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D~unday limes-sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gaiiii)C?IIs, O~olnt Pleasant, wv

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;.,.

l'

J.-

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OCto~r 23, 1~;

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.

Galli a County Farm Bureau
~i- ·
members erecting safety sign$ .'i
l

YOUR LIFE

\

BJPA11YDYER
GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia
County Farm Bureau, in cooperation with the Ohio I&gt;epenmeilt cil
Highway Safety, is erectina seatheft safety logo sian at various
locations tbrougbont the county.
1be
"''· .
. -,.;...,. wbicb I'Cid "Yourw.,ll
m your hands, Buckle-up Obio,"
·serves as a reminder to Ohio and
~ County residents lbat Well·
IIIJ a oeatbeJt CID save lives.
Jackie Graham,. Gallla County
Farm Bureau Safety Coordinator
says "When people fcqct Ill' refuae
to wear their seat belt they are four
times more likely to be killed or
aeriously injured if thrown from the
car. Part-time safety belt UleiS say
tbey don't wear belts on~ lripa

IS IN

YOUR
HANDS

because they know the roads. ThCy
believe they are unlikely to have a
c:mah in these situations. Unfortunately, ~ motorists doo't know
that fatal Injuries c:an happen at
speeds as low as 12 mph. It is
important to buckle up every lrip,
no matter how short. Buckle up
every time."
Automobile accidents are tbe
nJIIIIber ooe killer of people UDder
lhe qe of 2S and lhe number two
killer of those uader age 44. In
1991 22S Ohio residents between
the ages of 16 and 20 lost their
lives in motor vehicle accidents.
More than 70 pc:lCCIIt of these wbo

,.

may be ~our own or som~nc: ill';
your family. If you would lilce o~
of the peen reflective ~ nu;n~
ber sign, thev may be obtained at
the Gallia s~ &amp;: water ConserVa·:
tion Disuict off'Jce at a cost of'$7·.
per sign, which includes 2 setS of
your house number. These signs;
are another way to help speed uP::
emergency response tiJ!Ic. A welt:
acicn:e.
1be Gallii County Fann Bureau marked drifeway with your,·
hu allo been working for several address/llouse number can sav'-·
)'can to enco11rage the eounty to ~ious seconds or even minute4
tmplement the 911 system. We mtimes of emergency.
. '
lave a cblnce this November 8 to
PaUJ D7er 11 laformat!o•
mate this project a reality. Please · coordinator, Gallla Countf Fana
take this opportunity to vote for the Bureau.
'
911 sjstem. The life you help save

died were not wesrlng sestbelts at
the time of the accident Wearing a
llt¢ck improves your odds of survivinC an accident by SO percenL
Thil is one of sevaal safety projects that the Oallia County Pann
Bureau bas undertaken over the
put-several years to encourage
local residents to be safety con-

BUCKLE-UP • Gallla CHatJ Farm Bareaa lafor•adoa
Coordlllator PUtJ Dyer, left, ud Safety Coord"'ator Jaclde Gra·
bam teamed up lilt week to place buckle-up OWo aipiiD awaerOUI plleeiiii'Oilad tile CGUlJ. Tile lip above Wll placed oa tile C. ·
H. McKeazle Apicultaral Cater ud will reiDIDd ewryHe leav·
IDa tile falrp-ouadl tile Deed for lllllq their aeatbelll.

Jacobs joins clinic staff
who serves as their supervisor.
They are qualified to perform
direct patient care services under
the supervision of a physician,
includ10g evaluation, diagnosis,
and trealme.ut Tbese profeuloaala
are qualified as mid-level prlctitloners, have a degree from u
accredited college or university and
are licensed by the board of
medlcloe d lbe stile in wblcb lbey
are prac:tlcina.
Miss Jacobs will be worklog
iJDder tbe supervisioo of Joo Sullivan, M.D., a member of Holzer
Clinic:' s pediatric departmellt Wilb
oversight from Dr. Sullivan and
other clinic physicians, Mill
Jacobs will maintain a full-time
~~i!ltri~ practice at the Holzer
of West Vlrglola In Poiot

POINT PLEASANT - Holzer
Cllolc announces the addition of
Kim Jacobs, P. A., to the Holzer
Clink: of West Vqlnia pedialrica .
atafl.
Miss Jacobs Is a graduate of
Aldenoo-Broaddus CoUege, wbcn:
sbe received &lt;lual degrees In medical science and sports medlcloe.
Originally from PbiUijll, W. Va.,
Min Jacobs bas emeraeoc:y
medldoe experie.uce with United
Hospital Center In Chuksburg, W.
Va., aod 1be Myers Clinic's Ulpllt
Care in Pbillipi. Sbe Is a liceoaed
assistant In tbe State cil
and is NCCPA
taot to a

JOINS STAFF • ...._ R.
Pierce •a• Jolaed ••• salta
starr or Salfla Bakk-rc.ttae,
GaiiiDoUa. Pierce aDd Wa wife
Carol ralde at Z3 Clllllleotlle
Rd., GaWpolla.

·-·- -.pJ!~

MYSTERY FARM -1bls week's mJBtery
farm, featured bJ the Gallia Soil ud Water
Co~~~ervatloa District, Is loclted somewhere In
Gallla CountJ. Individuals wishing to partici- ·
pate In the weekly CCJDtest may do so b7 guessiDg
the farm's OWDer. Just mall, or dro~ off your
guess to the Gallipolis .Daily Tribune, sz! Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo, 45631, or The JlliiJ Sen·
tioel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, ..!!/769, ud

you ma1 wlo a $5 prlze .from tile 0 tlo ValleJ
Publisllina Co. Leave your ume, K dras and :
telepbooe number with JHr card or letter. No .:..
telephone calls wlll 'be accepted. /. II conteif ·
entries sboold be tuned lo to the 1 ewspaper :
olrk:e by 4 p.m. eacll WedoesdaJ.ID case or a tie, · ·
the winner will be chosen by lottery~ l&lt;lext week,
a· Meigs CouotJ farm wiD be featated by tbe .
Meip Soil and Water Conservation D;.strlct.

•

y~~~JlR~~'!~~~~ R.

Wtten he looks at .
you, your child sees his

Young, maintenance mec:hanic:-A
at the 0b1o Yall6y E1ec:uic: Corporations's Kyger Creek PliJU,
received bls 35th service award
mlCIIIly.
•
.Young joined OVEC on Oct 6,
1959, as a laborer. In 1967, he
transferred to the maintenance
department as a maintenance
mechlnic help« and. advnaced 10
maintenance mcchanic-C in 1969.
In 1978, he was ~to maill· ,
tenance mechanic-Band in 1982,
to maintenance mec:banlc-A.
Young resides In Middleport.

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
wins second
Battle of Ohio

Super Lotto:
4-7-15-24-34-38
Kicker:

1-0-4-7-0-4
Pick 3:
' 1-0-9
Pick 4:
S-4-5-6

Page4

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 121
Copyrtght1994

B7 JIM FltEFl'dAN
SellliDel Ne• swr
. RelpoodiDJ to Cb~U~gea in the
world at*l d!:fmdlna the two-J&amp;t)'
ayatem wem topica outlined by fill'·
mer Republlc:ao U.S. Rep. Cllnnce
Miller Ill the Md.l CouiltyRqJubo
Uc:an fall rally Saiwday at EullrD
ffigll Sc:bool.
wnxte bas beeD a peat cbange
lo lbe world, a ~~ .evolutloo ... a comm
oil super·
hlahway," said MIIJer, wllo served
26 yean io Coopaa. "We're lead·
lng loto a different worjd."
Miller, an engiDCCr wbo boldl
two patents, used the difference
between copper wire and fiberoptic .cable to explain tbe communlcati011 potential of today' s sod·
ety. A amall fiber-opck: cable cali
carry more information tban a
much Jarger alppCl' wire cable.
Witb teclloological advances
c:omea tbe aced for new laws,
Miller noted.
"'ur forefalben made tbe coostitlltioo flexible io new laws cali
be made," Miller J!lld, DOting lbat

laws may need to be made reatrict· Including Jobn Knauff and John
Ina accesa to RCCida about priVIIte Carey, c:andklates for stile senator
dt~J,Q.
. .
_
IIIIISIIIC n:preseatalive. reapecdveMUier said many people atteDil ly.
rallies u "just another fuoctioa"
KDauff, a Scioto County combill quickly added that tbey are missioner, said be bas been a full.
"scrioa bnslnesa;" ·
time OOUDty C01111J1iasioDc and will
· "We don't come put to play be a full-li!!le state senator if electa-. It Ia serious busloeu... very, ed. He is running against incumvery important We need to aet tbe ·bent Stale·Sen. Jao Micbael Long.
"I feel like I can get our fllir
vote out and support our c:andidates," Miller slid, adding that share and gee some tblogs done in
. while Republic:ana and DemoCIIIs our district," ICDiuff said on the
have pblloaopbiQIJ dlft'eaeoces, "we subject of highway construction.
doo't need to be penonal enemiea." On welfare, Knauff commented
"We 'eilber have two~ Ill' tbal"tbc able-bodied sbou1d work."
lbe sySIICUI will Dot wort. be said.
Miller addreaes be crowd wlllle Jolin ear.,,
Carey, currently the mayor of
ADDRESSING CHANGE - Former long·
"We must keep the two party sya· Wellston, said his top priority if
far left, caadldale for 11ate repre~eotadv., Wa
time U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller addreu.l Melp
tem ... or wlod up witb ooe party
wife, Lyaley, aDd Melp County ()unm!e!cwr
Co¥DtJ Republican&amp; Saturday algbt at tile
electilcl would be to create jobs In
and a dictator."
Fred
Ho«mao look on.
Melg• Coaoty Re_publican Fall Rally. Here,
the district. Carey also said be
"Our prefe~nce, naturally, Is =~I educatioo over
vole Republk:an."
sion and improving the housing Pomeroy attorney Steve Story. treasurer candidate J. Keonetb
I welfare.
-;
In aclditioo, Miller ripped tbe ·
Carey Is cballenging inwmbeut stol:l.
spoke for George Voinovicb and Blackwell, Secretary of State Bob
Cliotou administration on U.S. State Rep. Milt Malooe.
"Meigs County is defmitely on Nancy Hollister, candidates for Taft and c:andidatc for llale 1111«·
opeaatlous in Haiti and oo lbe antiFred Hoffman, incumbent the move," Hdfman said.
governor and lieutenant Joveanor, aey aeneral Betty MooiJomery,
crime bill, a measure be labeled as Republican candidate for Meiss
Pomeroy attorney '1. Carson and Mike DeWine, U.S. Senate respectively. Also auendiog wu
a "quick fix."
. &lt;;:ounty Commissioner, • • his CrQw ~Pil~~ Ill! tlehalf of Fra!!l&gt; candidalle.
appeals court candidate, Jud1e
Pomeroy allorDCy Bcnwd Fa1tl tbree goals for tbe couoty: more Cremean,s, caodidate for the U.S.
Patty Pickens, Bernard Fultz Roger Kline.
introduced several speakers,
water and sewer· line expao- House of Represen~tives, while and Gene Triplett represented state

Clinton looking to score
points with visit to Ohio

to stan making sure that,
if something unexpected
happens to you. he'll be
taken care of.
A Nationwide• Insurance

Agent can bring you roth peace

GALLIPOLIS' • Bank One will
be offering a basic home buying
seminar on /fhursday, November
10, from 6:30 pm·to 8 p.m. at the
Bossard Memorial Library at 641
Second Avenue in Gilllipolis.
Topics covered in the seminar
include how to apply for a loan and
what it takes to get approved, how
to detennine what you can afford
and infonnation about the bank's
special mortaa~e propam for low
to moderate income families.
Sharon Smith and other Bank
One lenders will discuss details on
~g a home. Seating is limIted. CaD to make rcservalions with
Sharon Smith or Debbie Rhodes at
446-0902 by November 7. Refreshmcnrs will be served. Tbe public is
invited to attend at no Charge. ·

Airbag, anti-lock brakes, keY. less entry, power
sliding door, electronic a/c, til(, cruise, pwr mirr,or,
cassette, Power Door Locks, Power Windows, ·
Rear Defog, 7 passenger.

of mind, With a life instlrance
plan that fits your needs.

Down .

Amy Redovlao wu crowaed as tills year's
q-. Frum WI-, back row, Brian Holrmao,
Raadall Barke, Juon Carleton, Cllrla Rood,
Roaer Arlx, Ricky Hollon aad Ryan Hawley;

near you today

.ll==

NATIONWIDE IS
0 N ·y 0 U R 5 I D E".

W.R. Dick Brown
Gallipolis

1994 BUICK STATION WAGONS
1- Century &amp; . '

·1- Roadmaster ·

446-1960
N~twnwtd.., Mutual insurance Corrj_p.:my ~nd AITillated Com_panies.
H11n\r Ofhc~ - Orw Nattonwidt rla,v . CQlum,bijS. OH~ll6
N~tllmwi dr· nnd · Nauonwtdt• i~ on yollr sidt" are rtglst ted ri:dt seni...'t marks ol

Estate Wagon

lnsurancf Company.

BOTH WADED._.

$6
000
UpTo .. · ,

Save

tl Now Accepting New Accounts

Minister Claudette Werleigb,
bec:IIIIC her leftiSt beliefS inspired

'

vtaoroua OIIPOiidoo.

· Michef'i bulioeaa iotereats
lodude oookiDJ oil, rice and ....
line, iod he is well-known amoog
the poor - Aria tide 'a atroogest
cooatltueucy ·- because of'bls
'preaenc:t= ln. tbe popular JI!Uket
dowJOOwo.
In •
developalllllts, lbe Unit-

'

LARRY I. MILLIR
'

'

McCONNELSVILLE (AP) ...,..
One soutbeastern Ohio educator
found trouble after paddling a stu·
dent. Aootber Is under fire for
refualna to do it
In McCoonelsviUe, elementary
sc:bool principal Margaret Foley
said abe would rather resian tban
carry out the corporal punlsbmenl
~~ of the Moraao County
bolrd. 'Ibe panel will meet
tooightiO'dlscuss her we. ·
In neighboring Noble County, a
Common Pleas .Court jury on
Wednesday cleared William J.
Dimm~ elementary social
studies
In lbe Noble sdlool
district. He bad beell indicted oo a

anooJ:
dltPs his finl dloice
for prime mint•. Interim Foreign

BP OIL CO.
/

Educators caught in controversy.
over renewal of paddling poUcy

PORT·AU-PRINCB, Haiti (AP)
- Selllitive to put Cabioet IDistakes llld hoping to win over bualness leaden W8f'J of bls populist
past, Preaidellt JCIII-Bertraod Arbtide bas reportedly picked a modcrare·to berome prime mini•ter.
. Within days, Aristide will
annolJIKe his aelec:tloo of Smart.k
Mlc:bel, 57, a Iooatime asaoc:iate
· wllo served brlefiy as Arlstide's
commerce minister Ia . 1991, a
-dole 10 lbe govemmeot sal~~
late S!!Dday on c:onditioa of

t/ We Accept HEAP VoucherS
446·11576~

middle row, Junior atteadaot Crystal Silllmerfield, aenl,or Becky DrJags, queen Amy Redo·
vlaa, 1tolor Heidi Nelson, senior J-lca CMvalier, aopbomore atte~dant Tracy Wlllte and
fresbmao attendant BIUee ~ooler; and front
row, Cllriltopller Cowdery aoil Brittany BIAell.

charge of child eodangerina after
he paddled a sixth-grade boy in
April.

About 10 percent of Ohio's 612

school distrlc:ts authorize paddllna,

tbe Ohio Department of Bducatioo
said.
Ohio Jaw prohibits corporal
punishment unless a districtappointed citizens task force recommends il Last smnmer, a community task force inc:luded pad·
dling as part of an overall disdpilne policy adopted by tbe Morgan
County school board.
Ms. Foley told board members
she c:wldn 't paddle a student
• 'I thought I could somehow

wort around it," sbe said.
But Ms. Foley, a 20-year educator, later decided to step down. Tbe
board will decide tonight wbetber
to acceptllct resigoatioo.
In Noble Couoty, paddling .goes
back 175 years. Dimmerllng said
the student be spanked was repeatedly unruly, disruptive and disrespectful in class.
· Jurors took about 10 min11tes to
decide be was innocent of child
endangerlna.
• 'This situation wu unfortu. nate," Dimmerllng said. "But in
many ways It baa reaffirmed my
belief that c:orporal pmlshment is a
proper form of discipline.'.'

" ROBERT BURNS
By
Allodated Prell Writer
CLEVELAND - President
Clinton, seeklna to c~ture more
aedit for the ec0110111y I improvement, announced today tbat the
federal budget defidt sbrank In die
just-coded fisc:al yea. to $203 bil·
lion aod predicted It would fall far.
tber io l!J9S.
"We're doing a good job right
DOW in bringinl tbc deficit down,"
tbe president said in a live radio
Interview ben: on WWWE. He said
be planned to elaborate 011 tbis In
ao address to a Cleveland business
.group later In the day.
Cliotoo told tbc Jlldio iolerviewer that lbe defiCit in lbe budget year
ended SepL 30 was $203 billion,
down from "$290 billion-plus··
two years ago, ill 1992. He did Dot
say bow mucb faitber be expected
tbe defiCit to fall in tbe cutrent fiS·
c:al year.
"We've done it by cutting the
size of government, by eliminating
government programs, by cutting
others while still being able to
Increase our lnvesbnent In education and trllining and·new tecbnology. And that's what I waot to keep
doing - managing tbis thins In a
very disciplined way," Clinton
said.

The president also got In a plug
for his uip to the Middle East Ibis
week and attempted to lower
Americans' expectations of what
he may accanplisb tben:.
"I don't expect a dramatic
breaktbrougb" in talks with Syria's
leader, Hafez Assad, he said. ·
In a speech in Seattle on Sun·

day, Clinton predicted the fiscal
1995 budaet deficit would be stiU
lower. He claimed that would mean
tbe first tbn:e-year string of budaet·
deficit leductioos since tbe Truman

admi.nistralion.

"I waoted to get this economy
going aaatn," Clintoo told a raucous campaign rally for several
Washington state conaressional
candidates in a speech aear the
Seattle Space Needle. "That's
what bringing down ~ deficit and
investing more in new tecbnoiogies
and expanding trade ... was all
about.''

Clinton came to Cleveland to
boast to tbe City Club of Cleveland, a business group, about tbe
successes of his economic program. He was emphasizing tbe
arowth in jobs, expansion of world
trade and stable inflation rate, in
addition l() gains in sbrinlring lbe
budget deficiL
But House Republican Wbip
Newt Gingrich said tbis morning
tbe Democrats bave yet to detail
any specifics of what tbey will do
after the upcoming elections.
.
"The president ... did not ru I"
out massive: tall Increases. He did
not rule out for example that tbey
might have to cap tbe bome mortgage deduction or do otber things
to raise talles," tbe Georgia lawmaker said 011 NBC.
Top Republicans took aim at
CliDtoD's deficit-n:ductloo plans by
pointing Sunday to an internal
Wbite House memo that outlined
numerous fiscal options for the
future, including large tall increases ·
and cuts in entitlements such as

Social Sec:wity.
Clinton, apparently sensioa
trouble, twice bec:kooed reporters
In Seattle OD Sunday to ch•IImae
Gingrich and to assert tbat tbe
memo was Dotbiog more than "a
list of optioos '' tbal grew out of tbe
budaet offx:e' s usual braioatormlng.

"I do not support cuts In Social
Security, and I believe: ..y savlnp
achieved in Medicare should be
used to belp pay for bealtb care"
reform, Cliotoo said.
Tbe president sought to tum the
tables oo Gingrich by assertina tbal
Gingrich's "ContraCt With America" - a bl11eprint of legislative
actioo he would press if lbe Republicans woo control of Coogn:ss oo
Nov. 8 - would "explode the
defiCit" by adding a trillioo dollan
of debt and lead tbe WUDUy to eConomic disaster.

In speecbes at campaign rallies
in Sao Frandsco and Seaoie before
coming to Cleveland, the presjdeot
complained tbat Republicans are
btwrlna tbc true loot r1 an-economy 011 tbc mend and bliildiDg people to lbe best path ahead.
A cenlnll aim of tbc Seaale visit
was to give a boost to Roo Sims, a
King County c:ouncil member wllo
is running a fairly close race
against incumbent Republicao Sen.
Slade Gorton. The Gorton campaign bas raised about $4 millioo,
whicb tbe Seattle Timts reported
Sunday was eight times more than
Sims.

Aristide eyes new prime minister

t/ We Delver Only Clean B.P. Fuels
"tl Courteous Dependable Deliveries

Clll .

CGurt paraded paat

IJ*Catorl dartac Friday's fciotball p-. Senior

Call a Nationwide Agent

'

a--•

EASTERN HOMECOMING - Eaatera
Hlgb Scllool'•

And his future.

N~tnmwtdc Mutu.tllmurJnce Company. Cl l99&lt;t Nationwi~t Mtuua

A Multimedia Inc.~

Miller briefs Meigs
GOP on technology

Today is not too soon

Plan seminar

3 Secllone, 20 Pagee 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 24, 1994

1·100·591·5654
..

'

...
~

;

ed States today planned to open a
police academy to traia selected
members of Haiti's dreaded anny
aod police 10 bcamc officers who
meet international Sllllldards.
Maj . Gen. David C. Meade,
U.S. ·around forces commander,
said be ~ to have 3,000 "new
poUcemen ' b)' mid-Dec:eaober.
The U.S. Justice Department
wlll teac:b basic police tec:boiquea
to tbe Haitian officen, wbo will be ·
sc:reeaed to keer&amp;:ut those wbb
~.bumall . ts dilrlng - y
MCIKlc did Dot say bow officera
will be screened, and it wasn't
clear bow Haltlaoa would reapoad
to a new police
of •
fmlli•and feared faces.
• But citizens in the oortb~ro
coast c:lty of Clp-~ ~
ly rejec:ted 'tbe U.S. mllltary's
aarmpts to nse former HailliiiiOI·
diers on an interim pollee force.
,Rcsideala said bumaD rigbll viola·
. 1011 wem 111110118 the oft"teer'l.
1be lll;lldemy Is klcated at Camp

roroe•cc••••

d' Application, the Haitian army's
heavy WCipOill dePOt before it was
dismantled by U.S. troops Jut
mooth.
•
Despite the presence of about
17,000 U.S. troops io Ibis
Caribbean country, t11ere Is a void
In Haiti's jusli'!;k:"• eapcc:ially
since the alUP I
wllo IJICd tbe
police and-y to rule tllrough rerror fled Into exile.
Meade said a lonaer tralnio1
course wiU bet!' early next year

t!.

~~ ~!'clli

tbe 7 ,SOO-strona army dowu to
t,SOO soldlcnl,
Aristlde's sdcction or close but
lnexperienc:ed usociatea fill' bls
original Cabinet alkm"'AJ die buainess community, IIIII IOIDC In tbe
middle and upper classea remain
waryoflbeJIRIIdeM'ainlellliolis.
Ariatlde wu owrtbrowo bv the
iamy In Sepecmber 1991, 11111 fkld
iDto exile after only ICVCII mootba
In office.
·

BOOI- De Mtlp CGenty Blk•n aDd b1J110
baddiea rr- tile Railaad AmerkaD JAaioo PaM
receod7 ran •roua• tllelr dreu reb~~~r~~~l for
•• Ch·k Center ..anted lloue, wllk• bepu

n-.

MMday. All proceeds from tile -k--.
wblcll .... ., to tt pa. Oct. :M-lt, ompt sday, wUI be a.t1 to repair tile Rudaocl Civic
Center. (Seqtlnei pllolo by c-p Abate)
~

.,

I

•

�Commentar

Pom.-o,....ulddlepol\ Ohio
Monday, October 24, .1814

'

The Daily Sentinel

I'

I
.:

111 Ccnait 8ueet

Inaurance

PomenJJ, Oblo
\

.I"WMDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publllber

,,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General MaMger -

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OF OPINION ue welcome. They lbouJd be lea than 300
words long. All lettcn are subject lo editinJ ODd muot be qoed wilb name,
llddrels and telepbooe number. No llllligoed !etten will be publilbed. L.e1ten
sbould be in good tute, lllldmlio&amp; ill-. DOt J11110oaliliea,

Deadline for publication
of election-letters Nov. 2

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Tile Dally Seatlllel wdu nletlln repnllq tile New. 8 ·a-ni
eledloL Howeftl',la die ...... rA fib •• DO eledioD !etten will be
accepted after U - • Wedlnsday, N~. 2.
bdiWduallllbould llddl• ........ Mt pe,_.JJdes,
pare~, ac~o~-."•kl•
Lt&amp;ten sbould 300 ....,. or ..., preleraiiiJ tJped. Allelten
· are sallject to edllilll ud .ud •lilt be. llped wWI-. adell•
and
aamber.
lien will
No
UBI
!etten wDI be p
Lttten•oald lie Ia pod Clllte.

I

utten

.;!flloDe

lbat'anotlbccue.'' ..
,
Modcnl IIDb bave bocome lbe
financial equlvaleat of Wai·Mart
ifCpartmcDt 110re1: oae-atop shop-

euales. WhiJe.!blaJllllli.llce.isper.·
fecdy lepl. iDa'eulllg numllerl of
older AlneriCIIJ!I are complaining
tbat !bey weren't told about !he
risks tbey were assumiD&amp; when
By Jack Anderson switcblng !heir money infO Jhese
, inaerumenll.
and
1be saipll that b1J11t employees
are pvcoto sen tbcae secwilies a
Michael Blnsteln oftm sprinkled with liCnDI such ..
" government investment" and
pilig oudets tbat llave some!billg "peaalty for early witbdtawal"
for eVf!lyOIIe. Right DCltliO 1be fed· tllal are used 10 lead !be CUIIOlllet
erally insured asvlngs lmd cbediDJ iato thlaldng !hat tbe product
accounts are uninsured mutual tbcy'n: buyill1 is giWililleed by tbc
fundi, stocb, Treaaury IIIIIs and bank Cl' tbc government.
81111uitiea.
Pryor cites lbe case of Leilani I.
Tbe A1illg Committee illvcsd- DeMiDt, a S3-year-old sillale mo!h·
1atlon has revealed what many er iD Sl Petersbuq, I:Ja. DeMint's
older Americans already lrnow job as a toll collector In Tampa
tllal many banka are eWing ev«y· barely allows her to make ends
thiDI !bey can to encoura1e cus- meet. forc1D1 her 10 scrimp and
10mers 10 move lbeir savillss iiiiO save 10 lluild a !ICil-ell fll' her 28tbcae uaiDsurecl lnatrumcnts, wblcb year-old autiatic 1011, Edward.
ofleo yield far more than a savings
When DeMint's motber wu
aocount or CD but allo c:.ry vary· tilled lly a c1nm1r.eta driver ill 1990,
illg degrees of riat. Daub tbat ldl she put !be IDHritaDce iiiiO a cer·
these products through affiliated lificate of deposit 11 a local bant ao
llusiDCsaea often give iDcealivcsto . It would grow safely. Bat ill the
!heir cmployecs 10 encourqe higb- spring of 1993, when one of her

FiRST-UaND
" SMoKe

...... be.-.
be
T::Z::: ... I I I be,..,......,

oaly lhls

&gt;-·CblriDk said.

