
·
1111-:.. ..,..,
•- ...... _ .._
now oxhl....,ronornlufoft,.IUII
SWAIN
room 1partment1 11 VIllage
:,9:::"'"::n::;till:;::.·- - - - - - qua
_7.,.•
IN..,..,'
rwplaood ongllll(350). llotiulft
AUCTION
.
&amp;
FURNITURE.
82
on TV ~
• Call
EIHI-Homt
Center Manor
•nd
Alwrtldt Olivo St., Qolllpollo. Now a Uud
1.&amp;00.S811-S710.
Apa~rrilnla In Middleport. From
18 Wanted to Do
Dn.gonwrnct
Coltory · 11+-1.
400 - - - ttOO.
tumhure, hlratll'l, Wntem • Sl._
andllmatayon
kltt..,._
12x50 trailer, 12x50 ldd-on, 3 $1118. c:.tl814-111:1-7787. EOH.
Work booto. 814-448-3111.
Bobyomtng In my home. outbulldlngt,
814
441
384
4
•ft.
7
p.m.
11111 Chnrolol Mollbu ~IC.
carport, ~,..r
614,?12-2220.
Modem 2br """""'""'· 114-448Ro1d, acre, $24,500. 304-175- 0380.
· Antlquea
Fllh Tonk, 2413 Jackoon Avo. 301, v..a, 114-317·71'10.
53
BMutltv yoUr car &amp; protect II 1168 oftor 4:00PM.
Point P-nl, 304-e75-2CIU, 10 1180 CheVy lmpiiL 4 door
tram wfnter uh &amp; grlm11. Expert 1172 Community tr~~lllr, 121:50, 2 Nloo!y lurnlohod mabllo homo, t
Buy or 1111. Riverine AntlqUII, gil 111 up $14.11 ond 10 gol Sidon. Eldro nk:o and ctoon.
mile below town onrlaaklng 112"4 E. Main Strut, PD~Mror. cornptoto f43.25.
auto CIMnlng lnsldt 6 OU'I.
Now llroo.· 305 VI tt,:IOO. 11+
atMroldo Aulo Dllol!lng. 814- bedroom, windOw AIC, gu heat, river, ~'-hoot, bOpaoM, Rot. Ho&lt;lro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 8;00
tn-67'11.
stove I ro~lgorotor, 811 114 •41 v.AI.
446.e890.
t :00 to 1:00 p.m. Ono
yollow
·
....._,
dick Wlral! kM, 10X12 ohocl. UnporrOL
Ono
;
.
.
3
monlhl
old 1181 lulclc Rogal. llmhod. 2
Kountry Kkll Child carw. Tho dtrpennlng anclewnlng . .laking Nlaoly Fumlohld Mollllo HoMO
f7110 whh cage. 814-112-t320.
door cou~ Full pJWII', ell:,.
tun pe.c. to May, where $7,000. bul nogallablo.lot up an In cHy. CA. Suitable for 1 per- Top CUh po!d. Old klmllwo
nlcl, oil lho oqlitpmonl, VI.
friondohlpo blain.· G- loca- rented lot, KliK Potnt Pleaianl, ton. Rot. llllp Roqulrld 814- cubotirde,
qulttl,
oriental, Poodtoo: 10J1, t-upo, AKC. tt,eOO. I14-IIIU7'11.
lot 17, 30M75-3301 o r - by. 448.0338
tion. 114-H2-7532. .
pt~lntlnge, toya, or entire 11ttt1 Tiny m-. boautltul - ·
Aloo od.-t ctoao. Lorgo CI(IH.
call eoii1C1304-525-327S.
LPN 'wOUklllk• to eire tor tick 1913 F•lrmont, 12110, 2 ~ Ono - . . . . . opto. for ron!.
Coolvlllo114/8C'J.1404.
Of .tderty In tM!r home. Have room.J. MW 22,000 btu wtndow l221 month. Dlpao~ roqulrld.
54 Mlac:ellaneous
114-111:1•2218 oftlr 8 p.m.
Rogiltorod Gorman Sho9honf
txperilnCI In both nuralno AIC, t:4000, 304-713-5111.
Pupo 2 black 11111ot, 1 blaclc l
homo ond haopltol. 81419115' 1862 TownhOUN, 14x711, double Pwu•ray. Effictency, 1115 plus
Merchandise
tan ioii.ato. 814·241 5833, 81+ 11182 Jllp Urodo c.n: Black,
4202.
txpandq, CA, 0" prfvlt• 1W11MI $110 dip. Pamlroyl2 bedroom,
,
. _ -114-112-2831.