.

llutlbe llrookbaVCD forecaaeen 0011tlnued operadDa delplte tile back·
up. Faulty 1U111P puDIIll allo wen:ID blame In B~ CbartuJt laid.,
"'lbe problem Ia willllbc sump pumps. It's aot a dellgn pobJcm. it a
an cquiJIIICIIl problcnl," be said. -- 1be BOVCIIIDCIIt' 1 weadler ~ aJadoDa ale geucnlly builtlly local
coa!IIM:IiDII &amp;Widing 10 !be government's apecificallool. . .
1be WilmlalfiDII stllioD Ia leiJIOD•Ib\e fCI' laaulag Obio River t'""Of""'ecaatland wcaJber fCI'eC8Ill fll' pans of Oblo, Kcobleky, bvtiw Mid Wcat Vir·
giola. Its upgraded $3 mi11ioo radlu' system surveys die regioo ·wiJbiD a
. 12S·mllc ~UI ofWilmlagtoD.
.
. Brookbawa lllld WllmiDIIOD ale &amp;mODI 116 S!ale-of·tbwrt ll'doos
tbc aovcmmeot baa built, II' plalll to build, In a S4 billiOD )II08IIm to
modcmlu lllld Improve fareculial Clplbilldea. 1be aew Slali0111 are
designed to provide earlier IIIII mon: rellable Wlllllaas of aew.re WCIIber,
as well as recludaa tbe number of falle allnu fCI'- wcadlcr.

Letters to the editor
Disappointed, shocked
1 attended the Malone/Carey
debllc on .OciOIIct 16th llecauao I
fek !hat as a graodmotber, I sboakl
hear both candidates for the Ohio
Houle's education plalforins. I was
very disappoillled to lcam that Mr.
Carey would try to pull tile wool
over my eyes and everyone in the
941h District. Let me explain.
When Mr. Malone Mked Mr.
Carey if "his" education plaD was
in fact his or his "Columbus Bosses, • Mr. Carey said it was his lllld
!hat he resented !be "thane in (his)
campaign." He WCDt on 10 say that
he didn't need 111yooc "10 tell him
what 10 do."
·
But when the documenlalion
was produced 10 prove that "his"
educalion plan was actuaRy bein~
used by at least-four other candidates around the Slate, and was in
fact the pl&amp;,n of the folks handling
his campaign in Colull!bl;I.S the

same folks who would have abort·
challgcd ow kids in Gallia, Jacklon
and Mei4J County schools over $1
· million m equity funding, I was
shocked.
·
This area cannot afford 10 have
someone like lhat in the House. We
need someone who will fight for
our intmaiS, not Colwnbus'.
Alldlinp coosidcml, 1 suppose
that the Malone campai1n folks
were right, the ooiy way Jbese BUYS
in Columbus can knock off Rep.
Malone is to go dirty and aeptive.
After Mr. Carey lied abouJ "his"
education plan, I expect to see
some aasty mailers a'iid TV commercials &amp;pinst Mutt. I hale 10 see
that, but I know Mark will han1

IOUJh. .

Judy Payne,

GaUipolis

Sllildlldl Act c:ll938.
In 1945, !be un.t Nations c:lficlally came infO exisreace as iU cblncr

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In 1952, ill a tpeeCII in· De!roit, Repulllic:sn presideolial candidate
Dwi ht D•.EileiiiiOwa' clecllre4 "I shall go to ~" as be Jlll)mised to
end CCiiDlct. .
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len8llf~ ajur}' In~ Sliapsoa case would be stymied oo die
trial proceedlnas may le~ to a quelliOII of rcaaooablc doubt.
~ apprecladoo of lbe Uatted ·
"It was very clelr," !he judge
told me, •'that they were not
llwyep." But !hey bad llccD eduNatHentoff
cared iD lbe law lly lelevialon in lbc
States court l)'llem. which has fall. couabocm.
·
en out of public favor-in.recent
NriDc!heleu, Ia a vote llehind
yesn." Maiy reaular viewen of ~losed doors, !be Ualted States
tile Court TV programs, for eltllll· Judicial Coaference decided Ia
pte, IIIIW tblat !be courts are faiR:r Septemllcr 10 end 1be pilot project
lhllllbey did before.
that bad giwa television aa:eu 10 a
There certainly has been an small numllcr of fcdersl c:ourtbousinaaae ill undenlanding how tbc es over !he past Jbree yesn. ADd
COUI1I wut. For yean. I bave llccD Jbia policy-making body COIIIimiCd
Jryin110 illlaat family lmd frlenda a total bMI an televiaian cameras ill
In IOIIIC of lbe Vlrioua lrillutarles ct fcdc&amp;Waimlnal trials.
due proceu: tbe euh•lloawy rule,
:Vet. In early 1994, !be Federal
renOIIIIble doubt, probable awae 10 Judicial Ceater - tbe reaearcll
olllaln a w1111111t, l!lld otber iDine· division of tbc fcdersl COWU)'IItm
fields of !be jualice system. Uatll - found, after au exlielllive survey
televiaioa eatered more and more of tile pilot project, !hat "judges
CODibOWII, I bad DOl made much
and lliOillCys... gcnenlly reported
headway.
·
ollaCrviDI amaH or no effecll of
1be (R-blal pmcccclinl&amp; of !be camera p-esentC an par1lclpants In
OJ. Simpson case have resulted iD tile proceedillp, courtroom decoa particularly remarkable advance rum, or !he admlniatratioa of jusin many people's illtaest In lbc jus· tice.''
lice _system. I have helld friends
Moreover, !he Judicial Center
and acqaaintanc:ea - Who bad 110 rrrommencled dial "fcdersl courts
previous concem wi!b tile Bill of. of appeals aad district courtsRights - araue heatedly as lit nationwide ... provide access to
wbelher there was suflideot proba- civil proceedings in tbeir court·
llle cause for tbe Loa Angeles nxxns.••
police 10 conduct a searCh of OJ.
That recomme~~dalion baa now
courts.
Simpsoa's bome lllld pu181ds.
been oveauled. ID a leucr to 1be
· ID Jaauary of Ibis year, a T'IIIICII
a federal Judie told New York TIIIIOI, Floyd Abnml,
Minu n'liantl survey showed lhlll meReceS:!ti,
of
, 011 • airplane, two an active autbority on !be Firat
larie numllen of viewers have pa&amp;ICDiers bdllnd her exploring 11

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Wlldled lbe more pullllci?WI· ll'ials
and dull "regula' vlewin1 of court

/

•lalumbusl52- I

W.VA.

·Charles M. Zimmerman
Rain, cooler temperatures
to move into state tonight
Alloclated rn.
Sbowen wen: expected 10 move
IDJO r11e stale today and ,linger into
the early evening hours in moll

By~

in sexual relatioaa, more on tbe
•WIII8e of once a week !ban once a
day. Swillgera we aren't, laid !he
3,432 lllulla'between !be qea of 18

::.,dl.~·~!!!. ~:: Hoddlng Carter Ill

It~ea~~~llkc lilly} cllcnlay lblt and 59. who responded 10 the .....
weWCRICDlualll)'OIIewhowoalcl vey. Over a Ufelime, the mt41•n
liAeD !hat we wen; In tile middle c:l number of aexaal pannen for a
a sexual revolution. 1bc notloa . WOIDDbtwo; fCI'aiDMIIt'aalx.
IDfarlated cultural cooservatlvea
The poll results were fucinat·
and tbrllled cullalal radicals All Ina. bill rm DOIIIR tbey wen: as
die okf'IIIDdalda bad llcclll
aciendflcally definitive u tl!elr
eel, Cl' 10 we illllnadli4 oae•IJ!Od!er. ap.oasora suueu. Though the
Evcryoue Wll alwaw doilla It, and IIICtbocloqy was repootedly more
It -·~ maacr - . •
whom rigon~~~~ JbMI !hat ued lly uy ~
-or ~ '-- ar. ao weat lbe holaU Jho ~viOUI sex snrv_eya, J. caa t
a
escape lbe UUIDI IIJiplclOn !hat
Bill dill was~. pill Acludlu! wbal wo aay aboa• our sellual
10 lbe NlllaNI OpUioD Reseani llebavior ID tbe 19901 hu litde
Coaeei's !leW sex aarvcy releaiod more coaneclion 10 t'CJllty lbaa
earlier dda aioach 10 .....U.~n Mid wllat ale c:l ua were aayiqlllout
1111gen, CCJNN••IOI'Iiy Americana IIOI'IClva 1n lbe iwlallni 19'?01.
are !be -ate of 1 lost -nera-·
That aside, consider a qnote
vm.,..
f
tho 0 f the
0 f th
t1011.
We
are
••lcally
a
IIIOIIOJ8~
rom
oae
e
aa
ra
D!OUI folk, male and female. '~be report. "Good lmiC abould bave
vast~ u fa1Jbfu1 to ..,0... !Oidaatbltllllllt~~·t•
..., lllde lndbWt to IIICOII¥allilll0 !be lime or cneray to ~~~~~~qe •
llllellllltule
·
'
affair, a joll, a family and (dlelr
~
beiDa CCJIII!uncd 11y 00111"?!* oa) tbe J.oDilslaDcl RailOCI' llliJl"ilel, we ICDd 10 die aedale m111, Profeuor Jobn H. a.,_

diiCans-

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Sliilriie on Tuesday will be at
7:53 p.m.
. ·
Wulllw rona~~~:
Today...IDcreasing cloudlncu.
Sllowers likely by laic morning In
the west, spreadina 10 tbc eat lly
late ID the day. HIBbS ill the iDid
50s to III'OUIId 60. .
Tonlpl..Showers likely nortb·
Clll Cloud wi!h I chance of show·
era early ejaewbere...Tbe·lwlon!lng
J11111y cloudy. Lows 30 10 35 nortb·
west. And mid 30110 tbc lower 40s
elsewhere.
·
Tuesday ... Varibale cloudl·
DCII .. .Euept IIIOitly cloudy wilh .a ·
cbanCe of ibowen IIU'Iheul.lfishs
ill lbe upper 40s 10 die mid 50s.
Edeaded rona~~~:
Tuesday oipl ..Cbance of rain
or snow sllowen nonhwt. ..Falr
elaewhere. Lows In lbe 301.
. WCdoelday.. .Falr. Hip ill !he
40&amp;.
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_Tbunday ...Fair. Lows ill lbc 30s
and hipa ill tbc 50s.
Friday ... Falr. Lows around 40
andhishsill !be 60s.

Nortbeaslerll Ohio may receive
showers JlmJpout 1be olghl. Elaewhere, skies Will bqill 10 clear and
temperatures will drop.
A frost warnina bas been issued
for toniaht for !be nortbwestem
comer of Ohio-. where lows will
reacb 30 10 35 degrees. Lows else·
where will range from tbc middle
301 Jiortbeast 10 around 40 south.
Scattered frost is possible Ia
most c:l Ohio.
:
Tuesday will offer a mix of
clouds and sua. It will lie masdy
cloudy northeast, with a chance rl
a few showen ..Hips will reacb
oolv !he upper 40s north and top
out'in lhC lower to middle 50s In
the rest of tbc slale.
. Tbe JeQlrd hiab temJICIIIIUre fll'
Jbia date at lbe CoiUDibus weaJher
stalioil was 82, set In 1963. The
JeQlrdlowwas.21, set ill 1981.
Sunset today will be at 6:40

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told The New York Times. The fiaure Jbatlt tate&amp; allouta half·
impUcadoas of.!hat ~ bave hour for tbe averaae person to ,
much wider application dian 10 unfold from lied Mid set ready fCI' . •
America's sex babill alooe.
wort, ac:hooJ Cl' play, and you're :
For IDUJce, we -fed ny!Jen . ahady up 10more bourl JbMI there :
stalisdcs lllout !be way lbc •venae are In a day. Ewa IOi you've left :
• American apcnds his or llcr time. out every!blnJ froaa bowlinl to •
Each of us supposedly watches hoatla110 driaklnl a 11ccr at lbe :
television four .hoaraa day. We ~lllriD...,Itl.
yJb . i
sleep lletweea aevea aad eiaht
1D oJber WOIIII, we reIn am • :
bollia~ day. We wort ICIIIe!biDI leal kln8~ of numllen, whose '
over elaht boura a day. Taken V«'J wel8lll !eDdl to oblc:ure Jbclr :
toietber, tbat'a already over 20 ablanllly. Tbe lnllh Ia tbat Wbll we ' :
houri.
·
liy we ell IIIII wbll we acblllly do
1lbero'siii(I'C.
In vlnually every llcld fftlm VOlin&amp; 1
Accordln1 to the C::QIIlllerce to
from a ~ dll- : t
Dqliolmell. die avcrqe boaaebold c:onpecdan fftlm resllty:
_
•
~II' receives 10 locai.CI' kina•
ll'a.IIOI tbaa lllllll ol Ul IIICIII 10 :
di"*"n callu clay. AcalrcliD&amp; 10 a lie ot mJslcld our eq« Mldlron. · :
a.iiDp Poll-Jhree yean qo, .., It's jalllhlt we limply don't thlnt I·
avtrlp .Am.icaa apaacla Cllle to · ID "'II!!Jcaltllmll, nor ell we keep . •
two hous a day drlvina aoate· · de!llll'ld I«Ucli c:l ow dally bcbav· I
whae. AKOer Oallap Poll ro.ad · lor. Outoflbc lllllddle oiOCI'meaa·
dill cii • avcrqe clay, 7.1 PQa:ul : orj, we offer apJII'Ollilaatloas of ,
c:l ua mad a·JICWIIIIIICI', 38 pen:aat · reallly fro• wlllcb !be experu ·. i
read a boci: fll' wort II' ICIIQol, 36 . . - COIIIInldl Mid "'............ 'l
.......
.' - t read a ::J:Ine and 33
dill a oftalas e-.t as ....... a
r ... ~
-r •
-~
pcac:ean:adaboot pleuUre,
s~
.
;
Fipre tbe ovcrbp oa that, and '
Tlb' tbe qaeadOII of b9w IDUI:l ; :
you're clolc 10 lbc ~anMnlna folr television we watcla. Examined •
.boun. 1bl'ow in a lurled cme hour . c:lolely, lbe infwDoal ,..llerllllld : ·
. a clay for an tine JDella 00111liiDed, ' 10 ~aporate. ·
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areas.

A~ qaouid a19"80~- ·..
ty opinioa by !be Supreme Court
lbat throusllout American history. '
lbe opcii'IICII of our WIIUUOIIII hu ./
beenm; "l""ispensable lllribate" ·
10 tile falmeu rl trials.
:·
. Bill wbeD It C11DC1 10 televilloa .:
- as Lcpl'llmea Mid USA Today ·:
Supreme Court reporter Toay ·
Mauro aaya - many jadges .
. "llelieve !bat tbe courtroom Ia ;
lbeira -DOt rile public's. 1bey for· :.
get It is tbc public' a bualncu IIIey •
are conductin~f ·
That th;l.preme Court UJIIlC· •
countably reflisea 10 televise ill :~
oral arJWDCDll nurturel !he ipo, .. ranee of !be puiiUc as to how ill ,
court of last resort WOlD. To dole ·
off !be rest of tbe federal coarts :·
from the citizenry further mockl ·
tile leller llld SPirit of constibltional
democracy. 1'here is 'still hope, ::
however. COIIII'CII lias tbc power ,:
to let !be sunshine in to federal ·~
wurttooms. Wbo will mite !be . ,
ftrstmove?
..
lf the presideat takel the lead,
be could bave signlfbnt bipdaan .~
B!ippCI'l ill Coaaresa - and 111D0D1 ..
!be pabllc atlarao. .
. .· .
Net Bea&amp;clr ls a a,atloully . ~
renoWMII aetllorlty 1111 ... Ji'lnt ·I
Amend-at and d!. rut ol the
Bll of RIPta.
~
(for lllfor-tloa on •ow to ,,
m-llllic:ate electronlclllly with :
thb eolamalat and othen, coa- ."
tact AD* lea ODIIae bJ caWmc 1·
800 8Z'7-6364, at. 8317.)
;

The average American doesn't exist
each of usllebavcl.:-;life.

' ~i~' !be 40-llour WOit Met went ~effect undrz the Flir Labor

IND.

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Do courts belong only to judges?

• , Tile Allocllted Prell

!he flnt penon 10 lllrViw: going ewer Ni"PP8 Fans in a lllnd. Mrs. Tay·
lor's chlma of fllne llld fonuile failed 10 IIIIICrilllzc, bowevcr, and she
died ill DO'IfltY
.
in 1921.
On Ifill diiC:
1D IJ37, JIBe Sevmour, lbe !bird wife c:ll!ngland's King HerKy VID,
cia lfter
...-:- llirtb
tt:ft~ Edward VI.
. . IIVIIII
. 10 ......__
u~ Bdwa'd, laler .....,.
died'l2': aays
ID 1648, lbC Peace·of WCIIphllll Olldccl !he 30 Yean w., and effec·
~~!be Holy Rolul-Bmpire.
in 1861, the lint II'IIIICOIIlinelll ~ · IIIC!IIIF was 11e111 as Jus, lice Slqlben J.Field c:l Califoroia 111n111. ilacd a Jdcplin 10 President Lin·
coin.
1D 193 •• !be Gecqe WllhilllfOD Bridse, COIIIIIICting New Yodt and
New Jersey, OPCDed 10 .!Jiffic,
·
.
1D 1939, nylon IIOC:kings ~ IOid Jll.~blicly for !be fU'Sllime, in Wilm·

A cusJiliDCI' service •cp:caeata·
live met DeMilll at the door and
illlroduced her 10 1he man ~ bad
called from !be llaak. He b•ndcd
11cr a huMs card with lbe bant's
oa it, Mid proc:oeded 10 tell
ber that she could get a hi1ber
illlaat rate lly bavinl !be \Ek lluy
govcnuaent bands fll' her. He aaid
tbc iii!Cre8t 1111e mishl Ouc.111111C, but
that her principal wouldn't lie
touched. Heariag this, DeMint
promptly pluaked do~ $60,000
from lbe maturing CD. 'I wu not
suspicious because I trusted tbe
bank lllld I was ill lbe bant," •
· said.
- But despite the bank's asaarancea,. ~t'a ICCOI!nt quickly
begsn losiDB moaey. Unbeotownat
10 her wben abe llarled tbc aocount,
her money bad been put In·a matu·
al fund- and her principii was
~g eacl moa!b. Al!boap •.
lbe bant 10ld her abe' d be forced 10 :
pay a steep JN~~B!ty 10 ~~ oat.of tbe .
fund c:.Iy, DeMiJi Jlllld tbe penalty .•
and lwildled her aocount tO a CD ·
at ancidler bank. But !he clamqe
was done, as lhe Jolt lboal10 per· '
cent of her IIIOIIC)', plus tbe tuea
abe paid 011 Jho SJDall lntereat she '

told our asaoclate Ed Henry. :
"They're all for It when !here;:
makiuJIIIOIIey. bat wben !bey
•
money tt..v suddenly WIDliO find 1 .
&amp;eapelciltf.
.
Reaulators privately admit _
Jhey're csugbtiD !he middle of a ·
delicale beii'Jidng acl belweeo protcetla&amp; !be COIIIumer and teepillf :
aovemment off of l;he· banta ·
bacta. "We're ll)'iniiO ~ cdu· •
eated eonaumera out of people ··
· wi~t imposillg an •mncccsaary ·
reJulaiOry burden 011 tbc llaQb," ·
anodler regulator IOid Ul.
•
Jack Antlenon ead Mlc•••l
Bl111te1D are· wrlten for Ualted ~
Future Syodlcate, IDe.

1bree YCill a10, J111ic Sborea,

11cr of lbe Oran~t Cbriadlll Chun:h, a U.S; Army VCiellll of lbe KmMI
Wll, IIIII a manlier c:llbe Modcnl Woodmm of Amalc:an Mid tbe Tappera Plains VFW Polt 9053.
.
·
He is aarvlvcd by bia wife, Inez Pullinl WindlecJ of Gumille; 1011,
David WindiW of Guysville~,
dMI
RoWn Tbombi1l ol Sllb, Ky.,
and Sunshine Wlndlaacl of
; broJben and liaten-ln-law, Dale
and Ada Grace·WiDdlaall of
~. Robert and Betty Wlndland of
Coolville, a Eugene Mid June
of ScmiDolc, Fla.; IIIIer, BIDD·
denna Martley of Colwnbua; lillen and brotbers-ln·llw, Milrllfttllld
Lclaacl Palter of Pantroy; Blanc:bc lmd James Cook of Llrlo, Fla.; ftve
pandddktea; lmd bia mo!her-ln-law, Manic Pullins It Coolville.
Besides his parents, be was preceded ill deaJh by an infant brother,
William WJacllaacl
Services will lie 1 p.m. Wedaeaday ill .!he Wbite-Blower Funeral
Home, Coolville, wl!h lbe Rev. Dawn Speldlnl officiating. Burial will
follow iD the Me.!Js Memory Gardens, where military aervlc:ea will be
conducted by lbc Tuppers PlalnJ VFW Poll Frlcudl may call at die fuaer.
al home from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
.

vlaiL

!C.C~a::.c:l~~ ··

Today in history
rc-.
.
.
~cJ::. ~.~ Tayb, a 43-yeas-old widow, became

. , \Vilbur R. Wlpdla, 65, c:l Guysville, died ~y. Oct. 22. l994ip
Mouat Carmel MccUaii Center, followlna• exteJ!dod ili!Jcu,
·
8CI'D Feb, 19, 1~ In Guyi~ sou of lbe lite Harllel and GiiDet
Lott Wlndlllld, be was M1 Abex employee IIIII I faimer. He - a IIICIII·

. CDalll8lllred,.slle-llegaa 10 shop
fll' a betler iDierelt rale. 1be biJIIt
!hat held her maturlnl CD caliecl
her to say !bey had a !letter deal
and illvited her 10 come Ia for a

smart as foxa." cine FDIC official .

Sex. Say lbe word lllld ltll'lbs
oar attention. Ast us aboutltllld
apparendy we csn't Slop Wklu1.
Bat, my, how our COIIvcrllllon bas
chanted. WUI hasn't cban&amp;ed Ia

.
Today is Monday, Ocl 2A, the 2971h .claY of 1994. Tbere n 68 days
left in tile

.

csud011 tbat 10111e ICIIIon may lie
trylal to aame tbe by clalmlna ·

associate Justice of Alabama' a
Supremo Court, was llddreui!ll a
luncheon for attomer.s newly
admitted 10 tile court. ' The avera¥! citizen," abe told them,
• doesa' t bave ·even a t~using
1cquaiataace with the Bill of
Rigbts ... he Uvea his entire life
widlout cxadaiD8 Ml)' of lbe dgbll
safeSlJilded 10 him lly !be Bill of
Rigbll....
.
"He liaa IICVCt illvt*cd b1J JiJbt
10 RIDiin ailellt In tile flee of illterro8alioa. He has never had tbe
occasion to cross examine his
IIIX:IIIet nor clemeDd llail, nor bave
lbe rl&amp;bt 10 QIUIUCJ. He hu never
been confronted wl!h a criminal
cbarp IICI'·bld a public trial .... This
lack of exposure to the Bill of
Rishll bas caused an Indifference
an lbe J8l of many of our c:iti1IDa
. 10 due proceu...
During tbe past three years,
wblle IDMIY clllzena baye remaipoc!
lanoran,. of their riBhts - and
therefore everybody else's- a
powiug numllcr bave been cduclt·
ed by wat&lt;:hlna, at bome, ~
cues ill actual courtrooms. ID 47
states, television cameru have
been allowed ill some cOUI'll; 111!1
until rece ..dy, a pilot project baa
permitted cameras durinl dvU trials and appeals ID eilhl federal

- -·Area-deaths-- Marauder band wina, ·
grand champion prize .
Wilbur R. Windland

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Oct.lS

madcFederss llantiDg reaataton abo :·

Sump pumps cause ·
problems for high-te~h
weather systems
By JOHN NOLAN
Allocleted rr- Wrllf!r
CINCINNATI - 'liackiDI WCIIbu pat1a111 8lld givln~ of
daDBeroua 1t0m11 Ia a 24 hoar lms!nes• . F11111C11, airllDea.
CIIJIIIIII·
olea IIIII odlcn bave a crldc:al DCCd rw weadler forec:ull.
So 111ere was CIIIIC for w a wileD a~CW~&amp;C blaup forced aacw $1
mlllioa NaiJnnil Weadler Senb ltllloD oat rA apenlilll fll' tiRe boun
Moaday aftcl110011.
.
. 'NOt 10 worry. scmce spo!Felll!!lll Bob Cbar1uk slid. Odlcr wc 'f« 111lioos ill !be rep011 lOOt OYtt !be Wllcll UDIII a plumber clealled up tile
mcas lmd tile WilmlagtoD llllioa resumed opc:nllloa.
"ID •Y acw project, )'Oil bave 11u11 you bave 10 wclk out," Cbar1ut
said. ''Givco this type of Ullderlatillg, we're Vf!ly fmuaale dial !bat's an
tllal'swroog."
Tbe Slali011's staff shut dowD tbc radar lllld eleclroDic equlpncnt 10
avoid problema wi!b lbe Will« llli:kup caused MOIIday wileD sump pumps
failed 10 pump tbc COIItt:llll of a holdilll JaDk out of lbc lluikiiDJ.
Sewqe overflows doo't always m., tile aowaamcnt'a wcadler filre.
Qllll. A·111m11ar aewqe backup occurred ID IIIOIIIet bnllcl-aew N~
Wcadlcr Service Slaliooln Brookbavco, N.Y.; wbicb allo bepD opctalilll

'

FDIC agents to.appe~r at a bank near you
... WASIUNGTON - .ID tlle.DCltt .
IIKillh. UlldeRlover qeots deplo)'e!l
lly the Federal Depoalt
Corp. wnt be ftaniq oat 10 thou·
llllldl ct IIIDb acrou tile axmtry,
JIOiill8 .. CUIIIliDel'l wkh money 10
lnw:at.
.
Tbe qents are part of I natioD·
· Wide "sweep" by !be FDIC to find
out bow much lnfonnatioa banks
· are glvills their cusiOmers about
the risks lissoclaled with aninaured
finaoclal inslrumcnta such as stocb
and mutual limda. Sparked in part
by • invesll1ati011 by !be Seoate
Aging Committee, lbe sweep wiD
be tbc lint federal effort 10 deter·
mine if consumers - primarily
older people - R beinl sold out
In the increuinaly competitive
fl..ncial scrvlcea market.
"You walt iiiiO a hanlt lllld oo
the doll' It says 'FDIC.• lllld IOIIIChow... It's like a Good HousekeepIDJ seal of approval," says Sea.
David Pryor, D·Ark., chairman of
tbc Senate AginJ Ccxumittee. "So,·
the avera1e pcrsoa out tbere
assumes tbat anytbiag tbe bank
aeUI Ia lluured by lbe FDIC. WeU.

The Dally~

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 2 file Daly BentiMI

Emergency HEAP season ·
s/!Jter,tto begin on Oct. 31
same fll' botb PmBrams· 1be 4ead·
lille for Regular HEAP Ia March
Melas Community ActkJn Aaerlc! 31, 1995.
aniiO!IIICCI !be Emcneacy JIEAP _ _ Both Emer1ency HEAP and
for !be 1994-95 heatin1 aeasoa ReiUW HEAP applications can be
be gina Oct . 31 and continues completed at !be Cbeablre CAA
Jhrougb Mardl31, 1995.
office, Gallia CAA ,Outreach
I:meqcncy HEAP anows a 11111&gt;- Office, lllld Meiss CAA Outreach
lime payment per bous..hold per off'u:e. Tbe CAA ceattal office is
headni awoo of up 10 $175 10 located at tbc comer of allle rou!el
res10re or continue home lleadna 7 and 5541n ~ire.
services.
The Gallla Outreach office Is
To lie elilillle, bo!b income located at 863 Porter Road in
guideUnes and emersency require· Porter. Tbe Meigs Outn:acl! office
menll must lie met. Housebold is located at 393SO Uni011 Ave. ill
inaJIDC II deftned as J1011 income Pomaoy.
of an OOuaehold members. except
ApplicatiOIIs will be taileD fi'IID
e.ucc1 iDcolnc of depeodent minor 9:00 a.m. to ooon 111d from 1 to
undrz 18 yea old.
' .
3:30 p.m. Monday Jhroush Friday
Allowable annual inaJIDC for a at !he two Outreach offices. The
oae-pa1011 household is·$11,040,
cenual office in Cheshire will
IWO penans $14,760, three peraOIII accc:pt appllcatioos Monday
$18,480;fourjleriOIIISZZ,ZOO, five tbrougb Thursday, 9:30a.m. to
persou's $25,920, six persons 111100 lllld 1 10 3:30 p.m. No appli$29,640, add $3,720 for each addi· cations will be taken at tbe
lional individual memllcr.
. Cllcabire office oo Fridays.
To med lbc emergency requireThe teleJihooe number for !he
menta of the prolfllll, !he bouse- · ClleshiR: office Ia 367•7341 II' 992·
bold must be threillened with tbc 6629, tbc Gaiiia County Outteacll
diSCQm~C~:IIon of Ill healiDIIOIRC office is 388-8232 and !he Meigs
or aln:ady cliscoDDccted, II' bave a County Outreach office \S 992·
bulk fuel supply of 10 days II' leas. 5605.
Households wi!b beat supplied 1\YO tO &amp;hare jackpot
by PUa:&gt;-reaulated utilldca must
be eorolled 011 !be Percentage of
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
IDaiDC Piau (PIP) to lie cllpblc for Ohio I...oUay dckcU a each worth
ellllliJCIIC)' bellcftll.
CCJI8l shares of a $16 miBioD jack·
· AppllcadOIIs are allo available pot becaaae the)' show tbe sill
.for !he R:J,War -HEAP prosram. nuoihers plcbd In Saturday nigbt's
wbich is
lional healing Wb· Super J..oUo drawin&amp;
ranee of a n011-emergeacy nat~.
Tbe winola&amp; tickds wen:IOid at
Tbe income guidelines arc the Colony Food Man In Oxford IUid
---...;.;~~---1 M&amp;S Carryoul iiiColumiiUI. When
validated, each will result in
The Daily Sentinel $307,692 a year for 26 years,
· Wl!h tbc willter bealln&amp; fWOII

j uat arouad the comer, Ollila·

bef~~,Cr LotiO jackpot will

(IJSf!l ZU.Mil

Charles M.·Zimmennaa, 64, of Clifton, W.VL, died Suaclay, Oct. 23,
19941n Cabeii·Hualiagtan Hosplhl, Huatlngtan, W.VL
BCI'D Nov. 4, 1929 ill Maysville, Ky., he was a son of lbe late Lester
and Florence Zimmerman. He was allo preceded ill death by a brolbcr,
Lcsler Jualll' Zimmerman, and Iiiier, Mary Ann Zimmerman.
A security guard fCI' tbc former Marietta MMiufacturinl Plant. be wu a
veteran of lbc U.S. MIKiae Corpl. He was a member of tbc Cllftoo Uniled
Me!hodlst.Olurdl, Stewlrl·lolmiOD VFW Post 9926, 8lld Moose Lodge
731 of Point Pleasant. W.Va.._
Suivlving 1ft hia wife, Alma Zlmmennan of Clifton; lwCl SlqldanpJen, ADD Untalan rl LeUit, W.Va., and Betty Hamm c:l Syracuse; su:p.
1011, William E. usonny" VIIIMeler of Cliftoo; two sislers, Rally YIKDlg
of Weat Columbia, W.Va., lmd Betty Dunlap of Pdnt Plm'Dt; brocbcr,
Jolm ZlmiDCrman of Point Pleasant; lmd 10 step gnaddJildrm lllld three
step greal·Ji'llilddilldrm.
Services will be Wedneaday at 1 p.m. In the foBicaoul Fuaeral Heme,
Mason, W.Va., willa tbc Rev. Terry Alvarez and Rev. Sonny VanMeJer
officiadng. Burial will be ill lbc Oifton Hill Cemerery. Frlcudl may call
at lbc fuDeral home from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

Poll finds Hyan gaining
on-De Wine in Senate race
COLUMBUS (AP) - Demo- · historic because C:fc show a
c:rat Joel Hyatt had Jlailled some Republlcan Senate
.beiDa

· Steak dinner phoned

Tbe Ladies Auxiliary of tbe

Hospital news
VKI'ERANS MEMORIAL

Saturday admissloas - RUler
- - '"" _ . , Mo!!diJ Uroull! agaiD hold $4 miB1oD fCI' Wcdnea·
Cheiss,
Racine; Elizabeth Bartoe,
fr141J, 111 court 51., l'l&gt;.,..y, Ol!lo, by die · dav's drawing.
Lon1
Bottom;
Elolae Adams,
OIJlo Volley Pli!JIIilllll Co-yiM!d!l'
Pomaoy;
Etbel
Mullens,
Pomeroy.
too., Po...,y, Ol!lo 4.:5769, Pb. Wl-2156,. ----~--I!!!B-!1111!11!1!1.
_ _ ......,..peld ..
Sabl!'day diacbaraea - Cheryl
......., ne AlwtetM Prla. •ae Olio
Hysu~C:::UU..1oas _ Randy
N""''l''l! ,..._,_ .
·
.ua Ele r-r
...31311
Smith, Pomaoy. .
Abu I 01 _,;._ - .313111'
AV4
Sunday clbcbarlea - ElizabrAb
Tilt Dolly Soattaol, Ill COlin St., .
Alblaad
Bartoe; Lon a Bottom; Betty
f!ll!*OJ,a,io4.S769.
ATAT
... .54tfl
llli*CIIII'I1'* ltATU
Buk ()ae
- -- ..21

Stocks

..._,Qiio,

POI1MAII'IIa---..

o.-.. . -.. . . . . . . ... . .

o.v. ....:....... ~...............-...........- ..113.20

16.95

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

=:.:?fa·----~~
K..art - - - - --16

t

.

·--~~~~-......, ....... .., .
-~~-- to'lbo o,l!lpallo Dilly
oo • - . • • or 12- 1N111. ·
Otdi!WIII&gt;op... - - No illl!lqllOII by ·..U

,.._Is ...
...,.__ _.Io..o.a, c..,

IS-·~······-··.............. ~..-~ .......SZU4-

SZTfwlll!........... _ .................._..._,_..,sa..o

'"

Mel'l tdlar-.
l'alllta._,
Rlllana ~.

11

18114

l'lfl
19
l'7/l

-17lfl

15

Star Bull .
19 7/1
Weedy bt'L - - - 1 4 511
WortJila&amp;laa lad.
n 114
Stadt nparllll't tiM 1".30 a.a.

. :16-••- ...- ...........~ ......... ~ ..-...$4116
szW...... .:....._........,............ ..,~-...$14.76

13 W.:.::~~~~-423.40
:16 ................................. - .........._ ......,JO

LlndiEncl
Lllllll8d hie.

Roblllas6Mye11
SboaeJ'a!JM:.

'MAJLftsCIIPI10NS

• ·· -

JIGb,J!ftu- .

B.-.---P!'-1--·
quot~i!,rovlded bJ Kdvllt o

•,

G~

.,;!'

Two charged in thefts
Two Meip County malca wen: items have been recovaed bat all :,
arrested Thursday oa numeroaa propeny will be held uali1 tbe CIICI ,
felony tbcft cb)ea, acc:ordillg 10 a1e resolved, be added.
·
tbc Middleport Police Deparbneat . 1be stolen IICIIII ladndod nillr
n:axds.
dellleton, jackell, llpCIIIId CO!D'
Tommy M. Penoin810D, 20, of pact dlsca. 11ic public allcJ!IId Yde
DexJer, aloag wi!b a 1 ~~C:-old down serial Dllllberllllld dela'lpO
Middleport hoy, were ·
to a lilllls of pes-.lp-'46ty ·Ill idellil· •
number of llliDmobile break-ins ill fy it if stolen, Llale said.
·'
tbe previous weeks, Middleport
l'l:DDiDgiOD ICI!IIImi UDder boule
Chief Sid Lialc said.
anest, pending an uralanmeill
Middleport au!horidca arrested Monday, reporu stated. 1be boy
lbc 17-ye~~-old b allegedly break· was returned 10 lbe aJIIGdy rA Ills'
In&amp; iDIO a c. early 'I'IIufsday l!liDID- jlarents.
ing, Little said. Several atolea

1

Burst oil pipelines vex
recovery effort 'in Texas
By JOSH LEMIEUX
Alloclated Preas Writer
HOUSTON - 1be Coast Guild

·~" ...

Trustees to a.et
The Scipio Township Trustees
will Nov.. 2 at 6:30 p.m at the
Pageville Township buildillg.
Sorority lela -~~na

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sipna Pili Sorority will meet
'l'bunday, 8 a.m. fll' a trip 10 Ores·
den .

Marriag• licenses
The followlna couples were
Issued JIIIRiqe lla.naea recently ill

:.~~Probate Court of
----» wc:~=ICAL~
~ Oct. 31 - Kimber·
Kenneth Fredrick Wallbrown,

('hmplo-IDcL__;--..,l4lfl
C1w'latal Sllop _____,_• •7 3111
CltJ Hokllla------..32

.,~---

Ole - ..,......................, .......... ~•··~-..SI~ .

o.,..

Meigs announcements

1 , ••

ly Morris, Grey Robinson, ~lima 41, l!lld SullO Diann Donaldsoa,
Holliday, Gerald Mapes, Carl botb of Long BotiDJD; J - Ralph
WIDiams, Shllm MOIIJ!IID, 'flmo. I GIIOIII, 72, GaniJ:n City, S .C~ llld
thy Sadden, Mil. MI-l Shoe· Jeaane Anne Bradbury, 68, Mid·
mater 111c1 sou, Cynthia Johnaoa, dleport; Sbenua Gone Backler,
Marilyn BOJII, Mrs. Patrick 41, Mid Linda Mlric. Bactley, 35,
Cochran and daupter, Zachary botb of Middlelal: Stevco BdWIId
Adkins.
·
Tmsaell, 35, Loa&amp; Bollom, aad
Blr.. - Mr. and Mrs. James Mk:belle Role Slsaon, 7,6. MlddJe..
Duma, daaJIMer, Gall'f:'·
pm;
·
DllcUipj Oct. J - Carrie
Kevin Lee Sllltll, 21, Clncln·
Gibba Vlrl': Saanden, Eloise IIIli, IIIII LeAnne Clrol Powell, 21,
Eblin. 'Eva
Mrs. J - 8111111 . Allllny; RJ!ba1 Joe Ratbbum, 33,
lllld dlual*r.
1 and Hea!ber Alayne Wood, 22,
Dbc\arau OcL 33 - Jobn botb of R.atland; Paul Jonathan
Mullal, Danlld DeWilL
hlpri, 20, Mid Cbarit_r Rlcbelle
(1'1111+•• .... ,.. hD)
Beyer, 16, botb oiMidcllepolt
I

,,

'

' '
The Mei11 Marauder baud 271.10.
. . ~.
cloledoaltbc 1994-95 mapcdta
Field romm'Dden ICrllleii'Bit.~~ -·
aeuon lly tatln&amp; JI'IDd mampioo sylva and Erin ICrawaczyil In lllllda durin&amp; tbe Marietta BIJid.. chosen u !be overaU Ileal field
held In Mmctta Satunlay.
commandcn of tile day, ·lid ·die
Saturday tbc lland will enter Meias percu11ion aectloa w-.e
st1te flnala at Cooper Stadl110 witb aWSJded ovenll'hl&amp;h G.a for 6e
step-off lime • 11 a.m.
&amp;ealild wee1t in a row. ·
At last Saa.day's ««opeUllan.
Tbe victory ladle tblnl CllllOCI&gt; '
!be IJaad ~ lbc Class A compe- tlve week that Melaa llu !lee•
lltloa by taking first ill most cate- grand cbi'Dpianlillld Mid lbe coa&amp;ories.
secutive 25Jb time !hit tbe Melp
Meigs won flnl places ill field baud bas llccD n1ec1 MpCriar 111 .rea·
coiiiiiWiden, Oaa corps, percus· uJar SellOil CDJDPI"iliOII. .
slon, ecJ IIMid. IIIII when rile overThe band Ia directed lly Ta.ey
all awards were aanouaced tbe Dingess. aaaisted by Jawefo Mor· ,
baud tan11: lhe 10p awald fCI' sCIICial .!OD, Dave Deem. Sa. Cllrt, Joy ·
effect and was c:bosca as lbc 1994 O'Brien, Millie Saew.t IDd Jaie
grand champion bud lleatia&amp; out ~Oi0JD811,
.
second place I..Guiaville 276.9 10

worked against a strong current
Sunday to clean up more tban a
mllliOII gaUona of oil ... gasoline
that gushed fl'lla pipelines ruplured
by Ooodwslc:n.
dMc
0ae of lbc llll!ioll's bullest poRI
1round in !he U.S. Senate race su(ipolled by 51 pen:alt oflbe like·
qaillst Republican Milre DeWIDe ly voters for !he first lime aiace could remaiD closed tbroup lbe
ill a Gallup Poll cond•ICied for 1be 1969.
week to nearly all traffic while
Columbus DisptJich and publilbed
"While I atlll cannot tell you crews wut on lbe gooey JI!CII. .
Sunday In a copyrlglllsliDI)'.
· how lladly Jcel Hyatt willlole, it Ia
Floodinl !hat began Oct. 16 1111
The survey also said Gov . evident !hat he will lose," BCDDClt killed at least 19 people. Rnahlna
Geor1c Volaovlcll had increased said.
warer from lbc swollen San J.:IDIO
his already sizable lead over
Among an reapl'Kients, 47 per· River is believed responsible for Ill
Demoaatlc c:ballenpr Rob Burcb.
cent said tbey would vote for leut four pipeline llreab !hat ~
1be poll said DeWine led Hyatt DeWtne; wbDe41 percent aa!d !hey atleut 1.2 miUiOII pllons of .-oby 10 percenta1e points among would vote for Hyatt.
line and crude oilluto !he river
people who said !hey plallned 10
1be gap baa IIIIJOwed aiDcc last Thunday, iBDilial fires.
vote. DeWine held a 19-polnt lead ii!OUth, when DeWine led Hyatt by
A llloldly ribbllll of lllaclt aude.
ill a similar Gallup Poll doae last 10 points amoag all poll respoa· some (J'Ikhes stilllluming, florlled
mootb for rile newapaper.
dents.
·
from rile rives's iililUth throush tbc
AmDIIBiikely voteil ill lbe lalcll
The latest ']lOll wu· conducted cbaaDCI aad iiiiO lbe Gulf of Mexi·
poll, 51 percent said !hey would by telephone Tuesday througb co. Oil·recovery ships worked 10
vote for DeWille and 41 percent Thursday ~mong 802 registered suck rile oil InfO atorqe llllb and
said !hey would vote·fCI' H)'attln voters, The maraln of enor for baa'¥,es with boom&amp; lllld lkimmers.
'I think 1 week is a good worlt·
tbe Nov. 8 election. Last montb, results involvin1 an respondents
DeWIDe led 54 percent 10 35 per· was 4 pera:n111Je points.
Ina figure fll' resolulillll of lbe oil
call.
For results involv1D1 only !be spillage. We may be IoRBer In
Joseph Sloveaec:, an hidepen- . 557 Jiltely voters, !he miU'Jli!l of resolviag ·some of the other
issues," Coast Guard Capt.
deal caJKiid•te, received 2 pen:eat error was 5 percenlale points. .
of tile vole ill lbe moll recent SID'·
In Democratic aortheastem · Ricbard Ford said. "It's tan early
vey. Six pen:cnt bad 110 opinion.
Ohio, where DeWine led ill previ· to predict exactly what type of
A measa1e seeklns comment ous polls by Gallup and .Tbe prolllcms we a1e dealing witb and
was left Sunday 81 Siovenec's cam· Columbus Dispatch, Hyatt pined bow 10111 it's &amp;oing 10 take."
The Hous10a Ship Channel is
pal~ office.
pllUIId amoog an poll respondeala
'The Gallup poll oonflrms 1bat aaclled rile regioa 46 pataJt 10 39 open 10 some barges during day·
Mike De Wine Is hemorrba&amp;lill pen:cnl
lipl Ford estimated dial buainess·
lladlr,. and !hal Joel Hyatt Ia dosing
Tbe survey also sbowed tbat es aloaJ rile Port of HousiOD will
fast, ' Hyaa campaiga spokesmaa Hyaa had gained 6 poillts amoaJ lose $1 million each day oceaa·
Dale Butland said.
Demoaals, 7 poiDliiiiJIODg Repub- going vessels n kept out
Oil-collecting ships bobbed
DeWine campaign spokesmaa Jicans 111c1 2 points llllOIIg indepen·
Sunday in 6 mph currents tbat
Barry BCIIIICU said rile numbers n
dents.
slowed rlleirproJI'CII.
"They're not particularly effeclive, nor n !hey designed 10 be, In
that type of current," fimlsaid.
A priviltc salvqe bOat worted
Chesler Volunteer Fire Deparlmcnt
Blood drive set
10
raise
a Jarse object - possillly
Tbe Meigs County Chamber of will have a steak dinner Nov. 5
au
unmanned
tugboat reported
Commer" will sponsor 1 blood from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at tbe fire·
missing
last
week
- suak in the
donor drive from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. house . Cost is $5 . Reservations
cbannel
near
the
Sao Jacinto's
Friday at the Trinity Church in may be made by calling Elsie
Pomeroy. Ci1l 992·5005 10 rells- Folmer, 985-3871, or lnzy NeweU. mouth.
Flve U.S. Army Corps of Engiter, but walk-los are welcome. 985-3344.
neen
vessel&amp; scanned the cbanne1
"-J'.
•
'_.
',.
...
Refreshments wlll lie supplied by
and
a
portion of Galveston Bay
Trinity Churdl.
Trick or treataet
with radar aad metal detectors for
Harrisonville lmd Pagevllle will
Slgnupaet
observe trick or treat Thunday, cars. mobile bomes II' other large
Basketball siaa·up at Chester Ocl 27, fl'lla 5:30 10 6:30 p.m. A obstructioos possibly carried there
floodwater.
ElementaiY fCI' an fourtb. fifth. lllld party will follow lit the flreboUie by A
leading tbeory about the
. slxtb piers will be held Tllunday from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Tbere will
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at tbe dancing, games. and a hauated
school. Fee is szo.
bouse.
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pipeline breaks, IIC8I' wllere .die San
Jacin10 emp«&lt;es iDto tile cllwmel, ia
that flood debris c:rasbccl !Dto tile
fuel lines.

Murty broWn flood~ carried.
ct sediment dial bas scaled iii
tbe 40·foot-cleep ship chaaael,
redurinl tbc deplll in IOIIIC places
to 30 feet. But the runoff iaa't
expected 10 affecl shippiiiJ once
tbc cbaanel is roopeoed ·
Ford laid he wouldn't lie l lf•
priscd if all of about 2S . . . . .
pipelines 111D11inl bencao!! tile Sill ·
Jacinto sustained strualnl" w
ill rile Ooods.
All liaes in !he area lrnown u
•'The Spashettl Bowl' ' were shut
down after two Coloolal Pipeline
. Co. lines carr~ Basoliae and
diesel fuel exp
A Teuco IDe.
crude line and a Valero Eneray
Corp. natural gaa line were later
determined to have broken lbout
the same lime. Offic:iala oa Slt.day believed a fifth line bad llroken, but on Suaday said they
weren't sure.
The Coast Guard baa ordered
tbe pipelines inspected llefore
aUowing tbcm 10 be reopcaed.
Molt flooded tivcn lmdlatel ill
the region coatlnued 10 recede Sunday, wbile the Necbca, Brazos a
·Trinil}' rivera mnuacd above !heir
flood 5111Jes down river.
Also Sunday, the Red Cross ·
opened tbree more shelters for
flood victims, iDcreasin tbc namber 10 47 openlinJ In 3J southeast
Texas COUDiies. Nearly 1.100 peo'pie a1e still housed 81 tbc shelllen,
compared wi!h more than 8,000
last week, tbc agency said.
lOIII

LlIVeStOCk report

COLUMBUS (AP) -Ohio
direct bog prices 81 selected ba)'ina
poinll Monday by lbe Ohio DeJ-t·
ment ct Apicullure:

Barrows and 'gilts: SO cents 10
1.00 lower.
Uli
.S.2l8· 3oo'2230-92260
5 I~., coun29711Y
pom
· • · • a .ew . 1S;
~ants 28.S0,.10.00~ aJe~ 30.SO,
.75
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs~ councry

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po~'izs~~Prooucera Uvc·
stock Association:

Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to
1.00 bigber.

6 dead in weekend accidents

By Tile Aaloc•ted Preas
At least six people bave died In
traffic accideats on Ohio roads
over tbc wccJrcnd, Jho Stale ltiihway Paaol said Sunday.
Tbe palrOI CXMDll fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday 10 mic!Digbl Sunday.
1be dead ale:
•

SUNDAY

179 ill Ashland County.
CIRCLEVILLE - David L.
Grabans. 38, of Ashville. a pedes.
triaD struck by lwCl can an U.S. 23
in Pickaway Couaty.
.
GENOA - Douglas V. 0..pion,' 32, of OscJOII• IIIOlOreycllat
wbo struck a deer oa an Ottawa
County road.

DEFIANCE - Casey R. LinFRIDAY
berg, 24, of Bowlinl Greeo, driver,
FREMONT -Forrest E. Kina.
and Selina A Kevin, 19, of Defi. S9, of Lima. driver in a twiH:Ir
ance, a puseager, in a one-car accident oa Ohio 600 in Saac!uaty
accident on Ohio 424 ill Defiance County.
County.
SATURDAY
ASHLAND - Sllawn R.
Sorenaeo. 34, of MilleniMq, driver iD 1 motortyele aa:idcnt an Ohio
.,,, ""'Wi&lt;h

Rowers From !..

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·

. POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
~IX)

Butternut Ave. Pomeroy. OH

(614) 992-6454 • \
(800)433-6203 '

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�·sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

By beating Bengals 37-13,

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Pomeroj Middleport, Ohio

In tJ.tV sections/ vo//erbs/1 set/on,

Mondey, OctOber 24, 1814

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~v~:~Y~;-b=:~·
'!:
bo soo at the lime ....... pia......

a ve ·
_, ,_
The softneaa of t.beir flnt·balf
schedule, lnclu~ing two ames
against Cincinnan, baa~ it dU·
fi~t to tell wbelber they Ill really
Ibis~oo:l;_. fine wllb them.
S'