· '--. mltoo.
11177 . Fl- Morino BoN Boot, 441 tl03
lj.onllop.
lloglc: YNro Illy Cora cantor !olin Rodnoy. 114-441-1Mt aftlr St70 pluo utll"loo. "-&gt;lnol ono loldld, 15 Inch aluminum
l:llllroom
$'110
plua
utllhl
...
1145p.m.
,.uontbfl,
dtpMdablt,
1113 Chevette, auto, air, AMIFII
whMII, w/cent• Clpll I lug S1
Musical
IICanu, quellty child CIN. Yon· 2 bldroam llbool! lrollor, 304- tn-33211.
null, off 1110 Jeep, $131. 1-..:.
CHIIIfl. Low mltoogo, 4dr. 114Instruments
diJ thru Frldoy, 7:30 1111 5:~0. 175-2211 .. 304-llll3841.
448-15114.
Tloln Rtv.no Tanro Houolng for 441·1114.
For mort InfOrmation or to
tho lildlrty ond ~laopped.
1883 LTD Crown Vlctarllri,
NQittlr ~75-5847.
SPECIAL Foctory lo you11111, 2 Apertmenll now IYIIIIblt-rertt• 4 good candy mechlnee.
ar ~ bldroom14x711 modotl at Ina tor 311% ol odluotod lncorno. 3041773-11118t.
· 1m Ford Ft-. Mull
Ml11 Paula'• Day ea,. Ctnt•r.
Frultslr
- bclh to
114-843tho unblllovable of 2011 Second St. or coU 30U75- 7!500 Wlndultriol Ganerotor, tin- ~
Safe, affordable, chlldcere. M.J' $12,100
5350 IVInlngt.
dlflver.d ancl Ml up. 1171L
6 o.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2 ·10. Coll1-800-,._ lor -111.
vagatables
tohocl nol!or, omaH ~r:'m :hp,
721,
'
StfDrl, •her echool. Orop-ln1
~~~ Floro, loodod, $2,IJOO. 304Upotalro unfllmllhod Apan- yardman rolotllltr, I
welcome. 814-448.S224.
Du11rovln Fndt Parm )Yit off Sr 875-5331.
Schultz 121dl0, 2br, $3,500. 81+ ment, carpeled, no p.ta, utllhl• M-F thtt lp.m. or weekdaye.
181 1111 of Albany. W. _..,.
448.e181,1~41 IIIII
paid. 814-44&amp;-107.
. '
Aluminum framed Morm wln- food otompo. YlriOIY of oppleo, 1184 Tompo, $1115. 1181 T. .po,
Want· to do all kinde of
mech•nlc work also waah and
U
1 F nillhld 3
dow.. Slzet: 4~~· 14a41(2l, frMh elder, lncfltn corn, $24118. 1188 Tompo, $3115: 1Ha
33 Fanns for Sale
waxing cars. 304-175-3086.
~· :o.n:-olr, woihld~ 53128 tl2(4).
• olrangth pumpklno, ond aotclo. 11-7 dolly, ~. $2485.81411112-7'184.
olaood llonday.l14-tiiM2M.
LET'S
TALK
FARIISI
·W.tortoo
•
~·
roto-o
I"
.;GI=-=
1200=:;·..:81;..:41H2:;,=::;.a720=;:·-,-,Will do odd lobo. Mowing, cut1tu Bronco II, 4x4, uc . ..-d,
~=•
1
·--.
I
111o.
Concroto I pluilo Mp!lc tanko, Sor(fUm M - It tho Junc- tow miiM, garogo kopl, 11+2411ling
bruah
or
firewood, Lowronca eo. •no,ooo. 18 acrH:
23
aorn,
2
toblcco.
Ron EvaM Enterprilu., Jack· tion Stolt Routt 121 and 124, 11047.
driveway repelr. Other. 6'MI867·
eon, OH 1-800-137-1528.
1223.
Furnished
Spring
a
crlll1.
2
·
2
45
Wilt of~. Ot11o.
bun•, 2 tractorw, 1 ..,.. lllltal
tiN Chryslor Lo-, 2.2 Turbo,
flo!!', D-4, Cit. Good cond,
Would llko to do blbyiiH!ng In building. ohlcun hoUM, and
Rooms
loldod,_R.IIOO.
oao.i,
Mor........ l14-448.ao:tl.
my
horM, w-:::r.,only.
Kavt milll CUIY Mtltro, 4
, nlctl
I mltoo 11om
Aaflrence., I
DO.
IVIIIoblo tor 2 or 3 c.,.,._
ochool. Coil Ubby Potndlxt•ot Fa1m Suppl1es
$1,200. It 21 Clnln
-.ro, 304-882- Flrowood tor 11111. CUt olobl.
Prudon41ol llunOh Compoz'll otruatton
- . Ollllpollo.
25111.
814-2511-1111
or
11+25H411e.
.
&amp;
livestock
~Nit~~ HuntlnalorL i04-8
Fmanctal
1111 Dod~ _Chora-. Exc.
'7711, ;tM-521 1'440.
oplll
dollvorld
-torrtrll--ormonth. Fl-ood,
ooncl., AMIFIIICut., 2.2 lhtr, &amp;
Stortll7 It $120/mo. Golllo Holll. ..ackld. S40 load, 114-367-0131,
~ mpg, PS, AC. 51+
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
114 Ul 1433.
111 • •so.
21
Business
8 1 - roorno wMh _,ng,
Opportunity
1117 ~Art., 2dr, llr eond,
Aloo· troll• - - Allllook-upo.
.autonwtlc, trane.. cruiM oonColi
oftor.
2:00
p.m.,
304·773INOTICEI
Approx. 1 acre. called tote. 1111, ...... wv.
trol~ota.-.1
wt-.
tift - ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. City
34,'!"" ..........
roof, *!,000,;
. . . . ___.. ftnardna. Jw\.
NCORWIIIInda tlllll you do ~· rtoo R;;d, Polnl ......_.1; WY
11• llazdo 11-2200 ,,_
wtth prliOpll yDU know and
48 Space for Rent ·
All.t'll . .automatic
. - . . '""""'
NOT to oll\d rnonor 111roug~ lho 3114-37N401or 372-2511.
-...r,
·"-'-·· llr
mall Uftlll you hlvolrwHtlflllod O.J. Whho Rd., 2 -.lod
oonc1 oruiM control PS, ohrorno
tho oltortng.
·
trollor
-lor Addlaan,
~
building tal, rMdJ lo build on, 2Bu&amp;a¥111
T-*\t
,ooo. 8 ~~·~010113.000
l11fLocal Vending Route. Hottlll rootrlctld, St,IOO. 114-24Hit5. oft• 4:30p.m.
....
•
I
I I; 11t Ul 1117'
Mlohl-. CASH Buo~ Route 2 Alhllon, 1 acN tot.. 3 eo..mr, llobllo Homo Porl1.
.....t-I00-7111-4445Elt. 1013.
mllol ooulh Qolllpojla U.Cko, R - 33, North o1 Pomoror.
11U Chew. Cdlbttlft__M,HII;
.... porto, - call
Local Vending Routt. Hottlll pYblto water, no reltrloUone. ~
-11119.
with ri- ~ontogo, 1. . IOOG, M~ 11N
MICIII-. CASH luol- 518-2338.
nno.t-I00-7111-4~Elll. 1013.
Fenl
Te~IUII;
_,. Pont.
lunlllrd,
~ 1NI Pont.
lAmont,
_,
'
1185
Dido
Mllnutaaturwr uUing wet• mi.·
chlnM, local routt tor u~.
Cllola 12
- '1NI ·AtpMt
buiiMII.
Above
IIIJ!"" Chry. [a
.....,., -~-iiMToyo~~i.w.,
--· 2111-312-11480.
4114, a.~ 111t1 Chry. 1-1
...... '.!,';'!!'j 1181 Okla Cillll•
Clwnor
-g
-ng
-·
T-- ,..,•. tiM Pont. lunwtlh 81CUrt
lacatloM,
anack
I
.drink - • bull-. Sortouo
~ · - ifoiii ._., I.W.
fn&lt;lulrlol Qnly!2tl-lV-"2020.
an ..
c~o. Iuick
$411:
,...lrGiij LTD, $411;
1181
VEHDINGI ROUTE: Local .. Groot
....., . . .; liD Wo Ioiii,
-h ' -· ·· High troff~
!l'&lt;!f, ltOJ mtill N. of Hoiur,
-ton.. Eooy -n; Will Troln.