•..:.~opefullt~wiU lteep try to keep It from rolliotl::'.:;
-v-1111 u.. Pepper couldD't get to it. I made a
JohnSOD Slid. "'!'e fed like we're · and itlrept rollins.
SlroDJ. f;Dd lbat a all tbat matters. ·
"All) could lhiDit of was going
We didn t mate up die acbednJe or bact to die sideline and Bill (coach
lose tbe ~ ~ dley've played Belicbick) saying 1 bad lost us 20
bcfoe facmg us.
· ·
yards. Then I sot a lucky boUDCC,
.,
QuartedJii&amp;D OD both aides took and when 1g':!.!'ltheir closest guv ·
a beatiug. Cleveland's ViDDy Tea· our guys slill
the wan set up •1 '
tavenJe left tbe pme complaining
The Browoa added 10 JIOlnti iD
of beadacbes ud blurred vision tbe fourth quarter on Stover's 3Searly in the third qitarler, and the yard field aoal and Leroy Hoard's
Beu-als lost David KJingler to 1 1-yard ruu- his second touch·
sprained ~and Dou Hollu to a dowu of lbe game. He scored
shoulder injury.
Clevelaod' s fust touclldown oo IMI
Teatsverile'a injury was dlag· . 11-yard screen pass from TeaIIOied u a mild concussion. '
taverde iD tbe secoud quarter.
_ Mart ltYJ)IeD. tbe former Super
The Bensals scored their only
Bowl MVP ·aiJDed by lbe Browns touchdown on Tim McGee' s- 11·
lalt spins to back 111m up, bad ·ut- yard recepliou from Klingler iD die.
lie success moving them. But first quarter, set up by Oliver's
Clewlad·s spccial teams made ita lnten:epllon. Oliver would have
moot point
·
sand himself, but be fmnbled die
First, lbey recovered Corey ball without belns touched as be
~awyer' i fumble on a fair catch.
!IClRd die goal line.
That raulieclln Matt Stover'i 'J:l.
"I tried to swildl banda, aad it
yard field goal, tylnj tbe game at just came out for some reason,"
13 with 3:20 lett 1n the lblrd period. Oliver said. "F0r1UD81eiy we got a
NexJ, Gerald Dilton cbarsed toudldown."
lhroll&amp;b die line to bloclt IolmiOD's
Doug Pelfrey bad two field
)JUDI fn tbe CD!I zoue, aud Hill fell
goals f&lt;a" die Bcugals.
DRAGGING BENGALS - Clmlaad nnnl.. uy•i AFC Ceanl boat Ill Cleftlml, wllert tile
II'OWIII 37·13 to . _ , th "Batde ol OWo''
oolt f«a2().131cad wilb 1:47kft
Klingler, responsible for 11
~::;~:---)and
'::!'ii~-·~:
IIM.(AP)
iD the quaner.
lurnovers over the previous four
,.
•uu
Finally, 00 tbe last play of die James, was error·fn:e Sunday. He
Benpll' _,..... IIssa • ... _.... W ol speriod. Mdcalf let JolmiOD's JUII was 18 ot 34 f« 200 )'lids.
·
l T.
put 111m, 1beD c1aaaec1 it dOwn
Tealaveroe was 8 of 18 for 103
I 0p 25
St:f/on,
.
..-rpered lllkll"bed down die
yards.
lcftllidelorlllaiCCOIIdpunt·ftllum
Browns rookie cornerback
toacbdown of tbe ye~~. The first Antonio Laogbam was sllllpped to
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011&amp;1 also came apiust die Bengals.
a saetcller aod carried otr altCt col· ·
This lime, the Beugals save lidlng with teammate Eric Turner .
Melalll two chaoa:s·at IL He was wit.b about four mlnules to go.
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sklppecl quiddy tbe finl time 1o1m- Laus~am bad full movement but
son Pll!lled from deep iD Ilia own was taken off cautiously because By DICK BRINSTER
tbe Oraoac Bowl five days off, all
Stewart scored twice in t.be
tarltory. But CiuciDDati was wbis· be bad a 5pf1lined neck.
AP Spans Writer
tbe poaturini will end. On Satur· fourth quarter, enabling tbe Buf·
~w!~e:':'t':Setc-=.~u:!sbaclbletmaotlle - ·sports briefs-- expected,
Bccauac It wou • eully umoa da~o of' t.be nation's eight faloea to overcome a Cbad May
few will. fi&amp;nre third· · un
teams wlll sqUIIC off iD aerial uaau1t 8lld 11m: tODCbdowDa
, DCXI try.
· r
·
· Bod•
· ranked Nebraska wu looking I locoln, Neb._
by numing tact JJ. Smilb iD a 35·
"I read • anide last night thai
WASHINGTON (AP) - lobo ~ 1D lhia year's pmc of pnea.
This lime, Nelnlka qlllltelback 21 viWJry tbat mliiPCd die Wild·
said If 1 didn' t bave a punt return Carlo .,,_, former hea"""""i..a.l
CoualderiD ill -..~.._
B It B 1
L11 111 ca1a to 23nl iD die AP poll.
qainat diem iD die lirlt pmc, my cbam ~ S lnlts al 't~09~ ·
ci.aoo~~
IODICe;n::::.c:_owa e w
"l•m saliafied we're IOiDI iDto
aveiiF woulll,j!DlY be 4.4 yards," t.be Wrst round faturday DIJIII. cmc:cm itaelf with that p'Ob1cm oo
"I didn't wut to take any Nebraska witb mCID'IfJ•s"D
COD·
Mctl:lllllllkf. So I wu ilaDPY to Carlo floored t.be 41-yeat-old Salurday. ·
UlllleCCSSir)' 'hlta," Beainser said
fideoee," Colorado ·coact~ Bill ,
do lllat. I was aaacJdag die bill to Spinlts twice.
·
Now, wilL their &amp;bowdoWII for after leadiDg the Combusten (8-0) Mc:Car1Dey 1l8id.
to a 42-7 victory over Missouri (:Z..
Elsewhere Saturday. No. 6
S) oo Satmday. "If I bad a dtaDce Miami beat Wcat VlraiDia 38..6,
to get out of bounds, that's wball No. 7. Tcxu A&amp;M beat l&amp;e 7-0,
bad iD mind. I came out of it all No. 8 Alabama beat Miaaissippl
ripL''
21-10, No. 9 Florida State beat
S64 lO
SW~27.Uololl.25
Bcninser also ran for 23 yards Clemson 17-0, No. 10 Micbigan
~
11
-.CII6t,c.urcn~ao
414 1!
SCIIIIIOIIJS,a.-SL29
oo five c:aniea, but wun't SKbd. bealllliDoia 19-14, No. 11 Artzooa
40!1 13
~ 45, OolooodO II. 31
He said lle'd be at 100 percall fla' beat UCLA 34s24, No. 12 Utab
:163 11
W......... IL:II,-11.21 .
330 24
W,..,... S2, S. U.., SL S!
tbe same qainst No. 2 Colondo beat No. 17 Colondo Stale 45·31,
30ii l3
Delli
woelt.
No. 13 VJraiDia Tecb beat PIUS·
28 19
OdlerOhlo
Berrlnaer.
limited to by .. ear~~. burgh 45-7, No. 14 Synicuse beat · ·
104
"
PI eollege sC:ons
er Ions iDjary llld playlns with a Temple 49-42 8lld No. IS Wub- .
Oalt jactet - I'CIIricted by COld! iDgtoo 1oet 10 0rc&amp;oo31·20.
'l'llllwwll'•.......... ll'oodlall ........
T1111
Osborne to a day blgltlighted
Also, No. lei Duke beatWakc
Dllflol24, llnloo7
-·ur:;...~
by bandoffa and rollouts. But FIRSt 51·26, No. 18 Virginia beat
Nortls c-eo.~­
Berrlnser,also compleled nine of No. 24 North CaroliDa ~10, No.
"WIMOooll ..........
Alloilllof 54, ~ 0
OIIIDSI'ATB• ... SIIOo
13 passca for lS3 yardaJlld llir= 19 Texas beat Soulbenl Melbodiat
..._.:M,W-12
U:U..•Ncwlbwe&amp;a ·
seailld·l!alf toucbdowns.
Olllo.,....,.
40, 0.0 w- 20
42·20, No. 20 BYU beat Tcxu-Fl
41, 01&gt;111111
His imJII:OVing bellth is good Puo 34-28, No. 21 Oltio Stale beat
MAC standings
DCWI for OSbomc. beqnse blctup
Purdue 48-14, No. 22 Wllhingtoo
OlaJo A6Jolk: eo.ten.ce ,
Matt
Tarman sprained Ilia risbt SialiC l.cal Arizooa Stale 28-21. and
-W-2S,RJr..,.Col.tO
Cool.
- It
shoulder nmning the oplioD iD die No. 25 Soulbem Cal beat Callfor- · j31,011d101110
c.~o~a __ _, 1 o ' 1 o .1so
.
fourth
_quarter. Tbird·atringer Dia61-0.
llllii.. ___ J I I S S I JOO
::.C:'nS'f:\~7
OllloNonbn:M,-14
Moote Cllrlslo, a fmllm• bad to
. W.Mdl---4 2 0 6 Z 0 .150
Top·l'lllkcd PcDD State, No. 4
finiab die same. '
Tolodo-····-Z I I 4 Z I ltGI
Auburn ud fifth.ruted Florida
Mlllll.,_, __ 3 2 0 3 4 0 All
M ....... lalln:oll.
Because he was opposing wen: idle.
1111 ......... --.2 3 0 2 ' 0 .2M
ll'ootball Canol.
B.lolla - - -1 4 0 I 6 0 .143
Kansas
State (4-2),. Berringer's
W1J10oMI1F.l6,IS
No. 6 Mlull38, W. Vlralllla 6
...... ___.., 5 0 0 7 0 .OOQ
Colorado
coanterpart,
Kordell
At Morgantown, W.Va., the
0 0 7 0 .000
Mld-SIItelli'DOibalt "-c.
s~ - aft'Cllded 110 such lllllll- · Hurricuea (S·l, 2·0 Big Eul),
.......,
so.
1'111113
SaiiiiiiiiJ'•ry. But be also bad ·Rubaan avenged Jut year's loss u Franit
· S'l,,....... 30
~0.. 59, BoD II. !6
w_,,.,,.~,
Salalln, wbo ran fCI' 202 yards and Coila !brew f« 266 yardS and two
11112i,OIIIDO
~--12,-30
two acora u tbe Buffs moved to scores. ColliS' toucbdown JIWCI
w. -...S3,B. ....... I4
7-0.
we111 for 52 )'lids to Quia T. Iooes
. Tolodo .. - 2 5
"We ltncw it was SoiDJ to be
and S4 yards to Yadl 'Green. West
'l'llllwwii'I~J
bard game because of the elsbt- VIrginia fell to3-S,1·3.
•
B.~llollII.
mu fronu ud lbe ·blitzes IIIey
No.7 T - AAM 7, Rice 0
.;
used asunst us," Stewart said.
Qua1atJack Corey PuWg made' ',
·
a.1111111'1""But
Sood
teams
are
capable
of
the de~ensive mov!l of the same .
-·y_,....st
adjusting. DoWu the suetcb, we wllb a touchdown-saving tackle ·,
j!!SI ha!t to stay foc:used and stklt it after Alldry Clifton picked up a
Big '&amp;n studfnp
in lbere."
.
.
(See TOP Z5 on r.p 5) ·

:r·

ly SCOTr WOUE
ri&amp;bt to fal:e top ad Soatbeo11 iD stral&amp;bt .ervea, willie Duty · Drisp 11110 poW, u ace, a cliDit
Se 411wl Canllp" ..,,
tbe cbampioaUip II!JIC. Trimble
addecltwo and Tammy and 3-3 apikill&amp;. ~ wu 3-3
'IJac T~ble Tomcau ellllCd dete"e'J $oulheni 15-a. 15-&amp;.
. Wlldect
U:aipr
line
iD 'l'riqtblc'a wiDDilta · ICI¥ilt llld 4-8 lliltill willa-a ltiU.
die DlvlsicJD IV secdoulll wlleyblll1
Tile ' din
spill
wbiJe Rdanl- 2-3, I pafect 3cbamploublp by defcatiDI TriThe firlt pmc o(
111r1ec1
ID
tbe
n!Jbtcap.
Brllldi
Reeves
3
spitin&amp;, 111-49 1lelliJI&amp; wldl four
Valley COIIfuencc HQCtiug Dlvi· out iD '*niUner tuhloa, howe\oa 8lW Jluleni I 1-0 lcld. but Trim- setJ
for killa and a clint. MiDday
llklD f~ Elltem IDd S. •otberu Sit- Trimble rallied llld Eu1an 1111111:
ble came blct to lillie a 2-lleld.CJD s....,... - a perfect 2-2 apiltina .
urday --at~· bled badly. The Tomcats came two ICMI by I mip, Becty Dril· with a kill.
anHipSdaooliDRLhnm..ak. 1\. from a 2·3 defldt to claim a lop II tied die san at 2-2, dieD Callie
Trimble Wll led by Len!&amp;.. s
1iimble defCII!ld Easlen! In die sicletllS.S lriumdL
McCown
pvc
THS
1 4s2 adVID- nine, Trace's eight, Misty Coff• .
finlllllldt 15-S, 16-14, caminadle
Misty CoffiDID iacied five taae. Patsy Acika' tied die san fCI' DIE'slix llld WlldcQ;'s 011&amp;1.
1be Eaalel, 4-4, but tben Eassern
n. Sa d .. ..,_
bellO llteldy llillpln. Waldec:t
Ia lbe cbmpionsbip IIIDC,
J~ve Trimble 1 6-4 lead, t.bea SOUibem toot a 3-1 kid ooaaood
Mindy s-"1- •••• ned a spike spite from 1eani CWIIllliDI ud
to sa the scrw ~-=t a Eaatan.
~~m: Saolllli Silaal anea. Soatb.

c

In&amp; IIM!dw Trimble·lime out. ~

Nebras· a 'AIabama w1·•nners•
.
was hI•ngton· among· fallen
n

t:OI/ek

:

Olld:;;.;w

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NFLetandlnp

--

AMIIIUCAN CONIIBilENCE

a:.____,' H.1~HHt
·
---·
4 ,3 00 J11
N.Y. loll.,
__ , 4
J11 136
lit
- lilllold-· 3 4 0 .42!1 175
's: r "'··-· s s o.m t67

.

10
111
113
••

c.nt-

CUM!LANJ).. 6 I 0 .15'1 166 7P
- . . . ........ ' 2 0 .714 124 111
. . . . ..· -·-· I 5 0 .161 'r7 136

---

CINCNNAD ..

o 7 o .000 101

S.DIIF-·••oo 6 I

' - CIIJ ·-· 5 2

110

o .lSI liS

0 .714
L.A.-·-· S 4 0.429
- · - · ·- ·-· S 4 0 .429
2 5 0 .ll6

Doo•----·

1:11
159 131
163 I'll

ISS 124
156 l!l'l

NA110NAL CONnltENCB

1:,__,__.ll H JUPJJ
Jlh'l
4 2 0 .661
N.Y. ...... S 4 0.429
--·-"" 22 6s 00 .2M
.250
I

" ' ' " "" "

w......... . . .

140 lot
127 144
19 us
169 Zll

c.nt'
1
--···
5 2 0 .714 147
a.:.&gt; .... _..... 4 3 0 J11 129
MI•

1115
129
D*ali ----·
127 145
a.-..,
___, 3, 44 00 .429
.429 117 ,
r..lhJ ..... 2 5 0 .2M " . ,

"--

• • 6 1 0 .750 2S'I ISO
-··-~-· 4 • 0 JOO 151 114
L.A. a--·-· 3 s om 1:15 156

.. -

..
-~·-·

3

s o.m .."'

201

-··-

the delay, Aelter ltno•IDI die san

· at 14sl4 in a pal EllS omK!w It
Reeves bad I lllpCl spike, but
Tnau"'e a paua~ of( lhe floor.

_____3 t t., t t

~

- ···---.11 '

a

c.-. ..

J::ta
. . . . _-!1 t t 1! t t rt
CliiiO 1!'..- -l I 0 6 1 0 .750
Cool.

1'11F'P' ·--·l
•. _ .... , ..1
.............2
IUI,Iall...-.......1
W - .--1
Nw.w.-a ...2

I
I
2
2
2

0
I
0
0
I

-

5 1
4 1
51
4 I
3 I

0
I
0
0
I

FHEE

.714
.643

.714 .
J71 .