114 4M ...1.114 Ut f1U.

prof*tr"·

Guar~nteed

Clinlro, Z..zt,
~r._~. .~.

a••·

&amp; V(clnlly

Pomeroy- Middleport. qhio

Autos lor Sale ·

1117

r.1 ercnJnd 1se
For Ront rK For Solo: , fir -...
Nmadtled, Pomttow: 13®. 1..;:========;:;;
Dopo11t Roqulrod. 114'411 1222, 5t
HoiJUhold

Illld
..

:r::.·l~.~r':~~r

71

.....z... land - - · · - 4Zfl
d,~Olor

•j

GallipOliS

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlabt

W.ntad: 114 I l l - to- or

1.-

Yard Sale

117 Wanted to Rent

41 HOU181 for Rent
3~
-

7

Monday, October 16. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page- S- The Daily Sentinel .

Philosopher to class :"Remember, if a place is

going there are no SHORTCUTS .~

worth

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

BRIDGE

NORI'JI

North's negative double OQUid have
created a problem, particularly if
South jumped in the heart suit. North
was lucky in two respe!'~: First, South
invited game in spades, and second,
South was Houston experl Eddie Wold,
who, as declarer, made the right as1sdui,.mciplrtid·ons from East's defens.ive
110
.

I'

+QJ76S

•Js

.

+Q5 2
+HI

WEST

+---

.K953

+A K Q 9 7 4

+10 8

+2

+KHHS

I

I

EAST

• 954
• Q7 6 4

;!

When
led three rounds of ·
SOVTif
East threw a low diamond as
~~ 8
ruffed. Decla:rer thea played A- •
+A 10 a 6
threw another dl·
+6 5
Since South's opening bid had . Vulnerable: East·West
been one diamond, these discards
made little sense unless East had ex- ·
Dealer: South
length in tbe suit. So Wold decided Soli~
Wool Nortll
that East had started with four hear~ ,.
2+ Db).• Eul
p ...
and sii diamonds. He played out the 3+
Pus 4+
All pall
rest of bis trumps, throwing two low
•nebative
hearts from his hand.
Upening lead: • K
Meanwhile, East had three more
discards to .make, and wound up blanking his king of hearts. Declarer playejl ~:-7"'-:--:--:-~:--7--::-:--:-.,.----..,J
a low diamond from dummy. Wben tricks to declarer's A-10 of diamonds.
East followed with the seven-spilt,
Lesson: Early discards in a suil
Wold played the eight from his hand. known to be important to declarer can
West showea· out. Dechirer n!&gt;-;{ be a tip-off that a defender has leflltb
cashed the ace of hear~ and played and strength In that suit In toclay's
back a low diamond. East won the deal, if East first throws two hearta,
king and had to give up the last two declarer · misread the situation.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Infamous
molel
owner
6 Spiked
club
· 10 Came up
11 Arkin and

sland
44Do

=~azlne
45PeeWee
or Della

DOWN
1 COmputer
language

Akla

2 Sports

13 Feel
14 Nab
15 Tavern
16 007, for
one
18 Discoverer's cry
19 Chef's
creation
22 Binary
base ·•
23 Bowling

sHe
24 Theand the
Papas
27 Haberdashery
buy
28 Notorious.
czar
29 Scot's
cap
30 Poppy
seedcovered
buns
35 Paintings,
e.g.
36 By way .ol
37Chow
down
38 Mournful
music
40Anc. Gfk.
lawmaker
42 Briny
deep
43 Painter's

setting .
3 Metric
ton
4 Double
curve
5 Playground
attractions
6 "Miracle
on 34th
Street"
setting
71n the
manner ol
8language
of Andorra

Yeaterday's Answer
9 Charm
27Marcher
12 Sun'
29 Numerical
glasses
preliM
17 Player for .31 Happen·
ing
pay
20 Musial
32 Flal
and Getz
paper?
33
Sneaker
.2 1 San
Anionic
leatures
landmark 34 Purloined
39 "Toujours
24G&amp; S
•
character
41 Actress,
25 Greed
-Dawn
26 Aestauranl VIP
Chong

..