J00
2 0 3 J I J(X)
MlcliiP"IL - 1 3 0 2 ! 0 Jl6
Wp
a ,.,-140 3JQJ'7S
loft................ 4 0 , ! 0 .315

~~~PECTI()~

SHAVER REPAIR ,CLINIC

3'5 -~lllra~tls)

........,... _..
..........,J ....

.S

loldllal9;- 1 4
-fUGo11'-Sblot4
7

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Same Day Service
All Parts Extra
Includes: Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments,
Greasing.

M!

I 17,w-.14
OIIIDSI'ATB 41, - 1 4

-·---·-·-

1'1111 -''• ••• IIMIU'daJ

r:...::=c.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2:30-4:30 P.M.

.
GETTING IT OVEit

.7161. 211D I,..,LMIDDlEPIIT, 1JHIO

,Choose a14 term
from
'
29 to ~9 months.
Minumum deposit $ 500.00. This CD is autOIIIIIic:ally re~CWable.
Penalty fur early wilhdnwal. A.P.Y. is available u of
the date of this iuue, but.ilsuiject tO dw!p:, , .

Call446-2634 or I-800486-6682

Ohio Valley Bank
\

•

QR. A JACKSON BAILES, OP'IUMETRIST, is Happy
tO announce the relocatio!l !&gt;f'!'is Meigs County Office to
224 B; MAIN · S'I'RBBT IN ·POMEROY (Fo11J!erly
~eroy Health C8re). The offiee will be CLOSED
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21st THROUGH 'IUBSDAY,
OCTOBER 2Stli:&gt;1Jmergencles during this time will be
'aec;n at the Gallipolis office; 228 Upper River Road, 4463300. The Pomeroy office will · RI}OPBN o.n
WEDNESDAY. OC'IOBBR 26m at the new Ioeatibll
offering fuU-aervic:e family viaipn care including glusea
and all types of contact bl~~es,
PHONE 992-3279.

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with clint, a~ llld a bJoct; BIID·

,

Soalllcra I ll....tra Norrll (15) ud u

ell 'Reevea was 8-9 wilb six poiaU,

ID ace ud 1-1 spikiDB nisbt·
Michelle Clldwell w~ 4-S with
wllcre tile four points ud.an ICC, ~ebecca
EVIIIS was 5-1 with two pomta, two
aces, 3-S 11pitiD8 and two~ and

:-:..::: ·

::~=-..: o1n..=e~o:;\~.t::-(3~F£

IV 't'GIII:rt-JI -Chaal +•mplcwlllp Ill Jtldo....T
.,
Ita two
01'1"1 P

an toot a 4s2 leld oo a O...mina
~me, 1beD Sbelly Hanly of Trimble apnn off u ICC ud tbree
lllllPt points for a S-4 11IS lead.
Allotber Cnmmma spite and two
SiSSOII IICtVea, including u ace,
pvc SIIS I 6-S advan18ge.
Dcspile two Soulbcm lime 01111
Trimble rolled to a rdllively tal)'
15..6 ·~·
In the ni&amp;bll:llp, I alis- served
up an ICe IIIII two poinla for a 2-0
lead, dieD Ralee Turley hwt•+ftd
diD off Andn:i MOOR:' I 1C1W for
a 2·1 tally. From that point on,
TrDble ...,iDm~ die tniddle 1*t
of tbe pme. McCown IICtVcd up
six llmigbt poiDis. inchtding • ICii
for a 8-llcad.
•
Swlbea11 foa&amp;bt b11:t oo~ena
by less CoclneF. Turley JOt die ltill
for the first point, t.beu Ienn ·
Lawi'euce drilled I by spike for 1D
8· 3 score. After bolb clnbs lost
IICtVCS. Amy Weaver pulled SHS
tact to wilbin four. Hanly nnried
lbe IICtViDI point OD I f.ent till,
added four more. u Lawreitce
added IIICiber ltill to repiu possa
a for SHS,dle san 13-4.
I..awreace served up two lhi&amp;bt
u Bea lisle and Amber Tbomu
made siJOd IIYa in lite EllS bll:t·
court After lllrlins out slow, Codaer made ICYift1 OlllllllldinB saves
to ltecp SHS alive.
. With die san 13-6, I Codner
diDk off die ~ ICne pll1ed
SHS yet doeCt at .15-7. .Bodllcams
traded serves twice wtth Codner
~or STuriHSey ~-~~r-ae:~
DOWN IT
Emten'a PaUy Aetbr (16) ,_.. tile .....
"
. M-v ........ ,UfJ
•nd1r1 ta.. llle reac11 olaa IRiidellllled Til•ble plaJa' ..... 111e
for a 13-11 tally, llut that 1 • - cloae
opzn !!1 n!'lnd !!I ~~7'1 DI.WO. IV ~ ~ at
u SoiOcra came. McCown served
So-llie t •IIIP Sdi'NII, wlaen line Eapi
two...-,

GOa -

r• ..
After breslclng record vs. Southern, .
'
·
Alcorn State's McNair strengthens case for Heisman candidacy

'

IJ SIEI'IIEN BAWKINS
LORMAN, Miaa. (AP)
Tboae wbo doubt the llleat of
Steve M~lir m •w be plays iD
Di\'ilioia -l·AA . . rwmlnS out of ·

W:l
wily die Alallll Stille ~ICiback abouldn'a be--. die 111p
cllldldatea f« the HeiamiD Till-'
play.
McNair conlinnea to breakrecorda, aud lteepa doins II in
impressive CuNou.
McNair puled Ty Detmer to

"If dlerc's a bc:ta: player iD lhia inorc IIIMl Deana's 14,665 ymls.
·competlliou, it only matters wbat
Still, muy uy McNair you do oodle ficid."
country, I don'tltDow where be
lila own Divisioiii·AA lill&amp;k&gt;pmc ii," Aloorn coacb Cardell JoiiCI sboaldn 'I be considered for lbe
When tile seuon staraed,
record wilb 649 yards, Aud that ilid. "You Clll 10 out oldie uni· HeiPDM lJco R"'C be playa iD I·AA. ESPN'a Beano Coot wu amou1
wun'l eveo wbal stood odl'WIICII verae ud find one, blit in Ibis Olben tblnk be's a froat-nmoer fCI' tlloae lbal felt McNair bad no
bemlsplere. I'd say Steve is the dleaw.d.
the game elided.
c:llance at de Heilman. Coot was
"With the )'lldiae I bave pol llllting a different tune after .
The biueat lli&amp;lliiabla c.uc • pcltCit'.
McNair led the Brava (6-2) oo two
lu eight smes this season, up, I lhiDit I delerve at least a allot McNair put up tbe biB numbers
klla drMa 111e • a4t-37 v1aory McNair bu 4,02.5 101a1 yards l!ld at tile lteiamu," McNair sud. wbile lcadlug tbe Braves' comeover _Southern. McNair's ooo-yard ~9 fll!rhdownl '(32 pissing, 7 rusb- "Everybody bu lbcir own opinion tact Salunlay.
IP• J!dowD run wllb 10 III!OIII!Ih left ma). Hia career lllllt, with three If die)' loc* at DC IIIII sec DC play,
Delmer played in 1-A, but the ·
wu die fOIIJIII lead cbaDac m11x &amp;ames left. Ia 15,049 yards, 384 it sbouldn' t matter the level of 1990 Heismu ·winner also bad
minuiCI. _
·
delraclas tJco:.'C be played in lbc
WAC, wllcn big passinSIIUIIIben
are CODUillll and sood ~

beo•ne the NCAA Clftlet' leader iD
total olfenae Salllnlay by bleatiDa

Top 25 college footba/J•••.~co~OOII~nocd~flan~,.~4)_ _ ____:__ _
fumble in the final period and
retnrned it 20 yards. PuU.:t:!:
puscd 60 yards to Rodney
f« a san,llld die Agiea (6-0, 4s
0 SWC) c:oll...,.ed their 26th ~
secutive leasne win ud 2St.b
atraigbl win at boule. Rice Ia 3-3,
2·1 iD the SWC,
ND.I Ahtw- :11
Mlakllppllt
- Jay Bilka', w11o lJco •te AlaIDI'I wiunlnseat qDII1elback ever
1131-1-1, got de go-ahead IOUCbdown ou a·two-ya'd rnn midway
tbrousll the fourlb quarter of a
game mmed by aligbiDingiiOIID.
ncre were 11m: injllrica, inciiJdin
a Mississippi assiataDI coacb..
• lbe atorm caused a 25-mioute
~~·Ole Miaa (2-S, 1-S in the
SEC) led 1~ II tbe balf, Alabama
is 8-0: S-0 in die leaJne.
No. 9 f1odda Slate 17 ,
Cle-t
The &amp;minolea (.5-1, S-0 ACC),
matched a leaglle record with its
21st ACC win. Wanict Dunn no
f« 133 )'lids llld two toucbdoWIII,
wbi1e Ckm1011 fell to :Z..S, 1-4.
No.1t Mklllpa 19, 111Doi114
Jlemy HIDiiltoa lticlted, four
field soala and Amui Toomer
retnmed I pUDI 70 yards for I
toudldown f« the visilins Wolver·
inca (5-2, 3-1 Big Teu). llliDois (43, 2-2) bad uol allowed a third-

:::J

quarter poinlllltil Mldllpn scored

FRUT.HPHARMACY

The bill rolled down the net, lhCa
fell to the f•len! side just bellind
the Eqlc .defcader. Waldeclt bad
-help from Milly Leal's port·
erful l;i1J OD tbe 15th point, tben
paemllllcuext widlout a volley
the finall6o 14 Trimble.
'
For Eastern Aeiter led wilb
seven serving ~II, so1nJ 11·11

..

.a

w-.

die Ill&amp; two poillll fCI' die ls-8 Turley four ltilb: ICDDifcr a.m.
finale. .
.
mins lhree points and lhree ltills:
S.•fhtwu -led by s.uni Sis- and -Amy Weaver a 3-3 aervbl&amp;
lOll's fi~ poinll, tine IlleS, tine Digbt
ltilllllld a&amp; assists. Lawn:ace IDid
Trimble wu led by McCown's
ltlldra Norris cadi ball 11m: ICI'V· eight. Hardy's aeveu, five-point,
ing polait witll each an ace. two-a ctrons from WlldcQ; . t
Lawrence bad. two ltilb. Andrea Latlp. well• ('dfmMt'SiiYC..
Moore bad two kills, u ICC, two
StJdhmt bowed 0111 with I wiDpoinllllld six assists; Jess Coduer DinS record of 11· 10 Ulller COIIda
two points and 11m: tills; Renee lenni Rousb.
lip

EHS waled t.be opportunity,
Tooya'l'rll:e added a Tomcat 1001e
u McCown ckilled altiU. Tbcll,
Colfm• 1a olf five poinla II'OUiid
1 Elllrnllime 0111. Trimble led 12S bcloe EllS repined tile - .
EHS fallecl to 1C01C 8lld Leaipr
added two • die pne,poinl ·
appu+totl, 14sS. '
·
Elltem and Triable bolb wall·
ed ·three aervea apieee with t.be
SliDe on t.be tine before Brudi
Reevca added two ~iDts for the
.:..ly Eqlea. llecty Driua poundeel a tiD die net, pompdna
Trimble 10 cllltime, dieD Reews
offered ap two moe points, tile
14-9.
Two serves apiece went for
Dlll&amp;ht, tllen EHS resuned lite
aerve on a fiDe save by Ieuiea
ICJIJ. Palay Acika' 101 a 11oc 1llld
with tine ltnlsJIIaervea, panpl·

Scoreboard

rootbilll

·

Tr•mbl~ dereats Eastern and Southern to earn.district berth

Page 4

Browns sweep Ohio series
ByCCLBUEVCEKLMELANDVJN(AP)- The
Cincinnati Beusals would like to
lhinlr: Ibis is as bad as It gets.
Theu !bey take a loolt at their
schedule.
''You .wonder when you hit
rock bottom. The Dallas Cowboys
are coming into Cincinnati next
week,'' coacb Dave Sbula said
Sunday after tbe Bensala leta
promising ftnl half disiDtesrate
in!D yet ano1ber loss, a 37-13 beat•
ing by tbe Cievelal!d Browu.
Cleveland (6-1 ), off to IIi beat
sllllt since 1963, llailed 13-10 after
Cincinnati played two or ' its
crispest quarters of the scasoo. But
ibe second balf showcased the Ben·
gals (0-7) at their bumbllns worst.
a continuation of the Keystone
Kops rooline that baa pJa&amp;ued their
special teams all year.
The Browns turned tile game
around with a 17·point tbiJd qu&amp;r·
ter tba1 fearuted COD.ecudve ltlliCJI.
downs on CiDciDnali pUDII. Edc
Metcalf returned Loe Johlllon'a
punt 73 yards f« • toucbdown leu
ibao two.! lllinua after Travia HiD
recovered 1 blodted punt iD tbe cad
z~e Bengals lost f« the t•tll
"
consecutive lime oo lbe road 8lld
remained t.be NFL' I only wiDiess
team. They've given up four II»'
cial teams touchdowns ill two
gamesapiDstCieveland.
"Hey, 1 dou'tltDow, lgueu
we're ~e:.'!f punished for some
reason.. . Louis OHvcr, wboae
interception set up Ciucinnali's
only IDUcbdown.
The Browna, meantime, have
quiedy built tbelr beat starl in over

Tile Dlily Sentlnei Pig' , .I

fO for a 19-7 edse.
No 11 Arlzoi?II:W, UCLA 24
o.;liW811D Carter nubed for 164
yards and a touchdown, and Din
\Vbite lbrew ·f« IWO sans f!a' lite
host Wildcats. UCLA (2·6, O·S
Pac:...J 0) which lost its fifth
stral&amp;bt. i.ed 17-14 before Arizoua
(6-1, 4-0) went ahead fqrsood oo
Wbite'• 14-yard pus to Lamar
Harris.

*'

game for its best
in '1:1 yem. = d a 34-14 lead before t.be got two fourth-quarter toucbdown
.
0·.5, 1-4) made It doae.
passes from lake Plllllllller, .then
Pitt (1-7, 04) lost ill fiftll iDa row.
drove to tbe WSU 19. But PlumAliiODio Frcemao returned 1 punt
No. 21 OW. Stale 411
IIICI' was sacDd by DeWayue I'll·
80 yards for oue score, caught a
Plnrdlle 14
IOUI:bdown J11151 for IIIOibcr 8lld set
Bob Hoying !brew four toudl· tersoo on 4th -ud·l 0 with 1:23
·up two more scores wit.b loua down piSSCI aud bad a CIRICI'.Jtip n:miinms.
No. Z5 So.clnen c.J 61
ftltlnl.
290 )'lids iD die fint balf. He fin.
Callluntla 0
No.14S)'IW 49
idled wit.b five toucbdowu and
Brad Ottou !brew for 188 yanls
T...... 4Z
.
31M )'lids u die bolt Btdcya (6Marvin HmililD teiiiiCd up wllb 2, 3·1 BiB Teu) beat tbe Boiler. and two toucbdowns In the tint
balfforUSC(5-2,4-l Plc-lO). The
Kevin Maaal. catdtins touc.bdowD llllkcn (4-2-1, 2-1-1).
No.
22
W
..........
Stale
21
61
pointa ~ de 111011 sand by
pwes of 53 llld SS yanJs. and ran
the Trojaos aloc;e a l56s10 victory
An-S'IaleZI
20 yards on a rt\'CI'SC for another
san. Mason was 17.of-20 for 334
1be visitlns Cougm (5·2. 3·1 over Utah State iD 1989. The . . .
atrds ud t.bree touchdowns as Pac-10) made a late defensive gin ot defeat was lite 1arJCS1 for Cal
S)'IIIQIIC imliroved to 6-1, 4-0 Big stud to win after Chad Davis (3·4, 2-2) aluce a 66·0 loss to
·
East. Hoat Temple (2-S, 0-3) sot t.brew for 3SS yards ud three Alabama iD 1973.
soorcs.
The
Sun
Devils
(2-S,
2-3)
four scoring puses from Henry
Burris.
, .. Ortipa31
-----Sports briefs-- - - No. 15 Wlllllngton ~
Dale DousJass iD lite R8ipbs Sailor
~
The Ducks beld Nap+=• Kauf.
WHTIE SULPHUR SPRINGS, Classic.
mao to nine y.roa oo five tries in
CHmA, Japan (AP) ~ Brio
lbe final quarter, and Keuny W.VL (AP) - 1be UDitod SllleS
Waas
woo his fourth IAlllniiiiDCDI in
Wbeatou retwned au iDien:eJtlioo wou eisllt of 10 siuslea matches
Japan
Ibis season, sboo1iug u
.
Sunday,
iDciiJdin
~~
victo97 yards for a IOUdldoWD wiL11 49
even-par
72 oa Sunday for a tim:·
,.,......,. left to seal tbe upsel Ore- ries from KeUy
and TliD·
goa is S-2. 3-1 Plc·lO, wbile tile mie Green, to reclaim die Solheim stroke victory over PGA Tour player Mart Caicaveccllia in tile
Cup from Europe.
Huskies fell to S-2, 2·2.
BridgestoDc Opeu.
. ~
No.16 DlnP 51
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jack
·w.u FGnlt 26
MARIANSKE LAZNE, Czech
Robert BaldwiD bad 157 yards Kiefer woo lila fint tournament as Republic (AP) - Sweden's PerOD 28 ames, but the Blue Devib a profesaioual Sunday, sbootin1an Uirit JnltaJIUIII allot a s-uuc~er-...
(7 ·0, 4-0 ACC) made it a rout 8-under-par 63 for a one-stroke 66 roc a tbreo-ll!Otc victory iD die .
becmae Wate FIRit was a givin&amp; victii'Y over defendlog cbampion Czech Opeu oo Sllltlay.

=

"Everybody is going to loc* at
it their own way. It's Slill foolball
and McNair is S1i11 out 1bere mating plays,' • said Detmer, now a
backup wilb the Green Bay Pack·
en.
'
To SDrpUI Uetmer'l r~d.
McNair oecded 266 yards apinlt
Southern (4-3), wbidlllld lllowed
jlllt 190 yards a game, tops in I·
AA. Mc:Nair bad die rcaJrd before
balftime, aeuin&amp; it by. sciambliDS
for 22 yards Ill a lbird-lnd-21 wllb
1:261cft.

inlea'i\f"•

miDus-366)'Sids~.

McNair Ills 12.924 )'lids pus.
Ins aod 2,12.5 ruahlns with three
regular-- JI'IICS ICDYiini"W
McNair is avera&amp;iDI 3.1
yards per SliDe lbia IICUOD, and
385.6 ysn1s in bis 39'JIIIIC cner.
The current NCAA records are
David Kiinser' s sincle-seasoa
mart o( 474.6 yards per ganre 11
HOUSIOD iD 1990, and Willie TutIDI'a 32.5 yards per pme 11 Missiasippi Valley Stale.

S

Nice Selection Of
4Wheel Drive Trucks

~l:f~~!:JiDS)~:-34

Dnke poiuts. The Blue
viii
IDIDed tbree f'IDible1 iDIO toucb·
_ downs iD tie lini six mlnula. ·
No. 11 Vlrlbtla 34
No. J4 Nortla c.rc...tt
The Virginia defense allowed a
ICUOII-hlsh 169 rusblng ylrds to
die Tar Hcda (5-2, 2-2). wi1o leld

theACCinthat• I a•y. ButMite
Groll paued for 2.56 )'Sidlllld two
IIIIICbllow!ta f« the CaYS (6-J, 4sJ).
NO. 12 Ulall45
No. It T-G
No.17 CGiondo Slate 31
Sa I' tm M1CL JLl »
DesPite the points allowed. the · Willa Teua beblad 7..0 Ia tile
Ullih defense waalhe by. 11e via- fint peril!d. Ml
J - Brown
i1iDa U1e1 (7.0, 4-0 WAC) ~ rep!..... SbeaMur- aud IH! 101Mline lticb, ftiiUI'IICd two iDien:q)ICOIIna ckhe~ ~
Ilona for touchdowns ud sot a W
r laid two rulaiat IOIICII·
llfet)'. AfterCSU (7·1, S·l) l1lllied downa for die 1.......... (5-2. :Z..l . ·
10 de It at 31 oil two toudldowna SWC). SMU fdiiO 1·7,04.
by'V• W~ Ullb reap.,.... wi1b
No.»
Y.... 34

'•'P

*!rrrel.ed •

e:sa·
~lllll..:-;;':00 Y-ds

~\Prl;f~W:~~ :r_ve to ' JoiiD
No.13::,;s
· Ttdt u
.a
line lllCIIetl, llld Jaaill WiJHa
.
7
nailed lor lJ' Jll* aud I .....
VitJIDia Tee:~ 7-1, 4-1 Bls don Mille Yilillai.YU et:'~~
1 ·
E.ut) ,woa 111 1~ s~ 11ome · 536 J1R11. BYU (7-,""
.

ara~'L

McNair also piSsed for 587
yards llld four 11'11&lt; """"" lllkiDI
over second place oo lbe 1-AA
career lists forpaaain&amp;_l_ards
(12,924) aud fll!• M!"WS (107). He
was 32-«·58 with 011&amp;1
Plllhlna Ilia scasoit 111111a to"d:
l64 wilb 11 intcm:p«iooa.
The effM broke bis I·AA liDJlc-pme recooJ of647 ysnls be ICl
Sept. 10 at Tm-see~
McNair also had 633 yards at
Gnunblins Stile. I
Deana (lic:bd up Ilia ya I ac 11
Brigham Youns from 1988-91.
-Detmer still holds lbe NCAA
ClftiCI' passinl record with IS 031
yards, but bad a tarc:er tota'! of

"'VI

.,.

'

I

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AND READY FOR DELIVERY .
See. Them rCHia~ at.••

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.funeral fl{ome
Ravenswood, WY· (304) 273-2152
Pltnlld-~tnlld- P'*'tlld
. S~R'mG JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MBGS (OH.) COUNT1ES

~~

SMITH'S GM·c

Truck Center, Inc.
135 PINE STREO

446-2532

nJIIPW'.-:!1'...

GALUPOUS1 011

• ;;

�Plgl I The DaUy Sentinel

Monday, October 24, 1,e4

Poinlroy-llldcleport, Ohio

Younger doctor, patient input can lower odds of hysterectomy
aD, lbc Rilly ought to be riabt up
froot with her ooocema." sa1d Dr.
A Nlaa Bk:tcU. wbolc study lllJIC8II
MIIIIR~ loW'cr her odell of_biV• In MClllday'a ~ (OIJIIII_Of
illl a ~yllercclomy by dloollnsa Public Healtb. ''1\at could ,bave a
~=~er ayncc:oloJiat - lllllc or lllljor Impart"
- llld lbcn simply te111q
Critlcl say betweea 2S pen:cat
the doctor abc wants to avoid and SO peRlCIIl of lbc 650,000 byasurpy, a new ..sy COIIC!udel.
tei""'Dmiea pcrfonned every year
B;r LAURAN NEERGAAitD
A-«&lt;eted ...._Writer
W.A SHINGTON (AP) -

The atudy of North Carollu
gynecoloaiatl blutl tbc OO!!!IM!t
uaumpdoa tbat 11111c doctDn are
more lltdy to perform lbc ~

vcnlal openiloo llld auJ8Citllbat
women have a lot more control
ovs lbdr mtmmtlbln pmioully
rcallud
•'If a WOIIUII bu ay quealklD ll

in thla countrY ue unncccaauy,
puUIDJ ovcraB bcalthy "':OIIICD 11
riat of serioua COIIIpllc:aliona and
evca dcatb.
The coatroveny Is fuelecl by tbc
great dlapulty In hysterectomy
rates. In tbc Soath, 83 hystercctomiea arc performed for every ·
10.000 womea. va. 1 nte of 48 per

iO,OOo Ia die Nortlall.

tomica 111111 femalca. But Bk:tdl
sautlnlzcd tUt data fl!flber, aliitrolliDS for aac. Tbc scllder pp
di~ ..... RICt:lltl)' tralaed
gynccoloJIJtl. leldins bet to dJI».
rizc dial JYD«&lt;loo&gt;' illelf l!cclme
more sensitive to hysterectomy
when w0111cn be~~oocllnl tbc
field ill lbc eady 1
"The more recently trained
gynecoloJiltl tellded 10 ... believe
tbc uterus contributes more than
just a reproductive fuactlon 10
women, llld lima were leas llUly 10
bcllcvc~wulbcbcattypeof
treatment, • aald Blctcll, now at
tbc New Yort Sl* lfealth .n cp.tmcnL

But DObody !mew bow mudl a
w011111 could laOUCKC a doaa'a
dedsioD lbout lbc opcra&amp;ioD- or
wbclbcr ftmllc IYIICCOloalata RaJly believe more ~~~lea a

Inappropriate tbiD lbclr male COUll-

cap.u.

So Blcbll. lbcD atlbc UnlwnityofNortbC#ollna.atCbapeUWI,
SIJI'Ye)'Cd 140 North Olollna aynecologlata, uklng bow often they
b&gt;'*l'"*"'lca llld bavmg
rate bow approprialc tbc
surgtty 11 ill dllfetCDt bypodletk:al

pcnOOncd
then!

sltuatioos.
The male nnecoloaiata performed 60 percent more byatcrcc-

-

More impo111Ddy, Bk:tdl fouDd
the first proof that the patlen-.
make a difference In their treat.IIICIIt. ~ ~~~ objectal to a .
byateaeeuny, tbc docton lmmcdlltely cbanJCd lbcir ratings of bow
appropriate the operation was.
Aaaln, newer aynecoloaists
diiDJed 111c1r cpinkJn1 at alxlut 111c
-ralerepdlcuofdlclriCIX.
"Palleots ICIId 10 be bro.gbt up
Ia tbc Ullited Stltcl thll )11)11SO to
lbc c1oc:1or 10 be told what to do and
dutifuDy comply," said Dr. Joaepb
(JanjbcwcofthCUDl•alltyofCa'llfornia, I.All Anaclea. "Thla veriflea
tbat If phyalclana bow paticnta
want to be 11101e illvolvecf. IIIey n

Siding
·
Concrete, Etc.
Fall Special
Get25 yr. shingles
the priCe of 20 year

caoccr.

_
For each diJcue, prev!Cllllltlld-

lea bavc found b~mlea m

number of utlclea tbat included
preucd leaves on wall plaques,
CIDdlea with pres1ed leaves 11 the
base, 1 sweat shin tinted muted
shades with tea bap and dcslped
with a display of rosy led leaves. ·
She showed two ~that
were duplicated In tbc ·w
which f~llowcd the meeting.
straw mat with a dealp fealurina.

lantcm for a noee.

"Tidbits•, a new feature, was
introduced by Macel Barton who

discuaacd we of houae plants that
have been outsicki all summer, not~!:at they should already be
.
, raet, and IIJIIIYed. Slle said

zen.

r:JPub~IIC~Nol~lce;::r::~~~N~Ol~lee~=cJP~ub;l~lc~NOI~Ice[:!:!Pub~IIC~Not~lee!:~
1---..,---·

tcred area.
In January
leaves will
begin
appearing,
she said,llld
in
February
the
snow
crocu1
will
NOTICE
BIDDERS
m1d1; •nd for •uch other
tax ten centa ($0.10) tor aach
that slips $hould be started in an
bloom,
in
Mardi.
the
1arpr
crocus.Sealed
tor
the_
rtlltl
u
mey
be
proper
·
t
n
one hundred doll an of
inch of water not a glauful. After a in Apilthe ,., :...
111 mattrllll lew end/or equity be
va!•'atlon,tor live (5) yearo.
1
ldlling frOst, bulbs should be dug,
...._
and performing all labor for g1'811ttd.
for aald
the erection of:
You ere required to
~!::f;!~~n will open 11 8:30
Office Aanovetlon For • - the complllnt within
·t;
A.M. end remain
Plalni•Cheater twlnty..lght (21) cteye elhr:
until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
Dlllrlct, 31581 Ber 30 the laet pubi...UOn of tllle _
Hid dD• Y·... Sept. 26 .1~
11""
"lla&gt;Oa. A--•a·villa Ohio
notice, whlcb will be
..,..
....
'
By order oftha Board of
''
for inai1ing by Nov. IS.
daushter banquet bu been select- :
will be received by .Publlahed once •acll - k
Electlonl,
A cootie ministry has been eel. It is "Find Us Faithful•. the · Tupper• Plalna·Chuter tor elx aucceaelve weeka, ·
.
ot.Melg• pounty, Ohio.
stutcd at the church. Each mem- speaker will be Connie Cunning- Weter Dlatrlct 11 39581 Ber ::',!'!~~:u:::'::' ~~I
- Henry L Hunter, Chairman
ben iJ to tate a dozen cookies to ham of Waterford. New officers 30 Road. Rtedlvllle,
Ohio 1
Alta D, Smith, Director.
111
the church for the project. Any first will be electecl at the Nov. IS mcct- :~!~!iu~;
!': ° :::~: ':~ of your fell ..• to
10, 17, 24, 31; 4TC
time vilikln at the church will be ingtobe hosled by Mn. Stump and Wedneadey, November 9, en1wer or
l-""'"u'
26, 1994
visiled at home and cookies taken Cathy Dyer. Paula Pickens will 1994, and opened publicly ~~~~• ~·· _permltt~ 11_}'_11~
By Order of the
Public Notice
them.
prepare
communion
in
November.
Immediately
thereafter.
the
time
lloard
of
Electlona
of
LEGAL NOTICE
10
The Dec. 1 meeting of "the The sunshine fruit basket was Propoaale may be dallvarad alated, Judgement by
Melga County, Ohio
Notice le given that
Ladies FeUowsbip will be hosted given 10 ~e &lt;llapman for Octo- or melted. 11 m~~~~~ ~~~= default will be ·rendered · · 10, 17, 24, 3~~~fc Smith numeroua aubacrlbera of
by Bradford. There will be a bcr. Dcvouona WCIC by Mrs. Moropening.
I ~:==~~~~ tor lha relief - - - . . , . - - - - - the Pomeroy Exchange of
1
1
received
c
J·- __P_ub_l_lc_N_ot_lce___
Ka1ita Stump opened the meet- "The Healing Power- Prayer, Love project which will Include
&lt;''erk of the Court of NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
:~bllg~~1111~·.~:~; 1 •~1~Z
ing with prayer c:oncems. Delorca and Hope.
.
the worlc of alltradtt.
PI
Mllge eo..!::.mg: · ~~ f:..~\~L.~~~~~g~
lnatltullon · of two·way,
Fnllt had the opening prayer, and
Those attending were Cathy
Eatlmattd Total Project
c!~. w1;!'~ncl
Atvlaed Coda, Sectlona
nonoptlonll extended area
_. offiCIIIIgave reports.
Dyer, Delorea Frank, Jane HyaeU, co:l~d::!'•:"dc:'algnote un
Street 350t .11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25 liarvlce betwaan the
II was decided that beginning in Karleta Stump, Bcck1 Amberger, the envelope that 11 11 1
Pomeroy, Ohio 457811
Notice Ia hereby given Pomeroy Exchange and the
January there will be a fellowship Diana Bing, Madeline Painter, 111led bid. The name and
By: Mertene Hanlton, We~ol~~~o~u~;~~:~eoa~~ :, :~so7 ~cha~fe 1~~ ~ell
dinner on lbc last Wednesday of Suzcc and Christi Well, Cherie addreea of the bidder and
Deputy Townahlp Trustees 01 the a~:nt ~he "~,,i' n:iv:~
each JDORh.
Caitlin and Jared Williamson and ~~~~~~~:ebe~~J~~:t.':t~oltcl
~: 1!! 24; &amp;TC
Townahlp ol Sutton, Racine. Exchange ol Clllzena
Theme for the 199S mother- Nancy Morris.
Drawlnga and Bid
Ohio, paa..d on the 4th day Telecommunlcitlona
of
July, 1994 \!'ere will be Company of Weal VIrginia.
Publl Notl
sera~
·
~~:~~~de;.!:..th~:~chll::.
c
ce
aubmltted
to a subdivision
vote ol the The
Commission
has
•
people ol aald
scheduled
this maHer, Case
at 326 Front Street, Marietta,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
at a General Election to be
·
--Ohio 457SO lor • refundable The Board of Education of hald In t~e Townahlp of No. 92 "2046 · TP-PEX,
tor
10' 00 p.m.,
1bc
Y
lntervqttion
gram
ing
fcc
paid
at
the
m.ccting.
Flodapoalt
of
$10.00.
Franklin
Eaetarn
Local
School
Sutton,
Ohio,
at
the
regular
public
hearing
at
_..__ __ _. __ __._ tiV.v -~.a
Ric:hll"d
Iiiii ...,..,......,
on Wedneaday, November
oaaulti-ta
.,_:'!~....,LS•W:.-t ......-.limi·- !"IICCthc ab-nccwasof !!!:__,..-y
Cuc-'y· D. Lee (614) 373-884t.
Dletrlct dealrea to receive · placea of voting therein, on 16 , 1894 , 11 the Stnlor
.-~,
, u a pre
m
_
....,..,..,
All propoaila muat , ..led bid a tor fleet the 8th day of November, Cltlzena Contar, Mulberr,y
nuy aav1c:e coonlinator for Meip. wbo bad bf:en -c a get-well card contain a nat of propoeed lneurance covering 1994, · the quntlon of His., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
C
f the M
from 1he unit.
aubcontracton. and be calendar year 1995. .
levying a tax, In excesa of A 1
d
OUDty~_a propm Ol lDC ClgS
accompanied by bid In order to be conaldarad, the ten mill limitation, for o~l11 ~ 1 ~~~~:r r:::ro~~~~~
County Hcallll Depll1mCnt
MICHAEL BIRTH ·
security n the form or a ell aaaled bide ohell bt the benefit of Sutton
Botb propams serve children
Laura Sigler ad Rllldy Micbael surety bond or certified received by tha Treuurar'a Town1hlp for the purpooe of ~~e dlre;~~Y 1 :n ~~~~~l~e'!
under four yean old who are con- oftomcroy IDJIOUliCC the 1linb of a check In the amount of 10% office .by 12:00 noon on Fire protection.
Commlaaton of Ohio, tllo
lidaalto beclcvc~ar ~:J'A
daughter of Natalie Virainia, at of the bid. Failure of any December 1, 1ttl4, end will
Said tax being: A renewal Ent Broad Street,
• • - IDf
- Oct. 7•
.
bidder to enter Into and
at the! time. The ol
an exiatlngtax
ol 11mill
at Columbua, Ohio 43266·
.....,., orma"'''ll-"
OD 11. av . blc '"·'·
u""' "
.....,..,,
th be o-ned
~a rate
not exceeding
(one)
by-111ft• ., __...._Cobb of"--'~
The infant weighted five execu1e 8 con1rae1 1or e lloard of -Eduutlon milia for each one dollar of 3793
- - e _......
........_.
work cuvorad by the rteervea the right to accept
·
Scboolll ~1 or Rila at992- pounds, two ounces and wu 18 proposal he hu aubmiHed, and/or reject any and all valuation, whl_ch amountoto (10) 17, 24, 3t; 3TC
S266.
mches long.
' 'shall cauH the bid aecurlty parts of any and .n blda.
Real Estate General
Patcmalllfll1dparcnta arc Ken- to become tortalted by the
Board of Education
·
AUXILIARY CONTRIBUTION ncth and Virginia Michael, bidder to the Ownar ••
Eaatem Local
Contributions were made to Pomeroy.. Maternal grandparents liquidated damage• and not
School Dlatrlct
CARE, Covenallt House, and tbc are tbc late Lloyd and Natalie 11 1 penalty becault of
38100 SA 7
American Indians when the Lewis Sigler
ouch fallura on the part of
Ratdavtlle, Of)lo 45772
·
the bidder. Blda mey not be
Elolaelloaton., fre aeurer
Manley Unt"t 263, Amert"can
BIKERACE
withdrawn Itee. than 45
24, 31; (11) 7, 14;_4TC
Legion, met recently at Dale's
The Wilton Civic Association deya etteraubmiHed.
RcstauranL
wiD hold its second annual mounEach bidder ahell, In the
Publlc-Notlee
Ella Dinsmore was hostess for
tain bike race in Southeastml Ohio tvent he Ia the ·eccepfed
h
•
L
G
•
bidder, tumlah -rtormance
t e meelmJ. orrene og,tns Oct. 30 starting at 1 p.m. in and lillbor an"d" material NOTICE OF ELECTidN ON
opened the mcctina in ritualtstlc Wilkavillc. The race will cover 20 payment bonda, In a form TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
form us.istecl by -Annclllc Jolllllon, milca. It Ia sanctioned by the U.S. eallafactory In lht owner, In THE TEN MILL UMITATION
chaplain.
CyeHnJ Federation and organ~ tho amount of tOO% of the Ravtatd
the bulletin from Eighth Dis- byTymTylcr,ObloDisUjctRepre· contract
omo_unt, I31KII. 11
• pre.._.
· _,..__t, Nancy Brown wu
Qua r 1 n 1111
ng
t hof
1 that,
Notice
IIJrl:~~~le
111Ct
sentative and Jane Ann B urns, succeoaful
completion
In p1
readtnotingthatthefallconfc:renc:c WCA Bike Events coordinator. tho work bid upon and resolution of tha
will DC hold ll Crooksville, OcL 16. More information may be obtained• payment of all obligations Education of the
Forms WCIC ~Sid lhe bond· by calling 81J0.414S.
arlalng therefrom.
Local School Dlatrlct,
Blddera ere advlaid that adopted an July 25,
bjact to there will be eubmiHed to 1
1h. · j ct 1
very nice 1 floor frame home
•• pro •
• au
prevailing
wag•
ratea and vote of the elector• of 1ald
. lull basement with one car garage
1
11
School Dlatrlct at the
"thee· payrol · rtpor .ng election to be held In aald
bath, large front lol that runs-down- to th'&amp; rive.
requlremenll 01 Section School Dlatrlct ac the I ofl11rina some beautiful river frontage.
ASKING $50,000
4115 of tha Ohio Rtvllld regular placoa of voting
Code baaad on the thareln on Tueeday the 8th
USTINGI E. tetart Rei. lovely country slda surrounds
t~llmated . coat
of dey of November. 11194, the
t975 24x50 moudlar with an added 9x18 room. T111s
nnovatlon.
question of levying a tax In
Includes 3 bedrooms. CA. 2 car garage. large front
The Oilner reaervea the exceaa of the ten-mill • oorcn. outbuildings, t.56+ acre of nlce ground with garden
right to accept any bid, to limitation for tho benefit of
Pretty locationl
·
ASKING $49,900
waive any or all tht Southern Local School
lnformallllea ~n blda end/or Dlatrlct for the pulpoH of HOME REDUCED IN CHESTERI ... OWNEA WANTS TO
to re1ect any or all bldl at current expenaei at a r•te SEI:L... NOWI Located on SA 248 1 112 story home wilh 2
their dlacretlon.
not excaed_lng 4.0 milia for
bath, basement, attic that could be made into
Harold H. Blac:katon I tach one dollar of valuallon, bedrooms, rooms.
Nice large back yard, storage garage.
Prealdent of
which ama11nte to 40 centa Close to schooL Great
little starter hamel ASKING $32,500
tor each one hundred
Pl............
dollara of valuttlon, tor IMMED!ATE POSSESSION!
Water
three yeara commencing
RACINE- Graenwooc:r Rd.· .57 acre with a 1986 modular
(tO)
14,
10,
24,
31;
(11)
t;
stc
_
·Happy Ada
. . . ., of Aet11 PPO &amp; hMr1l
PPO
home
that offers 3 bedrooms. HP./CA. like new condition
5
throughout Full basement with garage, deCking, and
Public Notice
outbuilding.
ASK..G $44,900

Oaill.

Nancy Mmil bosted lbc me1inJ
~.L which tim~ tbe ~p set
y night for a bayridc at the
home of Cherie and Dave
Williamson. The 11111aroo will leave
at S:30 p.m. lllda.'Wiencr rout will
follow the bayride.

wuTh.:Caf~~~~~·:n: t:! ='J!'v:~~vth!~J..~:"'· :dwl~::f:thS:~U:'itf::C ~~~

Family Restaurant in Jackso~.
Mcmbas a to meet 81 the church
at S p.m. to _carpool to the rcstauranL Names wae drawn for the gift
cxchanae and there will abo be an
ornament ciChaDg'C.
Otrislmas for missions was dis·
cussed and Jlifll for the Grundy
Mountain Mjasion are to be ready

Poll)eroy

Church

~he

of

Nazruene hold a doll contest during
.....a.-l..
the Fall Sunday School E....,._
All females were invited to bring
lhe'• faVOI'I"te doD ID be~':' by

~Good. Raymond

and

"-'J.:.-'-

--~.~of.-~~._._~~~
-- . . .v•-·'l...,...
___ ,·
___..
and ... _ w"'w
...:aw Y ....,.,JUW~&amp;
uuw """"":"
ere chosen In the children s
w
Alltl · Thomas' doD

group. ~
for JJ¥111

·

~1

• AJI. B

doll ~ moatlmpreaivc and Ta

Youns I doll won for the most
loved.) th d It
T
n e a u aroup, ammy
doll won for most
J 0 h nson •1 __
.. B-'-- Colmer'1
.im
ve .... · - ·

do WOII for the llllllllovccl. ·
On Sunday, lhln will be a con· - ~or the --'- for ...._._ favorite
,._"
·
Lcgo struCIIIle,lilplanc, model aw,
space sblp, boat, etc.
COU UORATIVEDINND
The Mei•• CotJIIty Colllbora·

...._,.. .a:..-. at
tivcGIOUpriccnllY.-ua_...
theu..i .... ScniorCitiZCDICcniiCtM
w~biTRac tbc Buly InterVCDtion

............... ~
- _ _ inwort.

n..,..-N

~~£1=.

MORGAN HOWARD

.First birthday
celebrated

Moriu Hqwucl observed her

on Sept. 29 wit!J_f
party,fciltliring a W~nie-thc-PQUII

(Jtlt bifthday

theme.

.

.

'lbe party was held ll the home

of bcr ~nta, J~se and Missy
Howard. who attendod along with

JD*Dal JICD!-~· Mary

Woocla and Tom, L1aa and Aunt

Kl&amp;io W,ooda; pilenW p-andparcnta, Duay U. In HOward,
Uacle·. Weu and·
Jody

A':t TJ.Iilr
lfliwlnt Milt)', r-mY

... ... . .....
cu.; SIIJ!o!! Wile ud DuiiiiD

.

.

,.

IIIII&amp;PY.lllh

.' .

. .. ·

~ .....tlqlifta.to die

1111, ~elill and Dolly

ud ~J. LeU. Kelly
,'.

•

·'

'

WIN A- PRIZE -

Enter AndertDir hr-11iture's 2nd Annual

JACK-0-LAI(TERN
CONTEST

Street,·
P~Ohlo
48719
Kennethe
I,
Mlddllport.
Plltntlfl

• '

I(e.

ROMicl Olllnll•.who!L
realdlnOI II unknaWn. ·
Delenclant '
Plaintiff hal II!!MIIJht thle

* Jr4 Prize 25.00 C11h

A·ndetson's Furniture
Dewnt•• Ptlllrtf
·Itt 4ttelle.l• ,., etere,
-LI~tlt 1111 FREE Putitpkfn per . fa111lly
'

~-

814-885-4110-

cows is red;
But the best kind of

.

~ows.

Help wanted

Chuck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Wel.come

valuation, which amounts to

of valuation, which amounts

to forty-lour cents ($0.44)
fur each bne hundred
dollars of valuation, for two (2) yeara..
The Polio tor Hid Election
will open 11" 6:3P o'clock
A.M. and remeln open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of aald
day.
Dated Sept.·26, 1994
·
By order of the Board of ,
Elections, of Mtlgs County, Ohio.
Hen,Y L Hupter, Chelrman
. Alii D. Smith, Dlrec~or.
(tO) t7. 24, 31; 3TC

C011le's Ollio

Howard L. Wrltesel

Rlwer Herlts •••
Ewerlnti•1•

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Available on

•

Weedeatera &amp;
•

ROBERT BISSELL

~

..

~
t

'l

•&gt;

·'t

•J
:t
•

{J

CONSTRuCnott
oNewHomee ·
eGarllgel
,.
oComplet. .
I Jl\

. Alzheimer·s Support Group ..
Meeting Thursday, Octot)er 27
1 pm at Pl~asant Valley
Nursing Care Center. .
S.Bild Hill Rd. Pt. Pleasant
. .

Remodeling

-.,aeompare
FREE E$niiA•

.

'

,,,

IIU&gt;MFJ
,.f.)

Ugllt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

1511..... TFN

Back HOI
Stnlct
·Hay for Salt
Dnld Wlllla•
GiHral .
(Hirldl•l
&amp; lxciVIIIII
992-4103

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

-

PIIRIIIIEDIC

PC

u-o - .

P!IKiYr.

potontlol. 7M 30-45110 nt. ISdl.__

POSTAL JOBS

lltart Sl1.41 Mr. F« Elan! 11nc1:
ADDIIcotlon Call (211) 7'Kdth Ell OH5II. I A.M. 4 P.M.

.

Sun ~rl.

POSTAL JOBS
'
$ti.4Uv.lo.lar ..... ....

ar..t

llllt&gt;llcolon -In
... 21~7'K1301 at. WVMI, e.m-tpm,
flun.Frl.

Social Worll PMitlon In 1:11 Bod
WVDHHR LTC loclllly. Atqutroo:

IISW

l

Clll

Olk

WVBSWE
and

_..,ICI,

11oo-.

8Upel..,.

oldie, hoofthllwmon -lng
obltltrlo
-With nul'lllng homo populo- .
lloll hiving -lol con - .
~I btiloflto. eo.uct Lllldn
Hoopllai. ~~~. 304-475-01110 ....

Poldngooo,
Jerry"e Run Rd1

tomalo

t

-·~by

Son-11 To Babvslt In lly Hoana. ._til On lltale Aouta
'7, 1 - - Galllt!OIIa. Loella
• llama 114~0.
THERAPIST/CASE
MANAGEMENT
TEAll LEADER

,...,._.. Individual with IIA.
In humon ...tcoo llokl .

to Pn&gt;YI!Io -.peutlc aorvlc:oo
lomalo Wl..tlalrocl Ttrrtor., 10121, P.O. 211J;_ 1441. HIIJ. WMI owrw. CUll mii18QIInll'lt
houaabrolca. Jony"a Run Rd1. tlngtcln. W'l
clellvorr to ..,..ly
l
Apple Grove, taft on Rlgh1-Hano
-lonolly
diaturbad ·
Fori&lt; Ad, 4th - o n loft.
Earn I*D Wlllllr IIUIIIng .,. County child,., ancl *'- · IIC rtak ol nmoval 1n&gt;m
11mo.
fnl ••pplll, .... tht homio or j..-Jio counlchlld
PI_._. Jony•o
Run Ad, 111&gt;t11t lnfanrllofi. no
aUglllon. lend paaloctlw! octlon. Ell·
Grove, loft on AlahC-Hencl FOrta SASE: CNc.- Dipl-40, P.O. ........ In llmlly
-.,
Ad, 411\- on foft.
pefwl'ld. IIA In hUII'IIn ..,..
- 1421, llan AngelO,
vtc:oo- oncl ntlllllo ta.napor4 lldon!blo, Playfut Kltttnt, e Eventa Sr
Ft ...... IMion roqulnd,
W..U Old. To Good Homo, LJI.
: - - preto....t. Will coqW1i
tor Tralnod, l Wormed; 5J4.441.
tnvtl whhin tht counry.
0845.
...... --1011,-lel S.ncl rwumo Including aalely
hl!!larr:PRESTERA CENTER
« ..toltd ploa I

.
......, __ _
-fi -=Tlt......
......
_ .. ._.In-

oGiaalware
LOIICI1 of Misc.

BuY.Sell·
Trade
.
.
tn1-.

'

wH~LEY'S AUTO
PARTS
I
$peclallzlng In Cullom
Fran~~ Replilr

KENNEL
Span ilia

Bred for

Quality and

lEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL IAKEI IMOD~LS
UI·TtUOR
·ltl-llU OR
,TOLL
FREE HH441-tl7t
' '
' '
.

Ta..,.,amanl

- .DlRVf.ll, OMI~.

I '

"

,....
tloMt
•ncl-loi
_..,.,
n........,.._laor_not•
..U.Jni.

Lob Pupplao, Witt Otllvtr
WHhin Olalanco.
Otdtr

~. .

oldllt

e Port

Femolo

-II

Popoao, 014-3'1'11-2104.

Wfth

.......... E1111_,.._ wldt ..
lndudlng ... loglotlct, -

cat;

10-. old, lltltr

~

Junk

1ar

6

Lost&amp; Found

5940.

glnoway.

:~DWrl&gt;-

Dot-by-.

Hum.~n

R..ourcN

M11on MA
P.O. Box 8068
Huntington, WV 25705
EOE/AA

...

cMYIIDpll'llllt and
l'ullllo I- Relloncl
ll'lllnod. aood wlchlldron. vwr meclllla_,nldgl
bonw.
MonciiY. lo good " - only.· oblo ""'-'otlon oncl volld
304-e7l-1650.
_ . . - roqulrocl.noPoncl to Hollfth Rocooory
Cat • Iaiit-. blklwhl, aNY. trM s.rw~coo. ~nc,..!:_o. 1oa 724,
to loving homo, 114-t!l2-3524. , At-. Ohio ......, Attn: Honer

Black

pro-

':

.., . . . . Exoellenl

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR Noodod To Tooch
Community And Pononot Sklllt
To An llduh With Looming

Umhotlono In llalgo County.

Hn /Wk (Uve-lnJ; 10
Sloop .()nr Aoquirocli .Vocation - . _ Vo~oua SNIIo And
T.-o NMdocl. H~h School
HOURS: 32

A.M. Sot Thru 1:30 A.ll. lion;

Deg-. V.lld OrNw • Uconao,
Good Driving Roconl, ThrM
,.... u....d Driving Eja."
porlenco, - And
lldiquMa

ll.utomoliHo r.u..noo ~
RoqulrK Training Pn&gt;Yidciil.

Solely: $1.DO IHr, TO Sta~. Wino
t-ttd Chrtalr At 1-.ut-2302 No Lotw Tl!on
t-..... Equol Opportunly
Emplopr• .

7

WANTED: l ' - - d - - .
Nu- For 1'wo c--nlty
Ho!IMo For , _ With
IIA 1011 In Oollla ~- 40

a.-

Yard Sale

Gallipolis •
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yonl S.IOI- II Pold In
AdYanct. OEIIDUNE: Z:DO p.m.
the day btlora the ad li 10 nan.
SUndaY dlon • 2:00

tm.
. F~-- :oa
p.m.

__

Y.

•

Speclallzlr'll In Part-oolora

Pt. Pleasant

Slud IIIVIce &amp;~·
young ...... for
.
41710 Mila HID Rd. •

.. VICinity

, ~Oh

Qaragt Sat.-2 112M!. all ... 112,
IMn ..... llthiM CIIUNII, ~'1\wday 0111. 21.

Furnlt-

-

•
·•

S.ncl - : P.O. loa 1D4 ~
Jac:Don. OH GMO. "cudllni
For l!rrtL')!•• 1Ct/S1iM. Eq,.. ~
Oppoctunlly .,.,,...,.r.

,.

'

WANTED: PIOIIont Avollablo Ill
A CCimmunlly Q~ Homo For.
In 8~.

, . _ Wlttlll
Houn: ,. Hn

: 10 A.ll...

PJl,'SUn;_,!·10 l&gt;.tl., lion /ll!aa; •

2 .. P.tl., "'"'"; 2 - WaoldY '
Sial! -lng; Or lla ~­
Sc-....,lllgh Schoc!l Oaatoo.
Yalld Drtv'n Uca..., 1hNci .
YMN I
llMd
EJ.. .
I

antiQuill, -

IIIJihlng you •nt.

"lnl-

'

Houn/Wia.
COntoot
a.r~o~y Ai ~ Or

tor tthow and compirllona.

su ••114..,.

Jlt1111 TfN

______
I

Tuea.-W8d.-Frl.-sat.
1-6
oCnftsman Tools
•Toya

I

•.

_ , Hotpllal

One Yalltv Drlw
'
SUllo 213
Pt.-an,WV25550
EOE/1111

Onemlleout
143 from Rt. 7

10117111ii

~

"t

TREE .TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

949-2168

ch&amp;Wl~w.

l!aae • •IJab.lall lneuronce

....,..

FREE ESTIMATES

Christmas L.eyaway

-

3 Announcements

2

· Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting

ECho Saw'a in stod(

avolllbla,

..
-..== -

Eacty lnlo.-rtion Proatom. 1
c.nt•n.;M~•
d t..cher, WY
3mo.
-lo
Poldngooo, -IIIIECE «lp Eel. llllln PH
houaabrolca. Jtrrr"t Run Rd pu*alll.1..,._ caardlrlllof
Apple Grove, ltft on Algh1-Ha;;;J
~-.:......,-:;
Fori&lt; Ad. 4th on loft.

GuHers

&lt;:;omplete Chain
Saw Semce &amp;: Parts

alon

Pn&gt; Ambulance Hoe
Qp!la_..,_ For , _ :M
...... Pari·Tlmt A.....
- . IM-l'S3-4m7, For lien.

ho~ebroM.

81211114

949-2804

n_,uepuUing companr

=r"'"

Apple Qrovo tot on Rlgl!t-Hanca
Fork Ad, 4th\,;;;.; on left.

Factory c•oke Oily
Bashan BtliAig

Mower Clinic :

-

...- .

Annou ncements

7yr.

12G~~~g~

·- RACINE ·

Owrw~D!Jtmon

Canl,.i FNigN . Cen1anJ r.
!!Jatnoupoclttcted orA"ato ""'
ftatbld. 11m ~~~~~ of

aorss.

"SAT., 6:30 P.M.

season
Wed. thru Sat. 9-5
5pt¥Jializinp:
Dried Materials
Pot pourri supplies
Herbal Crafts

.

. . . - , W card aratem.
~
aaale. .nta,
rldar
u.. home. 1-220-

Pomeroy, Oh. 45718
S14-DII2·7SI7

GUN SHOOTS

Fan

- l d·CCC 114411 52».

-

RACINE_
FIRE DEPT.

~ow open for

lllfiCyn

HMdllnera, C:Uatom
Seat eo- &amp; Carpet
· Convmlble Topa,
Antique Care,
Boat&amp;eatl
Owt:zo r... Expwt41414 StlroiMr Rd.

State Rt. 33 · ~
Darwin, Ohio - ~

t

...::!

J11s' Complete
Auto Upholstery

PRECISION ·AUTOMOTIVE

·614-247-4035

m

~ Worll Ohio
Dtpwlmont
01
Natanl
All DUro. 16.00 IHour, 40 IWK,
Young Aduftt 18~4. Contoc:i

fraHeN or punlng own tralllr,
- h lneunnoo w/-.1 l yJ.

- (No Sunday Calls)

, .. Step Ce11plete Aate Beir Repair

NOTICE OF EI,.ECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN M(LL UMITATION
Atvlaed Coda, Sectlona
350t.11(G), 5705.19.5705.25
Nolicf Ia hereby given
that In purruanc• of a
Aeeolutlon o the Boarlt-ot
Townal'!ip Truatees of the
Township of Salem. Salam
Center, O~lo, pused on tho
26th day of July, t994 there
will be 'ubmiHed to a vote
of the P'Ople of oald
subdivision .at a General
Election to be held In the
Towns~lp of Salam, Ohio.,at
the regular places of voting
therein, on the 8th day Qf
November, 1994, the
que1tlon of levying a tax, In
excasa of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit ol
Salem Townahlp for the
purpose of Maintaining and
operating cemeteries.
Said tax baing: A renewal
of en existing tax of 1/2 mill
at a rote not axcaadlng 1/2
mills tor each one dollar ol

.. oom lllg

lng -

:IOWIZ-aMI ar UDD tlll:ltaf,

614·992·7643

Now ~~Ina -•.!ill'•
Gallltl

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Revlaed Code, Sectlona
350t.t1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25 .
Notice Ia hereby given
- that In purauance of a
Aeaolutlon of tha ·Board of
Educetlon of the Eaatern
Local School Dlatrlct, ·
.Reedsville, Ohio, paaaed on
the 20th day of July, 1894
-there will be submitted to a ;
vote of the p~ople of aald
subdlvlsl~n at a General
Election to be held In lht
Eaalarn Local School
District of Aeedoyllle, Ohio,
at the regular placea of
voting therein, on the "8th :
day of November, 1994, tho
queatlon of levying a tax, In
excess of tho ton mill
limitation, lor lhe benefit or
Eaatern Local School
District too the purpose ot
Providing
for
the
emergency raqulromanta or,
t~e school district.
·
Said tax being: A.. newel
of an exlatlng tox of 4.4
milia at a rata not exceeding
4.4 mills for eac~ one dollar

live cents ($0.05) for each
one hundred dollara ol
valuation, for live (6) yeara.
The Polla lor said Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.
Dated Sept 26. 1994
By order of lht
Board of Elections,
of Meigs County, Ohio.
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Alta D. Smith, Director.
(10) 10, t7, 24, 31; 4TC "

AVON I30M75-1421.
AI - · I _..,
!pooao,

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·.
FREE ESTIMATES

• -992-5710

WANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
need~ to leach community and personal skills to an
adult with learning limitations in Meigs County.
HOURS: 32 hrs/wk (live-in): 10 a.m. Sal thru 8:30
a.m. Man; sleep-over required; vacation ben·'fits.
Various skills and talents needed. High school degree,
valid driver 's license, good driving record, three
years licensed \~riving eKperience; :lnd adequate
automobile insurance coverage required. Training
provided. Salary: S5Jl0/Hr, to start. If interested
contact Christy at 1-800-531-2302 no later-than
I 0/28/94. Equal Opportunity Employer.

i.-,

F-~--.

• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
G8rages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Call~800.806-9482

4

I

For A
Tho! Con Glw! You
And v... FoniiJr ~- Cal
Our AKncHor Pinnr 1 - - 5351 To Schaclula. A F- To

BISSELL IUILDIRS, INC.

Are You Too Busy for Running &amp;rands?
let Errtnd Boy Do the
for You. ·

.,.'

YOU HAVE AHOME YOU WANT TO SELL? WE HAVE -BUYERS THAT ARE WAITING! YOU CAN'T SELL THAT
HOME IF YOU KEEP IT ASECREl'. WE LET EVERYONE
KNOW IT'S AVAILABLE TO GET YOU THE OUICI\EST
SALE POSSIBLE. GALL US FOR DETAILS.

DRIVER TRAINNQ

Co~npenr

"VISrr OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Poll!tlroy, Ollio "Look t.or.Jhe Red ilild White Awning"

Conaplete Une of Errand Service.

712111ft1

-,

ue.aoo "'30.000
FIRST ~
FREE CDLa

Alt .,.., AVON ctvloiMM -

11112-20118 S10Pagelt.,llttl1part
· F-EellmMII

P"bllc Notice

Help Wanted

' II You Wont To Drlw

D. GillY'S
AITOIQDY

Uc. No. 0182·27

,,'

11

• $200 Installed
Call For Details

992-41 It AI TraM Owlir l-ao.291·5600

949-2038
949•2749

11

Employment Serv 1ces

i Free Estimates

·,m,...

_,

BEEN PAINTED, SPRUCEDIREDUCEDI All
the clothes and move lnl 2 story home In Pom,orov
ll~:~~~~b~y Mason bridge, gorgeous river view,
lo
2-3 bedrooms, bath, besernent, garage, some
I8PJ~II8n~; some tumllure, ASKING $19,500 N not a home
about a rtnlllllnnetmentl Coma-~ S$$'1.

wlnd~w•

- .
-IEAVICE- .
youa Sl]SfAQDON &amp; Our Suoceu beaila &amp; encla v.ilh
Nrvlcel Sa, when your aat8tllta lan~t working rlgh~ we•,.
lwNto helpl Bv phone or In penon- whttr you call,
wCIIIIHflllrll

AI Nalwal446·1

Wll. . mJEMI

• Cuatom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement

~ a! $7.96/montr lor t~ chenila!a on up t&gt; aa many ••
.your Mart deairao.
-SALES- .
Oiehes ..aina in aim from 10 IHI clear clown to t81nchee.
-PAYMENT PLANV.1, we can llkt cuhl ..,,_ eo claya HIM . . calh -&lt;~r·

.

'

action Mmlng yOu ae the
Is ,cows that is dead.
Detendlnt -tn the aboveWe won't say you're
ilemttl court ' by flllnt' her
old,
But we'll say this
_comptelnt on '*bruary ~-·
to you;
1114.
· The ollject of the
If you were a cow,
compleiM-..I&amp;.I!I oblllll 1
You'd be a bottle of
divorce from YG~Nncl t1ie
glue!"
dlmill!!d II that iald Plal'!tllf
granted 1 dlvoroe trotn
you; that 1 --l'eaeenabta
Happy "Udderlr"
dlvltlon of the pertoneJ
property be 1111de; thet 1 . - fantaatic birihday
re1lonablt dlvlalon of
marHal debta, If any, ._.

let Yeur FREE. Pumpkhf at

F,_&amp;IIIMfM
Before I p.m.leeve

.•

IVACAIIT GROUND! Ross Rd. Lebanon township approx.
owner may split some of the land. Call tor more
ASKING $400 par acre.

.lldft

c:n

1!:

We Hat eervtce at the top becal111 ~ hal alweya been our
lrat priority! In filet, 'Mil tllke •rvk» ., •rlouo, w may
.,_,.,_Mflll~y~.

I

c- NO; M-CIII~

* Ut Prlz• 100.00 C11h
* 2n4 Prize SO.OO C•••

...

CHESHIRE- Roush Lane- 1+ acre with 1970 2 be~room
plus a block efficiency apt and additiOnal trailer
hoOk-up. Agood rental investment Come check nout This
IIOlmasllke oppOrtunity knocking!
$24,909
mobUe horne,

Kenny'a Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
Gal~i&amp;; OH 45631

-IEAVICE-

Tab ... pain out of
painting. Let Ill • It fGr
you. Vwy rill Dfllllla.

.... c.HI ,..,,._,

Poat 1602 6:46 pm
Thla ~ good for 1
FREE CARD

MINERSVILLE· 2 story lrame home with 2 bedrooms,
BOxtoo 101. many newer repairs. large front sitting porch.
cable hoOk-up. Just minutes from Pomeroy. ASKING
$29,500 rney oonalder ollerat

RONALD DIGANGI, WHOSE
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
IN THE COIIMON IILEAS
. - COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Courtlloull, Welt s-ncl -

LarryAupeA ~··

m..-11111. Ar&amp;re p.m.

Starting Sun. Oct.
9th Racine Legion

w•••••a44r.IHI... ...........

NOTICi

1&amp;
. LEUaRONICS

BINGO

992·2259

TO THE DEFENDANT,

lenny'• Ia the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We lte"e CerJ end V•n•l

paymentllor 41 monlha ulow u $3&amp;hnonlh.

book

.........,...'..

Kenny's Auto Rental

VInyl&amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
RepiiDDmllit
Wlnclowe, Blown
lnaulltlon, Storm
Doore,Stonn
Wlndowa, GaragM.
F-Eellm...

llttrlor &amp;
lllterlor

1lt.IMM

~:V;n~e~rt~h~~~~:~':l:~~~:

John A.

Umestone
.' &amp; Gravel

614·742·2138

,. Co.plete Medical/~•rgictd Care For Ear, Nose &amp; Tllr~at

- ''·

--2772

Oflloti Hotn: Mon..f'rL
1:00814:30 . .

UNDI'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.

SABE TRUCKING

m;::

- . Soc"l ett

DOLL CONTEST