-

~

..

...

-

.•

..
10/15

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

--

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostropheS, the length and formation or the words are all
hiilbl. Each day the code letters are diffe"rent.
I

CRYPTOQUOTES
VNGZSFOUGT
VRJSFZF

AJOGSZOO

GO

AJOGSZOO

AZWWZN

WUIS

VRJSFZF

· vNGZSFOUGT. -

NR YQ

RS

ZVZ E E Z N

R S

X . RUS

F.

.

Yeeter••J'• Cr,ptoqaote: WE .CANNO"J'
DESPAIR OF IIUMANITY SINCE WE OURSEI.VF.S
ARE HUMAN BEINGS. - · ALBERT EINSTF.JN

�...•

..

'-8 I

Monday, October 16, 1990

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

10-The Daily s8ntine1

'

Ohio Lottery

World Series
begins tonigh
at Riverfront

Pirk-3: 595
Pirk-4: 8856 .

Cards:
7-H, 4-C, 5-D, 4-S

Page4

Partly cloudy Tuead
Dl«hi, with a low Ia llle m
Ms. Partly cloudy aad
WedDesday, with llilha Ia
mid 1G&amp;•

•

e
Vol.41 , No.115
· _Copyrighted 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, October 16, 1990

1 Section, 10 Pogeo

25 Cents

A MuHimodio Inc. N-~

Pomeroy Council OKs
easement to ODOT
'

';

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

THANK YOU!
FOR 4 YEARS OF PATRONAGE
AND HOPE YOU CONTINUE
· TO SUPPORT US!
VIsit OUr Store Oil Wednesday
AluJ
Cake And Coffee With Us!

Have

,Free
: Trick-Or-Treat
:Bags On MondQy
;While They Last!

·
APPRECIATiON· A plaque was presented by the Meigs County Bikers to the Meigs Coonhunters
in appre~iation for use of their building for various benevolent and social actiyities over the past year. Here
Patsr Pri~e presented the plaque to James Stewart, Coonhunters vice presidenL Looking on are children,
Codt DaviS and Hannah Woolard, and front row, Brenda Davis, left, and Nancy Woolard, with Price and
Stewart, and back row, Jo Frye, Terry Congo or the Coon bunters, and Sherry Swisher.

...

I

COKE

President's popularity drops
WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Bush's popularity h;~s
plummeted In a month, with
nearly 1!0 percent of Afil~l'lcans
saying they feel the country Is
headed In the wrong direction, a
new poll pubHshed Tuesday,
showed.
·
The Washington Post-ABC
News Poll also Indicated Americans are losing patience with the
handling of the Persian Gulf
crisis.

2 LITER

DEUCIOUS

TEENAGE
MUTANT NINJA

"

TURT\.E
CRACKERS

oz.SJ74

~BANAN"'~·

c

.,
'

.' .

. ·-.

LB .

'

~-

~ :~

•

.. ~EDIUM YELLOW

.

C

......... 3 LB. BAG ............44
.'DNIONS
..naa YAMs
......... LB................34C
U.S. No. 1 Russet

POTATOES
15LB.
BAG

8114

1LB.

VUie
fteq

.. n.a.am
w·•~,.,
•
u
FrfMiJ

.

5 -- 1 LB. LOAVES

._..

SPR.EAD QUARTERS.......................12

.

100Z.

.·

100Z.

oz.

.

ITE:KAS BUTTERMILK BISCUITS..... JIIO
12 OZ. NATURAL HARVEST

BUDGETGOURNIET ENTREES...•I.41

ENGLISH
. MUFFINS.~......................480-

.

.

.

.

BANQUET TV DINNERS ••, .......... ~ ••

.

ooz. .
"'TIES....
BANQUET CHICKEN PAt

..,.. [II-

SNACK SIZE 12 OZ.-16 OZ. BAG

CANDYBARSASST. '1.48
loiOANIN' GEMS

CQRNFLAKES
ROBERTS 12 OZ.

/lllbl"

'

•

r:JP-.... ..,Mtlle.,......klllla
-

• t- .

VANILLA WAFERS
&amp;lilAC 13 oz.

SToRE HOURs: Monclay-SituniiY, 8 am-8 pm; SUnday, 111111-8 pm
Mike Mczrn,Jaout, OWner

IIFANI' FOIIIULA

Loo

'1.71

L;j

,..

HOAIIEL

IICIIO MEATS
COUNTRY BIW«ll6 OZ.

BO!.QGNA

Loo

..... r;J
-

C aHBROWN or

.POWDERED SUGAR

EAS10NS 320Z.
.
1DU IUCE, WHOLE, SPEAR . .

r

BLACK PEPPER
CAREY

SALT
UllBY'S290l

PEACHES

. [.:;:] kURlZ 20.5 oz.

-

MUSTARD

.....
.....

100°/o

FROM

OCT. 151HRU
OCT. 21, 1990

MOrfEY..BACK
.
'

GUARAN'l"EE
Rr. 62 NORTH

(304)

'

67~-1155

POINT PLEASANT. WV

\..

'

.

formed council that the "w buggy" on the main well needed to be serpurchased b;v the village would be viced as soon as possible. ;
picked up wtthin the week.
Council member Deity B~
Morri~ also expressed, on behalf informed council of a ~f~
of council, .appreciation 10 'the received from Sco!! Dillon of LinMeigs County Commissioners fot coin Tenace conceriling stales
its
granting of .. Community needing 10 be replaced at the foot
Deveiovment Block Grant monies of Lincoln Hill.
for the tnslllllation o(a telemetenog
. According 10 Baronick, the
system. That grant will amoupt 10 s10nes were removed for the . P'!r·
nearly $15,000.
pose of_repairing sewer lines and
The monies, which will provide were never replaced.
,
a remote control metering system at
Dillon is requesting that the
the Lincoln Hill water reservoir, stones be replaced from their curwere granted 10 lhe village earlier rent location behind the firehouse.
this monlh when CDBG funds were
In other action, Pomeroy VIllage
announced for the county.
ColDICil:
·
Mayor Richard Seyler 'reported
-discussed good comments
to council membm present that a received on the new village stn:et
water pump on lhe village's main signs;
water well had broken last week,
-lleld discussion on purchase in
and that repairs to that machinery the near future of a replacement for
was reported 10 be an estimated· the village's older police cruiser;
$7,000.
.
·
-diseussed the need for painting·
According 10 Seyler, fine sand . of directional arrows a1 the inlli-'
from the pump's filtering system , sectiQil. of West Main Street and
entered into the pump· housing and Butternut Avenue, as introduced by
caused damage 10 the pump's . Council member Bill Young;
.
motor.
-discussed the possibility of
Seyler reported that he would purchasing a welder for the ·village;
a finance commilleC meet·
contact Village Administrator John ing-set
for
Monday
at 7 p.m.
Anderson 10 investigate the
Present
at
the
meeting were
progress on repair of the equip- Seyler, Morris, Baronick,
Young,
meaL
ColDICilmen Bruce Reed · llld
The mayor indicated that lhe vilWerry and President Latry
lage was now being . ~rviced by a Thomas
Wehnmg.
' ·.•
"standby well". ani! ihat the pump

Harris to seroe 18 months on
charge .of obstructi"g justice
Instantly after being struck by a
By BRIAN J . REED
occurred, was sentenced after
· Sentinel News staff
pickup truck In Chester on the · pleading guilty to charges of
A Meigs County man was night of June 2.
aggrav11ted vehicular homicide,
sentenced _Tuesday morning In · He had been attending his high gross abuse of a corpse. and
Meigs . County Common Pleas school class reunion In Chester tampering with evidence.
Court for his Involvement In tl!e when he was struck.
Throughout the lnvestlgatlnn
· Will's body was found the and court proceedings Sl!rroundJ .une death of VIctor Will.
Douglas Harris, ~7, had m, following day In the West Shade lng the Incident, off!ctals have
tered a gull ty plea on Aug. 21 to a area of Meigs County where It credited Harris' testimony as
bill of Information filed by the had been removed from the truck being .Instrumental to both the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attor- bed and thrown over a creek arrest aild conviction of .Riggs,
ney's Office ·charging Harris · bank.
and the recovery of Will's body
Jason Riggs, 18, Reedsville, the day after the Incident.
with obstructing justice.