~~~"':~: ~~~~:

Ulllryln Pllal
Mlddltpal1

1

.......ltlel•te•
loeN. S..yre

10 1

J&amp;L lttSULATION

_.. t

H4ULING
o

386 State RL 160
w/Natlonwlde ln1.
Galllpolla, Oh.
446-7400

992·5114

(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
182-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio
.

Pellet Stoves

WL Fell CUBEIIMICES

worlc

..

Hooting, lno.

We Buy All Non Ferrouelletala

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlona
oNew Gan1ge1
oEiactilcel &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
ofnterlor I Exterior
Painting alto concrete

-

•rr

1H~ loan per 1'011111 for ilaHa•d ccm.

Box220
Oh 45814

'

Lydia Circle plans holiday event$
Holiday pllnl were diiCusr:~ at
the recent mcednjOf the Lydia
Council at the Bntdbd Cllun:h of

•lw••······

(61 388-9865

~oftellnotmcclallyocces:-'l.
Tbc study finally veriflea c
advice of c:i1t1c Dr. Slclncy Wolfe,
of lbc adwc:acy PJU11 PubUc Clti·

Devotioaa Were Helen Steiner mg wu announced for Saturday t mcrfield rcmembas Elizabeth WeD
Ril;c readinp by Pauline Ridcnllur. McArthur with Vinton County in September. It was noted tbat
For roll cal[ membcn brought cluba to holt. ReaiSII'ation bcginl 81 Mrs. Wood and Dorothy Karr
leaves to IdentifY and suitable lor 8:30. ~ben were asbd to tate -attended the Delaware County fair
iiCIDI for.a salel table. A Wlllkshop Rower lnd cut show. Plans we~e
!RUin~.
New Jll'!)pant boob were dis- wu lit to deaign a wreath to be made for participation in the showtributed b;r_ Mrs. Wood, program tabn to lbc regional meeting for Ul case flower show. The November
meeting will be at the bome of
chainnan. Betty Dean reviewed the auction.
Maida
Mota on Nov. 2 with-a proClarice Knutter Is aunshlac
year's ~·and conducted the
pam
on
therapy.
lllCCiing.
fall Region 11 mCet· ' c!lairtqan f'- October. Jean Sum-

and sprina blooinina bulbi should
be planled.
She tallald alxlul forcing bloomll
and what bulbs are belt for that,
and terrace container plantinas
which can provide a vulety'Of
Rowen over a longer period of
time. Sbc llid that the cootaincr
allould be OliO which CID be llan- .
dlccllincc tbm CDIIICI a time when
it need( to be moved iniO a lhcl- ·

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEI FOR YOUI ~ONYEtfiEIKE
~-FRI. 9-6: SAT. &amp;SUN. 9-S ·..
P•jWi 'Wty 45C .. fer cle11

.

Chester Gar~en Club holds pressed-leaf workshop at meeting
A c:rlft Wlllkshop using colcrful !' Pleaed lcavea·and 1 Sll'aw hat as a
pressed leaves was a feature of the buo for a whimsical clown face
m:c:nt mecdna of the Cbcstel Gar- 1 WOD tbc craft cboicc. Ten mcmbas
den.Cub held llthe home of Edna, completed the clown hat using
Wood.
1 lcavea. ribbon JD111 for bait, castor
-p atrtcta
• • Ho Iter d'tsp Iaye.d a' oil....._
--~- nuts
- and a -.aw~
"'"'--- · ...,...,

11

&amp; Auction

SolD&amp; 10 pay llccd to diaL"
.
ID lbc study, docUJn aald a bys· terectomy for painful fibrolds,
-Which II" noncancerous uterine
-srowtha, wu appropriate 11ntil
. WIIIICII ol!lectecl - llld tbcn tbcy
said tbc operation wu "eqQivo·tal." Tbc- tWas bappCDed for
bleediDJiibroida ad c:crv1ca1 dyspluia, amall cell cbanaesln tbc
cervix tbll cu precede cervital

·-

~llcSalt'

8

:r"'&amp;tv.

~.~.....a;:~, II.~

Mr, To

Sta~. -

Jac-.

....._-To

cactlla . _ , P.O. 11oa! 104,

OH . 45140. Deadline ·

F« ~: 1CII31/M· ~-··-•
OppoctunllyEmj!loytr. • ...- .

,..

�"'

r
. Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio ·

'

'

BRIDGE

NEA CrosswQrd Puzzle
Anawer to Prevlo~ Puzzle

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

\

1 Diller
5 Harper Valley

grp.

a Warbled

12 1cannottell

BEATIIE BLVD,n.t

by

Bruce Beattie
SWAIN

MICTION I I'UANITUAE. 12
Ollwo ... Golllpalla.- • . _
lumM~n,
- - · w...om I
Wotll
bDala.~M-44~-316~.

6-

G"""'l llolnl........, Polnl!ri91
Yonl Wotll W I - wGuu ... Cloa_, Ughl Hlutlng,

:::~oo.~~

Commerlcll, R..adinllll, Steve:

52 Sponlng GOOds

--pod

.7 2

WI'bOiuUiuiiJ
._.,,.....
I,
PI, 11t 141 5411.

~:~~~75-1l57.
loaa lo iht

I mm A - MDC, lllllnloel,
13'111; 22 ~onnlnp, MO; llcllh
In Boxl Ellfra Cllpa, 114379-2343.

tor

In my home. Reuonable

-

negotl1ble, country

. -

IIGS-31140.

T-

-

DOWN

•A 9 6 4 2
•A 4 2
•Q 9 3

lionel,

HANDGUNS

call

Home care, will caN

Mill

1 Weather
lndicetora
2 Vinegar
3 Cracked
4 Cry of aHirma·
lion
5 Col'- danca

s- Anlter 3xtxS2
usiad, lliilln box,

6 Makes neat
7 Aiding (a felon)
B Wrongdoing

9 Kind of power

$06. 30WIIM442.

53

Antiques

Anllqu. floor -

$100,11Wtl24441

II"...,.....,..,...'"""'

Vlclrola,

South~

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 NT

I MIGHT A-KNOWED
THAR WAS A C:ATC:H
TO IT!!

JEST WASH UP

MY DISHES WH!;N
SHE GITS DONE

Wesl

North
Pa•s
Pass 3NT
Opening lead: •

East
2•

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

All pass

.4

Sun, run
and bridge

Will nko I l l - ond clolr
bMh; tlrnood lor 1111, $25lood, """'' Lawn Service,
D14-JSIZ·2111S or 114-112·7201.

m•

2Uac.r2br.,
pond,

....ucayol.m. ~.

4-

IUMia&amp;esl Ofll. lw lldlrly lind
htnclloopped. EOH 3CJol..a7l.

111'111.

;J5 Lota lr Acreage

Ftnancial
21

r..tn
r -!.;;- 11rr.-HUD
•
Ina lllllllcllllono

..,n,

illlllesllot-

011 Add- Pilla. Cor-

-USSI

Two bod"""" -

Aaclno..., - -- ·

-or
Ts~ot And • - 4S
Rood, SM,OOO, ~lilt.

Business

Fumlahed
Rooms

Opponunlty

-:z ..

-lorranl·-or-h.

114 4

$120/sno. QoiU. Haiti.

1180

II r'"tt $11 J5or Doy.
Conotn:ctlon w- w.~com~,
Kllclson, .
l..Min*y,l1t Sll IJ21.