Following the sentencing hear-·
Obstructing justice, as named was sentenced In September to a
In the Indictment against Harris, prison sentence of7-10 yearsfor lng this morning, Harris was
Is a fourth degree felony and Is h!s participation In Will's death. remanded to the custody of the
Riggs, who testitled to driving Meigs County Sheriff ' s
punishable by a maximum sent·
ence of 18 months In prison and a the truck when the Incident Department.
fine of $2500 or both.
· Several members of W1Il's
tmmedla te family were In the
•
court gallery as Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow III sentenced Harris 10
18 months In priSon, In accorRex 'E. Shenefield, Langsville, discussing possible policy which
dance with' a plea bargain has been named to the Ohio Farm would benefit farmers and l'llnl
agree men I reached between Bureau Policy Development Com- residents. Final recommendations
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. mittee for 1990, which met for its will be presented to, and voted all·
Story and Harris' attorney John first session recently in Columbus.
by, the Ohio Farm Bureau delegate
R. Lentes.
Shenefield has been a Farm body at the organization's annual
Assistant Prosecuting At tor· . Bureau member for 40 years and meeting November 27 and 28.
•
ney Linda R. Warner Informed currently serves as president of the
the court that the prosecutor's Meigs County Farm Bureau.
office would recommend thaf
The Ohio Farm Bureau Policy
Harris be granted shock proba- Development CommilleC coosists
tion after 90 days.
of 10 ·county ,presidents · and nine
Those family members, state trustees from throughout
through their attorney, Charles Ohio. They review policy recomH. Knight, waived their right to mendations from resource people,
make a statement to the court, which include directors of the Ohio
a.lthough permitted to do so by Department of Agriculture, Ohio
law.
' Department of Transportation and
Although no tine was Included the Ohio Depanment of Natural
!n the plea bargain agreement
Resources and the vice president
between the parties, the maxi- for agriculture at Ohio State
mum fine of $2,500 was Imposed University. There were also about
along with court costs.
1,500 policy suggestions from
W111, a Meigs County native county Farm Bw-eaus.
who lived In Canal Winchester at
The commi!!eC spends four days
the time of his death, was k!lled accepting testimony, writing and
REX SHENEFIELD

·Shenefield member
of policy committee

DeWine wants Dems . to release
names of top campaign contributo~

.

PRICES IN EFFECT

tir&lt;JIOD STAMPS
I'ERSONAL CHECKS
OUPONS
1FT CER'-I'IF-1CATES

liAISON ROYAl4 OZ.

11or. $1 19
. ' s KING SIZE BREAD
.
. ................. ~.............
. ·~........2.LOAVES
STORCK
•

w~c.

-

·

Lao

..

1

IMITATION SHREDDED MOZZARELLA;ISO

-.... __,,.... _. _

d.Ug.charges

•J

-

DAKOTA BREAD DOUGH........... •41

oz.

Jewell sent~nced on

By BRIAN J. REED
ment-against Jewell is the result of
"We're batting a thousand",
Sentinel News Starr
a year !!lid a half investigation Story said. "I hope that we have
· The . eleventh of 13 defendants being conducted by the BCI, the made a major-dent in dru~ ttaffick·indicted on drug cluuges earlier this Meigs County Prosecuting Attar- ing, especially cocaine lnlfficking
summer, a previously convicted ney and the Meigs County Sheriff's in Meigs County."
··
drug offender, entered a g)!ilty plea Department.
The twelfth mdividual who was
before Meigs County Common
Jewell, who was represented in indicted in July is scheduled to go
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow ill last coun by Athens AtiOmey John to coun next week.
week.
Lavelle, was sentenced to 3-15
Tony Hutton, 31, of Rutland was
. Terry Menford Jewell, 59, for- years in prison and a fine of $3,000 indicted on one count of aggravated
merly of Langsville, pled guilty to on lhe second degree felony and 6- trafficking in cocaine.
two cluuges of trafficking in 25 years and a $5,000 fine on the .- The cluuge, as listed in the in·
cocaine, one charge being a- first first degree count
dicunent against Hunon, is a third
degree felony and one charg~J a
Jewell is currently serving a sen- degree felony.
, felony of the second de~.
tence of three and a half years at
In addition to the I 2 indiclments
According 10 Metgs County the Hoelting Correctional Instiru- filed in July, a secret indictment
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.' tlon on a previous drug- conviction. . continues 10 pend agaiilst another
Story, Jewell sold cocaine 10 an
Story reports that Jewell was defendant whose name has not ·
. agent of the Ohio Bureau of seDienced in August on that cluuge. · been released by the prosecutor's
Criminal Investigation and IdentifiProsecutor Story said Monday office.
,
cation on two separate ocassions in that he is Jlleased with the re~ults of
Prosec01or
Story
said lhat inApril, 1989.
.
the mvesbgauon and resulung in- dividual has not been arrested and
Story said that the July indict· diclments.
is believed 10 have fled the state.

• . PRODUCE DEJ'ART.MEN'I'f
"'........
.f. GOLDEN RIPE

--~ z

Asked If the country Is •'gener- had been a month ago, the Pos 1
ally going In the right direction, said.
or do you feel things have gotten
Tile__ppll suryeyed~,006 adults
pretty seriously off track," '79 .nijtlonwltle ·Oct. 10·14 and 756
percent _said the country was on adults nationwide Oct. 5-7. The
the wrong track, while 19 percent . survey had a ·margin of error of
disagreed.
about 3 percentage points.
Forty percent said they disapThe percentage of Americans ·
prove of the way Bush Is handling who belteve the economy Is
his job as president, while 56 worsening t.ncreased from 64
percent said they approve, 19 percoo:nt to 77 percent In the past
percentage points lower than 11 month.

A resolution granting a temporary easement 10 lhe Ohio
Department ·of Transportation was
approved by Pomeroy Village
Council when it met in regular session on Monday night at Pomeroy
VIllage Hall.
.
The granting of the easement follows a request from ODOT for use
of lhe former sewage treatment
plant property near Minersville for
the parlcing of its equipment and
vehicles.
The depanment plans to use the
property when consttuction begins
on the Nye Avenue intersection
project.
Council also heard the second
reading of three proposed ordinances.
, The.first ordinance concerns the
annual Christmas bonuses for vii·
lage employees, while the second
pertains to the salary of the current
village clerk.
The lhird ordinance, if approved,
would allow lhe village to vacate
Steep Street in Pomeroy:
The Steep Street issue was approved by residents with property
on lhat street prior to the introduc·
tion of lhe ordinance, and costs of
the vacation action will be borne by
tllo~ owners. .
Village. Clerk Brenda Morris in-

'

.

'

By United P.-- laternauonal
election campatglt made public
Rep. Michael DeWine, the the names ot those who have
Republican nominee for lleuten: donated more than $10,000.
ant gcvernor, called on the
Meanwhile, In Cleveland, DeTOYS FOR TOTS • Hundreds of·toys to be dlstrlb•ted by tile Salvation Army at Cbrlstmastlme opposing side Monday io release mocratic gubernatorial nominee
have beeD contributed lly tile Melp County Bikers • the ftlll1t Ill their annual toy run. Representatives the names of top contrtbulnrs to Anthony Celebrezze Jr. told a
rrom tile Bikers were 011 lumd to praent tbe toys to Don Wl~::f the Salvation ArmJ and ller volunteer Its campaign.
assistant, AliDa Lemley, r!Pt. In the Jll'OUP from the left were c
ren, Codl Davis and Hatlnab Woolard,
At a press confetence In business executives' meetlag he
and .Nancy Woolard, Jo Frye, Sherry Swisher, Patsy Prk:e, and Breada Dam Appllc:atlou ror foocl bu- Columbus, DeWine said his run- wanta to set up a new state center
kets and toys ror uaderprlvlltaed children Will be accepted In November and DMember at the Salvation ning mate, George . Volnovlch, · to help businesses d(\velop envirArmy. Toys are sdll be collected by tile Blken.
\
·
,
~,has . twice during the. ·general onmental techriologles.
·~

1

y

-

Melinda Swan, Celeb1'1!Z21!'s
campaign pres's secretary, said ..
the voluntary disclosure of con· ..
trtbiltors by Volnovlch was a
"public relations ploy" and a -.
voluntary smokescreen" be- :
. cause there Is no requirement .
.that the-ttlaclosure be accurate.. ,
"We would have been happy to ·
do It If It were put Into law and
enforced," &amp;tid Swan.
'
1

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