E-...,

F,..

~·ayea.

W

....

BQRNLOSER

~ All Rt 1antltlo11od
And CloisrarOodl 1101 And Up,
- Dlllwer....... I ttL

'i FEU. \fl I'IY ~~~ RI~T IN "'
001-1T OF SCWXX.. .. I'VE
&amp;a.\~ flao\11.1 t..TED

Rentals

3 Bodroorn, Caunlry Uvtng, 1
Ac~W,

'

4312 Conr IIIII, Oolllpilllo,

.

~ 1-10'0\1~ l'O BE
--~AI!OOT,

,.WIW, U6T

.

"'

~!»ttY fW,. Off

Ill~ ~Tt-.nOOM:&lt; ~5£,

1

~-"

IIHo\'( UfE ! ..91~--

41 Housaa for Rant

~

....

:z.txoiO . _ Bulldlna For
-~ Coli 111-_.. Or 114:z.tl . IM Evonlnge.

cre•ture
16 Plaything
20 Cepltal of

OregOn
23 Type Of
a1llircae
25 Tot'1 glove
29 Fiber .,t.nl

Of·-

30 order
34S1-ing
appara1ua
35 Aquatic mammaia
36 Merchant
38 Capl1lll of
• Canada
39 Settler
40 SuppDIIL
41 Wide
size
42PeaWeaol
Dodgen r.me

a-

By Phillip Alder '
The Generali Two Worlds Trophy,
nicknamed the Ryder Cup of Bridge,
was an outstanding success. It was
played last August in the Hotel Club
del Bridge, which is the focal point of
the Villaggio del Bridge in northwest
Calabria &lt;which comprises the south·
west portion of Italy&gt;.
Sixteen of the world's best players, .
eight representing the United States
and eight representing Europe, fought
over 144 boards. The United States
won, 587-539. !The high totals resulted
because each deal was scored twice,
effectively making it a 288·board
match.&gt; '
This was my favorite deal df the
I · w,o:~A . It was played b1 Jeff
Meckstroth in his characteristic style.
East's two·diamond opening ,was
the Multi, showing a weak two·bid in
either major. Meckstroth's two -no·
trurnp overcall promised 16-18 points,
and Eric Rodwell made a thin raise.
West guessed wen to lead a heart
rather than a spade. Using the Rule of
II, East knew South had one high ·
heort. Afraid it was the ace, East made
the " nonnal" play of putting in the 10.
However, with A·x of hearts, WOijldn'l
South have called for dummy's jack?
After winning with the heart queen,
Meckstroth still had only eight tricks
in sight. Nine became· a possibility
when the diamond jack won trick two.
As West hadn't grabbed this trick
and cashed his he~rt winners, it was ·
apparent that West didn't have both
top heart honors. So, if East had the
K·Q of spades and a top heart, West
probably had the . club queen .
Therefore, Meckstroth cashed the
club king and played a club to dum' my's tO. When it held, he claimed nine
tricks: one spade, one heort, one dia·
. mond and six clubs.

10 Devotion ol
ninedlya
11 Folklore

-

45EvergEMII

48 Sum- drink
50 Short sleep

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

.

by luis Campos

CelebfitYCipher cryptograms ere created !1001 quotations by l &amp;mOU$ people, put and preeent
.
""~ ·"!~ lette r In tile tipt\er stands lor another. Todey's clue: L eqw/1: C
·

'CNH
F S H

VSRCHX
B M H. Y C

GHYLHPVI

M Y I G N

SYCRFSK
N F G ·H

YSX

P F M

PMHH

RK

FVM

Y

JFMIX . '

U V S L N ·H .
-

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Gralilude is one of ·lhe least articulate of the
emotions, especially when "is deep." -Felix Frankfurter.

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poinl today 1o speak well about people.
you. Mail $2 lo Malchmaker, c/o this Gossip or lhoughlless comments could
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York. alienate associates.
·
GEMINI (May .21·June 20) Someone
N.Y. t01&amp;3.
BERNICE
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dac. 21) You who is very'·lond of you might be willing
.BEDEOSOL could be reasonably fortunate today to do something lor you today he/she
where your material interests are con·
do
cemea: ye t you're likely 10
are unin ·
if your expectations aren't met.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) In finan· CANCER (June 21.July 22) Agreemllnts
cial matters or business IOday. be pleas· "' based upon unsellishness will have
ant and civil, bul don'l be so laid back enduring powers . However, in mailers
lhal you give away the store.
·
where either party is trying lo gain an
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZCH'eb. 19) II you lei edge, lhis won't be true.
events proceed at their natural pace LEO (July.23-Aug. 22). This ccutd ·be a
today, the resulls will be desirable . 1 very productive day lor you, provided you
Tuesday, Oct 25.J99&lt;l
Introducing erratic changes could spoil . work on projects or assignments you
Your probabil~ies lor material gain In thli things.
·
know well. New or unusual tasks might
year ahead look goQd primarly beeluas PISCES (Fah. 20.March 20) Your gen. have to be done over. .
.
you might be mare resaurcelulin mcney · erosily is likely to be easily arous·ed VIROO (Aug. 23-8opt. 22) Allot some
matters than you've been in the pest.
IOday, yel you put strings 911 the lhiogs . time tl)day for pleasurable pursuits, but
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-fiOV. 22) :Instead of you give, lha luster of your good deeds · don't overload your agenda wilh them.
· correct mislakes.' you make wil dim.
· ·
Esaential dulles and respc)nsibililios must
10
might try 10 '!void them. This ARIES (March 2f-Aprll 18) yo~ will nol ~neglected
, ,
Ia a
policy that is guarante'd to i~slinc:tively know how to ach~e· impcr· I.,IIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) II yo" re not
mike 'thiJlQS worse. Know Where to look tan! objectives today. Once aHalned, consistent and tenacious loday , your
romance and.you'll find"· The Astro;. though, you fl\lght not be ,as wise about' . goals aren't likely .to be achreved. Y~u
Matchrriakir ·inetanlly revaals maintaining yOur position.
.rtight .get close. but close only ccunls rn
signs ate rornanttcJIIy.~~or TAURUS (Api'll 20.May 20) Make it a a game of horseshoes.
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Revolt- Wring- Inlet - Wiring - GIVING .
I had been called on the carpel by the boss. 1came to
the conclusion that no one appreciates the value of
criticism more than the person GIVING it

�.

.

Page 1D-The Dilly Sentinel

Reader hesitates to investigate auth·entic.ity.of li-neage
I approached my mother about this
several months ago because I have
many physical characteristics that
arc clearly biracial. She became very
angry and cursed me for raising such
an "insulting" question. Since that
time, our relationship has been very
tense. I'm afrald if I bring up the
subject again, she may stop talking
to me permanently.
I want to end this estrangement,
Ann, but I also want to know the
truth . Am I blowing this out of
proportion? What .can I do? - NO
NAME, NO CITY
DEAR NO NAME, NO CITY: I
contacted the Illinois Masonic
Hospital in Chicago, the only
on-site location in the Midwest for
DNA paternity testing, and this is

Ann
Landers

Dear Ann Landen: All my life,

people have asked me if I'm of
mixed race. At the age of 35, I'm
now asking myself the same
question.
My parents separated immediately
after I was born. My father insists
that when ~ was away on a Navy
assignment, my mother had an
affair. I am deeply hurt that he docs
not believe I am his biological

what I learned:
To get a completely ' accurate
result, you would have to be tested,
and so would your father and
mother. The cost of lhc test is $600.
It takes from two to eight weeks to
get the results. The test is 100
percent accurate if the man is not
the fa'ther and 99.9 percent accurate
if he is.
If the mother is not tested, there is
a 0.8 percent chance of a false
positive.
You are going to have to ~ide
whether or not you want to risk your
mother's wtath by going ahead with
the testing. From what you have told
me, I doubt that she would
cooperate.
If you decide to be tested, are you

prepared for ~be repercussions
should .the tests reveal that your
father's accusations were correct? I
hope you will consider all the
ramifications before you press bard ·
to pursue the truth.
Dear Ann Landen: People arc
becoming increasingly concerned
about health practices in rcstsurants,
and the)' have a right to be .
Employees arc setting sloppier, and
health inspcctqrs arc less vigilant.
Last week, I found a cricket at the
bottom of a coffee cup. It appeared
to have drowned. When I called it
to the attention of the waitress, she
said, "Oh, that again •• we had the
exterminator in here just last month"
A week ago, I found a piece of
gravel in a biscuit. It was sharp and

bard and could have broken a tooth.
I Iiave also found baits in baked

gOQds and a worm in a salad. When
I reported those occurrenCes to lhc
restaurant managers, they didn 'I
seem the least bit concerned.
Several days ago, my husband and
I attended a wedding dinner. A
young mother was changing her
baby on the banquet table. When I
confronted her, she replied, "It's no
big deal." Ycatcrday, I observed a
mother changing a baby's diaper at
a booth in a rcstaunnt. When she
placed the soiled diaper on the table,
I lost my appetite and walked out.
How can you and I, Mr. and Mrs.
John Q. Public, protect ourselves
against such blatantly unsanitary
practices? rve gotten to the IJOinl

IT)

DEAR NERVOUS: Be selective..
Bat in restaurants wbcrc you don't
sec this sort of thing and don't
hesitate ·to pass the word to your
friends.
LonesotM? Take. c~rge of your
life and tum it around, Write for
AM Landers' new boolclet, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a selj-Dildresstd, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or 171011ey order for $4.15 (this in·
eludes postagi and handling) to:
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
ll562, Chicago, IlL 606Jl..()562 (In
Canada, send $5.05.)

Social Secu~i~y _overhauls disability process
By ED PEI'ERSON
Social Security 11111D11f!er, Athe111

Plans for a revised disability
application process, when fully
bnplemented, wUI represent the
most sweeping procedural changes
instituted iD SSA's 38-year blslory
of ~·•lng diaability cases.
plan, announced by Social
Security Commiasioner Sblrley S.
Cbate.r recently, will replace a process cbaractcrized by "excessive
delays, eudless paper sbuftling and
bewildering procedures."
Wben fully Implemented over,
the next five years, the plan will
reduce die time it tatea to IJIO"C8S a
claim from ISS days to no more
than 60 days and the nwnber of
employees required to haDdle a disability claim from 26 to eigbt. If
the claim Is appealed. it will reduce

Cogar birth
announced

Briuany BllaM Cogar was bam
OI:L 3 at Holzer Clinic weighing
eight pounds nine ounces.
She is lhc daus~tcr of William
K. Cogar Jr. and Mary Cogar. Hel
grandparents are Margaret and Darrell Rimes and Bill and Shirley
Cogar. She has a sister, Nicole
Benson.

the time it takes to process that
administrative appeal from two
years to about seven IIIOIItba IUid
wUiredu~thenwnberof~k

wbo would have bandkid die case
frolp 45 to 14.
.
Odla" major cballges iD die new
disability claims process Include:
-Personallzillg die process by
assigning one employee wbo is
knowledgeable about die case to be
die priDcipal CIOIIIaet.
-AnowiD&amp; disability applk:allll
to becane more directly involved
iD the claima proccaa by abowlns
them ways they can help obtain
medical evidellce to support their
case.
-ElimiNting .an IDtaim appeal
step so that a pt11011 whose claim Is
dcllied can immediately file fm a
bcarillg.

Heartiest to demonstrate low-fat eating
Meigs County grocery shoppers fat, saturated fat cholesterol and
will get the chance' to lcln bow to sOdium.
read and undcntand the new nutri"We will offer participants a
lion labela required on all paclatged brochure on how to read the new
foods It the American Heart Asso- food label," said Iannarelli. "The
ciation's national special event, new label design makes it much
HeartFest, Slllrting Saturday affour easier to read and undentand the
area grocery stores.
nutrition content of food products.
"It is easier than ever before to We also have a brochure on how to
ftnd tasty, delicious low-fat ·foods cut the fat in your diet, which will
for your family," said Sandy contain coupons from our HeartIanlliCCili, president of the Meigs Fest sponsors, offering discoWJt on
Countr, American Heart Associa- low-fat foods.
tion. ' HeartFcst will show shop·
Local stores offering the inforpera how tO understand the new mation are Kroger, Vaugbaii's Carnutrition label requirements from dina! Foods,Powell's Super Valu
the Food and Drug Adminisllalion. and Big Bend Foodland.
The new label requirements make
"There will be something for
shopping for foods low in saturated everyone at HeartFest,r said
fat and cholesterol easy and quick." Iannarclli. "ll is a heart-to-heart
Ht.artFest is a nationwide event mes~e from the American Heart
held in grocery stores, workplaces, Association to the peopk of Meigs
schools and other sites. The event. _ County. We want to show how to
launched by the American Heart lielp prevent heart disease, AmcriAssociatlon in 1985, aims to teach ca's No. I killer. Low-flU eating is
Americans bow to avoid heart dis- a big pail 'Of the answer."
ease by eating a diet low iD total
HeartFest is sponsored nation-

A Disability lmplementatioa
Task Force hll been establis!uod to
begin tbe pocal of implr.mr#i"'
tbe plan. Social Security Is committed to moving as quickly • poulble, but •a ,.mctJmc:Jttai dla!laca
caaaot be made ovemlgbt. For
instance, IICIIIC Mpecla of tbc plan
will require. extcmlve reiCIIdllllld
lesting before bnplementation.
Other propoaed cbaage1 will
require lcgisllllive Klion and IDIDY
cllangea will be bnplemented
tbrouab tbc reaulatory ~ to
allow f« public COIIIIIlent before

two proJIIIII&amp; required the usc of
more than half rl Social SCCIIity'a
admiDiattalive budget of $4.9 billion. •
ID addition, Social Sewrity hll
~ a critkal junclurc: applications for disability benefits have
~ all-time blgbs, tbc proceaa
bas produced a level of service
viewed by lbe Amerlam PUblic as
unacceptable, ,nd additional
wtmiDIW1Idve CCIOUnlCI are Ullllkely in an era or federal apeadiag
limilatioallllld competlna apendlns

impltmelllallol.

Ten IDOIIthl qo,Commiuloncr
Cbatcr put together a "disability
I'CCIIgiDeeriDg team" compriacd of
some of Social Seeurlty'a most
experienced and kllowledgeable
disability cxpcru, iDcludins J'CIR·
sentatlves of SSA' a field offices
and the state asCDciea that make
initial diaabllity declliiona for
Social Security. Following the
release of a pR!limlnary report iD

.

Allbougb lbe two disability prognuna wtmlnl!!lered by the Social
Security Administration - tire
Social Seeurity Disability Insurance JlfOBI'IIII and tbc Supplemental Sccmity II!CYllll!l (SSI) pi08I'IIIII
f« iowJDCOIDC IJOOI)Ie - accouDt·
ed for lesa thin 10 percent of
SSA's 45 mllU011 beneficiaries last
year, tbe clalma processes fm tbesc

wide by Healthy Choice, Quaker
Oats, Progresso, and Johnson cl
Johnson and runs through October
29. Contact the local stores to find
when information will be distnbut·
ed there.
The AHA rceonunends that 10181
fat intake be less than 30 peri:cnt of
calories eaten each day, and that
saturated fat be less than 10 pen:ent
of total calories. Cholesterol intake
should not exceed 300 millignuns a
day, and sodium intake should not
exceed 3,000 milligrams a day;
The AHA is the nation'1 !Qest
volunlal)' health agency dedicated
to reductloa of dislbillty and ~
from heart and blood vessel diseases, which annually kill almost
one million Americans. During
1993 the AHA spent more than
$226 million for research support,
publlc and profeuionll education,
and community fi'OSIIIDS.
For a me brochure titlccl'''Nutri·
tion Labelin~ infomi•tion
contact lhc
• Helrt Aaaociation at 1-800-AHA-USAI.

fdxldcs.

.

of~· Witbout this lower court review, Supreme Court Justices will bave
to asacmble and review the records of the case at ~ greater lqtb, cuttina into alleged time-saving. Individuals on ·botb aides of the iaauc ap:ec
that lhcse mandated appeals may increase the Ohio Supreme Court's burden
and caseload.
•

This proposal should be defeated because it selectively denicl a right of 1p- .
peal oilly to those subject to the state's most extreme penalty, death.

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL

on upper parkina lot iD Pomeroy.
Suah Fisher to share Ideas for
Pamcroy.

pabll•lted •• a free ••nice to
aoa-proftt aroap• wl•ltlaa to
annouce -CIDp IUid 1peclal
nentl. Tlte calendar 11 not
de•laned to promote 1ale1 or
hod nben ol any type. It11111
are printed • II*' pennitl and
cannot be puaat"d to raa a

1

To ...00 Sections land 3 ol Article IV oltbe COIIStlta· .
lion ol the &amp;.le ol Oblo.

IJ*Uk: nlllllbw o1 c1a,...

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meeting Monday at Bur·
kett Barber Sbop. Social bour and
· ttading seasion, 7 p.m. before meeting. ReflcsbmcDU. New members
welcome.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Home Town
Pride mecdng, 6:30 p.m. Mlllday

Maurader
band places at
competitions

APPEAL.

. 3
TBXT or PROI'OSID

CON~::=MENT

IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT WR.L BE EFFECTIVE
JANUARY 1, 1995.

1111uo.'lll-., ,_,.,,

CONS'I'I1UI10NAL AMINDMIIIT ..

YOIII-PIIIIIII '
AIEIITS IEIVIIIt
.ItS CHillY
SIICI1161

A auUorlty yes vote ls. nee 1

.i

YES

l'ropolili&amp;IO unead Secli0111 2 one! 3 of Ani·
cle IV of the Cooltitutim of tbe S1lle of
Ohio 10 pvelbe Supreme Court juriacjic·
tioo in diJCCtlljlpCOb i n - penally c:ueo
u • of rl&amp;ht, tllus _ . . , lbe
jurildiction of the CCJUJts of appeal• on
dlm:t review in death penalty cuea.

ryforpnp.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPI'ED?

'
NO

Propooina 10 eiiiCI Sectioo 6 of Anic1o VI of
the Corutitution of diO Stale of Ohio ..
authorize the tuitioo ctodits aold ot to be
aold tbolm to be poid from the Ohio Tui·
tioo T11111 Flmd 10 be IUJIIIOI10d by diO ftlll
faith one! cmlit of the IIIII 10 111Ue
other ......... JOVeming lhlt piiiii'IID.

Be it reaolved by diO General Auembly d
the- &lt;X Ohio, three-fiftho ofdlo ...........
elected 10 each boule """"""""horeio, tho&amp;
there shall be 10 diO elodon tX tho
in the pracrlbed by law • tho
geueralelectioo 10 be beld on.the lint n.e.
dlyollerthefintMondoyin-IM,
a ptopoul to eDKt 1 new JeCtion immecfi•
ly foUowU., Sectioo 5 of Article VI of tho
COIIIIitution of Ohio to read u foilftoa:
ARTICLE VI
Scc:tioo 6. (A) TO INCREASE OPI'OR·
TUNmES TO 1111! RESIDENTS OF 11118

•

in life IS
PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITVTIONAL AMENDMENT

TUESDAY
. RU'ILAND - RudaDd o.dcD
Club, Tuesday, bome of Dorothy

To ~ .AJ1!de I of the Oblo Condulloa by the addltloo
of SecdoD 10..

•

RACINE - RACO (Racine
Area Community ~anizadon)
Tuesday, Star Mill
6:30 p.m.
New members wck:aDe.

-

will of its citizens that victims of crime should have a right to reasonable
and appropriate notice, information, access· and protection, and a man' in&amp;fyl..ll!kin the criminal justice proCess.

1. REQUIRE THAT VICTIMS OF CRIME BE ACCORDED
FAIRNESS, DIGNITY AND RESPECT IN THE CIUMINAL
JUS11CE SYS'IEM.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Reviwl aervices
at the Pomeroy Cburcb of the
Nazarene will be held from OCt.
26· 30 at tbe church located at the
comer of Union and Mulberry,
Pomeroy. Bill and Mildred Crane
will be the evangelists. 7 pm. cadi
evening, 6 p.m. Sunday.
•

D\IIBt weigh the laws of the victim against· the constirutional rights of the
accused, the constitutional rights will prevail. The proposed amendment
will mean that when judges make decisions, they will weigh the constitu~onaJ rights of both the victim IUid the accused. The amendment will not
take away any rights of the accused. It.will, however, give the rights
of criminal offenses equal standing and protection in our state con~titution. Issue 2 is a question of balance.
2 . The constitutional amendment will serve as a guide to our state lawmakers
in passing victim rights legislation. Our con5tirution serves as our highest
authority and statement of public policy. Lawmakl:rs will know it is the

TO AFFORD VICTIMS OF CRIMINAL OFFENSES CONmiU·
TIONAL RIGHTS, TIDS AMENDMENT WILL:

.

I . Currently, there are laws regarding crime victims, but there arc constirutional rights that protect the accused. In a judicial setting, when a judge

victims

(Propoeed by Resolutioll of tltc Geaenl Awmhly of Oblo)

2. AS PROVIDED BY LAW, REQVIRE THAT VICTIMS OF , 3 . The Constitution protects certain fundamental rights that every person has
and that no other person, institution, or government can tske.away or deny.
CRIME BE GIVEN REASONABLE AND APPROPRIATE
The Bill of Rights to the Constitution of the United States and Article I,
N011CE; INFORMATION, ACCESS; AND PROTECDON AND
Section 10 of the Obio Constitution were adopted so that no one, who
A MEANINGFUL ~OLE IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE
PROCESS.
.... · · · ·- "-· "
is accused of committing a crime', can be denied the rights that arc
enumerated there. However, there is no corresponding section in either
If ADOPTED, TIDS AMENDMENT WILL NOT GIVE ANY
Constirution to protect the fundamental rights of victims of crime. The
PFJlSON NEW OR ADDI'J'IONAL RIGHTS TO APPEAL OR
fundamental rights of viCtims to be treated with fajmcss, dimjty. and
MODIFY A COURT DECISION, ABRIDGE ANY OTHER
J'C§pcct need to be in the fundamental law of our state, the Ohio
RIGHT GUARANTEED BY THE U.S. OR omo CONmiUConstitution.
TIONS. OR CREATE A lEGAL CLAIM FOR COMPENSATION
OR DAMAGES AGAINST THE STATE OF omo, ITS
COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 2
POLITICAL SUBDMSIONS OR ANY PUBIJC OFFICER OR

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This C.oupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and MaUlt To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

-----.-·

EMPLOYEE.

Representative Katherine H. Walsh
Representative Sean Logan
Rcpresenutive Tim Greenwood

IF ADOPI'ED, 'TIDS AMENDMENT WILL BE EFFECTIVE

. IMMEDIATELY."
A ~ yes vote is nee 111 TY lor pnssale.

•
ONE ITEM- ONE FREE AD PER WEEK

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE Z
YES

SHALL THE PROPOSED
~MENT BE ADOPTEDT

No argument was sulnttittcd against the proposed constitutional amendment.
No member of the General Aaacmbly voted against the amendment.

NO

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
·(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

tX the CcJnotjo- of Ollio"' reod • followl:
ARTICLE I

2 WHEEL DRIVE- SHORt BED

JUdalDJIIId IIIIIIIUveriDI·

Tbll wu tile second 'grand
challlpion bud victory for the
Manll!ldfil dill yet,.
11le bllld il UDder tbc diRclioQ
01 Toaey DIDie"o •ad...,_bY JCDDlt'cr Moreoa. Dave Deem, SUIID
a..t, Joy O'Brien IIIIIJIIDie Solo-

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Sectioo 101. VICilMS OF CRIMINAL

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S ITH:'S 'GMC·
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1111! CRIMINAL romCB PROCBSS,
AND, AS 1111! GBNIIRAL ASSJ!MIILY
SHAJJ.. DBFINB AND PaOVIDE BY

LAW. 5HA1J. BB ACCORDIID IUGHTS
TO RBASONABLB AND APPROPRIATE
NOI1CB, JNPORMATION, Acx:t!SS, AND
PROI'BC110N AND ro A MBANJNOFUL
ROLE IN 1111! CIUMINAL JUS'I1CB PRO.
CBSS. nus SBCTION DOBS NOr CON·
I'BR UPON ANY PI!ISON A 1UClHT TO
API'IIAL OR MODIFY ANY DIICISION IN
A CRIMINAL PROCBI!DINO, DOBS NOr
ANY OTHBR IUGHT

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MAIL TO: .....___..::.=::::.:;;;;;;._____ _ _ _ _"----~--

The .Daily s·entinel

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111 Court Street, Pome~oy, Ohio 45769
(Offir Expires November 15~ 1994)' .

135 PINE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OH.
.
. 446·2532

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OFFENSI!S SHALL BB ACCORDIID
FAIRNESS, D!GNITY,AND RBSPBCI'IN

NAMe=----------~~--------------------

Air, stereo, stand. trans., super nice, low
miles, solid red., 41,500 miles.

Truck Center, ·Inc.
(

ISSUE 1

(Amciiilod :;.,. 1oiDt Rao!utioo No. 9)

IISUUIICE ·

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Senator Antbony~S;;;ina;;agra~---""!"-"'!"'"""'!'""!"!-'!

3. APPLY TO CASES IN WIDCH THE DEATH PENALTY IS
IMPOSED FOR OFFENSES COMMITI'ED ON OR AFl'ER
JANUARY 1, 1995.

•uw•••••

This proposal should be defeated because it increaacs tbe riak that an inDo~nt person will be executed. There have been several IDatancca where people convicted and awaiting the death penalty have been falsely convicted.
This IIICI8urc should be defeated so we can solve the problem in ways tbat
carry less riak of executing the wrong person.

COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 1
State Representative Johnnie Maier
State Representative Barbara Pringle
State Representative Mike Fox
Senator Nancy Chiles Dix ·

2, PROVIDE FOR DIRECT APPEALS OF DEATH PENALTY
CASES TO THE omo SUPREME COURT FROM THE
COURTS OF COMMON PLEAS OR OTHER COURTS OF
RECORD INFERIOR TO THE COURT OF APPEAlS.

MWIIIICIIILIS

This proposal should be defeated because it opens our death peoaity law to
a lengthy and expensive constitutional cballenge. The U.S. Supreme Court
bas never upheld a dtalh penalty statute allowing fewer levels of appeal in
capital cases than in other cases.

EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 1
(as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

1991 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO.STEP SIDE

In two compeiidou tbc weekend of Oct. 15 tlie- ~~
Marauder
band retumcd with
.
The lint c;anpedtim took place
at the Riverview Hiah School in
Colbocton wbcte .Me1ga took lint
iD pen:uas1on beallng out Delaware
Hayes and New Pbiladelpbia for
tbc 11onor. nc
COIJI' 111c1 field
comm•odera placed ICCXllld and the
band flnisbcd fOIIIlb.
. Saturday niaht the band
llllldlcd tbcir way to gJllld cblmplon at tile Claymont Round-up
bclclin Urlchlville. Meiss edged
out Now Pb"edt:lpbi• Hlp ~
f« top hoDon iD c~ A and f«
tbc conlell
Meia• wu awuded tile fint
piKe b8nd. toot SCCODd iD flaga,
iCclond iD field CC"M"ander compcdtloll. tleCODd place iD pcrtUUion.
best ollllow mUJic, best of show

SUPPORTERS OF ISSUE 1
Governor George Voillovich
Attorney General Lee Fisher
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Assos:iatioo

1. REMOVE JURISDICTION FROM ·THE COURTS OF AP·

Woodanl, t.,.gaville.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Cuba' fall mectins will be
beld Monday •. 7 p.m at the Meigs
County Musewn, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

Ohioans abould vote in favor oflasuc 1 because it is a reasonable step toward
reforming our current judicial system. Too often criminals arc allowed to
manipulate and exploit our judicial prooeaa through elldless appeals that take
yean to review. Meanwhile,.lhc families of victims wait for final justice to
be administered. Unfonunately, many families arc still waiting. Support for
lAue 1 Ill support for these famOies
·

~ by Resolnlloa ol tbe .General Alnmllly ol Oblo)

---Community calendar. --ne cem-'lltJ Cale.IIIIJr ..

~MENT

PEALS TO REVIEW DEATH PENALTY CASES ON DIRECT

t.!J?~l23S.

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ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE
1
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BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLAI\IATIOIIIS, ARGUMENTS
THIS ISSUE SIMPLY WILL NOT~ WHAT rr CLAIMS. Thilpr.AND RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTs TO THE OHIO
VOTE FOR ISSUE 1
poaal should be defeated becsnae:
f:ONSTITU,TION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
SUPPORT swm JUSTICE IN ~mo
,ASSEMBLY AND BALLOT LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS According to the current law, a perso11 senteocecl to dealh in Obio bas the I . It will not aiJnificantly shorten the time between a ~ of delllb
THE FULL TEXT OF AN AMENDMENT TO.THE right to an appcala proceaa that contains two 11tep11 on the state level: The
and execution.
·
.OHIO CONSmUTION PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETI- Court of Appeals and The Obid Supreme Court. Isaue 1 aecklto delete the '
2 . It ~ the risk ·that an innocent person will be e:ucutcd.
·.TION
TO BE SUBMinED
TO TME VOTERS
AT ·THE coun
of Appeals step in an effort to atrcamline the proceu and make the
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system morc efficient. 1-. 1 wW pe pea- comlded and -ceaced
GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8, 1994. ·
to death 1D Obio a direct appell t8 tbe 0b1o Sapnme Court.
Ohio's dealh penalty cases are now reviewed by one of the 12 dUtrict courta

•
TO CII.'NGE THE.PROCEDURE FOR APPEALS OF CASES IN
WIDCB THE DEATH PENALTY IS IMJl()SED, THIS AMENDMENT WILL:

Marcil, they sousbt_public comment and pesentcd ODmluiOIIer
Cbatct with a final report incorporating those MII!I!MlQII iD Auguat.
. A oopy of a full report desaibiDg tbc new~ ed tbe exlellsive wort SS'A did to develop it
can be obtained by calliDB l-410966-82SS or by wrltllls to SSA,
DlsabiDIY Process ReciJIIneeriDg
Project, P.O. Box 17052,Ifalt~JaorC,

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ARGUMENT FOR.STATE

.where I don't want to eat out anymore. -- NERVOUS DINER IN
THE BIG APPLE (WHICH
PROBABLY RASe A WORM IN

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Monday, October 24, 1884

Pomeroy-.Uiddleport, Ohio

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STATB FOR IIIGHEil EDUCATION, rr IS
HBRBBY DBTBRMINED TO BE IN THB
PUBUC INTBRBST AND A PROPER
PUBUC PURPOSE FOR THB STATB TO
MAINTAIN A PROOIIAM FOR 11fE SALE
Of TUmON CREDITS SUCH THAT THE
PROCEEDS OF SUCH CREDITS PUJ..
CHASIID FOR THE BI!NI!FIT OF A PI!R·
SON THI!N A RESIDI!NT Of 1'1W1 STATE
SHALL BB OUARANTI!ED ro COVIlll A
SI'JICil'llll) ~ JlllliH,Alt'UJID
TO THE COST OF TUITION AT ANY
STATE INSTITUTION OF HIOHI!R
IIDUCATION, AND 11fE SAM!! OR A
D!FFERI!NT AMOUNT WHI!N APPLIED
ro THB COST OF TUmON AT ANY
OTHI!R INSTITUTION OF HIGHER
IID,UCATION, AS MAY Bll PROVIDED
BY LAW.
(ID THE TUITION CRI!DITS PRO.
GRAM AND THE QHIO TUITIO)'I
TRUST FUND PRI!VIOUSLY CRBATBD
BY LAW, WHICH TBRMS INCLUDE
ANY SUCCESSOR TO THAT PROORAM
OR FUND, SHALL BE COI'mNUI!D SlJB.
1ECT TO THE SAM!! LAWS, EXCI!Pf AS
MAY HERI!AFTBR BE AMENDIID. TO
SECURE THB GUARANTEES RllQUIRBD
BY DIVISION (A) OF 1'1W1 SECI10N,
THE GBNI!RAL ASSEMBLY SHALL AP·
PROPRIATB MONI!Y SUFI'ICII!NT ro
OFFSET ANY DI!FICIENCY THAT OCCURS IN THB QHIO TUmON TRUST
FUND, AT ANY TIM!! NI!CBSSARY TO
MAKE PAYMENT OF THE FULL
AMOUNT OF ANY TUmON PA YM1!Nr
OR REFUND THAT WOULD HAVE
BEEN REQUIRI!D BY A TUmoN PAYMENT CONTRACT, EXCEPT FOR THE
CONTRACT'S LIMIT OF PAYMI!NT TO
MONEY AV AILABLB IN THB TRUST
FUND. NOTWITHSTANDINGjECTION
29 OF AJ,TICLE..I!. OF TillS i;QNSTITUTION, OR THB LIMITATION OF A TUITION PAYMENT CONTRACT BX·
BCUTBD BI!FORI! THE EI'FBC'TMl
DATE OF THIS SEC110N, SUCH AP·
PROPIUA:TIONS MAY BE MADE BY 'A
MA10RITY OF THE MEMBERS
I!FFilCI'IVI! DATB AND RI!PI!AL
ELI!CTI!D TO EACH HOUSE OF THB
If adoplod by 1 m1jority of the electon
VOlin&amp; oo this uneadmcnt, lbe unendment GENI!RAL ASSEMBLY. ANDTIIEFUIL
AMOI,JNT OF ANY SUCH BNIIANCBD
shall like effect 011 IIIIIIIIIY I, t995 , one! n ·
istiDa Sections 2 one! 3 of Article IV of the TUmON PAYMENT OR REFUND MAY
BE DISBURSIID TO AND ACCilFil!D BY
Coalitutioo of the S1lle of Ohio slllll be
THE BENEFICIARY OR PURCHASI!R.
1rop:alod m tbot efl'oc:tive date. ·
TO TIII!SE I!NDS THERE IS IIBRIIIIY
PLEDGED THE FULL FAITH AND
SCHEDULE
CRI!Drr AND TAXING POWER OF THE
Upoa diO ldcpim of diO ll!aldmenl to Soc· 5TATB.
2 one! 3 of Article IV of the Constitu·
ALL
ASSETS
THAT
ARI!
of diO S1lle of Ohio, the General MAINTAINED IN THI! QRro TUmON
abiiiiiiiOIId the ttcviaod Code of
TRUST FUND SHALL BE USED SOLELY
the direct oppeo1J of death
FOR THE PURI'OSES OF THAT FUND .
10 tbe Ohio Suprane Coun.
HOWEVER, IF THE PROORAM IS TBR•mendn,g to Sectiona 2 and 3 of Al~
MINATI!D OR THE FUND IS Ll·
QUIDATBD: THB RI!MAJNING ASSBTS
. IV of diO a-itulioD of Ohio repnling
AFTI!R THB OBUGATIONS OF THB
dlm:t _.!of a........., of death apply
FUND HAVE BEEN SATISFIED IN AC·
10 &lt;UOO in whidt 1 IIOili&lt;DCe of death is
CORDANCE wrrn LAW SHAll. BE
for an olfenoe oommitlod oo or Iller TRANSFERRED TO THB· GENERAL
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1• 1m . A
.REVENUE FUND OF THB STATB.
~"!;;:::~=U..=• i for m oft'eaoe c:ommitted
LAWS SHALL Bl! PASSED, WHICH
II
I, 111'15, ollallbe!U&lt;bindlo
u if diO ,._,._ bad ... MAY PRECEDE AND BE MAD!! CON·
TINGENT UPON THE ADOPTION OF
~~ THIS AMIINDMI!NT BY 11fE BLBCTOitS, TO PROVIDE THAT PllTIJIU!
OF THE llNITED
Oit CONDUCT .OF THB TUmON CRI!DITS
THIS CONSI1TUTION, AND DOBS NOT PROORAM SHAJJ.. BB CONSIST'BNT
CRI!ATB ANY CAUSB OF ACTION FOR wrrH THIS AMIINDMI!IiiT. NOTHJNO IN
COMPENSATION OR DAMAGES THIS AMI!NDMI!NT SHALL BE CONAOAINST111B STATB, ANY FO!lnCAL 'STRUIID TO PROHIBIT OR RIIS'I'RJCt
ANY AMI!NDMBNTS TO 11fE LAWS
SUBDIVISION OF 11fE STATB, ANY OF·
FICBit, BMI'LOYI!Il, OR AOBNT OF THB OOVERNING 11fE Tlll'I10N CRIIDITS
PROORAM OR THB QHIO TUITION
STATE OR OF ANY FO!lnCAL SUB·
DIVISION, OR ANY OPFICBR 'op THE TRUST FUND Jl!AT ARE NOT INCON·
SISTENT wrrn 11118 AMENDMBNT.
COURT.

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EI'FI!CI1VI!DATE
If llit.,...r by I tllllloritY tX tho electon
.......... tho JIIOI*II, Soctioa 101 of Aliido I ol diO
d Obio abollllke ef.

e-m..-.

I!FFECI'IVI!DATB
If adoplod by • lllljorily 'o f diO . _ .
•llliDI Oil the JIIOI*II, a...... 6 of AJtido
VI of the Coaoti- of Cllio ailoil liD rl·
1i1ct imnwtiwly . (eontlnuod on b•ck)

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PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

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PROPOSED CONSTITIJTIONAL AMENDMENT
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(Proposed by Resolutloa of the GeDeral Aaembly of Oblo)

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To amend Artlde VI of tbe Oblo Colllltltutlon by tbe
addition of Section 6.

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TO INCREASE OPI'ORTUNI'I'IFS TO THE RESIDENTS OF THE
STATE OF OHIO FOR HIGHER EI)IJCATION AND TO ENCOURAGE
OHIO FAMILIES TO SAVF; AHEAD TO BETI'ER AFFORD IDGHER
EDUCATION, THIS AMENDMENT WILL:

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1. ALWW THE STATE TO MAINTAIN APROGRAM FOR THE SALE

OF TUITION CREDITS WHEREBY THE PROCEEDS OF SUCH
CREDITS PVllCHASFD FOR THE BENEm OF STATE RESIDENTS
ARE GUARANTEED BY THE STATE TO COVER A SPECIFIED
AMOUNT WHEN APPLIED TO THE COST OF TUITION AT ANY
STATE INSTITUTION OF HIGHER mtJCATION AND THE SAME OR .
A DIFFERENT AMOUNI' WHEN APPLIED TO THE COST OF TUITION AT ANY OTHER IDGHEit EDtiCATION INSTmmON AS MAY
BE PROVIDED BY LAW.

(/

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 3

Finally, the amendment would require that all1181Ct8 1111intained in the Ohio
Tuition Trust Fund be used solely for the purposes of the fund. If the fund TU omo CONSTITVTION SHOULD fill BE AMENDED TO
is liquidated, any remaining 8S8dS would be transferred to the aeneraJ revenue PUDGE SI'ATE TAXES TO GUAIWITEE PERSONAL COLLEGE
fund of the state.
11JJTION SAVINGS1
Cj

2. TO REQUIRE THAT RmON CREDITS PAID FROM THE Till·
TION CREDITS PROGRAM AND THE OHIO TIJITION TRUST FUND
BE suPPoRTED BY THE FlJU FAml AND CREDIT OF THE STATE
OF OHIO AND REQUIRE THE PASSAGE OF LAWS FOR THE CONDUCT OF THE TIJITION CREDITS PROGRAM CONSISTENT WITH
THIS AMENDMENT.

-INSVRI'S I'EilSONAL SAVINGS PLANS: the investor would be
p,.age of lasUe 3 will DOl miK taxes or cost Ohio tuplym more. It is , ·~ of a filled reJID'Il when colle~ tuition .credita are purchased

needed to dcrnoll$trate to the Internal Revenue Service that the Prepaid Tul·
tion Program qualifies for federal tax exemption. This "stamp of approval"
will enable the program to continue providing an atfonlablc: mcana for families
to prepay future higher education at competitive prices.

3. REQVJRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO APPROPRIATE MONEY
TO OFFSET ANY DEFICIENCY IN THE OIDO TUITION TRUST
FUND TO GUARANTEE THE PAYMENT OF THE FULL AMOUNT
OF ANY TUITION PAYMENT OR REFUND REQUIRED BY A TIJI,
TION PAYMENT CONTRACT, AND ALWW A MAJORITY OF THE
MEMBERS OF EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERALASSEMBLYTO APPROPRIATE FUNDS FOR THE PAYMENT OF ANY TUITION PAYMENT CONI'RACT PREVIOUSLY ENTERED INTO.

YJ!S

~MMITS STATE TAXJNG POWER: sbould the invesJme!!l of college tuition funds be illlufficient to cover future tuition, tax-payen will
have to pay the dltTerenco. In a time of difficult IJudaet choices, where
raising taxes ot recluciDa IJI"'Idina are options, guaranteeina penonalsav:
ings is wrong.
.

-GUARANTEES PAYMENT: an al!aolyteconstitutional guarantee is
made only for long-term debt for state buildings. Guaranteeing pa~
for periOIII1 collc:ae livings ..,.,..nn is BAD PUBLIC POLICY! , .
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-· IRS QUFSI10NS: llllemal Revenue Service will tax Trust Fund~­
ings unleaa tbe JII'OII'IIII it state backed. In reality tbeac are private ~v- ·
ings aNi abould remain ao. ·

The Ohio Tuition Trust Authority waa c:reatCd in 1989aa a state qc:ncy to
provide Ohio families with a safe, simple and affordable way to prepay the
cost of higher education in small increments. Also, scholanhips can now
be created by corporaliona or other organiz.otions to p1qJ1Y tuition for childrco
from families who cannot afford advanced savings.

•

IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT WiLL BE EFFECTIVE
IMMEDIATELY.

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regardleaa of c:arniDp on Trust Fund mveetments.

As a state agency, the Authority has many checks and balances to sa{eguard
a tis(:aJly-sound program for its participantll. The funds are sufficient to Dieet
future obliaations, l'aslage of Isslie 3 will officially back the Authority with
the State's endorsement, satisfYing federal guidelines.
·

4. REQtJJltE THAT ALL OHIO TIJITION TRUST FUND ASSETS BE
USED FOR THE PV1U'OSE OF THE FUND AND,IF THE FUND IS Ll·
QUIDATED, REQUIRE THAT ANY REMAINING ASSETS BE .
TRANSFERRED TO. THE GENERAL REVENUE FUND OF THE
STATE.

A maJoritY yes vote Is_necessary for

REAsoNS TO 'V(ll'E NO;

ARGUMENT .FOR STATE ISSUE 3

Since inception, !he agency's ~d Tuition Program has more than 31,SOO . -TRUST J.iUND N(JI' SEU'..slJPPORTING: when Jltislegis!ation . .
childrc:n c:nrollcd, has been liafdy and prudently invested.by Public Employees puled six yean qo, it waa.to be independent of stare JOYemmc:nt abel
Retirement System money lllllllllger&amp; aNi bas more than $113 million in 1188$. inveaton bad 110 '!aim on the Oc:neral Revenue Fund. Now they will ~e
firat claim on the ORFI
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Recent legislation passed by the General Assembly has improved tbe program's value, equity aNi affordability. To ensure its continued affordability -SI'ATE COMPETI!S WITH PRIVATE INVESTMENTS: people
abd 'enable more Ohio children to access higher education, the State's.&amp;or· who can afford to prepay tuition can do ao without state help.
mal, constitutionally-mandated "full faith and credit" is needed.
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-REMOVES PRESSURE TO KEEP TUri'ION LOW: the levc:ragc:
proposed amendment has broad-.bued, bi·partisan 1uppo1t: state l p· whidl the Trust Fund mi&amp;f!l have Uled to COII!rol tuition wets 'as dimimJtd.
ship supports its passage. Financial aid administrators endone lJsuc: 3 beM111e
advance family savings decrWea reliance on scarce financial aid and bunlc:n- --DISCRIMINATES: low ini:ome families cannot afford to contribute
some student loans, opening greater accc:ss to education.
to a coUeae 11vings IICCOWit.

pusage.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

.

The

EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 3

(as prepared by the Obio Ballot Board)
The amendment would require that tuition credits paid from the tuition
credits program and· the Ohio Tuition Trust Fund be supported by the full
faith and credit of the State of Ohio. The amendment would also require the

COMMITTEiil TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 3

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VOTE NO ON V§UE 31

Senator Richard H. Finan
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CO~ TO PREPARE ARGUMENT ~GAINSI' ISSUE 3
Senator Robert R. Cupp
Representative Michael G. Verich
,
State R.epreaentltive Edward F. Kuputis
Representative Barbara H. Boyd
State Rqnlenlative Joan W Lawrence
The amendment would allow the State of Ohio to maintain a program for r.!:C:==;.!!:!~Whi~'te:__ _ _ _ _ _ _...;.____
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t1Je .aa\A.p£l)lition credits and to &amp;I!BfUIIee the proceeds of tbe credila sold.
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llte~ WOUk!eom-·a sPGcillcd11in0Unt ortttecost oftuitibn at any
ARGlJMENTFoR STATE ISSUE 4
AGAINST STATE ISSUE 4
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state institution of higher education and- the ~ or a different amount of
the cost of tuition at any other higher education institution as may be provided
VOTE "m_" ON ISSUE 4- TO STOP TAXES ON FOOD
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by law.
STATB ISSUE 4 it 1 &lt;:ODititulional•mrndllll!llt to repeal a lillie tax on soda
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pep. Don'tbe misled into believiua it dinii....., taxes on fond. Since 1936
4
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· The amendment would also require the Ge~ral Assembly to appropriate ~~;: :!':n =~re Ohio tradition of protecnng eonaumen ~.·• Constitution bas prollibited state taxes on food otT the premiaea where ·
money to .offset any deficiency in the Ohio Tuition Trust Fund to guarantee
..,...
the. payment of the full amount of any tuition payment or refund required Whe
. th
· · nali f
hoi sal ft........
.....n ed ""''· · ndment . be' ~ primaril'
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be f h . n e.~.
constituUo
tyopened
o a ·new w. ehoie so
w ..... tax wu o;uaueJII
by out-of......
soda pop ven•
by a tuition payment contract, and allow a rnaJonty
u"' mem rs o eac
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Obi
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11111 ame
11 mg 1.. ........y
""""
1992
. fund s ••or the payment 0 f any m
' u"' court &lt;uuug
. . food
a gapmg e m o s coii8UtuUon,
don _
...,ch ..... to ,_the Ohio ,.._...,h"'on
to .........,.
theu
· limited
' •t-.......;.,
house of the General Assembly to appropnate
rohib
ww ...... '-NIUUWU
rw~
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tuition payment contract previously entered into.
had been thought to p
taxes.
&gt;.·
inlaests. Here.are five I'CI80III why every Ohio voter - and taxpayer
~~~~~~~~~~~~=-The court ruled that retail food iaxes are indeed illegal. But, it ~1+ct abould vote ~0 on ISSUE 4.
passage of laws to provide that future eoi\duct of the tuition credits program
be consistent with the amendment.

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PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION :~~b:::~gc~=~~~~e. &amp;MrcatoreOhio's~that wholesale taxes on food are legal!

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we·urge you to support Issue 4 becauae:

2. Al!owin&amp; stale IOV~m!l!!!!nt to mact bjdden taxes OA food wjll act I
dangerous J"T9"knt. The state is already looking at new food taxes
to raise revenues.
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.THE SALE OR PURCHASE OF SOFI' DIUNKS, CARBONATED, NON-ALCOHOUC BEVERAGES, OR FOOD FOll
. HUMAN CONSUMPTION,. OR THEIR INGR,EDIENTS OR
· P~CKAGING .

L,ct 's restore our constitutional tradition of prohibiting food taxea - before

..3. PRO~jTING ENACTMENT OF A TAX ON THE SALE TO
·OK PURCHASE BY A MANUF:ACTURER, PROCESSOR,
.:pACKAGER, OR RESELLER OF S0F1' DRINKS, CAR'BOfi!ATED, NON-ALCOHOUC BEVERAGI!S, OR FOOD FOR
J1VMAN CONSUMPTION, OR THEIR INGREDIENTS OR ·
PACKAGING.
·4... PROIUBITING ENACI'MENT OF RETAIL T~ ON
~PA~KA~ING THAT CONTAINS SOFI' DRINKS, OTHER CAR·

Join our broad-baaed comminee
Issue 4.

ry for prsssr,.

. SHALL THE PRO~
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

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FOOD FOR JlUMAN C0NSUMPI:10N ON

NO SALJlS OR Ollii!R EXCISE TAXES OJ. OFP TIIB Piu!MJsEs WJII!Itl! SOLD.
SJlAUBBU!VJm&gt;ORCOI.LI!CTBD(I) POR PUJUIOSIIS OF 11US S!ICTION,

OR ~":a,~NO~~
WHOU!SALBPVKCHASI!Ofr:ooi'OR IIIM!RAOES. THIS SBCTION ~
UPON ANY WHOLI!SALE SALB

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d)MMITJ'D TO PREPW 1\RGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 4

I. Jolm Reimcn

DiaJII Wimerbalter
Dan Schonhoft
STOP TAXES ON FOOD COMMIITEE

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wholesale pop tax wu approved in 1992 by a bipartisan majority in
the state lep.iature and Ot)vernor GeOrge Voiliovich. Pas,sqe of ·
ISsUE 4 could result in harmful cuts in education aNi other state provruns - or it will ncceaiiare the adoption of another tax bib more '
objcctionlble to c:onsumen.
·

Oarie $. Channing
Mait Real

'co~ TO PltEPARE ARGUMENT FoR ISSUE 4

IIIDXIodbylbelddllioaofo-..-cioa,
ti011 !3, 10 Rid:

NO

""' ......

(5) To balance the state budaet aNi prevent cuts in school funding, the

BI'OWIIing
of thouaanda of Ohioans in voting IiS.. on R.iQrc:lory
Stlf!leo A. Perry

DJBNTS OR rrs PACXAOINO; .(2) UPON
TDT or PROPOIIID
ANY SALB OR PURCHASI! OF SUCH
CON8ITIUI'IONAL AMENDMENT lTI!MS SOLD'!'() OR PURCIIASBD BY A
(Propoood by Jaitlllive Podtioo)
MANUFACTUJU!R,
PROCBSSOR,
PACKA(IBR, DISTRIBUTOR OR
Be i1 ~by tho poq11e of the SWe of RilSBLLBR OP FOOD P0R HUMAN
OJdo:
.
.
CONSUMPI'ION, OR rrs INOl!J!I)IBNTS:
Ankle XD of tho Obio- Collltilldioa II POR USB IN rrs TRADB OR BUSINBSS, .

'IF.ADOPTED, 11DS AMENDMENT WILL BE EFFECTIVE 30

YES

state goyemment lOCI any further.

lll!IVII 4

.B6NATED, NON.ALCOHOUC BEVERAGES, OR FOOD FOR
lltJMAN CONSUMPTION.

nee

(4) Consumers don't pay omolt·pop.-tn-. The aoda pop COO!palliet do.
MarUtplace c:ompeUtion continues to bold down pop prices at the
store.

3. Hjdden. wbn!pele-taxes on food are y!tjme""v pe•w' on to CX!Q·
SUD!!!" • The soft drink tax already costs coosumen $70 million annually. Future wbolesale food taxes could COlli us hundreds of mi1Iiona
On November 8th, vote NO on 1SSUB 4!
of doUan more per year .

~ 1. PROJiiBITING ENACTMENT OF A WHOLESALE TAX ON

DAYS AFl'ER ADOPTION.
(. .. : . ~- majority ya vote 11

(3) If paaed, ISSUE 4 will reduce state funds available for education
and ,hildrenl proJIIiDI in Ohio. The aoda pep tax aeneratea $130 ..
million per budget period, whidl it needed to support education aNi ·
.
otbor vital progriiiDi fcir dlildren.

r.

1. Tuinv food js wrong. Food taxes espc~:ially hurt diose who can._ .,
afford to pay. such 18 families with children and seniors 00 fixed '
incomes .

1. PROHIBITING THE CURRENT WHOLESALE '(AX ON
SOFT QRINKS AND OTHER CARBONATED, NON. ALCOH0UC BEVERAGES.

.

(2)' Slllc law baa never defined soft drinb u food. They are Nor a nutri·
. . tion soun:e for children or adultll. So they should be subject to tau·
• It's onJy, fair.
,.,. tion
. J'ust lite other non-food products

·

Cl.JRRENT SECTION 3(C) .OF ARTICLE XU PROIUBITS
TAXES ON :ruE SALE OR PURCHASE OF FOOD FOR HUMAN
. CONSUMPTION OFF THE PR,EMISES WHERE SOLD. THE
AMEl!IDMENT WOULD EXPAND TilE CURRENT RESI'RIC. TIONS BY:

.

(i) Contraiytoitasupporten' mioJudingclaims,ISSUE4itnotareac-

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. Spc~:ifically, Issue 4 will prohibit wholesale taxes on food aNi other~
taxes ~n food ingredients and food packaging. It also will repeal the 199t
PROPOSED CONSTITUI10NAL AMENDMENT
soft drink tax.
·
,.&lt;.
(Proposed by Inlflatin Petition)
·
To amend Article · XD of tbe Obio COIIItltUtion by the Rc:pealing the soft drink tax will not affect existing state programs. ~
revenues go into the Oc:neral Fund, and are not dedicated to any specific area.
addition of Section 13.

4

'

'

'

NOT AFPilCI' TIIB BXTIINT 10 WH1C1!
11tll L8VY OR COI.UICTION OP SALES
OR OTHI!R BXCISB TAXES ON 11t11

RBI'AIL SALB OR RBI'AIL PUilCHAIB
OPFOOO PORiruMAN OONSUMP!'ION
IS PBRMm'IID OR PROHIIITED BY
SI!CTION !(C) OP THIS AIITICLI!

OI'I'ICI! OP THe IICIIITAitY
OF ITATE OP OliO
. I, llclb Toft. Secietlo) of lillie, do benlly
GOIIIfy -tho .. ...... 11'1! . . I'll! - of

.....--,h..

pupwcd

by . . a-.1 ~ -'JIIodll .. oflloo of tho . . . . ., of lillie...- Ill Ar-

liclo XVI, Soclioa I of tho (Amtio"ioa oflbc
s.. of Oblo ad • cenlla ...........
1
' " " *lit pq»CCiid by ilddldve petitioaa
filod Ia tho ..... ofllle Sec:nlllly afS.O pur,
_.., ~ 0, Soclioa •• of . . OJooJilu.
lioa of tbe SlaJo of Oblo, ......... wllb llle
ballol ...... - up!PMkJno c:enJIJed

me by . . Olllo llal!ol
:'""'~==~· I
• ' ''IOd 10 me by • JNOJ)CWIII IIlii
~ of tho-.. •• JINCIIbod by Jaw.

'*"::d

IN TI!S11MONY WHI!RI!PORII, I bovo
. . _ ........ 'IIIJ -..rllllud' riiJ
olllciaJ .... CdJJml!w, Olllo t!Jil91h day
of S ; I , 19N.
llclb

Neighbor by Neighbor
Ribbon.by Ribbon
~ Partners . for a
Free Ohio

11114-1

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